Lecture TimeTuesday, 10:30 - 12:15
VenueRoom 208, Lee Shau Kee Building (LSK 208)
LanguageEnglish
Lecturer Noah SHUSTERMAN (39431765 / ncshust@cuhk.edu.hk)
Teaching Assistant YANG Yunfei (1155204035@link.cuhk.edu.hk)
This course is an introduction to the History of the Modern World – the events, people, and long-term developments which, since the end of the Middle Ages, have shaped and reshaped human society – with a focus on the growth of international developments and the creation of today’s globalized world. Throughout the semester, we will also be interrogating the continued tensions between local identities and dynamics, state centralization and the rise of nationalism, the spread of Western notions of universalism, and non-Western societies’ adaptation to or rejection of those dynamics. What role did the Christianization of Latin America play in the imperial project? What did it mean for a sparsely-populated settler-colonial society to declare that all men are created equal? How “anti-colonial” were the Marxist movements of the Global South?
Note that the course is designed to complement, rather than duplicate, already existing offerings in the history department. As most history majors who take the course will also be taking History 1002, this course will have only limited discussions of some of the major events in Western History.
| Week | Date | Topic |
| 1 | Jan-7 | “With a view that they might be converted to our holy faith” – The Age of Exploration |
| 2 | Jan-14 | “We shall be as a city upon a hill” – The Emergence of the Atlantic World |
| 3 | Jan-21 | “We Hold These Truths To Be Self-Evident” – The Age of Atlantic Revolutions |
| 4 | Feb-4 | “Among These Dark Satanic Mills” – Industrialization and its discontents |
| 5 | Feb-11 | “To any portion of this hemisphere” – The Americas in the early nineteenth century |
| 6 | Feb-18 | “Workers of the World, Unite!” – Urbanization and mass politics |
| 7 | Feb-25 | “Dr. Livingstone, I Presume” – Colonization and the Rush for Africa |
| 8 | Mar-11 | “A day which will live in infamy” – Global War in the Twentieth Century |
| 9 | Mar-18 | “Ich bin ein Berliner” – The Cold War, the Bomb, and the Internationalization of local conflicts |
| 10 | Mar-25 | “Is that all there is?” – Gender and Sexuality, and The Pill |
| 11 | Apr-1 | “A revolution is a struggle between the future and the past” – decolonizing in a divided world |
| 12 | Apr-8 | “Mr. Gorbachev, Tear Down This Wall” – The fall of the Soviet Bloc and the emergence of a New World Order |
| 13 | Apr-15 | “It’s not the war in Ukraine, it’s the war in Europe” – The remergence of populist dictatorship in the contemporary world |
Attention is drawn to University policy and regulations on honesty in academic work, and to the disciplinary guidelines and procedures applicable to breaches of such policy and regulations. Details may be found at http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/policy/academichonesty/.
With each assignment, students will be required to submit a signed declaration that they are aware of these policies, regulations, guidelines and procedures.
Assignments without the properly signed declaration will not be graded by teachers.
Only the final version of the assignment should be submitted via VeriGuide.
The submission of a piece of work, or a part of a piece of work, for more than one purpose (e.g. to satisfy the requirements in two different courses) without declaration to this effect shall be regarded as having committed undeclared multiple submissions. It is common and acceptable to reuse a turn of phrase or a sentence or two from one’s own work; but wholesale reuse is problematic. In any case, agreement from the course teacher(s) concerned should be obtained prior to the submission of the piece of work.