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HIS 461: The American Revolution, 1763- 1789
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
A study of the disagreement between Great Britain and the 13 colonies, the decision for independence, and the progress of revolutionary change through the ratification of the Federal Constitution.
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HIS 461 - The American Revolution, 1763- 1789
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HIS 462: The New Republic, 1789- 1820
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
An intensive study of the launching of the federal government, the rise of America's first parties, and the conflict over the completion of the revolutionary experiment.
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HIS 462 - The New Republic, 1789- 1820
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HIS 463: Expansion And Conflict, 1820- 1860
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
A social and political study of the United States from 1820 to 1860, with special attention to the growth of Jacksonian democracy, territorial expansion, and the rise of the sectional controversy over slavery.
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HIS 463 - Expansion And Conflict, 1820- 1860
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HIS 464: Civil War And Reconstruction, 1860 to 1877
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
A study of events immediately preceding the outbreak of conflict, of the military campaigns, and of the social, economic, and political developments during the periods of war and reconstruction.
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HIS 464 - Civil War And Reconstruction, 1860 to 1877
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HIS 465: Emergence of Modern America, 1877- 1917
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
A study of the transformation of the U.S. from an agrarian society into an industrial nation covering the years from the Gilded Age to the American entry into World War I. This course emphasizes the growth of corporate capitalism, the emergence of modern political institutions, and the development of modern American foreign policy. It also explores how various Americans- workers, farmers, immigrants, women- responded to and were affected by industrialization.
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HIS 465 - Emergence of Modern America, 1877- 1917
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HIS 466: Modern American History From ww I to Pearl Harbor, 1917- 1941
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
A study of America in World War I and the interwar era, emphasizing political, economic, diplomatic, and social developments. The course examines the impact of the first world war and the great depression on America and the nature of the New Era and the New Deal.
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HIS 466 - Modern American History From ww I to Pearl Harbor, 1917- 1941
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HIS 467: Modern American History Since 1941
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
An intensive study of the United States from the American entry into World War II to the present, emphasizing diplomatic, military, political, economic, and sociocultural changes.
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HIS 470: Honors Seminar in Historical Methods
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
This course will furnish qualified History majors with the methodological tools that they will need to put together an Honors thesis. It thus serves as the prerequisite to HIS 471 (Honors Seminar in Historical Research). Eligible students will have to complete both courses in order to graduate with departmental honors. HIS 470 will emphasize the honing of basic research skills: understanding historiographical debates, generating detailed bibliographies, developing effective note-taking and outline techniques, picking a feasible research topic, finding useful primary sources and drawing inferences from them, and constructing historiographical arguments in a series of short research assignments. Prereq: The course is open to History majors with a departmental grade-point average of 3.25 after at least 15 hours in history.
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HIS 471: Honors Seminar in Historical Research
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
This course will furnish qualified History majors with the faculty supervision that they will need to draft and complete an Honors thesis. It thus serves as the sequel to HIS 470 (Honors Seminar in Historical Methods). Eligible students will have to complete both courses in order to graduate with departmental honors. HIS 471 will emphasize the mechanics of historical research and writing: learning how to skim and take notes with a particular research goal in mind; asking thematically pertinent questions of one's evidence; turning that evidence into a compelling argument; preparing a detailed "script" before writing a rough draft; drafting an effective introduction; advancing an argument by pruning irrelevant material; writing with clarity and precision; critiquing the work of other students; and making a persuasive oral presentation of one's own research. Prereq: The course is open to History majors with a departmental grade-point average of at least 3.30 after 15 credit hours in history who have already completed HIS 470 (Honors Seminar in Historical Methods).
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HIS 499: Senior Seminar For History Majors
3.00 Credits
University of Kentucky
All History majors must complete a senior seminar with a grade of C or better. Topics will vary, but a major is required. May be repeated to a maximum of six credits under different subtitles. Prereq: HIS 301 or permission of instructor.
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HIS 499 - Senior Seminar For History Majors
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