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The Ranums' Panat Times
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A syllabus for a course entitled French Government in Thought and Practice, 1648-1721
The Department of History The Johns Hopkins University My aim in this course will be to (1) present an overview of a major Early Modern Political Culture, and (2) explore the relations between culture, power, and society. There will be one short paper (3-5 pages) and one longer paper (10-12 pages), no mid- term examination, and a final examination. Students who have taken History 321 must write their short papers on the history of an object, painting, building, illustration, cartoon, etc., from the period. Students new to the course will write theirs on the source distributed in class for that purpose. Many students did not do well on the final exam in History 321. I was dismayed by this fact, especially since high marks on the longer paper indicated real ability to do very strong work. We must work together to strengthen the ability to write strong exams; specifically, I must present material in a more structured manner, and you must read and think more attentively about the assignments. I shall be asking you for further suggestions about how to improve techniques in writing examinationsassuming that the reading has been done, that thought about the course has occurred, and that students have something to say. I also wish to reiterate that I have a healthy respect for historical fact as fact. Do you?
Week I: France in 1648: an Introduction
II: The Descent from Foreign War to Revolution: the Fronde
III: Social and Political Dynamics in the Ormée and Princely Fronde
IV: Beginnings of the Personal Reign of Louis XIV
V. The Fouquet Affair, a coup d'Etat?
VI: Women in Salon and Court Culture: the Power of Women and Their Novels,
Letters, and Memoirs
VII: Social and Economic Engineering in the Mid-Reign
VIII: Versailles as a Site for Court Culture
IX: Jansenism and the State in French Culture in the XVIIth Century
X: Defining the State in the Dutch War and the War of the League of
Augsburg
XI: Patronage and Power in the Arts and Sciences
XII: Louis XIV and Portraiture in French Political Culture
XIII: The War of Spanish Succession, Reform and Repression
XIV: The Death of Louis XIV: the Regency Perspective |