U.S. History and American Literature
Second Semester Syllabus
This semester, we will write our academic paragraphs in response to our class discussions and assigned literature. I will assign these each week in class, due the following meeting, and I will also post these prompts on the weekly review for those of you following along on the blog. Other readings may be added.
January 9th: Literary Circle on Jack London’s Call of the Wild. This book was the assigned reading over the Christmas break. Please come to class with your position’s work complete. I will take up your written work for this position after your group meeting.
History: The Era of Reconstruction, Lincoln’s Assassination, Andrew Johnson’s presidency and impeachment, Carpetbaggers and Scalawags
Literature: Bring OBSS to class. William Faulkner “The Evening Sun” pp. 335, Charlotte Perkins Gilman “The Yellow Wallpaper” pp. 191, Shirley Jackson “The Lottery” pp. 464
January 16th: (1860-1900)
History: Business and Labor in the Industrial Era /The New South and the New West
Literature: In Class, “A Good Man is Hard to Find” “A Late Encounter with the Enemy” pp. 514, OBSS, Southern Gothic Genre, and one of my favorite writers, Flannery O’Connor
January 23rd: Political Stalemate and the Rural Revolt
History: Seizing an American Empire (Modern America)
Literature: Modernism: The Great Gatsby Chapters 1-3
January 30th: The Progressive Era
History: Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, The Women’s Suffrage Movement, Settlement Houses
Literature: The Great Gatsby Chapters 4-6
February 6th: America and the Great War
Literature: The Great Gatsby Chapters 7-9
February 13th: A Clash of Cultures, 1920-1929: A “New Era” of Consumption, The Jazz Age, The Modernist Revolt, Rise of Mass Consumption (Kellogg’s, GE toasters, etc)
Charlie Chaplin and the movies
Literature: Langston Hughes, “The Weary Blues” OBAP pp.468, “Juke Box Love Song” pp. 469, “Harlem” 472
February 20th: The Reactionary Twenties: Reactionary Conservatism and Immigration Restriction, A Republican Resurgence, The Rise of Herbert Hoover, The Great Depression
Literature: To Kill a Mockingbird
February 27th: The Second World War, 1933-1945, The Rise of Fascism in Europe, Isolationism and Intervention, The Pacific War
Literature: To Kill a Mockingbird
March 6th: The American Age: The Cold War and the Fair Deal, 1945-1952, Truman, Containment, the New Deal, and the Red Scare
Literature: To Kill a Mockingbird
March 13th: Spring Break: NO CLASS/NO HOMEWORK
March 20th: A New Frontier and a Great Society, 1960-1968, Civil Rights, The Great Society, Vietnam, the Sixties
Literature: “The Things They Carried” Tim O’Brien, OBSS 688,
Beat Generation/Bob Dylan
March 27th: Rebellion and Reaction, 1960s and 1970s, “The Youth Revolt,” Social Activism Spreads, Nixon and the Revival of Conservatism, Thawing Cold War, Watergate
Literature: The Absolutely True Story of a Part-Time Indian
April 3rd: Conservative Revival, 1977-1990, Carter Presidency, Rise of Ronald Reagan, Anti-Soviet Foreign Policy, George H.W. Bush
Literature: The Absolutely True Story of a Part-Time Indian
April 10th: Twenty-first Century America, 1993-Present, Clinton Presidency, A Chaotic Start to a New Century, Second-Term Blues, and Obama Presidency
Final essay due
April 17th: Final exam (Jeopardy Style + In Class Essay)
April 24th: Last Day of Class (End of Year Party)/Parent conferences
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