300

09-320 United States Colonial and National History

Students explore what is now the United States from pre-Columbian times until the presidency of Thomas Jefferson, with a focus on the Spanish, French and English colonial experience, the rise of slavery, Native American-European American relations and the break with England.

3

09-322 U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction

This course provides a study of the origins, course, and first generation effects of the American Civil War.

3

09-323 The Emergence of Modern America, 1877-1941

This study of the United States from 1877 to 1941 focuses on the ways that industrialization reshaped American society and the ways that labor, Populist, Progressive, and New Deal reformers responded to those changes. The American Empire, the rise of segregation and the cultural impact of World War I are also explored.

3

09-325 United States Since 1941

Students examine World War II and contemporary U.S. social, economic and political history, with focus on the Cold War and its end, the Civil Rights movement, and current issues.

3

09-326 U. S. Urban History

This course traces the evolution of places, peoples, and systems identified with urban America. Analysis considers cities from the perspectives of geography, demography, economics, politics, and culture. Special attention is given to New York City and Chicago.

3

09-329 Public History

This course investigates the non-academic applications of history with particular emphases on oral history, archival methods, museum studies, and preservation. This course provides exposure to an array of applications of historical study.

3

09-331 A History of the U.S. Military

A study of the development of U.S. military policy and its execution, significant military actions and strategies, and their impact on America's foreign and domestic life is provided. There are also opportunities for several field opportunities.

3

09-333 The American Presidency

Students learn about the people who have held the office, constitutional and national issues, and the institution of the presidency from Washington to the present.

3

09-334 African-American History I

This course provides a social, cultural and intellectual study of the African-American experience from colonial slavery through the Civil War.

3

09-335 African-American History II

A social, cultural, and intellectual study of the African American experience, from the Civil War to the present.

3

09-336 Native American History

This study of the indigenous peoples of North America focuses on what is now the United States and the period from 1750 to 1900.

3

09-337 Immigration, Ethnicity, and Race in American History

This course begins with the colonial period and explores the racial, ethnic, and religious diversity of the American colonies, and the impact of the American Revolution on the new country's self-definition.  It will then continue into the 19th and 20th centuries and examine how immigration continued to transform American political, economic, and social systems and identity.

3

09-338 U.S. Women's History

This course presents an overview of the history of American women with particular attention to the issue of cultural diversity from the perspectives of the construction of gender roles, interactions of men and women within culturally prescribed boundaries, and challenges to patriarchal structures. The student will explore the relationships among gender, class, and ethnic and racial diversity. This course is one of the "foundational courses" for the Women's Studies Minor.

3

09-342 History of Science

This course examines the development of the scientific attitude and the principles of scientific inquiry in the context of the history of ideas. Students trace science back to its Greek roots, examine Islamic and Chinese science and examine the particular nature of the western scientific tradition.

3

09-344 History of Western Ideas

Why do we believe what we believe? Why do we think the way we do? What are the categories of our beliefs? How did we derive these categories? Starting with the Ancient Greeks and concluding with Post-Modernism, this course examines the intellectual history of Western thought.

3

09-350 History of the British Empire

This course traces the development of the British Empire from the 16th century until the present exploring the theme of modernization, globalization, and imperial dominance.
3

09-351 Modern China

This course examines the Chinese people's struggle in the 19th and 20th centuries to reclaim their heritage by means of a revolution that is still not complete.

3

09-352 Modern Japan

This course is a study of the Japanese response to Western intrusion and of Japan's world power status.

3

09-353 The Middle East in History

This course focuses on the interrelated history of the peoples of the Near East, with an introduction to ancient history and the rise of Islam, but with a concentration on modern times.

3

09-354 The Mediterranean World Since 1500

For the past five centuries, conflict in the Mediterranean has helped define the world's history. The primary focus of this course is the epic clash between Christian and Islamic forces starting in the 1500s. Subsequent events are considered through the same prism.

3

09-355 History of the Modern Middle East

This course will survey the struggle of Muslim powers in the Middle East as they encounter the technically advanced and aggressive West.  As many states attempt to modernize, there emerges the struggle to adopt new ideas into the context of Islam.  The way in which this process occurs and the new identities and institutions that result are the essence of the course.

3

09-356 The Vietnam War

A broad survey of the circumstances and events that brought the United States into the Vietnam War will be presented. Discussions will deal with the various interpretations of the major issues involved in the war and its aftermath.

3

09-367 Ancient World to 476 AD

This course provides an overview of the development of the ancient civilizations of China, India, Egypt, Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean world, with special emphasis on the Greco-Roman world.

3

09-368 Medieval Europe (476-1500)

Students explore the formation and development of institutions, material culture and mentalities from Germanic times through the Quattrocento.

3

09-369 Early Modern Europe (1500-1815)

A study of kingdoms, social orders, monarchs and rebels is provided from the Renaissance and the Protestant Reformation through the Napoleonic era.

3

09-372 Modern Europe (1815-Present)

This course offers a study of politics and society with respect to the ways in which Europeans influence the world in economics and ideas.

3

09-380 History of Ireland

The history of this small island off the coast of Britain is a paradigm of western and world history. Britain's first colony, Ireland's colonization set the pattern by which Great Britain would colonize the world. Ireland's history embodies the conflict between pre-modern societies and modernization. This course begins in the early Celtic period, treats of the bitter ideological conflicts and bloody battles of the Reformation, presents for discussion the darkest days of the Great Hunger and the effects of social Darwinist ideology on Irish identity, and finishes with an assessment of contemporary Ireland.

3

09-381 History of England and Great Britain after 1450

Students examine England and Great Britain as they emerged from civil wars, the Protestant Reformation and the absolute control of government by the monarch, causing it to rise as an economic, democratic and imperial power, as well as the monarch's subsequent fall to its present condition.

3

09-382 Germany: Ancient Times to the Present

Beginning with the Roman view of Germans, this course traces the development of German culture and polity by examining German lives and ideas.

3

09-383 Germany: From Bismarck to Hitler

This course examines the creation of a unified Germany by Otto von Bismarck, the development of that nation through both world wars, and its dismemberment following Hitler's Third Reich.

3

09-384 France and Spain

Students explore two contrasting national patterns and cultural traditions.

3

09-385 Russia: Ancient Times to the Present

Starting with Kiev, the state of Muscovy and the era of Tsar Peter the Great, this course then concentrates on Russian history in the 19th and 20th centuries.

3

09-386 Eastern Europe: From the Baltic to the Black Sea

This course focuses on the history of the Baltic States, Poland, the Austrian Empire, Hungary, the Czechs and Slovaks, the Bulgarians and Rumanians and their struggle for statehood in both early and modern times.

3

09-387 History of Modern Revolutions: 1789 to the Present

The students learn about the great revolutions and the political ideologies of the modern period of which they are a part - liberalism, socialism, Marxism and Maoism - as well as conservative fundamentalism and anti-colonialism.

3

09-390 Topics in History

This series of courses is organized by topic, event, or era. Examples include History of Iran, History of Mexico, and History of American Sport.

3

09-397 Workshop in History

Workshops are designed to enhance the study of History from various perspectives. Topics will vary. Credit may vary.

1-3

09-398 Internship for History Majors

This internship provides an opportunity for supervised, history-related, work experience in non-academic settings.

1-3

09-399 Independent Study

Students undertake intensive study in an area jointly chosen by the student and a history faculty member and approved by the chairperson.

3

Prerequisites

To qualify for an Independent Study, a student must have successfully completed 60 credit hours, at least 12 of which were earned at Lewis University, and have earned at Lewis University a minimum 3.0 cumulative GPA.