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HIST 70c: Topics in Natural History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A reading seminar focused on literature relevant for a natural history of humankind from several million years ago to the present. Topics will include population diasporas; long-distance exchange; coevolution; family, sex, and marriage; food; communication; goods and things; technology; human contact with ecosystems; status; demography and scale; and cognitive studies. The course will introduce students to the rapidly growing field of big history or deep history.
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HIST 70c - Topics in Natural History
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HIST 70h: History and Memory
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Explores the interactions of "memory" and historical writing, reading both theoretical writings on collective memory (e.g. Halbwachs, Nora, Yerushalmi and some of their critics) and more practical examples of the historical study of communal memory drawn from different periods and geographical regions. Please note that in contrast to many reading seminars, this course introduces you not to a particular swath of history, but rather to a set of questions raised in various contexts.
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HIST 70h - History and Memory
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HIST 71b: The European Renaissance and Reformation, 1350-1650
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A structured introduction to European Renaissance and Reformation Europe. Both classic and recent studies will be read and discussed. Attention is given to a variety of European lands and cultures. Recommended to undergraduates from all fields of study.
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HIST 71b - The European Renaissance and Reformation, 1350-1650
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HIST 71d: Race and Ethnicity in the British Atlantic World: 1570-1772
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Tracing the rise of the first British Empire, this course examines early modern English conceptions of race and ethnicity. Traveler's accounts, the representations of non-Europeans on stage, and English colonial encounters with native peoples are some of the major sources investigated. Students are invited to assess early modern ideas of race and their influence on English imperial and commercial activity in the Atlantic world, the development of unfree and slave labor regimes, and Anglo-American ideas of liberty.
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HIST 71d - Race and Ethnicity in the British Atlantic World: 1570-1772
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HIST 72j: Ethnic Cleansing and the Making of Nation-States
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Comparative analysis of twentieth-century measures to achieve territorial ethnic homogeneity through mass murder and resettlement. Explores the causes, methods, perpetrators, victims, and memories of ethnic cleansings as well as issues in historical writing and interpretation. Case studies include the Armenian genocide; East Central Europe during and after World War II; the partition of India; the Wars of Yugoslav Succession; and Rwanda.
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HIST 72j - Ethnic Cleansing and the Making of Nation-States
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HIST 73b: Introduction to Intellectual History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Introduction to major themes, periods and authors in intellectual history, in the West and beyond, and to a variety of approaches to the field. Students will be guided through the stages of writing an essay on a topic of their choice. Designed for current and future history concentrators and open to those with similar interests, with instructor's consent.
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HIST 73b - Introduction to Intellectual History
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HIST 74l: The New Deal and American Liberalism
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course studies the responses to the Great Depression that formed the New Deal. Particular attention will be paid to the connection of between policy development and the rise of American Liberalism. Major topics include Social Security, economic redistribution, Keynesianism, social planning, regulatory reform, conservative critiques of the New Deal and others.
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HIST 74l - The New Deal and American Liberalism
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HIST 74m: Rebels, Radicals, and Reformers in Nineteenth-Century America
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This seminar explores the varied, fascinating, and often perplexing social reform movements that flourished in nineteenth-century America. From temperance and abolitionism, to labor radicalism and utopian socialism, to free love and women's rights, we will examine the ways historians have approached and evaluated the many strains of American dissent. Themes will include: class formation and "social control"; religious revivalism; slavery and emancipation; immigration; gender and sexuality; diets and bodies; and transnational influences on reform.
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HIST 74m - Rebels, Radicals, and Reformers in Nineteenth-Century America
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HIST 74n: U.S. History: Major Themes in the Twentieth Century
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
The twentieth-century United States is a vibrant and flourishing field of historical study. The goal of this seminar is to introduce students to the central questions, problems and debates in the history of the "American century." Students will learn how the literature of history has developed through reading both older and newer approaches. Readings focus on questions of politics, political culture, the state and social life. The course is both thematic and chronological (as well as necessarily selective). Students are expected to prepare well for seminar and to participate actively in discussion. Each class will begin with a brief introduction to the readings (no more than five minutes) by a member of the seminar. The idea here is for one student to take special responsibility for leading discussion, raising questions and problems posed by the reading.
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HIST 74n - U.S. History: Major Themes in the Twentieth Century
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HIST 74s: Narratives is U.S. Immigration History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This reading seminar will explore different forms of narratives - scholarly historical work, memoirs, and fiction - interpreting American immigrant lives to examine critical historiographical issues in U.S. immigration history. Through reading seminal historical narratives along with award-winning novels/memoirs, we will investigate on-going construction of major issues in U.S. immigration history such as imperialism, acculturation, language, citizenship, biculturalism, displacement, family, cultural inheritance, community and empowerment, agency and resistance, as well as memory and identity formation.
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HIST 74s - Narratives is U.S. Immigration History
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