Admission requirements
(For History students): BSA norm and both first-year Themacolleges passed.
Description
This course examines the aftermath of the American Civil War, with particular reference to the southern states. It falls into two parts: the period of Reconstruction (1865-1877) and the period of the “New South” (1878-1914). During the first part we study the conflicting visions of President Andrew Johnson and the Republican Party for restoring the Union and defining the status of ex-slaves, the constitutional crisis that it produced, and the enactment by Congress of a plan based upon equak citizenship and black suffrage. After analyzing the violent white resistance that undermined Congressional Reconstruction, we examine the period of the “New South,” during which a system of white supremacy curtailed black rights and restricted voting to whites. The course also examines how blacks sought land, education, and control of their own churches as they responded to the challenge of freedom, and, after 1877, an increasingly oppressive system of racial segregation. The course utilizes books, articles, and primary sources to offers insight into race relations and to illuminate how Reconstruction has affected the course of American politics from 1865 to the present day.
Course objectives
Students will acquire knowledge of, and insight into:
Historical debates over Reconstruction and the New South
American politics and race relations generally
The concept of “American exceptionalism,” especially as applied to historical scholarship over the development of American democracy.
The course will sharpen the student’s ability:
To employ both traditional (print, film) and modern (digital) sources
To formulate and clearly express logical arguments in English (seminar paper/essay) and (optional) Dutch (essay).
To reflect critically upon the relationship between the interpretations of Reconstruction and the New South and ethical values (historical relativism)
To understand the political and contemporary relevance of the subject matter.
Timetable
See here.
Mode of instruction
Seminar
Course Load
Classes: 28 hours
Compulsory weekly reading: 140 hours
Researching and writing essay: 80 hours
Preparing seminar prentation: 32 hours
Assessment method
Attendance: required
Participation in discussion: required
Seminar presentation: 25%
Essay (approx. 6.000 words): 75%
Blackboard
Yes: contains syllabus, reading, articles, documents, and links to websites.
Reading list
Students must buy the following books before the start of the course:
Michael W. Fitzgerald, Splendid Failure: Postwar Reconstruction in the American South (Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2008).
*C. Vann Woodward and William McFeely, The Strange Career of Jim Crow (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001). ### Registration
via uSis.
Contact information
E-mail: Prof. Dr. A. Fairclough
Remarks
Seminar presentations are given in English. Essays may be written in either English or Dutch.