Profile
Benjamin Claude Brower
Associate Professor — Ph.D., 2005, Cornell University
Contact
- E-mail: benbrower@utexas.edu
- Phone: 512-475-6813
- Office: GAR 3.204
- Office Hours: Spring 2013: T 3:30-5:30 p.m.
- Campus Mail Code: B7000
Biography
I came to UT in 2009. Previously I taught at Texas A&M University and was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. (2007-08).
Research interests
I am a historian of modern France and its colonies with a focus on Algeria. My research examines the colonial situation, and its impact on the societies of the colonized and colonizers. My first book, A Desert Named Peace: The Violence of French Empire in the Algerian Sahara, 1844-1902 (2009) tells the story of colonial violence in nineteenth-century Algeria. I am working on a second book project entitled “The Colonial Hajj, 1798-1962.” This explores the history of pilgrimage to Mecca and the Holy Places made by Mulisms subject to French colonial rule. My broader research interests include European imperialism, questions of secularism and Islam, and understanding violence in history.
Courses taught
Writing Violence in History, French Empire: The "West" and "Islam"
Awards, Honors
Albert Hourani Book Award, Middle East Studies Association for A Desert Named Peace, best book in Middle East studies (2010).
David H. Pinkney Prize, Society for French Historical Studies for A Desert Named Peace, best book in French history (2010).
My research has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the French American Foundation, the American Institute for Maghrib Studies, and the Glasscock Center for Humanities Research.
HIS 309L • Western Civ In Mod Times-Pl II
39285 •
Spring 2013
Meets
TTH 200pm-330pm PAR 203
show description
Course Overview: In this course, we examine the central cultural characteristics of the Western heritage after the Reformation and discuss their transformation up to the present. A chronological narrative of the history in question will be provided by the lecturer and the textbook, but the most significant portion of our time together will be devoted to the examination of a number of central questions within western society since the Reformation. We will attempt to formulate an understanding of “western civilization” and its central concerns and transformations, with a particular attention paid to economy and politics in their relationships to culture and freedom. We will discuss such issues as the construction of political authority and its relationship to emerging conceptions of political liberty, revolution, popular sovereignty, and political economy. We will examine and explain the emergence of the central characteristics of modern Western society, including mass society, democracy, colonialism, secularism, political sovereignty, and the nation-state. Focus in the course is away from memorization of factual information about European history and toward reading, discussion, interpretation and criticism of texts that exemplify certain moments in the western tradition. By reading, discussing, analyzing and criticizing these sources, students will receive an introduction to the tasks involved in “thinking like a historian.”
Prerequisites: Students taking this course are assumed to be capable of an informed, critical stance toward the claims of the lecturer. No previous knowledge of the subject matter is assumed.
Possible Texts:
Mark Kishlansky et al., Civilization in the West, vol. 2
Jean Calvin, Golden Book of the True Christian Life
John Locke, Second Treatise of Government
Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders
Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (selections)
Émile Zola, The Ladies’ Paradise
Ernst Jünger, Storm of Steel
J. M. Keynes, The End of Laissez-Faire / Economic Consequences of the Peace (selections)
Franz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth
Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom (selections)
Additional readings will be distributed in class or are available on the Internet
Assignments & Grading:
Compliance with syllabus policy 0%
Compliance with attendance policy 0%
Paper 1 @ 15%
Paper 2 @ 25%
Final paper @ 30%
Average of regular quizzes @ 30% each (I will drop your two lowest scores)
HIS 306N • Intro To Modern North Africa
39115 •
Fall 2012
Meets
MWF 1100am-1200pm PAR 1
show description
COURSE DESCRIPTION:This course presents the major themes of North African history from the sixteenth century to today. North African history intersects several fields of study (European, African, and Middle Eastern studies) and Muslims, Christians, and Jews have made their homes here, marking the region with multi-religious and multi-linguistic traditions. Looking in particular at that part of North Africa known in Arabic as the Maghrib (today’s Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya), the course begins in the early modern Mediterranean period. At this time, merchants and privateers linked Europe and the Middle East from the Maghreb’s ports, and in the interior, caravans of scholars and slaves linked the region to sub-Saharan Africa. Our attention then moves into to the period of European ascendency, when France in particular established itself as the preeminent power in North Africa, beginning with the invasion of Algeria in 1830 and culminating in the 1912 French protectorate in Morocco. The period of European colonial rule came to an end in the decades after the Second World War, and the course concludes with the challenges faced by post-colonial states during the Cold War and the rise of Islamist political opposition movements in the 1990s.
HIS 381 • Transnational Mediterranean
39655 •
Fall 2012
Meets
W 300pm-600pm WAG 112
(also listed as
MES 385 )
show description
The fundamental task of this seminar is to examine the boundaries and frontiers that shape how scholars of the Middle East and Europe conduct their work. The area studies paradigm, common to Anglo-American scholarship, relies upon lines drawn across space, lines that come to us as fixed and unalterable, and they purport to reflect geographic, socio-economic, cultural, and political realities. They are thus taken for granted by most scholars. But boundaries and frontiers demand careful historicization, as well as sustained epistemological critique. Seemingly universal, inevitable, and necessary, they are in fact often contingent are always the result of history and politics. This seminar will engage texts that open a space in which these divisions can be rethought. In particular it will seek works that examine those historical movements that have transgressed or overflowed the boundaries by which an area of the world roughly centered on the Mediterranean Sea has been partitioned.
HIS 309L • Western Civ In Mod Times-Pl II
39109 •
Fall 2011
Meets
MWF 1100am-1200pm PAR 203
show description
Course Overview: In this course, we examine the central cultural characteristics of the Western heritage after the Reformation and discuss their transformation up to the present. A chronological narrative of the history in question will be provided by the lecturer and the textbook, but the most significant portion of our time together will be devoted to the examination of a number of central questions within western society since the Reformation. We will attempt to formulate an understanding of “western civilization” and its central concerns and transformations, with a particular attention paid to economy and politics in their relationships to culture and freedom. We will discuss such issues as the construction of political authority and its relationship to emerging conceptions of political liberty, revolution, popular sovereignty, and political economy. We will examine and explain the emergence of the central characteristics of modern Western society, including mass society, democracy, colonialism, secularism, political sovereignty, and the nation-state. Focus in the course is away from memorization of factual information about European history and toward reading, discussion, interpretation and criticism of texts that exemplify certain moments in the western tradition. By reading, discussing, analyzing and criticizing these sources, students will receive an introduction to the tasks involved in “thinking like a historian.”
Prerequisites: Students taking this course are assumed to be capable of an informed, critical stance toward the claims of the lecturer. No previous knowledge of the subject matter is assumed.
Possible Texts:
Mark Kishlansky et al., Civilization in the West, vol. 2
Jean Calvin, Golden Book of the True Christian Life
John Locke, Second Treatise of Government
Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders
Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (selections)
Émile Zola, The Ladies’ Paradise
Ernst Jünger, Storm of Steel
J. M. Keynes, The End of Laissez-Faire / Economic Consequences of the Peace (selections)
Franz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth
Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom (selections)
Additional readings will be distributed in class or are available on the Internet
Assignments & Grading:
Compliance with syllabus policy 0%
Compliance with attendance policy 0%
Paper 1 @ 15%
Paper 2 @ 25%
Final paper @ 30%
Average of regular quizzes @ 30% each (I will drop your two lowest scores)
HIS 364G • French Empire: The West/Islam
39520 •
Fall 2011
Meets
MWF 200pm-300pm WAG 420
(also listed as
ISL 372, R S 358 )
show description
The great historian of the Mediterranean Sea, Fernand Braudel, wrote that people here “live and breathe with the same rhythms,” meaning that Mediterranean societies have a shared destiny. Today, however, it is common to divide this region into northern and southern halves, variously called the West and East, or Europe and Islam. Our work in this course will critically consider the development of these categories, and their use in history down to the present. The focus will be on the role of modern France and France’s Mediterranean empire, but we shall examine other cases and contexts as well.
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in library.
Mouloud Feraoun, The Poor Man's Son: Menrad, Kabyle Schoolteacher (University of Virginia Press, 2005). ISBN: 0813923263.
‘Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti, Napoleon In Egypt: Al-Jabarti's Chronicle Of The French Occupation, 1798. (Markus Wiener Publishers, 1993) ISBN: 1558763376.
Susan G. Miller, Disorienting Encounters: Travels of a Moroccan Scholar in France. (ISBN: 0520074629)
Edward Said, Orientalism (Vintage, 1979) ISBN: 039474067X
Joan W. Scott, The Politics of the Veil (Princeton UP, 2007). ISBN: 0691125430
John V. Tolan, Saracens: Islam in the Medieval European Imagination (Columbia UP, 2002). ISBN: 0231123337.
Lucette Valensi, The Birth of the Despot, Venice and the Sublime Port. (Cornell UP, 2009) ISBN: 0801475430.
Required material in the course also includes music, photographs, films and various visual texts such as music videos that will be played/projected in class.
Grades:
Midterm 25%
Final Exam 35%
Writing 25%
Participation 15%
Grade Scale: 90 – 100% = A; 80 – 89% =B; 70 – 79% = C; 69 – 60% = D; below 60% = F.
HIS 364G • Introduction To Modern Algeria
39885 •
Spring 2011
Meets
MWF 900am-1000am GAR 2.128
(also listed as
MES 323K )
show description
This course presents the major themes of Algerian history from the sixteenth century to today. This story begins in 1516 and the Ottoman period, when formidable fleets of Algerian corsairs struggled with Spanish, French, and even American ships in the “jihad al-bahr” (jihad at sea). The course ends after a grueling but brilliantly won war of national liberation against colonial France (1954-62) became a revolution betrayed, when Algeria entered a period of terrorism in the 1990s. Algeria’s history intersects several fields of study (European, African, and Middle Eastern studies) and it is a country that has been home to Muslims, Christians, and Jews, speaking many different languages. The course seeks to give expression to these multi-religious and multi-linguistic traditions. Therefore, students should be ready to cross methodological and cultural borders.
Students will learn the skills of historical analysis and interpretation, along with the material described above. This will include the ability to grasp the complexity of historical debates and rethink received knowledge and concepts in light of new evidence. Coursework and evaluations will focus on students’ ability to articulate coherent and sustained arguments in writing and verbally. There are no pre-requisites beyond those generally associated with a course of this level.
Texts
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in library.
- Henri Alleg, The Question (Bison Books, 2006), ISBN: 0803259603
- Assia Djebar, Algerian White (Seven Stories Press, 2003) ISBN: 1583225161.
- Mouloud Feraoun, The Poor Man's Son: Menrad, Kabyle Schoolteacher (University of Virginia Press, 2005). ISBN: 0813923263
- Rachid Mimouni, The Honor of the Tribe: A Novel (William Morrow, 1992) 0688097464
- John Ruedy, Modern Algeria: The Origins and Development of a Nation (Indiana University Press, 2005) ISBN: 0253217822
- Additional required readings noted in schedule of class meetings will be distributed electronically or placed on library reserve.
- Other: Required material in the course also includes music, photographs, films and various visual texts such as music videos.
Grading
Midterm 25%
Final Exam 35%
Writing 25%
Participation 15%
HIS 380L • Violence And Colonialism
39948 •
Spring 2011
Meets
M 300pm-600pm GAR 1.122
(also listed as
MES 381 )
show description
This seminar will rethink the problem of understanding violence in the colonial situation. Much
recent historiography charts new ways to think about how colonial power is produced and
contested through things like architecture, sexuality, statistics, boundaries, definitions, manners,
law, and citizenship, along with all the various configurations that make up a colonial episteme.
It is here, the argument goes, that colonial power--subtle, sophisticated, and generally insidious--
is produced and not out of the end of the gun. The question of violence in its physical
dimensions, such as the body in pain, generally recedes from view in these studies. Thus
although colonial historians today still write under the shadow of Franz Fanon, they have very
little to say about the relationship of violence to political power. As a result, the violence of
colonialism is displaced as somehow not as worthy a subject as these “other spaces of
domination.” Our work in this course will seek ways that colonial historians might reconnect
with the question of violence.
Texts
You will need to purchase the following books or use the library’s copies. Other assigned
readings will be distributed electronically.
1. Shahid Amin, Event, Metaphor, Memory: Chauri Chaura, 1922-1992 (Univ. of
California Press, 1995) ISBN-13: 978-0520087804
2. Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism (Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1973)
ISBN-13: 978-0156701532
3. Etienne Balibar, Race, Nation, Class (Verso, 1991) ISBN-13: 978-0860915423
4. Benjamin Brower, A Desert Named Peace: The Violence of France's Empire in the
Algerian Sahara, 1844-1902 (Columbia UP, 2009) ISBN-13: 978-0231154925
5. Mike Davis, Late Victorian Holocausts: El Niño Famines and the Making of the Third
World
6. Franz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth (Grove Press, 2005) ISBN-13: 978-0802141323
7. Michel Foucault, “Society Must Be Defended”: Lectures at the College de France, 1975-
1976 (Picador, 2003) ISBN-13: 978-0312422660
8. Isabel Hull, Absolute Destruction: Military Culture and the Practices of War in Imperial
Germany (Cornell UP, 2006) ISBN-13: 978-0801472930
9. Priya Satia, Spies in Arabia: The Great War and the Cultural Foundations of Britain's
Covert Empire in the Middle East (Oxford UP, 2009) ISBN-13: 978-0199734801
10. Carl Schmitt, The Nomos of the Earth in the International Law of the Jus Publicum
Europaeum (Telos Press, 2006) ISBN-13: 978-0914386308.
Assignments:
Short response papers: These papers will you help work through the issues of the readings and
yield useful references. You are asked to summarize each week’s reading(s) and develop a brief
critical analysis of the author’s argument, evidence, and methodology. Length: 2 pp., doublespaced,
12 pnt. font. Proofread carefully: correct use of language is expected and will figure in
grading. Due date: These papers are due before each class at 8:00am. You may submit them
electronically in an email attachment.
Final Review Essay: Each student will prepare a final review essay of 10 pages. You will select
a total of 3 books (1-2 one from the course and 1-2 related outside books) on a related theme and
write a review essay. Due date: Last class meeting.
Grading:
Final Paper 40%
Short response papers 35%
Participation 25%
Plus/Minus grading will be used for all grading in this course. The grade scale is as follows:
100-93% = A; 92-90% = A- ; 89-87% = B+ ; 86-83% = B ; 82-80% = B- ; 79-77% = C+ ;
76-73% = C ; 72-70% = C- ; 69-67% = D+ ; 66-63% = D ; 62-60% = D- ; below 60% = F.
HIS 350L • Writing Violence In History
39295 •
Fall 2010
Meets
MWF 900am-1000am PAR 103
show description
Writing Violence in History
HIS 350L-39295
Fall 2010
Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower Telephone: 512-475-6813
Office: Garrison 0.116 Email: benbrower@mail.utexas.edu
Office Hours: M 10:15-11:45; W 3:00-4:00, Class Meeting Times: MWF 9-10am
and by appointment Meeting Place: PAR 103
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Violence has been a constant feature of history yet it is a topic that historians have had trouble understanding and explaining. Many scholars simply ignore violence, dismissing it as an enigmatic disruption of the otherwise intelligible course of history, or as a minor addendum to other human events. This seminar will take a different departure. Violence will be our starting point to understand history.
Endemic and problematic, violence is also ever changing and many hued, making its study especially difficult. This seminar will focus on the skills necessary for the historian working on violent phenomena. We shall examine how historians themselves have explained violent episodes, but we will also look outside of the discipline of history to see how psychoanalysts, anthropologists, novelists, and activists have both understood violence and how they represent it in their work.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
This is a research and writing course. Its objectives are threefold: (1) learn the methodologies required for the interdisciplinary study of violence, (2) develop experience working in primary historical sources, and (3) master advanced writing skills. There are no pre-requisites beyond those generally required for a course of this level.
REQUIRED TEXTS:
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in the library.
- Talal Asad, On Suicide Bombing (Columbia University Press: 2007). ISBN 0231141521.
- Alain Corbin, Village of Cannibals (Harvard University Press: 2006). ISBN 0674939018.
- Sven Lindqvist, A History of Bombing (New Press, 2003). ISBN 1565848160.
- Toni Morrison, Beloved (Vintage, 2004). ISBN 1400033411.
- Enzo Traverso, The Origins of Nazi Violence (New Press, 2003). ISBN 1565847881.
Additional required readings, as noted in schedule of class meetings, will be distributed electronically or placed on library reserve.
Other: Required material also includes films and video clips that will be screened in class.
COURSE RULES:
- Laptops are to be used only for taking notes. Students are expected to disable the Internet accessibility function of all electronic devises used in class. Thus there will be no use of email, web browsers, or other software that accesses the Internet during our meetings. If you would like the record the lectures, please see me first.
- Cell phone use of any sort, including text messages, will not be tolerated.
ASSIGNMENTS:
I. Writing: There will be two short writing assignments and a final research paper. There is no final exam. Additional informal writing exercises will be assigned periodically during the semester.
1. Two Short Papers: Each of these will help you prepare the conceptualization and execution of the final paper. In the first writing assignment, you will discuss some of the problems related to writing the history of violence as seen in our first group of readings. In the second assignment you will provide a research proposal and bibliography for your final paper. Each of these papers will go through a process of peer review of a first draft, revisions, and evaluation and grading by the instructor. More details will be given in class. The due dates are listed below. Alternate project for second short assignment: Complete a full application for the Undergraduate Research Fellowship at UT. See guidelines at http://www.utexas.edu/research/attach/admin/awards/URF0910App.pdf . This project can then be submitted to the Awards Committee for actual consideration in the Spring Semester; the awards go up to $1,000. The deadline Monday, 1 February 2010.
2. Final Paper: This will be a major piece of research and writing. You are expected to undertake a substantial research project focused on a topic and group of historical sources of your choosing (with certain exceptions that will be explained in class). The project will develop in several stages. You will receive instructor review and commentary on a rough draft before turning in the final version 15-20 pages in length. The due dates are listed below.
II. Discussions and Presentations:
1. All students are expected to be well prepared for discussions. This means having completed the assigned readings and coming with questions to pose to the text that we can work through as a group. Students who fail this will be score poorly in participation points. Shyness is not an excuse for not to participating. If it becomes clear that students as a group are not prepared for discussions, they will be required to hand in short written summaries of the readings and turn in written discussion questions at the beginning of our meeting.
2. You will make a short presentation on your final project in class on the dates indicated below. Presenters will briefly describe their topic, goals, and sources, and the audience is expected to respond with helpful, critical questions and commentary. Your grades will be based both on your oral presentation, and on the feedback you offer to your colleagues.
III. Instructor Meetings:
All students are strongly encouraged to meet with me during the course of the semester with any questions and concerns. A required individual conference will take place after turning in the rough draft of the final paper. In this meeting we will discuss revisions for the final paper.
GRADES:
Two Short Papers: 30% (15% each)
Final Essay 50%
Presentation 10%
Participation 10%
Plus/Minus grading will be used for all grading in this course. The grade scale is as follows: 100-93% = A; 92-90% = A- ; 89-87% = B+ ; 86-83% = B ; 82-80% = B- ; 79-77% = C+ ; 76-73% = C ; 72-70% = C- ; 69-67% = D+ ; 66-63% = D ; 62-60% = D- ; below 60% = F.
Extensions: Students who need an extension on the writing assignment must consult me prior to the deadline. Extensions will be granted in the case of exceptional circumstances, as well as documented illness, official university events, religious holy days, and for other university- excused reasons.
ATTENDANCE:
- This is a seminar: attendance, preparation, and active participation in all course sessions are mandatory.
- Please familiarize yourself with the University’s policy concerning excused absences. Unexcused absences as well as lack of preparation and tardiness will impinge upon your final grade: 2 unexcused absences will result in the loss of 1 full letter grade; more than 4 will result in loss of 2 full letter grades.
- Religious Holy Days: By UT Austin policy, please notify me of your pending absence fourteen days prior to the anticipated date of observance of religious holy days. If you must miss a class, an examination, or an assignment for religious observance, I will give you an opportunity to complete the missed work within a reasonable time after the absence.
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HONOR CODE:
The core values of The University of Texas at Austin are learning, discovery, freedom, leadership, individual opportunity, and responsibility. Each member of the university is expected to uphold these values through integrity, honesty, trust, fairness, and respect toward peers and community.
All work for this course will be that of the student and original contributions. Writing done for a previous course cannot be used to fulfill assignments in this course. I militantly pursue cases of suspected plagiarism and cheating.
*** Late assignments are penalized, plagiarism is prosecuted***
Documented Disabilities
The University of Texas at Austin provides upon request appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. For more information, contact Services for Students with Disabilities at 471-6259 (voice) or 232-2937 (video phone.)
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE OF CLASS MEETINGS, Fall 2010
(Subject to Revisions and Changes)
WEEK ONE: August 25 & 27
Wednesday: Introduction
Friday: Defining Violence
WEEK TWO: August 30-Sept. 3
Writing Violence: The Problem of Representation
Monday: Homer, Iliad, selections
Wednesday: Simone Weil, “The Iliad, or the Poem of Force”
Friday: Violence and Aesthetics: view and discuss Homer in film (video selections)
WEEK THREE: September 6-10
Writing Violence: Trauma & Memory
Monday: Labor Day Holiday, NO CLASS
Wednesday: Morrison, Beloved, pp. 1-165
Friday: Morrison, Beloved, pp. 169-275
WEEK FOUR: September 13-17
Writing Violence: Critical Histories of Violence
Monday: Lindqvist, A History of Bombing, pp-1-116
Wednesday: Lindqvist, A History of Bombing, pp 116-186
Friday: View and discuss “Hearts and Minds” (1974) (film selections)
***Draft of first writing assignment due***
WEEK FIVE: September 20-24
Monday: Peer Review
Wednesday: Library Tour
Friday: Violence and the Problem of Sources
***Revised version of first writing assignment due***
WEEK SIX: September 27-Oct. 1
Analysis and Explanation: State Violence and Genocide
Monday: Traverso, The Origins of Nazi Violence, pp 1-99
Wednesday: Traverso, The Origins of Nazi Violence, pp 101-153
Friday: Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life”
WEEK SEVEN: October 4-8
Analysis and Explanation: Violence, Sexuality, and Gender
Monday: View film, “The Stoning of Soraya M.” (2008) prt. I
Wednesday: View film, “The Stoning of Soraya M.” (2008) prt. II
Friday: Joan Scott, “Gender A Useful Category of Analysis”
WEEK EIGHT: October 11-15
Analysis and Explanation: Everyday Violence
Monday: P. Farmer, "An Anthropology of Structural Violence"
Wednesday: P. Bourdieu, Structural Violence
Friday: EP Thompson, “The Moral Economy of the Crowd”
WEEK NINE: October 18-22
Analysis and Explanation: Popular Violence
Monday: Corbin, Village of Cannibals, pp 1-60
***Draft of second writing assignment due***
Wednesday: Peer Review
Friday: Corbin, Village of Cannibals, pp 61-119
***Revised copy of second writing assignment handed in.***
WEEK TEN: October 25-29
Analysis and Explanation: Colonialism and Dirty Wars
Monday: Franz Fanon, Wretched of the Earth, selections
Wednesday: Brower, A Desert Named Peace, selections
Friday: Priya Satia, “The Defense of Inhumanity: Air Control and the British Idea of Arabia”
WEEK ELEVEN: November 1-5
Rethinking Political Violence Today
Monday: Talal Asad, On Suicide Bombing (In Full)
Wednesday: Project Presentations
Friday: Project Presentations
WEEK TWELVE: November 8-12
Monday: Project Presentations
Wednesday: Project Presentations
Friday: Project Presentations
***Draft of Final Paper Due***
WEEK THIRTEEN: November 15-19
Monday-Friday:
No Class, Individual Paper Consultations
WEEK FOURTEEN: November 22-26
Monday: Writing Progress Discussion
Wednesday: Writing Progress Discussion
Friday: Thanksgiving Holiday
WEEK FIFTEEN: November 29-Dec. 3
Monday: Film “War Photographer” (2001)
Friday: Conclusion
***FINAL PAPER DUE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3***
This course contains a Writing flag.
HIS 364G • French Empire: The West/Islam
39460 •
Fall 2010
Meets
MWF 100pm-200pm WAG 420
(also listed as
ISL 372 )
show description
French Empire: The “West” and “Islam.”
HIS 364G- 9460/ISL 372- 41510
Fall 2010
Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower Telephone: 512-475-6813
Office: Garrison 0.116 Email: benbrower@mail.utexas.edu
Office Hours: M 10:15-11:45; W 3:00-4:00, Class Meeting Times: MWF 1:00-2:00pm
and by appointment Meeting Place: WAG 420
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Modern French imperialism advanced its claims to global power through a division of the world into a two parts. On one hand was a space of civilization and modernity and, on the other, there was a primitive space inhabited by people who needed to be liberated or dominated. In the Mediterranean world this thinking erected a frontier running across the middle of the sea. In the north there was the “West” or “Europe,” and in the south there was the “East” or “Islam.” The West, represented by France, was construed as the conveyor of modern values and progress, while the East was a place of archaism and reaction that needed to be renewed, by force if necessary. French thinkers called this the “civilizing mission,” and it justified France’s colonization of Muslim countries in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Many parts of this thinking have survived the colonial era and mark attitudes in contemporary, post-colonial France. Religion is generally offered as the decisive category determining these divisions, with the Muslim societies of Africa and the Middle East set off as somehow essentially different and incompatible with France and its Christian or secular traditions.
Paying special attention to the religious and secular dimensions of the problem, our work in this course will critically consider how these cultural and political frontiers developed, and their use in contests for power. The focus will be on modern France and the Middle Eastern countries that fell under French rule in the 19th and 20th centuries, particularly Algeria, but the course will examine these questions within a broader trans-national context across several historical periods.
COURSE OBJECTIVES: Students will learn the skills of historical analysis and interpretation, along with the empirical material associated with the course itself. This will include the ability to grasp the complexity of historical debates and rethink received understandings and concepts in light of new evidence. Coursework and evaluations will focus on students’ ability to articulate coherent and sustained arguments in writing and verbally. There are no pre-requisites beyond those generally associated with a course of this level.
REQUIRED TEXTS:
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in library.
- Kateb Yacine, Nedjma (University of Virginia Press, 2001). ISBN-13: 978-0813913131
- Anonymous, The Song of Roland (Penguin, 1990) ISBN-13: 978-0140445329
- Abdellah Hammoudi, A Season in Mecca: Narrative of a Pilgrimage (Hill and Wang, 2006) ISBN-13:978-0809076093
- Edward Said, Orientalism (Vintage, 1979) ISBN: 039474067X
- Joan W. Scott, The Politics of the Veil (Princeton UP, 2007) ISBN: 0691125430
- Lucette Valensi, The Birth of the Despot, Venice and the Sublime Port (Cornell UP, 2009) ISBN:0801475430
Additional required readings, as noted in schedule of class meetings, will be distributed electronically or placed on library reserve.
Other: Required material in the course also includes music, photographs, films and various visual texts such as music videos that will be played/projected in class.
COURSE RULES:
- Laptops are to be used only for taking notes. Students are expected to disable the Internet accessibility function of all electronic devises used in class. Thus there will be no use of email, web browsers, or other software that accesses the Internet during our meetings. If you would like the record the lectures, please see me first.
- Cell phone use of any sort, including text messages, will not be tolerated.
ASSIGNMENTS:
- •Exams: There will be one midterm and a comprehensive final exam. Both exams will consist of analytical ID’s and essays. A list of potential ID’s and questions will be available to help prepare for the exams. You will be expected to respond with material from the readings and lectures. SEE BELOW FOR EXAM DATES.
Writing Assignment: You will prepare a historiographical essay. This will be an analysis of debates concerning Edward Said’s book Orientalism. The essay will deal with Said’s argument and evidence in the book itself and critically evaluate three outside reviews of it. Your task is to work through the significant controversies concerning Orientalism and examine the role of interpretation in the production of historical knowledge. More details will be given in class (7pp. minimum. DUE DATE: Monday, November 16).
Discussion Questions: Much of our course work will center on readings and discussions (about one each week). You are required to prepare in advance a question for our discussion. These will be typed and turned in. During discussions, each student will pose their question.
GRADES:
Midterm 25%
Final Exam 35%
Writing 25%
Participation 15%
Plus/Minus grading will be used for all grading in this course. The grade scale is as follows: 100-93% = A; 92-90% = A- ; 89-87% = B+ ; 86-83% = B ; 82-80% = B- ; 79-77% = C+ ; 76-73% = C ; 72-70% = C- ; 69-67% = D+ ; 66-63% = D ; 62-60% = D- ; below 60% = F.
ATTENDANCE:
- Attendance, preparation, and active participation in all course sessions are mandatory.
- Please familiarize yourself with the University’s policy concerning excused absences. Unexcused absences will impinge upon your final grade: 2 unexcused absences will result in the loss of 1 full letter grade; more than 4 will result in loss of 2 full letter grades.
- Religious Holy Days: By University policy, please notify me of your pending absence fourteen days prior to the anticipated date of observance of religious holy days. If you must miss a class, an examination, or an assignment, for religious observance, I will give you an opportunity to complete the missed work within a reasonable time after the absence.
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HONOR CODE:
The core values of The University of Texas at Austin are learning, discovery, freedom, leadership, individual opportunity, and responsibility. Each member of the university is expected to uphold these values through integrity, honesty, trust, fairness, and respect toward peers and community.
All work for this course will be that of the student and original contributions. Writing done for a previous course cannot be used to fulfill assignments in this course. I militantly pursue cases of suspected plagiarism and cheating.
*** Late assignments are penalized, plagiarism is prosecuted***
DISABILITIES:
The University of Texas at Austin provides upon request appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. For more information, contact Services for Students with Disabilities at 471-6259 (voice) or 232-2937 (video phone).
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE OF CLASS MEETINGS, Fall 2010
(Subject to Revisions and Changes)
WEEK ONE: August 25 & 27
Wednesday: Introduction
Friday: The Question of Borders
WEEK TWO: August 30-Sept. 3
The Early Example of Muslims in Europe
Monday, Concepts: “Europe” and “Islam”
Wednesday, The “Covivencia” in Medieval Spain Debate
Friday, Minorities and the Reconquista
WEEK THREE: September 6-10
The Question of Civilizations
Monday, No Class, Labor Day Holiday
Wednesday, The Crusades
Friday, Discussion: Huntington, “The Clash of Civilizations?”
WEEK FOUR: September 13-17
“Les Croisades”or “al-ḥurūb al-ṣalībiyya”: The Crusades and their Memory
Monday, The “Saracen”
Wednesday, Discussion: The Song of Rolland (IN FULL)
Friday, The Crusader Renaissance in the Nineteenth Century
WEEK FIVE: September 20-24
Early Modern Mediterranean Encounters
Monday, Europe and the Ottoman Empire, pt. 1
Wednesday, Europe and the Ottoman Empire, pt.
Friday, Discussion: Lucette Valensi, The Birth of the Despot (IN FULL)
WEEK SIX: September 27-Oct. 1
European Imperialism
Monday, Bonaparte in Egypt pt. 1
Wednesday, Bonaparte in Egypt pt. 2: Slides, The Description of Egypt
Friday, Discussion: al-Jabarti, Napoleon In Egypt (selections)
WEEK SEVEN: October 4-8
The Colonial Experience in Algeria
Monday, Algeria, 1830–1962
Wednesday, Discussion: Kateb Yacine, Nedjma pt. 1
Friday, Discussion: Kateb Yacine, Nedjma pt. 2
WEEK EIGHT: October 11-15
Republican France and Muslim Reformers
Monday, Discussion: The Renan and al-Afghani debate, 1883
Wednesday, Marianne and the Prophet
Friday, The Islamic Reform Movement and the Republic
WEEK NINE: October 18-22
Monday, Review
Wednesday, ***MID TERM EXAM***
Friday, How to Read Orientalism, Theory and Method
WEEK TEN: October 25-29
Representations and Power
Monday, European Orientalism in Image and Text
Wednesday, Discussion: Said, Orientalism pt. 1 (pp. xv.-110)
Friday, Discussion: Said, Orientalism, pt. 2 (pp. 284-352)
WEEK ELEVEN: November 1-5
Globalized Islam
Monday, Muslim Pilgrimage to Mecca and the Holy Places
Wednesday, Discussion: Abdellah Hammoudi, A Season in Mecca (Chpt. 1 pp. 3-8; Chpts. 2-6 in full;and Chpt
9 in full. Total ca. 150pp.)
Friday, Immigration and Islam in France
WEEK TWELVE: November 8-12
The Post-Colonial Era: Muslims in France, France and its Muslims
Monday, A New World Order?: Post-Cold War Society and Racism
Wednesday, Discussion: Abdelmalek Sayad, The Suffering of the Immigrant (selections)
Friday, Music Videos: Dahmane El Harrachi, “Ya Rayah” (ca. 1975) & 113, “Princes de la ville”
(2000) “Banlieu” (2005)
WEEK THIRTEEN: November 15-19
Assimilation, Integration and the Right to be Different
Monday, French Secularism pt. 1
***Orientalism Papers Due, Monday, November 15***
Wednesday, French Secularism pt. 2
Friday, Film: “La Haine” (1995), pt. 1
WEEK FOURTEEN: November 22-26
Monday, Discussion: Joan W. Scott, The Politics of the Veil (IN FULL)
Wednesday, Film: “La Haine” (1995), pt. 2
Friday: Thanksgiving Holiday
WEEK FIFTEEN: November 29-Dec. 3
New Citizens in Old Europe
Monday, Review
Wednesday, Discussion: E. Balibar, We, the People of Europe?: Reflections on Transnational Citizenship (selections)
Friday, Conclusion
***FINAL EXAM: Tuesday, December 14, 9:00-12:00 noon***
HIS 364G • Introduction To Modern Algeria
39813 •
Spring 2010
Meets
MWF 900-1000 PAR 1
(also listed as
MES 323K )
show description
INTRODUCTION TO MODERN ALGERIA
HIS 364G- 39813/ MES 323K- 42247
Spring 2010
Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower
Office: Garrison 0.116
Office Hours: M 10:15-11:45; W 3:00-4:00, and by appointment
Telephone: 512-475-6994
Email: benbrower@mail.utexas.edu
Class Meeting Times: MWF 9:00-10:00pm
Meeting Place: PAR 1
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
This course presents the major themes of Algerian history from the sixteenth century to today. This story begins in 1516 and the Ottoman period, when formidable fleets of Algerian corsairs struggled with Spanish, French, and even American ships in the “jihad al-bahr” (jihad at sea). The course ends after a grueling but brilliantly won war of national liberation against colonial France (1954-62) became a revolution betrayed, when Algeria entered a period of terrorism in the 1990s. Algeria’s history intersects several fields of study (European, African, and Middle Eastern studies) and it is a country that has been home to Muslims, Christians, and Jews, speaking many different languages. The course seeks to give expression to these multi-religious and multi-linguistic traditions. Therefore, students should be ready to cross methodological and cultural borders.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
Students will learn the skills of historical analysis and interpretation, along with the material described above. This will include the ability to grasp the complexity of historical debates and rethink received knowledge and concepts in light of new evidence. Coursework and evaluations will focus on students’ ability to articulate coherent and sustained arguments in writing and verbally. There are no pre-requisites beyond those generally associated with a course of this level.
REQUIRED TEXTS:
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in library.
- Henri Alleg, The Question (Bison Books, 2006), ISBN: 0803259603
- Assia Djebar, Algerian White (Seven Stories Press, 2003) ISBN: 1583225161.
- 3. Mouloud Feraoun, The Poor Man's Son: Menrad, Kabyle Schoolteacher (University of Virginia Press, 2005). ISBN: 0813923263
- Rachid Mimouni, The Honor of the Tribe: A Novel (William Morrow, 1992) 0688097464
- John Ruedy, Modern Algeria: The Origins and Development of a Nation (Indiana University Press, 2005) ISBN: 0253217822
Additional required readings noted in schedule of class meetings will be distributed electronically or placed on library reserve.
Other: Required material in the course also includes music, photographs, films and various visual texts such as music videos.
COURSE RULES:
- Students are expected to disable the Internet accessibility function of all electronic devises used in class.
- Cell phone use of any sort will not be tolerated.
ASSIGNMENTS:
- Exams: There will be one midterm and a comprehensive final exam. These exams will consist of analytical ID’s and essays. A list of potential ID’s and questions will be distributed to prepare for the exams. SEE BELOW FOR DATES.
- Short response papers: In these papers you are asked to write four brief papers on the each of the books (Alleg, Djebar, Feraoun, Mimouni) we will read. You will summarize and analyze how each fits into the themes of Algerian history. Length: 2-3 pp., double-spaced, 12 pnt. font. Proofread carefully: correct use of language is expected and will figure in grading. Due dates: in the class meeting scheduled for discussion of each book.
Grades:
Midterm 25%
Final Exam 35%
Writing 25%
Participation 15%
Plus/Minus grading will be used for all grading in this course. The grade scale is as follows:
100-93% = A; 92-90% = A- ; 89-87% = B+ ; 86-83% = B ; 82-80% = B- ; 79-77% = C+ ; 76-73% = C ; 72-70% = C- ; 69-67% = D+ ; 66-63% = D ; 62-60% = D- ; below 60% = F.
ATTENDANCE:
- Attendance, preparation, and active participation in all course sessions are mandatory.
- Please familiarize yourself with the University’s policy concerning excused absences. Unexcused absences will impinge upon your final grade: 2 unexcused absences will result in the loss of 1 full letter grade; more than 4 will result in loss of 2 full letter grades.
- Religious Holy Days: By University policy, please notify me of your pending absence fourteen days prior to the anticipated date of observance of religious holy days. If you must miss a class, an examination, or an assignment, for religious observance, I will give you an opportunity to complete the missed work within a reasonable time after the absence.
University of Texas Honor Code
The core values of The University of Texas at Austin are learning, discovery, freedom, leadership, individual opportunity, and responsibility. Each member of the university is expected to uphold these values through integrity, honesty, trust, fairness, and respect toward peers and community.
All work for this course will be that of the student and original contributions. I militantly pursue cases of suspected plagiarism and cheating.
*** Late assignments are penalized, plagiarism is prosecuted***
Disabilities
The University of Texas at Austin provides accommodations for students with disabilities. Contact Services for Students with Disabilities at 471-6259 or 232-2937 (video phone).
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE OF CLASS MEETINGS
(Subject to Revisions and Changes)
WEEK ONE: January 20 & 22
Introduction
Wednesday: Introduction
Friday: The Question of Borders
WEEK TWO: January 25-29
Algeria and the Mediterranean World
Monday, Space and Time in the Maghreb
Wednesday, Algerian Geography
Friday, The Sahara
WEEK THREE: February 1-5
Ottoman Algeria and the World around It
Monday, Discussion: Braudel, “The Longue Durée”
Wednesday, Algeria’s Cities
Friday, Mediterranean Trade
WEEK FOUR: February 8-12 (Read Reudy, pp. 1-44)
Ottoman Algeria and the Jihad at Sea
Monday, “Christians of Allah”: Captives and Slaves
Wednesday, Discussion: “Captivity Narratives”
Friday, Uncle Sam in Barbary and the Barbary Wars
WEEK FIVE: February 22-26 (Read Reudy, pp. 45-)
The French Invasion & Algerian Responses, 1830-39
Monday, Prelude: Bonaparte in Egypt
Wednesday, The French Revolution and the End of Ottoman Algeria
Friday, Algerian Notables React
WEEK SIX: March 1-5 (Read Reudy, pp. -79)
The Total Conquest of Algeria, 1839-57
Monday, Extermination, Expulsion, or Accommodation: The “Indigenous Question”
Wednesday, Discussion: “Abdelkader on Jihad”
Friday, The Conquest of the Sahara
WEEK SEVEN: March 8-12
Monday, Mid-Term Review
Wednesday, ***MID TERM EXAM***
Friday, Historians views of French Empire
WEEK EIGHT: March 15-19
Spring Break
WEEK NINE: March 22-26 (Read Reudy, pp. 80-113)
Colonial Governmentality, 1871-1930
Monday, The Land Question & the Saint Simonians
Wednesday, France’s Nationalization of Islam & the “Arab Kingdom”
Friday, French Algeria at 100 years, the 1830 Centenary
WEEK TEN: March 29-April 2 (Read Reudy, pp. 114-155)
Reform Movements & The Rise of Nationalism
Monday, Emir Khaled & the Young Algerians
Wednesday, Discussion: Mouloud Feraoun, The Poor Man's Son (IN FULL)
Friday, Islamic Reform Movement & Algerian Nationalists
WEEK ELEVEN: April 5-9 (Read Reudy, pp. 156-194)
The Algerian War of Independence, 1954-62
Monday, Why War?
Wednesday, Discussion: Alleg, The Question
Friday, The FLN’s Military and Diplomatic Victory
WEEK TWELVE: April 12-16 (Read Reudy, pp. 195-230)
The Triumphs and Trials of Independence
Monday, The FLN State and Society
Wednesday, Ben Bella to Boumedienne
Friday, Discussion: Mimouni, The Honor of the Tribe (IN FULL)
Film: Omar Gatlato (Directed by M. Allouache, 1976), screening time TBA
WEEK THIRTEEN: April 19-23
Algeria’s Other Wilaya: France
Monday, Algerian Immigration to France, Emigration from Algeria
Wednesday, Post-Colonial France and Its Muslims
Friday, Music Videos: Dahmane El Harrachi, “Ya Raya” & 113, “Princes de la ville” (2000) “Banlieu” (2005)
WEEK FOURTEEN: April 26-30 (Read Reudy, pp. 231-288)
Years of Terror 1988-1999
Monday, The Unraveling: October 1988 & Rise of the Islamist Opposition
Wednesday, A Civil War or a War on Civilians?
Friday, Discussion: Djebar, Algerian White [IN FULL]
Film: Bab El-Oued City (Directed by M. Allouache, 1994), screening time TBA
WEEK FIFTEEN: May 3-7
Conclusion: Algeria at a Global Crossroad
Monday, Neo-Liberalism and the Revolutionary Legacy: The Harraga
Wednesday, Blowback: Al-Qaeda and the “War on Terror” in Algeria
Friday, Conclusion
***FINAL EXAM Wednesday, May 12, 7:00–10:00 pm***
HIS 388K • Colonl Situatn Algeria/Beyond
39997 •
Spring 2010
Meets
M 300pm-600pm PAR 8A
(also listed as
MES 381 )
show description
Development of Middle Eastern history since the beginning of modern times.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
HIS 350L • Writing Violence In History-W
40066 •
Fall 2009
Meets
MWF 900-1000 PAR 103
show description
Writing Violence in History
HIST 350L-40066
Fall 2009
Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower
Office: Garrison 0.116 (temp. office until 30 September: Garrison 0.112)
Office Hours: M 10:15-11:45; W 4:00-5:00, and by appointment
Telephone: 512-475-6994
Email: benbrower@mail.utexas.edu
Class Meeting Times: MWF 9:00-10:00am
Meeting Place: PAR 103
COURSE DESCRIPTION & OBJECTIVES:
Violence has been a constant feature of history yet it is a topic that historians have had trouble understanding and explaining. Endemic and problematic, violence is also ever changing and many hued, making its study especially difficult. This seminar will focus on the skills necessary for the historian working on violent phenomena. We shall examine how historians themselves have approached episodes of violence, but we will also look outside of the discipline of history to see how psychoanalysts, anthropologists, novelists, and activists have both understood violence and how they represent it in their work. This is a research and writing course. Its objectives are threefold: learn the methodologies required for the interdisciplinary study of violence, develop experience working in primary historical sources, and master advanced writing skills. There are no pre-requisites beyond those generally required for a course of this level.
REQUIRED TEXTS:
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in the library.
• Talal Asad, On Suicide Bombing (Columbia University Press: 2007). ISBN 0231141521.
• Alain Corbin, Village of Cannibals (Harvard University Press: 2006). ISBN 0674939018.
• Sven Lindqvist, A History of Bombing (New Press, 2003). ISBN 1565848160.
• Toni Morrison, Beloved (Vintage, 2004). ISBN 1400033411.
• Enzo Traverso, The Origins of Nazi Violence (New Press, 2003). ISBN 1565847881.
• Georges Vigarello, A History of Rape: Sexual Violence in France from the 16th to the 20th Century (Polity Press, 2001), ISBN: 0745621708.
Additional required readings, as noted in schedule of class meetings, will be distributed electronically or placed on library reserve.
Other: Required material in the course also includes several films and video clips that will be screened in class.
COURSE RULES:
• Students are expected to disable the Internet accessibility function of all electronic devises used in class.
• Cell phone use of any sort will not be tolerated.
ASSIGNMENTS:
I. Writing: There will be two short writing assignments and a final research paper. There is no final exam. Additional informal writing exercises will be assigned periodically during the semester.
1. Two Short Papers: Each of these will help you prepare the conceptualization and execution of the final paper. In the first writing assignment, you will discuss some of the problems related to writing the history of violence as seen in our first group of readings. In the second assignment you will provide a research proposal and bibliography for your final paper. Each of these papers will go through a process of peer review of a first draft, revision, and evaluation and grading by the instructor. More details will be given in class. The due dates are listed below.
Alternate Project for Short Paper #2: Complete a full application for the Undergraduate Research Fellowship at UT. See guidelines at http://www.utexas.edu/research/attach/admin/awards/URF0910App.pdf .
This project can then be submitted to the Awards Committee for actual consideration in the Spring Semester; the awards go up to $1,000. The deadline is Monday, 1 February 2010.
2. Final Paper: This will be a major piece of research and writing. You are expected to undertake a substantial research project focused on a topic and group of historical sources of your choosing. You will receive instructor review and commentary on a rough draft before turning in a final version 15-20 pages in length. The due date is our last class meeting, as indicated below.
II. Discussions and Presentations:
1. All students are expected to be prepared for discussions. This means having completed the assigned readings and coming with questions to pose to the text that we can work through as a group. Students who fail this will be score poorly in participation points. Shyness is not an excuse for failing to participate. If it becomes clear that students as a group are not prepared for discussions, they will be required to hand in short written summaries of the readings and turn in written discussion questions at the beginning of our meeting.
2. You will make a short presentation on your final project in class on the dates indicated below. Presenters will briefly describe their interests, goals, and sources, and the audience is expected to respond with helpful, critical questions and commentary. Your grades will be based both on your oral presentation, and on the feedback you offer to your colleagues.
III. Instructor Meetings:
All students are strongly encouraged to meet with me during the course of the semester with any questions and concerns. A required individual conference will take place after turning in the rough draft of the final paper. In this meeting we will discuss revisions for the final paper.
GRADES:
Two Short Papers: 30% (15% each)
Final Essay 50%
Presentation 10%
Participation 10%
Plus/Minus grading will be used for all grading in this course. The grade scale is as follows:
100-93% = A; 92-90% = A- ; 89-87% = B+ ; 86-83% = B ; 82-80% = B- ; 79-77% = C+ ; 76-73% = C ; 72-70% = C- ; 69-67% = D+ ; 66-63% = D ; 62-60% = D- ; below 60% = F.
Extensions: Students who need an extension on the writing assignment must consult me prior to the deadline. Extensions will be granted only in the case of exceptional circumstances, as well as documented illness, official university events, religious holy days, and for other university-excused reasons. All unapproved late essays will be subject to a penalty of 1/3 of the final grade during the first seven days, after that half of the grade will be lost.
ATTENDENCE:
• This is a seminar: Attendance, preparation, and active participation in all course sessions are mandatory.
• Please familiarize yourself with the University’s policy concerning excused absences. Unexcused absences as well as lack of preparation and tardiness will impinge upon your final grade: 2 unexcused absences will result in the loss of 1 full letter grade; more than 4 will result in loss of 2 full letter grades.
• Religious Holy Days: By UT Austin policy, please notify me of your pending absence fourteen days prior to the anticipated date of observance of religious holy days. If you must miss a class, an examination, or an assignment for religious observance, I will give you an opportunity to complete the missed work within a reasonable time after the absence.
University of Texas Honor Code
The core values of The University of Texas at Austin are learning, discovery, freedom, leadership, individual opportunity, and responsibility. Each member of the university is expected to uphold these values through integrity, honesty, trust, fairness, and respect toward peers and community.
All work for this course will be that of the student and original contributions. Writing done for a previous course cannot be used to fulfill assignments in this course. I militantly pursue cases of suspected plagiarism and cheating.
*** Late assignments are penalized, plagiarism is prosecuted***
Documented Disabilities
The University of Texas at Austin provides upon request appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. For more information, contact Services for Students with Disabilities at 471-6259 (voice) or 232-2937 (video phone).
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE OF CLASS MEETINGS, Fall 2009
(Subject to Revisions and Changes)
WEEK ONE: August 26 & 28
Wednesday: Introduction
Friday: Defining Violence
WEEK TWO: August 31-Sept. 4
Writing Violence: The Problem of Representation
Monday: Homer, Iliad, selections
Wednesday: Simone Weil, “The Iliad, or the Poem of Force”
Friday: Aestheticized violence: view and discuss Homer in film (video selections)
WEEK THREE: September 7-11
Writing Violence: Trauma & Memory
Monday: Labor Day Holiday, No Class
Wednesday: Morrison, Beloved, pp. 1-165
Friday: Morrison, Beloved, pp. 169-275
WEEK FOUR: September 14-18
Writing Violence: Critical Histories of Violence
Monday: Lindqvist, A History of Bombing, pp-1-116
Wednesday: Lindqvist, A History of Bombing, pp 116-186
Friday: View and discuss “Hearts and Minds” (1974) (video selections)
***Draft of first writing assignment due***
WEEK FIVE: September 21-25
Monday: Peer Review
Wednesday: [Brower at The New School]
Friday: [Brower at Cornell University]
***Revised copy handed in***
WEEK SIX: September 28-Oct. 2
Understanding and Explanation: State Violence and Genocide
Monday: Traverso, The Origins of Nazi Violence, pp 1-99
Wednesday: Traverso, The Origins of Nazi Violence, pp 101-153
Friday: Freud and Einstein’s letters on war and peace
WEEK SEVEN: October 5-9
Understanding and Explanation: Violence, Sexuality, and Gender
Monday: Vigarello, A History of Rape, pp. 1-110
Wednesday: Vigarello, A History of Rape, pp. 166-244
Friday: Joan Scott, “Gender A Useful Category of Analysis”
WEEK EIGHT: October 12-16
Understanding and Explanation: Everyday Violence
Monday: P. Farmer, "An Anthropology of Structural Violence"
Wednesday: P. Bourdieu, Structural Violence
Friday: EP Thompson, “The Moral Economy of the Crowd”
WEEK NINE: October 19-23
Understanding and Explanation: Popular Violence
Monday: Corbin, Village of Cannibals, pp 1-60
***Draft of second writing assignment due***
Wednesday: Peer Review
Friday: Corbin, Village of Cannibals, pp 61-119
***Revised copy handed in.***
WEEK TEN: October 26-30
Understanding and Explanation: Colonialism and Dirty Wars
Monday: Brower, A Desert Named Peace, introduction
Wednesday: Franz Fanon, Wretched of the Earth, selections
Friday: Henri Aleg, The Question, selections
WEEK ELEVEN: November 2-6
Rethinking Political Violence Today
Monday: Talal Asad, On Suicide Bombing, pp. 1-38
Wednesday: Talal Asad, On Suicide Bombing, pp. 39-96
Friday: Project Presentations
WEEK TWELVE: November 9-13
Monday: Project Presentations
Wednesday: Project Presentations
Friday: Project Presentations
***Draft of Final Paper Due***
WEEK THIRTEEN: November 16-20
Monday-Friday:
No Class, Instructor Meetings by Appointment
WEEK FOURTEEN: November 23-27
Monday: [Brower at Middle East Studies Association]
Wednesday: [Brower at Middle East Studies Association]
Friday: Thanksgiving Holiday
WEEK FIFTEEN: November 30-Dec. 4
Monday: Film “War Photographer” (2001)
December 4, Conclusion
***FINAL PAPER DUE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4***
HIS 364G • French Empire: The West/Islam
40169 •
Fall 2009
Meets
MWF 300pm-400pm WAG 420
show description
French Empire: The “West” and “Islam.”
HIS 364G-40169
Fall 2009
Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower
Office: Garrison 0.116 (temp. office until 30 September: Garrison 0.112)
Office Hours: M 10:15-11:45; W 4:00-5:00, and by appointment
Telephone: 512-475-6994
Email: benbrower@mail.utexas.edu
Class Meeting Times: MWF 3:00-4:00pm
Meeting Place: WAG 420
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Modern French imperialism advanced its claims to global power through a division of the world into a place of civilization and barbarians, with France justifying its domination in terms of a so-called civilizing mission. In the Mediterranean region this thinking erected a frontier between two places, generally called the “West” and “East,” or “Europe” and “Islam.” The West, represented by France, was construed as the conveyor of modern values and progress while the East was a place of archaism and reaction that needed to be renewed or liberated. Many parts of this thinking survived the colonial era and mark contemporary post-colonial societies. Religion is generally offered as the decisive calculus determining these divisions, with the Muslim societies of North Africa and the Middle East set off as somehow essentially different from France’s Christian or secular traditions.
Playing special attention to the religious and secular dimensions of the problem, our work in this course will critically consider the development of these cultural and political frontiers, and their use in the contests for power in the region. The focus will be on modern France and the Middle Eastern countries that fell under French rule in the 19th and 20th centuries, particularly Algeria, but the course will examine these questions within a broader trans-national Mediterranean context across several historical periods.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
Students will learn the skills of historical analysis and interpretation, along with the material associated with the course itself. This will include the ability to grasp the complexity of historical debates and rethink received understandings and concepts in light of new evidence. Coursework and evaluations will focus on students’ ability to articulate coherent and sustained arguments in writing and verbally. There are no pre-requisites beyond those generally associated with a course of this level.
REQUIRED TEXTS
You will need to purchase the following books or use reserve copies in library.
• Mouloud Feraoun, The Poor Man's Son: Menrad, Kabyle Schoolteacher (University of Virginia Press, 2005). ISBN: 0813923263
• ?Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti, Napoleon In Egypt: Al-Jabarti's Chronicle of the French Occupation, 1798. (Markus Wiener Publishers, 1993) ISBN: 1558763376
• Edward Said, Orientalism (Vintage, 1979) ISBN: 039474067X
• Joan W. Scott, The Politics of the Veil (Princeton UP, 2007) ISBN: 0691125430
• Lucette Valensi, The Birth of the Despot, Venice and the Sublime Port (Cornell UP, 2009) ISBN: 0801475430
Additional required readings noted in schedule of class meetings will be distributed electronically or placed on library reserve.
Other: Required material in the course also includes music, photographs, films and various visual texts such as music videos that will be played/projected in class.
COURSE RULES:
• Students are expected to disable the Internet accessibility function of all electronic devises used in class.
• Cell phone use of any sort will not be tolerated.
ASSIGNMENTS
• Exams: There will be one midterm and a comprehensive final exam. These exams will consist of analytical ID’s and essays. A list of potential ID’s and questions will be available to help prepare for the exams. You will be expected to respond with material from the readings and lectures. SEE BELOW FOR DATES.
• Writing Assignment: You will prepare a historiographical essay. This will be an analysis of debates concerning Edward Said’s Orientalism. The essay will deal with Said’s argument and evidence itself and three outside reviews. Your task is to work through the significant controversies concerning Orientalism and examine the role of interpretation in the production of historical knowledge. More details will be given in class (7pp. minimum. DUE DATE: Monday, November 16).
• Discussion Questions: Much of our course work will center on readings and discussions (about one each week). You are required to prepare in advance a question for our discussion. These will be typed and turned in. During discussions, each student will pose their question.
Grades:
Midterm 25%
Final Exam 35%
Writing 25%
Participation 15%
Plus/Minus grading will be used for all grading in this course. The grade scale is as follows:
100-93% = A; 92-90% = A- ; 89-87% = B+ ; 86-83% = B ; 82-80% = B- ; 79-77% = C+ ; 76-73% = C ; 72-70% = C- ; 69-67% = D+ ; 66-63% = D ; 62-60% = D- ; below 60% = F.
ATTENDENCE:
• Attendance, preparation, and active participation in all course sessions are mandatory.
• Please familiarize yourself with the University’s policy concerning excused absences. Unexcused absences will impinge upon your final grade: 2 unexcused absences will result in the loss of 1 full letter grade; more than 4 will result in loss of 2 full letter grades.
• Religious Holy Days: By University policy, please notify me of your pending absence fourteen days prior to the anticipated date of observance of religious holy days. If you must miss a class, an examination, or an assignment, for religious observance, I will give you an opportunity to complete the missed work within a reasonable time after the absence.
University of Texas Honor Code
The core values of The University of Texas at Austin are learning, discovery, freedom, leadership, individual opportunity, and responsibility. Each member of the university is expected to uphold these values through integrity, honesty, trust, fairness, and respect toward peers and community.
All work for this course will be that of the student and original contributions. Writing done for a previous course cannot be used to fulfill assignments in this course. I militantly pursue cases of suspected plagiarism and cheating.
*** Late assignments are penalized, plagiarism is prosecuted***
Documented Disabilities
The University of Texas at Austin provides upon request appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. For more information, contact Services for Students with Disabilities at 471-6259 (voice) or 232-2937 (video phone).
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE OF CLASS MEETINGS, Fall 2009
(Subject to Revisions and Changes)
WEEK ONE: August 26 & 28
Wednesday: Introduction
Friday: The Question of Borders
WEEK TWO: August 31-Sept. 4
The Early Example of Muslims in Europe
Monday, Mediterranean Geography and the Longue Durée
Wednesday, Muslims in Medieval Spain, or Ahl al-Andalus (the People of Andalusia)
Friday, The Reconquista
WEEK THREE: September 7-11
The Question of Civilizations
Monday, No Class, Labor Day Holiday
Wednesday, Discussion: Huntington, “The Clash of Civilizations?”
Friday, Concepts, “Europe” and “Islam”
WEEK FOUR: September 14-18
Early Modern Mediterranean Encounters and The Foundations of Modern Empire: Bonaparte in Egypt
Monday, Discussion: Lucette Valensi, The Birth of the Despot (IN FULL)
Wednesday, Bonaparte in Egypt pt. 1
Friday, Bonaparte in Egypt pt. 2
WEEK FIVE: September 21-25
European Imperialism
Monday, Bonaparte in Egypt pt. 3. Slides, The Description of Egypt
Wednesday, [Brower at The New School]
Friday, [Brower at Cornell University]
WEEK SIX: September 28-Oct. 2
Algeria and French Empire
Monday, Discussion: al-Jabarti, Napoleon In Egypt (pp. 1-118)
Wednesday, Ottoman Algeria, 16th century - 1830
Friday, The Force of Empire, Algeria 1830-47
WEEK SEVEN: October 5-9
The Colonial Experience in Algeria
Monday, Algeria, 1848 – 1954
Wednesday, Discussion: Mouloud Feraoun, The Poor Man's Son (IN FULL)
Friday, The End of French Empire
WEEK EIGHT: October 12-16
Decolonization
Monday, The Algerian War of Independence, 1954-62
Wednesday, Discussion: Albert Camus, “The Guest” & Franz Fanon, “Letter to a Frenchman”
Friday, Film: “The Battle of Algiers” Part 1
WEEK NINE: October 19-23
Monday, Film: “The Battle of Algiers” Part 2
Wednesday, ***MID TERM EXAM***
Friday, Reading Orientalism, Theory and Method
WEEK TEN: October 26-30
Representations and Power
Monday, The Grand Tour in the Mediterranean
Wednesday, Discussion: Said, Orientalism pt. 1 (pages To Be Announced)
Friday, Discussion: Said, Orientalism, pt. 2
WEEK ELEVEN: November 2-6
Muslims in Motion
Monday, Muslim Pilgrimage to Mecca and the Holy Places
Wednesday, Discussion: Abdellah Hammoudi, A Season in Mecca (Chpt. 1 pp. 3-8; Chpts. 2-6 in full; and Chpt 9 in full. Total ca. 150pp.)
Friday, Immigration and Islam in Europe
WEEK TWELVE: November 9-13
The Post-Colonial Era: Muslims in Europe, Europe and its Muslims
Monday, A New World Order?: Post-Cold War Society and European Racism
Wednesday, Discussion: Abdelmalek Sayad, The Suffering of the Immigrant (selections) & Bernard Lewis, “Legal and Historical Reflections on the Position of Muslim Populations under Non-Muslim Rule”
Friday, Music and Music Videos: Dahmane El Harrachi, “Ya Raya” & 113, “Princes de la ville” (2000) “Banlieu” (2005)
WEEK THIRTEEN: November 16-20
Assimilation, Integration and the Right to be Different
Monday, French Secularism pt. 1
***Orientalism Papers Due, Monday, November 16***
Wednesday, French Secularism pt. 2
Friday, Discussion: Joan W. Scott, The Politics of the Veil (IN FULL)
WEEK FOURTEEN: November 23-27
Monday, [Brower at Middle East Studies Association]
Wednesday, [Brower at Middle East Studies Association]
Friday: Thanksgiving Holiday
WEEK FIFTEEN: November 30-Dec. 4
New Citizens in Old Europe
Monday, Review
Wednesday, Discussion: J. Bhabha, “Identity, Citizenship, and Exclusion in Europe” & E. Balibar, We, the People of Europe?: Reflections on Transnational Citizenship (selections)
Friday, Conclusion
***FINAL EXAM: Tuesday, December 15, 2:00–5:00 pm***


