HIST W3240y. East Central Europe in the 20th Century. 3 pts.
Despite--or because of--the adjective "east," East Central Europe was at the
center of major historical developments in Europe in the twentieth century.
From the two world wars to the communist period, the East Central European
region was the site of key events that marked the history of the world. And,
once again, it has recently been at the center of attention because of the
violent disintegration of Yugoslavia and the expansion of the European Union
and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to include several East Central
European states. This course examines these and other topics in twentieth
century East Central European history, and it emphasizes economic and
political approaches alongside cultural and social ones. It also includes
considerable treatment of the roles of Germany, the Soviet Union and the
United States of America in the region.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST W3240
|
|
HIST
3240
|
81699
001
|
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
TBA
|
D. Vuletic
|
14
|
|
HIST W3246y. Patterns of Soviet/Russian Interventions: from Poland to
Georgia, 1939-2008. 3 pts.
The lecture course will analyze the patterns of Soviet interventions from the
invasion of Poland at the onset of the Second World War in September, 1939 to
the recent military conflict between Russia and Georgia in 2008. These
interventions were of different character in every case: the mildest version
of Soviet crisis managing strategy was threatening the use of force in Poland
in 1956; it was possible to restore order by sending Soviet tanks to East
Berlinin 1953; the Red Army had no difficulty in defeating the freedom
fighters in Hungary during the Hungarian revolution, while tiny Finland could
eventually be defeated only in a large scale traditional war during the
winter of 1939-1940.
Soviet policy goals were achieved by most interventions: the one notable
exception being Moscow's "Vietnam": the invasion of Afghanistan. During the
crises emerging in the Soviet bloc a gradual improvement can be seen in
Moscow's crisis managing strategy: in Berlin, 1953 the Soviet army alone was
used to restore order, in Hugnary in 1956 initially the Kremlin tried to
pacify the situation by using a combination of military and politcal means,
during the Prague Spring a half year long bilateral and multilateral
coordination process aimed at finding a political solution preceded the
military intervention, while in Poland in 1981 the final option eventually
could be avoided by the introduction of Marshal Law. During the course, two
special cases of Soviet intervention will also be analyzed: the subtle
process of the Sovietization in East Central Europe between 1944-1948 and the
Soviet bloc's involvement in the Vietnam War.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST W3246
|
|
HIST
3246
|
98002
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
TBA
|
C. Bekes
|
20
|
|
HIST G8063x. Captivity. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A thematic graduate colloquium that examines the phenomenon of captivity in
Western history, from the Biblical Near East to the present day and across
Europe and the Mediterranean, Africa, and the Americas. Students will read
primary sources ("captivity narratives" and others) alongside secondary
scholarship, and produce either an essay based on original research or
another suitable final project.
HIST G8233x. Between Europe and Asia: History and Cultures of Nomadic
Civilizations. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
"A nomadic society does not have a history of its own," wrote the well-known
historian Arnold Toynbee. This course seeks to challenge this statement by
employing new perspectives in examining the economic, political, cultural,
and environmental history of the nomadic steppe populations of Eurasia, which
main body lies within the borders of the former Soviet Union. Extended to the
east into Mongolia and Northern China and to the west to the Carpathian
Mountain range in Central Europe, the Steppe region has played a major role
in Eurasian history, although its importance is often overlooked. By
connecting east with west via trade routes (the Silk and Tea Roads), it
facilitated travel of goods, cultures and ideas between their populations
through its inhabitants, the nomadic peoples, who were the main mediators in
bringing many innovations to both sides. The course is open to both graduate
and undergraduate students.
HSLW G8264x. A History of International Law. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
This seminar offers an introduction to the history of international law.
Topics include the intellectual foundations of modern international law;
slavery and the slave trade; the laws of war; international institutions; the
profession and literature of international law; the human rights revolution;
and twentieth-century critiques of international law.
HIST G8350y. American Big Business and German Industry, 1900-2000. 4
pts.
There is a great deal of research and debate on the role that the United
States played in the reconstruction and recasting of Europe after Wolrd War
II. This work is usually seen in the larger context not only of the East-West
conflict since 1945, if not since 1917, but also as part of the process of
the "Americanization" of the world. By the end of the 20th century this
process is deemed to have been replaced by a trend toward "globalization"
which is assumed to have started before 1914 until it was interrupted by two
world wars, integral nationalism, the Great Depression of the 1930s, the
struggles over decolonization and seemingly endless civil wars. It was only
in the 1990s that "globalization" is said to have resumed whre it stopped in
1914. Against the background of these wide-ranging scholarly debates that
also revolved around notions of "modernization" of both economies and
societies, that this course "homes in" on the development of German industry
and its relationship with American big business before coming back, at the
end of the semester, to the big questions that have been raised at the
beginning.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8350
|
|
HIST
8350
|
75283
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
|
V. Berghahn
|
0
|
|
HIST G8409x. 20th Century Political History. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Seminar teaches writing serious research papers in various areas of
20th-century American history, based on primary sources.
HIST G8412x. Comparative Slavery and Abolition. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
This course provides an intensive investigation in to the foundational works
in the comparative history of slavery and abolition. The subject is the
diverse purposes to which the practice of slavery has been put, and the
various conceptual strategies that scholars have employed to make sense of
them. The colloquium will place particular emphasis on social, economic,
institutional, and political history, and will give special attention to the
rise and fall of slave systems in the Mediterranean, Africa, and the
Americas.
CLHS G8420y. The Hermeneutic Tradition. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A conceptual and historical study of what it is to read historically, with a
focus on the hermeneutic tradition. Authors include Erasmus, Spinoza,
Schleiermacher, Droysen, Dilthey, Heidegger, R.G. Collingwood, Gadamer,
Habermas, Hayden White, and Paul Ricoeur.
HIST G8901y. Imperialism. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Taught jointly by historians of the ancient and contemporary world, this
colloquium aims to stimulate students wanting to work with an historical
perspective to examine cross-culturally the roots, the modalities, the
effects and the rhetoric of imperialism across the ages. Classes will
consider a variety of theoretical approaches and a series of case studies.
HIST G8910y. Introduction to History and Historiography.
This course is designed to introduce all first-year graduate students in
History to major books and problems of the discipline. It aims to familiarize
them with historical writings on periods and places outside their own
prospective specialities.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8910
|
|
HIST
8910
|
88781
001
|
M 2:10p - 4:00p
402 Hamilton Hall
|
E. Blackmar
N. Milanich
|
0
|
|
|
HIST
8910
|
10531
002
|
M 2:10p - 4:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
E. Haefeli
V. De Grazia
|
0
|
|
HIST G8920y. Disease, Public Health and Empire: Comparative
Perspectives. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
The aim of this graduate level colloquium is to provide a broad introduction
to disease, public health, and medicine in colonial and post-colonial
countries, with an emphasis on comparative history.
HIST G8930x. Approaches to International and Global History. 4
pts.
How do international and global perspectives shape and conceptualization,
research, and writing of history? Topics include approaches to comparative
history and transnational processes, the relationship of local, regional,
national, and global scales of analysis, and the problem of periodization
when considered on a world scale.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8930
|
|
HIST
8930
|
68346
001
|
W 9:00a - 10:50a
302 Fayerweather
|
M. Connelly
|
17
|
|
|
HIST
8930
|
72896
002
|
Tu 11:00a - 12:50p
311 Fayerweather
|
A. Mckeown
|
10
|
|
HIST G8931y. Research Theories and Methods in International and
Global History. 4 pts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8931
|
|
HIST
8931
|
12547
001
|
M 9:00a - 10:50a
302 Fayerweather
|
M. Connelly
|
0
|
|
HIST G8933x. Telling the Twentieth Century. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A transnational exploration of the history of the twentieth century,
addressing commonalities, connections, and comparisons among different parts
of the world toward the end of telling the twentieth century as a whole.
HIST G8935y. Nations and Nationalism in Global Perspective. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
This seminar provides a broad overview of theoretical literature on
nationalism and case studies of nationalist movements in modern Europe and
Asia. Beginning with the classic overviews written during the 1980s
(Gellner, Anderson), we move on to read a wide variety of books written
over the past decade on the relationship between nationality and selfhood,
citizenship, religion, empire, gender, and historical consciousness.
Requirements include two short written critiques of the weekly readings, an
oral presentation on a week's reading, and a long bibliographic essay on a
subject of the student's choice.
HIST G8940y. Population Movements, Minorities, and Genocide. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9345x. International Politics and the League of Nations. 4
pts.
This course is a research seminar designed for graduate students working on
some aspect of European or international politics between the wars. The
course will pay particular attention to the interaction between states,
mobilized interests or "peoples," and new international organizations
(especially the League of Nations), and will introduce all students to the
rich records of the League and other international organizations and
foundations available at Columbia. We will read a set of important framing
works on the interwar period together, but students will supplement those
readings with further works relevant to their own research interests. Each
student will write and present a research paper on a subject of their
choosing.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9345
|
|
HIST
9345
|
66402
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
201D Philosophy Hall
|
S. Pedersen
|
6
|
|
HIST G9401y. The Atlantic World, c.1600-1850. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
HIST G9903x. Gender and Migration: A Global Perspective. 4
pts.
This course explores reasons, from labor-markets and family structure to
gender ideologies and religion, for different participation of women and men
in migration, both internal and international, during the last two centuries
and throughout the world. Also examines gender differences in socio-economic
integration in host societies and the impact of migration on the gender
systems of countries of origins and reception.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9903
|
|
HIST
9903
|
02342
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
501 International Affairs Bldg
|
J. Moya
|
16
|
|
HIST G9912y. Writing History Beyond the Academy. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
This course looks at "public history." That is to say, the many forms of
history which are not primarily the province of academic history: popular
"trade" historical writing and publishing; history journalism; the writing
and designing of history texts for schools; children's history (ages 6-16);
the creation and installation of museum-based history exhibits; television
and radio documentaries and history-based feature films.
Directed Readings and Doctoral Seminars
HIST G8991x or y. Dissertation Prospectus Writing Workshop. 3
pts.
This yearlong workshop is open to all graduate students in history who have
finished coursework and expect to take their oral examinations soon. It will
meet every two weeks for two hours to discus the structure of a dissertation
prospectus, strategies of grant-writing, and, most importantly, successive
drafts of individual dissertation prospectuses. Consistent attendance and
participation are mandatory.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8991
|
|
HIST
8991
|
75948
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0
|
|
HIST G8996x-G8997y. Tutorial Readings. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor and advisor's permission. Open only to
part-time M.A. students. To register for G8996 and G8997, students must request a section number from the
department's graduate secretary.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8996
|
|
HIST
8996
|
71250
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8997
|
|
HIST
8997
|
16696
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
HIST G8999x or y. Directed Class Readings. 1-4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor and advisor's permission. Students may register for
G8999, which represents 4 pts. of graduate colloquium
credit, with permission of their adviser. Students then audit a lecture or an
undergraduate seminar on a specialized topic, and fulfill the course
requirements for G8999 by special arrangement with the instructor. To
register for G8999, students must request a section number from the
department's graduate secretary.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8999
|
|
HIST
8999
|
71101
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8999
|
|
HIST
8999
|
61247
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
HIST G9000x or y. Directed Individual Readings. 1-4 pts.
Prerequisite: instructor and department's permission. To register
for G9000, students must request a section number from the
department's graduate secretary.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9000
|
|
HIST
9000
|
17198
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9000
|
|
HIST
9000
|
11030
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
|
HIST
9000
|
07573
037
|
TBA
|
A. Rao
|
0
|
|
HIST G9901x-G9901y. European Research Seminar. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
This research seminar is offered for pre-MPhil students in European history
who are working or or will be working on a research paper for another
colloquium or in an independent study. All students who have not completed
their research requirements for the MPhil and who are not enrolled in a
9000-level research seminar that will satisfy their requirements are urged to
take the course (early modernists are required to enroll). The seminar will
focus on practical matters -- libraries, archives, and primary sources;
presentation of bibliographies, research plans, and rough drafts. Students
will read the work of others and present their own.
HIST G9990y. Colloquium/Seminar in Teaching.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9990
|
|
HIST
9990
|
98646
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9990
|
|
HIST
9990
|
82280
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
HIST G9999x-G9999y. Doctoral Seminar. 4 pts.
Prerequisite: instructor and department's permission. Eight points
of G9999, Doctoral seminar, are required for the M.Phil.
degree. The doctoral seminar, a year-long tutorial of directed reading,
prepares the student for the oral examination in subjects. To register for
G9999, students must request a section number from the
department's graduate secretary.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9999
|
|
HIST
9999
|
46598
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9999
|
|
HIST
9999
|
26030
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0 / 0
|
|
African History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8760x. Ecology and Development In Africa Since 1930. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8762y. Disease, Health and Healing In African History Since
1850. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Considers the intersection of western
and traditional healers and healing 1860 to the present, with special
attention to crises including smallpox, sleeping sickness, influenza and
AIDS.
HIST G8763y. Africa, Europe, and New Colonial Histories.. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
This course aims to provoke a conversation across fields. How do Africanists
write colonial history? How do Europeanists? Is it possible to write an
'African' history of European empire, or a 'European' history of colonialism?
HIST G8767y. Key Readings in Women, Gender and Sexuality in African
History. 4 pts.
This graduate colloquium will introduce students to the key scholarship on
women, gender and sexuality in African history. Readings will include key
works on African women's history, gender history, and the history of
sexuality. Emphasis will be placed on the theoretical and methodological
approaches that have informed the historiography on women, gender, and
sexuality in Africa in the last four decades
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8767
|
|
HIST
8767
|
03694
001
|
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
A. George
|
0
|
|
HIST G9761x-G9762y. Research Seminar In African History: Sources and
Methods of African Historiography. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Development of individual topics.
Discussion of methods and research tools.
History of the Middle East-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8701y. Political Islam. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G8712x. The U.S., the Middle East, and the Cold War. 4
pts.
This course will examine various answers to these questions, as well as the
continuities and disjunctures between these different periods. Specifically,
we will look at great power policies in the Middle East until 1917, and
attempt to see which constants carried over to the Soviet period and the Cold
War. We will also examine the degree to which the United States simply
stepped into the shoes of Britain in the Middle East, beginning in 1947. Much
of the course will concentrate on the strategic weight attached to the Middle
East by great power rivals, and the nature of their interaction with each
other and with internal regional dynamics -- nationalism, religion, reform
and revolution -- in the pre-Soviet and Soviet periods. We will conclude by
examining how the collapse of the Soviet Union has changed the situation in
the Middle East.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8712
|
|
HIST
8712
|
72447
001
|
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
R. Khalidi
|
22 / 20
|
|
HIST G8713x. Recent Trends in Islamic History. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
The intent of this course is to introduce graduate students interested in the
history of Islam to some of the interpretive problems raised in books on
Medieval, Ottoman, and Modern Middle Eastern history published in the 21st
century. Each week of the course will focus on a specific book, which will be
introduced orally by one or more students (depending on enrollment) and then
discussed by the class. Beyond preparing these introductions, each student
will be expected to write a 15-20 page term paper on a historiographical,
which may be drawn from the readings or from the student's own research.
HIST G9700y. Seminar In Middle Eastern History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9701x. Nationalism in the Arab World. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G9702y. Modernization and Other Stories: The Ottoman 18th and
19th Centuries. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9710y. Seminar On Religious Conversion. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Religious conversion as a historical process.
HIST G9712y. Seminar On the History of Islam. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
HIST G9713y. The Modern History of Palestine. 4 pts.
This seminar will examine problems in the historiography of Palestine from
the 19th century until the present. The course will focus primarily on how
the modern history of Palestine and the Palestinian people have been
understood and written. It will also touch on related topics, including great
powerpolicies, the history of Zionism and Israel, inter-Arab politics, the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict and the Arab-Israeli wars.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9713
|
|
HIST
9713
|
91196
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
R. Khalidi
|
0
|
|
East Asian History
HSEA G6200x or y. Workshop in East Asian History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
This graduate seminar focuses on the substance and practice of
history-writing about East Asia. It is intended for, and limited to, Master's
candidates in East Asian history in the Department of East Asian Languages
and Cultures. Although there is no pre-requisite, some prior knowledge of
East Asian history is assumed. Instructor's permission is required for
registration.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HSEA G6200
|
|
HSEA
6200
|
87698
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
TBA
|
E. Lean
|
0 / 17
|
|
HSEA G8100y. Ruling Inner Asia From Beijing. 4 pts.
China-Colloquia and Seminars
HSEA G8875y. Visual and Material Cultures in China. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HSEA G8880y. Colloquium In Modern Chinese History. 4 pts.
Research in and reading in Chinese history.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HSEA G8880
|
|
HSEA
8880
|
95901
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
902 International Affairs Bldg
|
M. Zelin
|
22 / 18
|
|
HSEA G8883y. Topics In the Middle Period of Chinese History. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: Chinese-History G4815-G4816 or the equivalent. Selected problems and
controversies in the social and political history of the Sung dynasty,
approached through reading and discussion of significant secondary research
in English.
HSEA G8885y. The City In Modern China: a Social and Cultural History.
4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Addresses the question of how the Chinese city was imagined and experienced
from the late imperial period into the early twentieth-century. We will start
by investigating key social, political, and cultural factors that shaped
urban life. What did the urban spatial landscape look like, how did changes
in media shape communication practices in the city, and in what manner did
the vicissitudes of political change at the national level affect life and
governance on the civic level?
HSEA G8888y. Chinese Legal History. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
An introduction to Chinese legal history (particularly the Qing period).
Issues covered include civil and criminal law, formal and informal justice,
law and the family, law and the economy, the search for legal history beyond
the law codes, and the question of rule of law in China.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HSEA G8888
|
|
HSEA
8888
|
80530
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
|
M. Zelin
|
0 / 18
|
|
HSEA G9861y. Seminar On Gender and Writing In China and Korea. 4
pts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HSEA G9861
|
|
HSEA
9861
|
70941
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
707 Hamilton Hall
|
J. Haboush
|
0
|
|
HSEA G9871x. Seminar in Western Zhou History. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
HIST G9880x-G9881y. Colloquium-Seminar On the History of Modern
China. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission.
HIST G9886y. Seminar In the Sources of Chinese History. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: Chinese G4007-G4008 or the equivalent. Reading and research in a major
genre for the history of traditional China. May be repeated for credit.
Japan-Colloquium and Seminar
HSEA G8839y. Colloquium on the History of Modern Japan. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Reading, analysis, and research on modern Japan.
HSEA G8871x or y. Colloquium on the History of Modern Japan. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Reading, analysis, and research on modern Japan.
HSEA G8873y. Japan Before 1600. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A graduate colloquium on the history of the Japanese archipelago up to ca.
1600 C.E. Readings in English, mostly of secondary sources but with a sampling
of the primary sources that are available in translation. No prerequisites per
se, but familiarity with the broad outlines of East Asian history and geography
is recommended. Intended for M.A. and PhD. students in history, literature,
art history, religion, and so on; upper level undergraduates with sufficient
preparation should apply to the instructor for permission to enroll.
HIST G8876x or y. History of Early Japan. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Readings and discussion of primary and secondary materials dealing with
Japanese history from the 16th through 19th centuries. Attention to both
historical and historiographic issues, focusing on a different theme or aspect
of early modern history each time offered. May be repeated for credit.
Korea-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8862y. Colloquium On Modern Korean History. 4 pts.
Reading and analysis of major works on Korean history and historiography
since the mid-19th century.
HIST G8864y. Research In Korean History. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Prerequisites: History-Korean W4033 or East Asian W4103. Historiography of East Asia, and instructor's
permission.
South Asian-History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8805x. Gender and Empire. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G9800x. Advanced Studies In South Asian History, Culture, and
Society. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Seminar on late medieval and modern
South Asia (from roughly 1600 to the present). Students are expected either
to have taken a previous graduate course on South Asia or to have extensive
background in South Asian studies. The content changes annually depending on
the particular interests of the students and the instructor.
European History-Ancient History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8001y. Colloquium On Ancient Mesopotamian History: Urban
History. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Study of the role of the city in
ancient Mesopotamian history. Students required to present the archaeological
and textual material from a selected city.
HIST G8007. Ancient Greek City to the Time of Marcus Aurelius. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Ancient Greco-Roman civilization was a fundamentally urbanized civilization,
and the development, growth, and transformations of the Greek city from the
beginnings of urbanization in the 8th and 7th centuries, through the
classical cities of the 5th and 4th centuries and the spread of Greek cities
throughout the near east after Alexander, to the fully developed cities of
late Hellenistic and Roman times, is therefore a subject of great importance
for a proper understanding of ancient civilization, and will be the focus of
this course.
HIST G8020y. Greek Epigraphy: Historical Uses and Methods. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8022x. War and Society In the Greece. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The dynamic relationship between the evolving ways in which Greek society was
structured, and the ways in which the Greeks organized themselves for and
conducted warfare at the different stages of their social evolution.
HIST G8024y. Politics, Economy and Society In Greece In the 4th and
3rd Centuries B.C.. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8028y. The Development of the Greek Polis. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
The development of the polis or city-state as the dominant socio-political
unit in ancient Greece, looking at how and why this development took place
and what effect it had on Greek society and culture.
HIST G8030x. Colloquium On Roman History: the Middle Republic. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Problems in the social, political,
economic and religious history of the Roman Republic from the 4th century
B.C. to 133 B.C. Close attention given to the problems of method.
HIST G8036x or y. Colloquium On Roman History: From Republic To
Dictatorship. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission, some knowledge of Latin or Greek.
Problems in the history, primarily social and political, of the late Republic
and early principate. Special attention will be paid to social structure, to
the interaction of imperialism and domestic politics, and to the rise and
consolidation of Caesarism. Heavy emphasis on reading the primary sources.
HIST G8038x. Colloquium On Roman History: the Roman Empire, 14-235
a.D.. 4 pts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8038
|
|
HIST
8038
|
22950
001
|
W 9:00a - 10:50a
302 Fayerweather
|
M. Maiuro
|
0
|
|
HIST G8039y. Readings In Tacitus and His Contemporaries. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Readings in Tacitus and his Contemporaries. The purpose of this course is
mainly to help students to learn as rapidly as possible how to translate what
is reputed to be some of the most difficult prose in classical Latin (Tacitus
himself). We shall read some other texts to get a feel for Tacitus' milieu,
and there will be some attention given to Tacitus' historiographical
practice, and to the concrete details of Roman life in his time. Recommended
reading prior to the course: R. Syme, Tacitus
HIST G8070x. Ancient Mesopotamian History: Urban History. 4
pts.
The course investigates aspects of ancient urbanism through the study of
Mesopotamian evidence: origins, social and economic organization, government,
urban culture and others. It will investigate topics such as disembedded
capitals, consumer cities, city-states and others within the wider context of
the Near East, Egypt, and the Classical World.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8070
|
|
HIST
8070
|
16397
001
|
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
311 Fayerweather
|
M. Van De Mieroop
|
11
|
|
HIST G9041y. Seminar On Ancient History of the Near East:
Imperialism. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Several empires of the ancient Near East studied using a comparative method:
the territorial empires of New Kingdom Egypt, of Assyria and Babylonia in the
first millennium, and of ancient Persia, and the trade empire of the
Phoenicians. Critical assessment of the use of the term empire within ancient
Near Eastern history. Determination of the common means of imperial
administration and management within these five examples.
European History-Medieval History-Colloquia
HIST G8061y. Topics In Pre-Modern European History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8117y. Knowledge Networks and Information Economies in the
Early Modern Period. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
This course is designed to introduce students to major topics in the
developing historical literature on the relationships between intellectual
and economic history, centered on Europe's global reach in the first two
centuries after Columbus and Da Gama.
HIST G9061x-G9062y. Seminar In the Intellectual History of Europe
From 1000 To 1500. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. A two-semester research seminar
intended to introduce students to the institutional settings (monasteries,
universities, etc.) and the genres (sermons, mystical treatises, scholastic
quaestiones, etc.) of medieval intellectual history, and to some creative
recent scholarly approaches to this material.
HIST G9067x. Seminar In Medieval Societies and Institutions. 4
pts.
This is a research seminar intended for graduate students in medieval
European history; it is open to others with the instructor's permission. The
seminar has three goals: 1) to introduce students to research tools and
methods for medieval European history; 2) to introduce students to the study
of medieval written records (diplomatics); and 3) to guide students in
identifying and developing appropriate research topics. The course will
focus on medieval Latin documents, although students interested in exploring
vernacular documents may do so. Students will be expected to have a good
knowledge of medieval history and facility in reading Latin and either French
or German.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9067
|
|
HIST
9067
|
43444
001
|
M 2:10p - 4:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
A. Kosto
|
6
|
|
HIST G9072y. Medieval Science and Society. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Developments in proto-scientific speculation from the 12th century, examined
in their social context.
Early Modern European History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8102x. European Social History, 1300-1700. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Survey of the major changes in socioeconomic structure and material life
between about 1300 and 1700 in Europe; and an examination of principal
historiographical debates in social history that have engaged scholars of the
last generation.
HIST G8103x. Topics in Early Modern European Cultural and
Intellectual History. Not offered in 2009-2010.
What were the institutions, formal and informal, in which knowledge was
created, disseminated and policed during the early modern period? How were
practical solutions to problems of knowledge found in solutions to problems
of order and organization?
HIST G8105x. Early Modern Economic History. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G8108x or y. British and American History, 1600-1765. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
The histories of early modern Britain and early America viewed as an
integrated subject. Topics such as slavery and race labor, the economy,
imperial government, religion and the landscape from an Atlantic perspective.
HIST G8110y. Intellectual History. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Reading and research in Anglo-American and European intellectual history.
Case studies drawn from early-modern and modern European and American
history.
HIST G8165y. History of Political Economy. 4 pts.
A study of the emergence of political economy in eighteenth-century Britain
and France, with a focus on the problematic relationship between economics
and politics, and the gradual establishment of economics as a separate field
of knowledge. Authors include Hobbes, Locke, Mandeville, Montesquieu, Hume,
Rousseau, Smith, Say, and Ricardo.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8165
|
|
HIST
8165
|
21247
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
TBA
|
C. Wennerlind
P. Force
|
0
|
|
HIST G8231y. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Ukraine, and
Muscovy-Russia in the Early Modern Period. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The course examines the polities, societies, and cultures of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Cossack Hetmanate, and Muscovy-Imperial
Russia in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. Special attention is paid to
the interaction of states and the flow of social models and cultural
developments. The role of Poland in the "Westernization" of Ukraine and
Russia, the relation of Western and Eastern Christianity, the remaking of
Eastern Europe by the rise of the Russian Empire, and the relation of the
political thought and identities of the period to modern nations are major
themes. The course will consist of discussion sessions based on reading of
monographs on specific topics. Students will be expected to report on the
readings and initiate discussions. A 20 to 25 page paper is required. All
readings will be in English.
HIST G8932x. The History and Theory of the Western Market Economy,
1200-1800. 4 pts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8932
|
|
HIST
8932
|
78442
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
311 Fayerweather
|
M. Howell
|
17
|
|
HIST G9101x. Material Culture and the Life of Objects in Early Modern
Europe. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9102y. Knowledge in Transit in the Early Modern World. 4
pts.
The commercial and territorial expansion of Europe and the Ottoman Empire and
the formation of long-distance trading networks in East and Southeast Asia in
the early modern period led to an unprecedented movement of knowledge. This
graduate research seminar examines the physical and epistemic travels of
various forms of knowledge, including objects, texts, and techniques, in the
early modern world.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9102
|
|
HIST
9102
|
68599
001
|
M 4:10p - 6:00p
311 Fayerweather
|
P. Smith
|
0
|
|
HIST G9305x-G9306y. Problems In European History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
First-year Master's seminar for graduate students in European history.
Modern Western European History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST U8040x. Americanization and Anti-Americanism. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Admittedly, the terms and concepts of Americanization and Anti-Americanism as
two sides of the same coin are vague and can even be concealing of mutuality,
yet they signify the pervading impact which the United States has had as a
power and culture on the rest of the world, the German-speaking one in
particular, and especially since 1945. America's influence on Europe was
strongest after World War II and during the heydays of the Cold War. For a
while after Hitler's defeat parts of Germany and Austria were occupied and
controlled by American forces; in some ways this military occupation still
remains at the roots of Americanization as well as Anti-Americanism in that
region of Europe.
HIST G8301x. Empire, State and Nation in the Modern World. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
This graduate seminar offers a comparative approach to the problem of modern
empire and its decline and transition into a world of nation-states. It
begins by exploring the conceptual and ideological vocabulary of empire
itself, and then surveys a variety of 19th century empires, focusing on their
guiding political philosophies, their institutional reformation along lines
of faith and/or ethnicity and the impact upon them of two world wars. The
imperial models considered include the British, French, Ottoman, Habsburg,
Russian, and German variants. Theories of nationalism and internationalism,
and the process of decolonisation are also discussed, as is the meaning of
empire in the contemporary world. Students must be prepared to read widely
across a range of diverse historical case-studies.
HIST G8303y. Secularization and Modern Intellectual History. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Taking its inspiration from the challenging contemporary critique of
secularism--and the notion of secularization on which it is based--this
course follows the theme in modern intellectual history, with emphasis on
Europe but some glances to America and South Asia. The course examines both
theories of secularization produced by modern intellectuals, and ask whether
secularization is something that happens in the theoretical activity of
intellectuals themselves.
HIST G8307x. Constructing the Middle Classes: Comparative History of
the Bourgeoisie In 19th-Century Europe. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Exploration in comparative perspective
of the history of western European middle classes, through study of recent
methodological and historiographical debates.
HIST G8310y. Projects and Practices of Colonial Rule in the 20th
Century. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Examines how great powers sought to justify, expand, and stabilize their
colonial empires in the period after the first World War. We will examine
both the rhetorical frameworks through which imperial powers understood and
explained their colonial efforts and the practices of international movements
and institutions on colonial governance, to colonial legal systems, and
economic structures, to conflicts between metropole and colony and to the
ways in which colonial governments and administrators reacted to, and learned
from, each other across national lines.
HIST G8311x. Introduction To the Literature of European History. 4
pts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8311
|
|
HIST
8311
|
27998
001
|
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
E. Winter
|
0
|
|
HIST G8319x or y. The Identities of Europe. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Designed to introduce students to classic studies of the problem of "what is
Europe," as well as to rapidly evolving debates about defining European
identity bound up with recent, rapidly accelerating trends toward regional
integration. Classes will focus on three dimensions: first, to works devoted
to discovering Europe as an idea and/or a discursive identity, tracing it
back to the Middle Ages, if not to antiquity; second, to works devoted to
isolating distinguishing features of European civilization; and, third, to
works devoted to studying projects and perspectives on European unification
in the twentieth century,
HIST G8325x or y. History and Memory In 20th-Century Europe.. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Explores the field of History and
memory in 20th-century Europe. Focus on theoretical problems, sites and
languages of remembering.
HIST G8345x. The Modern State in Theory and Practice. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
With the recent attention to empire, "the state" has tended to recede from
view. But the modern state was the vehicle of power and domination for much
of the modern period. This course examines the history of the European state
in the modern period, looking particularly at its role allocating resources
(financial, economic, demographic), managing risk, and reconciling interests.
HIST G8373. History of the Senses in England and France, 1680-1830. 4
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
This course will trace the evolution of European understandings of common
human sensibilities by exploring the production and reception of different
forms of art, music, literature, food, and sensual enjoyments. Beginning in
the late seventeenth century, new theories of human understanding and sense
perception ushered in an openness to defining the senses as determinative of
what it meant to be human. Theorists debated the question of whether or not
such capacities were linked to moral faculties, social tendencies, or
constituted as good in and of themselves. With confidence in the power of
reason, Europeans gradually relinquished fears relating to the power of
certain senses, entertaining the notion of their potential for beneficial
influence. The popularity of novels, enthusiasm for travel, and the
development of leisure activities signaled a greater value placed on
pleasurable sensations. Yet Europeans nevertheless aimed to redefine rather
than erase boundaries inscribed around the use of the senses. Readings will
explore a sharpening sense of aesthetic value and the championing of taste,
which worked to categorize the experiences generated by the senses. We will
also examine cultural activities as they absorbed aspects of national and
civic interests, exhibited in the professions of art, music, and literature.
HIST G8380x. Foundations of French Society. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Topics include demography; rural society; the family; cultural ferment;
origins and legacies of the French Revolution; notables, bourgeois,and workers;
the passing of traditional society.
HIST G8954x. International Orders 1500-1950. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G9201x. East Central Europe in the Cold War, 1945-1991. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
The course is based on the results of the instructor's ongoing large scale
research project: "Lobbying Allies: The Role of the East-Central European
States in the Shaping of East-West Relations, 1945-1991". This research
seminar will offer the interested graduate students an opportunity to study
the hitherto basically unexplored special role of the Soviet bloc states in
the Cold War predominantly on the basis of recently declassified archival
documents under the instruction of one of the most experienced researchers in
the field in East-Central Europe.
HIST G9305x-G9306y. Problems In European History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Designed for first-year master's students in modern European history.
HIST G9310y. Population Control: Eugenics, Malthusianism, and
Migration In the 20th Century. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
In the last century population trends have inspired fears of degeneration,
political upheaval, global climate change and drastically reduced
biodiversity. Yet the very idea of instituting policies and programs to shape
reproductive behavior has aroused the religious and embroiled science, pitted
governments against non-governmental organizations, and occasioned rancor
within and between the feminist, environmentalist, and Third World solidarity
movements. Students explore this history by reading some of the most
innovative work in the field and writing a 25-35-page research paper. A
particular emphasis will be placed on tapping the wealth of material
available in local archives - including the United Nations Archive, the
Rockefeller Archive Center, and the Ford Foundation Library - as well
collaborative research and peer criticism.
HIST G9311y. Writing British History: Research Seminar. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9360x or y. The Making of the British Empire. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Political, economic, and cultural origins
and development of the British Empire from the 16th century to the end of the
Seven Years' War, treated from the perspective of the metropolis. The
formation of imperial and national identities; the creation of an imperial
economy; war, empire and state-building in Britain; empire and popular
politics; Scotland, Ireland and empire; the constitutional construction of
empire; and the ideological origins of the British Empire.
HIST G9363y. Europe in the 1940s. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G9900y. Advanced Research Seminar. 4 pts. Designed to
assist second and third-year modern European history students to prepare and
defend their dissertation proposals. Students take G9900 third term and continue it through the third year, as
they identify a topic, draw up a research design, present drafts to the
seminar, and finally, defend the proposal before the dissertation committee.
Meetings are of two types: (1) to present students with materials useful to
shaping topics of research and introduce them to grant sources and notions of
publishing their work; (2) to present work-in-progress and provide critiques
of each others' work.
Russian and East Central European History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8205y. History of East-West RElations in Europe, 1945-1991. 4
pts.
This course will give an exciting opportunity to the students to study the
history of East-West relations in the Cold War period ont he basis of
recently declassified archival documents with the help of one of the most
experienced researchers in the field.
During the colloquium we will examine the origins of the Cold War and the
still much debated process of the Sovietization of Eastern Europe. The
detente process emerging in the middle of the 1950s will be presented by a
new approach as well as the analysis of the different types of international
crises during the Cold War will show that some of the most spectacular crises
of the era were in reality not genuine East-West conflicts. Due attention
will be paid to NATO and the Warsaw Pact as institutions of foreign policy
coordination, as well as to the German question and European security. The
last classes will be devoted to the analysis of the transformations of
East-West relations in the Gorbachev era and to the end of the Cold War.
The colloquium will be based predominately on the findings of the "new Cold
War history" with a special focus on the policy of the Eastern Bloc. Besides
studying readings from the most up to date literature on the topic, during
the course students will extensively use and analyze published and
unpublished archival documents from the former Soviet Bloc states.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8205
|
|
HIST
8205
|
28051
001
|
Tu 11:00a - 12:50p
TBA
|
C. Bekes
|
1
|
|
HIST G8210y. Topics In European History: Communism In East Central
Europe. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8216x. Topics In Eastern European History.. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8220x-G8221y. Empire and Nation In Russian and Soviet Empire. 4
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Required for all students in Russian and East Central European history. First
semester introduces general approaches to the problem of empire and nation
and to the extensive scholarly literature on the Russian empire in
particular. Students work out research topics in consultation with
instructors that should lead to a Master's essay or Ph.D. thesis, and present
their work in draft in the second semester.
HIST G8223x or y. Core Colloquium On Imperial Russian Institutions. 4
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Readings in the historiography,
monographs, and sources pertaining to the institutional and social problems
of Russia in the 18th century.
HIST G8224x-G8225y. Colloquium On Soviet Social History. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. The impact of industrialization,
collectivization, urbanization, and the purges; social mobility; and problems
of the Soviet intelligentsia, 1917 to the present.
HIST G8228x. Core Colloquium On Russia, 1855-1905. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8230xy. Colloquium On Germany and East Central Europe, 19th and
20th Centuries. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8232x or y. Germany and East Central Europe In WW II. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. The history of German penetration into
Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and
Greece. Economic, political and military conquest, collaboration, the final
solution of the Jewish question, resistance, Soviet penetration, the
expulsion of the German population, and creation of people's democracies.
HIST G8235y. Islam Across Eurasia. 4 pts.
This course examines interactions between Russia and Islam that in the wake
of Russian imperial expansion manifested themselves in a multiplicity of
ethnic and local cultures, traditions and ways of life, including political
and social structures. Reflected in the imperial discourse, the ambiguities
of these interactions shaped and reshaped the boundaries between the two.
This course thus is designed to challenge the adopted "truths" about
"colonialism", "religious fundamentalism", and "Islam". Although it gives a
historical overview of the spreading of Islam and expansion of Russian rule
in Central Asia and the Caucasus, the focus of this overview will be on
interactions between regional Islams and colonial policies and their
oftentimes unpredictable outcomes. A closer focus on the dynamics of the
shifting Russian/Muslim boundaries/identities that continue to outline the
major stages in Eurasian history will be a major theme of our discussions.
The course is open to both undergraduate and graduate students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8235
|
|
HIST
8235
|
22216
001
|
W 6:10p - 8:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
G. Kendirbai
|
0
|
|
HIST G8245x. New Approaches to Central European History. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8445x or y. Core Colloquium: Legacies of the Russian Empire and
the Soviet Union. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Harriman Institute certificate
candidates will have priority. Colloquium to acquaint students with themes
and texts that address aspects of the legacies of the Russian Imperial and
Soviet traditions that continue to shape contemporary political, economic,
social, and cultural processes in the post-Soviet states.
HIST G8445x. Legacies of Russia, Empire, Soviet Union. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9222x or y. Myth, Ritual and the Representation of Authority. 4
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A comparative examination of political myth, ritual, ceremonial texts and
other forms of representation, as means to establish political authority,
from the 16th to the early 20th century.
Jewish History-Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8600x or y. Colloquium On Popular Religion of Ashkenazic Jewry,
1600-1800. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8601y. Founding Fathers and Sabra Sons: Generational Change and
Continuity. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Israel's Founding Fathers attempted to create a "New Jew". Were they
successful? The worldview of fathers and sons, their attitudes to the Jewish
people, Zionism, the Arabs, culture and society will be juxtaposed. Ben
Gurion, Berl Katznelson, Y.H. Brenner and other leaders and cultural heroes
born and educated in Europe will serve as models of the immigrant generation.
Yigal Alon, Moshe Dayan, and their compatriots will serve as models of the
native sons.
HIST G8607x. Modern Jewish Politics. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G8616y. The Communal Life of American Jews. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Considers the changes that occurred in the group life of American Jews
concentrating on the years from 1860 to 1950 and the strategies of group
maintenance in religion, politics and Zionism; the changing relation to world
Jewry and the evolving character of communal polity.
HIST G8626x. Periodization In Jewish History. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Required of all graduate students in Jewish history. Qualified undergraduates
with fluency in medieval and modern Hebrew may be admitted with the
instructor's permission. The problem of periodization of Jewish history as
reflected in traditional Jewish sources.
HIST G8636y. Immigration and Acculturation: the American Jewish
Experience, 1880-1950. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Colloquium on the mass migration of Jews from Eastern Europe to the U.S., the
social and cultural integration and the evolution of American Jewish life as
we know it today.
HIST G8643x. Hasidic Literature. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
HIST G9020x or y. Seminar: Job and Other Arguments With the Lord In
Jewish Literature and Tradition. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The challenge of human suffering to divine justice as expressed in Jewish
literature from the Bible to Franz Kafka, including Talmud and Midrash,
medieval Hebrew poetry and exegesis, Hassidic parable, modern Yiddish and
Hebrew literature. Toward the end, and against the background, an attempt at
a fresh understanding of certain aspects of Kafka's The Trial.
HIST G9130y. The Jewish Book in the Early Modern World. 4
pts.
This course will situate the Jewish book in the context of the theoretical
and historical literature on the history of the book: notions of orality and
literacy, text and book, authors and readers, print and manuscript, literacy
and gender, the book trade and its role in the circulation of people and
ideas. It opens with the history of Jewish texts and literacy in the gradual
introduction of print. We follow print and scribal culture through the
migrations of early modern Jewry as well as the repercussions of destruction
and suppression in some places, openness and opportunity in others.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9130
|
|
HIST
9130
|
72647
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
E. Carlebach
|
0
|
|
HIST G9600x. Hebrew Chronicles of Martyrdom and Massacre, I. the
Crusade Chronicles. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Required of all graduate students in Jewish history. A one-year seminar
divided into two parts. For the autumn term, close textual and contextual
study of the four Hebrew chronicles of the devastation of Jewish communities
during the 1st and 2nd Crusades, as well as other primary sources of the
period. Focus is not only on the chronicles as historical sources, but on
questions of genre, mentality, and relation to liturgical-poetic laments and
Memorbücher.
HIST G9604y. Seminar On Sources of Jewish History: Impact of the
Spanish Expulsion. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Texts and documents on the formation of the Sephardic Diaspora and on the
intellectual and spiritual repercussions of the Spanish expulsion in the 16th
century.
HIST G9606x or y. Sources of Jewish History: Messianic and Sectarian
Movements, 7th To 16th Centuries. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Messianic activism and sectarianism,
and the problem of medieval Jewish communal control and authority. Required
of all graduate students in Jewish history.
HIST G9608y. Jewish Historiography In the 16th Century. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Required of all graduate students in Jewish history. Qualified undergraduates
with fluency in medieval and modern Hebrew may be admitted with the
instructor's permission. The renaissance of Jewish historical writing in the
16th century as a case study in Jewish attitudes to history and
historiography.
HIST G9620y. Traditionalist Responses To Modernity. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Reading knowledge
of Hebrew.
An analysis of the responses of traditional Jewries in Western, Central, and
Eastern Europe to the various forms and manifestations of "modernity" in
their midst from the beginning of the 18th century to WWI. Sources will
include polemical, homiletical, legal, and memoir literature.
HIST G9635x. Power and Authority in the History of Eastern European
Jewry. 4 pts.
The goal of this seminar is to examine the different forms of power and
authority which shaped Jewish society and culture in Eastern Europe in the
modern period. This will be done through the close reading of primary
sources, as far as possible in the original languages. Each topic, therefore,
will be discussed in a short introductory lecture, an analysis of the
research literature, and a detailed reading of a set of primary sources.
Particular emphasis will be placed on the different methodologies involved in
reading the range of sources which will be introduced during the semester.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G9635
|
|
HIST
9635
|
23304
001
|
Th 11:00a - 12:50p
513 Fayerweather
|
A. Teller
|
5
|
|
Latin American History - Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8663x. Historiography of Latin America. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
This graduate colloquium will introduce students to the literature of
colonial Latin American history, from narrative and institutional history to
social history, and then on to ethno-history and gender history. Both early
and recent books will be discussed, together with the latest debates in the
field.
HIST G8664y. Historiography of Latin America. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
This graduate colloquium will introduce students to the literature of modern
Latin American history, discussing both recent and early books. Readings will
include examples of the most important areas of research in the region, with
an emphasis on the diversity of approaches that has characterized the
historiography on post-independence Latin America in the last twenty years,
from political history to studies of culture and economic development.
HIST G8911y. Histories of teh Public Sphere in Latin America. 4
pts.
This colloquium will examine the historical literature on the public sphere,
particularly in Europe, Latin America and the United States. We will examine
uses of the category in studies that deal with intellectual debates, cultural
processes, elite and popular politics, and the shifting boundaries of public
and private life. Thus, discussions will stress criticisms of Jurgen
Habermas' model from the perspective of gender, non-European societies,
popular cultures, and class analysis.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8911
|
|
HIST
8911
|
97596
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
TBA
|
P. Piccato
|
0
|
|
HIST G9660x. Introduction To Documentary Analysis In Colonial Latin
America. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission.
HIST G9661y. Latin American Master's Seminar II. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Introduction to Latin American historiography and methods based on analysis
of primary sources.
HIST G9662y. The Knowledge of Informal Empire: The History of
US-Latin American Cultural Relations. 4 pts.
This seminar examines the cultural interactions between the United States and
Latin America during the period 1890-1960. The history of US foreign policy
towards Latin America is not sufficient to understand the processes of mutual
construction of difference in the Americas. In order to do so, we need to
study a vast and complex system of representations that resulted from
multiple encounters and inquiries that attempted to reduce, stylize, and
dissect "Latin America" in order to "deal" with it. Travel narratives, films,
journalistic coverage, business guides, and expert diagnoses by economists,
physicians, geographers, archaeologists, and political scientists contributed
not only to incorporate South or Latin America into the sphere of visibility
of the American public-reader, but also presented a formidable opportunity
for humanists and social scientists to expand the frontiers of knowledge.
Collecting and assimilating information about the world south of the Rio
Grande river was part of a gigantic knowledge adventure that I call "the
enterprise of knowledge." This collective endeavor at the same time
subalternized Latin or South America and built a solid and renewed interest
in the US for both business and knowledge ventures. The seminar presents
students with some of my writings, which will be part of a book in process,
titled "United States Strategies for Understanding South America."
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9662
|
|
HIST
9662
|
67211
001
|
Tu 6:10p - 8:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0
|
|
HIST G9664y. Mexican Politics in the Twentieth Century. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
U.S. History- Colloquia and Seminars
HIST G8000y. US Higher Education: History and Prospects. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8402x. Topics in 20th Century History. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
HIST G8403y. Readings in Colonial American History. 4 pts.
The class is an intensive reading course designed to introduce students to
the vibrant range of scholarship and issues relating to the colonial and
revolutionary periods of American history. It exposes students to a broad range
of relevant scholarship in as many media as possible - books, articles,
reviews, and primary source collections. The will task will be not simply to
come to terms with the argument of the given authors, but to compare, contrast,
and combine the various readings into a broader synthesis.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8403
|
|
HIST
8403
|
75029
001
|
W 6:10p - 8:00p
311 Fayerweather
|
E. Haefeli
|
16
|
|
HIST G8405y. U.S. Cultural and Intellectual History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Research Seminar in U.S. Intellectual History.
HIST G8407y. Colloquium On Early America. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Introduces recent problems and enduring issues in early American history.
Students will be expected to learn three things: chronology (the basic
timeline and narrative of historical developments), major events and
historical watersheds, and critical analysis of the major works and themes in
the field.
HSLW G8408y. Law and Nationhood in US History. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Readings course in the relationship between law and nationhood in the history
of the United States. The course aims to provide graduate students with an
introduction to the literature on the history of American law and to relate
that literature to American nationhood. Special attention will be paid to
the place of the United States and international law.
HIST G8410y. Colonial and Revolutionary America. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8411y. Citizenship and National Identity in U.S. History. 4
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
This course explores the ways that American national identity and citizenship
have been legally, politically, and culturally construed at different moments
in US history. It examines juridical and social categories of belonging to
the American nation and the political, legal, and cultural contestations over
inclusion and exclusion that have turned on property-holding, race, gender,
and alienage.
HIST G8430. Religion and the Writing of 20th Century American
History. 4 pts.
This course seeks to introduce graduate students to a variety of ways in
which religion is deployed as an analytical category in 20th century American
history. What do we mean by religion? What is the heuristic value of such a
category? This course will introduce students to the theoretical innovations
in the field of contemporary religion and to suggest ways that the study of
religion intersects, intervenes, and complicates the fields of American
urban, cultural, and political history.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8430
|
|
HIST
8430
|
12799
001
|
Th 12:10p - 2:00p
652 Schermerhorn Hall
|
R. Kobrin
|
4
|
|
HIST G8500x. Methodology and Historiography of United States History.
4 pts.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Required of all first-year students in
American history. Open to history graduate students only.
**formerly titled "Literature of American History"
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8500
|
|
HIST
8500
|
77746
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
406 International Affairs Bldg
|
E. Foner
|
10
|
|
HIST G8509x or y. Politics, Society, and Culture In 18th-Century
America. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. The development of provincial society,
beginning with the political and cultural crises of the late 17th century.
Synthesis of recent literature on historical demography, legal change, and
town and provincial politics. Emphasis on elite and mass cultural response:
witchcraft and revivalism; Anglicization and the search for gentility.
HIST G8515x or y. Colloquium On the American Revolution. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. The development of political thought
in England and America in the revolutionary era through the study of original
sources. Whig constitutionalism and popular radicalism are analyzed, with an
emphasis on theory and practice in the new states before the adoption of the
Federal Constitution.
HIST G8530x. Colloquium On the Civil War and Reconstruction. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: instructor's permission. Colloquium on the Civil War and
Reconstruction. The Civil War and the crisis of Reconstruction. Emphasis on
the implications of Emancipation for American history and the social and
political struggle over Reconstruction.
HIST G8538x. The South After Reconstruction. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
The period of Southern history between the end of Reconstruction and World
War I, during which the foundation was laid for a Southern Order more durable
than any of its predecessors - either the Old South of King Cotton, the
Confederate South of the Civil War era, or the Republican south of the
Reconstruction.
HIST G8547x. Colloquium In the History of Women and Gender. 4
pts.
Intensive reading and discussion course designed to critically analyze some
of the major themes and newest scholarship in women's and gender history.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8547
|
|
HIST
8547
|
06266
001
|
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
|
R. Rosenberg
|
0
|
|
HIST G8550x. Black BioPower: Science, Health, Politics, and Popular
Movements in the Twentieth Century and Beyond. 4 pts.
This course will provide historical background to one of the most pressing
issues in contemporary United States politics (indeed, a problem which now
faces most developed countries): the problem of health maintenance. The main
focus will be on post-WWII urban political economy and topics to be
considered will include the distribution of health care and health burdens,
disparities in health, the formation of social movements around health
issues, the geography of health and illness, urban land use policy,
environmental justice, the politics of stigma and exclusion, statistical
methodologies (and controversies) in historical perspective, racial
classification, informed consent (or lack thereof), and HIV/AIDS. Readings
will be interdisciplinary, emerging from the fields and disciplines of
political science, sociomedical science, sociology, anthropology, historical
epidemiology, ethnographic community psychiatry, and others.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8550
|
|
HIST
8550
|
92071
001
|
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
302 Fayerweather
|
S. Roberts
|
0
|
|
HIST G8560x or y. American Consumer Capitalism: 1800-Present. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Seminar studies the history of consumer capitalism in America from the early
19th century to the present; it establishes when capitalism emerged, what it
meant, and how it challenged and transformed American civilization.
HIST G8562x. Americans and the Natural World. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
HIST G8567y. America Between the Wars, 1920-1945. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
The traditional issues of this era's historiography: the political economy of
the 1920s, the Great Depression, the New Deal, and WW II. The integration of
those events with the social and cultural history of the time and
consideration of the influence of class, race, ethnicity, and gender on both
society and politics.
HIST G8570y. Black Leadership In American Politics. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G8572y. Race and Public Health In the United States. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Offers varying interpretations of the history of race and public health in
the United States. Students will examine issues dealing with epidemic and
chronic disease, substance abuse, public health policy, and urban politics,
among others. The texts selected in no way represent the full spectrum of
this history - the field has grown rapidly in the past decade. Rather than a
"comprehensive knowledge" of race and public health in the United States, a
grasp of historical methods will be gained through the readings. In this
sense, students will end the semester well prepared to tackle problems
pertaining not only to public health, but to larger policy issues as well.
HIST G8590x. A Social History of American Public Health. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Provides students with a historical understanding of the role public health
practice has played in American history during the 19th and 20th centuries.
The underlying assumptions are that disease, and the ways we define disease,
are simultaneously reflections of social and cultural values, as well as
important factors in shaping those values.
HIST G8592x or y. Social History of Medicine. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
The seminar is designed to introduce graduate students in history and in
public health to the social history of medicine. The particular focus will be
on the idea and practice of medicine as a profession, with frequent reference
to sociological concepts and to the American experience in the 19th and 20th
century.
HIST G8598x. Property In the 20th-Century United States. 4
pts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HIST G8598
|
|
HIST
8598
|
87746
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
301M Fayerweather
|
E. Blackmar
|
10
|
|
HIST G8918y. United States Empire. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
United States expansion from continental conquest through the early
20th-century colonialism. This growing empire will be examined in the context
of comparative and global histories of colonialism and from the perspectives
of colonized peoples.
HIST G8924. Resistance and the Black Atlantic. 4 pts.
This course investigates in-depth the significance of resistance among
African-descended communities in the Anglophone, Francophone, Hispanophone
and Lusophone Atlantic World from approximately 1700-1950. We will examine
the genesis of resistance as it affected key historical transformations such
as slavery and abolition, labor and migration, and transatlantic political
organizing. The class will explore various forms of resistance to racial
epistemologies, racialized labor regimes, and gendered discourses that formed
a continuum of cultural and political opposition to oppression among Black
Atlantic communities. The course will also reflect on how resistance plays a
central role in the formation of individual and collective identities among
black historical actors. Resistance will be explored as a critical category
of historical analysis, and a central aspect in the making of the "Black
Atlantic."
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G8924
|
|
HIST
8924
|
23329
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
301M Fayerweather
|
N. Lightfoot
|
1
|
|
HIST G8970y. The American Century': US Internationalism, 1918-1975..
4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A seminar which traces American debates about the international system and
the place of the USA within it from the Presidency of Woodrow Wilson to the
aftermath of the Vietnam wars. In particular, it explores the intellectual,
institutional and ideological background to changes in foreign policy as the
USA rose to Superpower status and assumed a global role.
HIST W9402y. History of American Women and Gender. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
This course is designed to help you produce a research paper on a topic of
your choice concerning the history of women and/or gender. Weekly discussions
based on the close reading of a few articles will introduce you to research
methodologies, interpretive frameworks and source materials in the field.
In-class critiques of each other's papers will provide a forum for learning
to give and receive useful advice. The course is open to PhD candidates in
History; other students may register by permission.
HIST G9440y. Social History and the History of Private Life. 4
pts.
The purpose of this research seminar is to give graduate students the
opportunity to do history: to conduct original research using primary
sources, to engage in historiographical debate, to revise work in response to
external criticism, and to produce an original essay of publishable quality.
The class's major outcome will be a 30-page analytical essay, based no
archival sources, on a topic in social history or the history of private
life. In addition, there will be intensive discussion about locating,
evaluating, and interpreting primary sources; historical methodologies and
the application of theory to historical research and writing; the
construction, organization, and framing of historical narratives; and
innovative approaches to social history and the history of private life,
including the history of the emotions, the senses, sexuality, leisure,
ritual, personal and social life, fashion and popular culture.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9440
|
|
HIST
9440
|
88253
001
|
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
613 Hamilton Hall
|
S. Mintz
|
0
|
|
HIST G9502y. 20th-Century U.S. Intellectual-Cultural History. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Research Seminar in U.S. Intellectual History.
HIST G9530y. Seminar In 19th-Century U.S. History. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Research and reading in 19th-century American history.
HIST G9560y. 20th-Century American History. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Teaches writing serious research papers in various areas of 20th-century
American history, based on primary sources.
HIST G9570y. Seminar In American Urban History. 4 pts.
Introduces advanced graduate students to the major debates, trends, and
methodologies which have engaged urban and social historians over the past
quarter century.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: HIST G9570
|
|
HIST
9570
|
72546
001
|
Tu 6:10p - 8:00p
309 Hamilton Hall
|
K. Jackson
|
0 / 1
|
|
HIST G9580y. Seminar On African-American History. 4 pts.
Research in African-American history from the colonial period to the late
20th century.
HIST G9581y. African-American History 1890-1945. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
HIST G9586y. American Women's History. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Students will research and write a 30-page paper on a topic of their choosing
related to the history of women in the United States. Students will meet
weekly as they select and refine their topics, explore relevant secondary
literature, identify primary sources on which their paper can be based, and
write their papers. With the help of reference librarians in Butler library
they will become proficient in a variety of research methods, and, working
with others in the course, they will develop their skills as editors. Part of
each week's class will be reserved for the presentation of work-in-progress
and the discussion of problems students are encountering in their research.
By the end of the term, each student will submit an essay suitable for
submission to a scholarly journal.
HIST G9920x. Oral History: Method and Theory. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
This seminar is a four credit interdisciplinary research seminar open to
graduate students. The seminar is organized as a combination of research,
fieldwork, and a review of the theoretical literature of oral history.
Students will complete a full length interview, and write an analysis of the
interview, as well as listening to each other's interviews and evaluating
them. Topics in the seminar covered in the readings will include the history
of oral history, historical research, memory, interviewing methodologies,
ethics and the representation and interpretation of oral sources. Students
will be encouraged to conduct interviews that further their own academic
research. This year the course will include a new media component using audio
and video, supported by the Center for New Media Teaching and Learning.
Of Related Interest
Chinese
G6510
Chinese Bibliography
Comparative Literature - History
G9020
Job and Other Arguments With the Lord In Jewish Literature and Tradition
Comparative Literature and Society
G4180
Crime: Practices and Representations
G8050
Technologies of Empire
East Asian
G6010
Cultural Studies and China Studies
History
G8572
Graduate Colloquium In Race and Public Health In the Twentieth-Century United States
G8732
The Social History of American Medicine
History - East Asian
V3418
Gods, Ghosts, and Ancestors
W3862
The History of Korea To 1900
W3871
Japan In the 20th Century
W3880
History of Modern China I
W3881
History of Modern China II -- China In the Twentieth Century
W3898
The Mongols In History
W4700
Rise of Modern Tibet: 1600-1913
G4832
Early Japan
G4833
Medieval Japan
W4834
The Tokugawa Period
W4845
Modern Japan in History and Memory
W4866
Competing Nationalisms In East Asia: Representing Chinese and Tibetan Relations in History
W4868
Women's Lives in Chinese History
W4871
Seminar on The City in Modern China
W4881
Gods, Ghosts, and Ancestors: Social History of Chinese Religion
W4884
Economic History of Modern China
W4886
Gender, Passions and Social Order In China Since 1500
W4894
Who is the Samurai?
G6009
Colloquium On Early Modern Japan
G8775
Visual and Material Culture In China
G8838
Seminar in the History of Pre-Modern and Early Modern Japan
G8861
Colloquium On Korean History To 1900
G8862
Colloquium On Modern Korean History
G8864
Seminar On Korean Historical Texts In Chinese
G8871
Colloquium On the History of Modern Japan
G8872
Colloquium In the History of Modern Japan
G8876
Colloquium On Early Modern Japan
G8880
Colloquium On Sources of Chinese History
G8880
Colloquium In Modern Chinese History
G8883
Topics In the Middle Period of Chinese History: Ming
G8885
The City In Modern China: a Social and Cultural History
G8888
Colloquium On Chinese Legal History
G8891
The Imjin War, 1592-1598: the Emergence of a New East Asia
G8895
Cultural Theory and Historical Methods
G8933
Telling the Twentieth Century
G8975
Topics In the Cultural History of Premodern Japan
G9860
Seminar On Korean Historical Texts
G9861
Seminar: Gender and Writing In China and Korea
G9871
Seminar on Western Zhou History
G9871
Western Zhou Archaeology
G9872
Graduate Seminar in Modern Japanese History
G9875
Topics in the Cultural History of Premodern Japan
G9881
Seminar On Modern Chinese History
G9891
Print Culture in 19th and Early 20th Century China
History - Japan
V3613
Buildings and Cities In Japanese History
G4860
Intellectual History of Modern Japan, I
G4861
Intellectual History of Modern Japan, II
G8840
Dislocating the Modern
History - Middle East
W1002
Ancient History of Mesopotamia and Anatolia
W1004
Ancient History of Egypt
W3013
Science and Astrological Theories In Pre-Modern Times
W4430
Islamic Renewal and Revolutionary Movements In the Middle East, Asia and Africa, 18th To 20th Centuries
W4467
Persian Political, Social and Cultural History In Ancient Times
W4468
Persian Political, Social and Cultural History From the Advent of Islam To Modern Times
W4469
Political, Social and Cultural History of Persia In Modern Times
G4640
Art and Aesthetics In Colonial South Asia
G6306
History of Modern S. Asia
G6306
Seminar In S. Asia
G8070
Colloquium On Ancient Mesopotamian History: Urban History
G8850
History and Historiography
History - Urban Studies
W4673
-W4674
American Urban History
Middle East
W4940
Late Ottoman State and Society
Political Science
G8208
Themes In American Political Development
G8490
The State
Religion
G8140
Introduction To the Sources of Canon Law In the Medieval Latin Tradition
G8830
Colloquium on Comparative Religions: Networks
G9103
-G9104
Seminar In Law and Medieval Christianity
Sociology
G4204
Historical Sociology