Department of History
Professors Emeriti:Dorothea R. French, Steven M. Gelber, George F. Giacomini Jr., Arthur F. Liebscher, S.J., Jo B. Margadant, Peter O’M. Pierson, Sita Anantha Raman, Robert M. Senkewicz, David E. Skinner
Professors:Naomi J. Andrews, Barbara A. Molony (Walter E. Schmidt, S.J., Professor), Amy E. Randall, Nancy C. Unger
Associate Professors:Paul P. Mariani, S.J. (Edmund Campion, S.J., Professor), Matthew L. Newsom Kerr (Department Chair), Harry N.K. Odamtten, Thomas P. Turley
Assistant Professors:Mateo J. Carrillo, Jeannette Estruth, Sonia C. Gomez
Lecturers:Gregory Wigmore, Meg Eppel Gudgeirsson
Courtesy Appointments:Anthony Q. Hazard Jr. (Professor of Ethnic Studies)
The major program in history provides students with an understanding of the human experience through the analysis of evidence derived from both the recent and more distant past. As history majors, students learn essential skills, understand the breadth and similarities of the human experience, and acquire specific geographical and thematic knowledge. A degree in history provides excellent preparation for careers in education, journalism, media, government, law, business, and international affairs—all of which are careers that utilize the history major’s expertise in discovering, organizing, and analyzing the forces that shape the contemporary world.
Requirements for the Major
In addition to fulfilling university Core Curriculum requirements for the bachelor of arts degree, students majoring in history will complete 13 history courses distributed in the following manner:
- Four lower-division courses, which may include HIST 11A and 12A
- Nine upper-division courses, encompassing:
- HIST 100
- HIST 101S
- Six other upper-division courses.
- One seminar course taken after the student has completed both HIST 101S and 115 quarter units
- From among the student’s lower- and upper-division courses (excluding HIST 100 and 101S), at least one course from four of the following six fields: Global History, the United States and Canada, Latin America, Europe, East/South Asia, Africa/West Asia
- An optional senior project (HIST 197), which is essential to be eligible for Honors in History, may be taken as one of the required upper-division courses
Honors in History
History majors may be selected for graduation with Honors in History provided they have a grade point average of 3.5 or higher in their history courses and complete a senior project (HIST 197) in a manner approved by the faculty honors committee.
Students may also qualify for Phi Alpha Theta, the international honor society in history, Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Sigma Nu, and other academic honor societies, as well as the honors at graduation. For more details, see Chapters 8 and 10.
Directed Reading/Research
Students can complete directed reading/research (HIST 199) in source materials and secondary works dealing with selected historical problems in world and comparative history. Prerequisite: Permission of department chair and instructor.
Hybrid Courses
Hybrid courses are offered throughout the History Department. In ourhybrid courses, students are offered the opportunity to study subject matter as lower-division studentswhile learning alongside upper-division students. Lower-division hybrid courses are worth 4 units. Upper-division hybrid courses are worth 5 units. Upper-division hybrid courses require students to do more in depth subject matter exploration through additional assignments and instructor prompts.
Requirements for the Minor
Students must fulfill the following requirements for a minor in history:
- Seven history department courses, at least four of which must be upper-division
Lower-Division Courses: Cultures & Ideas
11A. and 12A. Cultures & Ideas I and II
A two-course sequence focusing on a major theme in human experience and culture over a significant period of time. Courses emphasize either broad global interconnections or the construction of Western culture in its global context. Courses may address such topics as civilization and the city; explorations, migrations, and nations; and empires and rights. Successful completion of C&I I (HIST 11A) is a prerequisite for C&I II (HIST 12A). (4 units each quarter)
Required Upper-Division Courses
100. Historical Interpretation
An investigation of the diverse methods historians use to examine the past. Required of all majors. For history majors or with permission of the instructor. (5 units)
101S. Historical Writing
Researching and writing history papers. Required of all majors. For history majors and minors; majors will be given priority. Recommended to be taken in the sophomore or junior year. (5 units)
Lower-Division Course: Global History
21. Human Rights and Humanitarianism
In this class, we will examine the histories and ideologies of human rights and humanitarianism; consider their underlying assumptions and power dynamics; and investigate the ways these histories relate to current legal, political, and humanitarian organizations and movements. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division is listed as HIST 121(4 units)
24. History of Sexually Transmitted Diseases
This course will survey the impact of sexually transmitted infections in a variety of national contexts, from the early modern period to recent times. The focus is mainly upon the history of classic venereal diseases such as syphilis and gonorrhea as well as more recently HIV/AIDS. How have medical debates about sexual contagion both influenced and been influenced by cultural conventions of blame, stigma, and moral judgment? Do representations of STDs provide a window into how a society organizes gendered expectations and constructs an image of deviant sexuality? How have responses to the problem of STDs changed over time? Can we examine these changes to better understand broader cultural adjustments to issues as diverse as prostitution and promiscuity, medical treatment and prophylaxis, and the politics of feminism, gay rights, and patients rights. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division is listed as HIST 124. (4 units)
43. The Haitian Revolution in World History
Between 1789 and 1804, the French Caribbean colony of Saint-Domingue was the site of the most profound and violent realization of the revolutionary spirit sweeping the Atlantic in the “age of democratic revolutions.” This era is usually associated with the French and American revolutions, both key events in the history of democracy and the rhetorical development of human rights as an agenda in the West. However, both stopped short of the most radical realization of the promises of the age of Enlightenment, particularly with regard to slavery and the racial discrimination that went along with it. The slave revolt on Saint-Domingue and the Haitian revolution, by contrast, witnessed the fullest realization of these promises in the form of the only successful slave revolt in human history. The events on Hispaniola took place at the nexus of world historical forces of globalization through commerce, cross-cultural encounter, racial mixing, and the dispersal of radical Enlightenment ideas and their realization in the form of revolution. As a result of the powerful currents of human history that flowed through the region, the Haitian revolution has proved to be an enduring source of both fear and creativity in the history of race relations, slavery, and abolition, and the forging of a new world identity for the descendants of the once enslaved populations of the island. This course will examine the history of the revolutionary years in Haiti, its near erasure from Western historical memory, and the literary and historical recovery of its importance in the 20th and 21st centuries. (4 units)
57. Black Migration in the World
This course examines the dynamic and sustained relationship between Africa and the African Diaspora through the multiple lenses of African Diaspora of the Indian Ocean, U.S. Blacks, West Indian, Afro-Brazilian, Afro-European, and Afro-Cuban missions, travel, migration and repatriation to various locations in Africa. The course entails a consideration of the religious exchanges, ethnic/racial transformations, travel tropes, and discourses on Pan-African identity that characterized the Back to Africa Movement in various locations of the Atlantic World. It will introduce students to a historiography of Black Intellectuals, individuals, and groups who look to Africa as not a homeland, but as a site of Christian evangelization, trade, pursuit of freedom and social justice. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division is listed as HIST 157. Also cross-listed with ETHN 138. (4 Units)
68. Global 1968
History is not only an account of what happened, but also why things change. This class will focus on the political, cultural and social events of 1968, both within and without the United States, and the legacies and ramifications for twenty-first century political culture. A better comprehension of where we are at present comes from an understanding of the past. In addition to gaining some knowledge of history, the aim of this course is to help students improve their interpretive analyses and critical thinking skills through reading, writing, and class discussions. (4 units)
79. Technology: Steam to Cyborgs
This course provides an overview of important technological advances since the Industrial Revolution and takes a close look at a few specific technological touchstones from about 1750 to 1939. The rise of machines during this period profoundly influenced and challenged what it means to be human. A key goal is to question and explore the social and cultural context of emerging technologies and use the past as a guide for preparing ourselves in our own time of rapid change. Topics include the factory system, steam engines, photography, sound recording, electricity, industrial automation and design, and robotics.This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as HIST 179. (4 units)
93. Cold War
This course concentrates on the origins and consequences of the Cold War from a global perspective. The course covers the period from 1945 until 1991, considering economic, political, and social implications of the ideological conflict of communism versus capitalism. The course explores the origins of the conflict, the formation of opposing blocs, the interplay between periods of tension and détente, the engagement with contemporary anti-colonialism movements, and the relationship between the center of the conflict in the North Atlantic/European arena and its global periphery, the demise of the Soviet Union, and the enduring legacies of the Cold War. (4 units)
Upper-Division Courses: Global History
102S. Genocide and Gender in the 20th Century
This course will explore the mass murder of specific populations in the 20th century. One of the main topics we will examine is how the social construction of genderidentities and norms informed the unfolding of genocide. How did it contribute to victims' experiences of, and responses to, genocidal violence? How did it influence perpetrators' genocidal strategies and processes? An examination of how gender intersected with ethnicity, nationality, race, religion, social class, and sexuality in different historical and cultural contexts will deepen our understanding of genocide. Cross-listed with WGST 108.(5 units)
104. World History Until 1492
An overview of the great civilizations of the world prior to the Columbian Exchange, focusing on the geographical, cultural, economic, and political features of the complex societies in East Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Europe, the Americas, and Oceania. Survey of the foundations of each region. Patterns of connection and interdependence in world history. (5 units)
116. Sex and Gender in the Age of High Imperialism
An examination of the role of sexuality and gender in the global expansion of European hegemony in the 19th and 20th centuries. Explores these themes through literature, historical scholarship, and film. Cross-listed withWGST 124. (5 units)
121. Human Rights and Humanitarianism
The dignity of every human being and their inherent right to autonomy and freedom from undue suffering are much discussed in our interconnected world. Most people usually consider the goal of achieving universal human rights to be a timeless and generous ambition. In fact, however, contemporary articulations of human rights, as well as humanitarian efforts aimed at ameliorating suffering often in far distant locales have a particular history, rooted in both Enlightenment ideals of individual liberty and the modern experience of European imperialism. In this class we will examine the history and ideology of human rights and humanitarianism, as well as considering, through a series of historical and contemporary case studies, the underlying assumptions and power dynamics of these transnational ideals. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Lower- division listed as HIST 21.(5 units)
123. History of Plagues, Epidemics, and Infections
An exploration of scientific, social, cultural, political, and ethical contexts in the history of infectious diseases and epidemics. Particular attention is given to how the social framing of epidemiological thought has shaped responses by societies, how public health is an intrinsically political matter, and how we can envision the place played by social justice perspectives in fashioning global public health. (5 units)
124. History of Sexually Transmitted Diseases
This course will survey the impact of sexually transmitted infections in a variety of national contexts, from the early modern period to recent times. The focus is mainly upon the history of classic venereal diseases such as syphilis and gonorrhea as well as more recently HIV/AIDS. How have medical debates about sexual contagion both influenced and been influenced by cultural conventions of blame, stigma, and moral judgment? Do representations of STDs provide a window into how a society organizes gendered expectations and constructs an image of deviant sexuality? How have responses to the problem of STDs changed over time? Can we examine these changes to better understand broader cultural adjustments to issues as diverse as prostitution and promiscuity, medical treatment and prophylaxis, and the politics of feminism, gay rights, and patients rights? This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Lower-division listed as HIST 24.Cross-listed with WGST 140A. (5 units)
129.Reproductive Justice in Global Perspective
“Reproductive Justice” (RJ) was invented in 1994 by Black American feminists as a scholarly and organizing concept to analyze the intersection of reproductive rights and social justice. The study of RJ in historical and contemporary contexts now applies across borders and cultures, at the intersections—many of them transnational—of gender and sexuality, medicine, freedom and enslavement, ethnicities, eugenics and involuntary sterilization, the politics of birth control and abortion, the ownership of birthing bodies, and the global commercialization of child-rearing. This course will examine these global and intersectional issues from theoretical, empirical, and historical perspectives. Cross-listed with WGST 127 & ETHN 176. (5 units)
138S. Gender and Rights in theModern Era
This seminar examines gender and rights in the contexts of citizenship, marriage and divorce, reproduction, health, the workplace, the body, and other categories of analysis with cases taken from modern Asia, Europe, the Americas, Africa, and Oceania. Cross-listed with WGST 127. (5 Units)
143. The Haitian Revolution in World History
Between 1789 and 1804, the French Caribbean colony of Saint-Domingue was the site of the most profound and violent realization of the revolutionary spirit sweeping the Atlantic in the “age of democratic revolutions.” This era is usually associated with the French and American revolutions, both key events in the history of democracy and the rhetorical development of human rights as an agenda in the West. However, both stopped short of the most radical realization of the promises of the age of Enlightenment, particularly with regard to slavery and the racial discrimination that went along with it. The slave revolt on Saint-Domingue and the Haitian revolution, by contrast, witnessed the fullest realization of these promises in the form of the only successful slave revolt in human history. The events on Hispaniola took place at the nexus of world historical forces of globalization through commerce, cross-cultural encounter, racial mixing, and the dispersal of radical Enlightenment ideas and their realization in the form of revolution. As a result of the powerful currents of human history that flowed through the region, the Haitian revolution has proved to be an enduring source of both fear and creativity in the history of race relations, slavery, and abolition, and the forging of a new world identity for the descendants of the once enslaved populations of the island. This course will examine the history of the revolutionary years in Haiti, its near erasure from Western historical memory, and the literary and historical recovery of its importance in the 20th and 21st centuries. (5 units)
145. Islam in the Modern World
Islam is an understudied and thus poorly understood force in world affairs. As a result, many myths and fears have developed about its ideas, institutions, and activities. This course analyzes the diversity and complexity of Muslim cultures and societies in global affairs during the past two centuries. Special attention is paid to Muslims in Europe and the United States.(5 units)
153. Civil Rights and Anti-Colonial Movements
This course examines the connections between two historical developments often treated separately: the US civil rights struggle and African anti-colonial movements. By placing these two movements in a transnational framework, the course explores the global challenge to the racialized world order of the 19th and early 20th century. How did the civil rights struggle gain momentum in the aftermath of World War II? What was the longer history and role of "Black Nationalism" and Pan-Africanism in the transnational struggle? What were the connections between the civil rights movement and contemporary independence movements in Africa and Asia? One of the central goals of the course is to show how we can expand our understanding of US history by reaching beyond the interaction between the US government and other nation states to examine political and cultural change. Cross-listed with ETHN 149.(5 units)
157. Black Migration in the World
This course examines the dynamic and sustained relationship between Africa and the African Diaspora through the multiple lenses of African Diaspora of the Indian Ocean, U.S. Blacks, West Indian, Afro-Brazilian, Afro-European, and Afro-Cuban missions, travel, migration and repatriation to various locations in Africa. The course entails a consideration of the religious exchanges, ethnic/racial transformations, travel tropes, and discourses on Pan-African identity that characterized the Back to Africa Movement in various locations of the Atlantic World. It will introduce students to a historiography of Black Intellectuals, individuals, and groups who look to Africa as not a homeland, but as a site of Christian evangelization, trade, pursuit of freedom and social justice. Cross-listed with ETHN 138 and HIST 57. (5 Units)
179. Technology: Steam to Cyborgs
This course provides an overview of important technological advances since the Industrial Revolution and takes a close look at a few specific technological touchstones from about 1750 to 1939. The rise of machines during this period profoundly influenced and challenged what it means to be human. A key goal is to question and explore the social and cultural context of emerging technologies and use the past as a guide for preparing ourselves in our own time of rapid change. Topics include the factory system, steam engines, photography, sound recording, electricity, industrial automation and design, and robotics.This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Lower-division listed as HIST 79.(5 units)
Lower-Division Courses: United States History
27. Digital and Public History
This course is an introduction to the intersection of digital history and public history. The course will explore digital literacy, with a focus on public history. Students will discuss how public history differs from academic history and how public history presents its material. Students will consider how digital history provides a unique outlet for public history. Students will explore how history is preserved online both in primary and secondary sources. Students will learn about the continuity and sustainability of digital history, including a lifelong commitment to both preservation and creation of history. Students will also explore how historians access sources created digitally, which has rapidly changed in just a few decades meaning some sources are inaccessible without old technology. In this course, students will interact and use a variety of digital tools and resources. Students apply their mastery of the technologies in the culmination of a digital public history exhibition. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as History 127. (4 units)
55. African American Pursuit of Freedom
This course covers various strategies African Americans used to attain freedom. These include slave rebellions, moral suasion for the Abolitionist movement, pamphleteering and political tracts by Black intellectuals and their impact on contemporaneous political discourse. Conversely, it engages with important judicial, executive, and legislative decisions that affected the African American struggle for freedom, equality, and manhood/womanhood in the 19th century. It will therefore give particular attention to film and written documentaries on rebellions like the Nat Turner rebellion, cases such as the Missouri Compromise (1820), and laws like The Fugitive Slave Law (1850). It will also examine cases like Dred and Harriet Scott (1857), and the proclamations like the Emancipation Proclamation/13th amendment (1863-1865). Cross-listed with ETHN 137. (4 units)
60.Race & Immigration in the U.S.
Since its founding immigration has been one of the most celebrated characteristics of the United States, but it is also one of the most contested. This course will look at the history of immigration to the territory that makes up the United States from the late 18th century to the present day. Students will also examine immigration policies and practices, integration and exclusion, race and citizenship, and anti-immigrant movements. We will examine the forces driving immigration and the experiences of individuals and communities, as well as the reception of immigrants based on social categories like race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, socioeconomic status, and religion. As such, we will cover salient issues in immigration discourse over the last century including xenophobia, exclusion laws, deportation policy, and border policing - all of which are pertinent to immigration policy today. This class will ground students in the history of immigration in the United States, but will also provide opportunities to reflect on current debates. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as HIST 160. (4 units)
65. United States Political History: Democracy and Elections
An exploration of U.S. politics from the creation of the American republic to the present. Themes studied will include the rise and demise of political party systems, clashes between rival interest groups, and the evolving relationship between Americans and their government. The course will focus on several critical turning points in U.S. history when events, individuals, and various social and cultural factors helped shape the nation’s political development. (4units)
70. The American Revolution
Intensive study of the origins, progress, and culmination of the American Revolution to 1800. Emphasis is on the interplay between constitutional, social, economic and racial issues during the formative era of the United States. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Also listed as HIST 170. (4 units)
72. The Civil War Era
A study of the major aspects of the antebellum period, the Civil War, and the problems of Reconstruction. Emphasis is on the development of the slave system and resistance to it on the part of African Americans and other abolitionists, and the role of race and gender in the conduct of the war and in the development of Reconstruction. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as History 172. (4 units)
75. Nativesand Newcomers: Early North America
This course explores the history of North America from the eve of European colonization through the mid-18th century. It focuses on key social, economic, and political developments during the period and on cross-cultural interactions between (and among) Euro-American colonists, Native peoples, and peoples of African descent. While the course examines the settler colonies that subsequently became the United States, it also emphasizes the development of the rival French and Spanish empires in North America as well as the rise of pan-Native movements aimed at resisting colonial domination. This course strives to investigate North America’s colonial past by considering a wide range of perspectives, reflecting the diversity of the various peoples who shaped its development. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as HIST 175. (4units)
83. North America: Peoples & Lands
This course examines the ways in which human activity has shaped the landscape and built environment from pre-contact North America through the present day. It also investigates the reverse: the ways geography has shaped American and California history.Topics covered include: conflicts between Natives and Euro-Americans over land; the role of racism, immigration, and war in shaping settlement patterns; the rise of cities and suburbs; the emergence of conservation and environmental movements; and the ways in which nature, people, and governments have coped in the wake of disasters, both natural and man-made. We will also consider how an understanding of the past might inform current debates about California's drought and wildfires, the effects of climate change, and the future of American cities.This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as HIST 184.(4 units)
84. United States Women’s History
Examination of the rich history of the changing social, economic, political, and intellectual life of women in the United States. Focuses on issues of gender, race, class, geographic setting, and ethnicity. Primary and secondary sources will be used to examine women’s self-conceptions and self-identifications, as well as gender constructs and prescribed roles. Cross-listed withWGST 57. (4 units)
85. United States Environmental History
Study of American environmental history from the pre-Columbian period to the present. Examines the interactions in history between the physical environment and economics, politics, gender, race, ethnicity, and religions. (4 units)
86. Technology, Labor, Capitalism
Artificial intelligence and the knowledge economy. Computation and Credit. Satellites and social media. Philanthropy and factory flight. “Doing what you love” and digital activism. Climate change and corporate consolidation. This class will explore changes in capitalism, technology, and labor in the twentieth- and twenty-first century United States. We will learn how ideas about work and technology have evolved over time, and how these dynamic ideas and evolving tools have shaped the present day.
96A. Colonization, Revolution, and Civil War: The United States, Origins to 1877
A survey of the history of the United States from European colonization to Reconstruction. Political, economic, social, and intellectual aspects of America’s first 250 years. (4 units)
96B. Counternarratives : The United States, 1877 to Present
A survey of the history of the United States from the end of Reconstruction to 9/11 that focuses on counternarratives to interrogate the development of American political, economic, social, and intellectual life over the last century. (4 units)
Upper-Division Courses: United States History
105. Interracial Intimacy: Race & Sex in Modern America
This course examines the history of interracial intimacies from the late 19th century to the present going beyond the black-and-white binary to examine the making and unmaking of multiracial families, communities, and identities in the United States. Students will study the forces that have brought people of different racial, ethnic, and religious backgrounds together and torn them apart. In the process students will develop a critical understanding of the comparative process of racial formation over time, the role the media, and federal and local governments played in policing intimacy across racial lines. Students will end the quarter exploring the influence multiracial individuals, families, and communities have had on local and mainstream institutions and cultural practices. Cross-listed with ETHN 176 and WGST 147A. (5 units)
114. Race, Class, Gender, and Freedom
This course will be devoted to an exploration of the definitions and expressions of freedom within the United States by a variety of groups through the lenses of race, gender and class. The idea of freedom was present from the time our nation was founded and since then, individuals and groups within American society have claimed authority to define and defend their freedoms. The main themes will be political freedom (including speech, religion, civil rights, etc.), economic freedom, personal/sexual freedom, and exporting freedom. Cross-listed with ETHN 100. (5 units)
119. Gender, Sexuality, & Social Movements in the 20th c. U.S.
Gender and sexuality are oftentimes excluded from the studies of political movements, although both intersect with other core categories of analysis (i.e. race, economic status, and citizenship, etc.) that have shaped and been shaped by a century of social and political movements in the United States This course moves chronologically, exploring major and minor movements, beginning with a discussion of the uses of gender in historical analysis and ending with an exploration of current social movements. In between, we will read primary and secondary sources that illuminate the various, often contradictory, ways that ideas about race, gender, and sexuality have converged to influence major social and political movements that continue to shape our world today. Cross listed with WGST 168 and ETHN 169. (5 units)
127. Digital and Public History
This course is an introduction to the intersection of digital history and public history. The course will explore digital literacy, with a focus on public history. Students will discuss how public history differs from academic history and how public history presents its material. Students will consider how digital history provides a unique outlet for public history. Students will explore how history is preserved online both in primary and secondary sources. Students will learn about the continuity and sustainability of digital history, including a lifelong commitment to both preservation and creation of history. Students will also explore how historians access sources created digitally, which has rapidly changed in just a few decades meaning some sources are inaccessible without old technology. In this course, students will interact and use a variety of digital tools and resources. Students will learn how these technologies have changed, and apply their mastery of the technologies in the culmination of a digital public history exhibition. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as History 27. (5 units)
155. African American Pursuit of Freedom
The course covers various strategies African Americans used to attain freedom. These include slave rebellions, moral suasion for the Abolitionist movement, pamphleteering and political tracts by Black intellectuals and their impact on contemporaneous political discourse. Conversely, it engages with important judicial, executive, and legislative decisions that affected the African American struggle for freedom, equality, and manhood/womanhood in the 19th century. It will therefore give particular attention to film and written documentaries on rebellions like the Nat Turner rebellion, cases such as The Missouri Compromise (1820), and laws like The Fugitive Slave Law (1850), It will also examine cases like Dred and Harriet Scott (1857), and proclamations like the Emancipation Proclamation/13th Amendment (1863–1865).Crosslisted withETHN 137. (5 units)
156. African-American History
The diversity of the African-American experience—freedom and justice, community and identity, ethnicity and class—continuing through the crusade for political and civil rights, and the impact of gender within the black community, and struggle into the present century. (5 units)
158. Turmoil and Reform: United States 1877–1920
This informal lecture/discussion course examines the rich history of the evolving social, economic, political, and intellectual life of Americans from the end of Reconstruction through the peace following World War I. This course traces the dramatic changes that took place as the United States transformed into an urban industrial giant. This course also examines tensions between poverty and wealth, and the nation’s struggles over immigrants, gender, race, and America’s rightful role in global politics. (5 units)
160. Race and Immigration in the United States
Since its founding immigration has been one of the most celebrated characteristics of the United States, but it is also one of the most contested. This course will look at the history of immigration to the territory that makes up the United States from the late 18th century to the present day. We will examine immigration policies and practices, integration and exclusion, race and citizenship, and anti-immigrant movements. Students also examine the forces driving immigration and the experiences of individuals and communities, as well as the reception of immigrants based on social categories like race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, socioeconomic status, and religion. As such, we will cover salient issues in immigration discourse over the last century including xenophobia, exclusion laws, deportation policy, and border policing - all of which are pertinent to immigration policy today. This class will ground students in the history of immigration in the United States, but will also provide opportunities to reflect on current debates. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Lower- division listed as HIST 60 (5units)
165. Parties & Presidents: US Political History
An exploration of U.S. politics from the creation of the American republic to the present. Themes studied will include the rise and demise of political party systems, clashes between rival interest groups, and the evolving relationship between Americans and their government. The course will focus on several critical turning points in U.S. history when events, individuals, and various social and cultural factors helped shape the nation’s political development.(5units)
168. Malcolm and Martin
This course explores the lives, philosophies, and political activism of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.In an effort to complicate the violence/nonviolence paradigm, which has often pitted the two men as political opponents, this course seeks to uncover the long trajectory of the philosophical development and political activism of both men through the end of each of their lives, in 1965 and 1968 respectively. Both figures’ lives and activism are situated within the black freedom movement of the 20th century, which was both transnational and global. As such, this course attempts to locate these two figures within various iterations of black nationalism, civil rights activism, anti-colonialism, and Black Power. Cross-listed withETHN 133. (5 units)
170. The American Revolution
Intensive study of the origins, progress, and culmination of the American Revolution to 1800.Emphasis is on the interplay between constitutional, social, economic, and racial issues during the formative era of the United States. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-divisionlisted as HIST 70. (5 units)
171. The New Nation: U.S. From Hamilton to Jackson
An examination of the social and political history of the United States during the half-century following the American Revolution. Course topics will include: the creation of the American republic; social and economic changes since the colonial period; the rise of political parties; the evolution of slavery, race relations, and white supremacy; early American expansion and foreign relations, including interactions with Native peoples; and the evolving role of government. (5 units)
172. The Civil War Era
A study of the major aspects of the antebellum period, the Civil War, and the problems of Reconstruction. Emphasis is on the development of the slave system and resistance to it on the part of AfricanAmericans and other abolitionists, and the role of race and gender in the conduct of the war and in the development of Reconstruction. (5 units)
172A. American Slavery/Emancipation
An investigation of slavery and the slave trade in North America, focusing especially on the United States and its colonial antecedents. We will consider the ways in which Euro-American colonization and the American and Haitian revolutions influenced ideas about race and slavery. We will also examine challenges to slavery, including various forms of resistance by the enslaved, as well as the anti-slavery and abolitionist movements that undermined the institution and contributed to its demise. The course will emphasize the lived experiences of the enslaved and of freed people in the wake of emancipation, as well as slavery’s lingering role in shaping ideas about race. Finally, we will consider more recent depictions of slavery intended for broader audiences, such as literature and film, in order to discuss the place of slavery in public consciousness and historical memory. (5 units)
173. Flappers to Beatniks: The U.S. from 1920 to 1960
This course will introduce students to the crucial decades of the 1920s to the 1960s. Through readings and discussions we will examine a variety of influential issues and themes, including politics (both domestic and foreign), sexuality, race, ethnicity, religion and gender. The assigned readings have been selected to provide a sampling of the variety of current historical approaches to this crucial period that includes the "Roaring" Twenties, the Great Depression and the New Deal, World War II, the Cold War, and postwar challenges to domestic conformity leading up to 1960. Students will be able to hone their own historical skills through both written and oral critiques of these readings. (5 units)
174. Protest and Activism: The U.S. in the 1960s and 1970s
A study of social reform and reaction in America during the 1960s and 1970s. Emphasis is on the relationship amongvarious social movements, such as the civil rights movement, the women’s movement, the anti-war movement, and the conservativemovement. Students will also examine the continuing effects of these various campaigns upon the overall culture of the United States. (5 units)
175. Natives and Newcomers: Early North America
This courseexplores the history of North America from the eve of European colonization through the mid-18th century. It focuses on key social, economic, and political developments during the period and on cross-cultural interactions between (and among) Euro-American colonists, Native peoples, and peoples of African descent. While the course examines the settler colonies that subsequently became the United States, it also emphasizes the development of the rival French and Spanish empires in North America, as well as the rise of pan-Native movements aimed at resisting colonial domination. The course strives to investigate North America’s colonial past by considering a wide range of perspectives, reflecting the diversity of the various peoples who shaped its development. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Lower-division listed as HIS 75. (5units)
176. Celebrity and Politics: U.S. 1980sto Present
An investigation of the United States from 1980 to the present. The focus of the course is on the changing nature of American society that intertwines celebrity and politics beginning with the conservative revolution of the Reagan years and ending at our current divisive political landscape and the virtual unlimited access to public figures. The course also examines the changing international context which helped to shape America’s role in the world, especially the fall of the Soviet Union and American military action in the Arab world. (5 units)
177. Gays and Lesbians in United States History
Examination of the significance of gay men and lesbians across the broad sweep of American history, beginning with pre-Columbian Native Americans and concluding with the modern era. Religious, intellectual, economic, political, and social ramifications will all be examined. Cross-listed withWGST 138. (5 units)
178. Race and World War II
Cross-listed withETHN 178. For course description see ETHN 178. (5 units)
180. Indigenous/Native Americans of the United States
Native American history from colonial times to the present from the perspective of native peoples. The focus is on selected Indian peoples in each historical period with an emphasis on native responses to changing historical circumstances, the continuity of Native American cultures, and Indian relations with the U.S. government in the 19th and 20th centuries. Topics include colonialism, Native Americans and environments, regional, and tribal histories. Cross-listed withETHN 113. (5 units)
183. Whiteness and Immigration in the United States
In this seminar, by examining the changing conceptions of “whiteness” over time, students will gain insight into the political, cultural, and economic shifts that have occurred in American history, reshaping the broader dynamics of race and ethnicity that continue to inform American life in the 21st century. Cross-listed withETHN 172. (5 units)
184. North America: Peoples & Lands
America’s geography is not just the stage for American History but an integral player in that history. This course explores how Americans’ interactions with the continent’s physical geography and built environments have shaped the nation from the pre-colonial era through the present day. Topics covered include: land use by Native peoples and settlers; U.S. expansion; immigration and internal migrations; urbanization, suburbanization, and gentrification; the conservation, preservation, and environmental movements; and the response to natural and human-instigated disasters. Special emphasis is placed on topics related to California and on the experiences of people marginalized by race, class, and gender. (5 units)
185. African Americans in Postwar Film
This course examines the presence of African Americans in mainstream Hollywood films during the postwar period. How did Hollywood representations of African Americans change after World War II? What shifts and continuities occurred during the postwar period? And how did those changes reflect the ebbs and flows of civil rights activism through the 1970s? The goal of this course is to gain a deeper understanding of broader social and historical change by engaging the politics of race through a core aspect of American popular culture. Cross-listed withETHN 135. (5 units)
186. California
Survey of the state’s diverse history: its Indigenous origins, Spanish invasion and missionization, the Mexican period, U.S. conquest, gold rush, and development to the present. (5 units)
187. Racism in the United States
Multidisciplinary study of racism in the United States. Its historical manifestations from the arrival of Europeans in North America to contemporary time; its psychological and political dimensions; and its impact on U.S. culture, law and economy. Cross-listed with ETHN 155 (5 units)
188S. The Making of Modern America: The Progressive Era
This seminar examines the progressives (1880–1920), a group of reformers who struggled to more equitably redistribute the wealth and power of the newly industrialized, urbanized America, achieving mixed results. The impact of this crucial period of reform on politics, gender, class, business, the environment, leisure, and foreign affairs will be examined in order to illuminate current political and social views and actions. Students are evaluated on their informed participation and a research paper. (5 units)
189. Special Topics in United States History
Courses offered occasionally on subjects outside the standard curriculum in modern United States history. (5 units)
Lower-Division Courses: European History
16. Ancient Greek Religion
Consideration of the differing attitudes and expectations of polytheisms and monotheisms, and of religious expression in the context of classical Greek cult and ritual. Readings are drawn from a wide variety of literary, historical, philosophical, and epigraphical texts. Cross-listed withCLAS 67. (4 units)
17. Ancient Roman Religion
Examination of religious practices, institutions, and beliefs of the ancient Romans. Special consideration of interconnections in Roman religiosity between the acts/beliefs of individuals and the concerns of the state. Concludes with philosophic mysticism, magic, mystery religions, and Christianity. Cross-listed withCLAS 68. (4 units)
30. The French Revolution: An Introduction
The French Revolution of 1789 topped the greatest monarchy in Europe and ultimately ushered in Napoleon Bonaparte’s empire. But it also introduced into the Western world the political vocabulary we still use today. Whenever we use political designations such as left and right, or talk about nationalism and citizenship and the rights of man, the French Revolution is being invoked, whether we know it or not! This class explores the exciting events of the revolution through literature, art, and film and the often-heated debates among historians about the real meaning of these dramatic years. (4 units)
33. This is What Democracy Looks Like? Fascism, Populism and Crisis
This course examines the phenomenon of populist politics in 19th and 20th century Europe and the US. It examines populism in history and as political theory; its analytical strengths and weaknesses; the overlap and divergences between right-wing populism and classic European fascism; and the differences between reactionary and progressive forms of populism. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed as HIST 103. (4 units)
39. Rebellion and War in Modern France
This course surveys the history of France from the founding of the Third Republic in 1870 to the present day with particular emphasis on republican universalism, French overseas imperialism, the Dreyfus Affair, the struggle for women’s equality, the role and experience of France in the two World Wars, and late-20th century patterns of decolonization and migration. (4 units) This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-divisionlisted as HIST 139.
94. Europe
A thematic approach to European history, from Early Modern to the present. (4 units)
Upper-Division Courses: European History
103. This is What Democracy Looks Like? Fascism, Populism and Crisis
This course examines the phenomenon of populist politics in 19th and 20th century Europe and the US. It examines populism in history and as political theory; its analytical strengths and weaknesses; the overlap and divergences between right-wing populism and classic European fascism; and the differences between reactionary and progressive forms of populism. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-divisionlisted as HIST 33. (5 units)
106. Heretics and Holy Wars
Exploration of religion and the Mediterranean region between 235 and 622 CE. Attention will be paid to monasticism, pilgrimage, heresy, philosophy, and the relationships between the church and state, communities and individuals, and individuals and the divine. Cross-listed with CLAS 144. (5 units)
107. Archaic Greek History: Scientists and Spartans
If society collapsed, do you have the know-how to survive? Over three thousand years ago, this same question confronted the ancient Greeks. This course on Archaic Greek history examines how the Greeks used inquiry and experimentation to deal with problems such as climate change, epidemic disease, and economic decline. Students will study how these innovations forced the Greeks to confront social issues such as income inequality and environmental destruction that continue to have profound relevance. By studying the Greek response to such issues, students will be better able to think about the relationship between technology and society in the contemporary world. Cross-listed with CLAS 107. (5 units)
108. Classical Greek History
This is a class on how things fall apart. Its topic is civil strife in ancient Greece: autocratic coups and assassinations, rebellions and slave revolts, mob violence and kangaroo courts. In it, students will put Socrates on trial, explore the techniques of ancient demagogues, and write a guide for tyrant-spotting. They will also learn how the Greeks overcame internal conflict and healed communities torn apart by violence. The contemporary world can learn from the resiliency of ancient communities not only how things fall apart, but also how they might be put back together again. Cross-listed withCLAS 108. (5 units)
109. The Hellenistic Age
A cultural, social, and political review of Alexander the Great's conquests and their Hellenistic ramifications through the reign of Egypt's Cleopatra VII. Cross-listed withCLAS 109. (5 units)
110. Roman Republic
A political, military, social, and cultural review of the rise and fall of the most successful state the West has ever known. Cross-listed withCLAS 110. (5 units)
111. Roman Empire
A political, social, and cultural survey of the Roman Empire beginning with Augustus and tracing changes in Rome from the development of the Roman Empire as a world state to the development of Christianity as a world religion. Cross-listed withCLAS 111. (5 units)
115. Race, Gender, and Citizenship in the Atlantic World
This course examines the terms by which the notion of citizenship was defined and granted over the course of the past three centuries with a focus on the Atlantic world. Key historical questions we will explore include: Who is a citizen and what defines him or her as a citizen? On what grounds were rights granted to citizens? How were gender and race defined, and how did those definitions determine the meaning of citizenship? How did disenfranchised groups argue for their rights, and in what situations were their claims successful? Cross-listed with WGST 169. (5units)
117. State and Church in the Middle Ages, 1000–1450
This course examines the struggles between state and church that formed modern Western political institutions. Topics include the rise of royal and papal theocracy, the emergence of the idea of limited government, the foundation of representative institutions as well as modern legal institutions, and the origins of the modern state. (5 units)
118. Representation, Rights, and Democracy, 1050–1792
This course charts the development of modern democracy from its roots in the Middle Ages to its implementation during the American and French revolutions, with a major emphasis on the tension of political theory and practice in its formation. Topics include the evolution of representation and citizenship and the place of social, economic, racial, and gendered forces in their formation. (5 units)
120. The Crusades: Christian and Muslim Perspectives
This course traces the history of the Crusades from the 11th to 16th centuries, using both Christian and Muslim perspectives on these wars to gauge their impact upon both Western Europe and the Islamic society of the Mediterranean. Students will explore the interplay of religious, social, political, and economic forces that motivated Christians and Muslims during these struggles, the impact the Crusades had upon both Christian and Muslim religious and social sensibilities, and the reasons for the success of the early Crusaders, the complex response of Muslim authorities to the European invasion, and the eventual success of Muslim forces in driving Christian forces far back into Europe. (5 units)
122. The Holocaust
This course examines the persecution and mass murder of Jews in Nazi Germany and in Nazi-occupied Europe from 1933-1945. Although the mass murder of European Jewry will be a main focus, we will also discuss programs of discrimination, violence, and murder carried out against other groups deemed racially undesirable by the Nazis (e.g. people with mental and physical disabilities, Romanies, Slavic peoples, LGBTQ+ folks, and Afro-Germans). The course starts off contextualizing the Holocaust by looking at how modernity, imperialism, war, and various ideologies, such as antisemitism, nationalism, and scientific racism, shaped policies of discrimination and exclusion in Germany and elsewhere in Europe, and contributed to the rise of Hitler and a racial state. We will investigate the marginalization and persecution of Jews and other Others in Nazi Germany and Nazi-occupied Europe, considering differences and similarities in treatment in France, Amsterdam, Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and the Soviet Union.(5 units)
126. Conflicts in Medieval Christianity
This course is an examination of the religious tensions and conflicts that helped form later medieval Christianity. It treats heresies, the Inquisition, developing notions of orthodoxy and authority, the warrior Christianity of the Crusades, mendicancy and urban attitudes toward Christian perfection, the new monasticism, the development of a new personal approach to religion, lay tensions with the clergy, and the climate of reformation that spread through later medieval Europe. (5 units)
128. Crime, Prostitution, and Poverty in Victorian London
This course explores the social and cultural history of London from the 1830s to 1900. Particular emphasis is placed on the strong contrast that Victorian London offered between imperial splendor and grinding misery. Students will examine Victorian perception and experiences of London poverty, filth, prostitution, and assorted vices, as well as art, culture, entertainment, and social reform movements. (5 units)
130. Special Topics in European History
Courses offered occasionally on subjects outside the standard curriculum in modern Europe. (5 units)
130A. The French Revolution, an Introduction
The French Revolution of 1789 topped the greatest monarchy in Europe and ultimately ushered in Napoleon Bonaparte’s empire. But it also introduced into the Western world the political vocabulary we still use today. Whenever we use political designations such as left and right, or talk about nationalism and citizenship and the rights of man, the French Revolution is being invoked, whether we know it or not! This class explores the exciting events of the revolution through literature, art, and film and the often-heated debates among historians about the real meaning of these dramatic years. (5 units)
131. Britain and the First World War
World War I gave birth to a range of difficult questions regarding the relationship between democratic ideals and how societies organize for modern conflicts, setting a strong pattern for the 20th century and continuing to possess strong resonances for today. What strains and opportunities does war place upon democratic societies? Does modern patriotism enable or distort the aspirations of free societies? What forces propel individuals to assist or resist modern war making? This course encourages students to think of war as not an activity solely directed by generals and politicians, but rather a social and cultural event that is formed and negotiated by citizens, workers, and parents. This course places the World War I battlefront in the context of British imperial history, and especially examines how four years of fighting shaped Britain’s modern national and civic identity. Readings and materials cover the significance of the home front in many forms including the propaganda machine, the Irish problem, public school tradition, industrial organization and trade union activity, and the women’s vote campaign. Civic groups organized by peace protesters, conscientious objectors, suffragists, and striking workers will be explored alongside groups such as national service advocates, Empire leagues, Boys Scouts, and civil preparedness organizations. (5 units)
132. Democracy Under Siege: Ancient Athens and Modern America
This course will trace the fate of the Athenian democracy after the Peloponnesian War through the Hellenistic Age (404-ca. 307 BCE). It will cover the foreign and domestic policies of Athens through this period, and cover both the problems and the opposition to democracy by non-democratic polities as well as by those opponents of democracy who lived in Athens itself. Although the United States of America is a Republic and not a Democracy in the Athenian mode (which in fact, was the intent of our Republic's founders), the USA in the 21st century is facing comparable opposition both domestically and in the realm of foreign affairs to those which confronted the ancient Athenians. Parallels between the world of the 4th century BCE and the 21st century will not only be noted, they will be emphasized through readings and class discussions. Cross-listed withCLAS 113. (5 units)
133. History of Sexuality
Study of the history of sexuality in modern Europe. Examination of topics such as the politics of prostitution, abortion, and pornography; changing sexual norms and practices; the invention of homosexuality and heterosexuality; professional and state involvement in the supervision and regulation of sexualities; intersections of sexuality with gender, ethnicity and race, nationality, class, and religion; connections between sexuality and imperialism; sexual communities and movements. Cross-listed withWGST 137. (5 units)
134. Reformers and Revolutionaries in Tsarist Russia
Examination of politics, society, and culture in the Russian Empire from the reign of Peter the Great to the fall of the Romanov Dynasty in 1917. Themes include state building and modernization; peasant rebellion and the institution of serfdom; the nobility and its discontents; imperial expansion and the multiethnic Empire; the Orthodox Church and popular religion; aristocratic revolt and the Russian revolutionary intelligentsia; Alexander II and the Great Reforms; the growth of radicalism; industrialization and social change; the Revolution of 1905; and the crisis of the Old Regime. (5 units)
136. Postwar Europe: Gender, Race, and National Identity in 20th-century Eastern and Western Europe
An exploration of the ways in which social anxieties and ideas about gender, race, nationality, class, and sexuality shaped political, economic, social, and cultural developments in post-WWII Eastern and Western Europe. Three units structure the course: Communism and the Cold War; immigrants, race, gender, and national identity in post-war and post-colonial Europe; and challenges to the established order -- including the rebellions/revolutions in 1968, the women's and gay and lesbian liberation movements of the 1970s, and resistance to and the collapse of Communism. Cross-listed withWGST 172. (5 units)
137. The Soviet Experiment
During World War One the Tsarist regime in the Russian Empire collapsed in political crisis and military defeat. This course will explore the Revolutions of 1917 and the subsequent Soviet experiment to build the first self-proclaimed socialist government and society. Readings, lectures, and discussions will focus on Soviet political and economic policies, cultural practices, everyday life, and the evolution of social identities and roles, taking into account gender, regional, and national differences.(5 units)
139. Rebellion & War in Modern France
This course surveys the history of France from the founding of the Third Republic in 1870 to the present day with particular emphasis on republican universalism, French overseas imperialism, the Dreyfus Affair, the struggle for women’s equality, the role and experience of France in the two World Wars, and late-20th century patterns of decolonization and migration. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Lower-division listed as HIST 39. (5 units)
199. Special Topics in European History
Courses offered occasionally on subjects outside the standard curriculum in modern Europe. (5 units)
Lower-Division Courses: African, West Asian, Middle Eastern History
56. Women and African History
This course explores themes and perspectives on African Women's lives and their roles, contributions, and agency in shaping histories, major historical events, civilizations, and societies. We will examine African women's activities in pre colonial, colonial, and postcolonial African societies. Further, we will explore the diversity of African women's experiences in local, regional, trans-oceanic, and international settings. (4 units)
57. Black Migration in the World
This course examines the dynamic and sustained relationship between Africa and the African Diaspora through the multiple lenses of U.S. blacks, West Indian, Afro-Brazilian, Afro-European, and Afro-Cuban missions, travel, migration, and repatriation to various locations in Africa. The course entails a consideration of the religious exchanges, ethnic/racial transformations, travel tropes, and discourses on Pan-African identity that characterized the Back-to-Africa Movement in various locations of the Atlantic World. It will introduce students to a historiography of Black intellectuals, individuals, and groups who look to Africa as not only an ancestral homeland, but as a site of Christian evangelization, trade, pursuit of freedom and happiness, as well as social justice. Cross-listed withETHN 138. (4 units)
91. Africa in World History
Historical survey of the origins and development of African cultures from ancient times to the onset of European colonialism in the 20th century. Focus on selected civilizations and societies. Patterns of African social, economic, and political life,including women’s and gendered institutions, anticolonial movements, nationalism, and Pan-African histories. (4 units)
97. War and Peace in the Modern Middle East
This course explores the socio-economic and political history of the Middle East from the late Ottoman period to the present. We examine the region’s rich culture, religious heritage, and historical themes and developments. Themes include the impact of European imperialism during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, processes of Ottoman reform and decline, the creation of colonial mandates, the era of Arab nationalism, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the politics of oil, the role of the United States in the region, and the rise of political Islam. Finally, HIST 97 introduces students to an exciting array of primary and secondary sources including maps, films, speeches, treaties, and important correspondence. (4 units)
Upper-Division Courses: African, West Asian, Middle Eastern History
140. Black Internationalism in the Atlantic Era
This course will explore writings by African-born individuals during the Atlantic period. It will focus on how they describe their experience of slavery and colonialism in Africa, their perceptions of and experiences in the Western World, as well as African-American perceptions of and experiences in Africa. The themes we will explore will include, but not limited to, colonialism, slave captivity narratives, autobiographical and biographical accounts of free blacks and African slaves in Europe and the Americas, the experiences of African royalty abroad, and African contributions to the birth of African-American culture and the emergence of “Creole” societies in the New World. (5 units)
141. Politics and Development in Independent Africa
African economic, social, and political problems after independence. Major ideologies and international conflict. (5 units)
144S. Islam in Africa
Examination of the history and contemporary role of Islam in Africa. The principal topics are the development of Islamic ideas and institutions, the impact of Islam on African cultures, the role of Islam in contemporary political and economic development, and the interaction between African and non-African organizations and governments. (5 units)
149. Special Topics in African or Middle Eastern History
Courses offered occasionally on subjects outside the standard curriculum in African or Middle Eastern history. (5 units)
Lower-Division Courses: East Asian, South Asian, and Indian Ocean History
48. China’s Rise to Global Power
In the past forty years, China has become the second most powerful economy in the world. It has also become a powerful military player as well. Many have assumed that China would become more democratic as it rose in strength. In fact, it has become more authoritarian and some speak of a new Cold War. As China’s ambitions have grown, some wonder about its impact on Taiwan, the South China Seas, and even internationally. In addition, its posture vis-à-vis Russia and the United States has changed as well. This course will trace China’s global rise to power since the founding of the People’s Republic of China. (4 units)
50. Gender and Sexuality in East Asia
The historical study of women and men is necessarily the historical study of gendered societies. While there are important linkages among China, Japan, and Korea—for example, shared religious traditions, the varied experiences of imperialism, the central role of women and the construction of gender in modernity, and the physical movement of women and men among the three countries—there are also significant differences. This course will explore changes over time in sexualities, work experiences, civic culture, the gendered state, and marriage and family in the three countries. Cross-listed with WGST 126 and HIST 150. (4 units)
54. Modern India
History is not only what happened, but also why things change. This course is designed to examine the development of modern India from the seventeenth to the twenty-first centuries. We will survey the period as a whole by selecting significant events, processes, themes, and transitions that have shaped modern Indian history. What was the impact of the confluence, integration, and conflicts between different cultures and religions? Why and how did Britain expand, conquer, and prosper at the expense of India? How and why did they exit? How did India become the world’s biggest democracy? The class, in effect, will encompass an overview of the political, economic, social, and technological forces as well as the unique and strong personalities, which have contributed to the making and breaking of India. A better comprehension of where we are at present comes from an understanding of the past. In addition to gaining some knowledge of history, the aim of this course is to help students improve their interpretive analyses and critical-thinking skills through reading, writing, and class discussions. (4 units)
92. Modern East Asia
An examination of the emergence of modern nations from the rich and diverse cultures of the Pacific and their mutual transformations since 1600. Analyzes linkages within the region and with other regions using concepts borrowed from anthropology, cultural studies, economics, and political science. Particular focus on China, Japan, and Koreafrom the 1600’s to the present. (4 units)
Upper-Division Courses: East Asian, South Asian, and Indian Ocean History
146A. Medieval and Early Modern Japan
From the early medieval period through the middle of the 19th century, Japan developed as a blend of indigenous cultures, religions, and institutions and continental (Chinese and Korean) civilization and later European and American ideologies and imperialism. This course examines culture, ideas, religions, society/economy, and global interactions. (5 units)
146B. Modern Japan in the World
An examination of Japanese history in its global context since 1600, with emphasison its 19th century “economic miracle;”problems faced by a rapidly modernizing and globalizing society; questions of national security and imperialism; reconstructing gender, personhood, and rights of Japanese men and women at several key moments in “modern” society; social and political movements such as suffrage and labor; war and reconstruction; and diaspora, both of people and ideas. (5 units)
147A. Wonders of Ancient China
Chinese civilization from the earliest times to the early modern global encounter with the West. Includes Shang oracle bones, Emperor Qin Shi Huang and his terracotta army, the origins of the Great Wall and the Silk Road, Genghis Khan and the Mongol conquest, Tang empresses, Marco Polo, Zheng He and his expedition to Africa, the glories of the Ming dynasty, and Jesuit missionaries. Topics also include the evolution of Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism; development of political institutions; analysis of the pre-industrial economic experience; and state-society relations. (5 units)
147B. China in Revolution, 1840-Present
Social, political, economic, and cultural development of China from the early 19th century to the present. Topics include China’s state formation from monarchy to socialism; cultural history from Confucianism to individualism; issues of poverty and population; intellectual and cultural changes and the role of the West in these changes; and the indigenous forces shaping China’s modern evolution. Students will also have the opportunity to research a current topic as China emerges as a global technological, economic, and military power. (5 units)
150. Gender and Sexuality in East Asia
The historical study of women and men is necessarily the historical study of gendered societies. While there are important linkages among China, Japan, and Korea—for example, shared religious traditions, the varied experiences of imperialism, the central role of women and the construction of gender in modernity, and the physical movement of women and men among the three countries—there are also significant differences. This course explores changes over time in sexualities, work experiences, civic culture, the gendered state, and marriage and family in the three countries. Cross-listed withWGST 126. (5 units)
151. Race and Imperialism in East Asia
Racism and ethnic discrimination were central factors driving imperialism in East Asia in the 19thand 20thcenturies. Examining the three cases of France and the US in Vietnam, Japan in Korea, and the US in the Philippines, this course analyzes the role of racism not only in the colonies but also in the evolving definition of imperial nationhood in France, the United States, and Japan. (5 units)
152. History of Christianity in China
The history of Christianity in China from the seventh century to the present. We will explore the earliest evidence of Christianity in China, the Franciscan missions to the Mongols, the arrival of the Jesuits, the Chinese rites controversy, the persecution of Christianity, the rise of Protestant missions, and the explosive growth of Christianity in China today. We will also explore issues of church-state conflict, religious debate and conversion, and the complex interplay between foreign missions and Chinese developments. We end with a discussion of the current surveillance and control of Christianity in China. (5 units)
154. Modern India
History is not only what happened, but also why things change. This course is designed to examine the development of modern India from the seventeenth to the twenty-first centuries. We will survey the period as a whole by selecting significant events, processes, themes, and transitions that have shaped modern Indian history. What was the impact of the confluence, integration, and conflicts between different cultures and religions? Why and how did Britain expand, conquer, and prosper at the expense of India? How and why did they exit? How did India become the world’s biggest democracy? The class, in effect, will encompass an overview of the political, economic, social, and technological forces as well as the unique and strong personalities, which have contributed to the making and breaking of India. A better comprehension of where we are at present comes from an understanding of the past. In addition to gaining some knowledge of history, the aim of this course is to help students improve their interpretive analyses and critical-thinking skills through reading, writing, and class discussions. (5 units)
159. Special Topics in Asian History
Courses offered occasionally on subjects outside the standard curriculum in Asian history. (5 units)
Lower-Division Courses: Latin American History
61. Dictatorship, Revolution, Narcostate: Mexico Since 1876
This course explores the history of Mexico from 1876 to the present, examining the roots of modern Mexican institutions, identity, and inequality. Students will analyze the authoritarian political traditions that influenced Mexican democracy, the social movements that shaped official mythologies and popular memory, and the modernization/technocratic policies that intensified poverty, urbanization, and migration during the twentieth century. Students will study the roles of race, class, and gender in Mexico, as well as foreign intervention, industrialization, and globalization. Special attention is given to how neoliberalism and the erosion of human rights and rule of law transformed Mexican society beginning in the 1980s. Crucially, students will immerse themselves in Mexican and US-Mexico borderlands history through music, film, media, popular art, literature, oral histories, and other primary and secondary sources. (4 units)
63. Mexican Migration to the U.S.
This course is an introduction to the history of Mexican migration to the United States. It examines the factors that fueled migratory flows (“push/pull”), the discourses that shaped Mexican and US perceptions of migrant criminality, and the US immigration laws and border enforcement regime that racialized Mexican American citizenship. Students explore the key roles played by US-Mexico borderlands geography, binational politics, US employers, race, social inequality, war, imperialism and industrialization, as well as globalization and neoliberalism in intensifying transnational Mexican migration. By analyzing these people and processes students will gain a greater understanding of how illegality was ascribed to Mexican migrant and Latino/a bodies. Crucially, students will immerse themselves in both the migrant and Mexican American experience via music, film, literature, oral histories, and primary and secondary sources. (4 units)
64. Central America
Survey of Central America from independence to the present. Focus on three Central American countries: Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Emphasis on recent developments; social, economic, and political problems (militarism, dictatorship); and the nature of U.S. policy vis-à-vis Central America. (4 units)
66. Latin America: Empires & Borderlands
Beginning with an exploration of indigenous empires in the Americas, the course then moves towards examining how the Spanish created and enforced their own empire in Mexico and North America that later clashed with U.S. expansion. History 66/166 analyzes the indigenous and Spanish backgrounds in Latin America and North America, providing foundational conceptualizations of conquest and colonialism in the region’s empires. This is a hybrid lower-division and upper-division course. Upper-division listed at HIST 166. (4 units)
95. Modern Latin America: Inequality, Intervention, Revolution
This course surveys the major social, economic, political, and cultural trends that shaped modern Latin American history. Students will study the nation-states forged in the wake of nineteenth-century independence movements and civil wars, their incredibly diverse peoples and customs, and how US intervention and imperialism shaped these countries’ development. Students will explore the following themes via primary and secondary sources, film, music, media, popular art, and literature: democracy and authoritarianism; liberalism and conservatism; modernization and neocolonialism; nationalism and populism; Communism and the Cold War; revolution and reaction; (im)migration and urbanization; and globalization and neoliberal reform. Emphasis is placed on social movements, racial and gender inequality, and struggles for national and individual self-determination throughout modern Latin America. (4 units)
Upper-Division Courses: Latin American History
161. Dictatorship, Revolution, Narcostate? Mexico Since 1876
This course explores the history of Mexico from 1876 to the present, examining the roots of modern Mexican institutions, identity, and inequality. Students will analyze the authoritarian political traditions that influenced Mexican democracy, the social movements that shaped official mythologies and popular memory, and the modernization/technocratic policies that intensified poverty, urbanization, and migration during the twentieth century. Students will study the roles of race, class, and gender in Mexico, as well as foreign intervention, industrialization, and globalization. Special attention is given to how neoliberalism and the erosion of human rights and rule of law transformed Mexican society beginning in the 1980s. Crucially, students will immerse themselves in Mexican and US-Mexico borderlands history through music, film, media, popular art, literature, oral histories, and other primary and secondary sources. (5 units)
162. Argentina
Soldiers and missions, cities and plains, gauchos and immigrants, war and poetry, beef and wheat, politicians and a pope—these things and more describe the history of the complex, sophisticated land that occupies the southern part of the hemisphere. This course explores Argentina’s progress from a remote mystery to a cosmopolitan center of learning and business. The course brings into focus the challenges of unity, democracy, nationalism, freedom, and justice, with attention to the populist, authoritarian, and constitutional conflicts of the present. (5 units)
163. Cuba and the Caribbean
A survey from the colonial period to the present of three Caribbean nations: Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico. Emphasis on 20th-century developments; social, economic, and political issues (dictatorship, revolution, social stratification); and the role of U.S. policy vis-à-vis Cuba and the Caribbean. (5 units)
164S. The Catholic Church in Latin America
Readings, discussion, and research focused on the historical place, social role, and religious significance of the Catholic Church in Latin America, with attention to church-state issues, liberation theology, and the impact of the Church in nations affected by development, globalization, and poverty. (5 units)
166. Latin America: Empires & Borderlands
Beginning with an exploration of indigenous empires in the Americas, the course then moves towards examining how the Spanish created and enforced their own empire in Mexico and North America that later clashed with U.S. expansion. History 66/166 analyzes the indigenous and Spanish backgrounds in Latin America and North America, providing foundational conceptualizations of conquest and colonialism in the region’s empires. (5 Units)
169. Special Topics in Latin American History
Courses offered occasionally on subjects outside the standard curriculum in Latin American history. (5 units)