1113 History of Medieval Europe. History of Europe from the fall of Rome to the end of the 15th century. Emphasis on the development of social structures and culture forms, and the sociocultural background of political and religious developments. (F, Sp)
1223 Europe, 1500 to 1815. An introductory survey of Europe in the early modern period. Topics include the Reformation, development of the nation-state, the Enlightenment, and the French Revolution and Napoleon. (F, Sp) [IV-WC]
1233 Europe Since 1815. An introductory survey of Europe from 1815 to the present. Examines the major political, economic, social and cultural trends in the major countries and European foreign affairs and overseas expansion. (F, Sp) [IV-WC]
1483 United States, 1492 to 1865. A general survey of United States history from its colonial origins to the end of the Civil War, with emphasis upon national political, diplomatic, economic, constitutional, social and intellectual developments. (F, Sp, Su) [IV-US]
1493 United States, 1865 to Present. A general survey of United States history from the Civil War to the present day, with emphasis upon national political, diplomatic, economic, constitutional, social and intellectual developments. (F, Sp, Su) [IV-US]
1543 Introduction to American Indian History. A history of American Indian people in North America and their role in shaping American history through the early 1970's. Emphasis will be on how cultural values influenced Indian-European interactions and how cultures change over time. (F, Sp) [IV-NW]
1613 Western Civilization I. History and culture of western civilization from origins of Greek society to end of religious wars in seventeenth century. (F) [IV-WC]
1623 Western Civilization II. History and culture of western civilization between 1660 and the present. Emphasis will be placed on western institutions and ideas, their evolution, and their influence elsewhere. (Sp) [IV-WC]
1723 East Asia to 1600. A general survey of the histories of China and Japan with the history of Korea included as it bears upon the historyof Japan. The focus is on the political, social, economic, and intellectual aspects of China and Japan, and their points of contact. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
1733 East Asia Since 1600. A general survey of the histories of China, Japan, and Korea from 1600 to the present. Focus is on the political, social, and economic systems of these countries, major historical events and intra-Asian interactions. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
1913 World Civilizations to 1600. Deals with the entire globe rather than with some one country or region; deals with all peoples, not just with Western or non-Western peoples. Focuses on historical forces or movements of worldwide influence. Comparative history. (F) [IV-WC]
1923 World Civilization 1600-Present. Deals with the entire globe rather than with one country or region; deals with all peoples, not just with so-called Western or non-Western peoples. Focuses on historical forces or movements of worldwide influence. Comparative history. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
2013 Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations. A study of the major civilizations of the Ancient Near East from the last Pluvial period (ca. 8400 B.C.) through the first millennium B.C., with particular emphasis on the historic periods (ca. 3000 B.C. onwards). (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
2023 Greek and Roman Civilization. Covers the major political events of Greco-Roman history and civilization, but considerable attention will be devoted to Greek and Roman religion, historical writing, Roman law, engineering, and architecture; also Periclean Athens and Augustan Rome. Contributions of these civilizations to our own will be described. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
2033 African-American History to 1877. Traces the history of African-Americans from their African origins to the end of the Reconstruction of the southern United States in 1877. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
2043 African-American History Since 1877. Traces African-American history from 1877 to the present. (Irreg.). [IV-WC]
2203 Religion/Archaeology of the Near East, Egypt and Mediterranean. Investigates archaeology of key cities and events of the Mediterranean and the Near Eastern cultures. As a part of the study of these cultures we include aspects of religion and architecture. (Irreg.)
2333 The British Empire. A survey of the development of the British Empire and Commonwealth to the present day. Emphasis upon the period after the American Revolution; includes extension of control in Asia and Africa, movements of independence, the emergence of the Commonwealth and mid-twentieth-century challenges to the Commonwealth. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
2613 Colonial Hispanic-American History, 1492 to 1810. The founding and development of the Spanish and Portuguese empires in America with special attention to the conquest of native civilizations and to the political, economic, social and intellectual institutions of the colonial period. (F, Su) [IV-WC]
2623 History of Hispanic-American Nations, 1810 to the Present. The emancipation and development of the Spanish-American nations (and of Brazil) with special attention to the movements for national independence, political unification, economic developments and social welfare. (Sp) [IV-WC]
2683 Introduction to Islam. Survey of the history of Islamic civilization in the Near East, North Africa, India and Malaysia from the advent of the Prophet to the modern period. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
2713 Survey of African Civilization. Survey of the social, economic, political and cultural development of sub-Saharan African peoples from the emergence of human society to the present. (F) [IV-NW]
2803 Survey of Russia. An introduction to the history of Russia from its beginnings to the present day. Intended primarily for nonspecialists. (F) [IV-WC]
3003 History of Sparta. Traces the history of Sparta from its antecedents in the Heroic Age through the Dorian Invasion to the Roman conquest.(Sp) [IV-WC]
3013 Archaic Greece. An examination of the history of ancient Greece from the earliest times to the fifth century, with emphasis upon Minoan Crete, Mycenaean Greece, Homeric Greece and the Archaic era (c. 3000 to 500 B.C.). (F) [IV-WC]
3033 Alexander the Great. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the Macedonian and 4th Century Greek background of Alexander, the career of Alexander, and the legacy of Alexander (the Hellenistic world). Topics include the breakdown of Greek unity, Alexander’s conquests and military genius, his sudden death and the resulting wars of succession, the culture of the Hellenistic period. (Alt. F) [IV-WC]
3043 Egypt and Mesopotamia. Prerequisite: Junior standing or permission of instructor. A study of the ancient histories and cultures, literatures, religious thought, political ideas, and art. (Irreg.)
3053 Medieval Italy. Prerequisite: 1113 or 1613 or junior standing. A survey of Italy from circa 400-1350 CE, emphasizing the mix of Roman, Christian, and barbarian traditions, relations between the church and empire, and the role of cities and commerce. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3060 Topics in Medieval History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected special problem or problems in medieval history. (F, Sp)
3063 The Ancient Art of War. Traces the history of warfare from its origins through the ancient world to the beginning of the Middle Ages. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3073 Women in Early Modern Europe. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the experience of women in Europe from c. 1350 to c. 1650. Examines ideas about women, life cycle, economic activity, education, exercise of power, and religion, noting the enhanced position of women from c. 1350, following the Black Plague, and the decline in that position which began c. 1500. (Irreg.)
3083 The American Colonies. A history of the British colonies in North America from the earliest discoveries and of the United States from the Second Continental Congress to the inauguration of Washington in 1789. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3093 The United States: Revolution and New Nation to 1815. The American Revolution and the development of political institutions under the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution; innovations of the Federalists; domestic and foreign affairs. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3103 Slavery in World History. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines slavery and unfree labor from the earliest times in Mesopotamia to the present and includes an analysis of slavery in the American South and Latin America. Also traces the history of the Abolition Movement. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3113 The Crusades. Prerequisite: 1113 or 1613 or junior standing. Covers crusades to the Holy Land and Europe against Moors, pagans, heretics, and enemies of the Pope. Topics include crusade ideology, relations between Latins, Byzantines, Jews and Muslims, crusader states, techniques of warfare, and the experience of crusading. (F) [IV-WC]
3120 Topics in Modern European History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected special problem or problems in modern European history. (Irreg.)
3133 Medieval Women. Prerequisite: 1113 or 1613 or junior standing. Covers social history of women in western Europe from late Antiquity to the late Middle Ages. Topics include stages of life, marriage, families, occupation, law, power, health, religion, love, and education. (F) [IV-WC]
3143 The Era of the Reformation. An analysis of the forces leading to the religious upheaval in the sixteenth century and the spread of Protestantism in Northern European countries; the Catholic Reformation or Reaction; Thirty Years War; and the relation of the Reformation Era to medieval and modern civilization. (F) [IV-WC]
3153 The Great War, 1914–18. Prerequisite: 1233 or 1623. Examines the causes, conduct, and consequences of World War I, with primary emphasis on its cultural impact. (F) [IV-WC]
3163 Europe from the French Revolution to Napoleon. A social, political, military and cultural treatment of Europe from 1789 to 1815. Appropriate attention will also be given to causes of the French Revolution. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3173 History of the Great Plains. Prerequisite: 1483 or 1493 or junior standing or permission of the instructor. Includes the following topics: the ecosystem of the great plains, the diversity of people on the great plains, the role of the region in socio-economic and political systems of the nation and global communities, what history of the great plains can teach us about ourselves as a people. (Irreg.)
3183 Eastern Orthodox Christianity and State-Building in Eastern Europe. Prerequisite: Junior standing or permission of instructor. Explores the role of the Eastern Orthodox faith in shaping the political culture of Russia, Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania and other nations of eastern Europe. It further reviews church-state relations over a period ranging from medieval statehood to the communist rule. Emphasizes the centrality of religion in forging national identities, as well as its role in the movements of national liberation in eastern Europe. It also focuses on the impact of orthodox Christianity on art, architecture, music, and other aspects of cultural self-awareness and expression. Finally, attempts to explain the deep-rooted differences in civilization and outlook which divide eastern Europe from the western world. (Irreg.)3193 Europe in the Twentieth Century. Major topics include World War I and the postwar settlements; the breakdown of democracy and the rise of totalitarian states; origins and course of World War II; and postwar Europe and the Cold War. (F) [IV-WC]
3203 Transformation of Jews. Prerequisite: Junior standing or permission of instructor. Introduces students to the era of emancipation in modern Europe and will discuss Jewish approaches to become integrated and assimilated in the different emerging nation states. (Irreg.)
3213 Intellectual History of Nineteenth-Century Europe. Examination of the impact on European social and political development of concepts such as Nationalism, Imperialism, Socialism and Darwinism. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3223 Intellectual History of Twentieth-Century Europe. A general survey of the major intellectual developments in Western Europe since 1900, including the areas of social thought, religious thought, political philosophy, scientific thought, literature and drama. In each area the relationship of intellectual expression will be related to the historical context from which it emerged. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3233 Modern Spain. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the political, economic, social, and cultural aspects of modern Spanish history (1808-present) and will attempt to place Spain within the context of European history, where it has often been ignored by European historians. (F, Su) [IV-WC]
3243 European Women and Gender Relations-18th Century to Present. Prerequisite: 1233 or 1623. Explores the social, cultural, political, and economic history of European women and gender relations from the Scientific Revolution to the present. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3253 Hitler and Nazi Germany. Prerequisite: 1233. Focuses on the man, the part, and the regime. Hitler’s personality and ideological beliefs, the party’s growth and membership, and the regime’s structure and policies are investigated. The topics are discussed within the context of German history and political, social, and economic developments in 20th century Europe. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3263 Germany 1800-1923: The Long Nineteenth Century. Prerequisite: junior standing. This course surveys modern Germany’s passage from pre-industrial feudalism at the beginning of the modern period, through national unification under an authoritarian empire, to its first unsuccessful democratic experiment in the aftermath of war and defeat in the 1920’s. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3283 History of Ireland, Part II. Examines the history of Ireland from 1600 to the present day. Looks at the British conquest of Ireland, subsequent Anglo-Irish relations, events leading to Irish independence, and the origins and causes of present day sectarian violence. (Sp-alternate) [IV-WC]
3290 Topics in British History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected special problem or problems in British history. (Irreg.)
3293 Antisemitism. Prerequisite: junior standing. Covers the history of antisemitism, the world’s oldest prejudice, from the Middle Ages to the present, with emphasis on the 19th and 20th centuries. Topics include antisemitism’s religious and social roots, the Inquisition, the Holocaust, antisemitism of the right and left, and ethnic, black, and “genteel” antisemitism. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3303 Mexico and the United States. Prerequisite: Junior standing or permission of instructor. Explores the long and complicated relationship between these two nations. Explores economic investment, war, immigration, bilingualism, and culture. (Irreg.)
3313 Israeli Culture through Film. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of department. Introduces students to the Israeli culture in its modern day context of the young Jewish state. Focuses on the dynamic mosaic of this multi-faceted society which is still evolving. (Sp) [IV-NW]
3323 Tudor England. A study of England from 1485 to 1603. Topics covered include the establishment of the Tudor dynasty, Tudor administrative and political development, the English Reformation, foreign and colonial relations, economic growth, and sixteenth-century social and cultural life. (F) [IV-WC]
3333 Stuart England. A study of England from the accession of James I in 1603 to the death of Queen Anne in 1714. Topics covered include economic change and growth, colonial development, the Puritan revolution, constitutional and religious controversies following the Restoration, and social and intellectual developments. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3343 Eighteenth-Century England. A discussion of the domestic politics, society, economy, foreign affairs and constitutional and imperial development of England from the accession of the Hanoverians in 1714 to the passage of the First Reform Act of 1832. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3353 England Since 1832. Topical analysis of major developments in British life since 1832, including growth of political democracy, adaptation to industrialism, social and cultural change, foreign affairs, imperialism, growth of the welfare state. Britain's changed role in the twentieth century. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3373 Legal and Consitutional History of England II. Prerequisite: junior standing. The second of a two-part course on the development of the English constitution and of legal concepts, institutions and procedures from the Anglo-Saxons to the 20th centure. It covers the period 1485-1911. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3383 The American West. A survey of the economic, political, social and cultural development of the American West. Particular attention will be paid to the West as a frontier process and as a causative factor in historical change.(F) [IV-WC]
3393 History of Oklahoma. Meets the requirement in Oklahoma history for teacher's certificate. A survey of Oklahoma history from its beginning to the present, including its Indian background, formation into territories, achievement of statehood, and general cultural, economic and political development. (F, Sp, Su)
3403 America through Western Film. Prerequisite: Junior standing. Examines 2oth century American history focusing on western films. Surveys genre from dime novels and B-westerns through 1990’s, with special emphasis on important themes such as race, gender, American identity, American politics, and mythology. (Irreg.)
3413 Hebrew Civilization in Ancient Times. A topical survey from 1400 B.C. to 425 A.D., dealing critically with the main institutions and their historical background from early tribal theocracy to the end of the Rabbinic Patriarchate under Rome. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3423 War, Prosperity and Depression. Prerequisite: 1493 or equivalent. American involvement in World War I, and the impact of war on American society; the postwar decade, innovations of a New Era, and the crisis of American individualism; Franklin D. Roosevelt, the New Deal, and tensions in Depression America. [IV-WC]
3430 Topics in United States History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected problem or problems in United States history. (F, Sp, Su)
3433 The United States in the Cold War Era. Prerequisite: 1493 or the equivalent. Examines changes taking place in American life during the second half of the twentieth century. Topics include the Cold War, McCarthyism, the New Frontier, Civil Rights Movement, protest in the 60s, the Vietnam War, and adaptations to a global economy. [IV-WC]
3443 American Frontier to 1828. Prerequisite: 1483. An analysis of frontier development in the region east of the Mississippi with special emphasis on a comparative view of world frontiers. (F) [IV-WC]
3453 The American Frontier Since 1828. An analysis of frontier development in the trans-Mississippi West with special emphasis on a comparative view of world frontiers. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3473 Life of the Mind in America: 1815 to 1877. Main currents in American thought during the nineteenth century. How American culture weathered the tests of expansion, sectionalism, Civil War and economic growth. Special topics: the ideology of American democracy, Romanticism and Transcendentalism, religion, reform, the debate over slavery, the impact of war and the intellectual defense of American capitalism. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3483 Twentieth Century Urban West. Prerequisite: 1493 or junior standing or permission of instructor. 2oth century urban west covers the development of the western states and their cities since 1900 as they move from communities of local significance to ones of national and global participants. Includes the rise of the urban centers, the impact of the two world wars, the great depression, ethno-history, environmental history, and the economic, social, and political events and movements that shaped the modern west. (Irreg.)
3493 American Environmental History. Examine American attitudes toward the environment since the founding of American colonies, evolution of natural resource policies, and lives of prominent figures in the “conservation” and “ecology” movements of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. (F) [IV-WC]
3500 Special Topics in History. Prerequisite: junior standing. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit six hours. Covers topics not covered in current course listings or specific geographic area topics courses. (F, Sp)
3503 World War II. Prerequisite: junior or senior standing. Treats origins, conduct and outcome of World War II in global setting. Emphasis on roles of national interest, policy making, relations of states, and effects of war on societies involved. (F) [IV-WC]
3513 Central America and the Caribbean. Prerequisite: Junior standing or permission of instructor. Explores the rise of Caribbean society from Columbus to decolonization. Explores rise of Central America export societies, followed by attempts at reform and revolution. (Irreg.)
3523 American Southwest. Prerequisite: 1483 or junior standing or permission of the instructor. History of the American southwest from the exploration, colonization, and development of the southwest under Spanish rule, (1513-1821), through the initial penetration, conquest, and settlement by the united states (1821-1900), including interaction with indigenous people. (Irreg.)3533 The History of Early American Women .Explores the history of American women from the seventeenth century to the mid-nineteenth century by focusing on women's lives from a wide variety of perspectives including demographic change, sexuality, work patterns, and political involvement. (F) [IV-WC]
3543 The History of Modern American Women. Explores the history of American women from the mid-nineteenth century to the present by focusing on women's lives from a wide variety of perspectives including demographic change, family life, sexuality, work patterns, and political involvement. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3553 The Civil War. A course of lectures on the social, economic, political, intellectual and military aspects of the years 1861 to 1865. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3563 United States Diplomatic History (Crosslisted with Political Science 3563). A survey of American diplomatic history from the War for Independence to the present, emphasizing relations with major European, Latin American and Far Eastern countries. [IV-WC]
3573 Special Topics Colloquium. Prerequisite: History major and junior standing or permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of topic, maximum credit 15 hours. A writing-intensive, open topic, seminar designed to improve students’ research and writing abilities and introduce them to basic methodological issues in history. While the course is specifically meant to prepare students for their senior capstone course, the emphasis on research and writing will enhance their preparation for all upper-division history course. This course must be completed prior to enrolling for the senior capstone. (F, Sp)
3583 History of Sport in America. Examines the role of sport in American society, and uses sport as a device to explore social, historical and political topics like the commercialization of leisure, changing conceptions of masculinity, violence, racism, labor relations, gender relations, and working-class culture. (Irreg.)
3593 Women in the American West. Prerequisite: 1483 or 1493. Nineteenth-century gender ideologies, multi-cultural interaction and exchange, work roles and community building, participation in politics, and reform movements of women in Trans-Mississippi West. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3603 Germany 1918-1990: The Short Twentieth Century. Prerequisite: junior standing. Surveys Germany’s experience from the period before the first world war into the 1990’s. Students will explore the violent stresses challenigng Europe’s most dynamic industrial society, and the spiral into dictatorship, war and genocide after the failure of a fragile democracy in the first half of the century. The course tracks the subsequent challenges facing divided successor states of east and west between 1945 and the reunification of the 1990’s. (Irreg.)
3613 History of Yugoslavia. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Examines the intertwining history of the south Slav nations: Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Bosnians, Montenegrins, Macedonians from the middle ages to the end of the 20th century. The major goal is to provide insights into the bloody civil wars for Yugoslav succession. (Irreg.)
3623 Conformity and Dissent in the 1950s and 1960s. Examines conformity and dissent in the 1950s and 1960s. Topics include the consumer culture, suburbia, the impact of television, “McCarthyism”, the Beats and the 1960s counterculture, student protest, civil rights and black nationalism, and women's liberation. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3633 American Indian Ethnohistory to 1870. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the ways in which native societies in North America responded to European invasions between 1492 and 1890. Emphasis will be placed on Indian culture, the way in which it changed, and the various governmental attempts to destroy it. (F) [IV-NW]
3643 American Indian: 1870-Present. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines American Indian history since the 19th century reservation era. Major themes include life patterns, cultural survival patterns, pan-Indian movements, the Indian Reorganization Act, relocation and termination policies, and self-determination issues. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3653 The Media and Social Change in 20th Century United States. Prerequisite: 1483 or 1493. A history of the interaction between the American people and the six most important ways of receiving information about their world during the 19th and 20th centuries. These include mass market newspapers (also known as the "penny press"), modern advertising, motion pictures, comic books, radio, and television. This is not an introduction to journalism or communications theory, nor a course in film history. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3663 Political Islam. Prerequisite: junior standing. The study of radical Islamic thinkers, political parties, and governments in the modern Middle East. (Irreg.)
3683 Jewish Mysticism. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Introduces students to the main trends of Jewish mysticism, among them Kabbalah. It will familiarize students with ancient and medieval doctrines. (Irreg.)
3690 Topics in Latin American History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected special problem or problems in the history of Latin America. (F)
3693 Political/Socioeconomic History of South Africa. Prerequisite: 2713. Traces the political and socioeconomic experience of South Africans from 1652 to the present. Emphasizes political and social transformation of South African from racial segregation to Apartheid. Also examines the post-Apartheid changes in contemporary South Africa. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3703 Native Peoples of Latin America. Explores the history of Latin America's indigenous peasantry and the issue of ethnicity in the modern world. Focus is on the people of Mexico, Guatemala, Peru and Brazil. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3713 History of Mexico, 1800-present. Explores the history of Mexico from independence to the present. Particular attention is paid to the issues of statebuilding, dependency, revolution, and post-revolutionary change. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3723 Africa Since 1945. Prerequisite: junior standing. The course thematically and chronologically examines social, political, cultural and economic developments in Africa from the end of World War II to the contemporary period. The growth of millenarian religious movements, nationalism, decolonization, and the post-colonial nation states are among the topics examined. (F) [IV-NW]
3733 History of Heaven and Hell in Judaism and Christianity. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Traces the evolution of the concept of the afterlife, eternal reward and punishment in Judaism and Christianity from late Antiquity to the high Middle Ages. (Irreg.)
3743 Southern Africa Since 1800. Focuses on the socio-economic and political evolution of Southern Africa as a distinctive region from 1800 to the contemporary period. The preponderant role of South Africa in the development of the region will be emphasized, while Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Angola will also be closely studied. (Sp) [IV-NW]
3753 Cultural Revolutions of the 1960’s. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the rapid political, economic and cultural changes of the 1960’s as a world-wide phenomenon. (Irreg.)
3763 Eastern Europe since 1938. Prerequisite: 1233 or 1623. Studies the impact on eastern Europe of World War II, Nazi and Soviet occupation, Stalinism, communist reform efforts, the collapse of communist rule, and subsequent transformations. (Sp) [IV-WC]
3770 Topics in Russian and East European History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected special problem or problems in Russian or Eastern European history. (Sp)
3783 Africa Since 1800. Thematically traces the evolution of Africa during the colonial period and explains how the continent moved to independence in the second half of the twentieth century. Such topics as the development of formal colonies and protectorates, the missionary factor and African nationalism will be studied. (F) [IV-NW]
3793 Imperial Russia. A study of the origins and growth of the Russian Empire, origins and development of autocracy and serfdom, Russia's emergence as a great power, its reforms and revolutions. (Sp, Su) [IV-WC]
3803 The Era of the Russian Revolutions. Deals specifically with the conditions and events of change in Russia between 1905 and 1921. Seeks to take into account the broad questions of industrialization and backwardness, the popular responses to these matters and the rise of radical groups. Beyond this setting, major attention will be placed on the dissolution of the old regime during World War I and the two revolutions of March and November 1917, as well as the civil wars and the NEP. (Sp)
3813 The Soviet Union: Development and Problems. Detailed study of political, social, cultural and economic developments in the Soviet Union in world affairs. (F) [IV-WC]
3823 History of Japanese Culture. Prerequisite: junior standing. Surveys the development of Japanese civilization from the earliest times to the present through art, architecture, literature, religions, and political ideas. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3833 Nation Building in East Central Europe, 1790 to 1939. A comparative study of the social and political processes of nation building among the Polish, Czech, Slovak, Magyar, and Yugoslav peoples; the attempts of the Habsburg and Tsarist empires to deal with national diversity; the emergence of independent nation-states; and the problems of domestic and international instability between the two world wars. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3840 Topics in Asian History. 1 to 5 hours. May be repeated for credit with change of content. Discussion of a selected special problem or problems in Asian history. (Sp, Su)
3843 International Relations in the Middle East. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Covers the major wars of the region beginning with the first world war, when the modern state system was created, and ending with the Gulf War, when the U.S. hoped to construct a new world order. The Arab-Israeli conflict, the Cold War, the contest for control of the Persian Gulf and oil markets are also covered. Discussed will the role of the great powers as well as the major Middle Eastern states in shaping international relations in the region over the past century. (Irreg.)
3853 Japan to 1850. Prerequisite: 1723 or 1733 or junior standing. Trace the history of Japan beginning with the earliest Jomon and Yayoi cultures and ending with the unraveling of the last feudal regime in the nineteenth century. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3863 Japan Since 1850. Prerequisite: 1723 or 1733 or junior standing. Designed to introduce students to the history of Japan from the 1850's to the present. Will include the Meiji restoration, industrial development, imperial expanison, wartime mobilization, the U.S. occupation, economic recovery and high growth, and the changing political and popular culture of the 1980s and 1990s. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3873 Traditional China. Survey of Chinese history to 1700. Roots of longevity of Chinese civilization; salient features of traditional Chinese society; evolution of the bureaucratic state; philosophy and religion; literature and the arts; elite and popular culture; major historiographical debates on the nature of Chinese society; significance of China in East Asian and world history. (Alt. F) [IV-NW]
3883 Late Imperial China. Prerequisite: 1723 or 1733 or junior standing or permission of instructor. The cultural, political, economic, and social transformations China underwent during the rule of its later dynasties from the 13th-century Mongol conquest to the final stuggles and collapse of China's existence as an empire with the Revolution of 1911. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3893 Culture and Society in the Middle East. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Covers the major social and cultural conflicts which have defined the peoples and states of the modern Middle East from 1800 to the present. The focus will be on Turkey, Iran, Egypt and Israel. History texts, primary documents, and novels will be read. Particular attention will be paid to the debates over the place of women and religion. (Irreg.)
3913 The Samurai in Japanese History. Prerequisite: 1723 or 1733 or 3853. Explores the history of the most popular figure in Japanese history. Covers warfare and invasion before the formation of the early state up to the suicide of the last Samurai in 1970. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3923 China since 1911. Prerequisite: 1733 or junior standing or permission of instructor. An examination of Chinese history since the Revolution of 1911, including the development of Republican and Communist thought, warlord rule, China's tumultuous wartime period, and the rise of the People's Republic of China (PRC). The course will also cover the history of the PRC, China after Mao, Taiwan and China's changing position in the world. (Irreg.)) [IV-NW]
3933 History of the Great Witch-Hunt in Early Modern Europe and America (Crosslisted with Womens' Studies 3933). Prerequisite: junior standing. Covers an important era in the history of human rights and misogyny while offering a view of early modern Europe through social, legal, political, and religious lenses. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3950 Topics in Middle Eastern History. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: junior standing. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit nine hours. Discussion of a selected problem or problems in Middle Eastern history. (Irreg.)
3953 The Modern Middle East. Explores the political and social history of the modern countries of Egypt, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Turkey and areas affected by them from 1500 to the present. (F) [IV-NW]
3960 Honors Reading. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: admission to Honors Program and permission. May be repeated; maximum credit six hours. Will consist of topics designated by the instructor in keeping with the student's major program. The topics will cover materials not usually presented in the regular courses. (F, Sp, Su)
3963 Rebirth of Israel. Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the historical evolution of the Zionist movement in the second half of the 19th century through the establishment of the State of Israel in the mid-20th century within the framework of Jewish modernization, antisemitism, and conflicting modern nationalisms. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
3970 Honors Seminar. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: admission to Honors Program. May be repeated; maximum credit six hours. The projects covered will vary. The content will deal with concepts not usually presented in regular coursework. (Sp, Su)
3973 Judaism—A Religious History. Prerequisite: junior standing. Introductory survey of Judaism from its earliest origins in the ancient Near East to the present. Development of ideas, forms of worship, and religious expression as well as sectavian trends and variations will be examined. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3980 Honors Research. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: admission to Honors Program. May be repeated; maximum credit six hours. Provides an opportunity for the gifted honors candidate to work at a special project in the student's field. (F, Sp, Su)
3983 Medieval Jewish History. Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Survey of Jewish history from the fall of the Second Temple in 70 C.E. to the expulsion from Spain in 1492. Primary emphasis on the social and intellectual history of the Jewish communities of the Islamic world and of Latin Christendom and their relations with the two great medieval civilizations. (Irreg.) [IV-NW]
3993 The Evolution of Martyrdom in the Judeo-Christian Civilization. Prerequisite: junior standing. Traces the historical development of martyrdom in Judaism and Christianity to understand what motivated individuals and communities to give up their lives for their convictions. Compare the evolution of the idea of martyrdom in Judaism and Christianity to identify differences and similarities between these two faiths. (Irreg.) [IV-WC]
4003 Jews and Other Germans. Prerequisite: Junior standing or permission of instructor. Discusses the history and culture of the Jews in Germany from 1750 until the Nazi period. Focuses on the internal dimension of the German-Jewish experience and analyze the contribution of Jews to the German culture. (Irreg.)
4013 Modern Italy. Prerequisite: 1233 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Examines the formation of Italy as a nation-state, one of the most significant events in modern European history, particularly in light of colonialism and World War II. (Irreg.)
4023 Inquisitions. Prerequisite: 1223 or 1233 or junior standing or permission of the instructor. Examines the historical roots of inquisitions in order to better understand how they have shaped modern conflicts. The mechanisms people used for disciplining themselves, for imposing control on others, and for evaluating who has the right to participate in society reveals people’s fears, priorities, and weaknesses. (Irreg.)
4033 The Renaissance. Prerequisite: 1223 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Examines the European renaissance, a time period that was crucial to the development of western European culture, intellectual thought, and state formation. This pivotal time period built the foundations of modern western culture. (Irreg.)
4043 Modern France. Prerequisite: 1233 or 1623 or junior standing or permission of the instructor. Survey of French social, political and intellectual history from 1648 to the present. Topics include absolutism, enlightenment, revolution, liberalism, socialism, the Franco-Prussian war, imperialism, World War I and World War II, decolonization, and immigration. (Irreg.)
4053 The Enlightenment. Prerequisite: 1223 or 1623 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Examination of the intellectual and cultural currents of eighteenth-century Europe and Colonial America. Topics to be considered include enlightenment critiques of orthodox religion, the rise of the public sphere and the relationship between the enlightenment and the French revolution. (Irreg.)
4063 France in the Americas. Prerequisite: 1223 or 1623 or junior standing or permission of instructor. History of the French colonial empire in the Americas from sixteenth century to early nineteenth century. Topics to be examined include emigration patterns, cross-cultural encounters with indigenous populations and daily life in colonial France. (Irreg.)
4103 Mythology in Ancient Greece and Rome. Prerequisite: 1613 or 2023 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Greek and Roman myth through primary sources in translation; social and political context of Greek and Roman myth; archaeological evidence related to Greek and Roman mythology. (Irreg.)
4203 Classical China. Prerequisite: 1723 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Examines the roots of Chinese civilization, from its pre-historical origins through its emergence as a formidable empire to its devolution during a lengthy period of civil war after the end of the Han dynasty. (Irreg.)
4303 Violence in the American West. Prerequisite: 1483 or 1493 or junior standing or permission of instructor. The examination of the pervasive history of violence in the American West and the shaping of western imagery. Key episodes of violence allow exploration of specific strains of violence and application of theoretical approaches. General categories include colonial based violence, social conflict (Including vigilantism, race based violence, labor and class unrest, etc.), and the invention of western violence by purveyors of popular culture. (Irreg.)
4463 History of West Africa. Prerequisite: 2713 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Addresses the economic, social, political, and cultural strategies west Africans employed to meet the challenges presented by life in their unusual part of the world from 20,000 BCE to the present. Topics include linage, commerce, attitudes toward powers, traditional understandings of history, Islam, slavery, colonialism, and independence. (Irreg.)
4503 Brazil, 1500-2000. Prerequisite: 2613 or 2623 or junior standing or permission of instructor. Surveys the history of Brazil from contact to 2000. Touches on the pre-Columbian period, but focuses on the social, cultural, economic and political transformation of the region under Portuguese and Brazilian rule. (Irreg.)4973 Undergraduate Seminar in History. Prerequisite: History majors may enroll only after completing 75 credit hours of undergraduate coursework, 24 hours of which must be history. Non-majors may enroll with permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit nine hours. Extensive research in historical sources and literature relating to a special problem or topic selected by the instructor. Emphasis will be on the individual preparation of research papers. (F, Sp, Su) [V]
4990 Independent Study. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: three courses in general area to be studied; permission of instructor and department. May be repeated; maximum credit six hours. Contracted independent study for topic not currently offered in regularly scheduled courses. Independent study may include library and/or laboratory research and field projects. (F, Sp, Su)
G5050 Directed Readings in History. Prerequisite: graduate standing. Graduate-level independent study for master's candidates only. (Irreg.)
G5054 Historical Methods—Bibliography and Criticism. Prerequisite: graduate standing or permission. The nature and philosophy of history; techniques of research and writing. (F)
G5110 Independent Studies in European History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study, arranged between the professor and student, in the history of Europe. (F, Sp, Su)
G5143 Government Publications (Crosslisted with Library and Information Studies 5143). Prerequisite: LIS 5013 or permission of instructor. Acquaints the student with the basic reference sources that provide access to the publications of governmental organizations. United States government publications are stressed. Topics include: the basic catalogs and indexes; depository system; acquisition, selection, organization, use of, and on-line retrieval of government publications. (Irreg.)
G5210 Independent Studies in American History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content, maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study, arranged between the professor and student, in the history of America. (F, Sp, Su)
G5300 Directed Readings in Medieval History. 1 to 5 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing, a reading knowledge of either French or German, and permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content and permission; maximum credit 12 hours. A supervised program of readings in a selected special problem in medieval history. (F)
G5310 Independent Studies in Latin American History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content, maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study, arranged between the professor and student, in the history of Latin America. (F, Sp, Su)
G5320 Research in Medieval History. 1 to 5 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing, reading knowledge of Latin, and permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 12 hours. A supervised program of research in the sources for medieval history, preparatory to research for the master's thesis in medieval history. (F, Su)
G5410 Independent Studies in African History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study, arranged between the professor and student, in the history of Africa. (F, Sp, Su)
G5510 Independent Studies in Asian History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study, arranged between the professor and student, in the history of Asia. (F, Sp)
G5970 Special Topics. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing or permission of instructor. May be repeated; maximum credit nine hours. Special topics or seminar course for content not currently offered in regularly scheduled courses. May include library and/or research and field projects. (Irreg.)
G5980 Research for Master's Thesis. Variable enrollment, two to nine hours; maximum credit applicable toward degree, four hours. (F, Sp, Su)
G6050 Research Problems. 2 to 5 hours. Prerequisite: 12 hours of history and permission. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. An individual course of intensive research with the area and problem to be determined by the student and directing instructor. (F, Sp, Su)
G6160 Advanced Readings in European History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor; student must be at Ph.D. level. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study in the history of Europe; designed to give students the opportunity to do intensive readings in his/her major fields of study under direct guidance of his/her advisory committee. (F, Sp, Su)
G6200 Seminar in European History. 2 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing with permission. May be repeated with change of content. Training in historical research, bibliography and historiography, featuring reports and criticism. (F, Sp)
G6230 Advanced Directed Readings in Medieval History. 1 to 5 hours. Prerequisite: master's degree or equivalent in history, reading knowledge of French and German and permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content and permission; maximum credit 18 hours. A supervised program of readings on a selected special problem in medieval history. (F)
G6240 Advanced Research in Medieval History. 1 to 5 hours. Prerequisite: master's degree in history, or its equivalent, reading knowledge of Latin, German and French, and permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 18 hours. A supervised program of research in the sources of medieval history, preparatory to the research for the doctoral dissertation in medieval history. (F)
G6260 Advanced Readings in American History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor; student must be at Ph.D. level. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study in American history; designed to give students the opportunity to do intensive readings in his/her major fields of study under direct guidance of his/her advisory committee. (F, Sp)
G6300 Seminar in Latin American History. Prerequisite: graduate standing and permission. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit nine hours. Training in historical research, bibliography and historiography. Features reports and criticism. (Irreg.)
G6360 Advanced Readings in Latin American History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor; student must be at Ph.D. level. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study in Latin American history; designed to give students the opportunity to do intensive readings in his/her major fields of study under direct guidance of his/her advisory committee. (F, Sp)
G6400 Seminar in American History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing with permission. May be repeated with change of content. Training in historical research, bibliography and historiography. Features reports and criticism. (F, Sp)
G6460 Advanced Readings in African History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor; student must be at Ph.D. level. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study in African history; designed to give students the opportunity to do intensive readings in his/her major fields of study under direct guidance of his/her advisory committee. (F, Sp)
G6560 Advanced Readings in Asian History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: permission of instructor; student must be at Ph.D. level. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 15 hours. Independent study in Asian history; designed to give students the opportunity to do intensive readings in his/her major fields of study under direct guidance of his/her advisory committee. (F, Sp, Su)
G6600 Seminar in Middle Eastern History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing with permission. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 12 hours. Training in historical research, bibliography and historiography. Features reports and criticism. (Irreg.)
G6800 Seminar in Modern Japanese History. 1 to 4 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing with permission. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit 12 hours. Training in historical research, bibliography, and historiography. Features reports and criticism. (Irreg.)
G6970 Special Topics. 1 to 3 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing or permission of instructor. May be repeated; maximum credit 12 hours. Special topics or seminar course for content not currently offered in regularly scheduled courses. May include library and/or research and field projects. (Irreg.)
G6980 Research for Doctor's Dissertation. 2 to 16 hours. (F, Sp, Su)
Updated: July 11, 2008