• About WordPress
    • About WordPress
    • Get Involved
    • WordPress.org
    • Documentation
    • Learn WordPress
    • Support
    • Feedback
  • Log In
  • Register
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Western Civ Since 1600

History 107 at the College of Wooster

  • Home

Week 1 – On the Study of Western Civ

September 7, 2010 by Gregory Shaya

Should students study Western Civ as an introduction to the modern world? Or would they do better with World History? It’s been a topic of much debate. I tried to give you a bit of the history of the idea of “western civilization” and the college course as taught in the U.S. since the First World War. You’ll see that the very idea became a contentious one in the late 1980s and 1990s as students, faculty, educators and politicians argued over the proper matter of a liberal education. See a couple articles from the New York Times that reveal something of the debate at its loudest (and perhaps least enlightening) in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Here and here. Or see this more recent piece looking back at it. Here.

If you want a fuller history of the course, take a look at the AHR Forum from 1992 on “The Rise and Fall of Western Civilization” or William McNeill’s meditations on “World History and the Rise and Fall of the West.”

We spent some time this first week thinking about Samuel Huntington’s definition of Western civilization and his contention that the West was locked in a struggle – “the clash of civilizations” he called it in his important 1996 book – with the civilizations of Asia, Islam, Russia, India, Africa, Latin America. As you should have understood, I was sharply critical of his central idea that civilizations were so clearly defined. But I suggested that his picture of the inheritance of Western Civ. is useful in laying out the central terms of the “triumphant” vision of Western Civ. There has been soooo much debate on Huntington and his thesis. Take a look at this lecture by the man himself or at this response by Edward Said. Looking to the example of India, the philosopher Martha Nussbaum argues that the real fault lines are those that exist within societies. See her lecture, drawn from her book, “The Clash Within.”

What else will help to start thinking about western civilization and the study of history? You could watch this silly computer animation. Or contemplate what you might remember from this course five years after Wooster by watching Father Guido Sarducci’s Five Minute University.

Filed Under: Default Tagged With: western civ, world history

Welcome to Western Civ (Since 1600)

August 30, 2010 by Gregory Shaya

Welcome to the Western Civ blog, a place to share links, comments on the topics to come, reading questions, announcements, and random observations. If you have an idea for something we should include here, just send me a message. gks

Filed Under: Announcements

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4

Primary Sidebar

Welcome to the Western Civ Blog

Welcome to the Western Civ Blog! I’m still figuring out how to make this work well, but the plan is to create a running commentary on the course that includes interesting links to supplement the syllabus. Read on, follow the links and let me know what you think. And please feel free to share comments, links, and suggestions. – gks

Recent Posts

  • To Entertain and Instruct
  • Diplomacy in the News
  • World War I Officially Over
  • The War in Moving Images
  • “Burn” and Free Trade Imperialism

Recent Comments

  • laurenc on Diplomacy in the News
  • Nicholas Fedorchuk on Civilization and Barbarism
  • gshaya on The French Revolution
  • gshaya on The French Revolution
  • Greer M on The French Revolution

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in