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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 130). War in culture, politics, and society; technology, the Military Revolution and stateformation. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 130 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 188). Origins and causes of the global conflict; the six years of military campaigns; politics and diplomacy of warmaking; race as a factor shaping the war in Europe and Asia. Impact of technological innovations; social and economic aspects of the struggle, as well as its moral and psychological implications. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 188 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 177). U.S. history, 1945-1991. Emphasis on foreign policy and competition with Soviet Union. Impact of Cold War on American society. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 177 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 281). Origins of American involvement, the reasons for escalation, and the Vietnamese response to intervention. The impact on America’s domestic politics, the growth of the anti-war movement, and the economic, social, and cultural effects of the conflict. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 281 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 180). Origins to the present. Jewish origins, formation of a Catholic tradition, church-state relations, and the social and cultural contexts of changing Christian beliefs and practices. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 180 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 221). Politics, war, and masculinity; Christianity and sexuality; changing ideas about gender roles and sexual practices. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 221 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly 222). Modern masculinity, femininity, and gender roles; origins of identity politics and changing sexual norms; contemporary feminist issues. Serves as repeat credit for students who completed 222 prior to fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
Commercialization of the sex trade, Renaissance to the present. Political scandal, capitalism, and globalization; effects of technological change, from the printing press to the Internet. Readings from anthropology, psychology, and feminist theory.
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3.00 Credits
The roles of human bodies and body image in the making of modern Japan. Bodies as a means of understanding the past and the present. Individuals, society, culture, and physical environment. Historical and literary writings and film from the twentieth century.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to the "historian’s craft." Reconstructing the past using primary documents, diaries, letters, memoirs, and declassified government papers. Methods of historical research and reasoning through individual projects. Open only to history majors.
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