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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Role of the frontier as symbol and region in the development of American culture from early settlement to the twentieth century. Topics include race, gender, ethnicity, and popular culture. (Fall or Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Study of houses as historical evidence of social change from the colonial period to the twentieth century. Topics include: impact of gender, region, social class, and ethnicity on American housing. (Fall or Spring or Summer)
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3.00 Credits
Case study approach using photographs as historical evidence from the Civil War to the Great Depression. History and interpretation of specific print materials. Identification, care and handling of historic photographs. (Fall or Spring)
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3.00 Credits
GE Core: GHP CAR: GMO Not open to freshmen. Using paintings, houses, literature, radio, television, and other materials, this course explores the creation and development of American culture from early settlement through the twentieth century.
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3.00 Credits
A history of women in the U.S. to the Civil War. Topics include Native American gender systems, midwives, witchcraft, women's labor and education, families, slavery, and social reform.
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3.00 Credits
A history of women in the U.S. since the Civil War. Topics include women's activism, labor, reproduction, public policy, race and class inequalities, and contemporary women's issues.
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3.00 Credits
Southern and national civil rights politics in light of local and human rights dimensions of the wider black freedom movement. Special attention to leadership, economics, local movements, and white resistance. (Alt Spring)
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3.00 Credits
GE Core: GHP CAR: GMO Selected topics pertaining to development of colonies to eve of American Revolution.
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3.00 Credits
GE Core: GHP CAR: GMO The politics, social structure, warfare, and ideology of the American Revolution set against the background of early modern European thought and modern American constitutional development.
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3.00 Credits
A study of American History, 1789-1848, including examination of political events and politicians, economic and social trends and developments, and growth of sectionalism.
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