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HIST 1350: Theories of Secularization: Conference Course
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This advanced undergraduate course surveys various debates concerning the historical process and philosophical-political significance of secularization, especially the secularization of political norms. The course concentrates on the history of European thought since 1650, with special reference to the encounter between Western monotheistic religion and rationalist modes of criticism that first emerged with the scientific revolution. Readings from: Veyne, Febvre, Marx, Weber, Schmitt, Lowith, Strauss, Blumenberg, and Taylor.
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HIST 1390: Understanding Democracy through History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Examines the evolution of democracies in different nations over extended periods of time, and will focus on one fundamental issue: Under what circumstances or conditions have democracies (or political rights) expanded, and under what circumstances of conditions have they contracted? Readings will include historical studies as well as comparative theoretical works.
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HIST 1390 - Understanding Democracy through History
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HIST 1410: American Families, 1600-1900
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Family forms in the United States have varied widely over the centuries. This course will consider the radical innovations of 17th century Puritans, eighteenth-century Moravians, and nineteenth-century Mormons; the role of the family in debates over slavery, immigration, and the status of American Indians; and the impact of legal, economic, and social changes on mainstream ideals and practices. Students will work with a wide variety of family records as well as public documents and will have the option of writing about their own family history.
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HIST 1410 - American Families, 1600-1900
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HIST 1430: Asian America and World War II
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course, through readings, discussions, and lectures, explores the lives and experiences of Asian Americans on the homefront during World War II. We will consider the social, economic, political, and cultural changes and continuities experienced by Asian Americans during the United States' war with Japan. We will also examine the consequences of the unprecedented internment of Japanese Americans, and their relevance for post 9-11 America.
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HIST 1431: Asian American History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course examines the experiences of Asian immigrants and Americans from the mid-19th century to the present. We will explore the continuities and changes of their experiences in larger contexts of U.S. race relations, feminism, labor movements, and international politics. We will also consider how the experiences of Asian immigrants and Americans complicate major narratives of U.S. history and how, together with other people of color, Asian Americans have transformed American society and culture.
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HIST 1434: American Public Life in the 20th Century
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A course covering the major public and political events in America from the administration of Teddy Roosevelt through Ronald Reagan. Focuses on both rising national unity and power, as well as persistent racial, gender, and economic division that conflicted with this unity. Topics include: the Progressive Era, New Deal, World Wars, and Civil Rights Movement, and Watergate.
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HIST 1445: Science and Religion in American Public Culture
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This lecture course explores the multivalent interactions of science and religion in the United States, with a particular focus on the influence of democratic politics. Circling outward from the Scopes trial of 1925, it reaches back to the "pan-Protestant establishment" and the Darwinian controversies of the nineteenth century, and forward to today's debates over abortion and bioengineering. Students read a wide range of primary sources and examine visual material. No previous coursework is required.
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HIST 1445 - Science and Religion in American Public Culture
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HIST 1448: Culture and Politics in the (First) Gilded Age: The United States, 1861-1900
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course examines the exciting and turbulent decades when the United States emerged from the ashes of the Civil War to become a modern industrial nation and major world power. Remembered for its robber barons, teeming social conflicts, laissez-faire ideology, and turn to empire, the first "Gilded Age" is often said to provide lessons for the world we are living in today. Together we will debate to what extent this may be true.
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HIST 1448 - Culture and Politics in the (First) Gilded Age: The United States, 1861-1900
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HIST 1457: History of American Capitalism
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Examines the development of the American economy from its beginnings to the present. Focuses on the nature of economic change during the past 400 years and the reasons for and effects of capitalist growth. Topics include Native-American economies, the industrial revolution, slavery, the rise of new business structures, labor relations, and technological change.
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HIST 1457 - History of American Capitalism
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HIST 1462: History of Sexuality in Modern West
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Focusing mainly on the United States and secondarily on Europe, this course will examine changing sexual cultures and their relation to political economy as well as to gender norms from the 17th through 20th centuries. The emergence and ascendance of the concepts of sexuality, heterosexuality and homosexuality will be examined through intellectual and social history.
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