DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY

 

 

Text Box: SPRING 2006
SCHEDULE OF HISTORY CLASSES
 
OFFICE:  BRELAND HALL, ROOM 239
PHONE:  646-4601
DEPARTMENT HEAD:  JEFFREY BROWN

 


SPRING 2005

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

S C H E D U L E O F H I S T O R Y C L A S S E S

D E P A R T M E N T   O F   H I S T O R Y

 

OFFICE:  BRELAND HALL, ROOM 239

PHONE:  646-4601 

DEPARTMENT HEAD: JEFFREY P. BROWN

 

(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)*(*)­

 

REQUIREMENTS FOR HISTORY MAJOR:

The undergraduate history major consists of at least 42 credits in the major field (excluding Hist. 449), 21 of which must be numbered 300 or above.  One or more upper-division courses (excluding Hist. 398) must require research-based paper or papers totaling at least 20 pages. Electives must be carefully selected by the student and approved by a Department of History advisor. 

 

DEPARTMENTAL REQUIREMENTS:

 

HIST 101, Roots of Modern Europe ........................................................ 3

 

HIST 102, Modern Europe .................................................................... 3

 

HIST 201, Introduction to Early American History  .................................... 3

 

HIST 202, Introduction to Recent American History  ................................. 3

 

HIST 211, East Asia to 1600 ................................................................. 3

 

HIST 212, East Asia since 1600  ............................................................. 3

 

HIST 311, Colonial Latin America  ........................................................... 3

 

HIST 312, Modern Latin America  ..........................................................  3

 

*HIST 398, Historians and History  .......................................................... 3

            (Must be taken during junior year)

           

Three additional history courses over 300  ..............................................  9

(Not more than three courses in a single major field)

 

Two additional history courses over 400  ................................................  6

(Not more than three courses in a single major field)

 

                                                                    Total History Credit Hours:   42

 

Electives:  Sufficient to bring total credits to 128, including 55 upper-division

 

NOTE:  STUDENTS MUST FULFILL UNIVERSITY GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS AND COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS AS WELL AS THE DEPARTMENTAL MAJOR REQUIREMENTS.

 

 


 

History 100-level courses

 

HIST. 101G – ROOTS OF MODERN EUROPE

This course reviews the rise of Western civilization:  its cultural, social, political, and economic development from earliest times to about 1700.

 

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST 101G

01

8:30-9:20

MWF

HA216

TOLLEFSON

HIST 101G

02

9:30-10:20

MWF

HA206

TOLLEFSON

HIST 101G

03

6:00-8:30

W

CB203

SHOCKLEY

 

HIST. 102G – MODERN EUROPE

Although there are no prerequisites for admission, English 111 is suggested for its help with grammar, spelling, and general writing skills.

European history since 1700 by analyzing Anglo-French rivalry in the New World, as well as the Old. Deals with emergence of Russia into the foreground of continental politics under Peter and Catherine the Great.  Concerned with Enlightenment and its influence upon the French and American Revolutions, Napoleonic Era, and Industrial Revolution.  Darwinism and Marxism are studied in their relationship to modern European thought and politics.  Two World Wars, the Great Depression, and the totalitarian governments of Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union are examined.  Intended for first and second year students, the course consists of lectures, films, slide presentations and oral history, supplemented by class discussions. 

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST 102G

01

8:55-10:10

TUTH

HA114

HORODOWICH

HIST 102G

02

10:20-11:35

TUTH

HA114

HORODOWICH

HIST 102G

03

8:30-9:20

MWF

HA206

SCHNEIDER-HECTOR

HIST 102G

04

9:30-10:20

MWF

HA104

SCHNEIDER-HECTOR

HIST 102G

05

10:30-11:20

MWF

HA106

SCHNEIDER-HECTOR

History 200-level courses

 

 

HIST. 201G – INTRO TO EARLY AMERICAN HISTORY

 

Introductory course in early United States history designed to familiarize the student with origins of American civilization, including the Puritan “ethic”, roots of the American social and economic system, and analysis of the American Revolution.  Other topics are Jeffersonian and Jacksonian Democracy, slavery and the abolition movement, the causes of the Civil War and its aftermath (reconstruction).  Growth of executive power, role of the Supreme Court, and growth of the nation to continental proportion, to explain contemporary American politics and society, are also treated. 

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST 201G

01

8:30-9:20

MWF

HA114

LESTER

HIST 201G

03

11:30-12:20

MWF

HA114

LESTER

HIST 201G

04

11:30-12:20

MWF

GN230

KELLIE

HIST 201G

4 recitation sections taught on Friday

05-08

9:30-10:20

MW

HA114

LESTER

05

9:30-10:20

F

OH317

LESTER

06

9:30-10:20

F

OH316

TBA

07

10:30-11:20

F

OH316

TBA

08

11:30-12:20

F

OH316

TBA

                       

 

 

History 200-level courses

HIST. 202G – INTRO TO RECENT AMERICAN HISTORY

History of the United States since 1877, with varying emphasis on social, political, economic, diplomatic, and cultural development.

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST 202G

01

10:30-11:20

MWF

HA114

BRONSTEIN

HIST 202G

02

6:00-8:30

M

HA208

SHOCKLEY

HIST 202G

03

11:45-1:00

TUTH

HA101

WEISIGER

HIST 202G

05

1:30-2:20

MWF

HA114

LESTER

HIST 202G

90

1:00-3:55

SUN

HA212

KELLIE

HIST. 211G – EAST ASIA TO 1600

History of China, Korea, Vietnam, and Japan from earliest times through the sixteenth century.  Emphasis on cultural and political developments and their social and economic contexts, and the interaction between East Asian societies.

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST 211G

01

10:30-11:20

MWF

HA101

K HAMMOND

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST. 212G – EAST ASIA SINCE 1600

History of China, Korea, Vietnam, and Japan from the sixteenth through the twentieth centuries.  Emphasis on internal development of each country, as well as the social and political impact of Western Imperialism, and the emergence of each country’s unique version of modern society.

HIST 212G

01

9:30-10:20

MWF

HA212

E HAMMOND

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST. 222G – ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION SINCE 1800

History of Islamic civilizations since 1800.

HIST 222G

01

11:30-12:30

MWF

HA208

TOLLEFSON

HIST. 261 – NEW MEXICO HISTORY

Economic, political, and social development from exploration to modern times.

 

 

 

This class is through Distance Education – please check with the History Department as to classroom.

HIST 261

90

12:00-2:55

SAT

HA212

SCHNEIDER

 

 

 

 

 

History 300-level courses

NOTE:  History 323, 366, 368, 377 and 390 are cross listed with a 500-level for graduate students

HIST. 303G – HISTORY OF TECHNOLOGY

The development of technology, its impact on society and culture, and the social and ideological responses to the technological change from earliest times to the present.  ENG111G recommended.

HIST 303

90

8:30-11:30

SA

BD173B

MILLIORN

HIST 311 – COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA

Social, political, and economic development from Columbus to the Wars of Independence

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION

INSTRUCTOR

HIST 311

01

10:20-11:35

TUTH

JH103

O’HARA

HIST 311

02

11:45-1:00

TUTH

JH103

O’HARA

HIST 312 – MODERN LATIN AMERICA

Post-revolutionary developments in the nineteenth and twentieth-centuries; the role of Latin America in world affairs and the Inter-American system.

COURSE

SECTION

TIMES

DAYS

LOCATION