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  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Annual This course examines the origins and development of the United States as a great world power from the Spanish-American War to the post Cold War era. Focusing on the connections between international and domestic events, the course evaluates the role of the US as a global power over the past century. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, Global Studies, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, International Affairs Minor, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Annual This course examines major issues in race relations from the perspective of both black and white Americans from the onset of slavery to the present. The course examines the origins and functioning of American slavery, with consideration to the Atlantic slave trade and the role of U.S. slavery within the context of New World slavery; the relationship between European immigrants and African-Americans in terms of the formation of whiteness and the historical meaning of white skin privilege ; abolitionism and antislavery; the development and functioning of Jim Crow segregation; 2nd Reconstruction; the civil rights movement; and the significance of race during the post civil rights era. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Africana/Black Studies, Cultural Mode of Thought, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Sociology Minor, Social Science Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Wintersession Yearly Cycle: Annual This course explores the historical context of various expressions of American popular culture in a variety of media, including: literature, film, radio, television, music, performance, advertising, style and fashion, food, and the internet. It examines the meaning of popular culture to its audiences and the way those audiences use and transform cultural products as part of their everyday lives. Attention is given to popular culture's relationship to "high culture," to economics and commerce, and to social and political developments including, but not limited to the emergence of working-class culture, the Great Depression, the Cold War and McCarthyism, the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War, and the Women's Liberation Movement. Prerequisite: 200-level history course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, Liberal Arts Elective
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Annual This course provides students the opportunity to examine the cultural complexities of the 1950s and to appreciate it as a period of conservatism and restraints as well as a time of notable social change for women. It uses the enormously popular I Love Lucy television series (1951-1957) and Betty Friedan's classic work, The Feminine Mystique (1963), as well as related readings, to show how many women of the fifties challenged the stereotype of domestic, quiescent, suburban womanhood as they engaged in multifarious and diverse activities that helped pave the way for the social protest movements of the 1960s. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Communication Concentration, Communication Minor, Cultural Mode of Thought, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Communication Major, Women's Studies Minor
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Odd Year This course provides an historical study of the evolution of Russian society from the Age of Kiev to the present including the era of the tsars and the Soviet period. Special attention is given to the contemporary situation in Russia. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, Global Studies, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective, Social Science Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Even Year This course consists of an historical study of the ideas and institutions of the countries of East Asia with primary focus on developments in China in ancient times and in the modern era since 1800. Contemporary problems are also discussed. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, Global Studies, Historical Mode of Thought, History Minor, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective, Social Science Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Odd Year This course provides background for an analysis of some of the major problems of contemporary African life. Topics include the ancient culture of Africa, the slave trade, colonialism, African nationalism, and current political, economic and social trends in Africa. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Africana/Black Studies, Cultural Mode of Thought, Global Studies, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective, Social Science Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Even Year This course provides a survey and examination of Japanese history from it's beginnings to the twentieth century, and includes a consideration of political, social, economic, intellectual, and cultural developments. Emphasis is placed on the evolution of Japanese traditions and values and their sources, and also on the history and practices of Japanese business. A major portion of the course will deal with the modern period and Japan's successes and failures as a modern nation. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, Global Studies, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Annual This seminar will explore the origins and evolving complexities of the enormous cultural and economic transformations that are underway in the Newly Independent States (NIS). In particular, it will carefully situate the ongoing economic transformation within a broader cultural, historical, and political context. Special emphasis will be placed on how the rapid collapse of the Soviet Union's command economy, and the resulting cuts in defense spending, have created critical problems for both the West and the Newly Independent States. This course may be taken for honors credit. This course is cross-listed with ECO376, Cultures and Economies in Transition. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, Economics Concentration, Economics Minor, Global Studies, Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, History Minor, International Affairs Minor, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective, Social Science Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course covers in depth a major period, issue, or theme in history. It includes a specialized research paper or project, involves discussion and oral and written reports, and may include guest speakers and field trips. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division History and Social Sciences Department Course Attributes: Historical Mode of Thought, History Concentration, International Focus, Liberal Arts Elective
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