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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
bG ,Advanced Modern Hebrew:Israeli Society
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3.00 Credits
AyalaDvoretzky. For description see under Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations.
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3.00 Credits
Orna Goldman. tth1-2.15 L5 Meets RP (26) Reading of academic texts in modern Hebrew, for students with a strong background in Hebrew. Discussion of grammar and stylistics, with special concentration on the development of accuracy and fluency. Prerequisite: hebr 150b or permission of instructor. Conducted in Hebrew. ( Formerly hebr 109b)
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3.00 Credits
Shiri Goren. tth 2. 30-3.45 L5,Hu Meets RP (0) Examination of major themes in Israeli society through film, with emphasis on language study. Topics include migration, gender and sexuality, Jewish/Israeli identity, and private and collective memory. Readings in Hebrew and English provide a sociohistorical background and bases for class discussion. Prerequisite: hebr 140b or permission of instructor. ( Formerly hebr 105a) hebr 471a or b, Directed Reading and Research. Consult the director of undergraduate studies. htba (0) For students who wish to pursue a topic or body of texts not available in the department's regular curriculum. Approval of the plan of study by both the director of undergraduate studies and a member of the department who agrees to serve as instructor is required. Student and instructor meet regularly throughout the term. The course culminates in either a piece of written work or a final examination.
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3.00 Credits
Consult the director of undergraduate studies. For description see under Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations.
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3.00 Credits
Jon Butler. mw1-2.15 WR,Hu (0) Fr sem The survival and prosperity of religion in America from the 1870s to 2000. The relationship of religion to urbanization, industrialization, and American corporate life; efforts to realign religion to meet conditions of modernity; and ways that pluralism, gender equality, race, class, and expanding debates about values and culture challenged religion even as they expanded its influence in unexpected ways. Enrollment limited to freshmen. Preregistration required; see under Freshman Seminar Program.
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3.00 Credits
Valerie Hansen. tth1-2.15 WR,Hu (0) PreInd Fr sem An introduction to the historical traditions of Greece and Rome, Islam, and China. Focus on Polybius, Herodotus, al-Tabari, Masudi, Sima Qian, and Sima Guang. Particular attention to their treatment of people and events outside their borders. Enrollment limited to freshmen. Preregistration required; see under Freshman Seminar Program.
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3.00 Credits
Jon Butler. mw1-2.15 WR,Hu (0) PreInd Fr sem Colonial America and the coming of the Revolution, with special attention to population, economy, religion, politics, and the ways historians assess evidence and develop generalizations. Enrollment limited to freshmen. Preregistration required; see under Freshman Seminar Program. hist 006a/ hshm 005a, Medicine and Society in American History. Rebecca Tannenbaum. tth11.35-12.50 WR,Hu (0) Fr sem Disease and healing in American history from colonial times to the present. The changing role of the physician, alternative healers and therapies, and the social impact of epidemics from smallpox to aids. Enrollment limited to freshmen. Preregistration required; see under Freshman Seminar Program.
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3.00 Credits
Rebecca Tannenbaum. For description see under History.
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3.00 Credits
Anders Winroth. mw9-10.15 WR,Hu (0) PreInd Fr sem The ambiguous role of the Vikings in the history of the early Middle Ages. Focus both on the Vikings' impact in Europe (raids, trade, and settlement) and on developments in their Scandinavian homelands (Christianization and the creation of kingdoms). Enrollment limited to freshmen. Preregistration required; see under Freshman Seminar Program.
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