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HIST-UA 689: American Jewish History
4.00 Credits
New York University
Surveys the history of the Jewish people in America from the middle of the 17th century until the present. Focuses on the social, cultural, political, and religious development of the Jewish community against the backdrop of American history. Seeks to identify and explain both the preservation of tradition and patterns of innovation. Examines both the inner lives of American Jews and their communities and the kinds of relationships they had with the larger American world.
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HIST-UA 698: Seminar: Sport and Film in American History
4.00 Credits
New York University
Investigates how a visual medium (film), subject to the conventions of drama and fiction, and a popular activity/institution (sport), often associated with frivolity, violence, and puerility, might be used as serious vehicles for conceptualizing and analyzing the past.
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HIST-UA 700: Seminar: Modern Central Asia
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies.
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HIST-UA 700 - Seminar: Modern Central Asia
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HIST-UA 710: Seminar: Japan and World War II in Asia
4.00 Credits
New York University
Takes up a watershed event in Japanese history, the greatest single preoccupation of Japanese historians. The war is dealt with in two senses: its meaning for Japan's international history and its impact on the domestic landscape. Readings are drawn from both primary and secondary sources so that interpretative controversies as well as texts may be discussed. Thematically, the course divides into sections: (1) the great debates over Japanese fascism and ultranationalism; (2) the China War; (3) the Pacific War; (4) the Coprosperity Sphere; (5) the atom bomb, surrender, and occupation; and (6) issues of public memory and war responsibility.
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HIST-UA 737: Vietnam: Its History, Its Culture, and Its Wars
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under East Asian Studies.
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HIST-UA 737 - Vietnam: Its History, Its Culture, and Its Wars
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HIST-UA 743: Power and Poverty
4.00 Credits
New York University
This lecture/discussion course explores entanglements of power and poverty by focusing on dynamics of inequality during economic development under globalization. The course has four parts; each presents a particular angle of analysis. We begin with Amartya Sen's entitlement approach to famine. We then consider contemporary global issues. Our third project is to bring health into understandings of poverty and power. Last, we consider political struggles as potentially productive forces inside inequality environments.
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HIST-UA 745: History of Modern Latin America
4.00 Credits
New York University
Offered every year. Ferrer, Grandin, Weinstein.
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HIST-UA 745 - History of Modern Latin America
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HIST-UA 750: Topics in Latin American and Caribbean History
4.00 Credits
New York University
Focuses on varying groupings of historical experiences in selected countries of Latin America and the Caribbean or on thematic issues on the history of the region. Recent topics include Race and Ethnicity in Latin America, History and Revolution in Cuba, and Latin American Populism.
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HIST-UA 753: History of the Andes
4.00 Credits
New York University
Offered every other year. Thomson.
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HIST-UA 753 - History of the Andes
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HIST-UA 755: Cuba: History and Revolution
4.00 Credits
New York University
Cuba was one of the first territories colonized by Spain and among the last to secure its independence. It was among the last territories in the hemisphere to abolish slavery, yet home to the first black political party in the Americas. Its struggle for independence from Spain helped usher in an age of U.S. imperialism. It is the hemisphere's first and last socialist state. This brief description hints not only at the complexities of Cuban history but also at its significance for international histories of nationalism and imperialism, race and slavery, the Cold War and Department of History socialist revolution. This course serves as an in-depth examination of that complex and fascinating history, focusing in depth on the major themes that have shaped modern Cuban history in the 19th and 20th centuries: race and slavery, nationalism and imperialism, reform and revolution. Particular attention is paid to the revolution of 1959.
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HIST-UA 755 - Cuba: History and Revolution
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