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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
A history of black people in the United States from the end of the Civil War to the present. Stress on the rise and fall of Reconstruction, Jim Crow, black migration to the cities, the Harlem Renaissance, the civil rights movement and contemporary issues in race relations. Sacks.
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1.00 Credits
Follows the development of ancient Greek civilization from the middle of the second millennium BCE through the final Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BCE, with special attention to the Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods. Surveys political and military history as well as social and cultural history, including such topics as art, architecture, athletics, drama, literature, leisure, philosophy, town-planning, religion, sexuality and work. Hagerman.
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1.00 Credits
Same as A&S 256. Mullin.
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1.00 Credits
Analyzes the major events, ideologies and individuals that have shaped Chinese state and society from 1644 to the present. Major themes include Confucianism and traditional culture; foreign imperialism and nationalism; the Maoist years; and political dissent and social change in the 1980s and 1990s. Same as Anthropology and Sociology 263. Wu.
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1.00 Credits
Analyzes the major events, ideologies and individuals that have shaped Japanese state and society from 1600 to the present. Major themes include traditional Japanese culture; economic development; JapaneseU.S. relations; and Japanese democracy in the post-war years. Same as Anthropology and Sociology 264. Wu.
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1.00 Credits
Exploration of the factors that push Latin Americans to leave their countries, their experiences of entering and living in the U.S., and how their emigration has affected both their homelands and U.S. society. Emphasis on Mexicans, Cubans and Puerto Ricans in the twentieth century and the development of new "Latino" identities . Kanter.
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1.00 Credits
An examination of subjects or areas not included in other courses. May be taken more than once for credit. Staff.
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1.00 Credits
Comparative study of the development of race-based slavery in Spanish America, Brazil, the Caribbean and the U.S. South. Discusses the Middle Passage, plantation life, slave religion, resistance, emancipation and its aftermath. Invites students to consider the history of ethnic relations within multiracial societies. Kanter.
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1.00 Credits
Intensive look at gender relations, family and morality in Hispanic societies. Includes medieval Spain, colonial and modern Latin America, and Latina/os in the U.S. Asks how ideological and social constructs such as patriarchy and the code of honor have changed in response to conquest, multiracial societies and immigration. Kanter.
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1.00 Credits
The cultural, social and political history of Great Britain during the nineteenth century, with an emphasis on deconstructing the prevailing mythology of prudery and progress. Also examines issues of gender, class and ethnicity. Hagerman.
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