Steven Kale

General Education 111 is a survey of world history from 1500 to the present. The course is built around lectures, readings, and films and will emphasize two overarching themes: the comprehensive transformation of human life provoked by the consolidation of the major features of modernity (unified nation-states, industrial capitalism, urbanization, cultural secularization); and the increasing interaction and conflict between the major civilizations of the world.

Although the course is generally structured chronologically, it will focus not on a narrative of events but on the interconnections between political, economic, social, and cultural change in various societies and civilizations. We will explore different ways of understanding how and why change has occurred over the last 500 years and will discuss how major historical developments are related to our contemporary circumstances. The world, even one as future-oriented and technology driven as ours, can only be fully understood in terms of the past. The passions and ideas that motivate people today and allow them to make sense of their times are all rooted in the past experience.

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