AMERICAN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY SINCE THE CIVIL WAR

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Professor: Angus Burgin (burgin@jhu.edu) Office hours: Mondays 12:00pm 1:45pm (https://doodle.com/poll/u65th2gy7pyhrqwd) Teaching Assistant: Allon Brann AMERICAN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY SINCE THE CIVIL WAR Overview: This course surveys the history of ideas in an American context since the Civil War. Readings and discussions will explore the dynamic relationships between pragmatism and progressivism, modernism and antimodernism, scarcity and abundance, unity and diversity, science and tradition, and individualism and concern for the social good. Learning Objectives: Students in this course can expect to learn: how to comprehend difficult texts. how to situate texts in their social and intellectual context, in order to better understand the author s intended meaning. how to critique and defend complex philosophical arguments in oral debate. how to develop forceful written arguments that acknowledge and illuminate the depth and subtlety of their subjects. how to track the development of ideas over broad expanses of time, and to recognize antecedents for contemporary social philosophies. Assignments and Grading: 35%: participation (including in-class debate, in-class writing) 5%: first essay draft 10%: first essay (5 7 pages) 15%: first exam 15%: second exam 5%: second essay draft 15%: second essay (10 12 pages) In this course, you are expected to be honest and truthful. Ethical violations include cheating on exams, plagiarism, reuse of assignments, improper use of the Internet and electronic devices, unauthorized collaboration, alteration of graded assignments, forgery and falsification, lying, facilitating academic dishonesty, and unfair competition. Report any violations you witness to the instructor. You may consult the associate dean of student affairs and/or the chairman of the Ethics Board beforehand. See the guide on Academic Ethics for Undergraduates and the Ethics Board Web site (http://ethics.jhu.edu) for more information. 1

The grades of late papers will be lowered one level for each day they are late (e.g., a grade of B becomes a B- if one day late, a C+ if two days late, etc.). Any student with a disability who may need accommodations in this class must obtain an accommodation letter from Student Disability Services, 385 Garland, (410) 516-4720, studentdisabilityservices@jhu.edu. Texts: A number of the course readings (denoted with an * in the syllabus) are available on electronic reserve. The other readings, listed below, should be acquired separately. Editions are not important, so students are welcome to use any version they choose. I like to read hard copies of books, but four of the five books used in the course are available for free online: Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward (1898). (Available free through Google Books.) Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams. (Available free through Project Gutenberg.) W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk. (Available free through Google Books.) Walter Lippmann, Drift and Mastery. (Available free through Google Books.) Richard Rorty, Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity. (Available used online for $8+.) Students are also asked to purchase an i>clicker2 (ISBN 1429280476) and bring it to all course meetings. They are available through the Barnes & Noble campus bookstore or the JHU Technology Store. Monday, January 29: University Life after the Civil War Wednesday, January 31: Darwinism in an Age of Industry Reading: *William Graham Sumner, Sociology (1881), in Collected Essays in Political and Social Science, 77-97. *Lester Frank Ward, Mind as a Social Factor (1884), Mind 9, no. 36, 563-573. Debate: Sumner v. Ward on the social implications of Darwinism. Monday, February 5: Victorian Culture and Modern Morals *Charles Eliot Norton, American Political Ideas, North American Review 101 (1865), pp. 550 66. *Walt Whitman, Democratic Vistas (1871), in Walt Whitman: Complete Poetry and Prose, pp. 929 69. *George Santayana, The Genteel Tradition in American Philosophy (1913), in Winds of Doctrine, 186 215. 2

First paper topics distributed and discussed. Group discussions of readings. Wednesday, February 7: Reforming the Cult of Domesticity *Charlotte Perkins Gilman, selection from Women and Economics (1898), 58-75. *Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper and Why I Wrote the Yellow Wallpaper (1892), Norton Anthology, vol. 2, 4th ed., pp. 644 58. *Elizabeth Cady Stanton, The Solitude of Self (1892), in Elizabeth Cady Stanton Susan B. Anthony: Correspondence, Writings, Speeches, ed. Ellen Carol DuBois, 246 254. In-class writing assignment #1. Monday, February 12: The Problem of Poverty in the Gilded Age *Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward (1898), preface, ch. 1 7, 12, 14, 18, 22, 25, 28, postscript. *Jane Addams, selection from Twenty Years at Hull House (1892), 115-127. *Andrew Carnegie, Wealth, North American Review (June 1889). Debate: Bellamy s social vision. Wednesday, February 14: The White City and the Image of the West *Chief Joseph, An Indian s View of Indian Affairs, North American Review 128 (1879), pp. 412 33. *Frederick Jackson Turner, The Significance of the Frontier in American History, in The Frontier in American History (1893), 1 38. Lecture on the White City. Discussion of the frontier. Monday, February 19: Antimodernism as Impulse and Theory Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams: An Autobiography (1918), ch. 1, 4, 22, 25, 31, 33 35. Lecture on antimodernism. Group discussion of Adams. Wednesday, February 21: Varieties of Pragmatism *Charles Peirce, The Fixation of Belief (1877), The Popular Science Monthly 12, 1 15. 3

*William James, The Will to Believe (1897), in The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy, 1 31. *William James, Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking (1907), lectures 2 and 6. Debate: Jamesian pragmatism. * Friday, February 23: FIRST PAPER DRAFTS DUE IN SECTION * Monday, February 26: The Politics of Progressivism Walter Lippmann, Drift and Mastery (1914), introduction and ch. 1 3, 8 10, 13 16. Debate: Lippmann s solution to drift. Draft feedback: Group A. Wednesday, February 28: Legal Realism and Social Reform *Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law (1897), in American Thought, Civil War to World War I, ed. Perry Miller, pp. 184 206. *Louis Brandeis, selections from Brandeis on Democracy (1905 1922), pp. 25 36, 51 66, 94 102. Debate: Holmesian jurisprudence. Draft feedback: Group B. * Monday, March 5: FIRST PAPERS DUE IN CLASS * Monday March 5: The Intellectuals and the War *John Dewey, What America Will Fight For, New Republic, 18 August 1917, pp. 68 69. *John Dewey, Philosophy and Democracy (1918), in The Middle Works, 1899-1924, Vol. 11, 41-53. *Randolph Bourne, Trans-National America (1916), Atlantic Monthly 118, 86 97. *Randolph Bourne, Twilight of Idols (1917), The Seven Arts 11, 688 702. Debate: Dewey v. Bourne on pragmatism and war. Pragmatism timeline and review. 4

Wednesday, March 7th: Double-Consciousness and the Cosmopolitan Ideal W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk (1903), ch. 1, 2, 3, 9, 13, 14. Group discussion of DuBois. Monday, March 12: Conservatism in a Liberal Society *H. L. Mencken, selection from Notes on Democracy (1926) in Mason and Baker, eds., Free Government in the Making, pp. 638 43. *John Crowe Ransom, Reconstructed but Unregenerate (1930), in Twelve Southerners, I ll Take My Stand, 1 27. *Whittaker Chambers, selection from Witness (1950), 3 22. Exam review. * Wednesday, March 14: FIRST EXAM * Monday, March 26: Mass Culture and the Pathology of Normalcy *Clement Greenberg, Avant-Garde and Kitsch (1939), Partisan Review 6, no. 5, 34 49. *James Baldwin, Everybody s Protest Novel (1949), in Notes of a Native Son, 13 22. *Lionel Trilling, On the Teaching of Modern Literature (1961), in The Moral Obligation to Be Intelligent, 381 401. Debate: Greenberg and the social role of art. Wednesday, March 28: The Vital Center *Reinhold Niebuhr, selection from The Children of Light and the Children of Darkness (1944), 9 41. *Hannah Arendt, Ideology and Terror (1953), The Review of Politics 15, no. 3 (1953), 303 327. *Daniel Bell, The End of Ideology in the West (1960), in The End of Ideology, 393 407. Debate: Niebuhr and Chambers on religion and modernity. Monday, April 2: Cold War Capitalism *X (George Kennan), "The Sources of Soviet Conduct," Foreign Affairs 25, no. 4 (1947), pp. 566 582. *W. W. Rostow, selection from The Stages of Economic Growth (1960), 4 16. 5

*Noam Chomsky, The Responsibility of Intellectuals (1967), in American Power and the New Mandarins, 323 366. Debate: Chomksy on intellectuals. In-class writing assignment. Wednesday, April 4: Civil Rights and the American Dilemma *Gunnar Myrdal, selection from An American Dilemma (1944), 3 25. *Harold Cruse, Revolutionary Nationalism and the Afro-American (1962), in Rebellion or Revolution?, 74 96. *Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from a Birmingham Jail (1963), The Christian Century 80, no. 24, 767 773. Group discussion of readings. Monday, April 9: The Moral Life of Markets *Friedrich Hayek, Equality, Value, and Merit, in The Constitution of Liberty (1960), pp. 85 102. *Milton Friedman, selection from Capitalism and Freedom (1962), 7 21. Debate: Hayek, Friedman, and market critic. Wednesday, April 11: Left Critiques of Liberalism *C. Wright Mills, Letter to the New Left (1960), Power, Politics and People: The Collected Essays of C. Wright Mills, 247 259. *Herbert Marcuse, selection from One-Dimensional Man (1964), 1 18. Debate: Bell v. Mills on Ideology. * Friday, April 13: SECOND ESSAY DRAFT DUE IN SECTION* Monday, April 16: The Redistribution of Rights *John Rawls, Justice as Fairness, The Philosophical Review (1958). Debate: Rawlsian justice. In-class writing assignment. 6

Wednesday, April 18: Truth and Meaning in the Postwar Sciences *Thomas Kuhn, selection from The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962), 144 159. *Clifford Geertz, Ideology as a Cultural System, in The Interpretation of Cultures (1973), pp. 193 233. Debate: Kuhnian science. In-class workshop: second essay drafts, group A. Monday, April 23: Gender Equality, Gender Difference *Betty Friedan, selection from The Feminine Mystique (1963), 127 146. *Judith Butler, Gender Trouble (1989, Routledge edition 2006), pp. 1 22. Debate: Butler and Friedan on gender and politics. In-class workshop: second essay drafts, group B. Wednesday, April 25: The Norms of Postmodernity Richard Rorty, Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989), viii 95, 189 98. Debate: Rortyian pragmatism. In-class workshop: second essay drafts, group C. Monday, April 30: Community in an Age of Fracture *Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone, Journal of Democracy 6, no. 1 (1995), pp. 65 78. *Barack Obama, A More Perfect Union (2008). Lecture on intellectual history and politics today. * Wednesday, May 2: SECOND EXAM * * Friday, May 11th: SECOND ESSAY DUE * 7