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Course
listings for History
Professors
Doreen Hunter
Neil McHugh
Duane A. Smith
Associate
Professors
James K. Ash
Robert R. Bunting
Michael F. Fry
Visiting
Instructor
Katherine A. Clark
The Department of History
offers a wide variety of courses that enhance students' understanding
and appreciation of the human past. The study of history promotes
tolerance between peoples and helps make the world and our lives
more intelligible. We are the wiser for knowing that our belief
systems, institutions, and conflicts have their roots in the past.
Courses in the history of Africa, East Asia, Latin America, and
the Middle East introduce the creative achievements of other civilizations.
Through the exploration of our own national experience and the history
of western civilization, students gain a deeper understanding of
the historic foundations underlying the challenges we face in our
own time.
Students of history learn
to collect and interpret data, develop logical and convincing arguments,
and to write with clarity and economy. A degree in history provides
a solid foundation for students seeking careers in teaching, archival
management, library science, law, politics, international affairs
and governments, as well as the training needed for success in graduate
school.
Courses numbered 100
are broad topical courses designed for students seeking to meet
their general education requirements. 200-level courses are "survey"
courses providing overviews of the history of regions and periods.
These are the foundation courses for history majors and ideal courses
for those seeking to meet their general education requirements.
Courses designated 300 explore more specialized topics and assume
background in lower-division history courses. 400-level courses
are conducted as seminars and provide the advanced instruction required
for the Senior Research Seminar.
The courses described
are those offered on a regular basis. From time to time the department
offers new courses. Students should check the full list of courses
published by the department at the time of registration.
History majors are required
to take 14 history courses totaling 44-48 credits. Majors must concentrate
in one of the areas listed below. Under special circumstances, a
student may propose a student-constructed concentration. This special
option requires the approval of the department chair.
Students majoring in
history may be certified to teach social studies at the secondary
level. To obtain requirements for teacher certification, please
contact the Department of Teacher Education.
Goals and Objectives:
1. Familiarize students with the history of human experience in
at least three regions of the world.
2. Provide students with particular competence in their area of
concentration including a factual base of information, familiarity
with the important historiographical and interpretive concerns of
historians of that area, and an ability to synthesize their understanding
around recurrent historical themes.
3. Encourage an understanding of how different societies in different
times and places have constructed class, race, and gender.
4. Develop critical thinking-rigorous, fair-minded, nuanced.
5. Foster the research and writing skills that enable students to
define a suitable topic, conduct thorough and resourceful searches
for relevant information, and write up their findings in a clear,
persuasive, and interesting fashion.
6. Cultivate in students an understanding of the complex epistemological
challenges involved in doing history.
7. Help students appreciate that a historical understanding of the
human experience can contribute in vital ways to a responsible and
reflective life.
Areas of Concentration
| Courses: |
Credits: |
| African and Middle
Eastern History |
|
| Choose from among: |
|
**Hist 140R Survey
of African History I
**Hist 141R Survey of African History II
Hist 305 Mesopotamian Myth/Religion
Hist 340 Contemporary Africa
Hist 342 West Africa
Hist 343 Ancient Nile Valley
Hist 344 Northeast Africa
Hist 346 South Africa
Hist 348 Africans in the Americas
Hist 349 Islam in History
Hist 440 Advanced Studies in African History |
|
| East Asian History |
|
| Choose from among: |
|
**Hist 170R Survey
of East Asian Civilization I
**Hist 171R Survey of East Asian Civilization II
Hist 351 U.S.-East Asian Relations
Hist 352 Modern China
Hist 353 Pacific War
Hist 357 World Since 1945
Hist 450 Advanced Studies in East Asian History |
|
| European History |
|
| Choose from among: |
|
**Hist 160R Survey
of Western Civilization I
**Hist 261S Western Civilization II, 1350 to Present
Hist 306 Ancient Women's Religions
Hist 308 Rise of Christianity
Hist 359 Medieval Europe
Hist 360 Renaissance Europe
Hist 361 Russia in Revolution to 1924
Hist 362 Soviet Union: Stalin to Gorbachev
Hist 363 Collapse of the Soviet Union
Hist 364 Germany, Roman Times to 1919
Hist 365 Germany, 1919 to Present
Hist 366 Hitler and the Holocaust
Hist 367 Medieval England and Ireland
Hist 368 Medieval Women
Hist 381 France and Spain: Middle Ages to Modern
Hist 382 Reformation Europe and Wars of Religion
Hist 465 Advanced Studies in European History |
|
| Latin American
History |
|
| Choose from among: |
|
Hist 175 Introduction
to Latin American History
**Hist 270R Colonial Latin America
**Hist 271S Latin America Since Independence
Hist 371 History of Central America
Hist 372 U.S.-Latin American Relations
Hist 373 History of Mexico
Hist 475 Advanced Studies in Latin American History |
|
| United States
History |
|
| Choose from among: |
|
**Hist 181N U.S.
Environmental History
Hist 280 Survey of U.S. History, 1600-1877
**Hist 281R Survey of U.S. History, 1877-Present
Hist 311 Colonial and Revolutionary America, 1492-1789
Hist 314 Inventing America, 1789-1850
Hist 315 Irish, Catholic, American
Hist 316 Civil War America
Hist 318 Emergence of Modern America, 1893-1939
Hist 320 Western/Southwest American History
Hist 322 Western American Mining
Hist 324 Colorado History
Hist 326 Baseball and the American Dream
Hist 328 Christianity in U.S. History
Hist 332 Women in American History
Hist 333 America Since 1945
Hist 334 United States and Vietnam
Hist 337 Cultural and Intellectual History in the 20th Century
Hist 338 Modern Women's Movement
Hist 339 Women and the "West"
Hist 482 Topics in Colorado History
Hist 485 Advanced Studies in United States History |
|
Student-Constructed
Concentration
Approval of a History Faculty Advisor and the Department Chair |
|
| REQUIREMENTS
FOR A BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE WITH A MAJOR IN HISTORY: |
|
| General Education |
35-46 |
| **
Courses marked with double asterisks may also be counted toward
TS 1 requirements. |
| Lower-Division
History Requirements: |
|
| Survey sequence
in the area of concentration |
6 |
| Three additional
survey courses |
9 |
| Non-U.S.
history majors must take at least one U.S. history survey course. |
|
| U.S. history
majors must take three non-U.S. history survey courses. |
|
| Upper-Division
History Requirements: |
|
| Four courses at
the 300- or 400-level in the area of concentration, at least
one of which must be at the 400-level, other than Hist 496. |
|
| Three additional
300- or 400-level courses taken outside the concentration in
a least two areas. |
|
| Hist 396W, The Philosophy
and Methods (4 credits). This course should be taken in the
last term of the sophomore year or during the junior year. |
|
| Hist 496 Research
Senior Seminar |
|
| Subtotal Specific
Departmental Requirements |
44-48 |
| Writing Course
Within Discipline: |
|
| Included in Departmental
Requirements above. |
|
| Auxiliary Requirements: |
|
| Two courses in
one modern language |
6-8 |
| Four courses
selected among three of the following disciplines: |
|
| Anthropology (except
Anth 301, 350, 496, and 499) |
|
| Art 162,
262R**, 263R**, 265, and 365 |
|
| Economics (except
Econ 201) |
|
| English 173R**,
174R**, 175R**, 221R**, 230, 240R**, 280R**, 320, 336, 337,
345, 346, 370, 380, 430, 432, 461 |
|
| Geography 271R** |
|
| Philosophy
(except Phil 496 and 499) |
|
| Political Science
(except PS 350, 450, 496, and 499) |
|
| Psychology 157,
387, 425, and 499 |
|
| Sociology (except
Soc 353, 496, and 499) |
|
| Subtotal Auxiliary
Requirements |
18-24 |
| Free Electives
(variable) |
|
| TOTAL REQUIRED
FOR GRADUATION |
120 |
| Note
to transfer and former students: If you have taken any of your
major requirements and received a different number of credits
than listed above, you may need to complete additional major
credit requirements. |
| REQUIREMENTS
FOR A MINOR IN HISTORY: |
|
| A total of 6 courses
is required from at least two different instructors. |
|
| Three courses (9
credits) should be lower-division and three courses (10-12 credits)
should be upper-division. |
|
| See
the department chair for further information. |
|