Lecture TimeMonday, 16:30 - 18:15
VenueRoom 304, Lee Shau Kee Building (LSK 304)
LanguageEnglish
Lecturer Ian MORLEY (39437116 / ianmorley@cuhk.edu.hk)
Teaching Assistant Jio GUIANG (faguiang@link.cuhk.edu.hk)
Course Overview
HIST3375 offers an examination of the evolution of Philippine society from the onset of Spanish colonization in the mid-1500s to the start of World War Two in Asia (in 1941). Granting an opportunity to grasp the development of the Philippines under Spanish and American colonial rule, the course places attention upon the nation’s capital city, Manila, a place where life has also been historically shaped by Chinese, Japanese, and native cultural influences. Focusing on elements of cultural, political, and urban history the course endeavours to explain how ‘the Philippine nation’ has historically unfolded, and why Manila, today a metropolis with a population in excess of 13 million people, has come to play such a dominant role in determining the nature of Philippine society prior to the country being granted independence in the late-1940s. Utilizing innovative teaching methods to enable students to critically understand the physical as well as cultural character of the city, and so the nation at large, a multidisciplinary approach is fostered so as to encourage learners to recognize and explain factors that have influenced Philippines civilization as it progressed from the “traditional” to the “modern”. Encouraging learners too to identify connections between the country and places elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region, ultimately the course places the evolution of life in the Philippine Archipelago within the greater Asia-Pacific region. Taught by two professors at Brown University and the Chinese University of Hong Kong the curriculum is cut into two distinct sections: The Philippines pre-1898; The Philippines post-1898. Where possible a comparative analysis with the colonial development of Hong Kong will be provided so as to demonstrate, and explain, the different types and natures of colonial rule, culture, and development that took place in East Asia prior to the end of World War Two.
The course is designed with a number of expected learning outcomes:
Course Structure
The principal teaching/learning situations are:
Lectures
These classes are designed to not only be informative but to allow, where possible, for active student participation. Accordingly, once inside the classroom students will not be passive learners. Instead, where appropriate, lectures will include exercises to engage students with the topics being presented to them. The aim of such teaching practice is to promote learning motivation, to encourage debate, and the development of thinking and analysis processes. For some weeks, e.g. week 4, student will watch a video lecture, i.e. there is no class that week! Applying distance learning students will then bring newly acquired knowledge to the tutorials for discussion.
Tutorials
The tutorials grant students the chance to discuss the topics introduced in the lectures, and in addition they bestow opportunities to help resolve any problems in understanding course content that the students may have. To prepare for these classes materials will be given out beforehand. To provoke debate during the tutorials students will be asked to participate in question and answer sessions. The purpose of this is straightforward: to allow for student involvement, active learning, and where possible deeper learning and critical thinking.
The key text for the course is Luis Francia, A History of the Philippines: From Indios Bravos to Filipinos (available at the CUHK Bookstore, YIA for approximately HK$170 with your CUHK student ID)
Other texts of great relevance to particular parts of the curriculum will be available each week on Blackboard. All lecture-related reading materials and sources usable for course assignments will, therefore, be available online in PDF format.
The curriculum is as follows:
Week 1. Introductory Class (January 6, 2025)
Week 2. The Philippines and the Arrival of the Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish (January 13, 2025)
Week 3. Building the State: Spanish Colonization and Ethnic Groups (January 20, 2025)
Week 4. Chinese New Year Holiday! (January 27, 2025)
Week 5. e-Learning Class – Spanish Manila: A Transpacific Maritime Enterprise and America’s First Chinatown (February 3, 2025)
Week 6. The Rise and Ending of the Galleon Trade (February 10, 2025)
Week 7. e-Learning Class – Understanding the Binondo, Manila’s Chinese Quarter (February 17, 2025)
Week 8. Nationalism inside the Spanish Empire: All Change in 1898: The Spanish-American War, The Rise of American Imperialism and the US Purchase of the Philippines (February 24, 2024)
Week 9. Reading Week – No Class! (March 3, 2025)
Week 10. American Perceptions of the Philippines and the Building of the American Colonial State – with e-Lecture by Ms Nelly Fung (March 10, 2025)
Week 11. Redesigning Manila: The Role of City Beautiful Urbanism (March 17, 2021)
Week 12. Modernity in East Asia (March 24, 2025)
Week 13. The Virtual Fieldtrip of Manila, and Filipinization and the Widening Structure of the Colonial Government (March 31, 2025)
Week 14. The Road to Independence, and the Road to World War Two (April 7, 2025)
Week 15. Colonial and Postcolonial Legacies (April 14, 2025)
Students shall be given a term score based on:
e-Learning
To supplement the students’ learning process all course materials will be available online, e.g. through CUHK’s Blackboard system. To access these materials registered students input their student number and password, and if they so wish, they can download materials. Materials accessible to students include chapters from books, journal papers, photos, virtual reality animation, maps, lecture PowerPoints, and voice recordings of the lectures. The use of online resources ensures that if for any reason a student is unable to attend a class that individual can still access all materials given out in the lecture, and so not fall behind in the course. Furthermore, texts pertinent to assignment questions can be uploaded by Prof. Morley if there are problems obtaining books or papers from the libraries at CUHK. However, to also support student learning outside of the classroom, and so to offer a structured environment beyond the classroom, the courses uses a variety of interactive online instructional methods. These include:
(i) To provide a communicative tool where everyone can collectively learn from each other rather than from just the traditional teacher-centred learning situation.
(ii) To build from knowledge acquired in the lecture hall. For example, by Prof. Morley posting online questions it allows for the exercising of discussion, in turn extending student learning beyond the foundation of the lecture.
(iii) Respects the fact that all students already have knowledge about history, and can develop their own understanding of Asian history in light of their existing know-how and experiences of the real world.
Accordingly, with the lecture, tutorials and online learning support mechanisms a coherent scholarly environment is provided for, one that is purposefully formed to provide for the extension of wisdom both inside and outside the classroom.
The Virtual Fieldtrip to Manila
As part of HIST3375 students will, via a website designed by Prof. Morley, undertake a fieldtrip to Manila. Offering a guided tour through two historic districts students will be given opportunity at first hand to see Spanish and American History in the capital city of the Philippines, Manila. Integrating videos, interactive 360-degree panoramic photos, primary sources, etc., the fieldtrip will supplement information taught within the classroom so as to expand historic knowledge (i.e. factual and skills).
Attention is drawn to University policy and regulations on honesty in academic work, and to the disciplinary guidelines and procedures applicable to breaches of such policy and regulations. Details may be found at http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/policy/academichonesty/.
With each assignment, students will be required to submit a signed declaration that they are aware of these policies, regulations, guidelines and procedures.
Assignments without the properly signed declaration will not be graded by teachers.
Only the final version of the assignment should be submitted via VeriGuide.
The submission of a piece of work, or a part of a piece of work, for more than one purpose (e.g. to satisfy the requirements in two different courses) without declaration to this effect shall be regarded as having committed undeclared multiple submissions. It is common and acceptable to reuse a turn of phrase or a sentence or two from one’s own work; but wholesale reuse is problematic. In any case, agreement from the course teacher(s) concerned should be obtained prior to the submission of the piece of work.