History of the Slave South

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Free Online Course: History of the Slave South provided by Coursera is a comprehensive online course, which lasts for 5-8 hours a week. The course is taught in English and is free of charge. Upon completion of the course, you can receive an e-certificate from Coursera. History of the Slave South is taught by Stephanie McCurry.

Overview
  • Within the United States, the pre-CivilWar South was a distinct region of plantations, enslaved labor, andagricultural production for the export market. It was always part of a globaleconomy, tied into networks of capital, labor, and commodity markets thatspanned continents. The wealth of the slave South was absolutely central to thepolitical and economic growth of the U.S. and its emergence as a continentalempire in the nineteenth century, but ultimately that system had to bedestroyed for the country to claim its place as a world power.

    Why that was – why the U.S. experienced a brutal Civil War in the 1860s – is amatter of considerable contention among scholars and a central theme of thecourse. The history of the South is a crucial part of the story of the rise ofthe U.S. as a global power and it is particularly compelling because of itshistory as a slaveholding society, the wealthiest in the western world in 1860.This course is about the ethical and political questions that historynecessarily poses about the relationship between slavery, capitalism, anddemocracy in U.S. and world history.  It is about the rise and fallof the slave South from the beginning of the seventeenth century to the end ofthe American Civil War.

Syllabus
  • Week One (January 19-January 25)

    Lecture 1: New Worlds in the Making 

    Lecture 2: Slavery and the Making of the Atlantic World

    Readings

    Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano; Or, Gustavus Vassa (1789). (Read OnlyFrontmatter, Chapters 1 and 2)

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 1 – Suggested Due Date: 01/25 at noon (EST)


    Week Two (January 27-February 02)

    Lecture 3: Servitude and Slavery on the Periphery

    Lecture 4: Emergence of Southern Slavery

    Readings

    State of Virginia, "Enactment of Hereditary Slavery" (1662)

    State of South Carolina, "An Act for the Better Ordering and Governing Negroes and Other Slaves in this Province" (1740).

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 2 – Suggested Due Date: 02/01 at noon (EST)


    Week Three (February 03-February 09)

    Lecture 5: William Byrd’s World

    Lecture 6: Planters’ Revolution

    Readings

    William Byrd II, "William Bryd II to Charles Boyle, Earl of Orrery" (1726). (Read OnlyPages 59-62).

    Earl of Dunmore, "Proclamation" (1775).   

    Thomas Jefferson, "The Declaration of Independence" (1776). 

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 3 – Suggested Due Date: 02/10 at noon (EST)


    Week Four (February 10-February 16)

    Lecture 7: Slaves’ Revolution

    Lecture 8: Jefferson and Slavery

    Readings

    Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (1785). (Read OnlyQueries XIV and XVIII)

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 4 – Suggested Due Date: 02/16 at noon (EST)

    Writing Assignment 1 – Suggest Due Date: 2/18 at noon (EST)

    Peer Feedback 1 – Suggested Due Date: 02/22 at noon (EST)  


    Week Five (February 17-February 23)

    Lecture 9: Slavery’s Constitution

    Lecture 10: Empire of Cotton

    Readings

    Committee and Council of the Cherokee Nation "Address of the Committee and Council of the Cherokee Nation Convened to the People of the United States" (1830).

    Charles Ball, Fifty Years in Chains; Or, The Life of an American Slave (1859). (Read OnlyChapters 2 and 5)

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 5 – Suggested Due Date: 02/21 at noon (EST) 


    Week Six (February 24-March 02)

    Lecture 11: Plantation Regime

    Lecture 12: Masters and Slaves

    Readings

    James Henry Hammond, "Letter to an English Abolitionist" (1845).

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 6 – Suggested Due Date: 03/01 at noon (EST)


    Week Seven (March 03-March 09)

    Lecture 13: World the Slaves Made

    Lecture 14: Yeoman Farmers and Slaveholder’s Democracy

    Readings
    Solomon Northrup, Twelve Years a Slave (1853). (Read OnlyChapter XII)

    Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861). (Read OnlyChapters V, VI, VII, X, and XIV)

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 7 – Suggested Due Date: 03/08 at noon (EST)

    Writing Assignment 2 – Suggested Due Date: 03/12 at noon (EST)

    Peer Feedback 2 – Suggested Due Date: 03/17 at noon (EST) 


    Week Eight (March 10-March 16)

    Lecture 15: Democracy and Empire or The Problem of the Territories

    Lecture 16: Political Collapse 

    Readings

    John Archibald Campbell, "Nashville Convention of 1850: Resolutions" (1850). (Read OnlyPages 122-125)

    State of Georgia, "Georgia Platform" (1850).

    James Henry Hammond, "Cotton is King Speech" (1858).

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 8 – Suggested Due Date: 03/15 at noon (EST) 


    Week Nine (March 17-March 23)

    Lecture 17: Secession Solution

    Lecture 18: Confederate Republic

    Readings

    State of Mississippi, "A Declaration of the Immediate Causes which Induce and Justify the Secession of the State of Mississippi from the Federal Union" (1860).

    The Confederate States of America, "The Confederate Constitution" (1861).

    Alexander Stephens, "Corner Stone Speech" (1861).

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 9 – Suggested Due Date: 03/22 at noon (EST)

    Writing Assignment 3 – Suggested Due Date: 03/26 at noon (EST)

    Peer Feedback 3 – Due on 03/31 at noon (EST)


    Week Ten (March 24-March 30)

    Lecture 19: Confederate Reckoning

    Lecture 20: The Slaves’ Civil War or the Fall of the Slave South

    Readings

    Patrick Cleburne, "Patrick Cleburne's Proposal to Arm Slaves" (1864).

    Assignments

    Discussion Board Post 10 – Suggested Due Date: 03/29 at noon (EST)

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