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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 275). Political, international, social, and cultural currents that have shaped contemporary America. No credit for students who completed 275 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 280). The political, socioeconomic, and intellectual history of African American people from the end of Reconstruction to the present. Special emphasis on African American cultural and institutional history and the twentieth-century protest movements. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 280 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 207). Sciences of the human in the U.S. and Europe, 1870 to the present. Measurement and testing; classifications of human types by race, gender, and sexual orientation; institutional power and discipline; differentiations of the normal and abnormal in psychology, psychiatry, medicine, sociology, anthropology, and sexology. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 207 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
The end of the Scientific Revolution to the present. Sciences arising from the fields of Natural Philosophy (physics, astronomy, mathematics, and chemistry) and Natural History (geology and the life sciences). The clockwork universe, atomism and the Chemical Revolution; evolutionary theory (physical, geological, and biological); thermodynamics; and quantum theory. Colonial empires, industry, professional specialization, cultural modernism, and nuclear fear.
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3.00 Credits
The production and dissemination of knowledge of the natural world during the period of the Scientific Revolution, covering roughly from 1450 to 1700. Cosmology and astrology, navigation, alchemy, religion and philosophy, and medicine.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 181). From the commercial revolution of High Middle Ages to Industrial Revolution. Interconnections of economic forces with politics, society, and cultures. Rise of long distance trade; development of business and accounting techniques; public finance; monetary trends; advent of capitalist ethic. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 181 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
The development of American capitalism from the colonial period to the twenty-first century. The reasons for and effects of capitalist growth; how a largely agrarian society emerged as an industrial and commercial leader; and how this in turn shaped the ways Americans produced and lived. The political, social, and cultural dimensions of economic change. The global context of American development. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 294 section 3 in spring 2011.
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3.00 Credits
The movement of American banking institutions abroad from 1893 to the present. Foreign loans and sovereign debt, dollar diplomacy and imperialism, international branch banking and trade financing, money laundering and offshore accounting, political economy and globalization.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 291). Evolution of the form, organization, and structure of the American business firm from colonial times to the present. Entrepreneurs, labor management, financial capital, distribution, invention, and government regulation. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 291 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 131). An introductory survey of the U.S. Navy’s role in foreign and defense policies from the American Revolution to the present. The course also examines the broad principles, concepts, and elements of sea power throughout history. Key points will include technological advances, interservice relations, strategies, and governmental policies pertaining to sea power. This course is designed to meet the NROTC requirement. Does not count toward history major. No credit for both Naval Science 131 and History 169. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed History 131 prior to fall 2008.
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