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HIST 75c: Readings on Modern Latin American History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course serves as an introduction to Latin American historiography, covering the span between the 19th Century's processes of independence and the military dictatorships of the second half of the 20th Century. It includes readings on Argentina, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Cuba, and Brazil. This course is not designed to provide an extensive review of Latin America; however, the readings have been selected to cover an ample spectrum of themes, sources, countries and historical periods.
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HIST 75c - Readings on Modern Latin American History
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HIST 75d: The Making of the Spanish Empire, 1400-1600: A Reading Seminar on History and its Uses
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course examines the rise of the Spanish Empire from 1400 to 1600, a period that encompassed some of the pivotal events of the past thousand years: the conquest of Muslim Granada, the expulsion of the Jews from Spain, Columbus's voyages, and the conquest of the Aztec Empire, to name a few. We will examine these and other events through primary and secondary sources, and explore their impact through salient products of contemporary American culture.
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HIST 75d - The Making of the Spanish Empire, 1400-1600: A Reading Seminar on History and its Uses
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HIST 76a: Japanese Imperialism
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course examines one of the most important, but least studied empires of the modern world. By the early 1940s the Japanese empire encompassed some 200 million subjects, stretching from the cold northern woods of Sakhalin Island to the tropical rain forests of the Indonesian Archipelago. Rather than treating Japanese imperialism as exceptional, we will use it to explore the nature of modern empire, asking how its study might reshape broader understandings of imperialism and its consequences.
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HIST 76a - Japanese Imperialism
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HIST 79f: Empire and Nation in Russia and China
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Examines comparatively how imperial rule functioned in the Eurasian empires of Russia and China, and how the imperial heritage affected the transition to national and communist state forms. Theories of empire and nationalism based on European paradigms will be interrogated. Topics will include discourses of empire, the production of imperial knowledge, ethnicity, the frontier, colonization, Communism and national self-determination, Russification and Sinicization, religion, gender, and language. All readings will be in English.
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HIST 79f - Empire and Nation in Russia and China
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HIST 79h: International History
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Introduces students to major themes, ideas and developments in the modern history of international relations. Topics include imperialism, postcolonialism, the Cold War, and globalization.
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HIST 79h - International History
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HIST 80a: Roman Imperialism
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Whether regarded as a model for European empires or as a precursor of western colonialism and globalization, Roman imperial expansion has captured both popular and scholarly imaginations. We proceed thematically, analyzing a variety of textual and material evidence for the changing nature of Roman imperialism between the mid-Republican and early imperial periods, and its impact on the politics, culture, religion, and society of Roman and local communities alike.
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HIST 80a - Roman Imperialism
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HIST 80e: From Gaul to France: The History, Archaeology and Science of the Fall of the Roman Empire
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
What was the fall of the Roman Empire like in Gaul? We will use archaeology, ancient texts in translation, Roman material culture (coins, ceramic), natural scientific data and computers to try to answer this question and discover how Gaul ended and France began between about 200 and 500 A.D. Reading knowledge of French or German will expand the fun but is not necessary.
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HIST 80e - From Gaul to France: The History, Archaeology and Science of the Fall of the Roman Empire
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HIST 81c: The English Revolution
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course will fulfill the concentration requirement for a research course requiring the completion of an historical essay based on primary materials. It will explore the causes, course, and consequences of the English Revolution by focusing on selected topics covering the range of issues that dominated the period from the convening of the Lord Parliament to the execution of Charles I. Emphasis will be on research techniques and the use of seventeenth century sources.
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HIST 81c - The English Revolution
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HIST 81h: English Law and Society, 1571-1788
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course explores English legal development from the sixteenth through to the late eighteenth century. Bookended by the careers of two leading English jurists, Sir Edward Coke and Lord Mansfield, this was a period of fundamental change in English law. Major topics include constitutional and religious transformation, the development of the criminal law, and colonial law. Students will also examine methodologies that integrate the study of law and society.
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HIST 81h - English Law and Society, 1571-1788
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HIST 82d: French Colonial Encounters: 1870's to Present
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Explores and compares three colonies in the French Empire: French West Africa, Algeria, and Indochina, considering how colonial rule was extended, how individuals responded, and what reverberations there were between colony and metropole.
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HIST 82d - French Colonial Encounters: 1870's to Present
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