Jun 22, 2024  
2014-2015 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2014-2015 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


General Education Designations

Registration Notes

Academic Disciplines Chart

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(HIST) History (462)

  
  • HIST 261 - A History of World Civilization

    3 Credit Hours
    Historical survey of world civilization ― origins to 1500. Writing-emphasis course.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (CC)
  
  • HIST 262 - A History of World Civilization

    3 Credit Hours
    Historical survey of world civilization ― 1500 to present. Writing-emphasis course.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (CC)
  
  • HIST 267 - Honors: A History of World Civilization

    3 Credit Hours
    Students will attend the appropriate 261 lectures and the designated honors discussion section. Writing-emphasis course.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (CC)
  
  • HIST 268 - Honors: A History of World Civilization

    3 Credit Hours
    Students will attend the appropriate 262 lectures and the designated honors discussion section. Writing-emphasis course.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (CC)
  
  • HIST 300 - The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the United States

    3 Credit Hours
    Surveys the rise and fall of racial slavery in the United States. Topics include: trans-Atlantic slave trade, economics of slavery, gendered aspects of slave life and resistance in colonial and post-Revolutionary America, paternalism and violence in the slaveholding South, multiracial abolitionist movement, and slavery’s final collapse during the Civil War. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 300.)
  
  • HIST 302 - History of Classical Greece

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Classics 302.)
  
  • HIST 304 - History of the Roman Empire

    3 Credit Hours
    27 BC-AD 211. Age of Augustus, expansion of Roman citizenship, Flavian and Antonine dynasties, barbarians and Romans, the Second Sophistic, and the Severans. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Classics 304.)
  
  • HIST 305 - History of the Late Roman Empire

    3 Credit Hours
    AD 197-491. The Severan empire and the 3rd-century crisis, Diocletian and Constantine, the Christian empire, rise of bureaucratic government, the development of barbarian kingdoms, the fall of the western empire, from Roman to Byzantine in the east. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Classics 305.)
  
  • HIST 306 - History of Hellenistic Greece

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Classics 306.)
  
  • HIST 307 - Honors: Introduction/Historical Problems

    3 Credit Hours
    Historical analysis and philosophy of history. Principles and techniques of research emphasizing the roles of climates of opinion and frames of reference and the problems of evidence, interpretation, and objectivity. Required of students working for honors in history.

    Registration Permission: Consent of honors director.
  
  • HIST 311 - Dark Age Empire

    3 Credit Hours
    Course examines the era of Charlemagne and the Carolingian dynasty (ca. 700-ca. 900), a period of empire-building and religious transformation known to many of its contemporaries as a “Dark Age.” Topics include political and social change, Christianization, intellectual development, gender relationships, and warfare and violence. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 312 - Medieval History

    3 Credit Hours
    Early Middle Ages ― 300-1100. Formation of medieval society and institutions.

    (Same as Medieval and Renaissance Studies 312.)
  
  • HIST 313 - Medieval History

    3 Credit Hours
    Later Middle Ages ― 1100-1400. Height of medieval civilization and its waning in the 14th century.

    (Same as Medieval and Renaissance Studies 313.)
  
  • HIST 314 - Renaissance Europe

    3 Credit Hours
    The period traditionally seen as a transition from the Middle Ages to the modern world. Interrelationship of cultural, social, economic, political, and intellectual developments with an emphasis upon historical interpretation.

  
  • HIST 315 - Reformation Europe, 1500-1650

    3 Credit Hours
    The period during which Europe witnessed religious disunity, economic dislocation and insecurity, political centralization, intellectual skepticism, the origins of modern science, war, and the witch craze.

    (Same as Religious Studies 315.)
  
  • HIST 316 - Early Modern Europe, 1650-1800

    3 Credit Hours
    Dynamic conflict of a search for order in an age of revolutions seen in the continued push for political centralization, the impact of the scientific revolution, the intellectual flowering known as the Enlightenment, and the English and French Revolutions.

  
  • HIST 319 - Modern Europe, 1750-1914

    3 Credit Hours
    Political, industrial, and intellectual revolutions against traditions. Topics such as the modern population explosion, urbanization, the political emergence of the middle class and the masses, nationalism, imperialism, rationalism, and Romanticism in social thought and politics. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 320 - Contemporary Europe, 1900-Present

    3 Credit Hours
    The transformation from industrial to post-industrial society and the transformation of the European nation-state. Topics such as war and depression and the consequent political and social instability; totalitarian control; decolonization; the impact of Freud, Einstein and existentialism; welfare states; and the problems of European unification. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 321 - New Testament and Early Christian Origins

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Religious Studies 321.)
  
  • HIST 322 - Christianity in Late Antiquity

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Religious Studies 322.)
  
  • HIST 323 - Deviance and Persecution in the Christian West, 1100-1700

    3 Credit Hours
    Emergence and shifts in movements of dissent. Popular perceptions and ecclesiastical and civil policies and institutions designed to uncover and combat heretics, homosexuals, Jews, and witches. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 324 - Women in European History

    3 Credit Hours
    Comparative analysis of the roles of women in Medieval, Renaissance, and Victorian Europe. Relationship between family structure, sexual attitudes, and the economic and political roles of women with an emphasis on autobiographical writings by women. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Women’s Studies 326.)
  
  • HIST 325 - Women in American History

    3 Credit Hours
    Examines the experiences and perspectives of women in the U.S. from the pre-Columbian era through the end of the 20th century. Investigates how changing beliefs about gender identities have shaped public policy, social institutions, and business practices. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Women’s Studies 325.)
  
  • HIST 326 - Gay American History

    3 Credit Hours
    History of same-sex desires, behaviors, relations, and politics from colonial America to the present. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as American Studies 326.)
  
  • HIST 329 - Native American History

    3 Credit Hours
    Histories of Native Americans East and West of the Mississippi. Political, economic, social, cultural issues. Variable content. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as American Studies 329.)
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 330 - History of England

    3 Credit Hours
    To 1688. Medieval state, church, and society. Origins of Anglo-American law. The monarchy, parliamentary government, and the Reformation.

  
  • HIST 331 - History of England

    3 Credit Hours
    1689 to the present. Seventeenth-century revolutions ― commercial, agricultural and industrial. Class conflict, empire, the welfare state, world wars, and economic crisis.

  
  • HIST 332 - Europe in the Age of Total War, 1900-2000

    3 Credit Hours
    Highlights the role of modern, industrial “total war,” with its expanded destructive potential, in fundamentally reshaping Europe in the 20th century. Examines imperialist tensions, World War I, troubled interwar diplomacy, World War II, and the Cold War. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 333 - History of the Cold War

    3 Credit Hours
    A global history of the Cold War from 1945 to 1991. Surveys the origins of the conflict between the superpowers of the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies; its ideological, military, political, social, cultural, and economic dimensions; the dynamic of mutually assured destruction in the nuclear standoff; and the reasons for the end of the Cold War. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 334 - History of Germany

    3 Credit Hours
    To 1815. The First Reich’s fortune and failure. The development of the German lands, from the medieval empire to its disintegration, through dynastic and religious realignments, to the Austrian-Prussian dualism in the time of Fredrick the Great and Maria Theresa, culminating with the end of the older order in the Age of Napoleon.

  
  • HIST 335 - History of Germany

    3 Credit Hours
    Since 1800. The quest for nationhood. The evolution of modern Germany through revolution, industrialization and wars, from Metternich’s Confederation, to Bismarck’s Second Reich, to the Weimar republic to Hitler’s Third Reich, to Adenauer’s Federal Republic and the present nation.

  
  • HIST 336 - Modern France: A Survey of French History from the Enlightenment to the Present

    3 Credit Hours
    Topics include the French Revolution, imperialism, the Dreyfus Affair, the Vichy Regime, and the student protests of May 1968. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 339 - Modern Ireland, 1760-Present

    3 Credit Hours
    Ireland’s social, political, economic, and cultural history. Themes include Ireland’s status as England’s first colony from the Norman period to Cromwell and beyond, peasant revolt, Catholic-Protestant antagonism, nationalist revolutionary movements, the famine, home rule, partition, and independence in the 20th century, with continuing sectarian tensions.

  
  • HIST 340 - Revolution in Modern European History: France and Russia

    3 Credit Hours
    Focuses on the two most important political revolutions in modern European history: the French Revolution of 1789 and the Russian Revolution of 1917. Topics include concepts of rights, inequality, religion, counterrevolution, and terror and revolutionary violence. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 341 - History of Russia

    3 Credit Hours
    From the middle of the 19th century.

  
  • HIST 342 - History of Nazi Germany

    3 Credit Hours
    The coming to power of the Nazi party in Germany, origins of ideology, and the rise and fall of the Third Reich. Topics include foreign policy, social policy, World War II, Hitler’s brutal rule and racial programs, culminating in mass murder and genocide against the Jews of Europe. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 343 - History of Mexico

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of Mexican history from pre-Columbian period to the present. Highlights Mexico’s political, economic and social development under Spanish colonial rule, the emergence of the Mexican nation state after Independence, the Mexican Revolution, and the post-revolutionary period. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Latin American and Caribbean Studies 343.)
  
  • HIST 344 - History of Brazil

    3 Credit Hours
    History of Latin America’s largest nation. History of boom and bust economic cycles, slavery and the abolition of slavery, populism, military rule, and redemocratization. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Latin American and Caribbean Studies 344.)
  
  • HIST 345 - Religion in the United States

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Religious Studies 351.)
  
  • HIST 346 - African-American Religious History

    3 Credit Hours
    Surveys the diverse religious histories and traditions of African Americans from the earliest years of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the transmission of African cultures to the New World up to the present. Considerable attention will be given to African-American Protestantism, but black expressions of Catholicism, Islam, and folk/nontraditional religions will also be examined. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 346.)
  
  • HIST 349 - United States Military History, 1754 to the Present

    3 Credit Hours
    The nation’s broad strategic aims and means used to attain them. Shifting strategy, tactics, and weaponry involved in wars. The relationship between American society and its armed forces. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Military Science and Leadership 349.)
  
  • HIST 350 - Colonial America to 1763

    3 Credit Hours
    Social and cultural developments in the American colonies from the point of contact between Europeans and native peoples through the mid-18th century. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 351 - The American Revolution, 1763-1789

    3 Credit Hours
    The growing estrangement of the American colonies from the British Empire, the War for Independence, and the creation of a new American republic. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 352 - The Early American Republic, 1800-1860

    3 Credit Hours
    An examination of economic, political, and social developments in early 19th-century America.

  
  • HIST 353 - The Civil War and Reconstruction Eras, 1860-1877

    3 Credit Hours
    An examination of the major political, economic, and social developments in the United States during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras.

  
  • HIST 354 - United States, 1877-1933

    3 Credit Hours
    America’s political, economic, and social development from the Gilded Age through the Great Depression. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 355 - United States, 1933 to the Present

    3 Credit Hours
    American experience from Roosevelt’s New Deal through World War II and the Cold War to present. Emphasizes domestic history but includes military and foreign policy. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 356 - The 1960s in America

    3 Credit Hours
    The politics, social movements, and cultural rebellions of the 1960s. Topics include race riots, anti-war protests, new art forms, Great Society legislation, the rise of neoconservatism, empowerment movements by people of color, Cold War brinksmanship in Cuba, and the escalation of ground and air wars in Vietnam. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as American Studies 356.)
  
  • HIST 359 - American Religious History

    3 Credit Hours
    A survey of the American religious experience from the colonial period to the present, with emphasis on the development of religious pluralism and the principle of religious liberty. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Religious Studies 359.)
    Credit Restriction: Students may not receive credit for both History 359 and Religious Studies 351.
  
  • HIST 360 - History of Early Latin America to 1824

    3 Credit Hours
    The native cultures of pre-Conquest times. The Conquest and colonial settlement of Iberian America. Economic, social and cultural developments, concentrating on central areas of European presence. Emphasis given to the interactions of European, indigenous, and African populations. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Latin American and Caribbean Studies 360.)
  
  • HIST 361 - History of Modern Latin America since 1810

    3 Credit Hours
    Focuses on the history of a specific region in Latin America (the Andes, the Southern Cone, Brazil or Mexico) from independence to modern times. Explores the political and economic themes of nationhood as well as the socio-economic and political dimensions of race, class, ethnicity, and gender. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Latin American and Caribbean Studies 361.)
  
  • HIST 363 - U.S. Constitutional History to 1877

    3 Credit Hours
    The constitutional development of the United States through the end of Reconstruction. Topics include the foundations of constitutional government, law and economic development, sovereignty, balance of Federal and state power, individual rights, and the courts. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 364 - U.S. Constitutional History from 1877 to the Present

    3 Credit Hours
    The constitutional development of the United States from the end of Reconstruction to the present. Topics include immigration and imperial expansion, substantive due process, the New Deal Court, civil liberties during war, the administrative state, and individual rights. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 369 - History of the Middle East

    3 Credit Hours
    Rise and spread of Islamic civilization to the 16th century. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Judaic Studies 369.)
  
  • HIST 370 - History of the Middle East

    3 Credit Hours
    The Middle East from the 16th century to the present. Impact of the West and background of current problems in the area. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Judaic Studies 370.)
  
  • HIST 371 - African History

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of sub-Saharan Africa from 700-1700. State creation, trade, and the spread of Islam. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 371.)
  
  • HIST 372 - African History

    3 Credit Hours
    Dynamics of Africa’s encounter with Europe from 1500 to the present. Slave trade, colonial, and independence eras. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 372.)
  
  • HIST 373 - Historical Issues

    3 Credit Hours
    Variable content. Selected topics in history. Thematic focus, lecture-discussion format. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 374 - History of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States

    3 Credit Hours
    Examines the history of the civil rights movement in the United States from Reconstruction to the present. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 374.)
  
  • HIST 375 - Revolutions in Historical Perspective

    3 Credit Hours
    Comparative history of major revolutions which transformed political, social, and economic structures and values, such as those in France, Russia, China, Mexico, and Iran. Contrasts and common patterns in their causes, phases and outcomes. Relations between leaders and masses. Major theories of revolution. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 376 - African-American Womenʼs History from Slavery to the Present

    3 Credit Hours
    Surveys the social, cultural, political, and economic history of black women in the United States from the earliest importation of slaves from Africa and the Caribbean to the present day. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 375; Women’s Studies 376.)
  
  • HIST 379 - The African-American Experience from the Colonial Period to the Civil War

    3 Credit Hours
    Impact of the African slave trade on the cultural, economic, and social development of the colonies. Slave culture, adaptation, and resistance. Freed black people. The formation of an African-American identity. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 376.)
  
  • HIST 380 - The African-American Experience from the Civil War to the Present

    3 Credit Hours
    Topics in 19th- and 20th- century African-American history. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 380.)
  
  • HIST 381 - History of South Africa

    3 Credit Hours
    South African history from the pre-colonial period through the apartheid and post-apartheid eras. Topics include African state formation and resistance to European colonization, the impact of industrialization, the evolution of modern resistance movements, and the first democratic elections in 1994. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Africana Studies 381.)
  
  • HIST 382 - Archaeology of the Biblical World

    3 Credit Hours
    Introduces the archaeology and material culture of ancient Israel and the biblical world, from the Epi-Paleolithic Period (10,000 – 8,500 BCE) to the end of the Iron Age in the 6th century BCE. Cultural and social influences from the Mediterranean and Near East on ancient Israel will be emphasized along with important discoveries related to biblical history and literature. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Judaic Studies 382.)
  
  • HIST 383 - Early Jewish History

    3 Credit Hours
    Biblical-Talmudic periods (1200 BCE-600 CE). Origins of the Israelites, development of independent Israelite and Jewish states in the ancient Near East, rise of Jewish Diaspora communities, cultural convergences with Hellenism and early Christianity, and the development of Rabbinic Judaism. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Judaic Studies 383.)
  
  • HIST 385 - Studies in World History

    3 Credit Hours
    Variable content. Selected topics in world history involving analysis of two or more world cultures.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 386 - Topics in Atlantic World History, 1492-1850

    3 Credit Hours
    The integration of the peoples and regions around the Atlantic Ocean. Topics include New World settlement, slavery, imperial expansion, and imperial decline. Ocean-centered focus on the historical processes responsible for connecting Europe, Africa, North and South America through the flow of peoples, goods, and ideas. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 389 - History of China

    3 Credit Hours
    China to 1600. Surveys the history of Chinese society from the Neolithic Revolution to 1600. Governmental structure, social organization, economic and technological developments, religious practices, artistic, intellectual and literary traditions, and cross-cultural exchanges. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 390 - History of China

    3 Credit Hours
    China since 1600. Highlights China’s transformation from a dynastic system to a modern nation state and examines the forces, internal and external, driving China toward a major revolution in the 20th century. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 391 - Modern Chinese Intellectual History

    3 Credit Hours
    Examines major intellectual currents in late nineteenth and twentieth-century China, including: reconsideration of the role of Confucianism in Chinese state and society, gender and the family; the rise of a philosophy of science and social survey movements; and the formulation of a Chinese Marxist ideology. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 392 - History of Pre-Modern Japan

    3 Credit Hours
    Introduces aspects of the history, culture and interpretation of the area of the world that later became the nation-state of Japan. Topics include Japanese kingship, court culture, the rise of the samurai, civil war, and religious movements. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 393 - History of Modern Japan

    3 Credit Hours
    Introduces the politics, culture and ideologies of modern Japan from 1800 to the 1990s. Investigates the process of Japan’s experience as a modern nation-state, with emphasis on the complex interplay between Japan’s participation in global modernity and its simultaneous assertion of cultural particularity. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 394 - Chinese Intellectual History: Early Times

    3 Credit Hours
    Surveys intellectual traditions in China from early times to the medieval period, beginning with Confucius. Considers the development and evolution of primary concepts and values over centuries, and the impact of changes in forms of political organization on intellectual life. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 395 - The Crusades and Medieval Christian-Muslim Relations

    3 Credit Hours
    The major wars of European Christian armies against Muslim societies, 1050 to 1500, considered from political, military, cultural, religious, intellectual, and diplomatic perspectives. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Judaic Studies 395.)
  
  • HIST 400 - History and Archaeology of Mesopotamia

    3 Credit Hours
    Mesopotamia (Assyria and Babylonia) from the 5th millennium to the Iron Age. Specific topics will include the development of village and state-level societies and the emergence of social and political institutions, literacy, imperialism, and intersocietal interaction. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 407 - Honors: Senior Paper

    3 Credit Hours
    Bibliographic search, research, and conceptual clarification for the senior paper.

  
  • HIST 408 - Honors: Senior Paper

    3 Credit Hours
    Organization and writing of the senior honors thesis. Required of students working for honors in history.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (WC)
    Credit Restriction: Grade of A or B required for honors credit.
  
  • HIST 417 - Honors: Seminar in United States History

    3 Credit Hours
    Variable content. Selected topics in American history for honors students. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated up to 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 418 - Honors: Seminar in Non-U.S. History

    3 Credit Hours
    Variable content. Selected topics in non-U.S. history for honors students. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated up to 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 429 - Medieval Intellectual History

    3 Credit Hours
    The evolution of thought in Europe from late antiquity to the advent of Humanism, especially connections between major thinkers and their social, economic, and professional contexts. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 431 - European Intellectual and Cultural History

    3 Credit Hours
    Romanticism to Relativism ― 1750-present.

  
  • HIST 433 - European Diplomatic History

    3 Credit Hours
    Examines the diplomatic history of modern Europe, including the rise of the Great Powers and the “balance of power system”; challenges to the state system by Napoleon, the German empire, and Hitler; the creation of overseas empires, and the decline of European world power. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 434 - Modern European Imperialism: A Survey of the Rise and Fall of European Empires

    3 Credit Hours
    Topics include the slave trade, the scramble for Africa, liberal imperialism, theories of empire, gender, migration, and decolonization. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 435 - Science, Magic, and Religion in Early Modern Europe

    3 Credit Hours
    This course examines the role of alchemy, natural magic, and the natural sciences in early modern European culture (1400-1700) with special attention to the social, religious, economic, and political developments that shaped these intellectual traditions. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 436 - History of Gender and Sexuality in the U.S.

    3 Credit Hours
    Topical examination of the role of gender and sexuality in American social and cultural history. Topics include marriage, sexual identity, reproductive rights, interracial sexual relations, courtship and dating. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as American Studies 436.)
  
  • HIST 439 - Food and Power in United States History

    3 Credit Hours
    This course examines American history through the lenses of food and agriculture, emphasizing social, political, economic, and environmental questions, as well as interactions with the non-human world. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 440 - War and Truth in America

    3 Credit Hours
    Explores the relationship between the U.S. government and the press in times of war, with emphasis on the conflict between First Amendment rights and the demands of national security. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as American Studies 440.)
  
  • HIST 441 - The American West

    3 Credit Hours
    Examination of “the West” as both frontier and region, real and imagined, from the first contacts between natives and colonizers in the 15th century to the multicultural encounters of the 20th century. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 444 - History of the South

    3 Credit Hours
    New South from Reconstruction through the Second Reconstruction.

  
  • HIST 449 - History of Tennessee

    3 Credit Hours
    Tennessee’s history from the 18th century to the present.

  
  • HIST 450 - History of United States Foreign Relations

    3 Credit Hours
    Variable content. Examines America’s role in the world, and the ideology and practice of U.S. diplomacy. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • HIST 452 - The American Experience in World War II

    3 Credit Hours
    Diplomacy and warfare in Europe and Asia and the impact of the war on American society.

  
  • HIST 456 - Topics in Cherokee History

    3 Credit Hours
    Variable content. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as American Studies 456.)
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 6 hours.
  
  • HIST 464 - The Spanish Conquest

    3 Credit Hours
    The history of Iberian and Native American societies leading up to the Spanish Conquest of the Americas, the Conquest, and its aftermath. Spanish and indigenous primary accounts of the process of conquest as well as the cultural, religious, gender, epidemiological, and political impact on Spanish and native societies. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Latin American and Caribbean Studies 464.)
  
  • HIST 465 - Gender and Sexuality in Early Latin America

    3 Credit Hours
    Historical exploration of gender and sexuality in the social systems of pre-Colombian and colonial Latin America, with consideration of both indigenous and Spanish societies. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Latin American and Caribbean Studies 466.)
  
  • HIST 466 - Studies in Ancient History

    3 Credit Hours
    Aspects of ancient Near East and Mediterranean history. Topics vary.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 469 - Studies in African History

    3 Credit Hours
    Significant issues in African history. Variable content. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 470 - Studies in British History

    3 Credit Hours
    Selected themes and issues in British history. Variable content.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • HIST 471 - Studies in Western European History

    3 Credit Hours
    Particular aspects of western European history such as witchcraft, revolutions, or nationalism. Variable content. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
 

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