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HIST 280: Alfred Hitchcock in Hollywood
2.00 Credits
Xavier University
This course is designed for undergraduates and serves as both an in-depth investigation of a major artist and an exploration of American attitudes and institutions during World War II, the Cold War, and the upheavals of the 1960s and early 70s. Students are required to do a significant amount of reading and writing.
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HIST 285: Hollywood:A Soc & Cult Hist
2.00 Credits
Xavier University
Hollywood has always taken historical themes for some of its most ambitious projects, a trend that has become even more pronounced in the past decade. What has not always been understood is that Hollywood and the development of the American movie industry has been a central element in the social and cultural history of 20th century America. Thus, this workshop has two purposes: to critically examine various film images of American history and equally important, to place Hollywood and its products in the larger context of 20th century American history.
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HIST 286: America Through the Lens
2.00 Credits
Xavier University
Films and television programs will be analyzed in order to both identify the cultural and historical messages they contain. The formulas and conventions of Hollywood genres will be examined. This understanding of genre will serve as a primary analytical tool as we de-construct the films and television programs studied in class.
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HIST 286 - America Through the Lens
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HIST 287: Baseball & American Culture
2.00 - 3.00 Credits
Xavier University
Commentators have long argued that baseball is a key to understanding American culture and the American character. Over the past two decades historians of the sport have unearthed an enormous amount of material that not only verifies this insight but allows us to be more precise about the connection between baseball and the development of American culture.
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HIST 288: Un-”Happy Days”:Fear in 1950
2.00 Credits
Xavier University
(COMM288, EDWS288) This course is designedfor undergraduates and serves to introduce students to the study of mass media as well as a crucial decade in American history. It also explores the use and misuse of history, calling into question the tendency to serve up history in ten year units (i.e. the opening lecture is “The Fifties: 1935-1992”). Students are required to do asignificant amount of reading (two books and a handful of reviews) and writing (five short reaction papers and a longer analytical paper).
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HIST 289: Movies & Cities
0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Xavier University
The course is designed for undergraduates and serves as an introduction to both American urban history and the history of movies. It also acquaints students with interdisciplinary methods. Students are required to do a significant amount of reading and writing.
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HIST 289 - Movies & Cities
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HIST 300: Writing in Public
3.00 Credits
Xavier University
Writing in Public is a tutorial for sophomores in the philosophy, politics, and the public honors program. Designed to promote the development of public intellectuals, the tutorial emphasizes writing on public issues for a general audience. Writing in Public is taught in conjunction with POLI 324 Legislative Politics.
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HIST 301: Colonial America
3.00 Credits
Xavier University
Examines the establishment and evolution of Anglo-American colonial societies to 1754, emphasizing their social, economic, cultural, and political development.
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HIST 302: Formative Yrs of Rep:1763-1789
3.00 Credits
Xavier University
Thirteen colonies become a national state. Emphasis on the causes of the American Revolution and the writing of the Constitution of 1789.
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HIST 303: The New Nation
3.00 Credits
Xavier University
The U.S. Constitution and the ideas and issues which conceived and influenced the shaping of the new nation.
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