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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Growth ofwestern civilization from late antiquity to the Renaissance. GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt.-I. (I.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Developmentof western civilization from the Renaissance to the Eighteenth Century. GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt.-I, II, III. (I, II, III.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Developmentof Western Civilization from the Eighteenth Century to the present. GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt.-I, II. (I, II.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Survey of themajor social, economic, political and cultural transformations in the Middle East from the rise of Islam (c. 600 A.D.) to the present, emphasizing themes in religion and culture, politics and society. Offered in alternate years. GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Div, Wrt.-I. El Shakry, Teczan
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Social andcultural history of women, sex roles and the family from colonial America until the late nineteenth century emphasizing changes resulting from the secularization, commercialization, and industrialization of American society. GE credit: ArtHum, Div, Wrt.-I. (I.) Hartigan-O'Connor
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Social andcultural history of women, sex roles, and the family in twentieth-century America, emphasizing female reformers and revolutionaries, working class women, consumerism, the role of media, the "feminine mystique," changes in family life, and the emergent women's movement. GE credit: ArtHum, Div, Wrt.-II. (II.) Materson
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Introduction tothe history of Spanish and Portuguese America from the late pre-Columbian period through the initial phase and consolidation of a colonial regime (circa 1700). Topics include conquest, colonialism, racial mixture, gender, and labor systems. GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Div, Wrt.-I. (I.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Latin Americafrom colony to republic. The nature of Iberian colonialism, the causes for independence, the creation of nation states, the difficulties in consolidating these nations, and the rise of Liberalism and export economics in the nineteenth century. GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Div, Wrt.-II. (II.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour. Latin Americasince the beginning of the 20th century. Themes include export economies, oligarchic rule, crises of depression and war, corporatism, populism revolution and reform movements, cultural and ethnic issues, U.S.-Latin American relations, neo-liberal restructuring. GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Div, Wrt.-III. (III.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion-1 hour; writtenreports. Survey of Indian civilization from the rise of cities (ca. 2000 B.C.) to the present, emphasizing themes in religion, social and political organization, and art and literature that reflect cultural interaction and change. GE credit: ArtHum, Div.-III. (III.) Sen
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