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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Frank Snowden. tth 11.35-12.25, 1 htba Hu (24) The relationship between ideas and revolution in Europe between the French and Russian Revolutions, 1789-1917. Social and historical context of theorists such as Rousseau, Fourier, Marx and Engels, Mazzini, Bakunin, Bernstein, Kautsky, Lenin, Rosa Luxemburg, and Trotsky.
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3.00 Credits
John Gaddis. mw1-2.15, 1 htba Hu,So (36) The Cold War from beginning to end, viewed from the perspective of all its major participants, with emphasis on recently released Soviet, East European, and Chinese sources. Counts toward either European or U.S. distributional credit within the major, upon application to the director of undergraduate studies.
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3.00 Credits
Jay Winter. mw 11.35-12.25, 1 htba Hu (34) A survey of European history that addresses the two world wars and the transformation of European society and culture between 1914 and 1945.
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3.00 Credits
Carlos Eire. For description see under Religious Studies. PreInd
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3.00 Credits
PaulBushkovitch. tth1-2.15 Hu (26) Formation of the Russian Empire and its interaction with foreign policy. Topics include multiconfessionalism and multinationality, imperial strategy, and economic development on Russia's European and Asian frontiers.
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3.00 Credits
Fabian Drixler, Valerie Hansen. mw 10.30-11.20, 1 htba Hu (33) Introduction to the history of societies in East Asia, including China, Inner Asia, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam, focusing on interactions over the past 1500 years.
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3.00 Credits
Peter Perdue. th 2.30-430 WR,Hu (0) The impact of Asian farmers, merchants, and states on the natural world. Focus on imperial China, with discussion of Japan, Southeast Asia, and Inner Asia in the early modern and modern periods. Themes include frontier conquest, land clearance, water conservancy, urban footprints, and relations between agrarian and nonagrarian peoples. Attention to environmental movements in Asia today.
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3.00 Credits
Toby Lincoln. For description see under East Asian Studies.
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3.00 Credits
Valerie Hansen. tth 2.30-3.20, 1 htba Hu (0) PreInd A survey of Chinese history from the introduction of oracle bone writing in c. 1200 b.c. to a.d. 1600, and the effects of the discovery of the New World on China. Use of philosophical, religious, and literary texts in translation as well as archaeological and art-historical evidence.
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