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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed as HON 212. Provides a basic narrative survey of American political, economic, social and cultural history with an emphasis on modern America. Includes topics such as unity and diversity in American society, the development of common institutions and how they have affected different groups, and America ? relationship to the rest of the world. 3 Cr. Every Semester
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed as HON 220. Provides a narrative survey of American political, economic, social and cultural history. Honors course with selected topics defined by each instructor. Includes topics such as citizenship and democracy, unity and diversity in American society, gender, race and power in American politics, and US foreign policy. 3 Cr.
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3.00 Credits
Studies selected issues and topics according to student demand and faculty interest. Defined by the instructor in accordance with the specific topic offered that semester. 3 Cr.
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3.00 Credits
Examines the changing relationships among science, technology and American society as it developed from rural colony into modern, urban and industrial power. Assesses how government and private institutions influenced scientific and technological development and how that development affected the ways Americans worked, consumed, recreated, communicated, traveled and made war. 3 Cr.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces students to the ways in which a study of sport can help illuminate their understanding of major issues in history. Through the lens of sport they will look at issues such as nationalism, classism, racism and sexism as they have occurred around the world and across time. Reinforces what students have learned earlier in terms of how to read a monograph, how to develop a bibliography, and how to locate and abstract a scholarly article. 3 Cr.
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3.00 Credits
Provides an overview of the history of North America ? native people from the pre-Columbian period to present day. Addresses the diversity and commonalities of Indian culture and experience, the consequences of Indian-European contact, the nature of Indian-European relations and the evolution of Indian identity. 3 Cr.
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed as AAS 313. Provides a study of some of the dynamics of slavery in the South between 1800 and 1860. Includes firsthand accounts of observers and the political, economic and racial implications of this system. Compares the US plantation slavery to other slave systems in the Americas. Encourages students to borrow from the disciplines of anthropology, sociology, literature, and economics, as well as from political and intellectual history. 3 Cr. Fall
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed as WMS 324. Explores American politics from the 18th Century until today, emphasizing central tendencies and long-term patterns in the distribution and exercise of power in America with special attention to gender, interests, and ideologies. 3 Cr.
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3.00 Credits
Following a chronological format, studies the relationship of military policy to foreign policy, the issue of war and peace, the conduct of diplomacy and military operations, the impact of technology on war and politics, organizational development of the armed forces, and the constitutional structure of civil-military relationships. 3 Cr. Spring
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed as WMS 328. Focuses on cultural images of American women, such as the Victorian lady, the flapper, and Rosie the Riveter, individual as well as organized resistance to conventional definitions of womanhood; and contemporary issues, including employment, reproductive freedom, and historiographical issues in women ? history. 3 Cr.
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