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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; extra reading, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): upper-division standing or consent of instructor. Analyzes power and resistance in Brazilian history with emphasis on the social and political movements challenging state power. Topics include slave rebellions, banditry, millenarian uprisings, the industrial working class, the urban poor, social Catholicism, feminism, and "Black Power."
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; extra reading, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): upper-division standing or consent of instructor. Examines the major issues in modern Argentine history. Topics include industrialization and trade union politics, Peronism, the rise of the revolutionary left, militarism, state terrorism, political culture and the cultural dimensions of violence, and state and society during the democratic transition.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; extra reading, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): HIST 025 or HIST 026 or consent of instructor. Surveys the literary, religious and cultic, legal, political, socioeconomic, and scientific documents from which the Sumerian, Babylonian, and Assyrian civilizations are reconstituted.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; extra reading, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): HIST 025 or HIST 026 or consent of instructor. Uses archaeological and textual sources to study the political and cultural history of Babylonia from its emergence as a state in the second millennium B.C. through its incorporation within the Hellenistic period.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; extra reading, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): HIST 025 or HIST 026 or consent of instructor. Studies the history and culture of ancient Assyria, from the Old Assyrian Kingdom to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, and the impact the recovery of this civilization has had on our understanding of the roots of Western civilization.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; outside research, 2 hours; term paper, 1 hour. Prerequisite(s): upper-division standing or consent of instructor. The historical development of historiography as evidenced in ancient historical writings from Near Eastern king lists and biblical histories to the narrative histories of Greece and Rome. Focuses on the ideas of history in the various cultures of the ancient Near East and Mediterranean and their relation to modern historical thought. Cross-listed with CLA 100.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; individual study, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): upper-division standing or consent of instructor. Survey of the history of Greece from the late Bronze Age to the end of the Persian Wars. Focuses on the Mycenaean civilization; the rise of the polis in Athens and Sparta; the Ionian Enlightenment; and the Persian Wars.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; individual study, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): upper-division standing or consent of instructor. Survey of the history of Greece from the Persian Wars to the death of Alexander the Great. Focuses on Athens, its empire and democracy, and on the Macedonian Empire of Philip and Alexander. Special attention is given to the Greek cultural achievement within the context of changing political and social conditions.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; outside research, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): upper-division standing or consent of instructor. A survey of the literary aspects of historical writing in ancient cultures, with some comparison of the ancient contribution to later authors of the genre. Cross-listed with CLA 113 and CPAC 112.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; extra reading, 3 hours. Prerequisite(s): upperdivision standing or consent of instructor. Uses crosscultural comparison to survey writing and literacy in ancient civilizations and how they are related in the origin and development of selected ancient cultures. Cross-listed with CPAC 133.
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