|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Prerequisite: Upper-division status. Conservative reaction to reconstruction, decline of the presidency, the triumph of capitalism and industry, populist protest, the end of westward movement, socialization of immigrants, progressive impulse and leadership, rural vs. urban conflict, the United States and the race for empire, and the role of America in World War I.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Political, diplomatic, social, and cultural history of contemporary America; World War II and the advent of the nuclear age; the Cold War and the policy of containment; the Korean War, McCarthyism, and domestic reform; the New Frontier and the Great Society; civil rights, civil disobedience, and the greening of America; war and peace in Southeast Asia; Watergate and the travail of liberalism.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Prerequisite: Upper-division status. The evolution of Marxist, anarchist, state socialist, and right radical ideologies in European thought and politics.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Selected problems in French political, social, economic, and diplomatic history emphasizing historiography and interpretation of such periods as the restored monarch, the revolution of 1848, the Second Empire, the Third Republic, and its successors.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 The causes, conduct, and implications of the First World War. Through a thematic and narrative treatment, students will study the war and its implications for global society in the twentieth century.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 The issues that led to the outbreak of the Second World War and its global dimensions. Campaigns, theaters of operations, as well as the process of decision making by Allied and Axis Powers. Also, the social dimensions of the war: experiences on the home fronts, the Holocaust, and the impact of the war on the modern world.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Political, cultural, and social developments since the Reformation; Prussian kings and German emperors; nationalism and unification; Hitler's Austria; World War I; the challenge of democracy; the Nazi dictatorship; World War II; Germany after Hitler.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0; 8 Prerequisite: Upper-division status. The diverse, pluralistic makeup of American society; roots of pluralism and what it means for the daily experience of living in America; themes of diversity explored through history and literature; the activities of four major underrepresented groups in their struggle for liberation: African Americans, Native Americans, Latinos, and Asians.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Readings and bibliography on the role of workers in American life. Slaves, indentured servants, wage earners, and craftsmen. The rise of organized labor from colonial times. The history of the Knights of Labor, the American Federation of Labor, the Congress of Industrial Organizations, and independent unions, with related issues of immigration, radicalism and political action, and contemporary labor problems.
-
3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Prerequisite: Junior status. The development of English and Scottish political identities prior to their union, and the eventual formation of the British state in 1707. Also, considerations of the roles of the church, family life, social structure, culture, economics, immigration, and war as facets of these formative periods.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|