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United States history : Upper-division courses
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
Colloquia are intensive reading and discussion courses in major fields of historical scholarship. Topics vary from term to term; students should consult the department for current offerings and syllabi.
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United States history - Upper-division courses
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United States history 13: America to 1877
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits American history to 1877. Political and economic developments from the colonial origins of American institutions through the Revolutionary era and the periods dominated by Federalism, Jeffersonianism, and Jacksonianism. Consideration of the issues of the Civil War and the Reconstruction era. (Not open to students who have completed History 3.) Prerequisite: Core Studies 4 or Core Curriculum 2.2, or permission of the chairperson. History 213
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United States history 13 - America to 1877
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United States history 14: America since 1865
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits American history from the Civil War to the present. The Reconstruction era, emergence of big business, populism, progressivism, imperialism, the new freedom,World War I, the 1920s, the New Deal,World War II, and the postwar decades. (Not open to students who have completed History 4.) Prerequisite: Core Studies 4 or Core Curriculum 2.2, or permission of the chairperson.
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United States history 14 - America since 1865
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United States history 41.1: The Colonial World
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits European empires and colonies in the Americas. Patterns of conflict and interaction with Amerindian societies. Slavery and the slave trade. Origins and development of the mainland English colonies to 1763.
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United States history 41.1 - The Colonial World
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United States history 41.2: The Revolutionary Generation
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits The era of the American Revolution and the early national period as observed through the lives of representative men and women. War, loyalism, and republicanism. The establishment of the Constitution and the emergence of political parties. Cultural and social life of the new nation.
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United States history 41.2 - The Revolutionary Generation
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United States history 41.3: Civil War and Reconstruction
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits History of the U.S. Civil War and its meaning for the debate over states' rights as well as citizenship. Slavery as the mark of southern distinctiveness; westward expansion; new forms of mass politics, and economic and cultural changes within northern society that shaped antislavery. The impact of class, gender, and racial affiliations. Reconstruction as America's "unfinished revolution."
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United States history 41.3 - Civil War and Reconstruction
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United States history 41.4: Emergence of Modern America
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits From 1877 to 1920. Politics following the compromise of 1877. Problems of continental development in business, labor, and agriculture. Immigration, internal migration, and the growth of cities. Philanthropy. Overseas expansion and responsibilities. State and national reforms in the progressive era.World War I and its immediate consequences.
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United States history 41.4 - Emergence of Modern America
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United States history 41.6: Twentieth-Century America:1914-1950
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits United States history from the Wilson presidency through the U.S. entry into the Korean War and the onset of McCarthyism: consolidation of progressivism and the Wilson presidency; entry into World War I and the Wilsonian agenda; the rise of the corporatist state; the United States and the world of the 1920s; clashes of culture in interwar America; the Depression and the emergence of a Democratic majority; the importance of dissenters; Franklin Roosevelt and American reform; the battle over the role of the Supreme Court; the United States and World War II; postwar politics; nuclear weapons and the militarization of the Cold War. (Not open to students who have completed History 41.5.)
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United States history 41.6 - Twentieth-Century America:1914-1950
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United States history 41.7: Twentieth-Century America:1950-present
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits The Korean War and American society; nuclear weapons and U.S. foreign policy; McCarthyism and the culture of the Cold War; the presidency of Dwight Eisenhower; the emergence of the civil rights movement; liberalism and the dilemmas of the 1960s; Lyndon Johnson and the Great Society; the United States in Vietnam; the counterculture and student dissenting movements; 1968 and the collapse of the New Deal coalition; Richard Nixon and Watergate; environmentalism, feminism, and new social movements; the revitalization of American conservatism; the Reagan presidency; the intersection of law and politics; the United States after the Cold War.
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United States history 41.7 - Twentieth-Century America:1950-present
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United States history 43.1: United States Foreign Relations since 1898
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits The emergence of the United States as a major world power; the debate over imperialism; progressivism and U.S. foreign policy; Wilsonianism; the United States and the 1920s world; the Depression and American foreign policy; the debate over isolationism and presidential power; the United States and World War II; the onset of the Cold War; the militarization of the Cold War; nuclear weapons and U.S. foreign policy; Kennedy and Latin America;Vietnam and the collapse of the liberal consensus; Richard Nixon and détente; American foreign policy in an age of uncertainty; Ronald Reagan and the politics of anticommunism; beyond the Cold War. Special attention will be paid to the viewpoints presented by dissenters on both the right and the left.
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United States history 43.1 - United States Foreign Relations since 1898
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