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61. SWT 2002-2003 Graduate Catalog Dept Of History
BA, MA, PhD, University of Arizona. (american west; american Southwest; Texas) Yick, Joseph Kong Sang, Professor of History. (Modern China, chinese
http://www.gradcollege.txstate.edu/02-03GCatalog/depthistory.html
Department of History
Catalog changes since the last publication date that appear in the
2001-2003 Graduate Catalog Addendum are marked in RED and in brackets [ ].

Major and Degrees Offered

Admission Policy

Financial Aid

Courses Offered
...
Graduate Faculty
Major and Degrees Offered:
History, MA, MEd
Major Programs
The Department of History offers the Master of Arts degree with emphases in the United States, Europe, Latin America, and Public History. There are two options for earning a Master of Arts with a major in History. The first option requires 30 hours of graduate history courses, including thesis, or 24 hours of graduate history courses, including thesis, plus six graduate hours in a minor field. [The second option, which does not include thesis, requires 36 hours of graduate work in history, or 30 hours of graduate history courses and six graduate hours in a minor field.] The department also offers the Master of Education degree which consists of at least 21 hours of graduate history courses and 15 graduate hours in a minor field or a split minor of nine graduate hours from one field and six graduate hours from a second field. A grade of "B" or better must be earned in all history course work counting towards either degree. Candidates for any master's degree in the Department of History must take and pass a comprehensive examination. Students who choose the 30 hour MA option must also successfully defend their thesis.
Program Goals.

62. Yearly Course Listing, Courses, Asian & Middle East Studies Program, WCAS, North
History 392/39540, american-chinese Relations in the 20th Century, W 2 Poli Sci 397-1-20, US-China Relations since Tiananmen 7-21, Turkey between East and west, T 12
http://www.asian-studies.northwestern.edu/courses/approved0304.html
Home Courses Yearly Course Listing
Yearly Course Listing Potential Classes CAESAR
2003-2004 Approved Courses
Please note that these courses are subject to change. We will update them as information becomes available. Fall 2003
Please confirm courses by referring to course bulletin. Course No. Title Days / Time Instructor Art History 310 Ancient Art: Ancient Egypt / Near East MW 11:00-12:20 Yasin Comp Lit 271-3 Japanese Literature in Translation TTH 11:00-12:20 Lyons Comp Lit 274-1 Chinese Literature MW 3:00-4:20 Econ 361 International Trade MW 12:30-2:00 Olszewski English 275 Introduction to Asian American Literature TTH 11:00-12:30 Wang French 366 Southeast Asian Literature and Culture TTH 2:00-3:00 Winston History 270 Middle Eastern / Islam Civilization MWF 10:00 Petry History 385 History of India TTH 11:00-12:20 McLane History 291-20

63. Landmarks Of American History Teacher Workshops Sample Projects
in the economic expansion of the west, political and to Asian immigration such as the chinese Exclusion Acts and the acculturation of Asian american communities
http://www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/landmarksprojects.html
Landmarks of American History Teacher Workshops Since this is a new program, the following examples are hypothetical and are offered for illustrative purposes only. Independence Hall and the Birth of the United States A research library, in conjunction with a Philadelphia-area college, conducts four week-long residential summer workshops on events which took place at Independence Hall that are central to America's founding. Events to be examined include the Continental Congress' declaration of independence in 1776 and the Philadelphia Convention's drafting of the Constitution in 1787. Guided by humanities scholars, the fifty schoolteachers study the architecture of Independence Hall, its use by official and unofficial bodies, and the debates that led to the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Ancillary texts include the records of the Continental and Confederation Congresses, Thomas Jefferson's drafts of the Declaration of Independence, James Madison's notes on the debates of the Philadelphia Convention, and materials about the Constitution's ratification such as The Federalist . Humanities scholars include an architectural historian, a political scientist, an expert on the history of the American Revolution, and staff members of scholarly editions of significant papers collections. The teachers attend lecture/discussion sessions with scholars in the mornings and work on document-based teaching units and evaluation plans with master teachers in the afternoon. Accommodations for the teachers are provided by a local university.

64. American Memory Collection Finder Search
in California ~ Multiformat ~ 18501925 Title The chinese in California western US ~ Photographs ~ 1860-1920 Title History of the american west, 1860-1920
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/mdbquery.html
American Memory Home Collection Finder American Memory Collections: All Collections To explore an individual collection, click on its title in the list below
This will reveal more information about the collection and further options for searching and browsing the collection items. Search For Items in the Collections Listed Below
To remove a collection from your search, click on its checkbox. All collections are checked initially. Collections marked with a are not searchable.
Search Tips

Match any of these words Match all of these words Match this exact phrase Include word variants (e.g. plurals) Match words exactly
Return a maximum of bibliographic records.
What American Memory resources are included in this search?
Limit Search to:
Documents
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Sheet Music ...
Adams, Ansel ~ Japanese-American Internment ~ Photographs ~ 1943
Title: "Suffering Under a Great Injustice": Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar
Advertising ~ Multiformat ~ 1850-1920
Title: The Emergence of Advertising in America: 1850-1920
African Americans ~ Daniel A. P. Murray ~ Pamphlets ~ 1818-1907

65. The Chinese In California: About The Collection
changing history of this community in California. Major issues explored in these records include the chinese contribution to California and the american west
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award99/cubhtml/about.html
The Chinese in California, 1850-1925 About the Collection The Chinese in California 1850-1925 is a compilation of selected holdings from collections housed in the archives and special collections of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley; The Ethnic Studies Library, University of California, Berkeley; and the California Historical Society, San Francisco. Presenting approximately 8000 images, this virtual archive makes accessible material related to the history of the Chinese people in California between 1850 and 1925. The materials were selected to illustrate broad topical themes:
  • Chinese and Westward Expansion San Francisco's Chinatown For a brief essay on each theme, see The materials selected are drawn from a variety of archival collections, compiled by institutions and libraries with varying missions. Many of the collections have distinctive histories of their own. In some cases entire collections have been included; more often a selection of materials relating to the Chinese in California has been selected from a collection with broader scope. It is our hope that The Chinese in California presents a balanced perspective on a tumultuous and changing history of this community in California. Major issues explored in these records include the Chinese contribution to California and the American West in the 19th and early 20th centuries; the rampant anti-Chinese sentiment encountered by these immigrants, eventually leading to the federal Chinese Exclusion Act of 1892 (repealed in 1943); and settlement and development in various communities, including San Francisco's Chinatown, which remains the largest Chinatown in the United States.

66. Yale University Press - Publisher Of Fine Books
historyfemale park rangers, chinese railroad workers a unified interpretation of western american history that recognizes conquest in the west, while looking
http://www.yale.edu/yup/books/078331.htm
Search for a Yale book
Browse our Books
Contact Us About the Press Sample Chapters ... Go to our London site
Fixing Intelligence:
For a More Secure America
by Jonathan A. Edlow, M.D.
"General Odom uses the unique insight gained from years of experience in the intelligence business to explain in plain language an issue that is critical to U.S. national security—intelligence community reform. A valuable resource to expert and novice alike, it serves both as an excellent introduction to the intelligence community, and also as a valuable guide to the current debate over how to proceed with intelligence community reform."—Senator Richard C. Shelby
The facts behind the summer blockbuster
The Day After Tomorrow
Red Sky at Morning:
America and the Crisis of the Global Environment
by James Gustave Speth
" Moviegoers inspired to learn more will benefit from a new book called 'Red Sky at Morning' by James Gustave Speth, dean of the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale. The book, an overview of environmental threats, provides a list of the already observable consequences of warming... as well as a forecast of even greater calamities."
New York Times

67. HISTORY DEPARTMENT COURSES
Japan, _*hist 497 Topics in history Frontier China (Winter 2000 Middle East/west Asia. 100(FYE) Search in history Turning the american Centuries, _hist
http://www.history.ccsu.edu/wolff/Hist_Course_Key.htm
Central Connecticut State University HISTORY DEPARTMENT HISTORY DEPARTMENT COURSES Please note that this page is not an official University document but rather a guide provided by the History Department. The University catalog, as amended, is the final authority on the History major and the General Education Program. Please also be aware that this list is periodically revised
based upon changes to the History program. Revision: 30 October 2002
Key:
* = Counts as a non-Western course ** = Renumbered as Hist 479 G =Counts in General Education
program as Study Area II
† = no longer offered Required Intermediate Course for History and Social Science Majors as well as History Minors:
  • Either HIST 301 (The Historical Imagination) or HIST 310 (Communities in American History) Please note that all 400-level courses now have the following prerequisite: HIST 301 or HIST 310 or permission of instructor.
Required Capstone Course for History Majors:
  • HIST 490 (Senior Seminar) [For students with older programs, please note that HIST 495 (Historiography) is no longer offered by the department.]

68. Asian-Nation : Asian American History, Demographics, & Issues :: The Academic Si
The first major work of history by a nativeborn picture of the breadth of the chinese american experience began in the late 1960s, most west Coast universities
http://www.asian-nation.org/academic.shtml
Article and discussion that describes the history and contemporary development of Asian American Studies as an academic discipline and how it continues to evolve to reflect the diversity of past and present experiences within the Asian American community. Please enable JavaScript in your browser to maximize your experience and enjoyment at Asian-Nation.
Home
Culture History Issues ... Vietnamese Amerasians in America
The History of Asians in America The First Asian Americans The New Wave of Asian Immigration Celebrate APA Heritage Month The Academic Side of Asian American History ... 442nd: Rescue of the Lost Battalion
Research Sources Used /
Recommended for Further Reading Brewer, Cynthia, Trudy A. Suchan, and U.S. Bureau of the Census. 2002. Mapping Census 2000: The Geography of U.S. Diversity . Environmental Systems Research.
Chan, Sucheng. 1991.
... . New York: Basic Books.
Site Tools
Any word All words Exact phrase
Sound-alike matching The following is a reprint of an article (edited for length) entitled ’’Asian American History’s Overdue Emergence’’ by Roger Daniels (see credit below). Although it is intended for an academic audience, it nicely details the development of Asian American history as an academic discipline. It also stresses a point that is becoming increasingly important in the study of race and ethnicity these days. That is, while it’s important to understand what

69. Asian-Nation : Asian American History, Demographics, & Issues :: Construction &
s economy became dependent on the west and ordinary These actions taken by the chinese and Japanese to fight words, they wanted to be as american as everybody
http://www.asian-nation.org/internment.shtml
Article and description about the history and assimilation of Asian Americans in the first half of the 20th century, with a focus on the internment and imprisonment of Japanese Americans during World War II and its political and cultural consequences for the Asian American community. Please enable JavaScript in your browser to maximize your experience and enjoyment at Asian-Nation.
Home
Culture History Issues ... Vietnamese Amerasians in America
The History of Asians in America The First Asian Americans The New Wave of Asian Immigration Celebrate APA Heritage Month The Academic Side of Asian American History ... 442nd: Rescue of the Lost Battalion
Japanese American Prison Camps
During World War 2 Marysville, CA
Sacramento, CA
Tanforan, CA
Stockton, CA
Turlock, CA
Salinas, CA
Merced, CA Pinedale, CA Fresno, CA Tulare, CA Santa Anita, CA Manzanar, CA Pomona, CA Tule Lake, CA Puyallup, Washington Portland, Oregon Minidoka, Idaho Mayer, Arizona Poston, Arizona Gila River, Arizona Heart Mountain, Wyoming Topaz, Utah

70. Department Of History
the Pacific; subsequent conflicts in China, Korea, and HY 469 United States Immigration History Examines central HY 470 american west to 1900 Social, political
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/Hist/courses2.html
Undergradate Courses Level HY 301 Historical Methods
Basic historical skills and methods with emphasis on research, writing, and interpretation. HY 302 Ancient Civilization- Near East
Development of civilization in Near East from neolithic times to 500 B.C. emphasizing Mesopotamia and Egypt. HY 304 Ancient Civilization- Rome
From Monarchy to later Empire stressing political, legal, social, economic, and cultural achievements. HY 305 Ancient Greece to 323 C.E.
From the Bronze Age to the rise of Alexander the Great emphasizing political, social, intellectual, and cultural achievements. HY 306 Hellenistic World: Alexander to Cleopatra
From Alexander the Great to Cleopatra VII, emphasizing political, social, intellectual, and cultural achievements.

71. University Of North Carolina At Asheville Department Of History
in America* (Spring) 373/004 Roman Republic* (Fall) World Slavery* (Spring) 373/005 Women in China* (Fall) history hist316 THE american west Credits 3.00
http://www.unca.edu/history/descriptions.htm
Faculty Courses Students Events ... UNCA All Courses Taught Category I - Required of All Majors 101 The United States to 1865*
102 The United States since 1865*
151 World Civilization to 1687*
152 World Civilization since 1687*
390 Seminar in Historiography*
395 History Internship*
452 Senior Research Seminar*
Category II - American 303 Colonial and Revolutionary America
305 Civil War and Reconstruction*
308 The United States Since 1937*
311 Foreign Relations of the U.S.* 315 North Carolina History *(3) 316 The American West* 318 The Modern South* Category III - European 342 The Roman Empire 346 Medieval Europe 348 Tudor-Stuart England 349 The Age of Enlightenment 350 Britain Since 1688* 354 European Women: Antiquity to 1700* 355 European Women: 1700 to Present 361 Renaissance and Reformation 362 The French Revolution: History and Historiography 364 Europe: 1848-1918 365 Recent European History 367 Czarist Russia 368 20th-Century Russia Category IV - Other History Courses and Special Topics 330 World War Two* 340 Classical Greece 380 Imperial China 381 Revolutionary China 384 History of Japan* 386 History of Buddhism Special Topics 373/001 Atlantic World* (Fall) History of Christianity* (Spring) 373/002 Crusades* (Fall) Milton and the Century of Revolution* (Spring)

72. UNCA Catalog 2001-2002 - History (HIST)
women across the centuries in the west, with an contact with the cultures of India, China, Japan and of Israel, varieties of contemporary american Judaism, and
http://www.unca.edu/catalog0102/hist.html
UNCA Catalog: Courses of Instruction
UNCA Catalog: Table of Contents
History (HIST)
Associate Professor Hardy (Chair); Professors Ready, Spellman, Uldricks; Associate Professors Greenawalt, Rizzo; Assistant Professors Judson, Pierce; Instructor Peters The purpose of history is to provide a broad liberal arts education that addresses fundamental questions about the nature of humanity, of society, of past experiences and of the times in which we live. UNCA History graduates use their training in numerous ways: half the majors have entered careers in business and education, while the remainder are employed in such fields as national and state government, law, medicine, banking, the military, the ministry, social service, law enforcement, graduate study and archival work. This partial list demonstrates the diversity of careers open to those trained in history.
Major in History
  • Required courses in the major36 hours: HIST 101, 102, 151, 152, 390, 452; six additional three-semester-hour courses chosen as described below after Course Distribution.
  • Required courses outside the majorNone.
  • 73. Courses - LCSC Catalog
    of political and cultural developments in China, Japan, Indian history of the TransMississippi west of the hist 429 - Origins of american Foreign Policy (3 cr
    http://www.lcsc.edu/Catalog/courses/hist.htm
    History (HIST)
    A B C D ... W
    Course Descriptions - Lewis-Clark State College 2003-2005 Catalog History (Social Sciences Division)
    HIST 101 - History of Civilization (3 cr.)

    Surveys the development of society from Paleolithic era to the Reformation. Focuses on several facets of selected cultures, such as the evolution of civilizations, religion and philosophy, rhetorical tradition, and the unfolding of world commerce.
    HIST 102 - History of Civilization (3 cr.)
    Advent of the political and economic revolutions of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Consequences of war, extension of economic, political, and social relationships beyond national borders. Identifies and expounds four themes: Development of Western World; Emergence of World System; Revolution and Ideology: War and Peace in the Twentieth Century.
    HIST 111 - United States History (3 cr.)
    A survey of political, diplomatic, economic, social and cultural history of the United States from earliest times to 1865.
    HIST 112 - United States History (3 cr.)

    74. Pepperdine University - Seaver College - Humanities And Teacher Education Divisi
    China s nineteenthcentury contact with the west, the establishment and modern histories of China, Hong Kong Native americans (4) Studies american Indians from
    http://seaver.pepperdine.edu/humanities/academics/coursedescriptions/hist-course
    ABOUT SEAVER ACADEMICS ADMISSION ATHLETICS ... PEPPERDINE XPRESS Humanities and Teacher Education Division Division Home Academic Programs English Liberal Arts ... Contact Our Division
    Course Descriptions: History
    COURSES
    African-American Studies (AAS)

    American Studies (AMST)

    Archeology (ARCH)

    Education (EDUC)
    ...
    Women's Studies (WMST)

    The following abbreviations denote a course that satisfies or partially satisfies a particular general education requirement: GE (General Education), PS (Presentation Skills), RM (Research Methods), and WI (Writing Intensive). HIST 201 or 301. International Perspectives of American History (4)
    Covers the background, birth, and development of the American nation as viewed from an international perspective. Political, social, intellectual, and economic factors will be examined in an effort to understand the United States in the twentieth century. This course does not meet the California requirements for instruction in California state and local government. Students who need to meet that requirement may complete a one-unit directed study course, HIST 299. Offered only in international programs. top HIST 220. Pre-Columbian Civilizations of the Americas (4)

    75. The Elliott School Of International Affairs | Bachelor Of Arts Programs
    hist 173, African american history. IAff 90, Latin America Problems and Promise. hist 187, history of Modern China. Rel 1, Introduction to World Religions west.
    http://www.gwu.edu/~elliott/academicprograms/ba/societiescultures.html

    Academic Programs
    Bachelor of Arts General Requirements
    Bachelor of Arts
    GENERAL CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS
    (revised: Summer 2003)

    SOCIETIES AND CULTURES
    Required: Hist 40 European Civilization in Its World Context (1715 to present) Hist 72 Introduction to U.S. History (1876 to present) Choose one course from three of the five regional lists: (9 credit hours) Regional: Africa: Anth 178 Cultures of Africa Anth 181 African Roots from Australopithecus to Zimbabwe Geog 164 Cultures of Africa Hist 116 History of America Hmn 7 African Humanities IAff 93 Africa: Problems and Prospects Americas: AmSt 71 Introduction to American Studies AmSt 72 Introduction to American Studies Anth 170 Cultures of the Carribean Anth 171 North American Native Peoples Anth 172 Cultures of Central and South America Anth 190 Art 147 Latin American Art Engl 73 Literature of Black America Engl 74 Literature of Black America Geog 161 Geography of Latin America Hist 71 Introduction to American History (Early Settlement to 1876) Hist 139-40 Women in the United States I and II Hist 163 History of Latin America to 1820 Hist 164 History of Latin America since 1820 Hist 166 Immigration, Ethnicity and the American Experience

    76. Southern Methodist University
    PLSC 3352, chinese Politics. RELI 3323 (RELI 3321), Understanding the Self East and west. RELI 3336, Africanamerican Religious History.
    http://www.smu.edu/gened/humanelectives.html

    Cultural Formations Co-Curricular

    Perspectives Co-Curricular

    Human Diversity Co-Curricular

    Electives Co-Curricular
    ... General Education Curriculum Home Page
    Electives that Satisfy the Human Diversity Co-Curricular Requirement: ANTH 2331 (CFA 3331) The Foundation of Institutions: Roots of Society ANTH 3300 (CF 3300) Race, Gender and Culture in the African Diaspora ANTH 3301 (CFB 3301/ SOCI 3301 Health, Healing and Ethics: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Sickness and Society ANTH 3310 (CF 3301) Gender and Sex Roles: A Global Perspective ANTH 3315 Origins of Civilization ANTH 3327 (CF 3319) Economic and Political Change in World System ANTH 3333 (CFA 3316) The Immigrant Experience ANTH 3336 (CFA 3336) Gender and Globalization ANTH 3358 (CFA 3358) Indians of the Southwest from the 16th Century to the Present ANTH 3366 (RELI 3366) Magic, Myth and Religion Across Cultures ANTH 3368 Urban Problems: A Cross-Cultural Perspective ANTH 3399 (CFA 3399) In Search of Ice Age Americans ARHS 3322 (CFA 3313) Islamic Art and Architecture: The Creation of a New Art ARHS 3358 Women in the Visual Arts, Both Sides of the Easel

    77. Department Of History
    19thcentury american history; american west; history of Native americans 18th- and 19th-century China american social history; public history; film and
    http://www.nyu.edu/cas/dept/hist.htm
    College of Arts and Science
    Department Summary
    See also the Graduate School of Arts and Science department pages and the 1998-2000 College Bulletin section on this department.
    History
    History is the study of human experience of all kinds, considered in relation to particular times and places. But History is more than this. It is a method of thinking characterized by its attention to the contexts in which people have lived and worked. By learning to practice this method of thinking, students gain invaluable skills and techniques. They must learn to analyze and interpret many different kinds of evidence, cultural, social, economic, and political, to organize this evidence into a coherent whole, and to present it clearly with style in written or oral form. In so doing, students also learn to justify and question their own and others' conclusions, for History is always an argument about what actually happened. Indeed, rethinking and revising accepted historical conclusions is one of the most importantand most interestingtasks of the historian.
    Academic Programs
    The Department of History has recently adopted a new curriculum for the major in History . It is intended to provide students both breadth and depth in several fields of History, including American, European, and Non-Western History. Majors are required to take courses in each field, with a concentration, including a research seminar, in one of them. The Department offers at least one seminar especially for freshman each semester, allowing students to become interested and involved in the History program early. Under the supervision of a faculty member, students may take independent studies to focus on and research a particular interest. Students whose grade point average is outstanding will be considered for the History honors program, which requires an advanced methodology course in the junior year and a substantial senior thesis written in the senior year under the supervision of a faculty member. In the past, History students have held internships with the NYU archives, the Tamiment Labor History Library, and various outside agencies.

    78. History Course Descriptions
    G587 2783 G587 2783 Contemporary China 100-215P H259 2725 - H259 2725 american Jewish history 1115A-12 H615 2786 - H615 2786 Colloq-Early Mod west Eur hist
    http://www.indiana.edu/~deanfac/blspr00/hist/
    • Search History Courses
    • - A100 2653 U.S. Working Class and Labor Hist. 5:45-8:45P T BH016 Ashby
    • - A300 2734 History of American West 9:30-10:45A MW BH347 Warren
    • - A356 2735 Afro-American History 2 1:00-2:15P TR BH103 Clegg
    • - A383 2736 Ragtime to Rap 9:05-9:55A TR WH100 McGerr
    • - B300 2749 War Culture 9:05-11:25A T BH321 Douglas
    • - B300 2750 The Industrial Revolution 11:15A-12:30P TR BH304 Alter
    • - B353 2751 The Renaissance 2:30-3:45 TR BH347 Field
    • - B366 2752 Paris-Berlin 1920's Cultural Hist 2:30-3:45P WH101 Pace
    • - B378 2753 History of Germany Since 1648 2 2:30-3:45P MW BH103 Diehl
    • - C380 2754 History of Ancient Medicine 9:30-10:45A TR BH317 Demand
    • - C580 2782 History of Ancient Medicine 9:30-10:45A TR BH317 Demand
    • - E332 2755 Afri. History: Colonial Rule/Indep 9:30-10:45A TR BH333 Brooks
    • - E333 2756 Conflict in Southern Africa 11:15A-12:30P MW BH244 Martin
    • - E334 2757 History of Western Africa 2:30-3:45P TR BH345 Brooks
    • - E532 2776 Afri. Hist. - Colonial Rule/Indep 9:30-10:45A TR BH333 Brooks
    • - E533 2777 Conflict in Southern Africa 11:15A-12:30P MW BH244 Martin
    • - E534 2778 History of Western Africa 2:30-3:45P TR BH345 Brooks
    • - F300 2758 Issues in Latin American History 7:00-9:00P TR BH138 Gould
    • - F300 2759 Intro.to Cont. Latin Amer. Reality 11:15A-12:30P MW BH242 James

    79. Mills College Catalog
    012 The west and Its Cultural Traditions II (1). United States hist 031 american history I (1) hist 032 american history II (1). Asian hist 061 China and Japan
    http://www.mills.edu/PUBS/CATALOG/ugrad/hist_info.html
    History
    Faculty: Professional Interests
    Wah Cheng
    • Modern and traditional China, modern Japan, East Asia, Chinese nationalism, the Chinese press
    Bertram M. Gordon
    • Modern European history, French history, the European right, history of cuisine, history of travel and tourism, world history
    Marianne B. Sheldon
    • 18th- and 19th-century American history, history of women and the family, the American South
    Andrew A. Workman
    • 20th-century America, labor, constitutional, African American
    A knowledge of history is both the mark of an educated person and a background for understanding the present. It develops skills that are valuable in all fields - the testing of hypotheses, the evaluation of evidence, and the formation and presentation of sound generalizations.
    The Mills history curriculum is designed to provide students with a broad background in history and a knowledge of historical methods. The faculty in history is composed of specialists in modern European history, 19th- and 20th-century U.S. history, and East Asian history. Mills graduates in history have continued their study in graduate and professional schools and have entered careers in law, business, journalism, publishing, teaching, library science, museum curatorship, and government service. History Major (12 semester course credits) Lower-division requirements: Select a concentration in 1 of 3 areas listed below and take its 2-semester introductory sequence: European HIST 011 The West and Its Cultural Traditions I

    80. History Courses
    Regional focus on west Africa. of Modern China Major developments in chinese history with emphasis development from Jamestown through the american Revolution
    http://history.astate.edu/courses.html
    Course Offerings Undergraduate Courses (Go to Graduate Courses) General History (HIST) 3203. The History of Law - Law from primitive beings in early societies through the English Common Law; development of law in America. (D) (Recommended for Pre-Law students) 3213. Introduction to Museum Work - Emphasizes both theory and hands-on experience in administration, collections, management, exhibition techniques, museum education, and documenting artifacts. (S) 3293. History of Science - The emergence of modern science since 1500. Thematic studies to illuminate revolutionary change in science and the impact of science-based technology on society. (S - Even) 3333. The Practice of History - Experiential study of historical scholarship: research, writing, and criticism. To be taken at the beginning of the major. (Required for all history degrees.) (F, S) 4303. The Idea of History - Study of the idea of history in its chronological, practical, and historiosophical manifestations. (S) 4312. Computer Technology for the History/Social Sciences Educator

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