T H I R D R O M E , V E N I C E O F T H E N O R T H
Regular office hours this quarter will be:
- Monday, 11:30 - 12:20
- Wednesday, 1.30-2.20
Please feel free to email or telephone me to make appointments at other times, or to continue discussions from class. Classes, meetings and library work take me out of my office for a large part of every day, and the department can't afford voice mail for faculty, so email is a more reliable channel than the telephone.
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Papers: A midterm paper (6 - 8 pages, 40% of course grade) is due on Tuesday 6 May, and a final paper (8 - 10 pages, 45% of grade) on Thursday 12 June. You can turn in your papers as email attachments by midnight on the due day, with a hard copy for the midterm at the next class meeting. We'll develop paper topics during class discussions.
For the midterm you will initially be given a provisional grade that can be improved by some rewriting following discussion of the first draft.
Participation in class discussion counts for the remaining 15% of the course grade.
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R e a d i n g m a t e r i a l s
Some of the reading material that accompanies this course (see the readings for each week in the schedule) will be distributed as photocopies, and some posted online. The books you need to acquire are:
- James Billington, The Icon and the Axe.
- Serge Zenkovsky (ed), Medieval Russia's Epics, Chronicles and Tales.
- Pushkin, The Bronze Horseman, tr. D. M. Thomas.
- Goncharov, Oblomov.
- Turgenev, Fathers and Sons
- Leskov, The Steel Flea.
- Nikolai Trubetskoi, The Legacy of Genghis Khan.
The preferred source for these books is Amazon.com, which has used as well as new copies available, sometimes at very low prices. They may be available elsewhere, including public as well as the UW libraries, while Amazon has everything on this list, and delivers extremely fast. If you have any difficulty finding anything, please let me know. Some other materials will be distributed as photocopies or made availabe online, and I'll be making more suggestions for background reading in the course of the quarter, partly in reponse to your thoughts on paper topics.
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Medieval Musovy. |
Tue 8 Apr |
Life of St. Sergius of Radonezh. |
Thu 10 Apr |
Life of St. Michael, a Fool for Christ, + Story of Great John, Archbishop of Novgorod. |
Reading: Zenkovskii, pp. 262-290 and 300-314. |
More Medieval Muscovy |
Tue 15 Apr |
Orison on the Life... of Grand Prince Dmitrii Ivanovich |
Thu 17 Apr
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The Tale of the White Cowl. |
Reading: Zenkovskii: pp. 315-332. |
Late Medieval Muscovy |
Tue 22 Apr |
Afaniasii Nikitin's Journey Across Three Seas. Stephen Bathory's Campaign Against Pskov. |
Thu 24 Apr |
Prince Kurbsky and Ivan IV: Epistolary Polemics.
Richard James: Raid of the Crimean Tatars.
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Reading: Zenkovskii, pp.333-376. |
Undermining the Supremacy of the West |
Tue 27 May |
New Shoes for a Dancing Flea. |
Thu 29 May |
Huns and Scythians, and a New Challenge to the Europeans.
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Reading: Nikolai Leskov, The Steel Flea, Valerii Briusov, The Coming Huns, Aleksandr Blok, Scythians . |
Russians Re-Discover Their Eurasian Soul.
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Tue 3 June |
Prince N. Trubetskoi, The Legacy of Genghis Khan. |
Thu 5 June |
What Russia owes to the Mongols.
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Reading: Prince Nikolai Trubetskoi, The Legacy of Genghis Khan. |
Thu 12 June |
Final paper due. |
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What makes a good paper? If you have any doubts about any aspect of your paper, or just want to try out ideas before you commit the time and effort to developing them at length, please feel free to come by and talk about it. Here are the guidelines that will be the basis for grading your term papers.
4.0 - 3.6 The paper shows maturity: thoughtful analysis clearly expressed.
- The title reflects a clear and non-trivial topic, and the organization is logical and coherent: questions are raised, suggested answers are presented through well-connected arguments based on detailed evidence, and conclusions do not overreach either the evidence or the arguments.
- Evidence from the relevant primary texts is not outweighed by opinions drawn from secondary sources, and there are some original insights.
- The writing is good: no grammatical problems, spelling mistakes or sloppy punctuation; sentences are neither too short (leads to repetition of many basic sentence elements, weak connection between ideas and difficulty in constructing an argument) nor too long (points get lost, arguments are hard to follow); vocabulary and style are appropriate for the context.
3.5 - 3.0 The paper is less mature, and doesn't meet the 'A' criteria consistently.
- The title could be fuller or clearer, organization could be tighter, questions clearer, argument more detailed, conclusions more specific.
- Too much reliance on opinions expressed in secondary works, too little direct evidence from the primary texts, few personal insights.
- Some minor problems with grammar, spelling and punctuation, and style, e.g. inappropriate use of slang expressions.
2.9 - 2.5 The basics are there, but there's a lot of room for improvement.
- Topic not clear, organization weak, argument thin or hard to follow, conclusions sweeping, not well supported or not directly relevant to the topic.
- Paper is based on others' opinions (secondary works, class notes or websites), with no analysis of the primary texts and no personal insights.
- Serious writing problems: sentences are poorly constructed and linked, vocabulary is often inappropriate for the context, or gratuitously colloquial.
2.4 - 2.0 The paper reflects very little thought or effort, and is difficult to read.
- Topic poorly defined, and not much clearer by the end of the paper. Organization very weak, and statement takes the place of argument. The paper may be too short, and consist of more 'padding' than substance.
- Little reference to the primary texts, possibly because of difficulty in understanding them, and secondary sources are used to compensate for this.
- Writing is bad enough to make attendance at a writing workshop advisable.
1.9 - 0.7 Writing problems obscure the content of the paper, even if there is one.
- Topic trivial, makes little sense, or is of limited relevance to the course materials. Little or no organization, too little content for there to be a structure.
- Little evidence that the primary texts have been read and understood, and use of secondary sources is paraphrase bordering on plagiarism.
- Writing is bad enough to require remediation at the Freshman Composition level.
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