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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
1840-1865. Slavery, antislavery movement, Mexican War, sectional crises of 1850s, Civil War. Cr. 3. Variable Title (V.T.) Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World Dual Level Course Eligible for graduate credit.
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3.00 Credits
What has it meant to be female or male in America? Examination of sex/gender roles, stereotypes, family life, sexual mores, work patterns, and popular culture. Reading in original sources and scholarly interpretations. Cr. 3. Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World
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3.00 Credits
This course examines organized profit-making activity in America since 1607. Topics include colonial business, merchant-agrarian capitalism, the business of slavery, government aid to business, industrialization, railroads and regulation, inventing and marketing, big business and anti-trust, managerial capitalism, modern entrepreneurs, environmental and consumer regulation, merger movements, information capitalism, and globalization. Cr. 3. Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World
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3.00 Credits
Social, intellectual, and cultural features of the American South, from English settlement to secession. Emphasis on the development of a distinctive southern regional culture and how it helped shape the buildup to the Civil War. Cr. 3. Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World
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3.00 Credits
The Native American experience from pre-Columbian period through American Civil War. Lectures and readings will focus upon Native American cultural patterns and the Native American response to French, British, and American Indian policies. Cr. 3. Notes Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western) requirement. Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World
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3.00 Credits
Native American-White relations from Civil War through 1980s. Focus on Native American attempts to defend their homelands in American West, establishment of Indian reservations in late 19th century. Impact of the Sawes and Wheeler-Howard Acts, emergence of Native American church, urbanization of Native Americans in 20th century. Cr. 3. Notes Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western) requirement. Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World
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3.00 Credits
Reconstruction, industrialism, immigration, urbanism, culture, foreign policy, progressivism, World War I. Cr. 3. Variable Title (V.T.) Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World Dual Level Course Eligible for graduate credit.
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3.00 Credits
The 1920s, the Depression, New Deal, with interpretive readings in politics, diplomacy, economics, society, thought and literature of the period, World War II. Cr. 3. Variable Title (V.T.) Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World Dual Level Course Eligible for graduate credit.
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3.00 Credits
World War II, Cold War, problems of contemporary America; economic, social, political, and diplomatic. Cr. 3. Variable Title (V.T.) Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World Dual Level Course Eligible for graduate credit.
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3.00 Credits
Western expansion and development 1763-1900: economic, political, and social. Special attention to natural resources, Native American-Anglo American relations, and the role of the West in American myth and symbol. Cr. 3. Subject Area [US] - [US] United States [WE] Western Europe [OW] Other World Dual Level Course Eligible for graduate credit.
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