Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
History
Courses of Instruction
History (HIST)
The terms indicated are expected but are not guaranteed. For the courses offered during any given term, consult the Schedule of Classes.
HIST 100gm The American Experience (4, FaSpSm) Patterns of American development from Colonial times to the present. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 200gm.)
HIST 101g The Ancient World (4, FaSpSm) Achievements of the near East, Greece, and Rome with emphasis on the development of ideas, arts, and institutions which have influenced modern man.
HIST 102gm Medieval People: Early Europe and Its Neighbors, 400–1500 (4) Early Europe, c. 400–1500, with a focus on Europe’s diverse communities, cultural interactions among them, dealings between conquerors and conquered, and European contacts with non-Europeans.
HIST 103g The Emergence of Modern Europe (4, Fa) Political, intellectual, and cultural developments in Europe, 1300–1815. Renaissance and Reformation; absolute monarchy, scientific changes, and Enlightenment; French Revolution and Napoleon.
HIST 104g Modern Europe (4, Sp) The Enlightenment, French Revolution, industrialization, Darwinism, socialism, nationalism, technological revolutions, mass culture, imperialism, race, fascism, communism, world wars, genocide, migration, the Cold War, terrorism.
HIST 105g The Korean Past (4) A topical and chronological study of the major political, social, and intellectual forces that have shaped the history of Korea.
HIST 106g Chinese Lives: An Introduction to Chinese History (4, FaSp) Study of the lives of selected individuals who have helped to shape Chinese politics and culture.
HIST 107g Japanese History (4, FaSp) Japan from the earliest times to the present; social, cultural, and political dimensions.
HIST 180g The Middle East (4, Sp) Introduction to the history and the study of the Middle East from ancient to modern times.
HIST 195 Selected Themes and Topics in History (4, Irregular) Study of special historical themes and topics through readings, lectures, discussions, and supervised writings.
HIST 201 Approaches to History (4, FaSp) Methods and theories of historical interpretation of evidence; uses of archives; modes of presenting the past to the public. Required of all history majors. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 300.)
HIST 215g Business and Labor in America (4, Fa) Expansion of business enterprise from colonial merchants to modern corporations; evolution of the labor force from artisans to skilled and unskilled industrial workers. Concurrent enrollment: WRIT 140.
HIST 220 Murder on Trial in America (4) Examination of high-profile murders and murder trials in order to explore major social, political, and cultural issues from the colonial period to the present.
HIST 225g Film, Power, and American History (4, Sp) U.S. motion pictures as both a response to and comment upon major events, problems, and themes in 20th century America. Concurrent enrollment: WRIT 140.
HIST 235g War and the American Experience (4, Fa) Comparative historical analysis of the American experience of war: war decision-making processes; evolution of strategy and tactics; the political, economic, and social effects of war. Concurrent enrollment: WRIT 140.
HIST 240g The History of California (4, Fa) A thematic approach to California history from precontact to present; focus on peoples, environment, economic, social, and cultural development, politics, and rise to global influence. Concurrent enrollment: WRIT 140.
HIST 245gm Gender and Sexualities in American History (4) An investigation of the nature of femininities and masculinities over the course of U.S. history; including topics like women’s rights, birth control, abortion, and gay/lesbian liberation. Concurrent enrollment: WRIT 140.
HIST 255g The Evolution Debates (4, Fa) Historical perspective for current debates on evolution, investigating the contexts for the emergence and development of evolutionary theory and its subsequent impact on society.
HIST 265g Understanding Race and Sex Historically (4, Sp) To introduce students to historical consideration of the difficult contemporary topics of sexuality and race globally. Concurrent enrollment: WRIT 140.
HIST 266g Business and East Asian Culture, 1800–Present (4, Sp) Business history of East Asia (China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong) as related to culture, politics, and society.
HIST 270 Queens, Witches, Courtesans: Women and Power in Renaissance Europe (4) Exploration of the lives of women who defied the ideals of “wife, mother, widow” and examination of how gender and power were negotiated.
HIST 271g Early Native American Stories (4, Sp) An exploration of the history of Native America peoples and the ways they understood and explained the changes in their lives from 1492 to 1840.
HIST 273g Colonial Latin America (4, Sp) Introduction to Colonial Latin America; native American peoples, themes, issues, and evolution of Spanish and Portuguese colonial rule to ca. 1800.
HIST 275g The Worlds of the Silk Road (4, Sp) Exploration of the two millennia of economic exchanges and cross cultural interaction between Asia and Europe.
HIST 301 Religions of Ancient Egypt and the Near East (4) (Enroll in REL 302)
HIST 302 From Sappho to Stonewall: Lesbians in History (4, Sp) The cultural, social, and personal meanings of same-sex relations between women in Europe and the United States, from archaic Greece to the 1960s.
HIST 303 Barbarians, Romans, and Christians (4, Fa) Exploration of the dynamic transformation of the social, political, religious, and intellectual landscape of the Mediterranean during Late Antiquity, c. 200 – c. 700 AD.
HIST 304 Archaeology of Egypt and the Near East (4) (Enroll in REL 394)
HIST 305 From Goddesses to Witches: Women in Premodern Europe (4, Sp) Social, cultural and political contexts of women’s spiritualities in Europe from the Paleolithic to the Reformation. Topics include: goddess-worship; Christian and Jewish contexts; male attitudes. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 270.)
HIST 306 The Early Middle Ages (4) Survey of European civilization in the Early Middle Ages.
HIST 307 Women in Medieval Europe, c. 1000–1500 (4, Fa) The influences of cultural, social, economic, familial, religious, and political factors on medieval women, as well as consideration of differences among them.
HIST 308 Britain and Ireland to 1200 C.E. (4, Fa) Anglo-Saxon and Celtic societies from the Iron Age to the Norman Invasions. Topics include: King Arthur, epics, sagas, Christianization, kingship, women, economic development and Vikings. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 430.)
HIST 309 Britain and Ireland, 1100–1500 C.E. (4, Sp) English and Irish culture, economics, and politics during the expansion of the Norman-English kingdom, the colonization of Ireland, and subsequent development toward the English nation-state.
HIST 312 The Age of the French Revolution and Napoleon (4, Fa) Europe in the Old Regime; causes and course of the French Revolution; rise of Napoleon; revolutionary impact on Europe, 1715–1815.
HIST 313 France and the French from Napoleon to Mitterand (4, Irregular) Social, cultural, and political history of France from 1789 to the present.
HIST 316 The Renaissance (4, Irregular) The flowering of arts, literature, and learning at the end of the Middle Ages.
HIST 317gm North American Indians in American Public Life (4, Irregular) (Enroll in ANTH 316gm)
HIST 318 Early American Indian History (4, Sp) Relations of European settlers with native Americans from the 16th into the early 19th centuries; cultural contacts, trade and eventual conflicts.
HIST 320 Russian and Soviet Rebels: The Moral Dilemma and the Continuity of Dissent (4, Irregular) The ethical foundations and the intellectual dimensions of philosophical, social, religious, artistic, and political dissent in Russia from the 14th century until the present.
HIST 323 The Holocaust in 20th Century Europe (4, Sp) The origins and development of anti-Jewish persecution in Germany, resulting in the systematic mass murder of Europe’s Jews during World War II.
HIST 324g Islam in Russia and the Soviet Union (4, Sp) Cultural cohesiveness and ethnic diversity of Islam in the USSR; nature and effect of government policies aimed at the integration of Islam into the state.
HIST 325 Early Modern Britain (4, Sp) A survey of one of the most pivotal eras in British history: reform, regicide, and revolutions; new ideas, new religions, and new worlds.
HIST 326 The Victorians (4) Britain in the 19th century, politics, industrialization, and imperialism, change and continuity in social and cultural aspects, especially class, gender, and race relations. (Duplicates credit in the former HIST 433.)
HIST 327 Twentieth Century Britain (4) The rise and decline of modern Britain as a global political and economic force, social and cultural change, emergence of a multiracial and multiethnic society. (Duplicates credit in the former HIST 434.)
HIST 328 Poland and the Western Tradition (4, 2 years, Irregular) Polish civilization from the 10th century to the present, with special emphasis upon the participation of Poland in the currents of the European tradition.
HIST 329 Madness and Society in the Modern Age (4) The shifting place of insanity and “the mad” in Europe and the United States from the French Revolution to the anti-psychiatry movement.
HIST 330 Drugs, Disease, and Medicine in History (4, Irregular) An overview of the role played by disease and the health sciences in history.
HIST 331 The British Empire: 1588–1834 (4, Sp) Emergence of the British Empire, emphasizing colonies in the Americas; the development of imperial economy, imperial wars, slavery and abolitionism.
HIST 332 British Empire from the Mid-19th Century (4, FaSp) Political and economic development of the British Empire since Victoria; rise of the British Commonwealth.
HIST 333 Korea: The Modern Transformation (4, Sp) Examination of selected topics on Korea’s transition to the modern era; focus on the traditional roots of 20th century developments.
HIST 334 History of the Samurai (4) Development of the Samurai from a warrior elite to political hegemons between the 8th and 12th centuries; use of primary sources, introduction to divergent historiographies. Recommended preparation: a course in Japanese history.
HIST 335 History of Japan to 1550 (4, Irregular) Growth of Japanese civilization from the mythological “age of the gods” through the feudal “age of the samurai”; foundations of a great Asian power.
HIST 336 History of Japan, 1550–1945 (4, Irregular) Development of Japan as a modern world power; tradition and change in Japanese life; impact of Western culture, politics, and diplomacy from 1550 to 1945.
HIST 337 Japan since 1945 (4, Irregular) Survey of the impact of World War II, American occupation, and rapid economic growth on Japan’s politics, society, economy, and culture; Japan as a post-modern nation.
HIST 338 China to 960 A.D. (4, Irregular) The origins of China’s distinctive civilization; cultural and political ferment in the late Chou; the greatness of Han and T’ang.
HIST 339 China, 960–1800 A.D. (4, Irregular) Politics and culture under the Sung; Mongols, Manchus, and other invaders; the golden autumn of a great civilization.
HIST 340 History of China since 1800 (4, Sp) Western impact and dynastic decline; problems of the Chinese Republic; nationalism and communism.
HIST 341 American Social History (4, Irregular) The social history of the American peoples from Colonial times until the 20th century, to include industrialization, urbanization, women, families, workers, immigration, ethnicity, racism, radicalism.
HIST 342 Love and Politics in America, 1750s to 2050s (4, Fa) An analysis of the intersections of love and politics, private and public, in fiction, non-fiction, and film in America from the Enlightenment into the future.
HIST 343 Work, Leisure, and Violence in Industrializing America (4, Irregular) Rise of industrial America from 18th to 20th centuries: changing work ethics, rise of factories, women workers, mass leisure, consumer culture, urban and industrial violence.
HIST 344 The Vietnam War, 1945–1975 (4, SpSm) Analysis of causes, conduct, and consequences of war in Southeast Asia; of participants’ experiences; and of post-war debate.
HIST 345 Men and Women in United States History from the 1920s to the Present (4) Investigation of the roles and relationships of men and women in American society and culture from the era of the “flapper” to the era of the “yuppie.”
HIST 346 American Intellectual History (4, Sp) Study of major American ideas and values as reflected in philosophy, political and economic thought, religion, and social movements.
HIST 347 Urbanization in the American Experience (4, Irregular) The American city in interdisciplinary perspective; emphasis on growth and change in relation to architecture, urban planning, demography, and ethnic politics.
HIST 348 The Dynamics of American Capitalism (4, Irregular) Economic growth and institutional change in American capitalism from the Colonial era to the present.
HIST 349 Colonial North America 1600–1760 (4, Fa) Colonial history of United States area, Canada, and Caribbean to 1760; Indians, European migration, plantation complexes, Puritan colonies, African slave migration, creole culture, borderlands, wars for empire.
HIST 350 American Standard of Living: 1600 to the Present (4, Fa) Socioeconomic history of material life: Indian experience, colonial diet, urbanization and slums, industrial households, 1920s durables revolution, installment credit, Depression, postwar boom, advertising, international comparisons.
HIST 351 The American Revolution (4, Fa) Origins, course and consequences of the American Revolution; the post-war establishment of the Constitution.
HIST 352 The American Civil War (4, Irregular) The causes, course, campaigns, and consequences of the American Civil War, 1861–1865.
HIST 353m Race and Racism in the Americas (4) (Enroll in AMST 353m)
HIST 354 Mexican Migration to the United States (4, 2 years, Fa) Mexican migration from the 1850s to the present, emphasizing labor migrants to the United States.
HIST 355 The African-American Experience (4, Fa) An historical and social analysis of the African-American experience from Colonial times to the present. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 250).
HIST 356 The Old South (4, Irregular) The South from Colonial days to 1860; slavery, the plantation system, politics; important social and economic problems.
HIST 357 The New South (4, Irregular) Economic and political change, racial problems, society, and culture in the American south from 1877 to the present.
HIST 358 U.S. Gay and Lesbian History (4, Sp) (Enroll in SWMS 358)
HIST 360 19th Century U.S. History (4, Sp) The social, political, and economic history of the United States from the formation of the Constitution to 1900.
HIST 361 20th Century U.S. History (4, Fa) Critical turning points in the 20th century; sources of major social and political change. Course materials include primary documents and historic radio/television recordings.
HIST 363 Foundations of American Foreign Policy, 1776 to the Present (4, Sp) Evolution of American principles, roles and policies in international relations from the founding of the republic to the present.
HIST 365 The Second World War (4, 2 years, Sp) Comparative analysis of the Second World War as a major transforming event of the 20th century. Its causes, conduct, and consequences for humanity.
HIST 366 The People’s Republic of China (4) Politics, economy, society, and culture from 1949 to the present including the role of the communist party and the experiences of ordinary people.
HIST 369 Aztecs, Mayas, and other Indigenous Peoples of the Americas (4) Introduction to Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and the Andes, the causes and consequences of the Spanish conquest, and the establishment of colonial societies and economies.
HIST 370 Spanish America, 1492–1821 (4, Sp) Topics in Spanish colonialism in Americas, with a focus on how religious, sexual, and racial differences shaped colonial policies and practices.
HIST 372 Modern Latin America (4, Sp) Exploration of major themes and events in Latin American history from independence to the present. Upper-division standing.
HIST 373 History of the Mexican American (4, FaSp) (Enroll in AMST 373)
HIST 374 History of Mexico (4, Fa) The native cultures of Meso-America; colonial government, economy, and society; independence and 19th century liberalism; the Mexican revolution, 1910 to 1950. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 450.)
HIST 376 U.S.-Japan Encounters: War, Trade, and Culture (4, Fa) (Enroll in IR 376)
HIST 378m Introduction to Asian American History (4, FaSp) (Enroll in AMST 378m)
HIST 379 Arabs in America (4, FaSp) (Enroll in AMST 379)
HIST 380 American Popular Culture (4, Sp) Rise of popular culture (sports, amusement parks, movies, and television) and its significance in American society from mid 19th century to the present. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 255.)
HIST 381 Cinema and History (4, Irregular) Examines film as a means to narrate the past; treats the question of genre: epic, docudrama, the biopic, the music, adaptation, and such issues as authenticity and infotainment.
HIST 382 The Middle East, 500–1500 (4) Major topics, themes, and representative writings in the history and literature of the Arabic and Islamic World during the Medieval period.
HIST 383 The Modern Middle East (4, FaSp) Survey of major political, economic, and cultural developments in the Middle East on the basis of documents, literature, and film produced in the region. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 280.)
HIST 384 Popular Culture in the Middle East (4, FaSpSm) Examination of the Middle East through the prism of its popular cultures; emphasis on audio, visual, and literary representations in relation to colonialism, nation-building, and globalization.
HIST 385 Anglo-American Law before the 18th Century (4) The evolution of discourse, practices, and institutions in Anglo-American legal history from the later Middle Ages to the 18th century.
HIST 386 American Legal History (4, Sp) An introduction to the study of law from a historical perspective; explores the interaction of law, culture, and politics from the Revolution through the New Deal.
HIST 388 Women and Gender in North American History through 1920 (4) Roles and relationships of women and men in North America from first contact to the 1920s, with special emphasis on race, marriage, and political culture.
HIST 390 Special Problems (1–4) Supervised, individual studies. No more than one registration permitted. Enrollment by petition only.
HIST 401 The Roman World (4, Fa) Rome at the crossroads of Europe and the Mediterranean; the rise of Rome to world power; social, cultural and political history of Republic and Empire.
HIST 402 Cultural Heritage, Religion, and Politics in the Middle East (4, Fa) (Enroll in REL 402)
HIST 403 Carolingian Europe (4) Political, religious, and intellectual culture of Europe in the 8th and 9th centuries.
HIST 404 Seminar in Korean History (4, Irregular) Exploration of issues and sources in Korean history; work on an individual research paper through an incremental process.
HIST 406 Special Periods in Medieval History (4, Irregular) Intensive study of selected periods.
HIST 407 Europe in the 10th Century (4) Political, religious, and intellectual culture of Europe in the 10th century and beyond.
HIST 408 Everyday Life in Chaucer’s England (4, Sp) Readings and research on English social history between 1300 and 1550; emphasis on family structures, demography, gender relations, and class divisions.
HIST 409 The Norman Conquest of England, 1066 (4) Political, religious, and intellectual culture of England and the continent in the 11th and 12th centuries.
HIST 410 The Age of Humanism and Reformation (4, Irregular) The thought, art, politics, and religion of western Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries; emphasis on the contribution of Christian humanism.
HIST 413 The Age of Revolution (4, Irregular) The French and industrial revolutions and their interaction in 19th century Europe.
HIST 414 Contemporary Europe (4, Irregular) World War I and its aftermath; challenge of new culture values; World War II; problems of postwar adjustment.
HIST 415 Medieval and Early Modern Russia (4, 2 years, Fa) The politics, society, and culture of medieval and early modern Russia; the emergence of empire and the roots of its Eurasian identity.
HIST 416 History of Imperial Russia: 1689–1917 (4, Sp) The evolution of imperial society, politics and culture from Peter the Great to the Bolshevik Revolution. The dilemmas of identity in a multinational empire.
HIST 417 History of Soviet Russia: 1917–1991 (4, 2 years, Fa) The birth of the totalitarian regime, the emergence of the superpower and the socioeconomic, political and cultural developments that culminate in its demise.
HIST 419 Poland and Its Neighbors in the Middle Ages (4, 2 years, Sp) Polish politics, society, and culture in relation to its regional neighbors, especially Bohemia and Hungary, from the 10th to the end of the 15th century.
HIST 420 European Intellectual and Cultural History: The 19th Century, 1790–1870 (4) Intellectual and cultural trends of 19th century Europe, including Romanticism, Conservatism, Liberalism, Socialism and Evolutionary Theory.
HIST 421 European Intellectual and Cultural History: The Turn of the Century 1880–1920 (4) Intellectual and cultural trends of turn-of-the-century Europe, including the avant-garde, the crisis of positivism, psychoanalysis and gender theory.
HIST 422 European Intellectual and Cultural History: The 20th Century, 1920 to the Present (4, Irregular) Intellectual and cultural trends of contemporary Europe, including Dadaism, Surrealism, Western Marxism, Fascism, Existentialism and Structuralism.
HIST 424 Family, Work, and Leisure in Russian History (4, Irregular) Children and parents, love and marriage, work and leisure in the Russian village and city before and after the Revolution.
HIST 425 The Era of the First World War (4, FaSp) The background, causes, course, and aftermath of the First World War, with attention to the events in the United Kingdom and continental Europe.
HIST 426 Gender, Family, and Society in Europe and the United States, 1500–Present (4, 2 years, Sp) Changing social, economic, and cultural functions of the family and the roles of men, women, and children from pre-industrial times to the present in Europe and the United States.
HIST 427 The German Question: Nation and Identity in Modern Central Europe (4) A seminar on the making, unmaking and remaking of the German nation-state, with particular attention to issues of race, class and gender in German identity.
HIST 428 Life and Death in Nazi Germany (4) Social, cultural and medical history of Nazi Germany, emphasizing the Nazi vision of a racially pure national community. Recommended preparation: some European history.
HIST 429 Street Life: Urban Culture in Modern Europe (4, Sp) The 19th and 20th century European city as social artifact, cultural setting and object of fascination for its contemporary inhabitants.
HIST 432 Britain in the 18th Century (4) Political, social, and cultural aspects of British life from the accession of George I to about 1820.
HIST 437 Seminar in Modern Chinese History (4, max 8, FaSp) A readings and research seminar dealing with one topic in the history of China since 1600. Topics will change each time the course is offered. Recommended preparation: a class in Chinese history.
HIST 438 Seminar in Pre-Modern Japanese History (4, max 8, FaSp) A readings and research seminar dealing with one topic in the history of Japan before 1550. Topics will change each time the course is offered. Recommended preparation: a course in Japanese history.
HIST 440 Early Modern World History (4, Fa) Comparative patterns of historical change around the world, from ca. 1500 to ca. 1800.
HIST 441 Modern World History (4, Sp) Comparative patterns of historical change around the world, from ca. 1800 to the present.
HIST 442 The Ethics of Financial and Political Accountability (4) Examination of how kingdoms, empires and great companies have risen and fallen due to good or poor financial and political accountability.
HIST 443 Race and Religious Riots in Modern World History (4, FaSpSm) Origins of riots against Mexicans, Chinese, Jews and other minority groups in Asia, Europe, Australia and the Americas.
HIST 444 Mass Violence and Comparative Genocide in Modern World History (4) Systematic exploration of origins, developments, forms, and aftermath of mass murder of large population groups, one of the dark elements of modern world history.
HIST 445 Comparative History and Theory of Fascism and Nazism (4, Fa) Analysis and comparison of Italian Fascism and German Nazism in national and international contexts; recent historiographic debates.
HIST 446 Resistance to Genocide (4) Examination of theoretical approaches to and historical accounts of resistance to genocide. Students conduct original research on how people oppose or resist mass atrocities. Recommended preparation: course on the Holocaust or genocide.
HIST 451 The Mexican Revolution (4, 2 years, Sp) The roots, trajectory and outcome of the Mexican revolution of 1910.
HIST 452 Beauty and the Body in Historical Perspective (4, Sp) Cultural constructions of the body and beauty from gender, ethnicity, age, and disability perspectives in Europe and the United States from 1800 to the present.
HIST 453 The Age of Emancipation (4) Examines the evolution of racial status law in the long 19th century, with special emphasis on the relationship between slavery, segregation, and citizenship.
HIST 454 The World Pirates Made: Piracy and Privateering, 1500–1815 (4) Research seminar on history of piracy and its role in rise of modern state and nation. Recommended preparation: HIST 201.
HIST 455 Advanced Topics in African-American History (4, Sp) Exploration of African-American history through primary and secondary sources employing a colloquium format with an emphasis on shared responsibility for comprehensive discussion and analysis. Upper-division or graduate standing.
HIST 456 Race, Slavery, and the Making of the Atlantic World (4, FaSp) Introduction to the literature of the Atlantic World with a focus on slavery and its role in the emergence of the modern era. Seminar enrollment limited to 15 students.
HIST 457 The American West (4, Irregular) The nation’s westward movement from Colonial times to the present, with emphasis on the frontier’s effect on American life and institutions.
HIST 458 History of California (4, Fa) Exploration, colonization, and development of Hispanic California; coming of the Americans; political, economic, and cultural development of California since its acquisition by the United States.
HIST 461 19th Century American Thought (4, Fa) Major American thinkers from Emerson and Margaret Fuller to William James and W.E.B. DuBois, with emphasis on race, religion, politics, and gender.
HIST 462 20th Century American Thought (4, Fa) Major American thinkers from John Dewey and Jane Addams to Martin Luther King and Richard Rorty, with emphasis on race, religion, politics, and gender.
HIST 463 The Constitutional History of the United States (4) Historical influences on changes in the structure, practice, and interpretation of the American Constitution, including debates about institutional powers and civil/political rights and liberties. Recommended preparation: HIST 360 and HIST 361.
HIST 464 Culture, Money, and Power: Japanese-American Relations since 1853 (4, Sp) Examination of the role of cultural, economic, and military forces in shaping relations between two of the most important nations in the Asia/Pacific regions. Recommended preparation: HIST 363 or appropriate International Relations course.
HIST 465 America in the Cold War World, 1945–1991 (4, Fa) America’s role in the Cold War and the impact of that conflict on its people, society and culture.
HIST 470 The Spanish Inquisition in the Early Modern Hispanic World (4, 2 years, Fa) The Spanish Inquisition in Spain and Colonial Latin America, major theories and interpretations. Junior or senior standing recommended.
HIST 473 Colonial Latin America Seminar (4, Sp) The history of colonial Latin America, focusing on the transformation of native Americans and Europeans into participants in a new colonial tradition. Upper-division standing. (Duplicates credit in former HIST 371.)
HIST 474 Sex, Gender, and Colonialism in Latin America, 1492 to 1820 (4, 2 years, Sp) Seminar overview of the historical literature on women, gender, and sexuality in colonial Latin America.
HIST 478 The United States, 1789–1850 (4, Irregular) The nation during the first six decades; development of American institutions; constitutional growth, expansion, sectionalism, and the Mexican War; the Compromise of 1850.
HIST 480 Seminar in Middle East History (4, max 8) A readings and research seminar dealing with one topic in the history of the Middle East. Topics will change each time the course is offered.
HIST 481 Producing Film Histories (4, Sp) History of film form and its institutions. Students will produce an original written or multimedia research project.
HIST 482 Jesus in American History and Culture (4, Sp) The place of Jesus Christ in diverse American cultures from colonial times to the present: Jesus as cultural icon, secular inspiration, Christian Son of God.
HIST 484 The United States, 1919–1939 (4, Irregular) Postwar reaction and the Twenties; the Great Depression and the New Deal; diplomacy between the wars.
HIST 487 The United States since 1939 (4, Irregular) A survey of the accelerating changes that transformed the nation’s domestic life and revolutionized America’s role in world affairs.
HIST 488 Teaching History in the Secondary Schools (4, Fa) Seminar in research methods, textbook and online research and teaching materials, and instructional approaches for teaching history in secondary schools.
HIST 490x Directed Research (1–8, max 12, FaSp) Individual research and readings. Not available for graduate credit.
HIST 492 Honors Thesis (4, Sp) Writing of the honors thesis; for students in the History Honors Program.
HIST 493 Quantitative Historical Analysis (4, Sp) Reading and doing quantitative research with historical data. Covers research designs, appropriate statistical analysis, and software packages for the use of historians.
HIST 494 Seminar in New Historical Writing (4, 2 years, Fa) Historical writing experiments combining historical specificity with more fluid approaches to time, characterization and objectivity associated with 20th century artists.
HIST 495 American Lives: Biography and Autobiography in the United States Past (4) The history of the United States seen through the lives of individuals, including Thomas Jefferson, Jane Addams, Malcolm X, and Marilyn Monroe.
HIST 497 Senior Seminar in Early Modern Studies (4, Sp) (Enroll in ENGL 497)
HIST 498 Seminar on Selected Historical Topics (4, max 8, FaSp) Advanced study in historical analysis and writing on selected topics and themes. Seminar enrollment limited to 15 students. Recommended preparation: HIST 201.
HIST 499 Special Topics (2–4, max 8, Irregular)
HIST 500 Introduction to Graduate Historical Studies (4, Fa) Techniques, theories, and sub-disciplines of history.
HIST 505 Studies in Early Medieval History (4, Irregular) Intensive study of subjects selected from the early Middle Ages, emphasizing source material, bibliography, and historiographic problems.
HIST 506 Studies in Later Medieval History (4, Irregular) Intensive study of subjects selected from the later Middle Ages, emphasizing source material, bibliography, and historiographic problems.
HIST 508 Studies in the Renaissance (4) Europe in the Renaissance: sources; secondary bibliography; and historiography.
HIST 509 Studies in the Reformation (4) Readings, reports, and discussions of major problems, issues, and interpretations of the Reformation.
HIST 510 Studies in Early Modern European History (4, Irregular) Readings of major interpretive studies on the 17th and 18th centuries.
HIST 511 Studies in Early Modern British History (4) Readings of major interpretive and historiographical studies on 16th and 17th century British history.
HIST 514 Studies in Modern European History, 1789–1914 (4, Fa) Readings and current bibliography in the history of Europe from the French Revolution to the outbreak of World War I; emphasis on cultural history approaches.
HIST 515 Studies in Modern European History: Europe’s 20th Century (4, Fa) Readings in the history and historiography of Europe in the 20th century.
HIST 517 Studies in Russian History (4, Irregular) Readings, discussions, and student papers in modern Russian history.
HIST 520 Modernity and Its Visual Cultures (4, Sp) Western visual culture 1850–1930: historical background of changes in high and popular culture, technological reproducibility, display and spectacularization; recent literature and theoretical approaches.
HIST 525 Studies in British History (4, Irregular) Selected topics in English and British Empire history with emphasis on the 19th and 20th centuries.
HIST 534 Studies in Modern Japanese History (4) Selected topics and historiography of modern Japan. Open only to doctoral students.
HIST 535 Studies in Japanese History (4, Irregular) Selected topics in historical problems dealing with Japan.
HIST 536 Studies in Chinese History (2 or 4, Irregular) Selected topics in historical problems dealing with China. Prerequisite: HIST 340.
HIST 540 Studies in Modern East Asian History (4, max 8, Irregular) Readings and analysis of a particular theme in modern Asian history, focusing on broad comparative issues like cultural identity, colonialism, nationalism, revolution, or interstate relations.
HIST 544 Feminist Theory for Historians (4, Fa) Readings in contemporary feminist theory, focused especially on theories that address the construction, writing, and general practice of history. Open only to graduate students.
HIST 546 Comparative History of Women and Gender in the West to 1800 (4, Fa) Topically-focused readings in the comparative history of women and gender in Europe and the Americas before 1800. Open only to graduate students.
HIST 550 Studies in the History of Women, Gender and Sexuality (4, max 8, Irregular) Readings and current bibliography in the history of women, gender and sexuality.
HIST 554 Readings in Chicano/Latino History (4, FaSp) (Enroll in AMST 554)
HIST 555 Studies in the American West (4) Zones of contact — physical, economic, political, ecological, symbolic, cultural, metaphorical — between peoples “west” of the Eurasian land mass since the rise of capitalist global expansion.
HIST 560 Transpacific History (4) Exploration of the connections and divergences in the Pacific region, 19th century to present. Topics include transnationalism, war, political economy, international relations, immigration, environmentalism, and race.
HIST 561 Historiography of Colonial Mexico (4, Fa) Introduction to the historiography of Colonial Mexico from 1500 to 1821.
HIST 565 Studies in American International History (4, FaSm) Readings and analyses of American policies, roles and principles in their interaction with peoples and nations of the world.
HIST 566 Historical Scholarship on North America to 1800 (4, Fa) Introduction to research in the fields of American Indian, colonial America, Atlantic world, and the early United States. Open only to graduate students.
HIST 567 Historical Scholarship on 19th Century America (4, Sp) Introduction to historiography and research in the political, economic, social, cultural, and intellectual history of the 19th century United States.
HIST 568 Historical Scholarship on 20th and 21st Century America (4, Sp) Introduction to historiography and research in the political, economic, social, cultural, and intellectual history of the 20th and 21st century United States.
HIST 575 Studies in 19th Century United States History (4, max 8, 2 years, Fa) Intensive readings and bibliography in the Early National, Jacksonian, Civil War, and Post-Civil War periods.
HIST 583 Studies in Urban History (4) Readings and analyses in the rise of the city and the impact of urbanization from the colonial era to the present.
HIST 584 Seminar in American Social History (4, Irregular) Creation of communities and societies; industrialization, urbanization, working class life; families, women, ethnicity; immigration; racism; mobility; reform and radicalism, leisure.
HIST 585 Studies in 20th Century American History (4) Readings and analyses in social and political problems, movements, and issues.
HIST 587 Studies in the Politics of American Popular Culture (4) Selected themes, theories, and key works in the politics of American popular culture.
HIST 590 Directed Research (1–12, FaSpSm) Research leading to the master’s degree. Maximum units which may be applied to the degree to be determined by the department. Graded CR/NC.
HIST 592 Historiography (4, Sm) Historical criticism; form and mechanics of presenting research; writers of history, their works and philosophies; theories of historical development.
HIST 593 The Art of Historical Writing (4, Sp) An analysis of conventional forms of historical representation and the artistic and scientific challenges to them. Laboratory training in innovative forms of historical writing will be stressed.
HIST 594abz Master’s Thesis (2-2-0, FaSp) Credit on acceptance of thesis. Graded IP/CR/NC.
HIST 595x Practicum in Teaching the Liberal Arts (2, Fa) Basic principles of history pedagogy, with emphasis on practical applications and the importance of career-long skill development. Required for first semester teaching assistants in history. Graded CR/NC.
HIST 602 Seminar in Ancient History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems.
HIST 605 Seminar in Medieval European History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems.
HIST 608 Seminar on Premodern Europe (4, max 8) Directed research on topics from late antiquity to the 18th century. Students will work with both their faculty advisers and the course instructor.
HIST 610 Seminar in Early Modern European History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems concerning the 17th and 18th centuries.
HIST 615 Seminar in Modern European History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems dealing with Europe since 1789.
HIST 617 Seminar in Russian History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems.
HIST 620 Research Seminar on Modern Visual Culture (4, Fa) A research seminar focusing on Western visual culture since the mid-18th century. Recommended preparation: HIST 520.
HIST 630 Seminar in Japanese History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems.
HIST 635 Seminar in Chinese History (2 or 4, max 8, Irregular) Directed research in historical problems. Prerequisite: HIST 340.
HIST 650 Seminar on Women’s and Family History (4, max 8, Sp) Readings, discussions, and directed research on women’s and family histories.
HIST 655 Seminar in Western American History (2 or 4, max 8) Selected topics in the history of the American frontier and the West.
HIST 660 Research Seminar on Transpacific Studies (4, FaSp) (Enroll in AMST 622)
HIST 670 Illness and Healing in the Modern World (4, Sp) Illness and healing in Europe and the Americas since 1492, especially the changing clinical and cultural definitions and responses to disease and ailments.
HIST 673 Seminar in Early North American History (4, max 8) Primary research on issues related to the history of the colonial and early national periods with an emphasis on areas that became the United States.
HIST 675 Seminar in 19th Century United States History (4, max 8, 2 years, Sp) Research in historical problems of the Antebellum, Civil War, and Post-Civil War periods.
HIST 680 Seminar in 20th Century United States History (4, max 8, 2 years, Fa) Directed research in historical problems of the Reform, World War I, interwar, World War II, and Post-War periods.
HIST 700 Historical Explanation and Research Design (4) Designed for all doctoral candidates in their last year of course work, this practicum helps students define a dissertation topic and produce a prospectus. Graded CR/NC. Open only to graduate students.
HIST 790 Research (1–12, FaSpSm) Research leading to the doctorate. Maximum units which may be applied to the degree to be determined by the department. Graded CR/NC.
HIST 794abcdz Doctoral Dissertation (2-2-2-2-0, FaSp) Credit on acceptance of dissertation. Graded IP/CR/NC.