Hum 210 | Humanities | Reed


HUMANITIES 210 EARLY MODERN EUROPE

Spring, 1999

 

WEEK I (January 25-29):

Shakespeare, The Tempest
Stephen Greenblatt, "Learning to Curse"*
Stephen Greenblatt, Shakespearean Negotiations, 129-163*

Lecture: Shakespeare and the Disciplines of Culture (Knapp)

 

WEEK II (February 1-5):

Calderon de la Barca, "Life is a Dream"*
John Bossy, Christianity in the West, 1-152
Jean Delumeau, Catholicism Between Luther and Voltaire, 175-202*

Lecture: Free Will in Calderon and in the Catholic Reformation (Knapp)

 

WEEK III (February 8-12):

Galileo, The Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo, 1-58, 175-227
Francis Bacon, "The Great Instauration" (in Edwin A. Burtt, ed. The English Philosophers)*
Bacon, "Thoughts and Conclusions"*
Dunn, The Age of Religious Wars, 200-216

Lecture: The New Science (Bedau)

 

WEEK IV (February 15-19):

Descartes, Discourse on Method & Meditations on First Philosophy

Lecture: The Cartesian Revolution (Bedau)

 

WEEK V (February 22-26):

Pascal, Pensées, 33-95, 149-164, 210-212
Dunn, The Age of Religious Wars, 58-68; 82-92; 152-164

Lecture: Pascal's Wager (Bedau)

 

WEEK VI (March 1-5):

Saint-Simon, Louis de Rouvray, The Age of Magnificence: The Memoirs of the Duc de Saint-Simon, (selected, edited, translated by Sanche de Gramont), 21-23, 185-90, 40-50, 97-100, 135-178*
Norman Bryson, Word and Image, 29-88

Lecture: Court Society (Ray)

 

WEEK VII (March 8-12):

Dunn, The Age of the Religious Wars, 178-189
Racine, Phaedre
Moliere, Tartuffe

Lecture: Staging Virtue (Steinman)

 

WEEK VIII (March 15-19):

Madame de Lafayette, The Princess of Cleves

Lecture: The Subject of Power (Steinman)

 

--SPRING BREAK (March 21-26)--

 

WEEK IX (March 29-April 2):

'Agreement of the People,' & 'The Putney Debates,' in: Divine Right and Democracy, ed. D. Wootton, 283-317*
Dunn, The Age of Religious Wars, 164-178
John Milton, 'Areopagitica,' in: The Portable Milton

Lecture: The Rhetoric of Freedom (Knapp)

 

WEEK X (April 5-9):

Hobbes, Leviathan, Book I, Introduction and chapters 1-6, 10, 12-16 (9-46, 62-69, 75-115); Book II, chapters 17-22, 24, 26, 29-31 (117-65, 170-76, 183-200, 221-254); Book III, chapters 32, 43 (255-59, 402-15); Review and Conclusion (483-91)
Dunn, The Age of Religious Wars, chap. 3, & pp. 189-198

Lecture: The Social Contract I: Security and the Sovereign (Garrett)

 

WEEK XI (April 12-16):

John Milton, 'Paradise Lost,' in The Portable Milton

Lecture: Reading the World of the English Revolution (Steinman)

 

WEEK XII (April 19-23):

John Locke, Essay on Human Understanding (in Edwin A. Burtt, ed. The English Philosophers)*
John Locke, Second Treatise on Civil Government

Lecture (on Monday): Two Challenges to Hobbes's Materialism (Bedau)
Lecture (on Wednesday): The Social Contract II: Labor and Liberty (Garrett)

 

WEEK XIII (April 26-30):

Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe

Lecture: Marooned (Knapp)

 

 

Books for Purchase

Shakespeare, Wm. The Tempest. (ed. S. Orgel). Oxford U. P.
Hum 210 Pamphlet (available for purchase in Bookstore).
Bossy, John. Christianity in the West.. Oxford U.P. (Opus Books).
Galileo. Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo (trans. Stillman Drake). Anchor Books.
Dunn, Richard S. The Age of the Religious Wars: 1559-1715. Norton.
Descartes, Rene. Discourse on Method and Meditations (trans. Cress). 3rd. ed. Hackett.
Pascal, Blaise. Pensees (trans. A.J. Krailsheimer). Penguin Classics.
Bryson, Norman. Word and Image: French Painting of Ancien Regime. Cambridge.
Racine, Jean. Iphigenia; Phaedra; Athaliah. (trans. John Cairncross). Penguin Classics.
Moliere. Tartuffe (trans. Richard Wilbur). Harcourt Brace.
de Lafayette, Madame. The Princess of Cleves (trans. W.J. Cobb). Meridian Classic.
Milton, John. The Portable Milton (ed. Douglas Bush). Penguin Books.
Hobbes. Leviathan (ed. Richard Tuck). Cambridge.
Locke, John. Second Treatise on Civil Government (ed. C.B. MacPherson). Hackett.
Defoe, Daniel. Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe. Penguin Classics.

 

Lectures will be on Mondays only except for week twelve or unless announced otherwise in class.

* Indicates that readings will be available in the Course Pamphlet.

 

ONLINE:

The Humanities 210 syllabus will be available on the course's web page which can be reached through Reed's main page via Academic Life and Course Materials, or directly at this address: <http://academic.reed.edu/Humanities/>. The syllabus is also available on the Courses Server (via the Chooser in the Zone Academic Servers).


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