2020-2021 University Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
History
|
|
Return to: Division of Social Sciences
Faculty |
Professors Banner-Haley, Douglas, Harsin, Hodges, Nemes (Chair), Robinson, Rotter
Associate Professors Barrera, Bouk, Cooper, Etefa, Karn, Khan, H. Roller
Assistant Professors Hall, Mercado
Visiting Assistant Professors Depenbusch
Senior Lecturer T. Tomlinson |
Today the study of human history is critical to global survival; the experiences of others serve as guides to present and future conduct. At the same time, exposure to rigorous historical method and clear narrative style develops conceptual skills, research competence, writing fluency, and sensitivity to the uses and abuses of language and historical knowledge. The history department curriculum includes courses on African, Asian, Caribbean, European, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and North American subjects, and on contact and interaction among these societies. Majors are encouraged to take courses in related departments and programs. Competence in at least one foreign language is also desirable.
Course Information
Course classifications:
Africa (AF)
Asia (AS)
Europe (EU)
Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)
Middle East (ME)
Transregional (TR)
United States (US)
Awards
The Award for Excellence in History — awarded to the student judged by the faculty to demonstrate outstanding merit, perseverance, and promise on the basis of work done in the department.
The History Honors Award — awarded annually to a senior major in recognition of a distinguished thesis in history.
The Douglas K. Reading Prize — awarded in memory of Douglas K. Reading, professor of history from 1938 to 1980. The Reading Prize is given annually to an outstanding junior or senior major, with preference to a student of modern European history, Russian history, or ancient or medieval history.
The Scott Saunders Prize for Excellence in History — established in memory of Scott Saunders ‘89 and awarded annually to a senior major in history who participated in the Colgate London History Study Group, in recognition of work done in London that is distinguished in its own right or which contributed to the completion of a distinguished project.
Advanced Placement and Transfer Credit
Students with scores of 4 or 5 on the Advanced Placement (AP) exam in European or American history will receive credit toward graduation but not toward the major or minor. Those granted AP credit in European history may not repeat HIST 101 and/or HIST 102 without permission of the department chair; those granted AP credit in American history may not repeat HIST 103 and/or HIST 104 without permission of the department chair. No department credit or exemption is given for an AP score of 3 or for AP courses taken without the AP examination. Majors may not count course credit given for AP in history toward the nine total courses required. Minors may not count course credit given for AP in history toward the five total courses required.
Requests for transfer of external credits toward the major or minor should be directed to the department chair. Courses must be of comparable quality to ones offered at Colgate to be approved for transfer.
Colgate students who have not transferred from another institution should consult the department chair before enrolling in courses at other institutions or in approved off–campus study programs. Permission to use such courses for major or minor credit is granted selectively, and only one course may be approved.
Honors and High Honors
Candidates for honors in history must:
- Have or exceed, by the time of graduation, a major GPA of 3.50 and an overall GPA of 3.00;
- Complete an honors thesis that has been judged by the major adviser and one other department faculty member to be of A or A– quality. The thesis is normally expected to be completed in two terms. It may be started in any any 300 or 400-level history course, on campus or on the London History Study Group. A candidate should enroll in HIST 490 to complete the thesis.
Candidates for high honors in history must:
- Have or exceed by the time of graduation, a major GPA of 3.75 and an overall GPA of 3.00;
- Complete an honors thesis that has been judged by the major adviser and by one other department faculty member to be of A quality;
- Defend the paper in an oral examination before the two faculty readers. The examination must also be judged to be of excellent quality.
Teacher Certification
The Department of Educational Studies offers a teacher certification program for majors in history who are interested in pursuing a career in elementary or secondary school teaching. Please refer to Educational Studies for more information.
Only Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) Graduate students may take graduate-level versions of history department classes, which are given 500-level course numbers. For further details, see the MAT entry under Educational Studies .
London Study Group
Every year the history department conducts a study group in London. Admission is selective and limited to students of suitable interest and academic background. Interested students should inquire the preceding year. Prospective students must take HIST 199 - History Workshop and HIST 300 - The London Colloquium (EU) before going to London, and should be on campus the semester before departure. For more information, see Off-Campus Study .
Majors and MinorsMajorMinorCourses- HIST 101 - The Growth of National States in Europe (EU)
- HIST 102 - Europe in Crisis Since 1815 (EU)
- HIST 103 - American History to 1877 (US)
- HIST 104 - The United States since 1877 (US)
- HIST 105 - Introduction to the Modern Middle East (ME)
- HIST 106 - The Making of Modern Africa (AF)
- HIST 110 - Introduction to Cultural History (TR)
- HIST 112 - The History of Technology (US)
- HIST 114 - History of Colgate (US)
- HIST 120 - Introduction to Museum Studies (TR)
- HIST 199 - History Workshop
- HIST 202 - Europe in the Middle Ages, c. 300 - 1500 (EU)
- HIST 203 - Age of the American Revolution (US)
- HIST 209 - The Atlantic World, 1492 - 1800 (LAC)
- HIST 210 - The History of Health, Disease and Empire (TR)
- HIST 211 - Women’s Rights in US History (US)
- HIST 212 - The Emergence of the Modern Woman (TR)
- HIST 213 - Women in the City (US)
- HIST 215 - American Foreign Relations, 1776 - 1917 (US)
- HIST 216 - U.S. Foreign Policy, 1917 - Present (US)
- HIST 218 - The African American Struggle for Freedom and Democracy (US)
- HIST 219 - Oceanic Histories (TR)
- HIST 220 - The History of Nature and Capital in the United States (US)
- HIST 224 - Introduction to Environmental History (TR)
- HIST 225 - Jamaica: From Colony to Independence (Study Group) (LAC)
- HIST 231 - Resistance and Revolt in Latin America (LAC)
- HIST 232 - The Crusades (EU)
- HIST 233 - The French Revolution: Old Regime, Revolution, and Napleonic Empire, 1770-1815 (EU)
- HIST 237 - Empires, Places, and Global History (TR)
- HIST 238 - Europe in the Age of the Renaissance and Reformation (EU)
- HIST 241 - Life and Death in Early Modern Britain (EU)
- HIST 243 - Native American History (US)
- HIST 245 - Russia at War (EU)
- HIST 248 - Women’s Lives in Europe, 1500-Present (EU)
- HIST 249 - History of the City of London (Study Group) (EU)
- HIST 251 - The Politics of History (TR)
- HIST 254 - History of Coffee and Cigarettes (TR)
- HIST 255 - The Ottoman Empire, 1300 - 1924 (TR)
- HIST 261 - Modern Irish History (EU)
- HIST 263 - Cities of the Silk Road (TR)
- HIST 264 - Modern East Asia (AS)
- HIST 265 - War and Violence in East Asia (AS)
- HIST 266 - Foreign Relations in East Asian History (AS)
- HIST 269 - History of Modern India (AS)
- HIST 271 - The First World War (TR)
- HIST 272 - War and Holocaust in Europe (EU)
- HIST 273 - The Century of Camps (TR)
- HIST 281 - Slavery and the Slave Trade in Africa (AF)
- HIST 284 - Decolonization in Africa (AF)
- HIST 291 - Independent Study
- HIST 300 - The London Colloquium (EU)
- HIST 302 - Global Toxic History (TR)
- HIST 304 - Sex and Sexualities in U.S. History (US)
- HIST 305 - Asian American History (US)
- HIST 306 - History of Numbers in America (US)
- HIST 309 - Culture and Society in Cold War America (US)
- HIST 313 - Upstate History (US)
- HIST 316 - The United States in Vietnam, 1945 - 1975 (US)
- HIST 318 - African American History: African Background to Emancipation (US)
- HIST 319 - African American Leadership and Social Movements (US)
- HIST 320 - New York City History (US)
- HIST 322 - Race and Ethnicity in Latin America (LAC)
- HIST 326 - Jamaican Culture (Study Group) (LAC)
- HIST 332 - Medieval England (EU)
- HIST 333 - The Medieval Church (EU)
- HIST 334 - France in Modern Times (EU)
- HIST 336 - The History of Bodies, Planets, and Plants in the Early Modern Period (EU)
- HIST 337 - Pirates in the Atlantic World, 1500s - 1730 (LAC)
- HIST 338 - The Age of Absolutism in Europe (EU)
- HIST 339 - Traditions of European Intellectual History (EU)
- HIST 340 - 20th-Century European Intellectual History (EU)
- HIST 343 - The Formation of the Russian Empire (EU)
- HIST 344 - Imperial Russia and the Soviet Revolution (EU)
- HIST 346 - Germany and Eastern Europe, 1848 - 1989 (EU)
- HIST 350 - Post-War Europe, 1945 to the Present (EU)
- HIST 353 - History of the Modern Balkans (EU)
- HIST 356 - Global Indigenous History (TR)
- HIST 358 - Conquest and Colony: Cultural Encounters in the Americas (TR)
- HIST 360 - Borderlands of North America (TR)
- HIST 365 - Warriors, Emperors and Temples in Japan (AS)
- HIST 368 - China, the Great Wall, and Beyond (AS)
- HIST 369 - Modern China (1750 - present) (AS)
- HIST 370 - The Mongol Empire (TR)
- HIST 377 - History of Culture in the Caribbean (LAC)
- HIST 379 - U.S. and Africa (AF)
- HIST 380 - Emancipation, Forced Labor, and Contemporary Bondage in Africa (AF)
- HIST 381 - Pre-Colonial Africa (AF)
- HIST 382 - Modern Africa (AF)
- HIST 384 - Somalia: From Independence to Collapse (AF)
- HIST 385 - Darfur in Historical Perspective (AF)
- HIST 391 - Independent Study
- HIST 399 - Reading Seminars: New Areas of Inquiry
- HIST 400 - Thematic Seminar
- HIST 450 - Seminar in East Asian History (AS)
- HIST 459 - Seminar on Modern Middle Eastern History (ME)
- HIST 462 - Seminar on Problems in African History (AF)
- HIST 475 - Seminar in African American History (US)
- HIST 476 - Seminar on Problems in the 19th-Century United States (US)
- HIST 479 - Seminar on Problems in the History of U.S. Foreign Policy (US)
- HIST 482 - Seminar on Problems in British History since 1800 (EU)
- HIST 484 - Seminar on Modern European Cultural and Intellectual History (EU)
Page: 1
| 2
Return to: Division of Social Sciences
|