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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Naomi Rogers. For description see under History of Science, History of Medicine.
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3.00 Credits
KariannYokota. For description see under American Studies. PreInd
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3.00 Credits
Sarah Snyder. th 2.30-4.30 Hu (0) Attention by the United States to human rights abuses since World War II. Concern for human rights as it has influenced United States foreign policy, beginning with the Holocaust and the subsequent American commitment to protect human rights internationally. Questions about the consistency of that commitment through the Cold War and following. Contemporary struggles to balance morality and adherence to "American values" with the preservation of national security.
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3.00 Credits
Kariann Yokota. For description see under American Studies.
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3.00 Credits
Amanda Moniz. m 7-8.50 p.m. Hu (0) The intertwined rise of humanitarianism and capitalism in the eighteenth- century Atlantic world. Power dynamics in movements such as antislavery, medical philanthropy, prison reform, and missionary outreach to native peoples.
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3.00 Credits
George Chauncey. m 1.30-3.20 WRHu (0) Changing understandings and regulation of same-sex desire and sexual subjectivity from the colonial era to the twentieth century. Interpretation of primary texts in the context of recent theory and historiography. Texts include sermons, diaries, correspondence, police and court records, medical and sociological studies, political tracts, fiction, photographs, and films.
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3.00 Credits
Beverly Gage. t 2.30-4.20 WRHu (0) The intertwined histories of domestic communism and anticommunism in the twentieth-century United States. Topics include McCarthyism, the communist relationship with the Soviet Union, civil liberties, Cold War culture, and communist activism. Focus on connections between foreign policy and domestic political culture, the effect of anticommunism on political and social reform movements, and questions of American exceptionalism.
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3.00 Credits
MaryLui. w 1.30-3.20 WRHu (0) Asian American women as key historical actors. Gender analysis is used to reexamine themes in Asian American history: immigration, labor, community, cultural representations, political organizing, sexuality, and marriage and family life.
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3.00 Credits
JayGitlin. t 3.30-5.20 WR,Hu (0) The history of Quebec and its place within Canada from the Constitutional Act of 1791 to the present. Topics include the Rebellion of 1837, confederation, the Riel Affair, industrialization and emigration to New England, French-Canadian nationalism and culture from Abbé Groulx to the Parti Québécois and Céline Dion, and the politics of language. Readings include plays by Michel Tremblay and Antonine Maillet (in translation
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3.00 Credits
RebeccaTannenbaum. mw 1.30-2.20, 1 htba Hu (36) The history of women and gender roles from the English settlement of the North American coast to 1900. Emphasis on work and family roles, social and political movements, and regional, racial, and cultural variation.
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