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HIS 215: History of 18th and 19th Century Europe
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
This course provides a broad overview of the major cultural, political, and social changes associated with the emergence of Modern Europe. Topics covered in the course include the Enlightenment, Enlightened Despotism, the French Revolution and Napoleon, the Industrial Revolution, and 19th century European Imperialism.
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HIS 224: United States History Since 1945
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
A study of the major political events and social movements in the United States since World War II. The course examines the Cold War, McCarthyism, the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War, student protests of the 1960s, the counterculture movement of the 1970s, the Women’s Movement, Watergate, the Reagan Revolution, environmental politics, and the rise of a global economy. Film, oral history, and primary sources from the periods studies play major roles in this course.
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HIS 225: United States African American History
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
A study of the major themes in African-American history from 1607 to the present, this course utilizes race as a tool for analysis. Topics covered include major themes, such as slavery, the Civil War, the Harlem Renaissance, and the Civil Rights movement, as well as prominent biographies, such as Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, W.E.B. Dubois, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, and Fannie Lou Hamer.
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HIS 250: History of Ancient Greece
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
This course provides an introduction to ancient Greek history and culture. It provides an historical context for such important developments as the origin of democracy, tyranny, imperialism, international diplomacy and law, the invention of coined money, competitive sports, human rights, and other innovations in art, architecture, drama, and literature that remain basic cornerstones of Western culture.
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HIS 251: History of Ancient Rome and the Roman Empire
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
This course provides an introduction to antiquity’s greatest empire and its powerful influence in the subsequent history of the West. Topics discussed include the foundation of Rome and its archaic history, the evolution from rule by kings to republican government, the wars of expansion, the rise of uncontrollably ambitious military leaders, the rule of emperors, the zenith of the Roman Empire, the challenges of Christianity within and barbarians without, and the final division and dissolution of the Empire.
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HIS 251 - History of Ancient Rome and the Roman Empire
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HIS 254: History of the New South
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
This course takes a probing look at the myths and realities of the New South. This is a reading, lecture, and discussion seminar that will look at Reconstruction, segregation, the creation of Appalachia, and the southern movement for Civil Rights. Substantial contract with primary sources and material culture will help students look at the competing ideas of what it means to be a southerner.
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HIS 254 - History of the New South
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HIS 255: North Carolina History
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
Required for teacher licensure, this course surveys state history from the colonial period to the present. Students explore the tensions within the New South, Old South and Sunbelt through such topics as the Catawba Indians, the Roanoke Colony, the Regulator movement, Battle of Kings Mountain, slavery, Zebulon Vance, segregation, the tobacco empire, cotton mills, the Greensboro Sit-ins, Jesse Helms, Harvey Gant, and Grandfather Mountain
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HIS 261: European Renaissance and Reformation History
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
This course provides a broad overview of the major cultural, political, and social changes in Early Modern Europe. Topics covered in the course include the Italian Renaissance, the Northern European Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution, the rise of absolutist monarchs and the formation of nation states, the Reformation and Catholic Reformation, the Commercial Capitalist Revolution, European colonization and imperialism, and the Glorious Revolution.
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HIS 295: Nation State Histories of Modern Europe
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
This course surveys one of the many different nation state political and cultural histories of Modern Europe. The topic of the course will vary depending on which nation state is chosen as the focus in any particular semester. Normally, the course focuses on Russia, England, France, or Germany. Course may be taken for credit more than once provided the country of study varies.
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HIS 295 - Nation State Histories of Modern Europe
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HIS 302: Environmental History
3.00 Credits
Brevard College
Human beings have always modified their environment; but the scale of human activity has increased steadily since about 1700. Rapid technological change has provided the means for increased development of a world economy and larger nation-states. The result has been that environmental impacts have moved from a limited local and regional focus to becoming more global in recent decades. This course puts the increasing environmental effects of human values and culture into historical context. Students also research the environmental changes in a distinct bio-region or smaller place. Prerequisite: HIS 102, HIS 104, or permission of instructor.
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HIS 302 - Environmental History
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