History Course Finder
Curtis Richardson
Fetzer Hall - Rm 0104
MoWeFr 11:15AM - 12:05PM
Traces the development of sexual identities and changes in masculine and feminine ideals from Tsarist Russia through the post-Soviet period with emphasis on politics, society, and popular culture.
Hist 276- The Modern Middle East
Ansev Demirhan
TBA
TBA
This course introduces students to the recent history of the Middle East, including a comparison of the Middle East to the United States.
HIST 284 – Late Imperial China
Michelle King
Venable - Rm G311
TuTh 11:00Am- 12:15Pm
This course introduces undergraduates to significant themes of the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties. Topics include family, religion, art, fiscal change, trade networks, conquest, emperorship, Manchu ethnicity, the examination system and book culture, legal codes, gender, the Taiping Rebellion, and the Boxer Uprising, among others. No prior coursework required.
HIST 312 – History of France and Algeria
Maximilian Owre
Murphey - Rm 0115
MoWeFr 9:05 am - 9:55 am
This course covers France's conquest, rule, and loss of Algeria, and the relationship between French and Algerian people in Algeria and France from 1830 to the present. Topics such as modern French and North African history, colonialism, Islam, immigration, terror/torture, and cross-cultural exchange are all featured in this transnational course.
HIST 347 – Fascist Challenge in Europe, 1918-1945
Tobias Hof
Alumni- Rm 0203
TuTh 9:30-Am 10:45Am
The course focus on theories on fascism, national cultures of fascism (e.g. Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Hungary) as well as selected topics which are essential to understand the attraction and functioning of fascist movements and regimes since 1918 in Europe (e.g. racism, war, culture, charismatic leadership).
HIST 354 – War and Gender in Movies
Trevor Erlacher
New West - Rm 0219
MoWeFr 9:00Am - 9:50Am
The course examines and compares the images of war and gender that movies from different time periods and countries propagate and explores the different factors that influence these images and thereby the perception and recollection of war. Honors version available
HIST 366 – North Carolina History before 1865
Harry Watson
6 different rooms available
7 different times available
The history of North Carolina from the original Indian cultures to the end of the Civil War. Important topics include colonization, the American Revolution, evangelical religion, slavery, economic and political reform, the rise of sectionalism, and the Civil War.
HIST 367 – North Carolina History since 1865
TBA
TBA
TBA
The history of North Carolina from the end of the Civil War to the present. Important topics include Reconstruction, agrarian protests, disfranchisement and segregation, industrialization and workers' experience, the civil rights movement, and 20th-century politics.
HIST 368 – War and American Society to 1903
Joseph Glatthaar
Fetzer Hall - Rm 0109
Tuth 12:30Pm- 1:45 PM
The American military experience from colonial times to the early 20th century. Major themes include the problem of security, the development of military policies and institutions, and the way in which the country waged and experienced war.
HIST 398 – Undergraduate Seminar in History
Marcus Bull & Matthew Andrews & Flora Cassen & Lloyd Kramer & James Leloudis & Harry Watson & Sarah Shields & Donald Reid
8 different rooms available
8 different times available
Permission of the department. The course is in general limited to 15 students. The subject matter will vary with the instructor. Each course will concern itself with a study in depth of some historical problem. Students will write a substantial research paper. Honors version available