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HIST 86d: The Indian Ocean in Comparative Perspective
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Explores the history of the Indian Ocean inter-regional arena in the comparative context of histories of the Atlantic, Mediterranean and the Pacific worlds from the 1490s to the 1990s. The changing meanings of sovereignty, religiously informed universalisms and the links forged by intermediary capital and migrant labor in the age of global empire.
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HIST 86d - The Indian Ocean in Comparative Perspective
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HIST 88b: Medieval History and Cinema
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course deals with the challenges of representing medieval history by focusing on selected films, which will be viewed at two levels at once, as films and as history. What are the uses of cinema as a vehicle for thinking about the past? What qualities, other than accuracy, make for good history in films? What are the advantages, if any, of cinematic representation of the premodern past with its different sense of intimacy with the supernatural?
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HIST 88b - Medieval History and Cinema
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HIST 89a: British Colonial Violence in the 20th Century
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Will explore Britain's deployment of various forms of violence in its 20th-century empire, and how this violence was understood, justified, and represented in the empire and at home. Imperial objectives and policies will be weighed alongside local factors such as race, settler presence, indigenous responses to colonial rule, and economic and strategic interests to assess the universality and particularity of British colonial violence.
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HIST 89a - British Colonial Violence in the 20th Century
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HIST 89g: American Business and U.S. Foreign Relations, 1900-Present
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course will examine the impact of American business concerns in the conduct of the United States' foreign relations in the twentieth century. Topics will include the negotiation of protectionist claims at home, the drive to open markets abroad, the salience of investment disputes in U.S. bilateral relations, and U.S. government support for the internationalization of American business.
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HIST 89g - American Business and U.S. Foreign Relations, 1900-Present
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HIST 91r: Supervised Reading and Research
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Limited to juniors and seniors. Students wishing to enroll must petition the DUS for approval, stating the proposed project, and must have the consent of the proposed instructor. Ordinarily, students are required to have taken some course work as background for their project.
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HIST 91r - Supervised Reading and Research
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HIST 97: Sophomore Tutorial
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Introduction to the ways in which historians recreate the past. Students will read prototypes of historical genres and write their own histories in alternating sessions. Discussion sections and small tutorials.
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HIST 97 - Sophomore Tutorial
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HIST 99: Senior Thesis Tutorial
8.00 Credits
Harvard University
Research and writing the senior thesis in History.
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HIST 99 - Senior Thesis Tutorial
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HIST-LIT 90ae: Border Crossings: Remaking European Identities
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Explores changing concepts of European identity, from the Enlightenment to the European Union. Focusing on "border zones" of Europe, we will examine topics such as the division between Eastern and Western Europe, the shifting boundaries between nations, and the position of outsiders-women, Jews, and Muslims-within European culture and politics. Primary texts include literary works (Pushkin, George Eliot, Gunter Grass), political writings (Voltaire, Rousseau, J.S. Mill), historical documents, and recent films about Muslim immigrants.
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HIST-LIT 90ae - Border Crossings: Remaking European Identities
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HIST-LIT 90af: Mexican American Crossings
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Explores movement and exchange between Mexico and the United States during the twentieth century by examining literary texts, films, art, and historical sources. Will consider international events and policies that have inspired border-crossings. How does culture bleed across a border that still has political and economic significance? What sorts of mestizo identities are forged in the geographical and cultural borderlands? Topics include the Mexican Revolution, Mexican artists in the United States, NAFTA, Narcotraffic, and tourism.
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HIST-LIT 90af - Mexican American Crossings
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HIST-LIT 90l: Stories of Slavery and Freedom
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
In the last generation, scholars have revolutionized our understanding of slavery and freedom in the modern Atlantic world. This sea-change has been the result of a major methodological shift: to view this history through the eyes of slaves rather than the eyes of masters. This course will examine the history of the "black Atlantic" through a diverse range of cultural texts--poetry, pamphlets, court cases, petitions, autobiographies, novels, speeches, and sermons--produced by slaves, free blacks, and abolitionists from the Age of Revolution to emancipation.
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HIST-LIT 90l - Stories of Slavery and Freedom
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