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History (HIST)
College of Arts and Humanities
HIST 151 and 152 or consent is a prerequisite to
all history courses numbered above 300.
HIST 151 World Civilization (3) Development of
civilization from its prehistoric origins to 1500. Prerequisite for
advanced courses. WC
HIST 152 World Civilization (3) Continuation of
151. Development of civilization from 1500 to the present. Prerequisite
for advanced courses. WC
HIST 155 Non-Western Civilizations (3) Survey
of historical and cultural development into their classical phases;
restructuring under Western impact. Completes world civilizations
requirement for transfer students with a two-semester course in Western
civilization; not open to students with 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A. WC
HIST 161A World Cultures in Perspective (3) Development
of civilizations from prehistoric origins to 1500. Offered as discussion
and/or problems course. Alternative for 151 and 152; freshmen in SSP
only. WC
HIST 162A World Cultures in Perspective (3) Continuation
of 161A. Development of civilization from 1500 to the present. Offered
as discussion and/or problems course. Alternative for 151 and 152;
freshmen in SSP only. WC
HIST 231 Modern European Civilization (3) Political
evolution and major economic, social, and cultural development of
European states. 1500-1800. AH2
HIST 232 Modern European Civilization (3) Continuation
of 231. Major political, social, economic, and cultural trends from
Napoleon to the present. AH2
HIST 241 Civilizations of Asia (3) Survey of
major civilizations of Asia from earliest times to 1500; East Asia,
Southeast Asia, South Asia. (Cross-listed as ASAN 241) AH2
HIST 242 Civilizations of Asia (3) Continuation
of 241. Survey of major civilizations of Asia from 1500 to the present;
East Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia. (Cross-listed as ASAN 242) AH2
HIST 281 Introduction to American History (3) Interpretive
survey from the earliest settlements to the present. AH2
HIST 282 Introduction to American History (3) Continuation
of 281. Interpretive survey from the earliest settlements to the
present. AH2
HIST 284 History of the Hawaiian Islands (3) Survey
of state and local history from Polynesian chiefdoms to Hawaiian Kingdom
to American territory and state.
HIST 288 Survey of Pacific Islands History (3) Survey
of Pacific Islands from pre-colonial to modern times; early settlement,
cultural contact, colonization, contemporary problems. AH2
HIST 301 History of India and Pakistan (3) Historical
survey of Indian society, economics, politics, religion, ideas, and
institutions; origins, development, influence on culture, to 1500.
HIST 302 History of India and Pakistan (3) Continuation
of 301. 1500 to the present.
HIST 305 History of Southeast Asia (3) Survey
of development of civilizations and growth of nations in Southeast Asia,
to the 18th century.
HIST 306 History of Southeast Asia (3) Continuation
of 305, from 18th century to the present.
HIST 309 East Asian Civilizations (3) Characteristics
of East Asian civilizations as they developed in pre-modern China;
variant patterns in Japan and Korea; the modernization process to 1500.
HIST 310 East Asian Civilizations (3) Continuation
of 309. Period after 1500.
HIST 311 History of China (3) Chinese
civilization to the 17th century.
HIST 312 History of China (3) Continuation of
311. Period since the 17th century.
HIST 321 History of Japan (3) Survey of
culture, government, economics, and institutions, to 1700.
HIST 322 History of Japan (3) Continuation of
321. Period from 1700.
HIST 323 Way of Tea in Japanese History and Culture
(3) History and culture of Japan as revealed in study and practice
of the tea ceremony (urasenke): Zen, aesthetics, calligraphy,
architecture, ceramics, gardens, politics. (Cross-listed as ASAN 323)
HIST 324 The Samurai of Japan (3) A social,
military, and cultural history of Japan’s samurai (warrior) class.
HIST 327 History of Korea (3) Survey of
political, economic, social, and cultural developments from earliest
times to 1400.
HIST 328 History of Korea (3) Continuation of
327. From 1400 to the present.
HIST 331 Ancient Greece I (3) Political,
social, and cultural history of the Minoan, Mycenean, and Archaic
periods.
HIST 332 Ancient Greece II (3) Political,
social, and cultural history of the Classical and Hellenistic periods.
HIST 333 Ancient Rome: The Republic (3) Political,
social, cultural history from the Etruscans to Augustus. Emphasis on
discussion of literary and archaeological materials. (Alt. years: fall)
HIST 334 Ancient Rome: The Empire (3) Political,
social, and cultural history from Augustus to 476 A.D. Emphasis on
literary and archaeological materials. (Alt. years: spring)
HIST 335 Early Middle Ages 300-900 (3) Interaction
of three major forces forming Western European civilization: Classical
tradition, Christian religion, Germanic society.
HIST 336 High Middle Ages 900-1300 (3) Topical
examination of Medieval European culture: economy, society, religion,
politics, thought, and the arts.
HIST 337 European Intellectual History (3) Undergraduate
seminar on great debates in Western thought. Discussion of primary
source materials; the scientific revolution and Enlightenment. No
auditors.
HIST 338 European Intellectual History (3) Continuation
of 337. European thought from French Revolution to the present.
HIST 340 Comparative Economic Growth--Historical
Perspective (3) Comparative historical studies of economic
development since 1750 in Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, U.S.,
China, Japan, and the European common market. Political, social, and
cultural dimensions.
HIST 344 Modern Germany (3) Political, social,
economic, and cultural history since 1547. Rise of Austria and Prussia,
unification, Bismarckian era, World War I and Weimar Republic,
Hitler’s Third Reich, post-World War II.
HIST 345 France in the Old Regime (3) Major
social, political, and intellectual developments: Renaissance,
Reformation, religious wars, Richelieu, Louis XIV, Enlightenment, and
Revolution.
HIST 346 Modern France (3) Political, social,
economic, and intellectual developments from Revolution and Napoleon to
the present.
HIST 347 England to the Civil Wars (3) Evolution
of institutions and ideas in Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Norman, Tudor, and
early Stuart England. Similarities and differences between medieval and
early modern English civilization.
HIST 348 Modern England (3) Interaction of
17th-, 18th-, and 19th-century intellectual, political, economic, and
social changes, which together produced the British Empire and modern
Britain.
HIST 349 Biritsh Empire (3) Origins and
expansion of the British empire between the seventeenth and twentieth
centuries. Includes imperial policies affecting Britain, Australia,
India, Ireland, and Southern Africa. Open to nonmajors. Pre: 151-152 or
161-162.
HIST 350 Introduction to Russian History and
Civilization (3) Development of Russia as a unique society. Origins
and outside influences; rise of Moscow; autocratic system and serfdom;
Western impact and modernization; artistic and literary heritage;
Revolutionary movement and 1917 Revolution; Soviet Union.
HIST 354 Introduction to Islamic History (3) Muhammad,
the Arab conquests, the Caliphate; fundamentals of Islam; classical
Islamic civilization; development of Islam into modern times with
emphasis on the Middle Eastern heartland.
HIST 355 The Making of the Modern Middle East (3) Survey
of developments that created the system of nation-states in the Middle
East. History of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey; Egypt;
the Arab world; Israel and Iran. Recommended: 354.
HIST 356 Survey of African History (3) The
history of Africa from earliest times to the present: the rise of
indigenous civilizations, European and Muslim impact, colonialism and
nationalism, and current issues.
HIST 371 U.S. Foreign Policy to 1900 (3) History
of American foreign policy and diplomacy.
HIST 372 U.S. Foreign Policy in 20th Century (3) Presidential
leadership, Congress and public opinion, and policy toward Latin
America, Europe, Asia, and the Pacific.
HIST 373 American Thought and Culture (3) Politics,
family, philosophy, technology, etc.; their interrelationship within the
total society. Pre-Colonial to end of the 19th century. (Cross-listed as
AMST 343)
HIST 374 American Thought and Culture (3) Continuation
of 373: the 20th century. (Cross-listed as AMST 344).
HIST 375 The American City (3) Evolution since
17th century; role in contemporary American culture. Related problems,
perceptions, values. (Cross-listed as AMST 321) (Alt. years: spring 98)
HIST 378 History of American Business (3) The
evolution of business enterprise from colonial times to the present.
Emphasis on entrepreneurship, technological change, labor-management
relations, government-business relations, and economic thought. Case
studies of industrial development. (Cross-listed as MGT 348).
HIST 391 History of Warfare (3) Classical and
guerrilla warfare, revolution, and military systems and institutions.
HIST 392 History of Warfare (3) Continuation of
391, from 1850 to present.
HIST 393 U.S. Military History (3) Survey of
development of American military forces from War of Independence to war
in Vietnam.
HIST 394 History of Science to 1700 (3) Evolution
of scientific thought and its cultural context. Antiquity to 1700. A-F
only.
HIST 395 History of Science since 1700 (3) Continuation
of 394; science, technology, and society since 1700. A-F only.
HIST 396 Introduction to the Study of History (3) Introduction
to the discipline; current trends in Asian, European, American, and
Pacific historiography. Pre: history major.
HIST 406 Modern Philippines (3) Survey
of major developments from pre-colonial through Spanish and American
colonial periods, the revolution, Japanese occupation, and post-war
republic. Pre: 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A; or consent.
HIST 407 Modern Malaysia (3) History of Malay
peninsula and northern Borneo, emphasizing developments since 18th
century: trade, commerce, foreign migrations, pluralism, nationalism,
and Islam. Pre: 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A; or consent.
HIST 408 Modern Indonesia (3) Indonesia from
14th century to present. Emphasis on period from late 18th-century
Western colonial impact to struggle for independence and problems of
nationhood. Pre: 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A; or consent.
HIST 409 Modern Indochina (3) General survey of
the history of the Indochinese countries. Emphasis on the struggle for
independence. Pre: 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A; or consent.
HIST 411 Local History of Late Imperial China (3) Ch’ing
government and Chinese society from local and regional perspectives;
modes of control and disorder during the 19th century.
HIST 412 Local History of 20th-Century China (3) Sociopolitical
change and continuity at local and regional levels since 1900, stressing
provincial reform, Hsien and sub-Hsien politics, warlordism, Kuomintang
tutelage, and the Chinese Communist movement and rule.
HIST 416 Chinese Intellectual History (3) An
interpretive survey of Chinese ideas and values in their cultural,
social and political settings from classical age to 1600. Pre: 241 and
242; or consent.
HIST 417 Chinese Intellectual History (3) Interpretive
survey of Chinese thought from 1600 to the contemporary period, with
special emphasis on the themes of cultural collision and change and
tradition. Pre: 241 and 242; or consent.
HIST 418 China’s Foreign Relations (3) Systematic
review from traditional times, with emphasis on modern and contemporary
history, analyses of foreign policy formulation, objectives, and
implementation. Recommended: 312.
HIST 419 The Chinese Revolution (3) Origins,
development, and meaning of modern revolution in China, 19th century to
People’s Republic. Recommended: 311 and 312.
HIST 420 People’s Republic of China (3) Salient
developments from 1949 to the present. Social revolution and
modernization, critically relevant foreign relations. Recommended: 312
or 419.
HIST 421 Japanese Cultural History to 1600 (3) Genesis
and development of Japanese aesthetic and literary traditions prior to
founding of the Tokugawa Shogunate. Recommended: 321.
HIST 422 Tokugawa Japan (3) Japanese history
and culture, 1600-1867. Recommended: 321.
HIST 423 Okinawa (3) Survey of social,
cultural, economic, and political history from earliest times to
present.
HIST 424 20th-Century Japan (3) Problems of
Japan’s political, economic, and social development since
institutional consolidation of Meiji state (c.1890). Pre: 321 or 322, or
consent.
HIST 425 Women in Japanese History (3) Survey
of the changing political, social, economic, and cultural positions of
women in Japan from ancient times to the present. Pre: one course in
Japanese history or consent.
HIST 431 Ancient Near East: Pyramids and Writing
Tablets (3) Civilizations of the Sumerians, Babylonians, Assyrians,
ancient Egyptians, Hittites, Hebrews, and Achaemenid Persians. Emphasis
on discussion of literary and archaeological materials.
HIST 432 Crisis and Conflict in the Middle East (3)
In depth study and analysis of major crises and conflicts in the
Middle East since World War II: the Arab-Israeli Wars, revolutions in
the Arab countries, the Turkish experiment with secularism, the Iranian/
Islamic revolution, Afghanistan, the Gulf War. Recommended: 354 or 355.
HIST 433 Medieval Cultures (3) Topical study of
cultural and crosscultural issues in the medieval period (circa
300-1500). Class discussion and written work emphasize analysis of
primary source documents using cultural and world history theories.
Regional focus and readings vary by semester. Repeatable once. Pre:
upper-division standing; 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A; or consent.
HIST 434 History of Christianity to 1500 (3) Historical
analysis of the main traditions of Christianity and elements of
diversity within Europe and in relation to other parts of the world.
Focus on the interpretation of primary sources and discussion of
cultural issues. Pre: 151 and 152, or 161A and 162A. (Alt. years: spring
2000)
HIST 435 The Renaissance 1300-1500 (3) Political,
social, intellectual, and religious development. Emphasis on cultural
history; humanism and its influence on thought and reforming movements.
(Alt. years: fall 97)
HIST 436 The Reformation 1500-1600 (3) Political,
social, intellectual, religious developments of Protestant and Catholic
Reformation. Emphasis on cultural history; religious thought and impact
on social and political developments. (Alt. years: spring)
HIST 439 The Darwinian Revolution (3) Social
and intellectual origins of evolutionary thought and its continuing
impact; emphasis on Darwin and the Victorian scientific community. Pre:
152 and one of BIOL 101, BOT 101 or ZOOL 101; or consent.
HIST 440 20th-Century Europe (3) Contemporary
problems and their historical background.
HIST 441 Expansion of Europe (3) Historical
processes in modern European colonization from 16th to 20th century;
impact on non-Europeans in Asia and Africa. (Alt. years: fall)
HIST 443 Nazi Germany (3) Origins,
establishment, and impact of Hitler’s Third Reich. Recommended: 344.
(Alt. years: spring)
HIST 444 The History of the Holocaust (3) The
origins and progression of the Holocaust, the almost complete
destruction of European Jews, and other Nazi genocidal policies. Open to
non-majors.
HIST 445 French Revolution and Napoleon (3) Causes,
course, and conduct of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic periods, their
impact upon Europe; emphasis on the conflict of ideologies inherent in
the Revolutionary process.
HIST 448 Imperial Spain and Portugal (3) The
influence of Spain and Portugal on people and cultures in Europe,
Africa, America, and Asia; Portugal’s captivity and the defeat of the
Spanish Armada.
HIST 453 Russian Intellectual History (3) Evolution
of political/cultural ideas in 19th- and early 20th-century Russia. Pre:
350 or consent.
HIST 454 Tsarist Russia (3) Development of the
Russian state to the 19th century. Kievan state and early development of
culture and art; Mongol era; rise of Moscow, autocracy, and serfdom;
Petrine reforms; Western impact; emergence as a major European power.
HIST 455 Russian Revolution (3) Origins in
19th-century; problems in Russian society; revolutionary ideologies and
parties. Revolution of 1917 and the civil war; detailed study of
relation between February and October revolutions.
HIST 456 Soviet Union (3) Establishment,
political structure, economic system, society and culture, foreign
policy. Characteristics, impact on its peoples, problems, post-Stalin
“thaw.”
HIST 457 Russia in East Asia and the Pacific (3) Siberia,
Russian/Soviet Far East, Russian activities in Pacific basin; evolving
relations with Asian and Pacific powers.
HIST 461 Early America (3) Transit of European
culture to North America; independence and the Constitution.
HIST 462 The Young American Republic 1783-1841 (3) Development
of American society, the Constitution, Jeffersonianism, the age of
Jackson.
HIST 463 American Civil War Era 1841- 1877 (3) The
crisis of the Union: antebellum society and culture, slavery, reform,
sectionalism, the Civil War and Reconstruction.
HIST 464 Transformation of America 1877-1920 (3) Selected
themes that explain major changes in American life during the late 19th
and early 20th centuries, including the westward movement, consolidation
of capitalism, world power diplomacy, popular culture, progressivism,
and World War I.
HIST 465 The United States 1920-1948 (3) The
Roaring Twenties, the Depression, New Deal, coming of World War II,
America during the war, origins of the Cold War.
HIST 466 The U.S.: 1948 to the Present (3) The
atomic age and the Cold War, the age of anxiety, the 1960s, the Vietnam
War, the Reagan-Bush era, and beyond.
HIST 467 American Television History (3) A
lecture/discussion course examining the impact of television on American
society, culture and politics. Analyzed in depth are family sitcoms,
presidential politics, Vietnam and the presentation of gender and
ethnicity. Open to nonmajors.
HIST 470 American Show Business (3) History
of American entertainment industry since 1880, with emphasis on
businesses of recording, broadcasting, and film production. Role of
entrepreneurs, invention, labor, politics, and culture. Impact of
industry on American life. Pre: consent.
HIST 472 American Social History (3) Introduction
to the new social history; interdisciplinary approaches to the study of
the everyday lives of ordinary Americans in past generations. Pre: 281
and 282.
HIST 474 (Alpha) Topics in United States History
(3) (B) African Americans; (C) the West. (474C cross-listed as AMST
414)
HIST 475 Constitutional History of the U.S. (3) Origins,
development of Constitution, Colonial to modern times.
HIST 477 American Labor History (3) Conditions
of labor in major phases of American development; response of labor and
community to changing work environment. Capitalism, unionism, race,
gender, law, etc. Emphasis on 20th century. (Cross-listed as AMST 431)
HIST 478 Colonial Latin America (3) Pre-Columbian
civilizations: Spanish and Portuguese colonization; political, economic,
social, and religious evolution to 1810; independence.
HIST 479 Latin America since Independence (3) Political,
economic, and social development since 1825; case studies from Brazil,
Mexico, and Cuba.
HIST 481 Pacific Islands I (3) The Pacific past
from first human settlement to the start of the colonial period;
emphasis on historiography and analysis of islanders’ responses to
Euro-American intrusion.
HIST 482 Pacific Islands II (3) The colonial
experience to the present.
HIST 483 United States in the Pacific (3) Growth
of economic and political interests and policies.
HIST 484 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1819- 1893 (3) Transformation
of Hawai‘i into a state influenced by American and European ideas and
institutions and Asian peoples. Pre: 284.
HIST 485 History of 20th-Century Hawai‘i (3) Formation
of an American Hawai‘i with its unique local culture from 1898 to the
present. Pre: 284.
HIST 489 World Maritime History (3) A survey of
world maritime history from earliest times to the present, with emphasis
on the evolution of nautical technology, motives from maritime
enterprises, and the impact of cross-cultural encounters between oceanic
peoples. (Cross-listed as OEST 489)
HIST 491 Woman’s Place (3) Historical
explanations of women’s proper place and roles in the home, outside,
and in the struggle for emancipation. (Cross-listed as WS 491)
HIST 492 Women in Revolt (3) Conditions under
which women’s protest develops. Women’s rights movements in the
19th- and 20th-century. U.S., cross-cultural comparisons. Recommended:
491. (Cross-listed as WS 492)
HIST 495 (Alpha) History Colloquium (3) Extensive
or intensive treatment of special problems. (B) Philippines and
Indonesia; (C) intelligence and foreign relations; (K) Chinese
traditional government. Recommended for honors students. Pre: 372 (or
concurrent) or consent for (C); consent for (B) and (K).
HIST 496 (Alpha) Senior Tutorial in History (3) Analysis of sources
and evaluation of methods of historical writing. Research in field of
special interest. Required for majors except those in Honors Program.
(B) United States; (C) modern Europe; (D) Asia/Pacific; (E)
comparative/World; (F) provisional topics. Pre: 396 (or concurrent).
HIST 499 Directed Reading (V) Individual
projects in various fields. History majors with consent. Maximum 5
credit hours. (1) American; (2) Pacific; (3) Japanese; (4) European; (5)
English; (6) Chinese; (7) Russian; (8) Hawaiian; (9) South Asian; (10)
Southeast Asian; (11) Korean.
HIST 500 Master’s Plan B/C Studies (1) Enrollment
for degree completion. Pre: master’s Plan B or C candidate and
consent.
HIST 602 Seminar in Historiography (3) History
of history and historians; philosophies of history.
HIST 609 Seminar in World History (3) Analysis,
research, and discussion of themes and issues in study of history of
humankind. Repeatable. Pre: graduate standing or consent.
HIST 610 Topics in World History (3) Selected
themes--feudalism, economic and industrial development, etc.--important
in global history. Topics pre-announced. Repeatable. Pre: 609.
HIST 611 (Alpha) Seminar in European History (3) Selected
problems for reading and research. (B) ancient; (C) medieval (Pre: 335
or 336, or consent); (D) early modern (Alt. years: spring); (E) modern
(Alt. years: fall); (G) intellectual.
HIST 612 Ethnographic History (3) Critical
inquiry into historical representations of the “other” and ways in
which modern historians have used culture and other anthropological
concepts to write and think about the past.
HIST 613 Introduction to Cultural Studies (3) A
graduate seminar designed to introduce history students to the
multidisciplinary theories that are appropriate to cultural studies. A-F
only. Repeatable once. Pre: history major or consent.
HIST 618 (Alpha) Advanced Readings in Russian
History (3) (B) early Russia; (C) modern. Pre: 350 and graduate
standing, or consent.
HIST 619 Research Seminar in Russian History (3) Repeatable.
Pre: 618 and knowledge of Russian language, or consent.
HIST 620 Advanced Topics in Russian History (3) Seminar.
Repeatable. Pre: appropriate 400-level Russian history or consent.
HIST 621 (Alpha) Russia in East Asia and the
Pacific (3) (B) advanced readings; (C) advanced research on Siberia,
Russian activities in the Pacific basin, evolving relations with Asian
and Pacific powers. Repeatable. Pre: 457 and either 454 or 456; or
consent.
HIST 630 History of American History (3) Graduate-level
survey of American history, historians, historiography, and historical
literature. Pre: graduate standing.
HIST 632 (Alpha) Advanced Readings in American
History (3) Interpretations and literature of important themes and
problems. (B) early America; (C) the Republic to 1877; (D) industrial
America; (E) recent America. Repeatable. Pre: appropriate 400-level U.S.
history course or consent.
HIST 634 (Alpha) Research in American History (3) (B)
early America; (C) the Republic to 1877; (D) industrial America; (E)
recent America; (F) foreign relations. Repeatable. Pre: for 634(F) only,
639(C); for all others, appropriate 400-level U.S. history course or
consent.
HIST 639 (Alpha) Advanced Topics in American
History (3) Seminar in advanced research and readings. (B) social
and intellectual (Cross-listed as AMST 646); (C) diplomatic; (D)
religious (Cross-listed as AMST 644); (E) the American city
(Cross-listed as AMST 627 and ARCH 627); (K) business, labor, and
technology (Cross-listed as AMST 647). Pre: graduate standing and
consent.
HIST 654 Seminar: Mainland Southeast Asia (3) Studies
in the histories of peoples and states of Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia,
Laos, and Vietnam. Repeatable. Pre: 306.
HIST 655 Seminar: Island Southeast Asia (3) Research
and readings in the socioeconomic, political, and cultural history of
Indonesia, Malaysia, and Philippines. Repeatable. Pre: 306.
HIST 661 (Alpha) Seminar in Chinese History (3) Problems
and readings in political, social, and cultural history. (B) early; (C)
middle; (D) modern. Repeatable.
HIST 662 Seminar: Islam and Islamic Civilization
(3) Readings on the rise, spread, and development of Islamic
cultures and civilizations throughout the world down to modern times.
Repeatable. Pre: graduate standing or consent. Recommended: 354.
HIST 663 Seminar in Indian History (3) Problems
and readings; influence of Indian culture on Southeast Asia. Individual
reports. Repeatable.
HIST 665 (Alpha) Seminar in Japanese History (3) Problems,
principal sources of bibliographic information. (B) traditional period
to c.1600; (C) early modern 1600-1868; (D) 1868 to present; (E)
20th-century diplomatic.
HIST 667 (Alpha) Seminar in Korean History (3) Reading
major interpretive works, and research in selected topics. (B) reading;
(C) research. Pre: 327 and 328.
HIST 675 (Alpha) Seminar in Pacific History (3) Reading
and research on major themes and issues. (B) South Pacific; (C)
Micronesia; (D) 19th century; (E) 20th century. Pre: 481 and 482, or
consent.
HIST 676 Pacific History Research Seminar (3) Writing
Pacific history from primary sources in Hawaiian repositories.
Repeatable. Pre: 675.
HIST 677 Seminar in History of Hawai‘i (3) Reading
seminar with short papers required. Covers Kingdom of Hawai‘i and
20th-century Hawai‘i in alternate years. Pre: 284. Repeatable. (Alt.
years: fall)
HIST 680 Seminar in Military History (3) Bibliography,
research tools, readings, and special problems in military history.
Repeatable. Pre: graduate standing or consent.
HIST 690 Seminar in History of Science (3) Readings
in the history of science and its social context. Repeatable.
HIST 699 Directed Research (V) Individual
research topics. (1) American; (2) Pacific; (3) Japanese; (4) European;
(5) English; (6) Chinese; (7) Russian; (8) Hawaiian; (9) South Asian;
(10) Southeast Asian; (11) Korean. Restricted to Plan A (thesis)
students. Maximum 2 credit hours. Repeatable. Pre: consent.
HIST 700 Thesis Research (V)
HIST 702 Institutional History of Korea (3) Major
political, economic, and social institutions. Repeatable. Pre: 327 and
328. (Alt. years: spring)
HIST 705 Asian Research Material and Methods (3) Bibliography,
reference tools, and research methods in sources on Asia in Western and
Asian languages. Discussion of published and archival repositories.
Repeatable. (Crosslisted as ASAN 705 and LIS 705).
HIST 711 Korean Historical Sources (3) Reading
in Korean or classical Chinese of various forms of historical
literature, literary sources, reference materials; reading knowledge of
Korean or classical Chinese required. Repeatable. (Cross-listed as KOR
711) (Alt. years: fall)
HIST 713 Chinese Historical Literature (3) Reading
and use of numerous genres of Chinese historical literature and
documents. Chinese bibliography. Knowledge of Chinese required.
Repeatable.
HIST 717 Chinese Intellectual History (3) Intensive
study in Chinese thought and institutions. Repeatable. Pre: 311 and 312.
Recommended: knowledge of Chinese.
HIST 718 Chinese Intellectual History (3) Continuation
of 717. Repeatable.
HIST 721 China: Classic Antiquity to 750 (3) Foundations
and elaborations of Chinese tradition. Repeatable. Pre: 311 and 312.
HIST 723 China from 750-1700 (3) Political,
social, economic history; source materials, interpretive problems, rise
of the gentry. Pre: knowledge of Chinese. Repeatable.
HIST 725 Contemporary China Seminar: Reading (3) Topical
readings, research, and discussion, emphasizing PRC. Normal sequence
emphasizes reading in 725, research in 726. Repeatable. (Cross-listed as
ASAN 725)
HIST 726 Contemporary China Seminar: Research (3) Continuation
of 725. Repeatable.
HIST 800 Dissertation Research (V) Pre:
consent.
For key to symbols and abbreviations, see the first
page of this section. |