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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Spring. Political, economic, and social development of Iberian peninsula from invasion of Moors to 20th century dictators; re-conquest, reign of Hapsburgs, Spanish civil wars, regimes of Franco and Salazar.
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4.00 Credits
Fall. European backgrounds of American history, establishment of European settlements and institutions, emergence of colonial culture, conflict between France and England for New World.
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4.00 Credits
Causes, course, and consequences of the movement for independence in Colonial British North America. Detailed analysis of strategies and campaigns of the War for Independence and of the development of state and national constitutional republicanism.
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4.00 Credits
Fall. Development and growth of American social, political, and economic institutions from the ratification of the Constitution to the Mexican War. Topics include the emergence of new ideologies of race and gender, the market revolution, slavery and the Old South, antebellum religion and reform.
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4.00 Credits
Spring. Political, economic and cultural conditions during the War; resulting problems to peoples and governments of both sections continuing through postwar period.
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4.00 Credits
On demand. How and why the United States was transformed into an urban-industrial society and the consequences of this transformation for American culture, society, and politics. Approved for Distance Ed.
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4.00 Credits
On demand. Why and how the U.S. became a great, and then a global power. The new "associational" state, World War I and World War II, consumer culture, the "new" woman, the Great Depression.
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4.00 Credits
Spring. Crisis of social turbulence, political violence, and cultural ambivalence that marked Rome's transition from city-state to world state; inquiry into how and why Roman archaism, republicanism, and imperialism contributed to collapse of Late Republic and creation of Early Empire.
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4.00 Credits
Spring. Selected cultural, religious, political, and economic aspects of the Middle Ages which laid the framework for modern European Civilization; cross-cultural contacts with the Christian and Islamic East.
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4.00 Credits
Fall. Comparative study of European societies in an age of transition. Examines the Renaissance, the Reformation, the growth of absolutism and constitutionalism, economic expansion, social change, intellectual development, and the emergence of baroque art forms.
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