COURSE OUTLINE
Instructor: |
Dr.
Ewa Wasilewska |
Office
hours: |
By
appointment only; please call the Department of Anthropology (581-6251)
and leave your name, phone number, and class number. |
Time: |
Each
Monday and Wednesday at 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. |
Location: |
Campus:
ST 214 |
Important
dates: |
May
25, 05 - last day to drop classes
May
31, 05 - last day to add classes
May
31, 05 - last day to elect CR/NC option or to audit classes
June
3, 05 - last day to withdraw |
Required
Texts: |
All
required articles/chapters (in chronological order) are to be found at
the Reserve Desk at Marriott Library. Please check also electronic reserve
by Marriott Library.
All
articles/chapters are listed below as the required reading for specific
weeks.
Since
it might be cheaper and faster to order Stiebing’s book than to copy it,
this book (Stiebing, William H. Jr. Uncovering the Past: A History
of Archaeology. Pp. 55-248. Oxford University Press. 1993)
has been ordered through the University Bookstore. This book is a lot of
fun!
Ewa
Wasilewska: Rise of Civilization. Notes. 2005. (EW)
Notes
can be purchased during the first three class meetings from an instructor. |
Future/Optional
Texts: |
Such
texts are listed after required readings about any of the discussed civilizations.
You don’t have to read them this semester (or any other semester) but if
you are interested in exploring any specific subject on your own, this
is a start. |
Subject: |
This
course fulfills Social/Behavioral Science Integration. It focuses on the
rise of various civilizations around the world. This class explores such
famous complex societies as Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Maya, as well as
those less known but equally important as the Indus Valley or nomadic empire
of the Hsiung-Nu. |
Requirements: |
Come
to the lectures, enjoy them, do your readings, and pass required exams!
At the end of the semester turn in your paper (7 pages plus bibliography)
on your most favorite civilization! And remember, always laugh at
the instructor’s jokes! |
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Meeting
# 1 - May 16, 2005
Toward
a definition of “CIVILIZATION”.
-
[From]
Common understanding: “You know it when you find it,” i.e., selected histories
of discoveries.
-
Origin
of the term itself (Latin "civilis, civilitas, civis, civitas"; French
"civilisation, civilisateur, civiliser;").
-
Other
terms (e.g., “prehistory versus history,” “complex versus primitive societies”).
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Selected
discoveries: Mesopotamia, Egypt, Minoan, and Mesoamerican civilizations.
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[Through]
Classical listing of elements of civilization (understood as “urbanization”).
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[To]
Modern methodologies in comparative studies of various civilizations.
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Required
readings (don’t panic, everything will be explained in the class):
Notes
#1
Childe,
V. Gordon. The Urban Revolution. Pp. 6-14. In Lamberg-Karlovsky,
C.C. & Jeremy A. Sabloff. The Rise And Fall of Civilizations. Cummings
Publishing Company. 1974.
Fagan,
Brian M. Chapter 19. Study of Cultural Process: Processual archaeology.
Pp. 507-523.In In the Beginning: An Introduction to Archaeology.
Little,
Brown and Company. 1985.
Buren,
Mary Van & Janet Richards. Introduction: ideology, wealth, and the
comparative study of “civilizations.” Pp. 3-12. In Order,
Legitimacy, and Wealth in Ancient States. Part I: Order, Legitimacy, and
Wealth in Ancient States. Cambridge University Press. 2000.
Baines,
John & Norman Yoffee. Order, legitimacy, & wealth: setting the
terms. Pp. 13-17. In Buren, Mary Van & Janet Richards, eds.
Order, Legitimacy, and Wealth in Ancient States. Part I: Order, Legitimacy,
and Wealth in Ancient States. Cambridge University Press. 2000.
Future/optional
reading:
McGuire,
Randall H. Core and Periphery Systems. Pp. 132-137. In Ellis, Linda
ed. Archaeological Method and Theory. An Encyclopedia. Garland Publishing,
Inc. 2000. |
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Meeting
# 2 - May 18, 2005
Civilization
out of clay: MESOPOTAMIA.
-
Writing:
the main or just contributing factor in the development of civilization.
-
Temples
- centers of distribution.
-
Many
“firsts” on which a civilization is supposed to be based.
-
From
city-states to the first empire.
-
Rich
people, “poor” neighbours.
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 2.
Nissen,
Hans J. The Period of Early High Civilization. Pp. 65-128. In The
Early History of the Ancient Near East. The University of Chicago Press.
1988.
Sweet,
Ronald F.G. Writing as a Factor in the Rise of Urbanism. Pp. 35-49.
In Aufrecht, Walter E., Neil A. Mirau & Steven W. Gauley eds. Urbanism
in Antiquity. Sheffield Academic Press. 1997.
Future/optional
reading (absolutely great and fun to read):
Kramer,
Samuel Noah. History Begins in Sumer. The University of Pennsylvania
Press. 1981.
Meeting
# 3 - May 23, 2005
Cities
of the dead but where were the living? EGYPT.
.
-
Religion:
through battles to unity.
-
Pharaoh:
a god left behind?
-
Writing:
an independent invention?
-
Grand
scale of public works.
-
Urban
legend of the huts.
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 3.
Redford,
Donald B. The Ancient Egyptian “City”: Figment or Reality? Pp. 210-220.
In Aufrecht, Walter E., Neil A. Mirau & Steven W. Gauley eds. Urbanism
in Antiquity. Sheffield Academic Press. 1997.
Routledge,
Carolyn. Temple as the Center in Ancient Egyptian Urbanism. Pp. 221-235.
In Aufrecht, Walter E., Neil A. Mirau & Steven W. Gauley eds. Urbanism
in Antiquity. Sheffield Academic Press. 1997.
Patterson,
Thomas C. Africa and Egypt. Pp. 187-207. In Archaeology: The Historical
Development of Civilizations. Prentice-Hall Inc. 1993.
Future/optional
readings (fun, fun, fun):
Almost
anything about ancient Egyptian religion. (Avoid those without pictures).
Karl-Theodor
Zauzich: Hieroglyphs without Mystery. University of Texas Press. 1996.
(Impress your friends with knowledge of the ancient Egyptian script). ;-)
Meeting
# 4 - May 25, 2005
Staying
in charge. The emergence of THE MINOAN
and
MYCENAEAN civilizations...
-
Palace-centered
polities.
-
Mystery
of its origin – the Minoan Linear A.
-
Continuation
of the island culture on land: the Mycenaean civilization.
-
Heinrich
Schliemann: reinventing the legend of Troy.
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 4
Tsipopoulou,
Metaxia. Palace-Centered Polities in Eastern Crete: Neopalatial Petras
and Its Neighbors. Pp. 263-277. In Aufrecht, Walter E., Neil A.
Mirau & Steven W. Gauley eds. Urbanism in Antiquity. Sheffield
Academic Press. 1997.
Wolff,
Walther. The Aegean. Pp. 165-203. In Early Civilizations: Egypt,
Mesopotamia, the Aegean. The Herbert Press. 1989.
Future/optional
readings:
Works
of Homer. You should go through them at least once in your life.
Meeting
# 5 - May 30, 2005
Memorial
Day Holiday!
Meeting
# 6 - June 1, 2005
Meeting
# 7 - June 6, 2005
Galloping
through the steppe to civilization.
THE
HITTITES and others OF ANATOLIA.
-
Catal
Hoyuk - a city with no right to exist.
-
The
Indo-Europeans and those whom they ruled.
-
From
nomads to urban dwellers to an empire?
-
In
the name of tolerance: let’s worship them all.
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 5-7
Dunstan,
William E. Chapter VIII. The Hittites of Anatolia and Their Contemporaries.
Pp. 154-175. In The Ancient Near East. Harcourt Brace College
Publishers. 1998.
Hamblin,
Dora Jane. Chapter III. The Shrines of Catal Hoyuk. Pp. 42-67. In The
First Cities. Time-Life Books. 1973.
Future/optional
reading (boring but very informative):
Macqueen,
J.G. The Hittites and Their Contemporaries in Asia Minor. Thames and
Hudson. 1986.
Meeting
# 8 - June 8,
2005
Land
without conflict? THE INDUS VALLEY civilization.
-
The
Dravidian and Indo-Aryan question.
-
Land
without social stratification?
-
Too
much religion or not enough - can we even speculate?
-
Focus
on hygiene? Disposable cups and bath-houses.
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 8
Kenoyer,
Jonathan Mark. Introduction. Pp. 15-19. In Ancient Cities of the
Indus Valley Civilization. Oxford University Press. 1998.
Patterson,
Thomas C. Harappan Society: Class-stratified or kin-based? Pp. 141-146.
In Archaeology. The Historical Development of Civilizations. Prentice
Hall. 1993.
Future/optional
reading (very informative):
Kenoyer,
Jonathan Mark. Ancient Cities of the Indus Valley Civilization. Oxford
University Press. 1998.
Meeting
# 9 - June 13,
2005
Too
many empires, too much conflict: CHINA AND HSIUNG-NU.
-
Sedentary
versus nomadic empires: China vs. Hsiung-Nu.
-
The
Great Wall and Teracotta Warriors of Xi’an.
-
In
search of defense: the Silk Road.
-
Is
the conflict still there?
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 9
Barnes,
Gina L. Chapter 12. The Making and Breaking of Empire. 220 B.C. - A.D.
500. Pp. 192-207. In The Rise of Civilization in East Asia: The
Archaeology of China, Korea and Japan. Thames & Hudson. 1999.
Di
Cosmo, Nicola. Those Who Draw the Bow. The Rise of the Hsiung-nu Nomadic
Empire and the Political Unification of the Nomads. Pp. 161-205. In
Ancient
China and Its Enemies. The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History.
Cambridge
University Press. 2002.
Future/optional
reading (very interesting but also confusing at times):
Di
Cosmo’s whole book.
Meeting
# 10 - June 15, 2005
The
“enigma” of the New World: THE MAYA,
THE
AZTECS and THE INCAS.
-
Continuum
of complexity: Mesoamerica as a scholarly dream.
-
From
prehistory to history: decipherment of the Mayan languages and writing.
-
Chocolate
to die for: human sacrifices and commerce among the Aztecs.
-
Is
the writing necessary? The Inca Empire.
-
Childe’s
and others’ check lists.
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Required
readings:
Notes
# 10
Smith,
Michael E. & Marilyn A. Masson, eds. Part III. Political Organization.
(6 articles by different authors). Pp. 252-359. In The Ancient Civilizations
of Mesoamerica. A Reader. Blackwell Publishers. 2000.
Patterson,
Thomas C. Chapter 15. South America. Pp. 327-348. In Archaeology:
The Historical Development of Civilizations. Prentice Hall. 1993.
Future/optional
reading (fun and informative):
Foster,
Lynn V. Handbook to Life in the Ancient Maya World. Facts On File,
Inc. 2002.
Meeting
# 11 - June 20, 2005
ODDS
AND ENDS. FINAL DISCUSSION.
Meeting
# 12 - June 22, 2005
FINAL
Ewa
Wasilewska's Home Page |