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HISTORY 2910: Honors Special Topics II
3.00 Credits
Temple University
Arranged each semester, please consult with the instructor. See the history department web site (
www.temple.edu/history
) for the specific topics offered each semester.
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HISTORY 2910 - Honors Special Topics II
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HISTORY 2915: Honors Russian History in Literature and Film
3.00 Credits
Temple University
In this honors course, students read and study a short history of Russia and then read literary works and watch films depicting various periods, topics, events, figures, and issues in Russian history. Students in the course develop an understanding of the depiction of history in literature and film as contingent on the ideological perspective of the storyteller; students also learn to identify ideological perspective through attention to symbol, metaphor, and theme in both literature and film and, in addition, in film, through attention to lighting, sound and other filmic devices.
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HISTORY 2915 - Honors Russian History in Literature and Film
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HISTORY 2920: Honors Special Topics
3.00 Credits
Temple University
Arranged each semester, please consult with the instructor. See the history department web site (
www.temple.edu/history
) for the specific topics offered each semester.
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HISTORY 2920 - Honors Special Topics
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HISTORY 2930: Honors Special Topics
3.00 Credits
Temple University
Arranged each semester, please consult with the instructor. See the history department web site (
www.temple.edu/history
) for the specific topics offered each semester.
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HISTORY 2930 - Honors Special Topics
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HISTORY 2940: Honors Special Topics
3.00 Credits
Temple University
Arranged each semester, please consult with the instructor. See the history department web site (
www.temple.edu/history
) for the specific topics offered each semester.
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HISTORY 2940 - Honors Special Topics
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HISTORY 2970: Honors Topics in Latin American History
3.00 Credits
Temple University
This is an upper division honors course. It focuses on a special topic that changes each term. For more information, please see the history department web site at
www.temple.edu/history
.
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HISTORY 2970 - Honors Topics in Latin American History
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HISTORY 3101: Colonial America
3.00 Credits
Temple University
Many important aspects of U.S. society developed significantly before the Revolution. The purpose of this course is to understand better how this society took shape in that formative early era. The first classes deal with some general issues that colonizers faced as they tried to form and develop settlements in North America, and the way the English entered into this process. Then characteristics of how three regions of the colonies evolved are examined: the South, New England, and the Middle Atlantic. The final few weeks of the course take up changes in political life, economics, and culture that all parts of the colonies experienced in the 1700s and which tended to bring them together towards becoming one new nation, though not a nation without differences and conflicts.
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HISTORY 3102: American Revolution and Republic, 1754-1789
3.00 Credits
Temple University
This course examines the transformations in politics, culture and society that we call the American Revolution. What was revolutionary and not revolutionary about the period? What did the Revolution mean to the people who lived through it, and how might the answer be different for different groups of people? What was the relationship between the famous, enduring ideals of the Revolution and the realities of life in late 18th century America? And what kind of republic came out of the process? We will also consider the revolution as, among other things, a crisis in the first British empire, the creation of independent states and a nation, a civil war, and a massive slave rebellion, the aftershocks of which reverberated in the 19th century.
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HISTORY 3103: The Early United States, 1787-1846
3.00 Credits
Temple University
This course covers the political, social, and cultural history of the U.S. from ratification of the Constitution to the beginnings of the crisis over expansion and slavery. It examines the democratization of politics and the problems of national independence; territorial expansion; economic change; the development of regional, class, religious, racial, ethnic and gendered subcultures; slavery and resistance to slavery; and the new political and reform movements that responded to the era’s deep and lasting changes.
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HISTORY 3103 - The Early United States, 1787-1846
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HISTORY 3104: 19th Century America
3.00 Credits
Temple University
This is an advanced level history course aimed at giving history majors and students in other disciplines such as English and Political Science an understanding of the changes in American life during the 19th century. This is truly a “World We Have Lost,” a society dominated by agriculture, but becoming increasingly industrial and urbanized. But even though a visit to the world of 100 years ago is as foreign to contemporary students as the visit by the anthropologist to a non-western culture, the consequence for modern American life is immense. The topics discussed in this course are related to the changes in the United States that promoted its development as a multicultural democracy and an economic superpower.
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