|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
(Same as WMST 432A.) Examines the history of women in the United States from the period of European contact to Reconstruction. Examines women’s changing roles in the family, work force, politics, and social movements. Examines the historical experience of European colonists, Native Americans, African Americans, and immigrants. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
(Same as WMST 432B.) Women’s relationship to the economy and to political movements; changing ideals of womanhood; the demographic and sexual revolutions transforming family life and gender roles; and class, race, ethnic, and regional variations in female experience. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
(Same as AAS 432.) Topical approach to Black history that seeks to illuminate grand themes such as DuBois’ notion of “doubleconsciousness,he dilemma of being both Black and American. Explores in depth such topics as religion, family, slavery, urban life, education, labor, culture, and politics. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Growth of cities from colonial times to the present. Topics include urbanization, suburbanization, transportation innovations, crime, housing, and racial conflicts. Special emphasis given to the role of the city in American history. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Investigation of the radical impact of industrial modernity upon the European metropolis from the eighteenth century onwards. Focuses on cultural, social, technological, and architectural developments in the major European cities, such as London, Paris, Vienna, and Berlin. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Analysis and interpretation of European attitudes and ideas from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment, 1450-1775, including humanism, republicanism, Protestantism, science, liberalism, and early economic thinking. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Analysis and interpretation of European attitudes and ideas since the Enlightenment, 1775-present, including Idealism, Marxism, cultural individualism, psychoanalysis, existentialism, and structuralism. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Genocidal aspects of the Nazi Era in Germany. Special emphases on why Americans have become so “Holocaust conscious,” and onthe impact of the Holocaust on international Jewry. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Study of how world wars, the Great Depression, and other historical events have affected American families and communities in the twentieth century. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits.
-
3.00 Credits
Ethnohistorical examination of Native American peoples from early times to 1851. Includes origin of theories, Indian-white relations, U.S. Indian policy, concentration, assimilation, removal, and resistance to westward expansion. Prerequisite: Six credits of history. 3 credits. 334 College of Liberal Arts
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2024 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|