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HIST 1495: The US in the 1960s
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An introduction to the main developments in American society, culture, and politics during the premiere liberal decade of the 20th century. Topics include the New Frontier, the Great Society, the Vietnam war, the Civil Rights movement, the student movement, the counter-culture, and the rise of populist conservatism.
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HIST 1495 - The US in the 1960s
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HIST 1505: Mexico and the Difficulties of Rule: A Historical Inquiry
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This is a survey of Mexican history since 1810 that focuses on the development, successes and failures of the Mexican state. This course seeks to use history as a tool to understand recent controversies about the viability of the Mexican state, and its relation with economic development, political mobilization and organization, social unrest, cultural developments, international relations, natural disasters, and public health.
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HIST 1505 - Mexico and the Difficulties of Rule: A Historical Inquiry
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HIST 1507: Mexico's Indigenous Communities: Their Lands and Local Histories, 1500 to 2010: Conference Course
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course, designed for advanced or ambitious undergraduates as well as graduate students, will analyze how Mesoamerican Indian pueblos actually used local history and legal strategies over five centuries, with a focus on a series of individual cases and their historical context.
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HIST 1507 - Mexico's Indigenous Communities: Their Lands and Local Histories, 1500 to 2010: Conference Course
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HIST 1617: Mainland Southeast Asia: From Colonies to Independent Nations: Conference Course
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
The course covers the history of the countries of mainland Southeast Asia from the time Britain acquired control of Burma in 1824 to the Bandung Conference of 1955. Topics include the divergent approaches of Britain and France to colonial rule, the place of minorities (including overseas Chinese) in the societies and economies of the region, the impact of the Great Depression and the different movements for independence.
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HIST 1617 - Mainland Southeast Asia: From Colonies to Independent Nations: Conference Course
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HIST 1618: Telling Lives in Asia: Conference Course
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Using sources ranging from diaries and memoirs to biographies, autobiographies, records of interrogations, resumes and self-criticisms, this course will explore the ways in which individuals make sense of their lives and the lives of others in Asia. Through the examination of the themes and tropes deployed in stories of men and women both famous and ordinary, we will explore the relationship between self, nation, and narration.
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HIST 1618 - Telling Lives in Asia: Conference Course
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HIST 1620: Modern Vietnam
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Survey of Vietnamese history from 1802 to the present. Covers the period of unified rule under the Nguyen dynasty, French colonial conquest, the struggle for independence, the Vietnam War, and the recent unification under Communism. Major topics include the relationship between the state, the village, and the individual; the transformation of Vietnamese society, culture, and politics under French rule; the rise of nationalism and Communism; the causes and consequences of the Vietnam War.
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HIST 1620 - Modern Vietnam
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HIST 1621: Tokyo: History and the City, 1600-2000
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course charts the history of one of the world's first metropolises. From shogunal capital in the early seventeenth century to global commerce center in the twenty-first, Edo/Tokyo will be examined from political, economic, social, and cultural angles to question familiar assumptions about the course and nature of modernity.
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HIST 1621 - Tokyo: History and the City, 1600-2000
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HIST 1630: Rising China? 1900 to the Present
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course will explore Chinese history in the 20th century, bringing together approaches of political, social, cultural, intellectual and economic history. From the end of imperial China to the People's Republic of China's accession to the World Trade Organization, via the tempestuous Republican era and the heydays of Maoism, this is a survey of modern Chinese history for anyone interested in understanding the history of one of the most important countries in today's world.
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HIST 1630 - Rising China? 1900 to the Present
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HIST 1701: West Africa from 1800 to the Present
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Explores the internal dynamics of West African states from 1800, and West Africa's relations with the wider world. Examines African perspectives of colonialism, nationalism, and the transfer of political power. Concludes with the study of the continued struggle of independent West African states to achieve economic independence.
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HIST 1701 - West Africa from 1800 to the Present
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HIST 1702: Violence, Substances and Mental Illness: African Perspectives: Conference Course
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An introduction to African perspectives on mental illness, exploring the development and practice of psychiatry as a medical field in Africa, examining the grey areas within psychiatric knowledge, and engaging the ongoing debates about the interface between race, culture and psychiatry. Will review African therapeutic systems; witchcraft, causation and mental health; substance abuse; violence and mental illness; and more recent links between HIV/AIDS, loss and depression.
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HIST 1702 - Violence, Substances and Mental Illness: African Perspectives: Conference Course
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