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HIST 429: Historic Preservation
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
This course is on the movements and organizations that developed to save, protect, and present historical sites.
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HIST 429 - Historic Preservation
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HIST 429W: Historic Preservation
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
This course is on the movements and organizations that developed to save, protect, and present historical sites.
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HIST 429W - Historic Preservation
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HIST 430W: The Atlntc Wrld, 1450's-1750's
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
Instead of defining the Atlantic Ocean as a moat dividing East and West and even North and South, it should be seen as a great conduit of not just peoples, but of products, pests, pestilence, and ideas. Changes in Europe fostered exploration and colonization, which in turn promoted the development of empires, conflicts over trade and territories, and social and cultural innovations. This course examines some of the issues that connected and divided countries and peoples along the Atlantic rim in the Early Modern Era.
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HIST 430W - The Atlntc Wrld, 1450's-1750's
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HIST 433W: Gender in Am History
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
This class focuses in on several key issues in the development of gender roles in North American from the colonial era through the present. While the bulk of the class will concern the evolving roles of women, we will also consider men's history and the history of sexuality.
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HIST 433W - Gender in Am History
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HIST 442W: American Architecture
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
American architectural developments have been both dynamic and complex. This course provides students with a historical overview of North America's built environment form earthen houses to the concrete jungle. Lectures present noteworthy architectural styles, building types, and construction innovations from the pre-contact to modern eras, with attention also given to America's prominent architects and theorists. Students will learn what is distinctively "American" about the built environment. Students will assess what this continent's cities, landscapes, and buildings tell us about the American people. Students will gain tools for reading and understanding the architectural landscape as a way to "see" better America's pasts and present.
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HIST 443: American Decorative Arts
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
A survey of the decorative arts in the United States from the seventeenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. In addition to considering style and production techniques, this course will investigate the social and cultural context within which such works were created and displayed.
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HIST 443 - American Decorative Arts
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HIST 443W: American Decorative Arts
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
A survey of the decorative arts in the United States from the seventeenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. In addition to considering style and production techniques, this course will investigate the social and cultural context within which such works were created and displayed.
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HIST 445: Imperial Russia
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
An investigation of the political, social, and intellectual evolution of the Russian Empire in the 18th and 19th centuries.
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HIST 445 - Imperial Russia
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HIST 445W: Imperial Russia
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
An investigation of the political, social, and intellectual evolution of the Russian Empire in the 18th and 19th centuries.
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HIST 445W - Imperial Russia
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HIST 446: Rise and Fall of Soviet Union
3.00 Credits
Duquesne University
A study of the political, social, and intellectual evolution of the Soviet Union since the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.
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HIST 446 - Rise and Fall of Soviet Union
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