Description
Unlike most contemporary approaches to history, which reflect the fashions and biases of the fleeting present, the Humanitas series offers students something more substantial.
Geared towards history, humanities, and humane letters courses, the Humanitas series offers a continuous, unfolding narrative of Western Civilization through a series of carefully curated primary source documents that trace the founding and beginnings of the American experiment.
Book 1 begins with the myths and politics of peoples indigenous to the North American continent, then moves into a select tour of the peoples, ideas, and events that were most responsible for defining the historical epoch between the Protestant Reformation and the establishment of the American colonies.
Book 2 picks up the fascinating narrative, beginning with the intellectual renaissance known as the Enlightenment and then moving into a select tour of the peoples, ideas, and events that led up to and were involved in the American Revolution.
Humanitas: American Origins Teacher’s Guide PDF offers teachers further resources for understanding the texts included in Humanitas: American Origins. The guide supplies teachers with lesson objectives and plans.
Following C. S. Lewis’s stout defense of reading primary sources in “On the Reading of Old Books,” Humanitas will help “persuade the young that firsthand knowledge is not only more worth acquiring than secondhand knowledge, but it is usually much easier and more delightful to acquire.”
To see all the titles in the Humanitas program, please click here.

Reviews
There are no reviews yet.