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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
April
History students on
last leg of journey to the Middle Ages
Andrea Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
4/6/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
At a time of year when people are firming up their summer plans, students
in a college history course are wrapping up a three-month journey.
Using Marco Polo (1254-1324), the great Venetian traveler and travel
writer, as their guide, the 21 undergraduates in History
201 are engaged in medieval travel and in a few related topics,
“cross-cultural exchange and the phenomenon of travel to this
day,” says Sharon Michalove, who designed and is teaching the
novel course at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Along the way, the students are “looking at the principles of
the discipline of history through the lens of medieval travelers,”
Michalove said, adding that she knows of only one other such course
in U.S. higher education.
At the beginning of the semester, Michalove asked her students in “Medieval
Travelers: Cultural Contact and Conflict” to “think of this
class as a kind of journey.” She chose a few sentences from Mark
Twain’s “Innocents Abroad” to serve as a beacon: “Sail
away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore.
Dream. Discover.”
Michalove said she tried to create a course that would teach research
skills while showing students that neither tourism nor globalization
is an invention of the modern world.
“Cultures have had contact and have borrowed from each other for
centuries,” Michalove said, “and many of the conflicts that
we see today are rooted in events that took place in the Middle Ages
and early modern period.”
The most obvious early conflict, she said, was the crusades, a phenomenon
she and her students are exploring.
“But we also are looking at the growth of Greater Serbia in the
14th century, which is connected to the problems in the Balkans today,”
she said, “and many of the territorial issues in the Middle East
were issues among the Mongols, Persians and various Turkic tribes from
the 13th century through the 16th. Certainly the rise of the Ottoman
Turks influenced Western European history into the 20th century.”
The class also is considering slavery, class distinctions and “the
central role that long-distance trade – including the desire for
luxury goods such as sugar and silk – played in cultural exchange,”
Michalove said.
Michalove’s research focuses on medieval education, primarily
women’s education, and court culture and cultural exchange. A
professor in educational policy
studies, she is the author of many journal articles and book chapters
and co-editor of three books, including “Reputation and Representation
in Fifteenth-Century Europe” (Brill, 2004).
“Medieval Travelers: Cultural Contact and Conflict” is one
in a series of new courses at Illinois that fall under the rubric of
“Introduction to Historical Interpretation.” Now in their
second year, these courses focus on teaching students to do historical
analysis, a radical departure from the more traditional courses. Most
are taken by history majors.
“The reason we created the course,” said Michalove, the
associate director of undergraduate studies in history
at Illinois, “was to give students research skills in history
that they would need in upper-level courses and in their undergraduate
research and writing seminar.” The course is required for students
taking a minor in the Teaching of Social Studies, she said and next
fall, it will be required of all entering history majors.
To keep her course from being Eurocentric, Michalove is having her students
focus on the Middle East, North Africa and Asia and on how the West
related to these cultures. She said she is using Marco Polo as a major
case study because, among other things, “he is the western quintessential
traveler.”
“The students have heard of him, his book is accessible in a modern
English translation and he raises interesting questions about travel
and travel writing as well as questions about how documents come down
to future historians,” Michalove said.
Thus, students are drawing heavily from “The Travels of Marco
Polo.” But in contrast, they also are studying writings by Muslim
travelers such as Ibn Battuta and Babur, as well as writings by other
merchants, pilgrims and crusaders, Michalove said.
The students also are required to do library and map exercises; four
debates; seven film reviews; Web assignments; presentations; and a museum
visit and essay on it.
Michalove’s expectations have been up front since day one. On
the course syllabus, she posted a list of 20 “subject objectives”
– everything from “To understand the significance of the
fall of Constantinople in 1453” to “To understand the role
of art, music, printing, rhetoric and public display in the Middle Ages.”
She also posted 11 “skill objectives” – including
“To be able to work as part of a team” and “To be
able to write a piece of original research based on primary documents.”
The students’ final projects will examine why travel literature
was popular in the Middle Ages and why it continues to be popular; which
of our needs does travel meet, and what does it tell us about ourselves?
Michalove believes that travel “allows people to try the unknown.”
“Some people never travel or only travel to familiar places because
they can’t cope with the unknown,” Michalove said. “But
generally, human beings are curious. They hear about or read about other
places, other people, and they want those experiences – either
experientially or vicariously.
“For example, I am fascinated with polar exploration, but I don’t
actually want to go to the Arctic or the Antarctic. So she has a large
library of books on polar exploration, including “Terra Incognita”
by Sara Wheeler, a book that makes her feel “as if I had been
to Antarctica without having to suffer the discomfort.”
Michalove said she intends to visit some of the places she and her students
have been “traveling” to, including Turkey, Egypt and Morocco.
“I truly believe that you can only understand the world if you
are willing to be part of it, and traveling is one way to be part of
the larger world.”
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