|
UNIVERSITY OF
REGINA General Calendar 2000-2001 |
HIST 100 | HIST 203 | HIST 204 | HIST 205 | HIST 206 | HIST 207 | HIST 210 | HIST 211 | HIST 213 | HIST 215 | HIST 219 | HIST 220 | HIST 221 | HIST 222 | HIST 223 | HIST 231 | HIST 234 | HIST 235 | HIST 252 | HIST 253 | HIST 255 | HIST 256 | HIST 260 | HIST 264 | HIST 265 | HIST 266 | HIST 267 | HIST 270 | HIST 272 | HIST 273 | HIST 274 | HIST 275 | HIST 276 | HIST 281 | HIST 282 | HIST 285 | HIST 288 | HIST 302 | HIST 306 | HIST 307 | HIST 308 | HIST 312 | HIST 313 | HIST 316 | HIST 324 | HIST 326 | HIST 330 | HIST 332 | HIST 351 | HIST 359 | HIST 360 | HIST 364 | HIST 366 | HIST 367 | HIST 370 | HIST 374 | HIST 377 | HIST 390-395AA-ZZ | HIST 400 | HIST 401 | HIST 403 | HIST 405 | HIST 411 | HIST 413 | HIST 418 | HIST 423 | HIST 431 | HIST 467 | HIST 473 | HIST 475AA-ZZ | HIST 477AA-ZZ | HIST 490-495AA-ZZ | HIST 498-499
FACULTY
R. Blake
T. Bredohl
J.W. Brennan
I. Germani
A.N. Lalonde
A. Leger-Anderson
K. Leyton-Brown
J. Matsumura
M. McGovern
J.M. Pitsula
R.J.W. Swales (Dept. Head)
CAMPION COLLEGE
A. Fizzard
S.D. Kenny
LUTHER COLLEGE
Y. Petry
The general requirements for degrees in the Faculty of Arts are described on page 76.
BA
A major in history must include the following:
1. HIST 100
2. A minimum of five 200-level courses in 4 different (see page 125)
3. A minimum of four 300- or 400-level courses in at least 2 different areas
4. 4 additional courses in history
Credit hours |
History major |
Student's record of courses completed |
3.0 |
HIST 100 |
|
FIVE courses covering at least FOUR of the following groups:
|
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
FOUR courses covering at least TWO of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
42.0 |
Subtotal |
Students majoring in history should consult the head of the Department of History about the courses they choose to take in any particular year.
COMBINED MAJOR IN ECONOMICS AND HISTORY
The combined major in economics and history must include the following:
1. ECON 100, 201, 202, 301, 302
2. One course in economics at the 400-level
3. Two additional courses in economics
4. HIST 100
5. Three 200-level history courses in at least two different areas (see page 127)
6. Three 300- or 400-level history courses in at least two different areas
7. Three additional courses in history
8. MATH 103 or equivalent.
9. SOST 201 (or STAT 151 and 152)
Credit hours |
Economics/History major, required courses |
Student's record of courses completed |
3.0 |
ECON 100 |
|
3.0 |
ECON 201 |
|
3.0 |
ECON 202 |
|
3.0 |
ECON 301 |
|
3.0 |
ECON 302 |
|
3.0 |
400-level ECON course |
|
3.0 |
ECON course |
|
3.0 |
ECON course |
|
3.0 |
HIST 100 |
|
3.0 |
THREE courses from at least TWO of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
THREE courses from at least TWO of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
One of MATH 103, 105, 110 |
|
3.0 or 6.0 |
SOST 201 or BOTH of STAT 151 & STAT 152 |
|
60.0 or 63.0 |
Subtotal |
BA HONOURS
The honours program in history must include the following:
1. HIST 100
2. A minimum of five 200-level courses in 4 different areas set out below
3. A minimum of four 300- or 400-level courses in at least 2 different areas
4. HIST 400, or any 400-level course as specified by the Honours Student Advisor
5. HIST 498 and 499 (option of directed readings or essay)
6. 6 additional courses in history
The BA Honours degree must include at least four 400-level courses.
Credit hours |
History Honours major |
Student's record of courses completed |
3.0 |
HIST 100 |
|
3.0 |
FIVE courses covering at least FOUR of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
FOUR courses, including at least one at the 400-level, covering at least TWO of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
HIST 400 (or a 400-level HIST course approved by the Honours advisor) |
|
3.0 |
HIST 498 |
|
3.0 |
HIST 499 |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
3.0 |
HIST course |
|
Note: this program must contain at least one course at the 400-level in addition to 400 (or substitute), 498, and 499. |
||
57.0 |
Subtotal |
Students interested in an honours degree are strongly urged to consult the head of the Department of History by the end of the second year.
MINOR IN HISTORY
1. HIST 100
2. Three 200-level courses in history in three different areas set out below
3. Two additional courses in history at the 300- or 400-level in two different areas
History minor |
Student's record of courses completed | |
3.0 |
HIST 100 |
|
3.0 |
THREE courses selected from THREE of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
||
3.0 |
TWO courses selected from TWO of the following groups:
|
|
3.0 |
||
18.0 |
Subtotal |
AREAS
Canadian |
HIST 203, 204, 205, 206, 207 |
British & American |
HIST 220, 221, 222, 223, 231, 234, 235 |
Asian |
HIST 252, 253, 255, 256 |
Ancient, Medieval, & Early Modern European |
HIST 260, 264, 265, 266, 270, 273 |
Modern European & Russian |
HIST 274, 275, 276, 288 |
Other courses at the 200 level do not form part of the core. Students should take every opportunity to develop their programs not only in history but by incorporating courses from other disciplines.
HIST 100 is the normal prerequisite for all 200-level history courses. Any student who, at the beginning of the second year, has declared a major in a field other than history may seek approval from the head of the Department of History to take any 200-level history course without having taken HIST 100.
HIST 100![]()
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Introduction to History
3:3-0
A critical study of a variety of significant themes and topics from one or more selected fields of history such as Ancient, European, Asian, Canadian, and American.
HIST 203![]()
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New France to 1760
3:3-0
The beginning of French settlement; the Crown's policy of mercantilism; development of the fur trade and territorial expansion; political, social, and religious institutions; the struggle for the continent.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 204![]()
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British North America, 1760-1850
3:3-0
The impact of the Conquest; French-English relations; the emergence of distinctive economies and societies in the various British North American colonies; the achievement of colonial self-government.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 205![]()
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Canada, 1850-1914
3:3-0
The achievement of Confederation; John A. Macdonald and the National Policy; the rise of urban industrial Canada; immigration and western settlement; imperialism, continentalism, and nationalism.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 206![]()
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Canada, 1914-1945
3:3-0
The impact of World War I; social reform; evolution to nationhood; society and politics during the 1930s depression; English-French relations, economic development, and the emerging welfare state during World War II.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 207![]()
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Canada Since 1945
3:3-0
Political, economic, and social developments from Mackenzie King to Mulroney; foreign policy during and after the Cold War; U.S. relations; aboriginal issues; separatism, regionalism, and national unity.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 210![]()
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Prairie West to 1896
3:3-0
The fur trade and Native-European contact; the acquisition of Rupert's Land by Canada; Indian policy after 1870; developments in transportation, settlement, and politics.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 211![]()
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Prairie West Since 1896
3:3-0
Immigration and settlement; the creation of new provinces; cultural conflict and education; the agrarian movement and progressive revolt; depression and new party movements; post-war politics and government; the resource boom.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 213![]()
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Legal History of Canada
3:3-0
Aboriginal approaches to law; colonial regimes and the arrival of European law; the development of modern institutions; individual, group, and majority rights in a democratic society.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 215![]()
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Les bases historiques de la culture canadienne-française
3:3-0
L'évolution de certains aspects de la culture canadienne-française du régime français jusqu'au XXe siècle.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 219![]()
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History of Canadian Women
3:3-0
Examination of women's involvement in Canadian economic, political, social, and cultural life, with focus upon changes in position, status, and perception. Emphasis will be placed upon newcomer women from the era of New France to the 1980s.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 220![]()
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English History, 1327-1536
3:3-0
Government and society from Edward III to the emerging Henrician church; late medieval monarchy and civil war; Anglo-French relations; the effects of plague; heresy and `the king's Great Matter.'
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 221![]()
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British History, 1536-1688
3:3-0
The Reformation, the Civil War, and the failure of creeping absolutism; the expansion of trade; the search for political settlements; the locality in politics; social change and continuity; foreign policy.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 222![]()
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British History 1688-1832
3:3-0
The `rage of party;' England's growth as a world power; colonial rivalries; agrarian and industrial expansion, demographic change; the Revolutionary Wars and parliamentary reform in the age of improvement.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 223![]()
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Britain Since 1832
3:3-0
British political, social, and economic history; particular emphasis on development of parliamentary democracy, industrialization, imperialism, Ireland, Britain's role in two world wars, decolonization, rise of welfare state, Thatcherism.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 231![]()
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The American Colonies and the United States, 1740-1877
3:3-0
Examination of such topics as colonial life; the Revolutionary era; economy, politics, and society in the early republic; antebellum America; westward expansion, war, and diplomacy; Civil War and Reconstruction.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 234![]()
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The United States, 1877-1941
3:3-0
Topics covered include Western expansion and development; growth of the urban industrial order; immigration and ethnicity; African Americans; gender issues; society and culture; regionalism; politics; emergence of the United States as a world power.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 235![]()
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The United States Since 1941
3:3-0
Topics covered include America as a global power; domestic impact of the Cold War; politics; economic transformation; regionalism; African Americans; ethnic America; gender issues; society and culture.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 252![]()
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Imperial China
3:3-0
Focuses primarily on the Qing dynasty (1644-1912), when the traditional political, social, and economic institutions of China reached their fullest development.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 253![]()
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Republican and Maoist China
3:3-0
Examines social, economic, political, and cultural developments in China from 1911 to 1976: the fall of Imperial China, the Republican period, the Warlord years, the Nanking government, the impact of World War, the Communist victory, and the policies of the People's Republic.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 255![]()
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Japan before 1868
3:3-0
Examines Japan from prehistoric times up to the middle of the nineteenth century. Discussion will cover the political, social, economic, as well as cultural developments of each period, with emphasis on the means by which groups and individuals acquired and attempted to maintain their influence over others.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 256![]()
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History of Modern Japan
3:3-0
Examines the search for a new national identity in Japan during the twentieth century through an analysis of political, social, economic, and cultural changes from 1868 to the 1980s.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 260![]()
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Earliest Civilizations
3:3-0
An introduction, emphasizing the use of archaeological data, to the rise and development of the oldest civilizations in the Eastern Hemisphere, particularly those of Mesopotamia and Egypt.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 264![]()
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Ancient Greece and Rome
3:3-0
An introduction to Mediterranean civilization from c. 1000 B.C. to the decline of the Roman Empire in Western Europe.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 265![]()
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Early Middle Ages, 300-1100
3:3-0
This course surveys the early Middle Ages from the late Roman Empire through the Gregorian reform, highlighting the emergence of Europe out of Roman, Germanic, and Christian influences.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 266![]()
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Western Europe in the Later Middle Ages, 1100-1400
3:3-0
Focusing on Western European civilization (England, France, Germany, Italy, Christian Spain), this course surveys crusades, heresies, and the development of national states, representative government, higher education, and religious bureaucracy from the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 267![]()
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Lands Neighboring Western Europe during the Middle Ages (to 1500)
3:3-0
This survey course studies lands neighboring Western Europe during the Middle Ages. These areas developed individually and interacted in varying ways with each other. The areas studied could include Celtic lands, Scandinavia, East-Central Europe, Russia, the Byzantine Empire, Islam west of Bagdad, Portugal.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 270![]()
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Europe, 1400-1600: Renaissance and Reformation
3:3-0
Culture of the Italian Renaissance and its spread to Northern Europe; overseas discoveries; rise of nation states; origins, substance, and interaction of Protestant and Catholic Reformations.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 272![]()
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European Social History: Women, Marriage, and Family in Early Modern Europe
3:3-0
European social structure and values from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries; medical views, birth practices, orphanages and abandonment, kinship systems, adolescence, education, women in workplace, marriage and divorce, prostitution, poverty, witchcraft.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 273![]()
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Europe, 1600-1715: Crisis and Absolutism
3:3-0
European history in the seventeenth century: the seventeenth century crisis, the Thirty Years War, the Scientific Revolution, the growth of the state, theories and realities of royal absolutism.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 274![]()
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Europe, 1715-1815: The Old Regime and Revolution
3:3-0
The breakdown of the old European order: political, social and economic developments in the eighteenth century, the Enlightenment, international relations, the French Revolution, and Napoleon.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 275![]()
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Europe, 1815-1914
3:3-0
Industrialization, urbanization, science, ideological conflicts; Congress of Vienna, Concert of Europe, revolutions of 1848-49; unifications of Italy and Germany; Napoleon III; Imperialism, origins of the First World War.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 276![]()
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Europe Since 1914
3:3-0
First World War, revolutions, peace treaties; League of Nations; fascism, nazism, the Spanish Civil War; causes and consequences of the Second World War; divided Europe since 1945.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 281![]()
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European Military History
3:3-0
A study of European warfare from the Renaissance to the Second World War. Particular attention is focused upon the interaction between war and economic, social, political, technological and cultural developments.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 282![]()
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Military History: The First and Second World Wars
3:3-0
A survey of the military history of the two world wars. Subjects covered include war aims and strategic plans; the conduct of operations; the roles of naval and air power; scientific and signals intelligence; the economic and social dimensions of "total war."
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 285![]()
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Environmental History: Europe Since the First Industrial Revolution
3:3-0
The impact of human activities on the European environment since the eighteenth century; land use, energy, resources, pollution, disease, public health; nature conservation, science, politics, and ideology of ecology.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 288![]()
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Modern Russian Civilization
3:3-0
19th-century intellectual developments: rise of revolutionary movements; industrialization and expansion; the 1917 Revolutions; the Communist transformation of Russia; emergence of the Soviet Union as a world power.
Prerequisite: HIST 100
HIST 302![]()
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French-English Relations in Canada
3:3-0
The relationship between Canada's two largest language groups in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, or permission of department head.
HIST 306![]()
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Canadian Social History
3:3-0
Themes in the history of Canadian society and social institutions. Topics covered include class structure, the impact of industrialization and urbanization, social reform movements, and childhood and family in Canadian history.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 204, 205, 206, 207, or permission of department head.
HIST 307![]()
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The Sixties in Canada
3:3-0
Cultural, social and political change in Canada during the 1960s. Themes include student power, the peace movement, the Vietnam War, the New Left, women's liberation, civil rights, aboriginal rights, the Quiet Revolution, Canadian nationalism, environmentalism, rock and roll and other expressions of youth culture, and the counterculture.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 204, 205, 206, 207, or permission of department head.
HIST 308![]()
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Canadian Resource Policy
3:3-0
A study of policies and practices of Canada's federal and provincial governments for promoting development of land, forest, mineral, water, and energy resources (generally by private enterprise) since 1850.
Prerequisites: One of HIST 204, 205, 206, 207, ECON 206, or permission of department head.
HIST 312![]()
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Saskatchewan Since 1905
3:3-0
A study of selected topics in the economic, social, and political history of Saskatchewan from the creation of the province in 1905 to the post-World War II resource boom.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 205, 206, 207, 211, or permission of department head.
HIST 313![]()
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Legal History of the Prairie West
3:3-0
Aboriginal legal regimes; the law of the fur trade; the establishment of European law; the territorial period; the provincial era; the search for inclusion: aboriginal self-government, sentencing circles, civilian overview.
Prerequisite: HIST 213 or permission of department head.
HIST 316![]()
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Canadian-American Relations
3:3-0
Focusing mainly on Canada's relationship with the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this course will investigate the process of political, economic, social, and cultural integration/subordination.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 204, 205, 206, 207, 231, or permission of department head.
HIST 324![]()
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Victorian Britain
3:3-0
A lecture course dealing with nineteenth century British social, cultural, and political history; developments in literary and artistic culture, women's roles, education, industry, cities, science, and religion.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 204, 205, 222, 223, or permission of department head.
HIST 326![]()
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Urban England 1450-1700
3:3-0
The study of continuity and change in English urban development: oligarchies, guilds, demography, trade, poverty and disease; religious controversies; the urban 'Renaissance.'
Prerequisite: One of HIST 220, 266, 270, or permission of department head.
HIST 330![]()
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Women and Gender in the Prairie West
3:3-0
Examination of women's participation in settlement, development, and maturation of the prairie provinces, 1870-1970, from the perspective of women's history and gender history. Emphasis will be placed upon newcomers, with particular attention to diverse, sometimes conflicting, class and ethnocultural interests. Some comparisons will be made with United States developments, especially those on the Great Plains.
Prerequisite: At least one 200-level course in Canadian or American history since the late 19th century or permission of department head.
HIST 332![]()
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United States Foreign Policy in the Twentieth Century
3:3-0
This course emphasizes the emergence of the United States as a world power, and its growing military, economic, and cultural dominance in the course of the twentieth century. Of especial concern are United States relations with Europe and Asia and its increasing hegemony in the Western Hemisphere.
Prerequisite: HIST 234 or 235, or permission of department head.
HIST 351![]()
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Studies in Chinese History, 1800-1949
3:3-0
Analysis of such topics as the crisis of traditional China, impact of imperialism, reform and revolution, warlordism, the Nationalist period, and the civil war of 1946-49.
Prerequisite: HIST 252 or 253 or permission of department head.
HIST 359![]()
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Women in Modern East Asian History
3:3-0
This seminar course will explore the diverse roles and fluctuating status of Chinese and Japanese women in the twentieth century. Topics to be explored include women's political involvement, roles within and outside of the household, feminism, and contributions to art and literature.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 252, 253, 255, 256, or permission of department head.
HIST 360![]()
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Ancient History Topics
3:3-0
Studies of source materials and interpretations for such topics as statecraft, social organization, warfare, commerce, technology, learning, and speculative thought in the ancient Near East and Mediterranean region.
Prerequisite: HIST 260 or 264 or permission of department head.
HIST 364![]()
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Roman Social History
3:3-0
Themes in the history of Roman society and social institutions. Topics include childhood and family structure, health and diet, living conditions, recreation, and social attitudes.
Prerequisite: HIST 264, or permission of department head.
HIST 366![]()
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Cultural History of the Middle Ages
3:3-0
This course approaches the culture of the medieval period, and traces historical trends in art, architecture, literature, and thought throughout the Middle Ages.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 220, 265, 266, 270, or permission of department head.
HIST 367![]()
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Women in Medieval Europe
3:3-0
This course will explore the roles of women in European society, economy, culture, and religion from the end of the Roman Empire to c. 1400.
Prerequisite: HIST 265 or 266, or permission of department head.
HIST 370![]()
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The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic
3:3-0
A lecture and seminar course dealing with major Protestant and Catholic reformers; lay piety; Renaissance humanism; cultural and social changes resulting from reforms; impact on women, Jews, the poor.
Prerequisite: One of HIST 220, 266, 270, 272, or permission of department head.
HIST 374![]()
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The French Revolution
3:3-0
An analysis of political, social and cultural developments in France from the calling of the Estates-General to the coup d'état of 18 Brumaire.
Prerequisite: Any course in European history above the 100 level or permission of department head.
HIST 377![]()
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The "Golden" Twenties: Culture and Society in Weimar Germany, 1918-1933
3:3-0
Examination of cultural and social trends in the Weimar Republic: emergence of proletarian culture, rise of the "New Woman," cabaret and urban entertainment, new mass media, crime and social order, Bauhaus and modern architecture.
Prerequisite: HIST 275 or 276, or permission of department head.
HIST 390-395AA-ZZ![]()
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Directed Reading and Research
Variable Credit: 1-3 hours
Special topics for independent study. Courses designed for individual students.
Prerequisite: Permission of department head.
HONOURS COURSES
Prerequisite for all 400-level courses is permission of department head.
HIST 400![]()
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Theories of History
3:3-0
A study of various philosophies of history and theories concerning the method, purpose, and meaning of history.
HIST 401![]()
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Canadian Intellectual History
3:3-0
Intellectual developments in Canada since Confederation. Emphasis will be placed on the sources and forms of nationalist ideas, social criticism, the ideologies of protest movements, and religious ideas.
HIST 403![]()
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Canada, 1957-1993
3:3-0
The rise and fall of John Diefenbaker; Pearsonian Liberalism; Québec separatism, Western alienation, and national unity; aboriginal issues; constitutional change and restructuring of federalism; the legacy of Trudeau; the impact of neo-conservatism.
HIST 405![]()
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Contemporary Québec
3:3-0
Nationalism in the 1920s, the impact of the depression; the rise of the Union Nationale; Dominion-Provincial relations; the defeat of the Union Nationale and the beginnings of the Quiet Revolution.
HIST 411![]()
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The Prairie West, 1929-1945
3:3-0
Depression and drought in the 1930s; the crisis in politics and the ferment of radicalism; federal and provincial initiatives in rehabilitating the wheat economy; the impact of World War II on the economic and social fabric of the prairie west.
HIST 413![]()
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Prairie Urban History
3:3-0
A critical study of the emergence of towns and cities on the Canadian prairies; the evolving urban economy; population growth; the physical environment; social and cultural life; urban political behavior.
HIST 418![]()
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Canadian Colonial Times
3:3-0
This course seeks to understand Canada as a colony. One inexorable phenomenon of the twentieth century has been the process of national affirmation and decolonization. Focusing on fundamental political and economic change in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the course also examines subjects such as immigration, religion, education, as well as cultural and material conditions.
Prerequisite: Permission of department head.
HIST 423![]()
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English Politics in the 1620s
3:3-0
A decade at the centre of current research on politics, parliament, ideology, public opinion, moderate puritanism and arminianism; re-evaluating revisionist views of the early Stuart kings.
HIST 431![]()
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United States History: New Approaches
3:3-0
Examination of new approaches and interpretations in the writing of United States history, with emphasis upon the revisioning of the history of newcomers in the trans-Mississippi West since the late nineteenth century.
HIST 467![]()
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Marriage and Family in the Middle Ages
3:3-0
This course investigates the history of marriage and the family in medieval Europe. It covers such topics as: the development of Christian attitudes towards marriage; marriage practices; family structures and strategies; children and childhood.
HIST 473![]()
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Early Modern Europe: Special Topics in Social History
3:3-0
A seminar course dealing with topics in women's history, poverty and social welfare, education, crime and punishment, witchcraft, diet, health and medicine, death and dying.
HIST 475AA-ZZ![]()
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Selected Topics in Nineteenth Century European History
3:3-0
Course content will vary. Topics will include: the 1830 and 1848 revolutions in France; Napoleon III; nationalism and nation-building; imperialism and the origins of the First World War.
HIST 477AA-ZZ![]()
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Selected Topics in Twentieth Century European History
3:3-0
Course content will vary. Topics will include the origins of the Second World War, the Cold War, and also significant events and problems in the domestic history of European nations.
HIST 490-495AA-ZZ![]()
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Directed Reading and Research
Variable Credit: 1-3 hours
Special topics for independent study. Courses designed for individual students.
HIST 498-499![]()
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Directed Studies
3:3-0
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