Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
History Department Summer Session Courses, 2010 Note: For classroom locations and schedule updates, please check the Student Service Centre, https://ssc.adm.ubc.ca/sscportal/servlets/SRVSSCFramework Summer session term one. Term one courses meet two evenings per week, 3 hours per evening, 10 May to 30 July 2010, unless other dates are given in the table below. Course, section, credits HIST 103 sec. 921 6 credits HIST 270 sec. 921 6 credits HIST 412 sec. 921 6 credits HIST 425 sec. 921 6 credits HIST 432 sec. 921 6 credits HIST 490N Sec 921 3 credits Title and Room World History Since 1900 Buch D218 Modern China and the West Buch D219 The American Impact on Canada Buch B309 War and Society Buch B309 International Relations of the Great Powers in the 20th Century Buch B218 Seminar for History Majors Buch D201 Days, timings Mon, Wed 1700-2000 10 May to 30 July Tues, Thurs 1800-2100 10 May to 30 July Tues, Thurs 1700-2000 10 May to 30 July Mon, Wed 1900-2200 10 May to 30 July Instructor F. Roberts No e-mail Telephone 604.822.5171 C. Green [email protected] L. Silver [email protected] D. Gossen [email protected] Mon, Wed 1800-2100 10 May to 30 July V. Timofiiv [email protected] Mon/Wed 1700-2000 10 May to 18 June D. Meola [email protected] Summer session term two. Term two courses meet five days per week, 2½ hours per day, 12 July to 30 July 2010, unless other dates are given in the table below. Note: H = Thursday Course, section, credits HIST 317 sec. 951 3 credits HIST 326 sec. 951 3 credits HIST 441 sec. 951 3 credits HIST 453 sec. 951 3 credits HIST 486 sec. 951 3 credits Title Days, timings Britain, 1850-1918 Buch D219 MTWHF 1330-1600 12 to 30 July Canada Since 1945 Buch B210 MTWHF 1330-1600 12 to 30 July The Holocaust Buch D317 Class and Culture in Latin America Buch D317 Korea in the 20th Century Buch D317 MTWHF 1030-1300 12 to 30 July MTWHF 1030-1300 3 to 20 August MTWHF 1330-1600 3 to 20 August Instructor N. Lloyd [email protected] I. Waddell [email protected] J. Eidelman [email protected] M. Aviles-Galan [email protected] A. Agov [email protected] …continues on page 2 History Course Descriptions, 2010 Summer Session HIST 103 (6) World History Since 1900. The 20th century wrought terrible changes to people's lives, and no doubt many would have agreed with Samuel Beckett's conclusion that humankind “gives birth astride of a grave, the light gleams an instant, and then it is night once more.” HIST 103 examines a range of political and economic developments, among which are Imperialism, World War One, the Russian Revolution, Totalitarianism, World War Two, the Cold War and Decolonization. The course uses secondary and primary sources, the latter chosen to allow students to get inside the minds of people who shaped or responded to events. HIST 270 (6) Modern China and the West. The invasion of China since the 1600s by western civilization; the impact of Chinese culture and of the modern Chinese revolution on the West, Canadian relations with China included. Open to students with no previous knowledge of China. HIST 317 (3) Britain, 1850-1918. Britain from the Great Exhibition to the Great War: the creation of a mass electorate, the "New Imperialism," the "New Woman," and the ways that class, race, gender, and sexuality shaped modern Britain. HIST 326 (3) Canada Since 1945: Affluence and Anxiety in the Atomic Age. Includes immigration policy; the welfare state; Aboriginal peoples; the Cold War; resource economies and national politics; continentalism and free trade; constitutional crises; conflicting nationalisms; and new social movements. Credit will only be granted for one of HIST 326 or 426, if 426 was taken before 2007W. HIST 412 (6) The American Impact on Canada. An examination of the influence of the United States' rise to continental, hemispheric, and world power upon Canada in the areas of economics, defence, and foreign policy. HIST 425 (6) War and Society. Continuity and change in the relations of war and society, the connections between the economy, society, the military, and government in peacetime as well as war; not a course in military history. HIST 432 (6) International Relations of the Great Powers in the Twentieth Century. The international relations of the great powers from the end of the First World War to the end of the Cold War. HIST 441 (3) The Holocaust. A study of the systematic attempt to destroy European Jewry during the Nazi regime, 1933-1945. Topics of special importance include: the motivations and behaviour of the perpetrators; the reactions of the victims; the roles of bystanders. HIST 453 (3) Class and Culture in Latin America. The relationship between culture and class formation from the late colonial period to the present. HIST 486 (3) Korea in the 20th Century. History of the Korean people in the 20th century; the traditional cultural history; Japanese colonial rule; the Korean war; the two Korean states; economic, social, and cultural change. HIST 490N (3) Seminar for History Majors: Minorities in Europe Since the Enlightenment. This course will explore the relationship of different ‘minority’ groups to European Society and the evolving system of nation-states and supra-national entities since the middle of the 18th century. Last Updated: 18 February 2010 (C. Aldana)