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HIST-UA 178: History of Poland
4.00 Credits
New York University
Lecture course focusing on the cultural, political, and religious history of Poland from the Middle Ages to the present. Begins with the foundation of the Polish state in the 10th century, discusses the early modern Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and then considers the modern history of Poland, including the period of the partitions in the 18th century, the evolution of modern nationalism in the 19th century, and the experiences of war and communism in the 20th century.
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HIST-UA 178 - History of Poland
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HIST-UA 180: The Irish and New York
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Irish Studies.
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HIST-UA 180 - The Irish and New York
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HIST-UA 181: Topics in Irish History
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Irish Studies.
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HIST-UA 181 - Topics in Irish History
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HIST-UA 182: History of Modern Ireland I, 1580–1800
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Irish Studies.
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HIST-UA 182 - History of Modern Ireland I, 1580–1800
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HIST-UA 183: History of Modern Ireland II, 1800 to the Present
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Irish Studies.
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HIST-UA 183 - History of Modern Ireland II, 1800 to the Present
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HIST-UA 185: Seminar in Irish History
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Irish Studies.
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HIST-UA 185 - Seminar in Irish History
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HIST-UA 186: European Migration to America: The Irish and Jewish Experiences
4.00 Credits
New York University
Looks at the comparative experiences of two immigrant groups to the United States, the Irish and the East European Jews. Explores the forces that propelled the migrants out of their homes and the ways in which they created communities and new identities in America. Because of its comparative nature, this course asks students to seek both similarities and differences in those migrations. Additionally, there have been numerous points of interaction between the Jews and the Irish. This course focuses on how these two groups understood and related to each other.
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HIST-UA 186 - European Migration to America: The Irish and Jewish Experiences
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HIST-UA 187: The Irish in America
4.00 Credits
New York University
See description under Irish Studies.
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HIST-UA 187 - The Irish in America
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HIST-UA 192: Race, Religion, and Gender in 20th-Century France
4.00 Credits
New York University
Explores how people in France grappled with questions of race, religion, and gender during the 20th century. It begins with the Dreyfus Affair, a national convulsion over anti-Semitism and a miscarriage of justice that influenced debates over prejudice in France for decades thereafter. It then turns to the experiences of women and men during the First World War, including soldiers and workers recruited from the colonies. After examining the dynamics of discrimination against Jews, colonial subjects, and women during World War II, the course concludes with the French-Algerian war (1954-62), when issues of race, religion, and gender surfaced with explosive force in metropolitan France, as well as in Algeria.
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HIST-UA 192 - Race, Religion, and Gender in 20th-Century France
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HIST-UA 195: Liberal Visions of Empire
4.00 Credits
New York University
A lecture course exploring the changing relationship between British liberal thought and Britain's expanding empire from the 17th to the 20th centuries. Liberal conceptions of equality and freedom are generally understood to be fundamentally antiimperialistic in impulse, as historically complicit with imperialist agendas, and as inherently and logically disposed to imperialist domination. The course attempts to put these different claims into historical context and to periodize their applicability.
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HIST-UA 195 - Liberal Visions of Empire
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