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43.258: Russia to 1796Credits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 The growth of the Russian state: Varangian origins, the Kievan state, conversion to Christianity, Mongol domination, the rise of Muscovy, Europeanization and expansion under Peter the Great and Catherine the Great.
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43.270: Women in American HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course surveys the history of women in the British North American colonies and United States with a special focus on social and economic change. It examines women as a distinct group but also attends to divisions among them, particularly those based on class, ethnicity/race, and regional diversity. Course themes include concepts of womanhood, the development and transgression of gender roles, unpaid work and wage labor, social reform and women's rights activism, as well as changing ideas and practices with respect to the female body.
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43.270 - Women in American HistoryCredits
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43.272: Native American HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course is an overview of the history of the first peoples of North America from pre-European contact to the present. The course will offer a general framework for understanding indigenous Americans and their historical experiences by exploring the forces of continuity and change that have shaped Native Americans' lives through time and space. This view will stress the ongoing presence of American Indian peoples and their efforts to preserve the integrity and viability of their dynamic, self-directed societies and cultures.
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43.272 - Native American HistoryCredits
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43.274: Native American HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 A comprehensive study of the Native Americans through historical and first-hand accounts of their lives. Designed to enlighten students and to represent fairly the Native Americans, dispelling some of the existing myths about them.
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43.274 - Native American HistoryCredits
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43.275: African-American HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course surveys African American history in the United States from colonization to the present. It begins with a study of life in West Africa and traces the forced migration of Africans to the Americas. It explores West African transmissions, the freedom struggle, the great migrations from the South, the Harlem Renaissance, the modern Civil Rights movement, and the continuing impact of African Americans on life in the 21st century.
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43.275 - African-American HistoryCredits
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43.281: Sub--Saharan AfricaCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course provides a basic introduction to the history of the African continent. It will expose students to the processes and patterns that have shaped modern African history. The course examines the historical roots of the many challenges that the continent faces today. But, at the same time, it will also provide students with the knowledge to shatter the myths and stereotypes about Africa.
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43.281 - Sub--Saharan AfricaCredits
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43.296: United States Diplomatic HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Although the course takes the entire United States diplomatic history as its field of historical study, its focus is on the American foreign policy in the twentieth century. The course first explores domestic and international factors that made the United States a world power by 1898. It will then consider the goals, the practices, and the results of the twentieth century American foreign policy. The course challenges students to view American diplomacy in a global context.
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43.296 - United States Diplomatic HistoryCredits
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43.298: Introduction to Historical MethodsCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 An introduction for the undergraduate student to the nature and principles of history. The course takes up methodology, historiography, research methods, electronic resources, bibliography, and the technical and stylistic problems involved in the presentation of research in scholarly form. Required of all history majors in the sophomore year. No Freshman, History Majors only.
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43.298 - Introduction to Historical MethodsCredits
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43.301: The World of Things:Consumer Cultures in the Modern WestCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course will examine the emergence and historical impact of consumer cultures in the modern West, from the eighteenth century through the present. Topics to be covered will include the emergence of spaces of consumption (the home, the commercial/spectacular metropolis, the department store, the shopping mall, the tourist site), changing attitudes toward shopping and spending, the construction of modern social identities of class, gender, generation and race through consumption, and political struggles over consumption. Pre-Req: 43.106 The Modern World
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43.301 - The World of Things:Consumer Cultures in the Modern WestCredits
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43.304: European Economic & Social HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Europe has been transformed in the last 250 years from an agricultural society to a post-industrial one. We study the processes by which this happened, from the Industrial Revolution of the 18th and early 19th century to the wars and depressions of the early 20th century and the collapse of the communist system and European unification in the late 20th century. Students learn basic concepts and methods of history and economics. Level: minimum Sophomore standing
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