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Winter 07/Spring 08 Course Descriptions

All courses below are approved to be taught in Winter 2007 and Spring 2008; however, some (or all) may not be offered in either term.  The courses that are offered in Spring link to the Schedule of Classes.  Classes with alternative External Link delivery modes (Web based, cable TV, correspondence, etc) are noted in the Schedule at the section level.  The complete list below is a good indicator of what may be offered over the next few years (contact department about offerings).  For explanations of course elements see the Key to Course Descriptions.

History (HIST)  Department Info

HIST 117 -- History of England to 1603  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of English history from pre-history to 1603, with emphasis on legal and constitutional history.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 118 -- History of England from 1603 to the Present  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of English history from 1603 to present, with emphasis on political and social history.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 120 -- Topics in History  (3 units)
Description:  Introduction to college-level study of history through discussion of specific events or topics chosen by the instructor. Topics will vary each semester.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 191 -- Preceptorship  (2 units)
Description:  Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Teaching formats may include seminars, in-depth studies, laboratory work and patient study.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 195A -- Debates With Historians  (1 unit)
Description:  Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons, usually in a small group setting. Designed to give students insight into the concepts and practices which typify different academic disciplines, and introduce students to the methods and standards of the discipline for discovering new knowledge, the values which characterize the field of study, advances in the field, impact on society, and career opportunities.  This is a First-Year Colloquium Course.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  freshmen only.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 202 -- History of Modern Sexualities  (3 units)
Description:  Cross cultural history of the relationship of modern sexualities and the rise of capitalism, secularism, urbanization, imperialism, sexology, and sexual identity politics from the eighteenth century to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  1 hour discussion, 2 hours lecture.
Identical to:  W S 202.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 203 -- The Ancient Mediterranean: Power and Identity  (3 units)
Description:  This course will focus on the ancient Mediterranean from 800 BCE to the XXX of the Roman Empire in the third century CE, emphasizing concepts of power and identity as demonstrated in politics, gender ideals, material ulture and religious practice.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 204 -- Ancient History: Greek History  (3 units)
Description:  A political, social and cultural history of Greek civilization from the Bronze Age to the death of Alexander the Great.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CLAS 204.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 205 -- Ancient History: Roman History  (3 units)
Description:  A survey of Roman civilization from the founding of the monarchy to the emperorship of Constantine the Great.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CLAS 205.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 224 -- Models of Resistance, Post 16th Cent. African Liberation Movements in Southeast  (3 units)
Description:  There were actually several "Souths" during the Holocaust of Enslavement. However, courses taught in the era of African enslavement have tended to focus on the northern most regions, such as Virginia, which are often taken to represent-if not constitute-the South. This course looks at the other "South" and the French and Spanish colonizers of South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana. It offers a different perspective of the beginnings of the Great Enslavement and compares and contrasts the lives and struggles of enslaved, freed, and self-emancipated Africans in the Southwest during the tenure of Spain.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Prerequisite(s):  two courses from Tier One, Traditions and Cultures (TRAD 101,102,103,104).
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Humanities.
Identical to:  AFAS 224; AFAS is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 236 -- Indians in U.S. History  (3 units)
Description:  History of Indians in U.S. development from 1500 to the present with emphasis on relations between competing Indian groups and between Indians and whites.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 244 -- Western America  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of the patterns of American expansion and settlement in the western United States.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 245 -- Frontier America  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of the patterns of frontier expansion and settlement in the eastern and mid-western United States.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 253 -- History of Women in the United States: Colonial America to 1890.  (3 units)
Description:  Changing role of women in American society from colonial times to 1890.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  W S 253.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 254 -- History of Women in the United States: 1890 to Present.  (3 units)
Description:  Changing role of women in American society from 1890 to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  W S 254.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 270 -- Modern East Asia  (3 units)
Description:  Introductory survey of recent histories of China, Japan and Korea, focusing on the major watersheds in these countries' modern experiences. The roles of indigenous culture and forces of change as well as foreign influences will be considered.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  EAS 270.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 271 -- The History of Christianity  (3 units)
Description:  The history of Christianity is presented with its many shifts, shadows and differing stages, from the Apostle's Council in 48, through Vatican II (1962-65).
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  RELI 271.
Usually offered:  Summer.

HIST 272 -- Japanese Civilization  (3 units)
Description:  The study of the evolution of Japanese social values, aesthetic expression, religion and political institutions in order to understand Japan's cultural heritage and contemporary society.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  JPN 272; JPN is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 275 -- History of China  (3 units)
Description:  Historical development of China. To 750 A.D.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  CHN 275; CHN is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 276 -- History of China  (3 units)
Description:  Historical development of China. From 750 A.D. to 1900 A.D.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  CHN 276; CHN is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 277A -- History of the Middle East  (3 units)
Description:  Middle East history from the rise of Islam to the Turkish conquest of Constantinople, 600-1453.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Humanities.
Identical to:  NES 277A; NES is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 277B -- History of the Middle East: Modern Middle East  (3 units)
Description:  Modern Middle East: the Ottoman Empire, Iran, and the Arab lands, 1453-present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  NES 277A is not prerequisite to NES 277B.
Identical to:  NES 277B; NES is home department.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 278 -- Medieval Answers to Modern Problems  (3 units)
Description:  Discussion of essential texts from the Middle Ages which offer fundamental answers, 1) such as gender, class conflicts, death, happiness, and God. 2) gender is treated as an analytical topic. Taught in English.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  two courses from Tier One, Traditions and Cultures (TRAD 101,102,103,104).
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Humanities.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  GER 278; GER is home department.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 299 -- Independent Study  (1-3 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 299H -- Honors Independent Study  (1-3 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 301 -- Introduction to the Study of History  (3 units)
Description:  The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the nature and practice of writing history and to teach critical reading, writing, research and analytical skills necessary for history majors.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 310 -- The Black Death  (3 units)
Description:  A lecture course focusing on Europe in the age of bubonic plague (from 1348 to 1720), with emphasis on changes in climate, food supplies, public health, epidemic disease, demography, and economy. The last third of the course will be devoted to the religious and artistic responses to disaster.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 312 -- Economy and Society in Historical Discourse  (3 units)
Description:  Compares historical narratives about economic theories in their contexts.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 314A -- Europe 1870-1945: War, Peace and Social Change  (3 units)
Description:  European powers' competition for empire intensified in the late nineteenth century, producing twentieth century wars that spread from Europe to span the globe, shaped by and reshaping domestic politics, international relations, gender expectations and social and cultural forms.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV314A
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 314A or HSTV 314A
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 314B -- Europe Since 1945  (3 units)
Description:  In this course we will consider the choices Europeans faced and the paths they took after the second World War, including the loss of empire and the stresses of the Cold War, the construction of welfare states and the European Union, and the rise and fall of Eastern European socialisms and their aftermath.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV314B
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 314B or HSTV 314B
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 315 -- United States Military History  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of American wars from colonial times to the present; military institutions, doctrine, application of the principles of war, campaign strategies and tactics, technology, and leadership.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 317 -- History of Modern Ireland  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of Irish history from the Union in 1800 to the present; the course will emphasize the political, cultural, and religious bases of Irish history.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 320 -- Tudor-Stuart England  (3 units)
Description:  An intensive study of English history from the accession of Edward IV to the Hanoverian dynasty.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  RELI 320.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 321 -- History of Modern Brittain  (3 units)
Description:  An intensive study of English history from the accession of George III to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 324 -- History of Puerto Rico  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines the history of the oldest colonial territory of the United States. We will study Puerto Rico as an example of U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America and as an island with a long history of confrontation with foreign occupiers.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 324.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 325 -- History of France: Development of the Modern French State, 1815-Present  (3 units)
Description:  Political, socio-economic, and cultural history of modern France from 1815 to the present day, with emphasis placed on French politics and self-identity.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any European history course.
Identical to:  FREN 325.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 329 -- Jewish--Christian Relations  (3 units)
Description:  Explores the parallel and intersecting paths that both Jewish and Christian communities have taken toward theologies of self-identity.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Identical to:  JUS 329; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 332 -- Vietnam and the Cold War  (3 units)
Description:  Causes and effects of America's longest war in light of global U.S.-Soviet rivalry and Asian nationalism.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Usually offered:  Summer.

HIST 343 -- History of the Mexican American  (3 units)
Description:  Survey from the 16th century to the present, with emphasis on social, political and economic trends in their historical context.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV343
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 343 or HSTV 343
Identical to:  MAS 343.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 345 -- New American West  (3 units)
Description:  The major social, political, and economic changes in the twentieth century American West; the commonalities and conflicts within the region.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV345
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 345 or HSTV 345
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 347 -- The Old South  (3 units)
Description:  Social, economic, cultural and political history from Jamestown to Secession.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  AFAS 347.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 348 -- The South Since the Civil War  (3 units)
Description:  From the Civil War to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  AFAS 348.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 349 -- History of Crime in America, 1607-present  (3 units)
Description:  A history of crime in America from early Virginia through the present, with emphasis on violent crime, regional differences in crime, chronological changes, and causes of the same
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SOC 349, PA 349.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 351 -- Race and Class in Latin America  (3 units)
Description:  The impact of commercial expansion, urbanization, industrialization, and ideological change on race and class relations in Latin America from the 16th to early 20th century.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 351, AFAS 351.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 352 -- Slavery in Latin America  (3 units)
Description:  A broadly comparative introduction to slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean. Exploration of slavery, the use of slave labor, and the daily lives of slaves and slave owners in different settings and different cultures.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 352.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 355 -- U.S. Environmental History  (3 units)
Description:  Examines the history of changing relations between human society and the natural world in North America.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV355
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 355 or HSTV 355
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 356 -- Global Environmental History  (3 units)
Description:  This course will examine the ways in which different societies have defined, understood, valued, mapped, and made their livings in their environment. Also, it will explore how societies and environments mutually transform one another.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 361 -- The U.S.-Mexico Border Region  (3 units)
Description:  Evolution of the borderlands since the mid-nineteenth century, with emphasis on bi-national interaction and interdependence.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV361
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 361 or HSTV 361
Identical to:  LA S 361, MAS 361.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 368 -- Colonial Mexico  (3 units)
Description:  From discovery through the War for Independence.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV368
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 368 or HSTV 368
Identical to:  LA S 368, MAS 368.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 369 -- Mexico Since Its Independence  (3 units)
Description:  Struggle for political, economic and social stability; international relations, cultural patterns.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV369
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 369 or HSTV 369
Identical to:  LA S 369, MAS 369.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 370A -- History of the Jews: Modern Jewish History  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of major political, socioeconomic, and cultural developments in the history of Diaspora Jewry: Modern Jewish history.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Individuals and Societies.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  JUS 370A; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 370B -- History of the Jews: The Jew in the Medieval World (to the 17th Century)  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of major political, socioeconomic, and cultural developments in the history of Diaspora Jewry: the Jew in the medieval world (to the 17th century).
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Individuals and Societies.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  JUS 370B; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 372A -- History and Religion of Israel in Ancient Times -- The Biblical Period  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of the history and religion of ancient Israel. Biblical period through the Babylonian Exile; introduction to the Hebrew Bible.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  two courses from Tier One, Traditions and Cultures (TRAD 101,102,103,104).
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Humanities.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  JUS 372A; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 372B -- History & Religion of Israel in Ancient Times: Ezra-Nehemiah to the Roman Empire  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of the history and religion of ancient Israel. Ezra-Nehemiah to the Roman Empire, with emphasis on the formation of rabbinic Judaism.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  two courses from Tier One, Traditions and Cultures (TRAD 101,102,103,104).
Approved as:  General Education Tier Two - Humanities.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  JUS 372B; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 374 -- The Holocaust  (3 units)
Description:  Socio-economic and intellectual roots of modern anti-Semitism, evolution of Nazi policy, the world of death camps, responses of Axis and Allied governments, and responses of the Jews.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  JUS 374, R SS 374, RELI 374.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 376 -- Communist China: History and Narrative  (3 units)
Description:  This course looks at history of post-1949 China from two different perspectives. Students will read "proper" historical texts: political and intellectual essays, government documents, social reports, and scholarly historical monographs. These will be juxtaposed to different forms of narrative construction: movies, novels, and autobiographical accounts. With this integrated approach, the course examines the history of the People's Republic of China but also the continuous interplay between historiography and politics, history and memory, popular culture and learning.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Identical to:  EAS 376.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 377 -- Modern Israel  (3 units)
Description:  Evolution of the State of Israel from the rise of Zionism in 19th Century Europe to the present. Survey of the origins of the State of Israel from the rise of Zionism in 19th Century Europe to the Declaration of the State of Israel in 1948. Evolution of the State of Israel from 1949 to the present. Emphasis on interactive generative processes and understanding of the interplay between past processes and present socio-political realities.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  JUS 377; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 379 -- The Ottoman Turkish Empire  (3 units)
Description:  A survey of Ottoman history noting its expansion into Europe and the Middle East and its political and social institutions.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 379; NES is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 381A -- History of Muslim Societies  (3 units)
Description:  Rise of Islam, creation of Islamic society, relationship of religion and politics.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 381A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 381B -- History of Muslim Societies  (3 units)
Description:  Evolution and global spread of Muslim societies, modernization and its problems.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 381B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 386 -- Race/Gender: Genealogies, Formations, Politics  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines the gendered constitution of race in the U.S., beginning in the 21st century and working backward to 1800. It explores analytic tools for understanding race/gender, as well as its role in public policy, neoconservatism, feminism and literature.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Prerequisite(s):  INDV 102, satisfied mid-career writing proficiency requirements.
Identical to:  W S 386; W S is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 387 -- The History of Anti-Semitism  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines various definitions of anti-Semitism and traces the history of anti-Semitism (or “anti-Judaism”) from the earliest arguments between Christianizing Jews and Judaizing Christians to the birth of Islam, through the period of Muslim expansion and the Crusades, to the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, and the Holocaust. It looks at the differences among various types of Christian anti-Semitism, Muslim anti-Semitism, and Jewish anti-Semitism, and concludes with a look at contemporary forms of anti-Semitism.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  JUS 387; JUS is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 396A -- Nature and Practice of History  (3 units)
Description:  Course repeatable with consent of instructor.  This is a Writing Emphasis Course.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV396A
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 396A or HSTV 396A
Prerequisite(s):  satisfaction of the Mid-Career Writing Assessment (MCWA) or the former upper-division writing proficiency requirement (UDWPE); open to majors only, others only by department consent.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 396H -- Honors Proseminar  (3 units)
Description:  Course repeatable with consent of instructor.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 399 -- Independent Study  (1-5 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV399
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 399H -- Honors Independent Study  (1-3 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 400A -- Colony to Nation to the 21st Century: Politics and Culture in Chilean History  (3 units)
Description:  In this course the history of Chilean nation-building from the early colonial roots to the 21st Century will be analyzed. Focus is on political, social, and cultural histories of the country, giving attention to the unique characteristics of Chilean national developments. At the same time, connecting its historical idiosyncrasies to larger regional characteristics and to the trajectory that shaped Latin American developments from colonial encounters, to independence, to contemporary challenges.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 400A.
May be convened with:  HIST 500A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 402A -- Economic History of the Islamic World  (3 units)
Description:  An introduction to the economic history of the Islamic world from the seventh century to the present day.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  NES 277A AND NES 277B or consent of instructor.
Identical to:  NES 402A; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 502A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 403A -- History of Greece: Prehistoric Times to the Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War  (3 units)
Description:  From prehistoric times to the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  HIST 403A is not prerequisite to HIST 403B.
Identical to:  CLAS 403A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 403B -- History of Greece: Peloponnesian War to the End of the Hellenistic Age  (3 units)
Description:  From the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War to the end of the Hellenistic Age.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  HIST 403A is not prerequisite to HIST 403B.
Identical to:  CLAS 403B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 403C -- Democracy and the Market in Classical Greece  (3 units)
Description:  This class examines the growth and functioning of democracy and markets in classical Greece, their effects on people's lives, and the analyses and critiques of both systems that Greeks offered.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CLAS 403C.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 404A -- History of Rome: The Republic to the Death of Caesar  (3 units)
Description:  The Republic to the death of Caesar.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  HIST 404A is not prerequisite to HIST 404B.
Identical to:  CLAS 404A.
May be convened with:  HIST 504A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 404B -- History of Rome: The Empire through the Reign of Constantine the Great  (3 units)
Description:  The Empire through the reign of Constantine the Great.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CLAS 404B.
May be convened with:  HIST 504B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 405A -- Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  Major institutions and trends in Europe from the breakup of the Roman World to the 14th century.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV405A
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 405A or HSTV 405A
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of lower-division European history. HIST 405A is not prerequisite to HIST 405B.
Identical to:  RELI 405A.
May be convened with:  HIST 505A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 405B -- Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  Major institutions and trends in Europe from the breakup of the Roman World to the 14th century.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of lower-division European history. HIST 405A is not prerequisite to HIST 405B.
Identical to:  RELI 405B.
May be convened with:  HIST 505B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 406A -- Spanish Medieval Art and Architecture  (3 units)
Description:  Covers Spanish art and Architecture produced by Christian, Muslim, and Jewish cultures between the fall of Rome and 1492, examining the roles of art in medieval politics and religion.   This is a Writing Emphasis Course.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  satisfaction of the Mid-Career Writing Assessment (MCWA) or the former upper-division writing proficiency requirement (UDWPE).
Identical to:  ARH 406A; ARH is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 506A.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 407A -- Intellectual History of Medieval Europe: High Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  Major medieval cultural and intellectual trends: High Medieval Europe.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of lower-division European history. HIST 407A is not prerequisite to HIST 407B.
Identical to:  RELI 407A.
May be convened with:  HIST 507A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 408 -- The Renaissance  (3 units)
Description:  Europe between the 14th and 16th centuries with special emphasis on Italy as the seat of the Renaissance. Topics include the city states, humanism, the Church in an age of Schism and secularization, Renaissance art, the New Monarchies and European exploration and imperialism.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of European history.
Identical to:  RELI 408.
May be convened with:  HIST 508.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 409 -- The Reformation  (3 units)
Description:  The Reformation in thought and action both from the perspective of its religious origins and of the political and social conditions. Analysis of its impact on sixteenth century Europe including the spread of Protestant reformation and its companion movement, counter-reformation.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV409
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 409 or HSTV 409
Identical to:  RELI 409.
May be convened with:  HIST 509.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 410 -- History of Hell in Early Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The concept of punishment after death in Western Europe from the Bible to Dante. Includes the Hebrew, Greco-Roman, Germanic, and Christian traditions.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of European history.
Identical to:  RELI 410.
May be convened with:  HIST 510.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 412A -- European Intellectual History: 1600 to the Present  (3 units)
Description:  Topics include philosophy, science, Enlightenment, Romanticism, Realism, political economy.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV412A
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 412A or HSTV 412A
May be convened with:  HIST 512A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 412B -- European Intellectual History: 1870 to Present  (3 units)
Description:  Intellectual and cultural movements from the fin-de-siecle to the collapse of communism.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 512B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 414 -- Cultural History of Germany to 1714  (3 units)
Description:  The political, social, economic and cultural history of Germany from the late Middle Ages to about 1800.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any history course.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 415 -- Cultural History of Germany from 1714 to 1989  (3 units)
Description:  The political, social, economic and cultural history of Germany from the period of the French Revolution to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any history course.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 416A -- Rise and Fall of European Empires  (3 units)
Description:  The rise and fall of European empires from the fall of Rome to the present, a process involving Europeans with the non-European world and its people, continues to shape global events.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 516A.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 419 -- The French Enlightenment  (3 units)
Description:  Cultural history of France in the 18th century, with emphasis on the works of the philosophers.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 519.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 420 -- The French Revolution and Napoleon  (3 units)
Description:  The origins and progress of the Revolution in France.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Equivalent to:  HSTV420
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 420 or HSTV 420
May be convened with:  HIST 520.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 421 -- History of Russia: Early Period  (3 units)
Description:  Political, socio-economic, and cultural history of Russia in medieval and early modern times.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  R SS 421.
May be convened with:  HIST 521.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 422 -- History of Russia: Modern Period  (3 units)
Description:  Political, socio-economic, and cultural history of Russia in the modern era until the Bolshevik Revolution.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  R SS 422.
May be convened with:  HIST 522.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 424 -- The Modernization of Russia, 1856-1935  (3 units)
Description:  Social history of Russia from the emancipation of the serf to the establishment of the Stalinist system.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any history course.
Identical to:  R SS 424.
May be convened with:  HIST 524.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 425 -- History of the Soviet Union  (3 units)
Description:  The Bolshevik Revolution and problems of Soviet and Russian history from 1917 to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any history course.
Identical to:  R SS 425.
May be convened with:  HIST 525.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 427 -- Work, Culture and Power  (3 units)
Description:  History of work, cross-culturally and over time, including slavery, agricultural, artisanal, and industrial work, unions and workers' political movements, and labor market segmentation by gender and race, sweatshops and migration.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 431 -- Colonial America  (3 units)
Description:  The experience and evolving institutions of the North Atlantic colonists from the first landings to the end of the French and Indian War.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history survey course.
May be convened with:  HIST 531.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 432 -- The Era of the American Revolution  (3 units)
Description:  Origins, progress, and character of the struggle against Great Britain; internal political, constitutional, social, and economic developments; the problems of the "Critical Period" and the making of the Constitution.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history survey course.
May be convened with:  HIST 532.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 433 -- Jefferson and the New Nation, ca. 1790-1828  (3 units)
Description:  Major ideological, political, economic, and social conflicts and developments, North and South, during the first decades of the American nation.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history survey course, junior or senior status.
May be convened with:  HIST 533.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 434 -- Jacksonian Era, 1828-1850  (3 units)
Description:  Political, economic and social developments from the "reign" of Andrew Jackson through the collapse of the Whig Party in the 1850s.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  junior or senior status, 3 units of any U.S. history course.
May be convened with:  HIST 534.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 435 -- The Coming of the Civil War, U.S. 1845-1861  (3 units)
Description:  Political, constitutional, social and economic developments in the U.S. from the Mexican War through the Civil War.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  AFAS 435.
May be convened with:  HIST 535.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 436 -- Civil War and Reconstruction, U.S. 1861-1878  (3 units)
Description:  Political, constitutional, economic, and military developments in the U.S. and the Confederacy during and after the Civil War.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV436
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 436 or HSTV 436
Identical to:  AFAS 436.
May be convened with:  HIST 536.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 437 -- U.S. 1876-1919: The Gilded Age and Progressive Era  (3 units)
Description:  Examination of economic, social and political developments in years of rapid industrialization from the end of Reconstruction through World War I.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV437
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 437 or HSTV 437
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history course.
May be convened with:  HIST 537.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 438 -- U.S. 1918-1945: From World War I through World War II  (3 units)
Description:  Prosperity, Depression and the New Deal in peace and war.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV438
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 438 or HSTV 438
May be convened with:  HIST 538.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 440 -- United States: 1945 to Present  (3 units)
Description:  American society and the role of the United States in world affairs from the Yalta Conference to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV440
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 440 or HSTV 440
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history course.
May be convened with:  HIST 540.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 442 -- History of American Society and Thought: Pre-Civil War  (3 units)
Description:  American political, religious, cultural and philosophical ideas as expressed in colonial, revolutionary, and pre-Civil War society.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV442
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 442 or HSTV 442
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 444 -- Islamic Mysticism  (3 units)
Description:  Origin and development of Sufism and its impact on Muslim and non-Muslim worlds.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 444; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 544.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 445 -- Women in Islamic History  (3 units)
Description:  Examination of the roles women have played throughout Islamic history and of the changing discourse in the Islamic community about women and their roles.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 445, W S 445.
May be convened with:  HIST 545.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 446 -- History of Arizona and the Southwest  (3 units)
Description:  Economic, social and political development of the state and region from Spanish times to present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 546.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 448 -- The Latin Image in American Film  (3 units)
Description:  The course examines the manner in which Hispanics have been portrayed and depicted in American films from the beginning of the 20th Century to the present. The context in which the films were produced and the forces that have shaped their production will be covered.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  HIST 343, HIST 361; Student must be at least a junior in class standing.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 449 -- History of American Foreign Relations to 1914  (3 units)
Description:  Examines the rise of America from a struggling colony to a world class power, including its relations with Europe, Latin America and Asia.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history course.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 450 -- History of American Foreign Relations Since 1914  (3 units)
Description:  Examines the pivotal role played by the United States in world affairs since WWI, focusing on America's struggle with revolutionary movements in Europe, Asia and Latin America.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history course.
May be convened with:  HIST 550.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 451 -- The United States and East Asia: 1840 to the Present  (3 units)
Description:  An examination of American interaction with Japan and China since the Opium Wars, with special attention given to economic, cultural, and military relations and conflicts.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history course.
Identical to:  EAS 451.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 452 -- American Ethnic History  (3 units)
Description:  A history of the various ethnic minorities in America from Colonial times to the present, with emphasis on adjustment, acculturation and degrees of assimilation.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV452
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 452 or HSTV 452
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history course.
May be convened with:  HIST 552.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 453 -- History of Women and Work  (3 units)
Description:  History of women and work in western and non-western nations from prehistoric times to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history or women's studies courses.
Identical to:  W S 453.
May be convened with:  HIST 553.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 454 -- The Spanish Inquisition  (3 units)
Description:  The Inquisition in Spanish, European, & ethnic history: it's bureaucracy and procedures; it's festivities, it's victims, New and Old Christians; and witches. Social, economic, and demographic context.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Identical to:  JUS 454, RELI 454.
May be convened with:  HIST 554.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 455 -- History of Women in Europe  (3 units)
Description:  History of women in Europe covering topics such as women's work in family-based economic systems and in religious, political and cultural life, and the impact of larger historical changes.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  junior status.
Identical to:  W S 455.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 456A -- Paradise Lost: History of Anarchism in Europe  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines anarchism's birth, growth, and development in various parts of Europe during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 556A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 457A -- Manhood and Masculinity in the United States  (3 units)
Description:  This course explores the social construction of the male gender across American history, from European colonization to the present. We examine shifting norms and ideals of manhood and masculinity in the home, in the workplace, in social settings, and in politics.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  1 hour lecture, 2 hours discussion.
Identical to:  W S 457A.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 458 -- Topics in Comparative Women's History  (3 units)
Description:  International history of a topic of the instructor's choice. P, 3 units of any history or women's studies course.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  3 units of any U.S. history or women's studies courses.
Identical to:  W S 458.
May be convened with:  HIST 558.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 461 -- The Spanish Conquest  (3 units)
Description:  The impact of conquest and Spanish rule on the native peoples of Mexico, Central American, Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Topics include: conquest and ecology; land and labor; religion and culture; adaptation and resistance.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  TRAD 101.
May be convened with:  HIST 561.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 464 -- History of Argentina  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of Argentine history and culture from the colonial era to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  junior or senior status, 3 units of any lower-division Latin-American history course.
Identical to:  LA S 464.
May be convened with:  HIST 564.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 465A -- History of Spain: Classical/Medieval Spain, Prehistory to 1100 AD  (3 units)
Description:  This course explores the formation and development of the Iberian Peninsula from the earliest settlements through the Roman Period, the Islamic conquest, and the early Reconquest. It will survey the political, social, cultural, and economic factors that combined to give the Iberia Peninsula its distinctive characteristics.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 465A.
May be convened with:  HIST 565A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 465B -- History of Spain: Early Modern Spain, 1100 to 1700  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines the Iberian Peninsula during the Renaissance and Reformation. The rise of Spain as a Mediterranean, then an Atlantic political and economic power, primarily under the Trastamaras and Habsburgs, will be studied along with the social and cultural factors that contributed to Spain's rise as a World Empire.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 565B.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 465C -- History of Spain: Imperial Spain, 1700 to 1898  (3 units)
Description:  This course surveys the growth and development of the Spanish Empire, with particular attention to Latin America, under the guidance of the new Spanish dynastic house, the Bourbons. It will focus on reorganization of Spain's political affairs in the old world and the new world. In addition, Spain's socio-economic and cultural development will be discussed.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 465C.
May be convened with:  HIST 565C.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 465D -- History of Spain: Contemporary Spain, 1868 to the Present  (3 units)
Description:  The central theme of this course is the conversion of Spain from a far-flung world empire to a modern European nation-state. It will explore the many political, socio-economic, and cultural changes that have transformed Spain from a nation in decline to one of the leading nations in the European Community.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 465D.
May be convened with:  HIST 565D.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 465E -- History of Spain: Modern Spanish Cultural Studies  (3 units)
Description:  This course will focus on the various elements of Spanish culture that contribute to its cultural distinction. It will examine Spain's cultural life from various spiritual, literary, athletic, and culinary perspectives and the history of their development. As such, its central focus will change each time it is offered.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 465E.
May be convened with:  HIST 565E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 465Z -- History of Central America  (3 units)
Description:  A survey of the history of Central American from the Spanish conquest to the present, focusing on regional economies, ethnic and class conflict, and the politics of state formation.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 465Z.
May be convened with:  HIST 565Z.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 467 -- Contemporary Latin America  (3 units)
Description:  Revolution, social change and reaction in Latin America from 1930 to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV467
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 467 or HSTV 467
Prerequisite(s):  Junior or Senior status.
Identical to:  LA S 467.
May be convened with:  HIST 567.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 469 -- History of Women in Latin America  (3 units)
Description:  Women's history in Latin America from the Conquest to the present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  junior or senior status; 3 units of any lower-division Latin-American history or women's studies course.
Identical to:  LA S 469.
May be convened with:  HIST 569.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 472 -- History of Medieval India  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of Indian history from the 7th century to 1750.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 472.
May be convened with:  HIST 572.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 473 -- History of Modern India and Pakistan: 1750-Present  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of political, social and economic developments in South Asia from the mid-18th century to the present. Writing emphasis for India-Pakistan specialization.  This is a Writing Emphasis Course.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  satisfaction of the Mid-Career Writing Assessment (MCWA) or the former upper-division writing proficiency requirement (UDWPE).
Identical to:  NES 473.
May be convened with:  HIST 573.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 474C -- History of Japan: from 1800-Present  (3 units)
Description:  Social, cultural, economic and political history of Japan: 1800-present.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  junior or senior status, 3 units of any history course.
Identical to:  JPN 474C.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 475D -- Periods in Chinese History: New Empire: 750-1350 AD  (3 units)
Description:  In-depth treatment of major premodern eras: New Empire, 750-1350 A.D.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Identical to:  CHN 475D; CHN is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 575D.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 475E -- Periods in Chinese History: Late Empire 1350-1800 AD  (3 units)
Description:  In-depth treatment of major premodern eras: Late Empire, 1350-1800 A.D.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  CHN 475E; CHN is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 575E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 476 -- Modern China  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of political, social, economic and cultural transformations undergone by China from ca. 1800 to the present. Provides students with a sense of both the major themes and the substance of the last two centuries of history of one of the world's major civilizations, as well as a better understanding of China's prominent position in the world today.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CHN 476.
May be convened with:  HIST 576.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 477 -- Comparative History of World Revolutions  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines the historical context against the theoretical, cultural, political, social, and economic elements of sudden revolutionary upheaval. Revolutions from the French Revolution of 1789 to the Cuban Revolution of 1959 will be studied.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 477, POL 477.
May be convened with:  HIST 577.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 479 -- The Ottoman Empire to 1800  (3 units)
Description:  History of Ottoman Empire from its origins through the direct Western European impact, focusing on the political and social history of the empire in Europe and Asia.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 479.
May be convened with:  HIST 579.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 480 -- The Middle East in the Twentieth Century  (3 units)
Description:  The modern Middle East in the age of imperialism, world wars, state formation, decolonization, and Islamic resistance.  This is a Writing Emphasis Course.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  satisfaction of the Mid-Career Writing Assessment (MCWA) or the former upper-division writing proficiency requirement (UDWPE); NES 277B or consent of instructor.
Identical to:  NES 480; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 580.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 482 -- Social History of China  (3 units)
Description:  Formation of ancient Chinese society; organization of families and clans; social stratification, mobility, conflict, and control in traditional China; and transformation from traditional to modern society.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  CHN 482; CHN is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 582.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 484 -- History of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1800 to Present  (3 units)
Description:  Origins of Zionism, and Palestinian and other Arab nationalisms from the nineteenth century and the post-1948 Arab-Israel state conflict in the Cold War era.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 484; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 584.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 485B -- Social, Cultural and Political History of Iranian Plateau: 7th Century - Present  (3 units)
Description:  The Iranian plateau in the modern era of western imperialism and nationalistic Islamic responses.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  NES 277A, NES 277B or consent of instructor.
Identical to:  NES 485B; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 585B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 488 -- History of Byzantium  (3 units)
Description:  Political,social and cultural history of Byzantium from A.D. 325 to1453, including the Byzantine legacy in Europe and the Middle East.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CLAS 488, NES 488, RELI 488.
May be convened with:  HIST 588.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 489 -- Women in East Asia  (3 units)
Description:  Women in traditional China and Japan; analysis of changes occurring in the modern period.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  junior or senior status.
Approved as:  General Education Diversity Emphasis.
Identical to:  EAS 489, W S 489.
May be convened with:  HIST 589.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 490 -- Philosophy of History  (3 units)
Description:  Introduction to historical thinking from antiquity to the present, with emphasis on ideas in European and North American historical writings during the modern and contemporary eras.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 590.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 493 -- Internship  (1-6 units)
Description:  Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of training and practice in actual service in a technical, business, or governmental establishment.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV493
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 493L -- Legislative Internship  (1-12 units)
Description:  Working experience at the Arizona State Legislature; responsibilities draw upon student's area of major expertise and include preparing written and oral reports, summarizing legislative proposals, and providing information to legislators and legislative committees.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 495A -- Studies in Early Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  one semester of history course.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 495B -- Studies in Black America  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  AFAS 495B.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 495C -- Topics in Modern European History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV495C
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 495C or HSTV 495C
May be repeated:  for credit 2 times (maximum 3 enrollments).
May be convened with:  HIST 595C.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 495E -- Struggle and Survival: Modern Mid East and North Africa, c. 1850 - Present  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  NES 495E.
May be convened with:  HIST 595E.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 495F -- Colloquium: Topics in US History  (3 units)
Description:  Colloquium covers topics in United States, such as an urban history from colonial to modern periods.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV495F
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 495F or HSTV 495F
May be repeated:  for credit 2 times (maximum 3 enrollments).
May be convened with:  HIST 595F.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 495G -- Topics in Latin American History  (3 units)
Description:  A colloquium or small lecture class intended for majors and upperclassmen; topics vary by instructor
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV495G
Mutually Exclusive: Credit allowed for only one of these courses: HIST 495G or HSTV 495G
May be repeated:  for credit 3 times (maximum 4 enrollments).
Identical to:  LA S 495G.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 495K -- Colloquium on World History  (3 units)
Description:  A colloquium or small lecture class intended for majors and upperclassmen; topics vary by instructor.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 3 times (maximum 4 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 496C -- The Literature of Identity in the Modern Middle East  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  NES 496C, W S 496C.
May be convened with:  HIST 596C.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 496P -- Women’s Life Writing: Autobiography, Diary, Oral History, Biography....  (3 units)
Description:  Women’s lives come to us in many forms: oral history, diaries, autobiography, biography, letters, “testimonios,” photos. This course will explore the wide variety of women’s life-writing, addressing text and context. Students will read primary texts and analytical scholarship. Research paper or project required.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
Prerequisite(s):  Students are required to take at least two lower-division W S courses before taking any 400-level courses or consent of instructor.
Identical to:  W S 496P; W S is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 596P.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 496T -- Queer--Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender--Histories of North America  (3 units)
Description:  The main focus of this course is on the development of lesbian and gay community and politics in North America in the 20th century, but it will start with colonial America and end up with transnational queer life in the post-Stonewall period. The course aims to develop an appreciation for sexual diversity in North American history.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  Students are required to take at least two lower-division WS courses before taking any 400-level courses or gain consent of instructor before taking class.
Identical to:  W S 496T; W S is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 596T.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 498 -- Senior Capstone  (1-3 units)
Description:  A culminating experience for majors involving a substantive project that demonstrates a synthesis of learning accumulated in the major, including broadly comprehensive knowledge of the discipline and its methodologies. Senior standing required.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 498H -- Honors Thesis  (3 units)
Description:  An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  for a total of 9 units of credit.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 499 -- Independent Study  (1-3 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
Equivalent to:  HSTV499
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 499H -- Honors Independent Study  (1-5 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 500A -- Colony to Nation to the 21st Century: Politics and Culture in Chilean History  (3 units)
Description:  In this course the history of Chilean nation-building from the early colonial roots to the 21st Century will be analyzed. Focus is on political, social, and cultural histories of the country, giving attention to the unique characteristics of Chilean national developments. At the same time, connecting its historical idiosyncrasies to larger regional characteristics and to the trajectory that shaped Latin American developments from colonial encounters, to independence, to contemporary challenges. Graduate-level requirements include bi-weekly meetings to discuss additional readings. Graduate students don't write short papers but will take the exams with the undergraduates. Their grades consist of different components. Please see syllabus.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 500A.
May be convened with:  HIST 400A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 502A -- Economic History of the Islamic World  (3 units)
Description:  An introduction to the economic history of the Islamic world from the seventh century to the present day. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings, lead one class discussion by presenting an analysis of the readings, preparing a written outline and discussion questions, and to use primary historical sources in their papers.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 502A; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 402A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 504A -- History of Rome: The Republic to the Death of Caesar  (3 units)
Description:  The Republic to the death of Caesar. Graduate-level requirements include an additional in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 404A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 504B -- History of Rome: The Empire through the Reign of Constantine the great  (3 units)
Description:  The Empire through the reign of Constantine the Great. Graduate-level requirements include an additional in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 404B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 505A -- Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  Major institutions and trends in Europe from the breakup of the Roman World to the 14th century. Graduate-level requirements include additional work with primary and foreign language secondary sources.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 405A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 505B -- Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  Major institutions and trends in Europe from the breakup of the Roman World to the 14th century. Graduate-level requirements include additional work with primary and foreign language secondary sources.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 405B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 506A -- Spanish Medieval Art and Architecture  (3 units)
Description:  Covers Spanish art and Architecture produced by Christian, Muslim, and Jewish cultures between the fall of Rome and 1492, examining the roles of art in medieval politics and religion. Graduate-level requirements include a 15-20 page paper and will meet with the instructor outside class hours to discuss readings.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  ARH 506A; ARH is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 406A.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 507A -- Intellectual History of Medieval Europe: High Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  Major medieval cultural and intellectual trends: High Medieval Europe. Graduate-level requirements include additional work with primary and foreign language secondary sources.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 407A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 508 -- The Renaissance  (3 units)
Description:  Europe between the 14th and 16th centuries with special emphasis on Italy as the seat of the Renaissance. Topics include the city states, humanism, the Church in an age of Schism and secularization, Renaissance art, the New Monarchies and European exploration and imperialism. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 408.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 509 -- The Reformation  (3 units)
Description:  The Reformation in thought and action both from the perspective of its religious origins and of the political and social conditions. Analysis of its impact on sixteenth century Europe including the spread of Protestant reformation and its companion movement, counter-reformation. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 409.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 510 -- History of Hell in Early Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The concept of punishment after death in Western Europe from the Bible to Dante. Includes the Hebrew, Greco-Roman, Germanic, and Christian traditions. Graduate-level requirements include additional work with primary and foreign language secondary sources.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 410.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 512A -- European Intellectual History: 1600-Present  (3 units)
Description:  Topics include philosophy, science, Enlightenment, Romanticism, Realism, political economy. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 412A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 512B -- European Intellectual History: 1870 to Present  (3 units)
Description:  Intellectual and cultural movements from the fin-de-siecle to the collapse of communism. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 412B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 516A -- Rise and Fall of European Empires  (3 units)
Description:  The rise and fall of European empires from the fall of Rome to the present, a process involving Europeans with the non-European world and its people, continues to shape global events. Graduate-level requirements include additional reading, writing and discussion meetings.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 416A.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 519 -- The French Enlightenment  (3 units)
Description:  Cultural history of France in the 18th century, with emphasis on the works of the philosophers. Graduate-level requirements include substantial additional independent reading.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 419.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 520 -- The French Revolution and Napoleon  (3 units)
Description:  The origins and progress of the Revolution in France. Graduate-level requirements include substantial additional independent reading.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 420.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 521 -- History of Russia: Early Period  (3 units)
Description:  Political, socio-economic, and cultural history of Russia in medieval and early modern times. Graduate-level requirements include a research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 421.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 522 -- History of Russia: Modern Period  (3 units)
Description:  Political, socio-economic, and cultural history of Russia in the modern era until the Bolshevik Revolution. Graduate-level requirements include a research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 422.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 524 -- The Modernization of Russia, 1856-1935  (3 units)
Description:  Social history of Russia from the emancipation of the serf to the establishment of the Stalinist system. Graduate-level requirements include a research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 424.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 525 -- History of the Soviet Union  (3 units)
Description:  The Bolshevik Revolution and problems of Soviet and Russian history from 1917 to the present. Graduate-level requirements include a research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 425.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 531 -- Colonial America  (3 units)
Description:  The experience and evolving institutions of the North Atlantic colonists from the first landings to the end of the French and Indian War. Graduate-level requirements include different, additional reading and reports thereon.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 431.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 532 -- The Era of the American Revolution  (3 units)
Description:  Origins, progress, and character of the struggle against Great Britain; internal political, constitutional, social, and economic developments; the problems of the "Critical Period" and the making of the Constitution. Graduate-level requirements include different, additional reading and reports thereon.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 432.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 533 -- Jefferson and the New Nation, ca. 1790-1828  (3 units)
Description:  Major ideological, political, economic, and social conflicts and developments, North and South, during the first decades of the American nation. Graduate-level requirements include an additional, substantial research or historiographical paper, to be decided on in consultation with the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 433.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 534 -- Jacksonian Era, 1828-1856  (3 units)
Description:  Political, economic and social developments from the "reign" of Andrew Jackson through the collapse of the Whig Party in the 1850s. Graduate-level requirements include an additional, substantial research or historiographical paper, to be decided on in consultation with the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 434.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 535 -- The Coming of the Civil War, U.S. 1845-1861  (3 units)
Description:  Political, constitutional, social and economic developments in the U.S. from the Mexican War through the Civil War. Graduate-level requirements include a research exercise.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 435.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 536 -- Civil War and Reconstruction, U.S. 1861-1878  (3 units)
Description:  Political, constitutional, economic, and military developments in the U.S. and the Confederacy during and after the Civil War. Graduate-level requirements include a research exercise.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 436.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 537 -- U.S. 1876-1919: The Gilded Age and Progressive Era  (3 units)
Description:  Examination of economic, social and political developments in years of rapid industrialization from the end of Reconstruction through World War I. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 437.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 538 -- U.S. 1918-1945: From World War I through World War II  (3 units)
Description:  Prosperity, Depression and the New Deal in peace and war. Graduate-level requirements include taking examinations which consist entirely of essay questions, completing a research paper on a topic chosen in consultation with the professor, assisting the professor in leading discussion groups with undergraduate students over the assigned readings, providing questions from those readings for use by the professor in formulating quizzes for the undergraduates, and possibly presenting a lecture to the class if the student is nearing completion of graduate work.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 438.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 540 -- United States: 1945 to Present  (3 units)
Description:  American society and the role of the United States in world affairs from the Yalta Conference to the present. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper on a topic approved by the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 440.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 544 -- Islamic Mysticism  (3 units)
Description:  Origin and development of Sufism and its impact on Muslim and non-Muslim worlds.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 544; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 444.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 545 -- Women in Islamic History  (3 units)
Description:  Examination of the roles women have played throughout Islamic history and of the changing discourse in the Islamic community about women and their roles. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and meetings with the instructor and an additional research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 545, W S 545.
May be convened with:  HIST 445.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 546 -- History of Arizona and the Southwest  (3 units)
Description:  Economic, social and political development of the state and region from Spanish times to present. Graduate-level requirements include an historiographic essay and additional reading.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 446.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 550 -- History of American Foreign Relations Since 1914  (3 units)
Description:  Examines the pivotal role played by the United States in world affairs since WWI, focusing on America's struggle with revolutionary movements in Europe, Asia and Latin America. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper and additional course readings.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 450.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 552 -- American Ethnic History  (3 units)
Description:  A history of the various ethnic minorities in America from Colonial times to the present, with emphasis on adjustment, acculturation and degrees of assimilation. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper on a topic approved by the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 452.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 553 -- History of Women and Work  (3 units)
Description:  History of women and work in western and non-western nations from prehistoric times to the present. Graduate-level requirements include writing a lengthy research paper demonstrating a familiarity with basic secondary works as well as investigating primary sources on a pertinent topic.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 453.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 554 -- The Spanish Inquisition  (3 units)
Description:  The Inquisition in Spanish, European, & ethnic history: it's bureaucracy and procedures; it's festivities, it's victims, New and Old Christians; and witches. Social, economic, and demographic context. Graduate-level requirements include graduate students studying more deeply the economic, social and demographic context of the Inquisition, through more scholarly reading, discussion and writing.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Typical structure:  2 hours lecture, 1 hour discussion.
Identical to:  JUS 554, RELI 554.
May be convened with:  HIST 454.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 556A -- Paradise Lost: History of Anarchism in Europe  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines anarchism's birth, growth, and development in various parts of Europe during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings, writings, and individual consultation with the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 456A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 558 -- Topics in Comparative Women's History  (3 units)
Description:  International history of a topic of the instructor's choice. P, 3 units of any history or women's studies course. Graduate-level requirements include reading and writing about the field in more depth.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 458.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 561 -- The Spanish Conquest  (3 units)
Description:  The impact of conquest and Spanish rule on the native peoples of Mexico, Central American, Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Topics include: conquest and ecology; land and labor; religion and culture; adaptation and resistance. Graduate-level requirements include an additional essay.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 461.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 564 -- History of Argentina  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of Argentine history and culture from the colonial era to the present. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper on an approved topic.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 564.
May be convened with:  HIST 464.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 565A -- History of Spain: Classical/Medieval Spain, Prehistory to 1100 AD  (3 units)
Description:  This course explores the formation and development of the Iberian Peninsula from the earliest settlements through the Roman Period, the Islamic conquest, and the early Reconquest. It will survey the political, social, cultural, and economic factors that combined to give the Iberia Peninsula its distinctive characteristics. Graduate-level requirements include additional meetings with the instructor, additional reading-including reading in the primary language. The course also includes additional writing for the graduate student-such writing may include a semester research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 565A.
May be convened with:  HIST 465A.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 565B -- History of Spain: Early Modern Spain, 1100 to 1700  (3 units)
Description:  Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and meetings with instructor to develop topics for a historiographic or bibliographic essay. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and meetings with instructor to develop topics for a historiographic or bibliographic essay.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 565B.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 565C -- History of Spain: Imperial Spain, 1700 to 1898  (3 units)
Description:  This course surveys the growth and development of the Spanish Empire, with particular attention to Latin America, under the guidance of the new Spanish dynastic house, the Bourbons. It will focus on reorganization of Spain's political affairs in the old world and the new world. In addition, Spain's socio-economic and cultural development will be discussed. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and meetings with instructor to develop topics for a historiographical or bibliographic essay.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 565C.
May be convened with:  HIST 465C.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 565D -- History of Spain: Contemporary Spain, 1868 to the Present  (3 units)
Description:  The central theme of this course is the conversion of Spain from a far-flung world empire to a modern European nation-state. It will explore the many political, socio-economic, and cultural changes that have transformed Spain from a nation in decline to one of the leading nations in the European Community. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and meetings with instructor to develop topics for a historiographical or bibliographic essay.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  SPAN 565D.
May be convened with:  HIST 465D.

HIST 565E -- History of Spain: Modern Spanish Cultural Studies  (3 units)
Description:  This course will focus on the various elements of Spanish culture that contribute to its cultural distinction. It will examine Spain's cultural life from various spiritual, literary, athletic, and culinary perspectives and the history of their development. As such, its central focus will change each time it is offered. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings, writings, and individual consultation with the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Identical to:  SPAN 565E.
May be convened with:  HIST 465E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 565Z -- History of Central America  (3 units)
Description:  A survey of the history of Central American from the Spanish conquest to the present, focusing on regional economies, ethnic and class conflict, and the politics of state formation. Graduate-level requirements include an 8 to 10-page historiographic essay, additional readings, mid-term and final exam.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 565Z.
May be convened with:  HIST 465Z.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 567 -- Contemporary Latin America  (3 units)
Description:  Revolution, social change and reaction in Latin America from 1930 to the present. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth paper on a topic approved by the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 567.
May be convened with:  HIST 467.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 569 -- History of Women in Latin America  (3 units)
Description:  Women's history in Latin America from the Conquest to the present. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper on a topic approved by the instructor.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 569.
May be convened with:  HIST 469.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 572 -- History of Medieval India  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of Indian history from the 7th century to 1750. Graduate-level requirements include additional research or writing; see instructor for details.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 572.
May be convened with:  HIST 472.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 573 -- History of Modern India and Pakistan: 1750-Present  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of political, social and economic developments in South Asia from the mid-18th century to the present. Writing emphasis for India-Pakistan specialization. Graduate-level requirements include additional research or writing; see instructor for details.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 573.
May be convened with:  HIST 473.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 575D -- Periods in Chinese History: New Empire, 750-1350 AD  (3 units)
Description:  In-depth treatment of major premodern eras: New Empire, 750-1350 A.D. Graduate-level requirements include a bibliography, reports, and a term paper similar to that required in a preliminary doctoral exam.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Identical to:  CHN 575D; CHN is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 475D.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 575E -- Periods in Chinese History: Late Empire 1350-1800 AD  (3 units)
Description:  In-depth treatment of major premodern eras: Late Empire, 1350-1800 A.D. Graduate-level requirements include a bibliography, reports, and a term paper similar to that required in a preliminary doctoral exam.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Identical to:  CHN 575E; CHN is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 475E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 576 -- Modern China  (3 units)
Description:  Survey of political, social, economic and cultural transformations undergone by China from ca. 1800 to the present. Provides students with a sense of both the major themes and the substance of the last two centuries of history of one of the world's major civilizations, as well as a better understanding of China's prominent position in the world today. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper and additional readings.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CHN 576.
May be convened with:  HIST 476.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 577 -- Comparative History of World Revolutions  (3 units)
Description:  This course examines the historical context against the theoretical, cultural, political, social, and economic elements of sudden revolutionary upheaval. Revolutions from the French Revolution of 1789 to the Cuban Revolution of 1959 will be studied. Graduate-level requirements include additional reading material, some in the original language; additional writing; meeting separately with the instructor for more level appropriate discussion and analysis.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  LA S 577, POL 577.
May be convened with:  HIST 477.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 579 -- The Ottoman Empire to 1800  (3 units)
Description:  History of Ottoman Empire from its origins through the direct Western European impact, focusing on the political and social history of the empire in Europe and Asia. Graduate-level requirements include an in-depth research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 579.
May be convened with:  HIST 479.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 580 -- The Middle East in the Twentieth Century  (3 units)
Description:  The modern Middle East in the age of imperialism, world wars, state formation, decolonization, and Islamic resistance. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings on selected topics and an extensive research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 580; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 480.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 582 -- Social History of China  (3 units)
Description:  Formation of ancient Chinese society; organization of families and clans; social stratification, mobility, conflict, and control in traditional China; and transformation from traditional to modern society. Graduate-level requirements include an extra term paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CHN 582; CHN is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 482.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 584 -- History of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1800 to Present  (3 units)
Description:  Origins of Zionism, and Palestinian and other Arab nationalisms from the nineteenth century and the post-1948 Arab-Israel state conflict in the Cold War era. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and an extensive research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 584; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 484.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 585B -- Social, Cultural and Political History of Iranian Plateau: 7th Century - Present  (3 units)
Description:  The Iranian plateau in the modern era of western imperialism and nationalistic Islamic responses. Graduate-level requirements include additional readings and an extensive research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  NES 585B; NES is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 485B.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 588 -- History of Byzantium  (3 units)
Description:  Political,social and cultural history of Byzantium from A.D. 325 to1453, including the Byzantine legacy in Europe and the Middle East. Graduate-level requirements include an additional term paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  CLAS 588, NES 588, RELI 588.
May be convened with:  HIST 488.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 589 -- Women in East Asia  (3 units)
Description:  Women in traditional China and Japan; analysis of changes occurring in the modern period. Graduate-level requirements include an additional research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  EAS 589.
May be convened with:  HIST 489.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 590 -- Philosophy of History  (3 units)
Description:  Introduction to historical thinking from antiquity to the present, with emphasis on ideas in European and North American historical writings during the modern and contemporary eras. Graduate-level requirements include a research paper.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 490.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 593 -- Internship  (1-3 units)
Description:  Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of training and practice in actual service in a technical, business, or governmental establishment.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 593L -- Legislative Internship  (1-9 units)
Description:  Working experience at the Arizona State Legislature; responsibilities draw upon student's area of major expertise and include preparing written and oral reports, summarizing legislative proposals, and providing information to legislators and legislative committees.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 595C -- Topics in Modern European History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be convened with:  HIST 495C.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 595E -- Struggle and Survival: Modern Mid East and North Africa, c. 1850 - Present  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  NES 595E.
May be convened with:  HIST 495E.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 595F -- Colloquium: Topics in US History  (3 units)
Description:  Colloquium covers topics in United States, such as an urban history from colonial to modern periods. Graduate-level requirements include additional reading, plus 3 options regarding written work: (1) 20-25 page essay based on own research (2) create a syllabus for the undergrad course (3) complete 20 page historiographical essay.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 2 times (maximum 3 enrollments).
May be convened with:  HIST 495F.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 596C -- The Literature of Identity in the Modern Middle East  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  NES 596C, W S 596C.
May be convened with:  HIST 496C.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 596M -- Middle East: Topics in History and Civilization  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Identical to:  NES 596M; NES is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 596P -- Women’s Life Writing: Autobiography, Diary, Oral History, Biography....  (3 units)
Description:  Women’s lives come to us in many forms: oral history, diaries, autobiography, biography, letters, “testimonios,” photos. This course will explore the wide variety of women’s life-writing, addressing text and context. Students will read primary texts and analytical scholarship. Research paper or project required. Graduate-level requirements include a 15-page paper plus additional background reading on each life story discussed in class.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  W S 596P; W S is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 496P.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 596T -- Queer--Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender--Histories of North America  (3 units)
Description:  The main focus of this course is on the development of lesbian and gay community and politics in North America in the 20th century, but it will start with colonial America and end up with transnational queer life in the post-Stonewall period. The course aims to develop an appreciation for sexual diversity in North American history. Graduate-level requirements include 8-12 page paper and additional readings each week.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  W S 596T; W S is home department.
May be convened with:  HIST 496T.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 597A -- Teaching Method and Practice  (3 units)
Description:  Course focuses on the history undergraduate classroom, working from theoretical approaches to application and workability. The primary emphasis is teaching critical analytical and communication skills, but another important theme is professional development for graduate students, preparing course material and gaining experience with teaching technology.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 599 -- Independent Study  (1-5 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work. Graduate students doing independent work which cannot be classified as actual research will register for credit under course number 599, 699, or 799.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 612 -- Anthropology of Modernity  (3 units)
Description:  Course identifying and analyzing characteristically modern social forms; their historical emergence; role of colonial and imperial projects; articulation with locales on various scales and impact on the politics of self and community in cases from around the world
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
Identical to:  ANTH 612; ANTH is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 653 -- Anthropology and History  (3 units)
Description:  Explores historical approaches to the study of indigenous/subaltern peoples across the world, critically examines the strengths/weaknesses of multiple lines of evidence, and analyzes different epistemologies of history involved in the construction of the past.
Grading:  Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Identical to:  ANTH 653; ANTH is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 693 -- Internship  (1-6 units)
Description:  Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of training and practice in actual service in a technical, business, or governmental establishment.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 695A -- Advanced Studies in United States History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695B -- Advanced Studies in Latin American History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Identical to:  LA S 695B.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695C -- Advanced Studies in European History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695E -- Advanced Studies in the History of Women  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Identical to:  W S 695E.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695F -- Advanced Studies in Ancient History  (3 units)
Description:  Discussion and analysis of current scholarship on a range of topics and issues in ancient history, usually in a small group setting. Instruction may include presentations by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 5 times (maximum 6 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695G -- Advanced Study in Asian History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 3 times (maximum 4 enrollments).
Identical to:  EAS 695G.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695H -- Comparative History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for a total of 6 units of credit.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695I -- World History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 695K -- Historiography  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  open to majors only.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 695M -- Advanced Studies in Middle Eastern History  (3 units)
Description:  The exchange of scholarly information and/or secondary research, usually in a small group setting. Instruction often includes lectures by several different persons. Research projects may or may not be required of course registrants.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Identical to:  NES 695M.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 696B -- Nineteenth-Century U.S. History  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696C -- Twentieth-Century U.S. History  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696E -- Medieval Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696F -- Early Modern Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  Latin and German required.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696G -- Nineteenth-Century Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696H -- Twentieth-Century Europe  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696J -- Latin America: Modern Period  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
May be repeated:  for credit 10 times (maximum 11 enrollments).
Identical to:  LA S 696J.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696L -- Conservation and Community  (3 units)
Description:  An intensive exploration of the impact of conservation efforts, including protected areas, on rural peoples across the world.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E. Available to qualified students for Pass/Fail Option.
May be repeated:  for credit 1 time (maximum 2 enrollments).
Identical to:  ANTH 696L; ANTH is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall.

HIST 696M -- Sexuality and International Migration  (3 units)
Description:  The course examines sexuality as the site where multiple concerns about international migration (including social, cultural, political, economic and national) are expressed and contested, in the context of globalization and transnationalism.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Identical to:  W S 696M; W S is home department.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring.

HIST 696N -- Comparative Women's History  (3 units)
Description:  The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers.
Grading:  Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E.
Prerequisite(s):  consent of department.
May be repeated:  for credit 4 times (maximum 5 enrollments).
Identical to:  W S 696N.
Usually offered:  Spring.

HIST 699 -- Independent Study  (1-6 units)
Description:  Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work. Graduate students doing independent work which cannot be classified as actual research will register for credit under course number 599, 699, or 799.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 900 -- Research  (1-9 units)
Description:  Individual research, not related to thesis or dissertation preparation, by graduate students.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E K.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 910 -- Thesis  (2-6 units)
Description:  Research for the master's thesis (whether library research, laboratory or field observation or research, artistic creation, or thesis writing). Maximum total credit permitted varies with the major department.
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P E K.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 920 -- Dissertation  (1-9 units)
Description:  Research for the doctoral dissertation (whether library research, laboratory or field observation or research, artistic creation, or dissertation writing).
Grading:  Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P E K.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

HIST 930 -- Supplementary Registration  (1-9 units)
Description:  For students who have completed all course requirements for their advanced degree programs. May be used concurrently with other enrollments to bring to total number of units to the required minimum.
Grading:  Grade of K is awarded for this course except for the final term.
May be repeated:  an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions.
Usually offered:  Fall, Spring, Summer.

 

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