|
overview | schedule
| assignments |student
pages | links | UCSB English|
Schedule
Jan 9: Introduction:the Persistence of the American Revolution
Introduction to A Media Study of the American Revolution (Slide Lecture)
I.
The English Origins of American Liberty & the Plot of Liberty: the Republic versus the Empire
Jan 11: Britain the Empire of Liberty?
Reading:
- Declaration of 1776: 1st 2 paragraphs of The Declaration of Independence and Other Great Documents of American History, 5-9. [below, Documents]
- Locke, John. from The Second Treatise of Government, 222-229 R
- “Rule Britannia” R
- Links:
Jan
16: The Republic versus the Empire: Joseph Addison's Cato
(slide lecture)
Readings:
- Plutarch, The Life and Character of Cato, in Cato, pp. 253-271
- Addison, Cato, Acts I-III
Links:
Jan 18: Cato
II. The Theory and History of Revolution
Jan 23: Conceptualizing Freedom: Hannah Arendt
- Hannah Arendt, “What is Freedom?” from The Portable Hannah Arendt, Ed. Peter Baehr, pp. 438-461. R
- Wikipedia entry on Hannah Arendt
Jan 25: Conceptualizing Freedom: Hannah Arendt
Assignment due Jan 25: Write
a 1-page response paper to the essay "What is Freedom?"
Choose one idea about freedom from Arendt's essay, summarize it, and then offer a critique, application, or extension of that idea. |
Hannah Arendt's Concept of Freedom (slide lecture)
Jan 30: The Narrative of the American Revolution: from loyal colonies to political crisis
The Origins of the Revolution (a slide lecture)
Reading:
- Gordon Wood, The American Revolution: Preface, 3-62
- Questions for reading
Feb 1: The Narrative: from 1st blood to independence to victory
The Dynamic of the Military Struggle Leading to Independence(a slide lecture)
Quiz: short (20 minute) test on the basic ideological and military struggle of the American Revolution
III: Media Infrastructure of the British Empire and the Communication Innovations Attending the Beginning of the American Revolution
The Media Infrastucture of British America
|
Feb 6 & 8: Protesting Imperial Policy: 1767
- John Dickinson, The Pennsylvania Farmer, numbers 1-4, R
- Questions for reading
Assignment due Feb 8: Write
a 3-page on the style and rhetoric of one of John Dickinson's Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer
|
.Feb 13: From Petition and Argument to Action and Declarations: 1772-1774
- The Boston Committee of Correspondence, The Votes and Proceedings of the Town of Boston R
- Correspondence of Governor Thomas Hutchinson and Lord Dartmouth, the American Secretary in London, from Documents of the American Revolution, ed. K. G. Davies. R
The Communication Inventions of the Boston Whigs (slide lecture)
Feb 15: The Political Crisis of 1774
- Lord North, Introducing the Boston Port Bill to Parliament so as to punish Boston for the Destruction of the Tea, Proceedings and Debates of the British Parliament, ed. R. C. Simmons, 56-64, 75-76.R
- Whigs Conspiring: the Letters Exchanged between Richard Henry Lee of Virginia and Samuel Adams of Massachusetts (1773-1774) R
- Thomas Jefferson, Summary View of the Rights of British America (1774) R
- Garry Wills, chapter 2 of Inventing America: Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence, New York: Doubleday, 1978, 19-33. R
Feb 20: The Political Crisis of 1776
- Thomas Paine, Common Sense (1776), pp. 1-58 (all)
- Thomas Jefferson, “The Declarations of Jefferson and the Congress”, version with original draft and the revisions of Congress, from Wills, Inventing America: Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence,374-379. R .
IV.
Performing Liberty
Performing Revolution:
Useful links :
|
Feb 22: Reading The Declaration by Congress in 1776
Reading
- The Declaration of Independence
- Essay (handout)
- Patrick Henry, “Give me Liberty or Give me Death” (March 23, 1775), American Revolution: Primary Sources, Ed. Linda Schmittroth, Detroit: UXL, 2000, 89-96. R
- Massachusetts Slave Petition, (1774) & (1777), The Democracy Reader, Ed. By Diane Ravitch and Abigail Thernstrom. New York: HarperPerennial, 1992. 107-108. R
- Seneca Falls Declaration (1848) R
- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address (1863), Documents, p. 92-93 R
- The Ten-Point Program of the Black Panther Party (1966)
Declaring Indendence (slide lecture)
Feb 27: Extensions of the Declaration of 1776
Assignment due Feb 27: Write
a 4-page paper on The Declaration of Independence: take one of the "extensions" of the Declaration of 1776 and read it against the original Declaration. Address questions like: does the extension embed a critque of the original? What new historical conditions are engaged by the extension? How does the extension "read" the original declaration? |
Classroom presentations based on paper: Students will self-organize into groups based on their paper topics and take turns presnting issues for discussion to the rest of the class.
.March 1: Liberty from the Vantage Point of Black Slaves
- Fredrick Douglass, What to the Slave is the Fourth of July? (1852) R
- Fredrick Douglass, The Heroic Slave (1853) R
March 6: The Essential Popularity of War: Ballads, Anthems and News
- Broadside: “Bloody Butchery” Lexington & Concord (1775) R
- “The Yankee’s Return from Camp”: ballad (1775) R
- Bunker’s Hill: Map and account of British officers R
- Abigail and John Adams letters exchanged after Bunker Hill R
- King George III, “Proclaims the American in a State of Rebellion” (August 23, 1775) and Address to Parliament (October 26, 1775) R
- David Hackett Fischer, “The Rebels: Washington’s Dilemma: An Army of Liberty” from Washington’s Crossing, Oxford, 2004, 7-30 R
- “The Death of Jane McCrea”, painting by John Vanderlyn (1804) R
- General Gates versus General Burgoyne on Jane McCrea, from Diary of William Digby, from The American Revolution: Writings from the War of Independence, Library of America, 314-317. R
March 8: Late Midterm EXAM
V:
Media Policy and the Architecture of the New Republic
March 13: The Architecture of the Republic
- The Constitution of the United States, Documents, 10-24
- James Madison, The Federalist, No. 10, Documents, 35-42
- James Madison, The Federalist, No. 51. R
March 15: A Media Policy for the New Republic
- 1st Amendment, Documents, p. 25
- Review for Final Exam
Final Exam:
March 21, 2007, 4:00-7:00PM Sout Hall 1415
| overview
| schedule | assignments
|student pages | links
| UCSB English |
|