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HIST 084: Topics in 20th C.Middle East
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Distribution Course in Hist & Tradition. Class of 2009 & prior only. Kashani-Sabet. If "the clash of civilizations" is the first image that jumps to mind when thinking about the modern Middle East, then this is the course for you. From the familiar narratives about the creation of modern nation-states to the oft-neglected accounts of cultural life, this course surveys the multi-faceted societies of the twentieth-century Middle East. Although inclusive of the military battles and conflicts that have affected the region, this course will move beyond the cliches of war and conflict in the Middle East to show the range of issues and ideas with which intellectuals and governments grappled throughout the century. The cultural politics and economic value of oil as well as the formation of a vibrant literary life will be among the topics covered in the course. By considering illustrative cultural moments that shed light on the political history of the period, this course will adopt a nuanced framework to approach the Arab/Israeli conflict, the history of the Gulf States, the Iran-Iraq War, and U.S. involvement in the region.
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HIST 090: Pre-Modern Japan
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
History & Tradition Sector. All classes. Staff. This course will survey the major political, economic, social and intellectual trends in Japan from the earliest epoch through the 16th century. ( EALC071) Modern Japanese History. (C) History & Tradition Sector. All classes. Dickinson. This course will survey the major political, economic, social and intellectual trends in the making of modern Japan. Special emphasis will be given to the turbulent relationship between state and society from 1800 to the present.
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HIST 093: Performing History
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Distribution Course in Arts & Letters. Class of 2009 & prior only. St.George. From medieval processions to the Mummers Parade, from military reenactments to Mardi Gras, communities do more than "write" or "read" history in order to feel its power and shape their futures. Drawing upon traditions in theater, spectacle, religion, and marketing, they also perform their history--by replaying particular characters, restaging pivotal events and sometimes even changing their outcomes--in order to test its relevance to contemporary life and to both mark and contest ritual points in the annual cycle. This course will explore diverse ways of "performing history" in different cultures, including royal passages, civic parades, historical reenactments, community festivals, and film.
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HIST 096: Late Imperial China
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
History & Tradition Sector. All classes. Fei. This lecture course -- the first of a two-part sequence -- examines the history of late imperial China through the early 19th century. We begin with the Song dynasty transformation: the rise of gentry society and imperial absolutism, the institution of Confucian orthodoxy, the shift of the population and the economic center of gravity to the south, the commercialization of the economy, and change in the relative status of women and men. We then trace China's subsequent political and social history, including the following themes: inner vs. outer court politics; law, government, and society; intellectuals and political dissent; gender, family, and kinship practices; patterns of peasant life and rebellion; traditional foreign relations and first contacts with the West; internal sources of the decline of imperial order.
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HIST 097: History of Modern China
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Fei. This lecture course -- the second of a two part sequence -- provides a broad survey of political history and social change from the fall of the imperial order to the "market socialism" of today, including the following themes: the interplay of new and traditional forces which made the end of one dynasty the end of a centuries-old political and social order; the political role of new social classes; the search for viable models; war with Japan, civil war, and rural revolution; socialist construction and the development of the two-line struggle; the impact of Cold War; the Cutural Revolution; the opening to the West, economic reforms, and social ferment since the death of Mao.
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HIST 101: Freshman Seminar:Europe before 1800
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Staff.
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HIST 101 - Freshman Seminar:Europe before 1800
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HIST 102: Freshman Seminar:Europe after 1800
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Staff.
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HIST 102 - Freshman Seminar:Europe after 1800
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HIST 103: Freshman Seminar:America before 1800
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Staff.
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HIST 103 - Freshman Seminar:America before 1800
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HIST 104: Freshman Seminar:America after 1800
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Staff.
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HIST 104 - Freshman Seminar:America after 1800
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HIST 105: Freshman Seminar:The World before 1800
3.00 Credits
University of Pennsylvania
Staff.
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HIST 105 - Freshman Seminar:The World before 1800
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