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HIST 339: Italy & Europe after WWII
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
The transformation of Italian political institutions and society after the defeat of the Fascist government at the end of the Second World War, the continuing evolution of Italy during the Cold War and post-Cold War eras, and Italy's role in post-war Europe(including NATO, the European Economic Community, and the establishment of the European Union). Generally offered through the Gonzaga-in-Florence program on an irregular basis.
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HIST 340: The Cold War
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
The focus of this course is the ideological and geopolitical confrontation between the superpowers that shaped the second half of the twentieth century. The course analyzes the origins of the Cold War, its global manifestations in Europe and the Third World, as well as the effects of the Cold War on American and Soviet societies and cultures.
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HIST 340 - The Cold War
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HIST 346: Europe and World Since 1945
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
World affairs since the end of World War II with special emphasis on the Cold War, North-South relations, wars in Indochina and the Mid-East, European integration, and the disintegration of the East bloc in 1989-1991.
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HIST 346 - Europe and World Since 1945
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HIST 348: Islamic Civilization
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
This course examines the history of Islam from the time of the Prophet Muhammad to the great Islamic gunpowder empires of the early modern period. Specific topics covered include the Quran, the practices and beliefs of the faith, and an examination of the intersection between faith and culture. The course also includes an introduction to key issues related to Islam in the contemporary world.
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HIST 348 - Islamic Civilization
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HIST 349: History of Modern Middle East
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
The development of the Middle East from the middle of the nineteenth century to the late twentieth century. Topics covered include the end of the Ottoman and Qajar Empires, the creation of the contemporary states of the Middle East at the end of World War I, and their history from 1920 through the end of the twentieth century.
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HIST 349 - History of Modern Middle East
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HIST 350: The City in American History
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
How, when, and why did cities in America develop where they did? How do physical form and institutions vary from city to city and how are these differences significant? This course will explore these and other questions while emphasizing twentieth-century American cities. We will examine urban populations, city culture, crime and municipal politics.
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HIST 351: Coming to America
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
Immigration and Ethnicity in American History. We will discuss the factors that impelled our ancestors to leave the Old Country and the New World features that made it attractive. What baggage did they bring? Where did they settle? How were they received? While considering ethnic identity, religion, assimilation, community, citizenship, work, gender, class, and exclusion, we will discover why it is important that we study not only our own roots, but also the background of others in this polyethnic nation. This course has social justice component.
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HIST 351 - Coming to America
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HIST 352: The Early American Republic
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
This course examines the critical period in the early American republic from the nation's creation in 1781 until approximately 1850. Topics covered in this course include immigration, expansion, nationalism, conceptions of race and ethnicity, labor, slavery, gender, reform movements, industrializations, Native American issues and popular democracy and religion. All of these will considered in light of the processes by which the United States began to cohere as a nation both politically and culturally.
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HIST 352 - The Early American Republic
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HIST 353: US Civil War & Reconstruction
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
Although this class will center around the American Civil War (1861-1865), it will even more so be a history of the United States from approximately 1820 through 1880, in order to effectively place the war in its appropriate historical contexts of the political, economic, social, and cultural history of the mid-nineteenth century. This course will examine the nature and creation of regional distinctiveness in the United States, the centrality of race and slavery to the nation, the causes of disunion, the nature and character of the Civil War which followed, the wars diverse effects on the whole American populous, the nations attempt at reconstruction, and the wars legacies that still inform our nation today.
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HIST 354: North American Exploration
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
A biographical approach to individual, government and institutional exploration of the Trans-Mississippi West after 1800.
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HIST 354 - North American Exploration
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