TRENT UNIVERSITY
History/Sociology 223: The Other Europe
1999-2000

Professor O. Andriewsky
Champlain College K-4
748-1493
Office Hours: Tuesday 10-11 a.m. 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
E-mail: oandriewsky@trentu.ca

Secretary: Shirley Pavy
Champlain I-13
748-1331
Wednesdays: 11 a.m.-12 p.m. & by appt.
E-mail: spavey@trentu.ca

Professor A. Heitlinger Web Page:
Champlain College J-15 www.trentu.ca/academic/history/hiso223
748-1616
Office Hours: Monday 9-10 a.m.
Thursdays 4:30-5:30 p.m. & by appt.
E-mail: aheitlinger@trentu.ca

This course will explore the history of Eastern Europe from 1848 to the present, with special focus on the "small nations" and minorities of East Central Europe: the Czechs, Poles, Jews and Ukrainians. Particular attention will be devoted to modernization and nation-building, the social aspects of integration and disintegration, the main features of the Communist system, and the problems of post-Communist cultural and economic reconstruction. Students will be encouraged to read and think critically and to construct and defend their own arguments.

The course consists of two classes per week. Lectures will be supplemented with workshops, films, and guest lectures. A detailed schedule is listed below. Please note: workshop attendance makes up 20% of the final grade. Students who miss a workshop must submit a seven-page summary of the Workshop readings within two weeks after the missed session. Failure to complete any make-up work will result in a "0" for this portion of the grade (20%). Since lectures and reading assignments are designed to complement—not duplicate—each other, reading, preparation, and attendance at lecture are essential to the successful completion of HISO 223.

Grading in HISO 223 will be divided as follows:

Map Quiz 5%
First Hour Exam 10%
Second Hour Exam 10%
Third Hour Exam 10%
First Essay 10%
Second Essay 10%
Workshop Participation 20%
Final Exam 25%

Plagiarism

Plagiarism is considered an extremely serious academic offense and carries penalties varying from failure in an assignment to debarment from the University. All HISO 223 students are expected to familiarize themselves with the definition of plagiarism as established in Trent University's Policy on Plagiarism before submitting any written work. The policy statement is available on request from every department or college office or from the Registrar's office.

Please note: Students are required to keep all research notes for their essays and may be required to hand them in. Failure to do so can result in an F on the essay. Students submitting written work that is copied or bought from another source and then presented as original work will fail the course.

Textbooks

All readings will be on reserve at Bata Library. The following textbooks can also be purchased in the bookstore:

Canadian Scholars’ Press, Reprotext for HISO 223
Eva Hoffman, Shtetl
Miron Dolot, Execution by Hunger
Czeslaw Milosz, Native Realm
Slavenka Drakulic, How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed

Recommended: Paul Robert Magocsi, Historical Atlas of East Central Europe

Lecture and Workshop Schedule

Week Lecture

Sept. 14 Introduction to East-Central Europe

Sept. 16 The Peoples and Lands of East-Central Europe (1): The Poles

Sept. 21 The Peoples and Lands of East-Central Europe (2): The Czechs

Sept. 23 The Peoples and Lands of East-Central Europe (3): The Jews

Sept. 28 Film

Sept. 30 The Peoples and Lands of East-Central Europe (4): The Ukrainians

Oct. 5 The Imperial Legacy: Habsburg & Romanov Rule in Eastern Europe

Oct. 7 WORKSHOP: What is a "Nation"? (+Map Quiz)

Oct. 12 The "Reinvention" of Eastern Europe: The National "Awakenings"

Oct. 14 Guest Lecture: Prague

Oct. 19    1848

Oct. 21 Workshop: Recapturing the Jewish Experience

Oct. 26-28 Reading Week

Nov. 2 Exam

Nov. 4 Modernization and Nation-Building: Emancipation and Reform

Nov. 9 Modernization and Nation-Building: Industrialization, Urbanization and

Social Change

Nov. 11 Workshop: From Serfdom to Self-Government

Nov. 11 First Essay Due In Class

Nov. 16 Modernization and Nation-Building: Ideology and Mass Politics (1)

Nov. 18 Modernization and Nation-Building: Ideology and Mass Politics (2)

Nov. 23 Nationalism and Women’s’ Emancipation

Nov. 25 Workshop: Nationalism and Socialism

Nov. 30 Film

Dec. 2 Guest Lecture: Mshanets’: The Story of A Ukrainian Village

Dec. 7 Exam

Winter Term

Jan. 11 WWI and the Disintegration of the Old Order

Jan. 13 Workshop: 1919: Redrawing the Map of Eastern Europe

Jan. 18 The Soviet Experiment In National Communism and Federalism

Jan. 20 The Right in Inter-War East European Politics

Jan. 25 The Czech Exception

Jan. 27 Workshop: Between Fascism and Communism

Feb. 1 WWII, the Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in Eastern Europe (1)

Feb. 3 WWII, the Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in Eastern Europe (2)

Feb. 8 FILM

Feb. 10 Workshop: Ethnic Cleansing

Feb. 15 Exam

Feb. 17 No Class

Feb. 22-24 Reading Week

Feb. 29 The New Communist Order in Eastern Europe

March 2 What Was State Socialism/Communism?

March 7 The Crises of 1956 and 1968 (+ Film)

March 9 The Polish Experience: Solidarity

March 14 From Crises to the Revolutions of 1989

March 16 Workshop: The Power of the Powerless

March 21 Back to the Future: The Collapse of the Soviet Union & the (Re-)Emergence of Ukraine

March 23 Guest Lecture: How Rock-n-Roll Killed Communism

March 28 Film

March 30 The New Women of Prague

March 30 Second Essay Due In Class

April 4 The "Other" Europe? Some Final Thoughts

Reading Schedule

Week Reading

Sept. 14-16 Timothy Garton Ash, "The Puzzle of Central Europe," pp. 18-22 (Reprotext); Paul Robert Magocsi, Historical Atlas of East Central Europe, pp. 2-4, 97-99 (in the Reference Division of Bata Library); Norman Davies, "A Historic Nation", pp. 279-311 (Reprotext); Magocsi, pp. 59-62, 70-72

Sept. 21-23 Robert Bideleux and Ian Jeffries "The Kingdom of Bohemia and the Hussite heritage", pp. 212-261 (Reprotext); Magocsi, "Bohemia-Moravia, 13th-15th centuries," pp. 20-22, 48-50; Lucy S. Dawidowicz, "The World of East European Jewry", pp. 6-38 (Reprotext); Magocsi, pp. 107-110

Sept. 28-30 R. Szporluk, Ukraine: A Brief History, pp. 1-41 (Reprotext)

Oct. 5-7 Workshop: Map Quiz + What is a "Nation"?

Joseph Stalin, "The Nation," pp. 18-21(Reprotext); Walker Connor, "A Nation is a Nation, is a State, is an Ethnic Group, is a…", pp. 36-46 (Reprotext)

Oct. 12-14 Magocsi, pp. 76-82; Robert Bideleux and Ian Jeffries, "An Empire in Crisis: East Central Europe and the Revolutions of 1848-49"pp. 294-325 (Reprotext); "Letter Sent by František Palacky to Frankfurt"; "Manifesto of the First Slavic Congress", pp. 303-313 (Reprotext)

Oct. 19-21 Workshop: Recapturing The Jewish Experience

Eva Hoffman, Shtetl, pp. 1-158

Oct. 26-28 Reading Week

Nov. 2-4 No Reading

Nov. 9-11 Workshop: From Serfdom to Self-Government

Jan Slomka, From Serfdom to Self-Government: Memoirs of a Polish Village Mayor 1842-1927, pp. 1-272 (Reprotext); Magocsi, pp 100-103

Nov. 11 First Essay Due In Class

Nov. 16-18 Mykhailo Drahomanov, "The Program of the Review Hromada," pp. 206-208 (Reprotext); Chaim Weizmann, "My Early Days," pp. 375-83 (Reprotext); Thomas Masaryk, "Nation," pp. 200-214, (Reprotext); Roman Dmowski, Thoughts of a Modern Pole (Reprotext)

Nov. 23 Katherine David, "Czech Feminists and Nationalism in the Late Habsburg Monarchy: ‘The First in Austria’," pp. 26-45 (Reprotext)

Nov. 25 Workshop: Nationalism and Socialism

Nicholas Stargardt, "Origins of the Constructivist Theory of the Nation," pp. 83-105 (Reprotext); Horace B. Davis, "East European Marxism and the Multi-National State," pp.133-65 (Reprotext)

Dec. 7 Exam

Winter Term

Jan. 11-13 Workshop: 1919: Redrawing the Map of Eastern Europe

Magocsi, pp. 121-133

Jan. 18-20 Miron Dolot, Execution By Hunger (entire)

Jan. 25-27 Workshop: Between Fascism and Communism

R.J. Crampton, "Fascism," 159-176 (Reprotext); Czeslaw Milosz, Native Realm, pp. 1-202; Eva Hoffman, Shtetl, pp. 159-200;

Feb. 1-3 Magocsi, pp. 152-159, 164-168

Feb. 8-10 Workshop: Ethnic Cleansing

"The German Occupation of Poland" pp. 922-935, 982-996, 1059-67, 1086-1101 (Reprotext); War Through Children’s Eyes, pp. 3-27, 56-58, 67-69, 152-54, 224-229 (Reprotext); Eva Hoffman, Shtetl, pp. 201-240 (Reprotext); Czeslaw Milosz, Native Realm, pp. 203-284

Feb. 15 No Reading

Feb. 23 Reading Week

Feb. 29- Magocsi, pp. 169-172; K. Verdery, "What Was Socialism and Why did it Fall?" pp. 19-38 (Reprotext);

March 2

March 7-9 "The Helsinki Accords"; "Charter 77", pp. 160-166 (Reprotext); Crampton, Eastern Europe In The Twentieth Century, pp. 359-376, 391-392 (On Reserve in the Library); "Solidarity’s Program", pp. 209-213 (Reprotext); Ladislav Holy, The Little And The Great Czech Nation, pp. 16-54

March 14-16 Workshop: The Power of the Powerless

Valentyn Moroz, "Report from the Beria Reserve: In the Reservation", pp. xv-xxiii, 48-60 (Reprotext); (Reprotext); Václav Havel, "The Power of the Powerless", pp. 168—174 (Reprotext); Adam Michnik, "Letter from Gdansk Prison" pp. 225-228 (Reprotext); Slavenka Drakulic, How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed

March 21-23 Magocsi, pp. 173-176; Catherine Wanner, Burden Of Dreams, "Festivals", Pp. 121-140 (On Reserve in the Library)

March 30 Second Essay Due In Class