May 09, 2024  
2017-2018 Catalogue 
    
2017-2018 Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Courses of Instruction


The College reserves the right to change procedures, programs, curricula, courses, fees and charges, instructors and degree requirements without prior notice. It further reserves the right to sever the connection of any student with the College for an appropriate reason.

NOTE: The course sequence outlines appearing under each department are illustrative only, and do not supersede either general or departmental requirements. Extra-departmental courses ancillary to the major, and specified by name or course number in the sequence outlines, are considered to be an integral part of the major program.

New Course Numbering System

Beginning in the Fall 2006 semester, Saint Anselm College adopted a three number course designation system. Henceforth, the following course numbering system is in effect.

100 – 199 Introductory
200 – 299 Intermediate
300 – 399 Intermediate/Advanced
400 – 499 Directed readings, research, internships and further advanced study 

Please note, when searching courses by “Code or Number”, an asterisk (*) can be used to return mass results. For instance, a “Code or Number” search of ” 2* ” can be entered, returning all 200-level courses.

 

Fine Arts Studio

  
  • FAS 322 - Special Topics: Painting as Narrative


    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 330 - Special Topics: Printmaking: Intaglio and Alternative Processes


    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 340 - Intermediate Photography


    A continuation of FAS240 and FAS245. Technical goals include the ability to use different films or ISO settings properly, control contrast and exposure to produce fine quality silver or digital prints. Darkroom students will be introduced to elements of digital photography while digital students will collaborate with silver students to get experience with darkroom photography.  Emphasis is on a personal vision and making clear statements through the editing and sequencing photographs. Students will work on proposing and finalizing a large final project in either digital or silver master photographer and a service-learning project providing photographic services to a venue of your choice is required.  Studio and materials fee charged. (Formerly FA 356)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FAS 240  or FAS245 or permission of instructor.
  
  • FAS 342 - Photo Media: Analog Digital


    This course is an exploration of analog silver-based photography into digital imaging and print production.  Emphasis is placed on conceptual problem solving through conventional and experimental methods.  In this studio class, through a variety of visual problems, students will learn the basic elements of exposure and development through the use of the large format camera (4X5), as well as large format scanning, digital image editing and print production.  A variety of software programs pertaining to the medium will be utilized, as well as input and output devices.  The goal of this course is to begin to develop creative imaging skills in graphic systems.  This course makes use of the studio environment, both traditional analog (hand-made) and digital, assigned readings and discussions and visual presentations.  Writing assignments, as appropriate to the discipline, are part of the course.  Photographic imaging will be addressed as a process, a sequence of steps taken toward the final production of a work of art or photograph, requiring creative problem solving, methods and critical thinking.  Studio and materials fee charged.

    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 356 - Special Topics: Mixed Media


    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 360 - Special Topics: Ceramics II


    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 372 - Digital Art & Imaging II


    A continuing investigation into the use of the computer as an artistic instrument.  The intent of this project-oriented class is to provide students with intermediate and advanced information and skills needed to analyze and produce digital media and apply those skills to both fine art and commercial environments.  We will also explore the art of storytelling, abstraction, metaphor, and narrative language.   Materials fees charged. (Formerly FA 367)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FAS 270 , or FAS 272 , or FAS 376 , or permission of instructor.
  
  • FAS 374 - Special Topics: Graphic Design II


    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 375 - Typography and Design


    Students will learn fundamentals of typography including history, theory, semiotics, page layout, communication design, identity, letterform design and experimental contexts of typography such as: type as art object, symbol and cultural element, type as expression and type as personal voice. Students will gain competency in digital typography and graphic design using industry standard software such as Adobe InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. No experience necessary.

    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 376 - Art and Design for the Web


    An introduction to media development and artful design for the world wide web and electronic publishing highlighting the creative, aesthetic, historical, and theoretical aspects of informational systems.  No HTML or scripting required.  Students will have the opportunity to develop graphics, web pages, and web sites utilizing Adobe Creative Suite, After Effects, and Dreamweaver. Class format includes: lectures, and critiques (Formerly FA 368)

    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 378 - Motion Art


    An examination of the procedural, historical, and conceptual aspects of motion in media including motion graphics, animation, and video.  The course focuses on motion art design principles and introduces two animation and video authoring software applications: Adobe Flash and Final Cut Pro. Adobe After Effects software will be introduced for use in type animation.  Students will have the opportunity to develop a variety of creative products that incorporate animation and videography with an emphasis on display on the Web, including stop motion techniques.  The art of storytelling, abstraction, metaphor, and narrative language will also be explored.  No previous programming knowledge required. (Formerly FA 369)

    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 400 - Independent Study


    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 401 - Independent Study - Thesis Studio


    Four credits.

  
  • FAS 492 - Internship (one semester)


    (Formerly FA 481)

  
  • FAS 493 - Internship (two semesters)


    One semester of a two semester internship. (Formerly FA 481)

  
  • FAS 494 - Internship (two semesters)


    One semester of a two semester internship. (Formerly FA 482)


French

  
  • FR 100 - French I


    A careful study of the fundamentals of the French language and an introduction to the culture of a variety of French-speaking countries. Online video, audio, and textual explanations and exercises prepare the student for further in-class practice. By the end of the course, students will start to be able to function in a concrete French context, expressing themselves due to a basic grasp of all four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing) and of some of the target culture’s products, practices, and perspectives. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): No prerequisites.

     

  
  • FR 150 - French II


    This French language course uses a communicative approach to help students with a basic command of French to improve all four skills: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. In addition to a review of vocabulary and grammar and task-oriented practice through in-class activities, online exercises, and chapter projects, the course material includes topics of historical and cultural importance corresponding to the Francophone world. Students will study and discuss a variety of reading selections of varying lengths, film excerpts, and audio recordings on or by native French speakers. Students will be able to function in a French context, expressing themselves and creating with language, due to a solid understanding of the French language and culture. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. 

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 100   or placement.
  
  • FR 200 - French III


    This course offers a contextualized review of the fundamental structures of the French language helping students become more sophisticated language users in all four language skills: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. It is designed to move students beyond what is often referred to as the “survival skills” acquired in first-year French. Over the course of the semester, students will also learn about, reflect on, and discuss many topics pertinent to French and Francophone culture.  They will understand how these topics are perceived in the Francophone world and make comparisons with their own culture. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 150   or placement.
  
  • FR 300 - Writing


    This advanced French course, which addresses a specific theme selected at the instructor’s discretion, helps students improve their writing skills through an in-depth study and application of grammar, vocabulary, and writing techniques. Over the course of the semester, students will read and critically examine texts of various genres and watch clips of and/or full-length films. These readings and films provide a means to improve comprehension and cultural empathy, while also serving as models of good communication. Short written assignments and longer compositions allow students to apply their learned writing techniques through a multi-draft process. Students receive peer and instructor feedback on their written work to help them correct and learn from their mistakes. Required for both the major and minor. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Designated Writing Intensive (WI). Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 200   or placement.
  
  • FR 303 - Conversation


    This course is designed to improve oral and cultural fluency. It focuses on improving the students’ listening and general comprehension skills as well as enhancing the precision, sophistication, and pronunciation of their spoken French while building their cultural knowledge of France. This course gradually challenges students to exchange ideas and personal views with others about current events and socially important topics. Students will practice deriving useful information about these topics from video and audio/radio recordings, films, and printed texts. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 200  or above.
  
  • FR 320 - Culture and Civilization


    A study of France’s past from a variety of perspectives. The role of key historical figures, the practices of various social groups, and artistic and political developments will be analyzed. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 200  or above.
  
  • FR 321 - Contemporary France


    With a view to better understanding the French and their role in the world; we will study contemporary France, including its institutions, cultural production, social practices, and worldview. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG) and the Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 200  or above.
  
  • FR 325 - Cinema


    An examination of French culture through film. Students will view, analyze, and discuss a great variety of French and francophone films. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 200  or above.
  
  • FR 348 - Selected Topics


    Topics to be arranged.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 200  or above.
  
  • FR 350 - Survey of Literature I


    A general view of the main currents of French literature from the Middle Ages to the present. In this course students read, analyze, and write about representative canonical works, building a familiarity with French literary genres and traditions that will enable them to more easily access and better understand all French literary production, but also better value the role literature and literary criticism play in the development of ideas and human progress in general. Survey I covers the Middle Ages through the 18th century and requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 351 - Survey of Literature II


    A general view of the main currents of French literature from the Middle Ages to the present. In these courses students read, analyze, and write about representative canonical works, building a familiarity with French literary genres and traditions that will enable them to more easily access and better understand all French literary production, but also better value the role literature and literary criticism play in the development of ideas and human progress in general. This course covers the 18th century to the present and requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 353 - Short Story


    The theory and history of the French short story through readings and discussions which reflect a period of French literature, a common theme, or the short story in the Francophone world. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 354 - Early Narrative Literature


    A study of Medieval and Renaissance narrative literature, pre-cursor to the modern novel. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 355 - The Novel


    A study of the French novel from the 17th Century to the Present. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 356 - Poetry I


    A study of French verse, designed to develop the student’s appreciation of, and sensitivity to, poetic forms of expression. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 357 - Poetry II


    A study of French verse, designed to develop the student’s appreciation of, and sensitivity to, poetic forms of expression. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week.  Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 358 - Theater I


    A study of French dramatic art in its major manifestations from the Middle Ages to the present. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 359 - Theater II


    A study of French dramatic art in its major manifestations from the Middle Ages to the present. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 360 - Selected Topics


    Topics to be arranged.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 363 - Seventeenth Century Literature: Age of Classicism


    A study and analysis of the classical authors and their works.The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 365 - Eighteenth Century Literature: Age of Enlightenment


    An examination of literature produced in France during the Enlightenment, a period of intensified scientific inquiry, public discourse, and religious tolerance which culminated in the first French and American republics. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 367 - Nineteenth Century Literature: Age of Romanticism and Realism


    A study of the major movements, themes, and authors of nineteenth century French literature. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 371 - Women Writers


    This course will introduce students to some of the major works and theories of French women writers. It will be taught as an overview or concentrate on a certain time period, theme, or author. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week. Conducted in French.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 373 - Francophone Literature


    This course will introduce students to the vast field of Francophone literature and culture. Students will discuss a variety of texts and films from many different countries of the French-speaking world, such as Canada, Africa, and the Caribbean. The course requires three contact hours with the professor and one contact hour of conversation with a Native Speaker each week.  Conducted in French.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 400 - Senior Seminar


    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.
  
  • FR 460 - Selected Topics


    Topics to be arranged.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): FR 300  or above.

German

  
  • GR 100 - German I


    This course is an introduction to the fundamentals of German language and the cultures of the German speaking countries. Students will practice the reading, writing, speaking and listening to German and expand their knowledge of our globalized world. GR 100 involves three class hours and one weekly session of conversation with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): No prerequisite.
  
  • GR 150 - German II


    This course is a continuation of GR 100 that introduces students to the fundamentals of the German language and the cultures of the German speaking countries. Students will practice the reading, writing, speaking and listening to German and gain intercultural competencies. GR 150 involves three classhours and one weekly session of conversation with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 100  or placement.
  
  • GR 200 - German III


    This course is a continuation of GR 150 and introduces students to the fundamentals of the German language and the cultures of the German speaking countries. Students will practice the reading, writing, speaking and listening to German and gain intercultural competencies. GR 200 involves three class hours and one weekly session of conversation with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 150  or placement.
  
  • GR 250 - German IV


    This course is a continuation of GR 200 and allows students through the reading and discussion of intermediate level material in the German language to improve reading and listening comprehension, as well as written and oral proficiency in German. The course focuses on gaining insights into the contemporary culture of Germany and its history. Major historical events, such as WWII, the division of Germany into two countries, the cold war, and finally the fall of the Berlin wall and Germany’s reunification have shaped the Germany of today. GR 250 involves three class hours and one weekly session of conversation with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German.

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s):  GR 200    or placement.
  
  • GR 301 - Advanced German I


    The primary emphasis is placed on the development of written and spoken German through the discussion of contemporary topics in the German speaking countries (Germany, Austria and Switzerland). An introduction to advanced grammar, vocabulary-building with exercises in composition, syntax and stylistics are included. GR 301 involves three class hours and one weekly conversation session with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German. 

    Note: Meets Linguistic Awareness Learning Outcome Modern Foreign or Classical Language (LANG)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 250   or placement.
  
  • GR 302 - Advanced German II


    The central goal of this course is to improve students’ writing in German through the review and implementation of advanced-level grammar, and the preparation of several drafts per essay. Another goal is to introduce different genres of German texts, as well as to develop media literacy in German that allows students to find texts in the media and read them independently. Students will also have the opportunity to improve listening and oral proficiency by listening to the news and other podcasts, and bring this information into the class discussion. GR 302 involves three class hours and one weekly conversation session with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 301   or placement.
  
  • GR 320 - Tales of the Brothers Grimm


    In this course, students will read in German some of the best known and least known of the Grimm Brothers’ tales. They will learn some of the ways Märchen (“fairy tales”) can be analyzed, understood and retold, and see how some of the Märchen are treated in contemporary media. Grammar and vocabulary of the texts will be attended to, as needed. GR 320 involves three class hours and one weekly conversation session with a Native Speaker.

    Note: Meets Aesthetic and Creative Engagement Learning Outcome (AEST)

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 301  or permission of instructor.
  
  • GR 321 - Business German


    The main purpose of this course is the reading and discussion of business related items from German speaking countries. Students will have the opportunity to improve reading and listening comprehension, written and oral proficiency in German while getting an insight into the business culture of German companies. GR 321 involves three class hours and one weekly conversation session with a Native Speaker.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 301   or permission of the instructor.
  
  • GR 322 - Contemporary German Storytellers


    In this course, students will read a variety of classical Kurzgeschichten (“short stories”), as well as contemporary ones (written after 1989), highlighting major themes, stylistic trends and formal devices, and motifs of the genre. The course emphasizes principles of literary analysis and interpretation, and advances reading, listening (class lecture and discussion), speaking (preparing and giving several short oral presentations, responding to discussion questions), and writing skills (critical analysis tests, and research paper) in German. GR 322 involves three class hours and one weekly conversation session with a Native Speaker. This class will be taught in German.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 301  or permission of instructor.
  
  • GR 323 - Translating German Prose


    This course introduces students to the science and the art of translating. Texts come from a variety of sources: history, philosophy, fine arts, biography, as well as from newspapers and web pages. Students will evolve strategies for dealing with difficult constructions and for using dictionaries effectively. GR 323 involves three class hours and one weekly conversation session with a Native Speaker.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): GR 301   or permission of instructor.
  
  • GR 324 - Special Topics in German


    Topics to be arranged.

    Four credits.

  
  • GR 325 - Special Topics in German


    Topics to be arranged.


Great Books

  
  • PH 170 - Introduction to Great Books


    An introduction to the Integrated Studies major and minor which samples its three kinds of courses:  the reading and seminar discussion of great books, the closer reading and analysis of a single great book, and the examination of an enduring idea or issue from a variety of different approaches

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 271 - Great Books Seminar I: The Ancient World - Homer to Plutarch


    Selected readings are chosen from among the following: Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, Aristophanes, Aristotle, Tacitus, Vergil, Lucretius, Cicero and Plutarch.

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 272 - Great Books Seminar II: The Medieval World - Augustine to Chaucer.


    Selected readings are chosen from among the following: Letters from Clement and Ignatius, Plotinus, Augustine, Boethius, Anselm, Beowulf, Thomas Aquinas, Dante, Song of Roland and Chaucer.

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 273 - Great Books Seminar III: The Renaissance - Machiavelli to Pascal


    Selected readings are chosen from among the following: Luther, Shakespeare, Montaigne, Cervantes, Bacon, Galileo, Descartes, Hobbes, Milton and Pascal.

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 274 - Great Books Seminar IV: The Enlightenment and Its Discontents - Locke to Dostoevsky


    Selected readings are chosen from among the following: Locke, Hume, Kant, Goethe, Federalist Papers, De Tocqueville, Austen, Hegel, Newman, Kierkegaard, and Dostoevsky.

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 275 - Great Books Seminar V: The Contemporary World


    Selected readings are chosen from the following: Marx, Tolstoy, Nietzsche, Pope Leo XIII, Freud, Chesterton, Joyce, Eliot, Wharton, Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Camus, Marcel, and Pope John Paul II.

     

    Note: Meets Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 276 - Great Books Seminar VI: Non-Western Classics


    Selected readings are chosen from the following: Ptahhotep, Vedas, Upanishads, Confucius, Laozi, Buddhist Sutras, Kebra Nagast, Sundiata, Cao Xuequin, Anand, Borges, Achebe, Kōbō Abe, Salih, and Silko

    Note: Meets Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 455-457 - Integrated Studies Seminars


    The integrated Studies Seminar considers a topic or theme from multiple points of view, engaging two or more disciplines.  This course may be team taught by members of different departments or may be taught by a single professor with invited guest contributors from other departments.

    Four credits.

  
  • PH 467-469 - Focused Study Seminar


    The Focused Study Seminar studies a single book or author. Each student chooses a topic pertinent to the material under discussion and, with the help of several individual conferences with the instructor, writes a long essay.  Examples of Focused Study Seminars are:  Plato: The Republic, Dante: The Divine Comed, Freud, Indian Philosoph, Thomas Aquinas,             Newman: The Idea of the University, On Friendship, On Evil, Texts of Daoism, The Life of Muhammad, Euclid: Geometry, and Plutarch.

    Four credits.

    Prerequisite(s): PH 105 .

History

  
  • HI 100 - Introduction to the Study of History


    This course is intended to introduce you to the ways that historians learn, know, and think. We will explore how to read, understand, and critique books and articles written by historians, and we will also begin to learn how to conduct historical research and construct arguments based on that research. We will read about history and do history in this class.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 101 - Origins of European Civilization


    Western Civilization, from its Middle East origins to approximately 1600.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 103 - War and Revolution in the Modern World


    This introductory course will investigate the ways in which Western warfare has both reflected and stimulated changes in Western politics, society, economics, and culture. The course will start by studying the ancient Mesopotamians and conclude with a discussion of contemporary insurgencies. Along the way, students will become familiar with theories of war, see how changes in the battlefield environment have changed the experience of war, discuss the extent to which the transformation of war has been the result of revolutionary or evolutionary change, and understand the significant place of war in Western history.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 104 - The Peopling of America


    An introductory level course exploring the history of the diverse ethnic and racial composition of the United States from the colonial period to the present. The course will examine the impact of mass immigration and interrace relations in this country. The course will make use of autobiography, oral history, and primary sources to show how the United States developed into a pluralistic society. This course will discuss the experiences of European, African American, Asian and Latin American immigrants.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 105 - World History, 1500-present


    This course examines the development of the modern world from approximately 1500 AD to the present. Topics include the role of European expansion and colonization in creating the new global network, and the cultural exchange between Western and non-Western civilizations.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 106 - The U.S. Presidency


    The power of the U.S. President was intended to be limited, but has generally grown throughout the years since George Washington served as the first president. We explore the limits specified in the Constitution, as well as the ways in which Presidents have used institutional, Congressional, and personal strategies to expand their powers.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 107 - Cities and Social Change


    An introduction to urban and social history. It examines selected cities over time, looking at their physical composition and the impact of their economic, social, political, and cultural functions on social change.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 108 - Law and Justice in European History


    This course will examine the relationship between ideas of justice, legal institutions, and legal decisions in their European context, from the Roman republic to the twentieth century.  Focusing primarily on criminal law and criminal trials, we will use legal sources to gain insight into the political, social, and cultural values of  Europeans from ancient to modern times.   Subjects presented will enable us to consider the development of ideas of justice over time and evaluate the origins and growth of the Western legal tradition.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 109 - Environmental History


    This course focuses on the historical relationship between people and the environment.  It draws data from the diverse cultures and geographies of the United States first, and then looks at particular environmental concerns in other nations across time.  Overall the course frames the environment as a global phenomenon affected by international politics and world cultures.  The course will be grounded in the past, but will examine current issues such as global warming, biological prospecting, invasive species, and food production to understand the environment from local and global perspectives.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 110 - African Health and Healing


    The course introduces the concept of the social basis of health and healing and the figure of the popular healer in Africa and the African Diaspora from the eighteenth to twenty-first centuries. Topics include indigenous knowledge, colonial medical practices, postcolonial health care, and infectious diseases, such as HIV and the AIDS epidemic.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 111 - Exploration and Discovery


    This course introduces students to European voyages of discovery from the late middle ages until the early nineteenth century.  European explorers navigated across the globe discovering new sea lanes and peoples.  This course covers both the scientific and technological developments that made such voyages possible, the challenges explorers needed to overcome, and the consequences of these voyages on people and on the environment.  Special attention will be paid to first encounters - the realities as well as the images of this cross cultural contact in the Americas, Africa, and Asia.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits

  
  • HI 112 - History’s Mysteries


    The study of the past can be compared to a mystery.  Historians try to piece together a sequence of events by using documentary evidence to determine how or why things happened the way they did.  In this course, we will read books about actual historical mysteries to understand how historians think, research, and write.  We will also use these historical mysteries to understand the larger societies and eras in which they took place.  In this way, “history’s mysteries” will help us to understand the Reformation, the Age of Exploration, the rise of nation states, and the development of a diverse and industrially advanced United States.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 113 - The Crusades


    This course will examine the major Crusades of the 11th to the 14th centuries. We will look at the origins of the Crusading movement, the crusader states, the military orders, the rise of Saladin and the eventual collapse of the crusader kingdoms. We will examine Christian, Muslim and Jewish perspectives on the crusades.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST) and the Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 150 - Historical Reasoning Special Topics


    This is a special topics course.  The content of the class will vary by section, professor and semester.

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 151 - Historical Reasoning Special Topics


    This is a special topics course.  The content of the class will vary by section, professor and semester. 

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning and Citizenship Learning Outcomes (HIST, CITZ)

    Four.

  
  • HI 152 - Historical Reasoning Special Topics


    This is a special topics course.  The content of the class will vary by section, professor and semester. 

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning and Global Engagement Learning Outcomes (HIST, GLOB)

    Four.

  
  • HI 175 - Asian Civilization


    The course introduces the history of Asia, with primary attention to East and Southeast Asia. It explores interactions among the Asian countries, and ways in which Asians made sense of social relations, politics, economic change, and culture. (Formerly HI 275)

    Note: Meets Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ) and Global Engagement Learning Outcome (GLOB)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 199 - America: Origins to World Power


    This course covers crucial issues in American History from the American Revolution to the twenty-first century, with a heavy focus on processes which created, challenged and changed the Constitution and those which made the United States an international power.  It is specifically designed to support Elementary Education majors by providing a deeper understanding of United States history and civics, with some focus on geography and economics. 

    Note: Meets Historical Reasoning Learning Outcome (HIST)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 225 - Early Modern Europe


    The course explores the origins of modernity in early modern Europe, and it examines the major economic, political, social, intellectual, and cultural developments of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Topics of special interest include the Thirty Years’ War, witchcraft, rise of absolutism, “consumer revolution”, colonial expansion, the Scientific Revolution, the Age of Reason and Enlightenment, and the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 226 - Modern European History


    A survey of the major political, economic, social, and cultural events that have shaped modern Europe since 1815. Topics discussed include the Industrial Revolution, the emergence of modern political ideologies, and the conflicts of the twentieth century.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 250 - United States History to 1877


    A survey of American economic, political and social developments from colonial times through Reconstruction.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 251 - United States History from 1877


    A survey of American economic, political and social developments from the Gilded Age to the present.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 311 - Ancient Greece


    A study of the political, social, and cultural history of Greece from Homer to 146 B.C. Topics include: the Age of Homer, rise of Sparta and Athens, Athenian democracy and imperialism, and Alexander the Great.

    Note: Meets Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 312 - Ancient Rome


    A study of the political, social and cultural history of Rome from 509 B.C. to the Fall of the Empire. It will examine the rise of the Roman Republic, expansion and imperialism, Roman society and culture, and Roman legacy to the West.

    Note: Meets Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 313 - The Early Middle Ages


    This course examines the creation of Western Medieval society after the fall of Rome by looking at the rise of Christianity, feudalism and chivalry, and the renaissance of the 12th century.

    Note: Meets the Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 314 - The High Middle Ages


    This course examines the flowering of medieval civilization in the 13th century, the development of the national monarchies, the Black Death and the Hundred Years War.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 315 - The Renaissance


    An intellectual, cultural, and social history of 14th-15th century Europe. Special emphasis on society and politics in Renaissance Italy, the humanists and their patrons, Machiavelli and statecraft, and the Christian humanism of Erasmus and More.

    Note: Meets the Citizenship Learning Outcome (CITZ)

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 316 - The Reformation


    This course covers the Age of the Reform in 16th century Europe. Students will study the thought of the religious reformers, the impact of the Reformations and the Counter Reformation, the interaction of religion and politics in France, England, and Germany, and the rise of toleration.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 317 - Medieval Spain


    This course examines the history of the Iberian Peninsula from the Muslim conquest in 711 to the Christian Reconquest of Grenada in 1492. The course emphasizes the chief social, political, religious and economic transformations within the Christian and Muslim peninsular Kingdom.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 324 - Special Topics: Early Europe


    Topics to be arranged.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 326 - Modern Britain


    This course investigates modern England since about 1760, concentrating on social, political, cultural, and imperial issues, and Britain’s new European status since World War II.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 327 - Early Modern France


    Social, cultural and political foundations of the Ancient Regime in France from 1500 to the French Revolution of 1789. Covered in the course: the French Renaissance, the development of absolutism, French society and culture and the coming of the French Revolution.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 328 - The Habsburg Empire


    A survey of this unique Central European state from its emergence in the 16th century to its fall in 1918. Emphasis is on the 18th and 19th centuries.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 329 - Modern Germany


    The history of the German lands since 1815. Topics include Germany’s unification and industrial transformation, the rise of Nazism, the country’s division after World War II and its subsequent reunification.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 330 - Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century


    Europe’s most volatile and crisis-ridden region. Topics include the emergence of the independent East European states, their subsequent political and economic problems through World War II, and the rise and fall of Communist regimes.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 332 - Modern France


    Modern France will begin with the aftermath of the Napoleonic era and conclude with France of 1989, two hundred years after its famous revolution. It will cover domestic political and social issues, so intertwined in French history, and seek to appreciate France’s position in the contemporary modern world.

    Four credits.

  
  • HI 333 - Europe since 1945


    Devastated and impoverished in 1945, Europe lay in the shadow of the United States and the Soviet Union. Although the last sixty years have presented terrible challenges, the European people have experienced a remarkable regeneration during this period. This course will investigate this regeneration and contemplate the various difficulties Europe faced and continues to face today. Topics covered will include the Cold War, the postwar “economic miracle,” Communist rule in Eastern Europe, European unification, immigration, and the Revolutions of 1989.

    Four credits.

 

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