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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
15A Native American History (4). Introduction to multiple topics: indigenous religious beliefs and sociopolitical organization, stereotypic "images," intermarriage, the fur trade, Native leaders, warfare, and contemporaryissues. ( IV, VII) 15C Introduction to Asian American Studies I (4). Examines and compares the diverse experiences of major Asian American groups since the mid-nineteenth century. Topics include: origins of emigration; the formation and transformation of community; gender and family life; changing roles of Asian Americans in American society. Same as Asian American Studies 60A and Social Sciences 78A. ( III, VII)
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4.00 Credits
May be taken twice for credit as topics vary. Same as African American Studies 138. ( VII)
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4.00 Credits
Introduction to the main social, political, and political contours of the African American experience from the importation of Africans into the Americas, from the seventeenth through the eighteenth centuries. May be taken twice for credit as topics vary. Same as African American Studies 133A.
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4.00 Credits
Examines different dimensions-economic, cultural, political, and social-of the African Americanexperience since 1900, including pattern and forms of struggle against racist oppression and exploitation. May be taken twice for credit as topics vary. Same as African American Studies 133B.
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4.00 Credits
Examines the origins, development, operation, and end of slave societies in the Americas, including the pattern and forms of slave resistance. Focuses primarily upon the U.S., the Caribbean (Hispanic and non-Hispanic), and Brazil. Same as African American Studies 132A.
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4.00 Credits
Explores the origins, development, and operation of the institution of slavery in the U.S. from colonial times to the end of the Civil War. Experiences in the North and South are explored, right through to the end of slavery. Same as African American Studies 132B.
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3.00 Credits
151A Chicana/Chicano History: Pre-Colonial to 1900 (4). Examines social history of the southwest region from antiquity to 1900. Discusses major questions, theory and research methods pertinent to Chicanas/Chicanos. Themes include: indigenous empires, conquest, colonialism, social stratification, ideology, marriage, sexuality, industrial capitalism, accommodation and resistance. Same as Chicano/Latino Studies 132A. ( VII) 151B Chicana/Chicano History: Twentieth Century (4). Examines social history of the Southwest with emphasis on Mexican-origin people. Discusses major questions, theory and research methods pertinent to Chicana/ Chicano history. Themes explored include: immigration, xenophobia, class struggle, leadership, generational cohorts, unionization, education, barrioization, ethnicity, patriarchy, sexuality. Same as Chicano/Latino Studies 132B. ( VII) 151C Latinas in the Twentieth Century U.S. (4). Latinas in the U.S. from 1900 to present, offering a diversity of their cultures, regional histories, sexualities, generations, and classes. Same as Chicano/Latino Studies 135. ( VII)
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4.00 Credits
Introduction to important themes in the history of people of Asian ancestry in the United States from the nineteenth century to the present. May be repeated for credit as topics vary. ( VII) 152A Asian American Labor (4). Explores history of Asian Americans and work from the nineteenth century to the present. Areas of study include migration, colonialism, family, social organization, and work culture. Same as Asian American Studies 137. ( VII) 152B Asian American and African American Relations (4). Addresses relationships of Asian American and African American communities in the United States. Topics include race, class, gender, labor, economic systems, political mobilization, community, civil rights, activism, cultural expression. Same as Asian American Studies 167 and African American Studies 117. ( VII)
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4.00 Credits
Introduction to American legal case materials, to legal categories and ways of thinking, and to selected topics in U.S. legal history. Does not offer a chronological survey of the development of law in the United States.
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4.00 Credits
A study of urban communities in the United States, from colonial times to the present. Traces the impact of industrialization and urbanization on social and cultural life and investigates the significance of urban life for U.S. democratic culture.
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