Fall 2016 Office: HIS 502 HIS 504 Telephone: American Thought and Culture, 1776 to 1900

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History 305/705 Professor Charles Capper Fall 2016 Office: HIS 502 HIS 504 Telephone: 353-8318 TTh 9:30-11 E-mail: capper@bu.edu Office Hrs: TTh 11-12 Elements REQUIRED READING: American Thought and Culture, 1776 to 1900 David A. Hollinger and Charles Capper, eds., The American Intellectual Tradition, Vols. 1 and 2, Seventh Edition (Oxford UP, 2016) James Fenimore Cooper, The Prairie (Penguin) Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass: The First (1855) Edition, ed. Malcolm Cowley (Penguin Classics) Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom s Cabin (Penguin) Mark Twain, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Viking-Penguin) AIMS AND APPROACHES: History 305/705 and 306/706 investigate the history of ideas underlying religious, philosophical, political, artistic, and other major cultural practices in the United States. Both courses emphasize the thinkers and movements most influential in formulating, debating, and disseminating these ideas in their own time and beyond. Both also address two important questions on the courses subject. One is methodological: How does the study of reflective and expressive thought illuminate the larger culture of the United States? The other is definitional: In light of the nation s extensive importation of ideas from Europe, its unique diversity of ethnic and other identity groups, and its purportedly hyper-utilitarian ethos, what does it mean to speak of an American intellectual tradition? THEMES AND TOPICS: History 305/705 examines how major American thinkers and intellectual movements of the long nineteenth century constructed an exceptional national identity by adjusting their culture s provincial Protestant and Enlightenment traditions to the challenges of transnational democratic, Romantic, and secular modes of thinking. Specific topics include Transcendentalism, evangelical and liberal Protestantism, pro- and anti-slavery arguments about freedom, race and gender theory, philosophical idealism and literary realism, and Darwinism and evolutionary social science. READING: The required readings are all primary documents, including essays, addresses, book excerpts, pictures, and novels. BOOKS AND ARTICLES: All required books are available at the BU Barnes and Noble bookstore or can be purchased from Amazon and other online booksellers. Links to

2 electronic versions of articles from journals (e-journals) and essays from books (ereserve) may be found on the BU Libraries website. Students desiring overviews of major periods in American intellectual history covered in HI 305/705 and HI 306/706 might want to consult the relevant volumes in Lewis Perry and Howard Brick, Series Editors, American Thought and Culture (1991-2010). DISCUSSIONS AND QUESTIONS: In order to make lectures optimally useful and discussions possible, it is essential that reading assignments be done before the date indicated. Class discussions will be emphasized on certain dates, but comments and questions will be encouraged throughout the term. There will also usually be a time at the beginning or end of class for students to ask questions about the reading and lectures. Assignments SHORT PAPERS: Students will be required to write two 5-page papers. Each is a comparative analysis of all or at least most of the reading assignment for a particular day, although you may, especially when it includes a relatively long text, such as a novel, largely emphasize one of the documents. The object is not to just summarize or paraphrase the readings but to analyze them. This means picking out the main arguments or themes, evaluating how they re supported logically and/or rhetorically, how they compare (in similarity or difference) with each other in these respects, and how they fit (or don t fit) into the topics or movements we ve discussed in the course. The first paper can be on any required reading assignment from Sept. 8 through Oct.25 and should be turned in no later than the beginning of class on the day the assignment will be discussed. The second short paper can be on any assignment from Oct. 27 through Dec. 8 and will likewise be due in class on the day it is assigned. TERM PAPER: This paper is an essay of 10 pages on a single book by an American thinker. It should address the question, What marks this book as a product of its intellectual time? You may choose any book listed in the Chronologies sections of AIT1 and AIT2 with four qualifications: 1.) The book must be by an American author. 2.) Its first publication date should be roughly between 1776 and 1900. 3.) Preferably it should not be one that includes a major selection from the required reading, 4.) It should not be a commonly assigned novel or other book that the student has already read in high school or college. Before selecting your book, you need to check with me either in person or by email about your selection. In making a preliminary assessment of possible books, you might find it helpful to consult a dictionary of American thinkers and ideas, such as Richard Wightman Fox and James T. Kloppenberg s Companion to American Thought (1995). The focus of your paper should not be on your author s biography but on his or her ideas. You should not try to fit your book into the history of particular social and political events of its era, although you may allude to them. Rather you should select a central intellectual problem, question, theme, or movement alive at the time and position your book in relation to it, using evidence drawn from relevant documents in AIT1 and AIT2. Papers will be due by Dec. 12 and should be placed in my box in the History Department before 9:30 AM.

3 CITATIONS: Citation form should be consistent and generally follow the Chicago Manual of Style. If you frequently cite the same text, you can place a shortened version of its author and title in parentheses at the end of a quotation or sentence and before the period and create a bibliography of full citations at the end of the paper. EXAMS: There will be a quiz and a final. GRADE BREAKDOWN: 10% for the quiz, 30% for the two short papers, 30% for the term paper, and 30% for the final. GRADUATE STUDENTS: Graduate students enrolled in History 705 are expected to read the secondary texts listed in Recommended Reading and, where pertinent, reference them in some of their papers and exams. In addition they will be required to write a 10-page historiography paper on two or three scholarly works on any of the topics in the course, which will be due at the end of the semester. Students should consult with me about appropriate subjects and books AUDITORS: Auditors will not write papers or take exams but are expected to regularly attend, do the required readings, and, if they wish, participate in discussions. Regulations ATTENDANCE AND PARTICIPATION: Attendance at all classes is required and unexplained absences will lower a student s final grade. Participation in the form of questions and comments in class may raise it by as much as a half grade. LATE WORK: Makeups will not be given nor will late papers be accepted except in the case of an extraordinary emergency or a severe illness. I need to be informed in advance unless the event s suddenness makes that impossible. Generally, a makeup date will be scheduled within a week. PLAGIARISM: Plagiarism is arguably the most serious ethical violation that a scholar or student can commit. Read the Academic Conduct Code to understand the college policy on plagiarism. All cases of its suspected perpetration, as well as all other acts of suspected academic misconduct, will be referred to the Dean s Office. If found guilty, a student will receive the maximum punishment allowed at the university. ETIQUETTE: To preserve a classroom atmosphere conducive to collective learning, turn off cell phones and use laptop computers only for taking notes on the classroom lecture and discussion. Laptop use should not interfere with your ability to interact with the instructor and other students.

4 SCHEDULE OF TOPICS AND READING Sept. 6 Intellectual History and the Long Nineteenth Century David A. Hollinger, Historians and the Discourse of Intellectuals, in Hollinger s In the American Province: Studies in the History and Historiography of Ideas (1985), 130-51, 210-15 Stefan Collini et al., What Is Intellectual History? in Juliet Gardiner, ed., What Is History Today? (1988), 105-19 I. ENLIGHTENMENT FOUNDATIONS Sept. 8 Theories of Revolutionary Republicanism AIT1, xi-xv, 109-14 John Adams, A Dissertation on the Canon and the Feudal Law, in AIT1, 128-38 Thomas Paine, Selection from Common Sense, in AIT1, 139-47 Thomas Jefferson, The Declaration of Independence, in AIT1, 148-51 James T. Kloppenberg, The Virtues of Liberalism: Christianity, Republicanism, and Ethics in Early American Political Discourse, Journal of American History, 74 (June 1987), 9-33 Sept. 13 Debates over Republican Constitutionalism Alexander Hamilton, Constitutional Convention Speech on a Plan of Government, in AIT1, 152-57 Brutus, in AIT1, 158-68 James Madison, The Federalist, Number 10 and Number 51 in AIT1, 169-78 Sept. 15 John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and the Fate of the Republican Enlightenment John Adams to Samuel Adams and to Thomas Jefferson, in AIT1, 187-96 Thomas Jefferson, Selection from Notes on the State of Virginia, in AIT1, 197-208 Thomas Jefferson to John Adams, to Benjamin Rush, and to Thomas Law, in AIT1, 209-18

5 Henry F. May, After the Enlightenment: A Prospectus, in Henry F. May, The Divided Heart: Essays on Protestantism and the Enlightenment in America (1991), 179-96, 210-13 David A. Hollinger, The Accommodation of Protestant Christianity with the Enlightenment: An Old Drama Still Being Enacted, in Hollinger s After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History (2013), 1-17 Sept. 20 Gender, and Race, and the Proto-Democratic Enlightenment Judith Sargent Murray, On the Equality of the Sexes, in AIT1, 179-86 Samuel Stanhope Smith, Selection from An Essay on the Causes of the Variety of Complexion and Figure in the Human Species, AIT1, 219-32 Ruth H. Bloch, The Gendered Meanings of Virtue in Revolutionary America, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 13 (1987) II. PROTESTANT COUNTERPOINTS AND DEMOCRATIC ORDER Sept. 22 The Reawakening of Protestant Theology AIT1, 233-38 William Ellery Channing, Unitarian Christianity, in AIT1, 239-51 Nathaniel William Taylor, Concio ad Clerum, in AIT1, 252-66 Charles Grandison Finney, What a Revival of Religion Is, in AIT1, 267-77 Mark A. Noll, Common Sense Traditions and American Evangelical Thought, American Quarterly, 37 (Summer 1985), 216-238 Sept. 27 Evangelical Perfectionism and Varieties of Antebellum Social Reform John Humphrey Noyes, Selection from The Berean, in AIT1, 278-85 William Lloyd Garrison, Selection from Thoughts on Colonization, in AIT1, 286-99 Sarah Grimké, Selection from Letters on the Equality of the Sexes, and the Condition of Woman, in AIT1, 300-13 Sept. 29 The Problem of The People in Democratic Ideology George Bancroft, The Office of the People in Art, Government, and Religion, in AIT1, 314-23

6 Orestes Brownson, The Laboring Classes, in AIT1, 324-39 Oct. 4 Harmony and Hierarchy in Whig Social Thought Catharine Beecher, Selection from A Treatise on Domestic Economy, in AIT1, 340-53 Henry C. Carey, Selection from Harmony of Interests, in AIT1, 354-64 QUIZ III. ROMANTIC INTELLECT AND CULTURAL REFORM Oct. 6 Romantic Nationalism in James Fenimore Cooper s The Prairie James Fenimore Cooper, The Prairie Perry Miller, The Romantic Dilemma in American Nationalism and the Concept of Nature, in Perry Miller, Nature s Nation (1967), 197-207 Oct. 11 Oct. 13 No Class Substitute Monday Transcendentalism as a Religious Demonstration AIT1, 365-69 A. Bronson Alcott, Selection from Conversations with Children on the Gospels, 370-85 Charles Capper, A Little Beyond: The Problem of the Transcendentalist Movement in American History, Journal of American History (Sept. 1998), 502-39 Oct. 18 Oct. 20 Ralph Waldo Emerson s Philosophy of Self-Reliance Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Divinity School Address and Self- Reliance, AIT1, 386-412 Margaret Fuller, Henry David Thoreau, and the Signs of Transcendental Politics Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, Plan of the West Roxbury Community, in AIT1, 413-20 Margaret Fuller, Selection from Woman in the Nineteenth Century, in AIT1, 421-39

7 Henry David Thoreau, Resistance to Civil Government, in AIT1, 440-53 John L. Thomas, Romantic Reform in America, American Quarterly (Winter 1965), 656-81 Oct. 25 Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, and the Two Souls of Romantic Democracy Herman Melville, Hawthorne and His Mosses, in AIT1, 464-74 Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass: The First (1855) Edition), 1-86 LAST DAY TO TURN IN FIRST SHORT PAPER Oct. 27 Horace Bushnell and the Nurture of Sentiment Horace Bushnell, Christian Nurture, AIT1, 454-63 Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom s Cabin [Begin UTC] Nov. 1 Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Power of Sentiment [Finish UTC] IV. THE QUEST FOR UNION AND RENEWAL Nov. 3 Slavery and the Making of Southern Conservatism AIT1, 475-79 John C. Calhoun, Selection from A Disquisition on Government, in AIT1, 480-90 Louisa McCord, Enfranchisement of Woman, in AIT1, 491-503 George Fitzhugh, Selection from Sociology for the South, in AIT1, 504-14 Lacy K. Ford, Jr., Inventing the Concurrent Majority: Madison, Calhoun, and the Problem of Majoritarianism in American Political Thought, Journal of Southern History, 60 (Feb. 1994), 19 58 Nov. 8 Race and Nation in the Political Thought of Martin Delaney and Frederick Douglass Martin Delany, Selection from The Condition, Elevation, Emigration, and Destiny of the Colored People of the United States, in AIT1, 515-531

8 Frederick Douglass, What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? in AIT1, 532-45 Nov.10 Abraham Lincoln, Francis Lieber, and the Antislavery Origins of American Nationalism Abraham Lincoln, Speech at Peoria, Illinois, Address Before the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society, Address Delivered at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettysburg, and Second Inaugural Address, in AIT1, 546-61 Francis Lieber, Nationalism and Internationalism, AIT1, 562-74 V. TOWARD A SECULAR CULTURE Nov. 15 Huckleberry Finn and the Ironies of Literary Realism AIT, 3-4 Mark Twain, Fenimore Cooper s Literary Offences, in AIT2, 64-70 Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Miles Orvell, The Romance of the Real, in Miles Orvell, The Real Thing: Imitation and Authenticity in American Culture, 1880-1940 (1989), 103-37 Nov. 17 Constructs of Culture, Science, and the Research University Thomas Wentworth Higginson, A Plea for Culture, in AIT2, 11-14 Charles Peirce, The Fixation of Belief, in AIT2, 15-25 Daniel Walker Howe, American Victorianism as a Culture, American Quarterly, 27 (December 1975): 507-32 Nov. 22 Biblical Criticism and the Dilemmas of Liberal Protestantism Charles Augustus Briggs, Selection from Biblical Study, in AIT2, 36-40 Nov. 23-27 Thanksgiving Recess Nov. 29 Josiah Royce, William James, and the Philosophy of Liberal Belief William James, The Will to Believe, in AIT2, 7-84 Josiah Royce, The Problem of Job, in AIT2, 85-97

9 7 Dec. 1 Dec. 6 Dec.8 David A. Hollinger, Justification by Verification: The Scientific Challenge to the Moral Authority of Christianity in Modern America, in Hollinger s After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History (2013), 82-102 Evolutionary Social Science and Social Darwinism William Graham Sumner, Sociology, in AIT2, 26-35 Lester Frank Ward, Mind as a Social Factor, in AIT2, 41-49 Thorstein Veblen, Selection from The Theory of the Leisure Class in AIT2, 134-48 Evolutionary Gender Theory and First Wave Feminism Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Solitude of Self and Selection from The Woman s Bible, in AIT2, 50-54 Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Selection from Women and Economics, in AIT2, 98-104 Henry Adams, George Santayana, and the Revolt against the Nineteenth Century Henry Adams, The Dynamo and the Virgin, in AIT2, 105-09 George Santayana, The Genteel Tradition in American Philosophy, in AIT2, 110-22 John Higham, The Reorientation of American Culture in the 1890s, in John Higham, Hanging Together: Unity and Diversity in American Culture (2001), 173-98 LAST DAY TO TURN IN SECOND SHORT PAPER Dec. 12 Dec. 14 Dec. 17 TERM PAPERS DUE (by 9:30 AM in my box in the History Department.) GRADUATE HISTORIOGRAPHY PAPERS DUE (by 9:30 AM in my box in the History Department) FINAL (9-11 AM in class)