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Soubory | Komentář | Kdo přidal | |
Part I (1-37).pdf | Part I | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part II (39-85).pdf | Part II | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part III (87-141).pdf | Part III | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part IV (143-182) + Part V (183-244).pdf | Part IV | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part IX (417-478).pdf | Part IX | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part VI (245-310).pdf | Part VI | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part VII (311-372).pdf | Part VII | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Part VIII (373-415).pdf | Part VIII | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. | |
Preface-Introduction.pdf | Preface and Introduction | PhDr. Mgr. Kryštof Přemysl Kozák, Ph.D. |
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Poslední úprava: Mgr. Ing. Magdalena Fiřtová, Ph.D. (20.02.2017)
Dissent in America
Dr. Ralph F. Young, Temple University ralph.young@temple.edu
The course is a block course, the class will meet in the following times in 2017:
FRI 5.5. 12.30-16.50 (3h) J3093
TUE 9.5. 9.30-13.50 (3h) J1035
WED 10.5. 14.00-15.20 (1h) J2066
THU 11.5. 17.00-19.50 (2h) J1037
FRI 5.5. 12.30-16.50 (3h) J3093
Research Project: Using a combination of primary and secondary sources write a 5-8 page paper on the nature of dissent. What impact has dissent had on the course of American history? And what influence, if any, have voices of dissent in the United States had on other protest movements around the world. What is dissent? Is it an effective force for change? Or merely a safety valve for letting off steam? Should dissent consist solely of peaceful non-violent demonstrations? Under what circumstances should it ever become violent? Or should it never become violent? What is the difference between legitimate grievances and injustices and perceived grievances and injustices? Also be sure to discuss various forms of dissent. There are many documents in Dissent in America: Voices That Shaped a Nation that can be a starting point for your research. The paper is to be submitted to me digitally by 17 May 2017. Topics:
1) The European Origins and Dissent in the Colonies Luther, Calvin, Puritanism, Roger Williams, John Peter Zenger, Thomas Paine, Abigail Adams, Thomas Hutchinson Readings: Dissent in America, 1-85 2) Questioning the New Republic Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, John Brown, Civil War dissenters Readings: DiA, 87-182 3) Dissent in the Gilded Age Chief Joseph, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. DuBois, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Carl Schurz, Mother Jones Readings: DiA, 183-232 4) Progressivism and War: The Early 20th Century The Socialist Party, IWW, Emma Goldman, Joe Hill, Eugene V. Debs, Randolph Bourne, Marcus Garvey, Margaret Sanger, H.L. Mencken, Huey Long, Father Coughlin Readings: DiA, 233-310 5) Dissent in the 1950s Margaret Chase Smith, Paul Robeson, the Beats Readings: DiA, 311-338 6) Civil Rights Martin Luther King, Songs of the Civil Rights Movement, Stokely Carmichael, Black Panther Party Readings: DiA, 339-362 7) Vietnam and the Counterculture SDS, The Weather Underground, Abbie Hoffman, Timothy Leary, Make Love Not War, Protest Music: Phil Ochs, Bob Dylan, The Fugs, Creedence Clearwater Revival, From Columbia to the Sorbonne to the Prague Spring. Readings: DiA, 363-403 8) Feminism, Sexuality and the Globalization of Dissent Readings: DiA, 403-478
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