History 348 World War I: Origins, Experience, Aftermath: Dr. Paul W. Werth
History 348 World War I: Origins, Experience, Aftermath: Dr. Paul W. Werth
History 348 World War I: Origins, Experience, Aftermath: Dr. Paul W. Werth
This course treats World War I as a crucial set of formative moments in the political, economic, social, and
cultural history of twentieth-century Europe. By exploring developments in diplomacy, incorporating
experiences from both military front and home front, and considering the ways in which people have sought to
organize and articulate their memories about the war, the course aspires to introduce students to the complexities
of historical process and to understand war as something broader (and more profound) than a set of military
engagements. This is therefore a course on the entire experience of war and is not limited strictly to military
history. The course is guaranteed to be mind-blowing and profoundly intense, and in diligently fulfilling all the
requirements for this course, students will
• gain a basic and fundamental understanding of the reasons for the war's outbreak;
• explore different dimensions of the experience of war (including both combat and the home front);
• analyze the complexities of the post-war situation, including the peace treaties, continued violence in
East-Central Europe after 1918, and the efforts of survivors of the war to mourn the dead;
• acquire basic geographical knowledge of Europe and the Middle East;
• develop core skills in representing the subjective outlooks of historical actors;
• improve their writing and analytical skills;
• develop new capacities for summarizing and making historical connections;
• and learn how to access scholarly articles in electronic form through the on-line library catalog.
This course addresses University Undergraduate Learning Outcomes (UULOs) in the following fashion:
• Intellectual breadth and lifelong learning—by developing in-depth knowledge of a critical episode in
world history and by thinking about complex problems in historical context;
• Inquiry and Critical Thinking—by using triads™ to connect historical events and ideas and by
articulating theses about complex problems;
• Communication—by presenting work in both written and oral forms, including two diplomatic
conferences;
• Global Knowledge and Awareness—by studying European and Middle Eastern geography and by
seeking to understand the motivations of historical actors in relation to specific cultures;
• Citizenship and Ethics—by systematically considering the reasons for the outbreak of World War I,
the nature of the settlement after the war, and the dilemmas that faced historical actors of diverse social
backgrounds.
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Required Texts
Vera Brittain, Testament of Youth (Penguin, 2005, though any edition is OK). ISBN-13: 978-0143039235.
Michael S. Neiberg, Dance of the Furies: Europe and the Outbreak of World War I (Harvard University Press,
2011). ISBN-13: 978-0674725935.
William Kelleher Storey, The First World War: A Concise Global History, 2nd ed. (Rowman & Littlefield,
2010). ISBN-13: 978-1442226814.
Susan, Grayzel, ed., The First World War: A Brief History with Documents (Bedford/St Martin’s, 2012). ISBN-
13: 978-0312458874.
Roger Chickering, Imperial Germany and the Great War, 1914-1918, 3rd ed. (Cambridge, 2014). ISBN-13: 978-
1107691520
Eric Goldstein, The First World War Peace Settlements, 1919-1925 (Routledge, 2002). ISBN-13: 978-
0582311459.
Flawless attendance and vigorous, animated participation (10%): Excessive absences will be detrimental if
not fatal to your final grade. You should be animated in discussions and prepared to demonstrate your serious
engagement with the material. All listed readings are obligatory. Vegetating students will be shown the door.
Geography quizzes (10%): These quizzes are designed to ensure that students have a grasp of the geographic
features essential to understanding the developments of the war. I allow students to take each quiz a second
time, counting both the original score and the new one as 50% of the final grade for that quiz. But in order to
take a quiz a second time, you must do so within one week of its first offering, and you must do so on your own
time. If you miss a quiz and have not made arrangements with me, you will receive a zero, and you forfeit the
opportunity to retake it. Details on the geography quizzes may be found on the web site.
Content Quiz (5%): There is one content quiz later on in the semester just to be sure that no one is slacking on
the reading or losing touch with the course. There will be some element of choice, and my assumption is that if
you are attending class and staying on top of the readings you should do fine.
Diplomatic Conferences (20%): We will conduct two conferences designed to simulate the atmosphere and
diplomatic positions of various states/groups on the eve of the war’s outbreak and during the peace negotiations
after the war. Each student will choose either a state or some population group that he or she will represent at the
conference. In preparation, she or he will write a short, three-page “position paper” outlining the principal
aspirations and concerns of his/her state/group. Details are available on the web site. Because the conferences
depend crucially on your serious and timely preparation, no late position papers whatsoever will be accepted,
and your failure to prepare for the conference will be treated as a most heinous crime.
Book Review (20%): You will be asked to write a paper of 4-5 pages on the Vera Brittain memoir. Details are
available on the web.
Mid-Term Examination (15%). The mid-term will test all knowledge accumulated by the date of the exam.
Final Exam (20%): This will be an in-class exercise that comprehensively reviews the material for the entire
course. Details on the final will be available later in the semester.
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Written assignments are due at class time on the day indicated in the syllabus, unless otherwise specified.
Students are encouraged to submit written work to the instructor electronically, using Microsoft Word or a
compatible program. Electronic submissions will be considered on time if they were sent prior to the start of
class on the day that they are due. Late submissions will be downgraded seven points (on a 100-point scale) for
each day that they are late and will be accepted only with an accompanying one-page explanation for why they
are late and why the instructor should accept them. All written submissions must be typed, using a 12-point font,
double space, and one-inch margins. Each submission must also have a title. Papers that exhibit a complete
absence of proofreading may be returned to the author as unacceptable. Any submission not conforming to these
guidelines may be rejected entirely. A full description of my guidelines is available on the web site. Unless prior
arrangements have been made with the instructor, students will not be permitted to make up any missed exam or
quiz.
MON (Jan 25): Michael S. Neiberg, Dance of the Furies, pp. 1-35
William Storey, First World War, pp. 1-4
WED (April 6): C. F. Wargelin, "A High Price for Bread: The First Treaty of Brest-
Litovsk and the Break-Up of Austria-Hungary," International
History Review 19.4 (1997): 757-788 [library].
WED (April 20): Goldstein, Peace Settlements, pp. 22-68 + docs 4-13
GEO QUIZ #2: Europe, Africa, & Middle East in 1922
MON (April 25): Goldstein, Peace Settlements, pp. 69-95 + docs 14-20.
DIPLOMATIC CONFERENCE: The Paris Peace Conference
CONFERENCE PAPERS DUE
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MON (May 2): Maria Bucur, “Mourning, Burying, aand Remembering the War Dead,”
in Bucur, Heroes and Victims: Remembering War in Twentieth-
Century Romania (Bloomington, 2009), pp. 49-72.
*
Papers may be submitted electronically to werthp@unlv.nevada.edu by the designated time in Microsoft Word or some
comparable program. Students are responsible for ensuring that papers arrive in a readable format.
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