Tuesday through Friday, February 16-19, 2016
Day 1/2: Capstone Research in Library
Period 7, Tuesday, 2/16
Period 4&5, Wednesday, 2/17
Period 3, Thursday, 2/18
Day 1/2: The New Imperialism
Period 3, Tuesday, 2/16,
Period 7, Wednesday, 2/17,
and Periods 4&5, Thursday, 2/18:
In-class: Discuss the primary source handouts:
Primary source #1: Friedrich Fabri, "Does Germany Need Colonies?".
Primary source #2: Rudyard Kipling, "The White Man's Burden".
Primary source #4: Gandhi, "Facing the British in India".
Review the homework textbook reading, “Mass Politics and Imperial Domination: Democracy and the New Imperialism, 1870-1914,” in The West in the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury, pp. 609-623, take notes on the following key terms, and develop an answer to the related questions.
Key Terms: the new imperialism, the scramble for Africa, the Boer War, the Opium Wars, the Taiping Rebellion, the Meiji Restoration and the Russo-Japanese War.
Key question#1: What are the causes for the rise of imperialism during this period?
Key question#2: What are the legacies of 19th-century European imperialism for both Western and non-Western peoples?
Key question#3: How did peoples in Africa, the Middle East and Asia respond to the rise of a new wave of European imperialism in the late 19th century?
Homework for Day 3: Read the secondary source handouts (see the selected documents below), identify the arguments and evidence of the secondary sources, and use these sources to build your notes on the leading questions, i.e., the causes and effects of the new imperialism and how the non-Western world responded to it.
Secondary source#1: Eric J. Hobsbawm, "The Age of Empire".
Secondary source #2: Carlton J. H. Hayes, "Imperialism as a Nationalistic Phenomenon".
Secondary source #4: Margaret Strobel, "Gender and Empire.
Secondary source #5: Pankaj Mishra, "From the Ruins of Empire", Prologue.
Day 3: The Responses of the Non-Western World to Imperialism.
In-class: Discuss the secondary source arguments and evidence on European imperialism and non-western responses to imperialism.
Homework over the weekend: Work on capstone proposals, or decide on final exam; work on revising final drafts of the independent research papers.
No comments:
Post a Comment