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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Europe from the breakup of the medieval world to the dawn of the modern age. The course traces the transformations of all aspects of European life-economic organization, state structures, religious institutions and sentiments, and intellectual outlooks-with an emphasis on different historiographical approaches and analysis of secondary sources, especially monographs. This course is offered in some fall semesters.Credits: 1
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3.00 Credits
Since the content of this course varies from semester to semester, it may be repeated for credit upon the instructor's approval. Credits: 0.5-1
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1.00 Credits
This survey will cover events in European history from the French Revolution to the end of the 19th century. It will explore nationalism, utopianism, Europe's quest for colonial expansion, and the rise of the Industrial Revolution. In addition to these vast issues, the course also examines developments in social history including family life, change in urban areas, health, medicine, and gender. This course is offered some fall semesters. Credits: 1
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1.00 Credits
This survey will examine significant events in European history from 1900 to the end of the twentieth century. The course will cover circumstances leading to World War I, the rise of fascism, and World War II. The survey ends with a discussion of the Cold War, its ultimate demise, and nuclear legacy. Since there was more to the 20th century than military history, the class will also consider how European societies reacted to war and will focus on life on the home front, gender relations, cultural change, and consumerism. This course is offered some spring semesters. Credits: 1
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3.00 Credits
Since the content of this course varies from semester to semester, it may be repeated for credit upon the instructor's approval. Credits: 0.5-1
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1.00 Credits
Emphasis on three crucial periods: slavery, Reconstruction and its aftermath, and the civil rights and Black liberation movements of the 1960s. Relations between Blacks and Whites will be examined through the reading and discussion of classic African-American texts by Douglass, Jacobs, Washington, DuBois, Wright, Angelou, Moody, Walker, Malcolm X, King, Baldwin, Gates, and others. This course is offered in the fall semester. Credits: 1
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3.00 Credits
Since the content of this course varies from semester to semester, it may be repeated for credit upon the instructor's approval. Credits: 0.5-1
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