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HIST 1251: The History of France from 1715-1958
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
France from the death of Louis XIV to the French Revolution and its echoes in the Revolutions of 1830, 1848, 1871 and the collapse of the Third Republic in 1940. The rise and fall of France as an imperial power and as victor and loser of two world wars. Other themes include the history of Paris and cultural change in letters and the arts, with the move from Enlightenment to romanticism, realism, and surrealism.
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HIST 1255: Order and Conquest: Modern Central Europe
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Examines competing concepts for political and social order in the lands historically impacted by German or Habsburg rule from 1848 to the present. Topics include citizenship, class, and ethnic identity in nineteenth-century empires; nationalism and socialism as mass political movements; anti-Semitic ideology and practice; German expansionism and genocide; ethnic cleansing and the redrawing of borders; and the Cold War division of Central Europe.
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HIST 1255 - Order and Conquest: Modern Central Europe
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HIST 1256: Fascist Europe, 1918-1945
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Traces the rise and fall of fascist states and movements across Europe. Examines fascism's ideological influences, political mobilization, social engineering efforts, gender policies, literary and cultural output, use of violence, and relationship to other forms of authoritarian rule. Comparative cases include Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and movements in France, Spain, Hungary, Romania, and Yugoslavia.
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HIST 1270: Frontiers of Europe: Ukraine since 1500
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
The history of Ukrainian territory and its people within a broad context of political, social and cultural changes in Eastern Europe in the course of the half of a millennium. Special emphasis on the role of Ukraine as a cultural frontier of Europe, positioned on the border between settled areas and Eurasian steppes, Christianity and Islam, Orthodoxy and Catholicism, as well as a battleground of major imperial and national projects of modern era.
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HIST 1282: The Russian Revolution: An International History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Analyzes the 1917 Russian Revolution as the central event in the revolutionary transformation of Eurasia from 1905 to1934. Considers the1905-1912 revolutions in Russia, Turkey, Persia, and China; the 1917-18 collapse of the German, Austro-Hungarian, Russian, and Ottoman empires and ensuing revolutions and civil war; ends with Stalin's Revolution from Above, Hitler's Nazi Revolution, and Mao's Long March. Themes includes revolution, civil war, state collapse, ideology, violence, and the transnational political contagion.
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HIST 1300: Western Intellectual History: Greco-Roman Antiquity
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A survey of major themes in the intellectual history of the Greek and Roman World, with special attention to metaphysics, psychology, ethics and the philosophic life. Readings in the Presocratics, Plato, Aristotle, Lucretius, Epictetus, Cicero, Seneca, Marcus Aurelius, Plotinus, Augustine, and Boethius.
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HIST 1301: Western Intellectual History: The Middle Ages to the Seventeenth Century
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A survey of major themes in medieval and early modern intellectual history. Readings in Anselm, Abelard, Thomas Aquinas, William of Ockham, Petrarch, Machiavelli, Thomas More, Martin Luther, Montaigne, Francis Bacon, Descartes, Hobbes.
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HIST 1301 - Western Intellectual History: The Middle Ages to the Seventeenth Century
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HIST 1323: German Social Thought, Nietzsche to Habermas
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A philosophical and historical survey of major debates in modern German social theory over the span of a century, from Nietzsche's anti-foundationalist critique of morality and truth to Habermas's attempt to rebuild a pragmatic-transcendentalist theory for ethical and discursive reason after the collapse of metaphysics. Readings by Nietzsche, Weber, Heidegger, Adorno, Horkheimer, and Habermas.
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HIST 1324: French Social Thought
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A survey of major themes and debates in modern French social theory over the span of a century, from Durkheim's neo-Kantian theory of the social symbolic to Foucault's conception of the historical a priori, concluding with the recent emergence of neo-liberal conceptions of both history and society. Major readings by Durkheim, Mauss, Levi-Strauss, Canguilhem, Foucault, Lefort, Furet, and Gauchet.
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HIST 1324 - French Social Thought
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HIST 1345: The Human Sciences in the Modern West
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course explores how the human sciences evolved from loosely organized discourses into academic disciplines in response to the sweeping transformations of the modern era. Students gain perspective on how universities such as Harvard became what they are today. Readings consist of short primary selections, from Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes in the seventeenth century to Homi Bhabha, Jean Baudrillard, Pierre Bourdieu, Alasdair MacIntyre, Richard Rorty, Steven Pinker, and Francis Fukuyama in our own time.
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