how one theme changed over time
· Ole J. Benedictow, “The Black Death: The Greatest Catastrope Ever,” History Today, March 2005: http://www.historytoday.com/ole-j-benedictow/black-death-greatest-catastrophe-ever BB
· Alexander Lee, “What Lies Beneath: The Black Death in London,” History Today, 20 March 2013: http://www.historytoday.com/blog/2013/03/what-lies-beneath-black-death-london BB
· Vasari, Lives of the Artists: Michelangelo BB
· Symcox & Sullivan, 1-37, 60-83, 155-176
· “Tobacco Readings” BB
· Scribner Article BB
· “Early Reformation Primary Sources” BB
[read: Luther, “Appeal to the Christian Nobility of the German Nation,” “Statement of Grievances” from the Diet of Worms, and Lotzer, “Twelve Articles of the Peasants of Swabia”]
· “Women & the Reformation Readings” BB
· Diefendorf, 1-35, 82-111, 128-148
· Morton, xiii-xxxiii, 6-8, 14-23, 27-31, 39-40, 50-2, 55, 63-5, 71-8, 82-94, 98-105, 113-6, 119-123, 142-5, 148-9
· Hunt, 1-50 “Enlightened Readings”
[Read: Filmer, from Patriarcha; Locke, from Two Treatises of Government; Rousseau, from The Social Contract; Kant, “What is Enlightenment”] BB
· Robert Darnton, “The Forbidden Books of Pre-Revolutionary France” BB
· Mercier, The Year 2440 (1771) BB
· Hunt, 51-79 plus 82-101 OR 101-118 OR 119-139