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You can find a link to the History Major Undergraduate You can find a link to the History Major Undergraduate Requirements and Course Catalog here

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Online (U800, U700) Classes: Online History Courses are set up through The College of Professional Studies (formerly known as University College or UC), not through the History Department. The majority of the seats in these classes are reserved for College of Professional Studies Students. Any other available seats can be taken on a first come, first served basis. If you are unable to enroll in the course during the enrollment period, you will have to wait until the first day of class, when any remaining reserved seats are released. We are unable to offer permissions or increase enrollment caps at this time. 


CourseDay/Time Professor Description 

HST

101

102

American History to

America Since 1865

*This course includes the lecture and a weekly discussion section. By enrolling in discussion, you automatically enroll in the lecture.

M/W
9
10:
30
35-
10
11:
25
30
Murphy
Cohen

This

introductory course will survey American history from the pre-colonial era to the Civil War. We will approach this period of history through a discussion of three themes. The first covers the period from the founding down to the middle of the eighteenth century and focuses on how Europeans from a medieval culture became Americans. The second theme explores the political, social and economic impact the Revolution had upon American society. And finally, we will focus on the modernization of American society in the nineteenth century and how that modernization was a major factor in causing the sectional crisis.In addition to the two lecture classes a week, you will attend a small discussion class taught by one of the teaching assistants once each week.

semester offers a broad look at the history of the United States in the 150 years from the end of the Civil War through the first decade of the 21st Century. Throughout the course, we will engage with the social, political, and cultural changes, ideas, and events that have profoundly shaped modern American society.

Key questions include: How have we defined being American? How has the nation’s relationship with the world changed?  How have the rights of citizens evolved over time? How have various groups in American society articulated their claims to citizenship and national belonging? What factors have affected the development of American political leadership?

Concentration: U.S. / Period:

Pre-

Modern

HST

111: Early Modern Europe

112: Napoleon to the Present

*This course includes the lecture and a weekly discussion section. By enrolling in discussion, you automatically enroll in the lecture.

M/W
11
10:
40
35-
12
11:
35
30
Kyle
Ebner

This course

covers

examines the

history of Europe from the Black Death, which marked the end of the Middle Ages, to the French Revolution – the beginning of the modern world. While it will cover the major events of the period – the Renaissance, the Reformation, the English, French and scientific revolutions, the rise and fall of Napoleon, the growth of the modern state – the emphasis will be on changes in the lives of ordinary men and women. There will be a mid semester, a final, and two short (c. 5 page) papers

major developments in European history since the late 18th century, including the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Era, the Industrial Revolution, imperialism, the First World War, the Bolshevik Revolution, the Fascist and Nazi seizures of power, the Second World War, the Holocaust, the Cold War, and European Unification. The thematic focus of this course is the relationship between the individual and the state. How does this relationship change over time – what makes it “modern”? To address this question, we will examine ideologies (liberalism, conservatism, socialism, nationalism, fascism), the birth of mass society, poverty, violence, women’s rights, and racism. There are two lectures and one discussion section per week. Discussions emphasize primary sources and historical debates. Grades are based on in-class exams, papers, and discussion.

Concentration: Europe / Period:

Pre-modern

Modern

HST

121

122: Global History

to

1750-Present

*This course includes the lecture and a weekly discussion section. By enrolling in discussion, you automatically enroll in the lecture.

M/W 11:40-12:35
G. Kallander
Cheta

This course introduces students to global history

from the thirteenth century through

beginning in 1750 by focusing on social, economic, political, intellectual

,

and religious developments in major regions of the world: Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and the Americas. Beginning with the

Mongol’s Eurasian empire, their transformation of the continent

Mughal Empire in India, the Ottomans, and the

spread of Islamic empires from Central Asia to the Atlantic, it traces the historical patterns of different world regions in the fifteenth century through the trans-Atlantic slave trade and European imperialism.  What types of exchanges were facilitated by maritime trade and trade diasporas? How were human interactions with their environment circumscribed by climate change and disease? The latter part of the course looks at global connections and local particularities facilitated by the spread of Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. Course themes include empire, disease, environment, slavery, religion, state-formation, and the rise of global trade

empires of the New World, it will trace the growing interaction of these areas with Europe through colonialism and trade. From the age of revolutions to the age of empires and the age of nation-states, this course studies the relevance of the early modern world for understanding today’s global patterns and economic interdependency. We will explore twentieth-century developments including the spread of Marxism, secular nationalism, and decolonization. The course ends by looking at current issues in world history, including the environment, global capitalism, and religious revivalism. Topics will be covered thematically in general chronological order. Lectures will be supplemented by maps, visual materials, music, documentaries and films. All students are required to attend lectures and one discussion section a week. Students need not have taken HST 121 Global History to enroll.

Concentration: Global / Period:

Pre-modern

Modern

HST/MES
208
209: Modern Middle East
Since the Rise of Islam
M/W 12:45-2:05Cheta
This course is an introductory survey

Interested in the Middle East but not sure where to begin? This course is the perfect introduction to understanding a fascinating and dynamic part of the world today. It covers major aspects of Middle East history from

the rise of Islam in the seventh century to 1900. There are no pre-requisites, and no prior knowledge of the Middle East is expected. We will discuss the origins of Islam, and aspects of major Islamic empires such as the Umayyads (7th-8th centuries), the Abbasids (8th-13th centuries), the Fatimids (10th-12th centuries) with greater focus on the Ottomans (14th-20th centuries). In approaching this long history, which unfolded over a vast geography from the Iberian Peninsula and West Africa to Central and South Asia, we will not confine our study to high politics but will also explore intellectual, cultural and social issues such as gender relations, sectarianism, consumerism (coffee, tulips!), gossip and disease. We will also learn how to critically read documentary and material historical traces in order to understand how historical knowledge is constructed as well as the tensions between popular memory and written history.  

the twentieth century to the present, including the countries from Turkey and Iran in the east, to Palestine, Israel, Syria and the Arabian Peninsula, and from Egypt across northern Africa to Morocco in the west. Lectures combine political basics with a insights on social and cultural life, and women’s rights. Readings blend specific details of political and economy change in each country while indicating broader regional trends, from as European imperialism, the impact of the two world wars, to revolutionary aspirations and radical social movement. These are supplemented by primary sources that incorporate the words, perspectives, and self-representations of individuals across the Middle East. Additional topics include intellectual life, constitutionalism and democracy, anti-colonial nationalism, feminism and women’s movements, the radical left, political Islam, and contemporary debates.

There are no prerequisites for this class.

This class meets twice a week, there is no discussion section.

Concentration: Global / Period:

Pre-modern

Modern

HST

210: The Ancient World 

211: Medieval and Renaissance Europe

*This course includes the lecture and a weekly discussion section. By enrolling in discussion, you automatically enroll in the lecture.

M/W
10
11:
35
40-
11
12:
30
35
Diem
Brege 

This

course surveys the history of the ancient Mediterranean and Near East, and explores the classical roots of modern civilization. We will begin with the first civilizations of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, the roots of western religion in ancient Israel; then proceed through Bronze Age, archaic and classical Greece, the Persian wars, the trial of Socrates, the conquests of Alexander the Great, the Hellenistic world, the rise of Rome, and end with the fall of the Roman Empire and the coming of Christianity. The course will treat political, social, cultural, religious and intellectual history. We will focus on issues that the ancients themselves considered important – good and bad government, the duties of citizens and the powers of kings and tyrants – but we will also examine those who were marginalized by the Greeks and Romans: women, slaves, so-called "barbarians." The course will emphasize reading and discussion of primary sources, in order to provide a window into the thought-worlds and value systems of past societies

introductory survey traces Europe’s transformation during the Middle Ages and Renaissance, from roughly 300 CE to roughly 1500 CE. It begins as the Roman Empire slowly gave way to new societies in both East and West, and then follows the fortunes of these societies over more than 1000 years. It explores the religious, political, economic, social, cultural, intellectual, and artistic aspects of these societies and how they changed over time. Readings will include both primary sources (those written at the time) and secondary sources (by modern scholars). Students will learn to analyze these sources in order to find out what happened in this period, how people understood events, and how historians use evidence to explain the past. Requirements include reading and participation, midterm and final exams, and two papers.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-modern

HST
213: Africa: Ancient Times to 1800T/TH 11:00-12:30Shanguhyia

This course is a survey of pre-modern African history, presenting an overview of the main themes and chronology of the development of African culture and society. It provides an exposition of the regional and continental diversity and unity in African political, economic, social and cultural histories with special emphasis on major African civilizations, processes of state formation, encounters with the Euro-Asia world, Africa’s role in the international Trans-Saharan, Indian Ocean and Atlantic trades, ecology, and urbanization.

Concentration: Global / Period: Pre-modern

HST 300, M002: Food in Modern EuropeT/TH 12:30-1:50Terrell 

In the last two and a half centuries, food has transformed dramatically. Global integration and new agrarian and industrial systems of production have displaced many earlier relationships with the land and its products. The people who grow, harvest, prepare, and serve food and how they do so have transformed due to accelerating social processes from urbanization to mass migration and the culture of domesticity. Eating, too, has become both deeply politicized and intensely refined—the stuff of regulation, identity formation, and emotional connection. The production, consumption, abundance, and scarcity of food create boundaries, political or otherwise, defining people and shaping bodies. This course anchors the study of these transformations in European history in the 19th and 20th centuries. 

Concentration: Europe
300, M001: Queen Elizabeth IM/W 12:45-2:05Kyle

Elizabeth I: Cultural icon? Virgin queen? ‘Father/Mother’ of the nation? This course will examine the images, personality, words and actions of one of the most important monarchs in English history. How did Elizabeth manage to negotiate her rule of a patriarchal society as a ‘weak-willed woman’? Did she exploit her considerable political skills to benefit the country or simply to maintain her position on the throne? And what of those who sort to assassinate or replace her? How did she react to threats of foreign invasion, domestic rebellion and a barely concerned hostility among many in the governing classes? Using both early modern and modern iconography, we will explore the images and representations of Elizabeth to unravel her life and examine how she sought to portray herself and how others have seen her through the years.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-Modern

HST/HNR/PSC 300, M002: White Nationalism/Right Populism in Modern America

Honors ONLY 

T/TH 3:30-4:50Thompson

This course will examine why White Nationalism and Right-wing Populism have become so prominent on the early 21st-century American political landscape. Although such tendencies have long been evident (consider the Second KKK in the 1920s and the Dixiecrats of the 1940s and '50s as two examples), we will explore why they have achieved such significance in recent years. Among the questions we will consider are these:

To what extent is there continuity between earlier forms of right-wing radicalism and those we see today?

Was the emergence and ongoing influence of Donald Trump (and pro-Trump groups like QAnon, Proud Boys, Militias, and America First) a cause or consequence of the surge in such beliefs?

In what ways are US developments distinctive, and how are they part of a global authoritarianist wave?

How has social media enabled the development of movements like these? Throughout the term, emphasis will be on reading, reflection, and discussion.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST 300, M003: Cultural
Images in HST 300, M004: Native History from Pre-Colonial Era to 1830M/W 12:45-2:05
History of AIM/W 3:45-5:05Lasch-Quinn

Selected ideas/movements/episodes concentrated on American/European cultural history, ancient and modern, as seen in images. Close-reading of texts, images, cultural artifacts. Representations of the self, emotion, ideas, and art of living as reflected in a range of primary sources including philosophy, literature, art, architecture, and film. Discussion of extensive common readings, art works, documentary films, and other materials, as well as individual original research. Hands-on visual workshop component. Reading/viewing journal, short writing assignments, presentations, and semester research paper related to cultural history in images. Students use common readings as a springboard to in-depth examination of a particular image as the centerpiece of their semester project. Students at any level from any program welcome.

Concentration: U.S./Europe / Period: Pre-Modern/Modern

As A.I. (Artificial Intelligence) has exploded into contemporary consciousness and its uses in everyday life have expanded exponentially (ChatGPT, for example), it is vital to pause to reflect on its potential impact on nearly every realm, from education, jobs, popular culture, and entertainment to how we think of ourselves as human beings, form relationships, interact with others, and navigate other aspects of our public and private lives. In this course, we will explore AI as a cultural phenomenon through its history, imaginative portrayals in film and the arts, and current debates over its pros and cons, with special attention to the impact of the virtual world of computer technology, social media, the internet, and now AI, on the self. Comparison with earlier concepts of the self, emotion, and thought in intellectual history and cultural criticism of technology and media—with their visions of what the human person is and might strive to be—can help us assess what might be different in emerging concepts and practices.

Concentration: U.S./Europe / Period: Modern

HST/NAT 300, M005: History of Native North America II: From 1830 to the PresentT/TH 9:30-10:50Luedtke

This course is part

one

two of the Native North American Survey.

Spanning from the pre-colonial era to the Indian

Beginning with the Indian Removal Act of 1830, this course will take a chronological approach to Native North America to understand how major historical events and themes connect the past to the present. This is mostly a discussion-based course with major topics including Native sovereignty and self-determination,

cultural conflict

forced removal, forced assimilation, the

Doctrine of Discovery, international/inter-imperial warfare, settler colonialism, Native survivance

Red Power movement, Landback, Native repatriation, and other forms of Native resistance and cultural perseverance. The course culminates with a major research paper on a topic related to the course’s themes.

Concentration:

US

U.S./Native / Period:

Pre-

Modern

HST 300,

M005: Native America and the WorldM/W 2:15

M006: Indigenous History and Culture Through Film and Literature 

T 12:30-3:
35
15Luedtke

This course

is a study of Native America in an international context. Organized thematically, this course will begin with a discussion of the 2007 United Nations’ Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the issues faced by Native Americans in the present day. We will then touch on critical points in the history of North America that place Native Americans in contact/conflict with other nations from across the world. This course is an even split of lectures and discussions with major topics ranging from colonialism to migration to the global whaling industry to the sport of Lacrosse to environmental activism and justice.Concentration: US

explores the history of representations of Native Americans and their culture in popular media by both Native and non-Native peoples. Through analyses of both films and literature, this course will investigate major several major themes that affect Native people in the present-day such as colonialism, erasure, survivance, missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, forced assimilation and boarding schools, the myth of the vanishing Indian, and Natives dealing with a post-apocalyptic future. The course will be accompanied by a weekly film viewing series where we watch movies from several different genres, mostly written and produced by Native filmmakers.

Concentration: U.S./Native / Period: Modern

HST 300,
M006
M007:
History of Development in Africa
Herodotus and the Invention of HistoryT/TH
2
9:
00
30-
3
10:
20Concentration: Global
50
Shanguhyia

This course is about the history of development in Modern Africa from 1800 to the present. Development here is defined as the quest for progress/improvement in human economic and social conditions. Focus is on the origins, meaning, and implementation of development as an idea and practice in modern Africa. Readings challenge the students to develop a critical assessment of these processes. The readings examine roles of several agencies and institutions in Africa’s development history, particularly states, administrators, international institutions, knowledge regimes, as well as geography, natural resources, labor, policy frameworks of postcolonial states. What has motivated these institutions and agencies to engage in development in Africa? What has been the vision of ordinary Africans regarding developments? Assignments include critical writing reflections and tests. The course is relevant to students interested in the historical, political, and international contexts of Africa’s development question. Students of history, economics, development, political science, international relations will particularly find the course relevant to their fields.

Champion 

A study of Herodotus, the father of history, the first anthropologist, the first ethnographer…and the father of lies.  Herodotus was the product of ancient Greece, which defined itself in cultural terms in opposition to non-Greeks, or ‘barbarians.’  This cultural framework provides the context from which to consider Herodotus’ narrative of the Persian Invasions of Greece.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-Modern

HST 300, M008: World War II in EuropeT/TH 2:00-3:20Allport

The Second World War in Europe lasted for six years and cost the lives of more than 50 million soldiers and civilians. It transformed the continent's politics, economics, society, and culture. Its memory continues to haunt Europe and influences every aspect of the region's current affairs. Studying its causes, conduct, and consequences, then, is an essential precondition for understanding modern Europe. In this seminar we will combine close classroom readings of important primary and secondary sources with independent research on aspects of the conflict chosen by the students themselves. The end goal for each participant will be an original research paper drafted and presented to the class.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Modern

HST 300,
M007: AI & the Virtual SelfLasch-Quinn

As A.I. (Artificial Intelligence) has exploded into contemporary consciousness and its uses in everyday life have expanded exponentially (ChatGPT, for example), it is vital to pause to reflect on its potential impact on nearly every realm, from education, jobs, popular culture, and entertainment to how we think of ourselves as human beings, form relationships, interact with others, and navigate other aspects of our public and private lives. In this course, we will explore AI as a cultural phenomenon through its history, imaginative portrayals in film and the arts, and current debates over its pros and cons, with special attention to the impact of the virtual world of computer technology, social media, the internet, and now AI, on the self. Comparison with earlier concepts of the self, emotion, and thought in intellectual history and cultural criticism of technology and media—with their visions of what the human person is and might strive to be—can help us assess what might be different in emerging concepts and practices. 

HST/IRP 300, M008: International Relations in AntiquityT/TH 8:00-9:20Champion

This course explores interstate systems of ancient Greece and Rome through international relations theory.  The theoretical framework is applied to two famous historical narratives: Thucydides' portrayal of the great Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta, and Polybius' account of the Second Punic War between the Roman Republic and its arch nemesis Carthage, led by the commander Hannibal.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-Modern

HST 300, M010: The Cold War in Latin AmericaM/W 3:45-5:05Jashari

This course explores the history of revolutions and counterrevolutions in twentieth century Latin America, an epoch that witnessed unprecedented levels of social uprisings followed by political violence. We examine the ways in which class, gender, race, and ethnicity shape revolutionary actors and movements. As we consider the local, country-specific dimensions of the Cold War, we will also explore the impact of regional and global dynamics. We will examine diverse revolutionary experiences, from Mexico to Central America and the Southern Cone, as we analyze how the state and transnational actors responded to such momentous changes. Countries such as Chile and Argentina experienced significant upheavals during the 1960s and 1970s, but also disturbing levels of state violence and repression made more deadly by the use of new technologies. Some of the central questions that motivate this course include: how do we understand the complex dynamics of revolution and counterrevolution in Latin America? What has been the role of local, regional, and transnational actors in fomenting both? How has the Latin American left transformed throughout the century? What are the legacies of the Cold War in Latin America? To understand the lived experiences of the Cold War, we will work with declassified CIA documents, translated primary sources, murals, posters, music, and more!

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern 

HST 301: Practicum in the Study of HistoryM/W 2:15-3:35Diem

What is History? How do scholars “do” history? This seminar introduces history majors to the methods and goals of historical study, and to the skills needed to conduct independent historical research. The first part of the course will be spent discussing what exactly history is and has been. We will then move on to discussing the kinds of history that have developed across the century in the American Historical profession. Finally, students will spend a large portion of the course familiarizing themselves with the analytical and practical skills needed to develop their own research projects. 

HST 301: Practicum in the Study of History

T/TH 11:00-12:20

Kumar

What is History? How do scholars “do” history? This seminar introduces history majors to the methods and goals of historical study, and to the skills needed to conduct independent historical research. The first part of the course will be spent discussing what exactly history is and has been. We will then move on to discussing the kinds of history that have developed across the century in the American Historical profession. Finally, students will spend a large portion of the course familiarizing themselves with the analytical and practical skills needed to develop their own research projects. 

HST 304: The Age of Jefferson and JacksonM/W 2:15-3:35Schmeller

This course examines the period between 1787 and 1848 as a distinctive era in United States history.  From the adoption of the Federal constitution to the Mexican war and the Gold Rush, the early American republic offers a vivid case study in historical irony: how a revolutionary republic inched towards nationalism and imperialism; how declared principles of liberty and equality could coexist with (and occasionally create new modes of) racial, gendered, and economic oppression and inequality; how a people who praised the virtues of rural life became progressively urban and industrial.  Readings and lectures will juxtapose the traditional scholarly focus on statecraft, presidential politics, and diplomacy with more recent research in social, cultural, and economic history.

Concentration: US / Period: Modern 

HST 311: Medieval CivilizationM/W 12:45-2:05Herrick

This course explores European civilization from about 800 to about 1200. We will study kings, saints, and villains; faith and violence, love and hatred; ideas and beliefs. Our questions include: how did these people make sense of their world? How did they respond to crisis and opportunity? How did their civilization work? What was life like in medieval Europe? To answer these questions, we will mainly read primary sources that show us what medieval people themselves had to say about their world. Our goal will be to understand the past on its own terms. We will also emphasize the skills of close reading, strong argumentation, and clear expression of ideas.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-modern

HST/MES 317: Arab RevolutionsT/TH 12:30-1:50A. Kallander

From revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, to mass protests in Syria, Bahrain, and Yemen, to the overthrow of the regime in Libya, this course offers an historical introduction to the revolutionary movements that began in 2010 and 2011. Was it a Facebook revolution? Who was Tweeting in Tahrir? What role did women play? And where exactly is Tunisia?

Beginning with in-depth case studies of Tunisia and Libya since the 1950s followed by shorter case studies of Bahrain, Egypt, Syria, and Yemen, this course explores the social, economic, and political histories of each country to understand the contexts and reasons for social justice movements and protests. Topics include postcolonial politics, anti-imperialism, socialism and socialist development, state feminism, neoliberalism and economic restructuring, and social media. Who participated in protests movements and sit-ins? How did music, videos, or street art contribute to these movements? 
M009: An Introduction to Public History T/TH 12:30-1:50Elliott

TBA

HST 300, M010: History of Ukraine in European ContectM/W 3:45-5:05Hranchak

This course is aimed at forming an understanding of the history of Ukraine from ancient times to the present in the context of international relations. Ukraine is considered as an integral part of European civilization, its Frontier and Gate from one side, and an intersection of different politics and cultures from the other. Against this background of Ukrainian-European interaction, this course examines the political and cultural development of Ukraine, the traditions of Ukrainian statehood, and the origins of the Ukrainian nation. Additionally, the course discusses the characteristic features of the national and cultural identity of Ukrainians and their contribution to the development and promotion of European democratic values.

Students will improve their skills in analyzing sources, critical thinking, and communication.

The course will also contribute to students' understanding of the formation and development of the system of European relations and the role of Ukraine in this process.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-Modern/Modern

HST 301, M001: Practicum in the Study of HistoryT/TH 11:00-12:20Herrick

What is History? How do scholars “do” history? This seminar introduces history majors to the methods and goals of historical study, and to the skills needed to conduct independent historical research. The first part of the course will be spent discussing what exactly history is and has been. We will then move on to discussing the kinds of history that have developed across the century in the American Historical profession. Finally, students will spend a large portion of the course familiarizing themselves with the analytical and practical skills needed to develop their own research projects. 

HST 301, M002: Practicum in the Study of History

M/W 2:15-3:35

Diem

What is History? How do scholars “do” history? This seminar introduces history majors to the methods and goals of historical study, and to the skills needed to conduct independent historical research. The first part of the course will be spent discussing what exactly history is and has been. We will then move on to discussing the kinds of history that have developed across the century in the American Historical profession. Finally, students will spend a large portion of the course familiarizing themselves with the analytical and practical skills needed to develop their own research projects. 

HST 302: Early American HistoryM/W 2:15-3:35Murphy

European invasion of America. Native American resistance. Institutions of conquest, colonization, and empire. Anglicization of the colonists and interactions with Indigenous peoples. Servitude, slavery, and the family.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Pre-Modern

HST 305: America in Crisis: The Civil War and ReconstructionM/W 3:45-5:05Schmeller

The Civil War was a second American Revolution, and considerably more transformative than the first. Through lectures, readings of primary and secondary-source texts, discussions, and films, this course will show why. We begin by asking what led Southern states to secede in 1861, why the North resolved to restore the union by force of arms, and how emancipation evolved from a military expedient to a defining war aim. We will ask how changing military strategies and tactics related to political struggles over the objectives of the war, and why the war took so many lives. The role of political and military leaders – Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee, to name a few – will be placed alongside the experiences of soldiers, slaves, and civilians. Our examination of Reconstruction will pay particular attention to the efforts of freedmen and women to secure their freedoms despite the hostility of white Southerners and the indifference of Northerners. Care will also be taken to understand the Civil War and Reconstruction in relation to larger social, economic, and cultural developments in nineteenth-century America, and to place them in global context. Finally, we will look at how Americans have remembered the war, from struggles over memorialization, to the persistence of "Lost Cause" mythology, to changing interpretations of the war advanced by historians in the twentieth century.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST 310: The Early Middle AgesM/W 12:45-2:05Diem

This course provides a survey of the most important political, cultural and social developments in the period between 300 and 900, or roughly between the reign of Constantine and end of the rule of the Carolingian kings, mostly focusing on Western Europe. In this period falls one of the most dramatic historical breaks: the “Fall of the Roman Empire” and the “Beginning of the Middle Ages.” But was there really a “Fall of the Roman Empire?” When, how and why did the Roman Empire come to an end? This still ferociously debated question will play a central role in the course. Other topics will be the rise of Christianity, the development of medieval institutions (such as kingship, church structures, and feudalism), and the continuity and discontinuity of intellectual traditions. A special emphasis will be laid on reading and interpreting (translated) primary sources and on methods of historical research.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-modern

HST 321: Modern ChinaT/TH 11:00-12:20Kutcher

This course will survey the history of China from the seventeenth century to the present. Our focus will be on revolution and reform: the primary means through which Chinese people responded to the challenges of a new world, and, most particularly, to Western encroachment and invasion. Topics to be considered in depth include:  politics and society under the Qing dynasty (1644-1911); the end of the dynastic system and the continuing quest for a viable political system; reform of Chinese culture through revolution; the challenge of changing old attitudes about gender roles; conflicting visions for the new nation; the critique of communism by dissident Chinese; the persistence and resurgence of traditional ways, and the renewed interest in Maoism during the 2000’s. Assigned readings include a slim textbook to provide chronology and a variety of historical materials including memoirs, fiction and poetry.

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern

HST 323/LAS 313: Colonial Latin AmericaT/TH 3:30-4:50Jashari

In this course, we will explore Latin American history from independence to the late twentieth century. This course is broad, geographically and temporally, but no prior knowledge of Latin American history is necessary. Drawing upon primary documents, audio and visual materials, and secondary historical literature, this course will explore the nation-building process and the ways that ordinary people interacted with the state. We will also analyze the construction of racial, class, and gender hierarchies in various Latin American contexts. We draw from case studies and national histories, but we will place these historical moments within a global perspective, elucidating how Latin American actors shaped imperial practices, nation-state formation, revolutionary and counterrevolutionary dynamics during the Cold War, and innovative political practices against neoliberalism.

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern

HST
320: Traditional ChinaT/TH 11:00-12:20Kutcher

In this course we will survey Chinese history from earliest times to the end of the Ming dynasty in 1644.  This seemingly remote time witnessed the formation of a complex government and society whose influence extended to much of East Asia. Ranging over the centuries, the class will explore some of the main currents in Chinese political, cultural, social, and intellectual history. These include:  Confucianism, Buddhism, Daoism, and Legalism as competing and sometimes intersecting philosophies; the imperial system and major changes in its form over time; the changing roles of women in society; popular rebellion and heterodox religion; and the place of science and technology in the Chinese past.

We will read a variety of texts in addition to a concise textbook.

Concentration: Global / Period: Pre-modern

HST 322: Colonial Latin AmericaM/W 5:15-6:35Jashari

Latin America had the world’s longest experience with colonialism, which in some areas lasted from 1500 almost to 1900.  It was the first place where Native Americans met Europeans, and their often violent and exploitative but also creative contact helped shape distinct multi-ethnic and multi-cultural societies. Latin America had both the earliest and most prolonged experience with African slavery. 

This course will examine the period from pre-Columbian times to 1825. We will concentrate on six main themes. First, we examine Europeans’ violent conquest of indigenous societies and subsequent efforts to impose Christianity and other cultural values on the conquered even as they exploited them economically. Second, the course highlights the continuing and partially successful efforts of Native Americans to resist or modify European cultural and economic impositions. Third, we explore the introduction and expansion of African labor, the experiences and resistance of African Americans, and the eventual end of African slavery in Latin America. Fourth, we trace Spanish and Portuguese colonial institutions. Fifth, we analyze gender in colonial Latin American societies, and finally, we will cover the efforts of diverse Latin Americans to build independent nations. This course requires no prior knowledge of Latin America. We will work with primary sources such as Spanish and Indigenous accounts of conquest, maps, court records, and more.

Concentration: Global / Period: Pre-Modern

HST 340/WGS 342: Women in America: 17th Century to Civil WarT/TH 3:40-4:50Branson 

This course examines and analyzes the changing social, economic, and political roles of American women from European settlement to the Civil War. Using primary documents, historical essays, and fiction, we will explore how women's roles and identities have been defined by American society over different historical periods. We will pay particular attention to the ways in which women of diverse races, classes and ethnic groups have either embodied or challenged dominant social norms.  

This is primarily a lecture course with discussion of reading and writing assignments based on primary source material.
Concentration: U.S. / Period: ModernHST/JSP 362: Nazi Germany and the HolocaustT/TH 9:30-10:50Terrell

In 1933, a radical and dictatorial regime came to power in Germany, remade the German state, and went on to orchestrate a vast program of mass murder in pursuit of a vision of biological purity and to launch a war of world conquest, ultimately killing millions. This course examines the history of German fascism, the Nazi state, and the Holocaust according to three primary lines of inquiry. In the first part of the course, we will address the question of how the Nazis came to power. What was Nazism, and why did it gain a popular following? Why did the Weimar Republic, the parliamentary democracy founded in 1918, fall (first to dictatorship and then to Nazism) in the early 1930s? In the second part of the course, we will examine the politics of Nazism in power. What was everyday life like for various Germans under the Nazi state, and why did many Germans come to support the regime? The course’s third section addresses war, genocide, and the legacies of Nazism and the Holocaust.  How did Nazi genocide policies develop, and how was it possible to implement them? What can the history of Nazi Germany teach us about other state-run mass murder programs?  How have Germans grappled with the aftermath of Nazi Germany?

Concentration: Europe / Period: Modern

HST 364: The Origins of Modern RussiaT/TH 9:30-10:50Hagenloh

The Russian Empire emerged relatively late in the modern era, but it quickly rose to dizzying heights of military power, cultural prestige, and influence on international politics. Powerful rulers like Ivan the Terrible and Peter the Great, literary giants like Alexander Pushkin and Fyodor Dostoevsky, radical socialists like Alexander Herzen and Vladimir  Lenin – these figures placed Russia at the center of trends that transformed European society for five hundred years. Yet by the end of the nineteenth century, the Russian Empire was in the midst of a period of precipitous decline, which led to the collapse of the 300-year-old Romanov dynasty during the First World War. This course examines the history of Russia from the emergence of the Tsarist autocratic system in the 1400s to the revolutions of 1917, focusing on the Russian state, serfdom, the Russian intellectual tradition, Russia’s imperial policies, and nineteenth-century working-class activism. We will also examine the lived experiences of various social groups within the Empire, including peasants, urban women, ethnic minorities, factory workers, and the intelligentsia.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Modern

HST 370: American Military T/TH 11:00-12:30Allport

Is there, as some historians have claimed, a distinctive ‘American way of war’ traceable over the four centuries since the beginning of the European colonization of North America? If so, what are its characteristics, how has it changed over time, and what does it reveal about a peculiar American attitude to state violence and the relationship between military and civilian society? In this course, we will examine the ‘small’ and ‘big’ wars of the United States from the colonial period to the recent campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. Class meetings will be a mixture of lectures and discussion. Students will complete a number of primary and secondary source readings. Assessment will be based on class discussion and several reading and writing assignments.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST 371: Religion in South Asian PoliticsT/TH 2:00-3:20Kumar

Religion has been an explosive issue in recent South Asian politics. Commencing with a look at contemporary events, such as the Rohingya refugee crisis, the consolidation of a Hindu nationalist state in India, and the recently concluded Civil War in Sri Lanka, this course will work its way back through the twentieth and nineteenth centuries to understand their historic roots. Key themes discussed will include the gendered nature of religious violence; majoritarian politics and religious identities; colonial rule and enumerated communities; everyday and extraordinary violence.

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern

HST/WGS 379: Gender, Race and ColonialismT/TH 9:30-10:50A. KallanderThis course explores the centrality of gender (ideas about what it means to be a man or woman, how masculinity and femininity are defined and expressed) and race (whether biological, cultural or otherwise) in France, England and their colonial empires. Looking in particular at the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, we will examine the gender and racial hierarchies and presumptions that justified colonial occupation, domination, and exploitation, and the ways they infused not only politics, but science, literature, and the arts (though not without significant and sustained resistance). How did race and gender – or racism and gender biases – contribute to European expansion? What are the legacies or continues shaping race and inequality today?
Examples extend from the Caribbean to South Asia with attention towards the impact of colonialism on Europe and Europeans as well as US empire, and race and gender in the US today. This course is about the making of the modern world, and the centrality of inequalities (based on race and gender) to nation building over the past 200 years no matter how liberal, republican, or democratic. We alternate between the historical contexts of colonialism and their relevance today with readings from disciplines including anthropology, literature, feminist theory, and cultural studies
331: Race and Sport in US HistoryM/W 3:45-5:15Gonda

This course explores the subject of American sport as a lens through which to view race relations in U.S. History. Sports have long served as important symbolic sites of both resistance and assimilation for individuals from various racial and ethnic groups. Our readings and discussions will consider the role of individual athletes, key events, and sports as cultural and corporate institutions in an effort to understand how organized athletics have shaped racial identity and political protest in American history. Key topics will include how sport has influenced discourses of manhood/womanhood, citizenship, and power as we navigate the events, lives, and sociopolitical changes from the era of slavery to the present day.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST/WGS 349: Women in US History Since the Civil WarT/TH 12:30-1:50Thompson

Focusing mainly on the past 150 years, this course is intended to provide an overview of women’s experiences in America from the Civil War to the present. While it is not a course on the history of feminism, it will be taught from a feminist perspective. What does that mean? Stated simply, in this class women will be considered as subjects—as actors who themselves “make history,” and not simply as passive objects of the actions of others. Moreover, it assumes the full personhood of women, the reality of discrimination against women, and the intrinsic significance of women’s experience. Beyond that, it is not expected that students in the course will share the professor’s point of view on all matters (indeed, with any luck, the class will contain a healthy diversity of backgrounds and perspectives). It should be understood from the outset that “U.S. women’s history” is not monolithic. Therefore, we will pay considerable attention to the diversity among women and their experiences over time. This diversity adds to the complexity of what we will be studying—but it also will add to the richness of understanding that I hope you will take away from this class. Student participation is not only welcome, but essential! Finally, this course also assumes the seriousness with which women's history needs to be considered—so, know from the outset that HST/WGS349 is designed to be both demanding and challenging. There is a lot of assigned reading (after all, we are dealing with a lot of long-neglected material). Though it may be impossible for you to do it all, the more you read, the more you will get out of the class (and the better your grade will be). And you are expected to do most of it! As we go along, certain readings will be noted as deserving special emphasis.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST 352: The History of Ancient GreeceT/TH 8:00-9:20Champion

Survey of ancient Greek political, economic, social and cultural history based on interpretation of primary sources, both literary and archaeological, from the Bronze Age through Alexander the Great.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-modern

HST 355: The Italian RenaissanceM/W 2:15-3:35Brege

This course examines the civilization that developed in the states of northern and central Italy between 1300 and 1520 and the concept of the Renaissance itself. The course is divided into three parts. The first part examines Renaissance Italy as the birthplace of modern republicanism. In this part of the course we examine the republics of Florence and Venice and the art and ideology which accompanied those regimes. The second part of the course explores the social history of Renaissance Italy (women, family, and sexuality) and the social significance of Renaissance art. The third part of the course looks at Renaissance Italy as the originator of the court system which dominated Europe until the time of the French Revolution. Here much consideration is given to the creation of an aristocratic style of life and princely art. The goal of the course is for students to understand not only the Renaissance itself but also the ways in which historians have interpreted the Renaissance to fit their vision of the world.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-modern

HST 357: Early Modern EnglandT/TH 2:00-3:20Kyle

This course examines the political, cultural and social history of Early Modern England. Topics covered will include the power and image of the monarchy (cases studies - Henry VIII, Elizabeth I and Charles I); the role of the printing press in both ‘high’ and ‘low’ culture; the impact of crime and the treatment of criminals; the importance of London as a center of commerce and culture; the myth and reality of Shakespeare and the role of the theater; witchcraft and the dominance of religion in everyday life; and the role of women in a patriarchal society. The course will emphasize reading, discussion, visual culture and the use of primary sources.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Modern

HST 363: Germany Since 1945T/TH 9:30-10:50Terrell

This course begins in the catastrophic aftermath of the Second World War, traces out the reconstruction of Germany, its incorporation into capitalist and communist blocs, and its emergence as a leader of contemporary Europe. Throughout, the course highlights the legacies of the Nazi past, international connections from the Cold War to the so-called refugee crisis, and the truly profound transformations of political and cultural life from aggressive racial dictatorship to pluralistic democracy.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Modern

HST 365: Russia in the 20th Century T/TH 9:30-10:50Hagenloh

The history of twentieth-century Europe can be understood in large part as the aftermath of the Russian Revolution of 1917. The first half of the century was dominated by the antagonism between the Soviet and Fascist powers; the second half, between Soviet and Western spheres of influence in the Cold War. Likewise, if the 20th century began in 1914 with the start of WWI, it arguably ended in 1991 with the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe and Eurasia. This course has two main objectives: to examine the major issues surrounding the rise and fall of communism in Russia in the 20th century, and to give you a glimpse of what life was like for people who lived through the Soviet era.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Modern

HST
386: Crime and Society M/W 12:45-2:05CohenThis course addresses crime, deviance, and dissent in American history from the colonial period to the present, considering the ways in which the state has encouraged order and conformity among its constituents. We will examine how industrialization, immigration, urbanization, emancipation, and war transformed American society, causing the breakdown of older forms of social control such as church and community while producing significant discontented and dispossessed populations. This course also examines the expanding role of the state in controlling "deviant" behavior beginning in the late-nineteenth century and the reordering of legal priorities in the latter half of the twentieth century. Major topics include police, radicalism, alcohol, vice, sexuality, and organized crime
370: American Military T/TH 11:00-12:30Allport

Is there, as some historians have claimed, a distinctive ‘American way of war’ traceable over the four centuries since the beginning of the European colonization of North America? If so, what are its characteristics, how has it changed over time, and what does it reveal about a peculiar American attitude to state violence and the relationship between military and civilian society? In this course, we will examine the ‘small’ and ‘big’ wars of the United States from the colonial period to the recent campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. Class meetings will be a mixture of lectures and discussion. Students will complete a number of primary and secondary source readings. Assessment will be based on class discussion and several reading and writing assignments.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST
391: Mary Magdalen: History of a LegendM/W 3:45-5:05Herrick

This course examines the legends that evolved around the Biblical figure of Mary Magdalene. It begins with the New Testament, then traces the development of her legends through the early Christian and medieval eras and into such modern day versions as The Da Vinci Code.  We will pursue the development of the legends by reading primary sources, from the Bible to Christian writers, saints' lives, plays, and miracle collections. We will also engage with scholarship surrounding Mary as saint, legend and historical puzzle. Emphasis will be on discussion analyzing readings. We will also give attention to developing skills of close reading, solid argumentation and clear writing.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-Modern 

HST 395: Modern JapanM/W 2:15-3:35G. Kallander

Through a thematic and chronological approach, this course examines the changing nature of Japanese society from early modern times (1600-1868) through the modern period (1868-1945) and postwar Japan (1945-today). We begin in 1600 when the battle of Sekigahara ushered in more than two centuries of “great peace” and “isolation” that only ended in 1868 with the fall of the Togukawa shogunate. We follow developments through the founding of the new Meiji government, when political leaders and ordinary citizens set out to create a modern nation-state, which resulted in great social, political and economic changes, while internationally Japan’s quest for an oversea empire brought the country into conflict with its neighbors and ultimately the U.S. In the final section of the course, we study Japan’s successful post-war economic “miracle,” and consider the Tokyo governor and nationalist Ishihara Shintarô’s publication of the best-selling book "The Japan That Can Say No," which argues that the West has much to learn from Japan. Class topics range from urbanization, mass culture and nationalism, popular protest, imperialism, colonialism and empire to gender, war and occupation, memory, apology politics, and globalization. The course will also pay particular attention to the contested nature of modernity. Primary sources, secondary scholarship, film clips and short story translations allow us to explore the changing nature of Japanese politics and society, as well as Japan’s interaction with East Asia and the world. Course requirements include weekly reading assignments, class discussion, a take-home midterm, an in-class final exam and a research paper.

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern

HST 401: China in Western MindsW 3:45-6:15Kutcher

This course examines the history of Western attitudes towards China.  In particular, we will focus on experts: the relatively small group of individuals we have relied upon for our knowledge of China. Among their numbers have been journalists, historians, missionaries, fiction writers, poets, and philosophers. Some have been famous, such as Pearl Buck and Marco Polo; and some infamous, such as the forger Sir Edmund Backhouse. One famous expert even boasted he’d never been to China. Why, he asked, should he permit the real China to interfere with the more glorious China of his mind?  How experts have seen China has been determined in some sense by how they wanted to see it, and by how they wanted to convey it to the people back home.  Students choose a China expert to research in depth, and prepare a substantial research paper based on original sources. 

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern

HST 401: US Civil WarM  9:30-12:15Cohen 

This is a research seminar on the history of the United States Civil War.  Students will write 25-30 page papers, utilizing primary sources.  Subjects considered will include politics, military strategy and tactics, memory, slavery, reconstruction, race, and gender.

Concentration: US / Period: Modern 

HST 401: What If? Counterfactual History T 12:30-3:15AllportWhat if history had turned out differently than we remember? What if Julius Caesar had not been assassinated, the Black Death had not ravaged Europe, Columbus had not reached the Americas, the South had won the Civil War, or the Soviets had landed someone on the Moon first? In this course we will be considering the theory and practice of counterfactual history, or the examination of moments in the past in which events might have diverged dramatically from those that actually happened. Thinking about counterfactuals requires us to examine fundamental questions about causality and contingency in history and to what extent events are driven by structural circumstances or the choices of individual people. As a capstone to the course, each student will develop an annotated counterfactual history of their own on a subject of their own choice, expressed through print nonfiction, fiction, visual media, or some other method of presentation.
371: Religion in South Asian PoliticsT/TH 2:00-3:20Kumar

Religion has been an explosive issue in recent South Asian politics. Commencing with a look at contemporary events, such as the Rohingya refugee crisis, the consolidation of a Hindu nationalist state in India, and the recently concluded Civil War in Sri Lanka, this course will work its way back through the twentieth and nineteenth centuries to understand their historic roots. Key themes discussed will include the gendered nature of religious violence; majoritarian politics and religious identities; colonial rule and enumerated communities; everyday and extraordinary violence.

Concentration: Global / Period: Modern

HST 373: The CrusadesT/TH 2:00-3:20Herrick

Starting in 1095, Christian armies from Western Europe attacked groups they viewed as their religious enemies. These campaigns took place in what is now the Middle East, but also within Europe itself. By studying these campaigns, this course explores what the crusades were, why people fought them, and how they justified violence in the name of religion. In particular, the course investigates the ways in which crusaders dehumanized their enemies and depicted their own violent acts as holy. Students will read and analyze primary sources (those written at the time) in order to learn what happened and to explain how it happened. We will also consider the significance and legacy of these wars.

The course emphasizes critical reading and analysis, and writing. Each class will involve a combination of lecture and discussion. Careful reading and active participation in discussion are vital. Requirements include in-class debates, in-class exams, and a final paper. Fulfills the Critical Reflections requirement.

Concentration: Europe / Period: Pre-modern

HST 387/WGS 341: Women, Abolition and ReligionT 3:30-6:15Faulkner

This course focuses on the role that religion may have played in women’s understandings of themselves as abolitionists and social reformers. A selected group of women will be studied, with considerable attention given to Frances Harper.

Concentration: U.S. / Period: Modern

HST 401, M001: Food and FoodwaysT 12:45-3:15Terrell

“Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you who you are.” This oft-quoted line from the French gastronome Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin encapsulates how food informs identities, histories, and power. The origins, abundance, scarcity, and nature of food reveal global connections, local conditions, and social hierarchies including race, gender, and class. In this research seminar, students will conduct primary source research on the history of food and foodways and produce a 25-30 page paper on either modern European or Global history.

Concentration: U.S./Europe/Global

HST 401, M002: Race, Identity, and Migration in the Modern WorldTh 9:30-12:15A. Kallander

This seminar will center around how race, racism, and processes of racialization shape understandings of identity in the modern world. Individual papers can focus on any area of the globe, movement or migration between different parts of the globe, on national identity, or a specific community. We will examine how national identities are racialized and exclusionary, consider the significance of colonial empires in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean in shaping modern Europe, and unpack anti-racist constructions of identity promoted by transnational resistance movements such as Afro-Asian solidarity or movements for Indigenous rights.

Concentration: U.S./Europe/Global

HST 401, M003: Cultural History in ImagesM 12:45-3:30Lasch-Quinn

This is an advanced research and writing seminar on selected ideas/movements/episodes in cultural history, ancient and modern, as seen in images. Through close-reading, students investigate texts, images, and other cultural artifacts. Research centers especially on representations of the self, emotion, and the art of living as reflected in a range of primary sources, including philosophy, literature, art, architecture, and film. Secondary readings help students to situate their sources in time and place and to identify original research questions. Attention to each step of the project allows students to master such skills as the choice and proposal of topics, archival research (including digital), footnoting and use of evidence, bibliographical annotation, logical argumentation, revision of rough drafts, constructive critique of others’ work, and enhancement of the literary quality of their final papers. Students produce a 25-30 page research paper on a subject of their choosing dovetailing with the course theme. This seminar is the capstone of the History major and is required for majors.

Concentration:  U.S./Europe/Global / Period: Modern

HST 495/496:  Distinction in History 

Instructor Consent Required

Students doing the thesis will take 3 credits of HST 495 the first semester and 3 credits of HST 496 the second semester (2 semesters for a total of 6 credits), which may begin in their junior or senior year.  Students should register for HST 495 and 496 upon approval from the faculty advisor and Undergraduate Director. 


For any questions regarding the History Program please contact: 
Director of Undergraduate Studies: Mark Schmeller at mschmell@syr.edu or
Undergraduate Coordinator: Christina Cleason at cmcleaso@syr.edu or 315-443-2210

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