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Course Criteria
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3.00 - 12.00 Credits
Topics vary. Recent topics include Jefferson and His Time, Women in 20th-Century America, The Nightmare Years: The U.S.1960-1980, American Religious History, and Conservatism in Recent America.
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3.00 Credits
Reading seminar. Topics vary and may include U.S. Women's History, U.S. Women's History in Comparative Perspective, Gender in History, or European Women's History.
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3.00 Credits
A graduate readings course covering roughly 1500 to 1800 on major themes in the history of the Atlantic World, including empire, identity, race, inter-imperial commerce, migration, borderlands, and Atlantic revolutions. RESTRICTIONS: Graduate students only.
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3.00 Credits
A readings seminar on the Revolutionary era from 1750 to 1812 which addresses the issues of economy, identity, political culture, slavery, frontiers, and America in the Atlantic world.
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3.00 Credits
Reading seminar on development of the modern political party system, the American presidency in transition, the transportation revolution, slavery, abolition reform and important changes in American society during the antebellum period.
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3.00 Credits
Reading seminar on 20th century U.S. history.
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3.00 Credits
Seminar addresses a specific research issue within historic preservation including hypothesis construction, design of research methodology and evaluation of results. Emphasis on use of primary sources and application of data-base techniques.
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3.00 Credits
Focuses on the process of creating a physical record of a historic structure, including preparation of scaled, annotated field notes and measured drawings in AutoCAD (plans, sections, elevations and details), architectural photography, and learning to "read" the critical features of a historic resource.
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3.00 Credits
Black activists of the nineteenth century are called abolitionists so routinely that the appellation goes unmarked and unnoticed. This class will re-center Black activism in relation to the Colored Conventions Movement, which shared its genesis with the antebellum abolitionist movement, but continued, indeed grew, in scope and force after the Civil War.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces various colonial policies of the European powers in Africa, emphasizing the comparisons and contrasts among these policies. Attention paid to the effect of Colonialism on Africa's economic, social and political development.
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