HIST-HISTORY
– 2005-07
Catalog
History Department
HIST
110 Western
Civilization: Ancient to Renaissance (4)
Beginnings of western civilization from the river
valley societies of the Middle East, circa 3,000 BCE to the Renaissance in
HIST
111 Western
Civilization: Reformation to Twentieth Century (5)
Development of western civilization from 1550 CE to
1900 CE. Comparison
of liberal modernization of the West with the retarded, conservative
modernization in Central, East and
HIST
200 Special
Problems for Undergraduates (1–2)
Individual investigation, research, studies, or
surveys of selected problems.
Total credit limited to 4 units, with a maximum of 2 units per quarter.
Prerequisite: Consent of department chair.
HIST
206 American
Cultures (4) GE D1 USCP
The social, cultural, constitutional, and political
history of African American, Asian American, Native American, European
American, and Latino/a men and women.
4 lectures.
HIST
207 Freedom and Equality in American History (4) GE D1 USCP
The multiple and conflicting ways in which various Americans
(defined in terms of race, class and gender) have struggled to formulate and
promote their own understandings of freedom and equality, from the pre-conquest
era to the present. 4 lectures.
HIST
213 Modern
Political Economy (4) GE D2
The relationship between states and economies in the
modern period. Themes
of modernization, industrialization, and colonial expansion. The major theories of
political economy, especially liberalism and socialism. 4
lectures.
HIST
214 Political
Economy of Latin America and the
Comparative examination of socio-economic structures
of the Middle East and
HIST
215 Comparative
World History (4) GE D3
(Some sections also listed as HNRS 215)
Interaction
of selected traditional and modernizing non-Western cultures with Western
industrial imperialism and its attendant economic, political, and cultural
forces. Within this context, evaluation of both the nature of
industrial imperialism and the way in which it influenced or interfered with
the host culture. 4 lectures.
HIST
300 Junior
Seminar (4)
Historical analysis of selected problems and topics
for undergraduates. Seminar format, intense discussion of readings and issues. Class Schedule will list topic selected.
Total credit limited to 8 units. 4 seminars.
Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A. Completion of two courses in
lower-division Area D (preferably D2 and D3). Junior standing
or consent of instructor.
HIST
303 Research
and Writing Seminar in History (5)
Designed
to develop student's ability to research and write an interpretive paper on a
specific topic. Seminar participants practice the skills of library research,
historical and historiographical analysis, and
writing and revising. Paper in lieu of final examination.
Class Schedule will list topic
selected. 4 lectures and research project.
Prerequisite: Completion of GE Areas A1 and A3, and junior standing or consent
of instructor.
HIST
304 Historiography
(4)
Theoretical
approaches used to study the past, including scholarship on history and memory,
the influence of interdisciplinary studies, the significance of race and gender
as categories of analysis, and the place of history and the historian in
contemporary society. 3 seminar meetings and research
project. Prerequisite: HIST 303; junior standing or consent of
instructor; and History major.
HIST
305 History of
American Agriculture (4)
Agricultural development with emphasis upon economic,
political and social implications.
3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
306 The
Witch-Hunt in
A
history of the development of witchcraft ideas, persecutions, and skepticism in
the western world from 1400 to 1800, focusing on the legal, economic, social,
and intellectual currents that produced, fired, and eventually ended the
phenomenon. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE
Area A and two courses from Areas D1, D2, D3, D4. History majors will not
receive GE Area D5 credit.
HIST
307 European
Thought, 1800-2000 (4) GE D5
Intellectual and cultural history of
HIST
308 The
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (4) GE D5
The African, Islam and Euro-American dimensions of the
trans-Atlantic slave trade, with focus on its varying roots, organization and
impact on cross-cultural and global levels. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area A and two courses from Areas D1, D2, D3.
History majors will not receive GE Area D5 credit.
HIST
309 Cultures of
The
cultures of West African and the African Diaspora, with special attention to
the intersection of Animist, Islamic and Western cultures, and the survival of
African cultures in the
HIST
310 East Asian
Culture and Civilization (4) GE
D5
The pre-modern and modern histories of
HIST
311 Early
History
of the
HIST
312 Early
Modern
History
of the
HIST
313 Modern
History of the British Isles from the loss of the
American colonies through the era of the World Wars and the dissolution of the
HIST
314 The
Political, social, and economic development of the
Middle Eastern countries in the context of regional history and international
politics since the birth of Islam.
Particular attention to the resurgence of religious movements
and their connection with nationalism and anti-colonialism in the region.
3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing.
HIST
316 Modern
Modern
histories of China, Japan and Korea: great disruptions of modernity that have
transformed these societies, common characteristics of modernity in East Asia,
great differences between Chinese, Japanese and Korean histories, and the
mutually constitutive nature of these East Asian histories. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A. Completion of two
courses in lower-division Area D (preferably D2 and D3), or consent of
instructor.
HIST
320 Colonial
and Revolutionary
Settlement
and evolution of British America, background to the imperial dispute, events
leading to the Revolution, Articles of Confederation, Constitution, the
national economy, roles of and impact on African-Americans, women, Native
Americans and Loyalists. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area D1 and completion of Area D2, Area D3, or Area D4.
History majors will not receive GE Area D5 credit.
HIST
321 Civil War
The experiences of nineteenth-century Americans. Focus on industrialization, antebellum reform,
slavery, the Civil War battlefield and homefront,
Reconstruction, and the creation of a New South. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area D1 and completion of Area D2, Area D3, or
Area D4. History majors will not receive GE Area D5 credit.
HIST
322 Modern
American history since 1900. Focus on domestic and foreign policy interactions,
struggle of disenfranchised groups for social and political equality, and
changes in culture and identity. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area D1 and completion of Area D2, Area D3, or
Area D4. History majors will not receive GE Area D5 credit.
HIST
323 Versions of
the Past: Novels, Comics and Movies (4) GE
D5
An
introduction to historical novels, comics, movies, memoirs and autobiographies
as forms of historical representation in the contemporary U.S. Exploration of
the vision of American history that each work presents and the truth-claims
made for that particular vision. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of two courses in lower-division GE Area D and completion of Area A;
junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
324 The
Historical Novel in the
An
introduction to the historical novel as it has developed in the United States
since the 1960s. Exploration of how historical novels typically represent the
past and the ways in which they change our notion of what counts as “history.” 4 lectures. Prerequisite: GE D1 and any other lower-division
Area D course. History majors will not receive GE Area
D5 credit. Change effective Winter 2007.
HIST 332 African-American
History to 1865 (4)
History of African Americans from the colonial period
to the Civil War, roughly 1619-1865.
The slave trade, slavery in the colonies, plantation slavery,
the Black West, and free Black culture and institutions. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: HIST 206 or
HIST 207; junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
333 African-American
History from 1865 (4) USCP
History of African-Americans from the Civil War to the
present. Reconstruction, racial
segregation, the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Migration, the Civil Rights
Movement, Black Feminism and Black Power. 3 lectures and
research project. Prerequisite: HIST 206 or HIST 207; junior standing or
consent of instructor.
HIST
336
Historical examination of
HIST
339 History of
Colonial
Survey of Latin American history in the colonial
period from 1492 to the early nineteenth century. Special attention to the indigenous
cultures, the Iberian civilization, and the evolving relationship between them.
3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing.
HIST
340 History of
Modern
Social and political history of
HIST
341 History of
Modern
Political, social, and economic development of Central
American countries in the context of regional history and international
politics during the nineteenth and twentieth Centuries. 3 lectures and research project.
Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
346 Medieval
Medieval
Europe from the fall of Rome to the plague (400-1350 CE), with topics including
the Barbarian Kingdoms, the early Church, Charlemagne, medieval art and Gothic
architecture, Church fathers and Scholasticism, medieval philosophy,
agricultural and commercial revolutions, and the Great Plague. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
347 Renaissance
and Reformation
Europe
from 1348 to 1620 CE, with topics including the urban milieu, Renaissance
philosophy and artistic expression, the new prince, the educational revolution,
the Renaissance Church, Martin Luther, Jean Calvin, and the monumental
economic, social, and political changes of the sixteenth century. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
348 Religious
Wars and Absolutism (4)
HIST
349 The Age of
Revolution and Napoleon (4)
HIST
351
Reaction to the French Revolution. Industrialization. Liberal socialist and nationalist revolts against the conservative
order of 1815. 3 lectures and research project.
Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
352
Maturation of industrialization, socialism and
nationalism. Imperialist
competition of nation states for world hegemony. Explosion
of the First World War. 3 lectures and research
project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
353
Democracy in crisis and the fascist alternatives. Second World War and the recovery
of Europe in a bipolar world to the fall of the Berlin Wall, German
reunification and the disintegration of
HIST
354 History of Network Technology (4) GE
Area F
History of computer network technology from the Cold
War to the present. Origins of the Internet, development of TCP/IP, growth of network
democracy, encryption, race and gender in cyberspace, Usenet and hypertext.
4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area B and
junior standing.
HIST
358 Cloning (4)
GE Area F
An integrative and multidisciplinary approach to the
study of cloning, to better understand its history, scientific techniques, and
their applications. The ethical,
social, legal and other issues raised by cloning will also be discussed. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area B and junior
standing.
HIST
359 Living in a
Material World (4) GE Area F
(Also listed as MATE 359)
Evolution of materials (ceramics, metals, polymers,
composites, semiconductors) in the context of history. Traces the link between historical
and technological developments enabled by materials from the Stone Age to the
Electronic Age. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area B and junior standing.
HIST
381 Precolonial African History (4)
Survey of African history from earliest times. Ancient African civilizations,
Moslem penetration, the rise of indigenous kingdoms and the continuous impact
of Atlantic slave trade. 3 lectures and research
project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
382 Modern
African History (4)
Survey of African in the 19th and 20th centuries
including European colonialism, African resistance, the rise of African nationalism
and problems since independence. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
383 History of
American Thought (4)
Thought
and culture in
HIST
385 Topics in
In-depth
analysis of selected political, economic, and social issues involved in the
development of
HIST
387 History of
History of American foreign policy from 1900 to the
present. Emergence of the United
States as a world power early in the century, the retreat following the Great
War, Franklin Roosevelt’s diplomacy leading to and through the Second World
War, atomic diplomacy and the Cold War, four decades of Containment and the
search for a new post-Cold War strategy. 3 lectures and
research project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of
instructor.
HIST
390 American
Presidency (4)
Examination of the American presidency with emphasis
on its role in American society since the beginning of the twentieth century. From the era of congressional
government through the Imperial Presidency of the post-World War II period, and
beyond, using presidential biography as a historical source. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
400 Special
Problems for Advanced Undergraduates (1–2)
Individual investigation, research, studies, or
surveys of selected problems.
Total credit limited to 4 units, with a maximum of 2 units per quarter.
Prerequisite: Consent of department chair.
HIST
401 Early
Age of exploration. European powers in eastern
HIST
402 American
Revolution and the New Nation (4)
Background to the imperial dispute, events leading to
the Revolution, Articles of Confederation, Constitution, impact on the national
economy, women, African-Americans, Loyalists, Native Americans. Class Schedule
will list topic selected. 3 lectures and research project.
Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
404 The Era of
Civil War and Reconstruction (4)
Exploration of the different patterns of life in the
HIST
408 The Age of
Principle forces affecting the nation’s political,
social and economic life during the Age of Franklin Roosevelt. Included are the politics of the New Deal, government
regulation of the economy and response to the Depression, the rise of the
modern presidency, racial and ethnic conflict, the politics of class and
gender, the home front at war and post-war tension. 3
lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent
of instructor.
HIST
409 Vietnam War
at Home and Abroad (4)
Interaction of revolutionary Vietnamese nationalism
with
HIST
410 Recent
Political, social and economic forces that have shaped
American life since 1950. Subjects
included are the Red Scare, suburbanization, the civil rights movement, the
Great Society, the politics and culture of protest, recasting the welfare
state, and de-industrialization. Emphasis on racial, ethnic and gender issues
in the collapse of the American Consensus. 3 lectures and
research project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of
instructor.
HIST
414 The Fall of
Imperial
History of
HIST
416 Modern
HIST
417 Modern
Chinese
history in the twentieth century: the fall of the Qing Dynasty and founding of
Republic of China in 1912, problems of imperialism and modernity, Chinese
Communist Party and People's Republic of China since 1949. 3
lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent
of instructor.
HIST
418 Chinese
Film and History (4)
Examination
of 20th century Chinese history through the use of Chinese feature
films. Films (with English subtitles) serve as main texts for understanding the
tremendous changes in modern Chinese history, and the evolving relationships
between film and Chinese society. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
424 Organizing
and Teaching History (4)
Organization,
selection, presentation, application, and interpretation of subject matter in
history in secondary schools. 4 seminars.
Prerequisite: Admission to teacher education program or valid teaching
credential.
HIST
426 Imperial
Political, social, intellectual and economic roots of
HIST
427 Soviet
Transformation of
HIST
431
History
of South Africa prior to white rule including the African societies populating
the area, their history prior to European contact, the nature of early white
settlement, and the impact of mineral discoveries in the 19th
century. 3 lectures and research project.
Prerequisite: One of the following: HIST 315, HIST 381, HIST 382, or consent of
instructor.
HIST
432 Twentieth
Century
History
of South Africa in the 20th century focusing on the rise and fall of
the apartheid state and including Afrikaner nationalism, apartheid legislation,
industrial development, and the growth of effective African resistance leading
to full democracy. 3 lectures and research project.
Prerequisite: One of the following: HIST 315, HIST 381, HIST 382, HIST 431 or
consent of instructor.
HIST
434 American
Women's History to 1870 (4) (Also listed as WS 434)
Female
ideology and experience from the colonial period through the American Civil
War. Use of a variety of sources, including women’s own
writing, in order to understand the history of women as it both reflects and
shapes American culture and society. 3 lectures and
research project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of
instructor.
HIST
435 American
Women's History from 1870 (4)
(Also listed as WS 435) USCP
The female past in the modern period of
HIST
437 Nazi
Background of German Romantic Nationalism; national
unification and defeat in World War I; the failure of Weimar Democracy and
political radicalization; the Nazi political, economic, and social revolution
1933-1939. 3
lectures and 1 activity. Prerequisite: Junior standing.
HIST
440 Topics and
Issues in the History of the
Selected topics and issues in
HIST
441 Topics and
Issues in European History (4)
Selected topics and issues in European history. Descriptive subtitles assigned to each course. Class Schedule will list topic selected.
May be repeated to 8 units. 3
lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent
of instructor.
HIST
442 Topics and
Issues in Latin American History (4)
Selected topics and issues in Latin American history. Descriptive subtitles will be assigned to each
course. Class Schedule will list
topic selected. May be repeated to 8 units. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
443 Topics and
Issues in Asian History (4)
Selected topics and issues in Asian history. Descriptive subtitles will be assigned to each
course. Class Schedule will list
topic selected. May be repeated to 8 units. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
444 Topics and
Issues in African History (4)
Selected topics and issues in African history. Descriptive subtitles will be assigned to each
course. Class Schedule will list
topic selected. May be repeated to 8 units. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
445 Topics and
Issues in Comparative History (4)
Selected topics and issues in comparative history. Descriptive subtitles will be assigned to each
course. Class Schedule will list topic
selected. May be repeated to 8 units. 3 lectures and research project. Prerequisite: Junior
standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
450 History
Internship (6–12) (CR/NC)
Supervised
work experience using skills of the discipline of history in a public agency
ranging from 18 to 36 hours per week. Interns work directly under the
supervision of an employee of the agency and are subject to the professional
responsibilities typical of the state. Credit/No Credit grading only.
Prerequisite: Junior standing. Completion of HIST 303 with
grade of B or better and consent of internship coordinator.
HIST
460 Senior
Project I (2)
Completion of paper or creative project under faculty
supervision. Must be historical in
nature, investigate a question of significance, include an
historiographical analysis, and make an argument
based on primary and secondary sources. Take HIST 461 during a subsequent
quarter. Prerequisite: HIST 303; HIST 304; senior standing or consent of
instructor; and History major.
HIST
461 Senior Project
II (2)
Completion of paper or creative project begun in HIST
460 under faculty supervision.
Prerequisite: HIST 303, HIST 304; HIST 460; senior standing or consent of
instructor; and History major.
HIST
468 Internship
in State and National Park History (3) (3)
Work
experience program in interpreting state and national park history. Weekly
three-hour seminar and regularly scheduled work experience training at
HIST
470 Selected
Advanced Topics (1–4)
Directed group study of selected topics for advanced
students. Open to undergraduate
and graduate students. Class Schedule
will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 8 units. 1 to 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Junior standing or consent of instructor.
HIST
485 Cooperative
Education Experience (6) (CR/NC)
Part-time
work experience in business, industry, government, and other areas of student
career interest. Positions are paid and usually require relocation and
registration in course for two consecutive quarters. Formal report and
evaluation by work supervisor required. Total credit limited to 16 units. Credit/No
Credit grading only. Prerequisite: Sophomore standing and consent of
instructor.
HIST
495 Cooperative
Education Experience (12) (CR/NC)
Full-time
work experience in business, industry, government, and other areas of student
career interest. Positions are paid and usually require relocation and
registration in course for two consecutive quarters. Formal report and
evaluation by work supervisor required. Total credit limited to 16 units.
Credit/No Credit grading only. Prerequisite: Sophomore standing and consent of
instructor.
HIST
504 Graduate
Study in History (4)
Weekly
reading and discussion course on practical methods and theoretical approaches
to the study and writing of history. 4 seminars.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in History and consent of instructor.
HIST
505 Seminar in
Intensive study of selected topics in HIST 504 or consent of instructor. Graduate standing in History and consent of instructor. Change effective Winter
2007.
HIST 506 Seminar in Modern
European History (4)
Intensive study of selected topics in modern European
history. Class Schedule will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 12
units. 4 seminars Prerequisite: Graduate standing in History or consent of
instructor.
HIST
507 Seminar in
East Asian History (4)
Intensive study of selected topics in East Asian
history. Class Schedule will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 12
units. 4 seminars. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in History
and consent of instructor.
HIST
508 Seminar in
Latin American History (4)
Intensive study of selected topics in Latin American
history. Class Schedule will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 12
units. 4 seminars. Prerequisite: HIST 505 or consent
of instructor.
HIST
509 Seminar in African History (4)
Intensive study of selected topics in African history. Class Schedule
will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 12 units. 4
seminars. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in History or consent of
instructor.
HIST
512 Supervised
Directed supervision of reading for MA comprehensive
exams. Regular
consultation between advisor and student. Total credit limited to 4
units. 2 seminars. Prerequisite: HIST 504 and 12 units
of graduate study.
HIST
599 Thesis (3)
Directed supervision of MA thesis. Regular consultation between
advisor and student. Course to be taken three times over three separate
quarters; total credit limited to 9 units.