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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Explores the new scholarship in American environmental history, considering the intellectual and material interaction people have had with the environment of North America, from pre-contact to the present.
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3.00 Credits
The course explores the multifaceted dimensions of military history to include: the international security environment; the relationship between American security policy, strategic planning, and intelligence; civil-military relations; defense legislation; the roles and missions of the armed forces; leadership; strategic thought; doctrinal developments; technological innovation; industrial mobilization; joint and combined operations; operational and tactical effectiveness; and the experience of battle.
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3.00 Credits
The course explores the multifaceted dimensions of military history to include: the international security environment; the relationship between American security policy, strategic planning, and intelligence; civil-military relations; defense legislation; the roles and missions of the armed forces; leadership; strategic thought; doctrinal developments; technological innovation; industrial mobilization; joint and combined operations; operational and tactical effectiveness; and the experience of battle.
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3.00 Credits
The evolution and practice of Western science from origins to contemporary ideas.
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3.00 Credits
This course will consider the theoretical background of public history and its disciplines: historic preservation, museum studies, archives and records administration, and documentary editing. Students will survey, research, and analyze the ways in which history is conveyed to a broad public through museums, monuments, sites, films, and other media outside the classroom or scholarly writings. (Replaces HIST 2500.)
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3.00 Credits
A study of the historic preservation movement in the United States including the history and evolution of the movement, theoretical origins, current conditions and laws, organizational framework and design philosophies.
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3.00 Credits
Advanced principles in copyediting, scholarly publication, and preparation of material for mulitple publishing venues, including journals and monographs, public displays, and online collections.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction to archival management, in which the students learn how archival institutions obtain, process and manage a variety of archival formats, and how this information is made available to the public generally and to historians in particular.
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3.00 Credits
The history of the North American continent from pre-contact to the end of the French and Indian War. This course will study the lives of the First Nations in the countries now known as Canada, the United States, and Mexico before and after contact with Europeans. We will also investigate the imperial conquest of North America by the Spanish, French, British, and other European powers. In addition, the forced migration of Africans and their enslavement in North America as well as the enslavement of others will also be a key focus of the semester.
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3.00 Credits
Atlantic World history refers to relationships and interactions between the peoples of the Americas, Africa and Europe, from the fifteenth through the nineteenth century. Its study focuses on themes such as migration and colonialism; the African slave trade, New World slavery and its abolition; trans-oceanic commerce and the development of history's first worldwide cash economy; violence, mixing and transculturation among Europeans, Africans and indigenous Americans; negotiation of knowledge about medicine, geography and the natural world; and the evolution of imperial systems and the wars of Independence.
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