Ttc Video Development: Of European Civilization
The conclusion of the course typically brings the story to the present, or near-present, covering the Cold War division of Europe, the process of decolonization, and the remarkable project of the European Union. The post-1945 story is presented as a deliberate attempt to transcend the very nation-state system that caused two world wars. The EU, for all its flaws, is portrayed as the logical endpoint of a civilization that learned—perhaps too late—to value peace, law, and shared sovereignty over glory and empire. As a TTC Video course, The Development of European Civilization has distinctive pedagogical strengths. The lectures are typically 30-40 minutes, dense with information but punctuated by thematic signposts. The use of maps, timelines, and art historical images (in video versions) helps visual learners. Moreover, the best lecturers adopt a Socratic tone, posing questions (“Why did feudalism decline?”) before offering answers.
In the vast landscape of educational media, The Teaching Company (now Wondrium) has carved a unique niche by offering university-level courses to lifelong learners. Among its most enduring and foundational series is The Development of European Civilization , a sprawling narrative typically spanning dozens of lectures by distinguished historians. More than just a chronological survey, this course attempts to answer one of history’s most ambitious questions: How did a peripheral, fragmented, and “backward” region of the Eurasian landmass come to dominate the globe, define modernity, and then grapple with the catastrophic consequences of its own success?
However, the course is not without implicit biases. By definition, it is a “civilization” narrative, which privileges political, military, and intellectual elites. The experience of women, peasants, and religious minorities often appears as a side-note to the main action of kings, popes, and philosophers. More recent editions have tried to correct this, adding lectures on family structure, popular religion, and gender roles, but the overall framework remains top-down.
Another bias is geographical. “Europe” is often tacitly defined as Western Europe (France, England, Germany, Italy). The Byzantine Empire, the Russian experience, and the Ottoman presence in the Balkans receive far less attention, often as a “different” path. The course struggles to incorporate Eastern Europe, which is frequently portrayed as lagging behind or as a battleground for Western powers.