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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
The 20th century saw a remarkable number of great leaders, both the good and the evil, in all parts of the world. This course will examine such world altering figures as Hitler and Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill, Mao and Gandhi, all of whom left their mark on our world.
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3.00 Credits
This course studies the changes in American society from World War I to the end of World War II. Both domestic developments and foreign affairs will be covered. As the topic demands, events and circumstances outside the U.S. will be treated. Domestically, the social, political, and economic changes that occurred during these years will be discussed in detail.
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3.00 Credits
The history of Germany from the collapse of the empire to the destruction of the Third Reich. Emphasizing political, social and economic aspects of the German Experience.
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3.00 Credits
This course traces the history of North America's environments, ecosystems, and societies by exploring the impact of the land on people and of the people on the land. Historic settlement patterns, trade networks, territorial conquests, and literary or artistic renderings, among other categories of experience, are examined to better understand the communities and cultures that developed upon and created American landscapes.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of the physical world which is the basis for a human civilization, past, present, and future. What are the possibilities and limitations of different places for human development? How successful or unsuccessful were human settlements? Emphasis also on geography as an intellectual discipline and cultural phenomenon.
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3.00 Credits
Students explore different applications of and for History. This course surveys the various specializations across the field of Public History, including current museum, archival, archaeological, and historical preservation theories and practices. Students will assist a community partner in a history project.
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1.00 Credits
Working with their mentor, history majors in their final semester will review their portfolio and evaluate their learning and achievements in the discipline.
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3.00 Credits
An exploration of the elements which, taken together, comprise the unique culture of the Middle Ages.
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3.00 Credits
An exploration of the elements which, taken together, comprise the unique culture of the Middle Ages.
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3.00 Credits
This course will examine the life and culture of the early modern European aristocracy, particularly in the princely and royal courts of the period. From the Medici of Florence to Queen Elizabeth of England and Louis XIV of France, the courts of this era were scenes of opulence, great literature, and brutal conflict, and have fascinated historians for centuries. Topics will include the social foundations of the nobility; ideology and political thought; artistic and literary culture; sex and gender; and warfare, violence, and dueling.
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