Course offerings in history are intended to familiarize students with both the American and Western heritage, as well as with some aspects of the history of the non-Western world. The study of history is presented as a means of integrating college experiences and developing certain perceptual and analytical skills. Students are exposed to a broad range of modern historical methodologies, making connections between history and many other academic disciplines. The study of history is aimed at students who are motivated by diverse goals. It offers excellent preparation for careers in law, civil service, journalism, business, foreign service, museum work, and archives, and for graduate study, including law school.
History Courses (HIST)
101 Introduction to U.S. History  (4)
This topics  course is an introduction to the study  of United States  history. While taking a focus on a particular topic or era during each semester, the course gives special attention to the doing of history  through introduction to the materials  and methods of historical inquiry. Offered every semester.
 103 Introduction to Non-Western History (4)
    This course is an introduction to the study  of non-Western history.  While taking a focus on a particular topic or era during  each semester, the course gives special attention to the doing of history  through an introduction to the materials and methods of historical inquiry.  Offered every semester.
113 History  of the U.S. to 1877 (2)
  A brief survey of the first half  of American history, from early Native American history to Reconstruction.  Designed for students who need only one half of the American  history survey to fulfill a graduation requirement. Students may not take both HIST 113 and 116 for  credit. Offered intermittently.
114 History of the U.S. Since 1877 (2)
  A  brief survey of the second half of American history,  from Reconstruction up to the present. Designed  for students who need  only one half of the American survey to fulfill a graduation requirement.  Students cannot take both HIST 114 and 116 for credit Offered intermittently.
219 Topics in Asian History  (4)
  An examination of selected topics  in the history of Asia that varies from year to year and focuses on such areas  as China, Japan, India, and the Near East. May be repeated  for credit as designated topics  change. Offered spring  of odd-numbered years or  intermittently.
 220 The Civil War and Reconstruction (4)
    Examines the causes, experience,  significance, and lasting legacies of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Topics  include the ongoing crisis of sectionalism and nationalism, the political,  ideological, and moral conflict over slavery, the impact of expansionism, the ideological development of a revolutionary South,  and the impact of the war on national  politics, culture, and  memory. Heavy emphasis is given to the war itself: the battles, leaders, common  soldiers, tactics, diplomacy and economics of this great  conflict. Finally, students  explore the mixed results of this war for  the victorious North,  the defeated South, and the  restored nation during Reconstruction and beyond. Offered spring of  even-numbered years.
222 History of Modern Korea  (4)
  An overview of Korean political, economic,  social, and cultural  history in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Pays special  attention to the impacts of colonialism and the relationship of Korea with the  rest of the world during the period of globalization. The course features a  study away trip to Korea. Offered every spring.
 223 Modern Japan Study Away (2)
    Provides an overview of Japanese  political, economic, social, and cultural history combined with a 10-day  immersion study away trip to Tokyo, Kyoto,  Osaka, Nara, and Hiroshima. The class includes  study of Japanese  intangible cultural heritage  in the forms of food, music,  and art. Offered summer term of odd-numbered years.
233 African  American History to Reconstruction (4)
  This  course examines the major ideas, individuals, and institutions shaping African  American life from the mid-fifteenth century  until following the Civil War. It explores  the growth of the Atlantic  slave system, the political and economic decisions supporting its  institutionalization, and the formal and informal modes of resistance practiced to combat it.  Offered spring of odd-numbered years.
234 African  American History since the Civil War (4)
  This course examines  the major ideas,  individuals, and institutions shaping African American  life from the end of the Civil  War to the  1990s. It discusses institution building and debates over black political  leadership, the Great Migration, the Harlem Renaissance, the Black Freedom  Movement, and the post-Civil Rights era, among  other topics. Prerequisite: ENG 105; Offered spring of even-numbered years.
 243 World History to A.D. 1600 (4)
    A study of selected topics in  history from the emergence of early cultures to the 16th century. Emphasizes  the variety of human societies and the ways in which Old World societies influenced one another. Prerequisite: first year/ sophomore  status or consent. Offered every fall.
245 World  History: The Modern  Era (4)
    Explores world history since 1600,  focusing on intercultural exploration and appreciation. Examines many critical  political events in world history, including the two world wars. Students  also learn about key historical trends such as the waning of traditional societies,  industrialization, Marxism, nationalism, and imperialism. Significant attention  is devoted to studying cultural developments, especially how ordinary people  experienced major historical events. Offered every spring.
247 History of the United  States (4)
    A survey of the history of the  United States from approximately 1400 to the present. Examines the major  political, social, cultural, intellectual, religious, and economic trends  over the course  of the nation’s history. Designed  primarily to fulfill  state competency requirements for prospective teachers. Prerequisite:  Comprehensive Liberal Students – Curricular Emphasis majors, history majors,  history - social Science majors, or consent. Offered every semester.
 250 Topics in American  History (4)
    Applies skills in historical  analysis to a variety of geographical, chronological, cultural, social, and  political topics. Students learn how societies change over time, analyzing  primary documents in their historical context and developing independent arguments based on primary sources.  Requires an 8-10-page paper based on primary source evidence. Topics for HIST  250 sections are available  from the History  Department before  registration begins each semester. May be repeated  for credit as topics change.  Prerequisite/Corequisite: ENG 105. Prerequisite for January Term: successful  completion of ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher.
 251 Topics in European  History (4)
    Applies skills in historical  analysis to a variety of geographical, chronological, cultural, social, and  political subjects. Students learn how societies change over time, analyzing  primary documents in their historical context and developing independent  arguments based on primary sources.  Requires an 8-10-page  paper based on primary source  evidence. May be repeated for credit as topics vary. Topics and  descriptions are available from the History Department before registration  begins each semester. Prerequisite/Corequisite: ENG 105. Prerequisite for  January Term: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher. Offered intermittently.
252 Topics in Non-Western History  (4)
    Applies skills in historical  analysis to a variety of geographical, chronological, cultural, social, and  political subjects. Students learn how societies change over time, analyzing  primary documents in their historical context and developing independent  arguments based on primary sources.  Requires an 8-10-page  paper based on primary source  evidence. May be repeated for credit as topics vary. Topics and  descriptions are available from the History Department before registration  begins each semester. Prerequisite/Corequisite: ENG 105. Prerequisite for  January Term: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher. Offered intermittently.
260 Historical Thinking  (4)
    Students analyze the differing  schools that have developed around various historical questions and learn how  to enter into historical debates by engaging other historians. They also are  exposed to some of the most important methodologies in the discipline of history. Prerequisite: a declared major in history  and social science,  the history minor,  or the social science minor. Offered every spring.
262 Seminar  in the History of European  Cities (4)
    Investigates the history of  various European cities, including Berlin, Paris, London, Vienna, and Prague.  Focuses on the history of art, architecture, city planning, and public spaces.  Through walking tours, visits to museums and key landmarks, and musical  performances, students investigate the historical developments of the cities,  especially the conflicts radiating from the construction and destruction of the  urban landscape. Begins at VWU with an on-campus component in which students prepare for an on-site study of the city.  This study is followed by travel to the destination. Offered intermittently.
286 Banned Books (4)
    An interdisciplinary exploration  of banned books; the legal battles in U.S. history that created, supported, and  ended censorship; and the literary, legal, aesthetic, and socio-political  contexts that influenced both the artists and the changing conceptions of obscenity that marked their works as controversial. Students  may not also receive credit  for ENG 286. Offered intermittently.
 303 17th- and 18th-Century America (4)
    A study of the social, cultural,  religious, and demographic changes that took place over two centuries in early  American history. Topics studied  include Native American  life; encounters between  whites and Indians;  the political, economic,  and social formation of the colonies;  free and enslaved  black life; African,  European, and American  cultural development; and religion, among others. Prerequisite:  ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher. Offered fall of even-numbered years.
 306 Seminar in Asian History (4)
    An examination of selected topics  in the history of Asia that varies from year to year and focuses on East,  Central, or Southeast Asia. Includes  consideration of intangible cultural heritage and traditional music  and dance. May be repeated  for credit as designated topics change.  Offered intermittently.
 313 19th-Century America (4)
    An intensive exploration of major  themes, events, and individuals in United States history between Thomas  Jefferson’s presidency and the Spanish-American War. Topics include territorial  and governmental expansion, the politics of slavery and freedom, the Civil War  and its aftermath, the industrial revolution, urbanization, imperial  adventurism, and other transformations that marked this tumultuous and  fascinating time in history. Emphasizes historiographical interpretations of  the historical changes  and their meanings. Prerequisite: sophomore/junior/senior status.  Offered fall of even-numbered years.
    314 First and Second  Great Awakenings (4)
    A  study of the social, cultural,  religious, and demographic causes and consequences of the First and Second  Great Awakenings.  Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher and sophomore/junior/senior  status. Offered spring of even-numbered years.
 316 Medieval Europe (4)
    A  survey of the cultural, religious, political, and economic  changes that Europe  underwent from the “fall”  of Rome to the Black Death. Prerequisite:  sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered spring of odd-numbered years.
317 History  of Virginia (4)
    An exploration of the history of  the Common-wealth of Virginia. Topics include Powhatan culture, early colonial  life, the origins of slavery  and the construction of race,  gentry and slave culture, the Civil War, and the 20th century.  May require field trips to historic sites.  Prerequisite: sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered every fall.
319 Early Modern  Europe, 1300-1789 (4)
    An investigation of European  history during the transition from medieval to modern forms of political,  cultural, religious, and social dimensions of life. The course explores  the concept “early  modern” as it emerged in the Renaissance, Reformation, and  Enlightenment movements. Prerequisites: successful completion of ENG 105 with a  grade of C or higher and sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered spring of  even-numbered years.
322 Religion and Social Issues  in American History  (4)
    An interdisciplinary examination  of major social issues in American history such as slavery, racial equality,  and the status of women. Explores the religious influences, background, and context  of these social  issues which have had a profound effect  on American history and continue to reverberate in American society  today. Prerequisites: at least 6 semester hours in history, religious studies,  political science, English, interdisciplinary studies, philosophy, or sociology  and junior status or consent.
    Offered intermittently.
323 Tudor England  (4) W
    A  detailed introduction to the history  of 15th- and 16th-century England  that explores the political, social,  economic, religious and  intellectual trends responsible for the renaissance of culture that characterized  the Elizabethan Age. Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher and  sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered fall of even-numbered years.
325 Radicalism, Terrorism, and Violence in American History  (4)
    An examination of dissent, radical  politics, terrorism, and political violence in American history from the  colonial era to the present. Examines the impact and influence of historically important  forms of violence, political crime, and state repression on American politics, culture,  society, and economy. Other topics include the rise of different radical  political ideologies and parties, mob violence, slave uprisings, filibusters,  lynching, vigilantism, strikes, police and military repression, assassination,  terrorism of the left and right,  apocalyptic sects, and the role of  violence in producing or forestalling social change and reform.  Includes discussion of the different theoretical approaches developed by  historians to explain the meaning of radicalism, terrorism, and violence in  American history. Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher and  sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered fall of odd-numbered years.
 328 United States Foreign  Relations 1763-1919 (4)
    An examination of the major themes, events,  ideas, and consequences of American foreign policy from the French and Indian Wars through  Woodrow Wilson’s attempt  to re-shape international relations in the aftermath of World War I. Emphasizes the strategic, ideological, economic, sectional, and racial  dimensions of U.S. relations with other nations and peoples, and the  connections between foreign and domestic politics. Prerequisites: ENG 105 with  a grade of C or higher and sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered spring of  odd-numbered years.
346 History of South Africa (4)
    An exploration of the South  African past, from earliest settlement by African and European peoples through  the British Colonial and Afrikaner union periods, to the establishment and dismantling of apartheid in the 20th century. Prerequisite: sophomore/junior/senior  status. Offered fall of even-numbered years.
 347 History of Modern  France (4)
    Focuses on France’s attempts to  achieve “liberty, equality, and fraternity,” exploring the history of France  from the beginning of the 18th century to the present.  Examines the various  political regimes, beginning with Absolutism under Louis XIV, through  the series republics and the two Napoleonic empires. Emphasizes the many  revolutions that have left indelible stamps on the history of France. The  political narrative is supplemented by a social analysis of French society,  including the history of the working classes, women, Jews, and immigrants.  Examines the cultural milestones in French history, in popular culture, and in  national political symbolism. Prerequisites: successful completion of ENG 105  with a grade of C or higher and sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered  intermittently.
348 History of Modern Germany  (4)
    Explores the meaning of modern Germany  since its unification as a modern  nation-state in 1871. Topics include  the political outline of  German history, the social and cultural histories of Germany, German identity,  ethnic groups, the Holocaust, and Germany’s national borders. Prerequisite:  sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered spring of even-numbered years.
 349 Topics in U.S. History (4)
    Applies advanced historical exploration of a variety  of geographical, temporal,  cultural, social, and political subjects  in U.S. history. Students  focus on understanding how societies change over time, analyze primary  documents in their historical context, and develop independent arguments based  on analysis of primary sources. Courses may be repeated as topics change.  Prerequisite: Successful completion of ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher.
 350 Topics in European  History (4)
    Applies advanced historical  exploration of a variety of geographical, temporal, cultural, social, and  political subjects in European history. Students focus on understanding how  societies change over time, analyze primary documents in their historical context,  and develop independent arguments based on analysis of primary sources.  Courses may be repeated as topics change. Prerequisite: Successful  completion of ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher.
 351 Topics in World  History (4)
    Applies advanced historical exploration of a variety  of geographical, temporal,  cultural, social, and political subjects  in world history. Students  focus on understanding how societies change over time, analyze primary  documents in their historical context, and develop independent arguments based  on analysis of primary sources. Courses may be repeated as topics change.  Prerequisite: successful completion of ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher.
352 U.S. Women’s  History (4)
    Examines the history of women in  the United States from the colonial period to the present. Focuses on how  women’s roles and ideas about femininity have changed over time in the context  of the social, economic, political, and cultural development of the United States. Takes  account of what American women have shared, as well as how they have differed  across lines of class, race, ethnicity, and region. Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade  of C or higher and junior/senior status.  Offered spring of even-numbered years.
 353 History of Women  in Europe Since 1700 (4)
    Explores the history of women in  Europe from the 18th century to the present. Focuses on women’s roles in  society, both public and private. Examining women in the spaces they have  historically occupied, students probe some of the central questions concerning  the history of women in Europe: how did society define “woman,” and why was she  generally seen as the “other”? How did  society construct women’s roles, and to what extent did women contest traditional  gender roles? How did industrialization shape women’s lives? To what extent  did women participate in political struggle, and how did their political goals and means of struggle  vary from those of men? How did contemporaries view the female  body? Why did some  women oppose “emancipation”, as defined  by feminists? Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher  and sophomore
    /junior/senior status.  Offered fall of even-numbered years.
360 Junior Research Seminar  (4)
    Designed to provide history majors  with skills for producing research within the discipline, culminating the  following fall semester in HIST 460. Students begin the process  of designing their  research project, produce  a historiographical review  of their topic, and craft a research proposal for review and discussion.  Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher, a declared major in history  or history and social science and sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered every  spring.
365 Comparative Genocide  (4)
    Examines a number  of genocides. Central to the analysis is developing an understanding of the conditions that  gave rise to genocide, the processes of genocide, the experiences of genocide (both victim and perpetrator), and external responses  to genocide. We also consider the definition and significance of the  term “genocide”. Prerequisite:  Junior or Senior status, or consent. Offered fall of even-numbered years.
366 Holocaust (4)
    Examines the Third Reich and its collaborators’ murder  of six million Jews, emphasizing the perspectives of Holocaust  victims. Also explores how survivors, nations, and popular culture have  constructed a history that both raised awareness of the Holocaust while  simultaneously advancing interpretations that were sometimes inconsistent with  the historical record.
    Prerequisite: Junior  or Senior status,  or consent. Offered  spring of odd-numbered years.
 380 Dos Passos’ USA (4)
    An intensive exploration of John Dos Passos’ great trilogy, U.S.A.:  The 42nd Parallel:  1919: The Big Money. Students  read and discuss the books,  explore and evaluate Dos Passos’ innovative narrative and experimental styles,  his political agenda and social critique, his understanding of the flow of  American history, his enduring appeal, and his great utility to the student of  American history. Using the books as a guide and a lodestar, they construct an  understanding of the American experience before, during, and after the First  World War and gain insight into the connections between literature and history  and between art and memory. Offered intermittently.
381 The South of Erskine  Caldwell (4)
    An intensive reading and  discussion seminar which explores the tenor of early 20th century Southern life  and culture through the fiction and non-fiction works of Erskine  Caldwell, a much-overlooked genius of American  letters. Caldwell stands  alongside William Faulkner as one of the two most important interpreters  of life, culture, and society in the South during the early 20th century.  Covers rural Southern life, the race question in the South, radical Georgia  politics, social change during the Great Depression, and the broader flow of  events in American history between 1900 and 1945, along with other important  topics.
    Prerequisite: sophomore/junior/senior status.  Offered intermittently.
385 Seminar in the History  of Socialism, Communism, & Marxism in Europe (4)
    Explores the development of  socialism in Europe from the late eighteenth century through today. Examines  the theoretical origins of socialism in the late eighteenth century and the  beginning of the nineteenth century. Includes an analysis of Marxism and Communism as developed by Karl  Marx and Friedrich Engels in the mid-nineteenth century, as well as critical  socialist thinkers after Marx, including August Bebel, Lenin, Rosa Luxemburg,  and Geog Lukacs. Includes an analysis of socialist/communist feminism,  aesthetics, literary theory, and home furnishing. Investigates the historical  application of socialist theory to the political world from the mid-nineteenth century  to the Russian Revolution, to the collapse  of communist regimes in  Eastern Europe in the 1990s. Prerequisite: sophomore/junior/senior status.  Offered intermittently.
400 The Civil Rights  Movement (4)
    This  seminar includes intensive reading and writing about scholarship on the Long  Black Freedom Struggle. Students will critically examine previous narratives of the movement that tend to focus on overly  simple dichotomies (violence  vs. non- violence, Malcolm X  vs. King), and arrive at nuanced understandings of the complexities of the  movement. Prerequisite: Junior/senior status or consent. Offered spring of  odd-numbered years.
415 Comparative Colonial  Empires, 1500-1800 (4)
    Introduces students to the major topics  and themes arising  from the innumerable connections that existed  between peoples who  crisscrossed the Atlantic Ocean between 1500 and 1800. Students examine topics  such as encounter, environment, migration, piracy, slavery, and  revolution in Africa, Europe, North America,  and South America. Prerequisite: ENG 105 with a  grade of C or higher. Offered spring  of even-numbered years.
 417 History of the Old South (4)
    An intensive study of life,  politics, culture, economics, gender, and race in the American South between  the Civil War. Topics include life in the Antebellum South; the experience of  the frontier, mountain, Tidewater, piedmont, and Gulf Coast; the complex relationships among Black, White and Native  Americans; the notion of Southern honor;  the interplay of sectionalism,  radicalism, Southern nationalism, and expansionism; and the experience of  plantation life for master and slave. Students analyze an array of  historiographical interpretations and schools of thought on the history of the  Old South. Prerequisite: senior status or consent. Offered fall of odd-numbered  years.
418 History of the New South (4)
    An intensive study of life, politics, culture, economics, gender,  and the race question in the American  South between the end  of Reconstruction and the present. Topics include the shifting legacies of the  Civil War and of Reconstruction, the Jim Crow segregation system, New South  ideology, the life and working experiences of Southerners, and globalization in  the South.
    Students analyze an array of historiographical interpretations and schools  of thought on the history,  meaning, and memory of  the New South. Prerequisites: 3 semester hours in history and senior status or  consent.
425 Brother  Can You Spare  a Paintbrush? The Arts Programs  of the New Deal (4) I
    Students use the creative projects and administrative  documents available in online archives to pursue intensive research and analysis of the arts programs of the Works Progress Administration. They examine the cultural, social,  and political significance of these projects in the  context of one of the most dynamic and fascinating periods in modern American  history. They also create New Deal-style art, individually and in groups, which  is presented to the campus community at the end of the January Term.  Prerequisite: senior status. Offered intermittently.
426 European Heresy  and the Witch-Hunt (4)
    An intensive examination of the varying themes  and viewpoints historians grapple with in their study  of religious dissent in Medieval and Early Modern  Europe. Includes a formal research  paper in a student-led seminar format. Prerequisite: senior status or consent.  Prerequisite: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher. Offered spring of  odd-numbered years.
433 Globalization and Empire in American History  (4)
    Traces and evaluates the development of systems of  liberalized trade, cultural exchange, communication, and transportation known as globalization and  the related American pursuit of empire and power in this capitalist world  system. Topics include the legal, administrative, political, ideological, cultural,  and military systems  and strategies created  over time by policymakers  in the United States to shape and dominate an increasingly interconnected and  interdependent world. Students analyze and dissect the different theoretical  approaches developed by legal and foreign policy historians to explain the  meaning of globalization and empire in American history. Offered fall of  even-numbered years.
 440 Seminar in American  History (4)
    Intensive study of selected  topics that vary from semester  to semester. May be repeated  for credit as designated topics change. Prerequisite: ENG 105 with  a grade of C or higher and sophomore/junior/senior status. Offered  intermittently.
450 Seminar in European History  (4)
    Intensive study of selected  topics that vary from semester  to semester. Prerequisite: senior status or consent.  Offered intermittently.
 460 Senior Thesis Seminar  (4)
  A workshop in which senior history  majors apply previous learning. Each student selects a historical problem,  develops appropriate research methodology, and carries out the project  under faculty supervision and in close contact with other members of the seminar. Students  are encouraged to consider a variety of approaches to historical investigation,  including oral history, quantification, and archival research. Prerequisites: ENG 105 with a grade of C or higher, senior  status, and HIST 360 or consent. Offered every fall.
 489 Pop and Rock Music Seminar  (4)
    Examines the history of  Western popular music in the twentieth century. Situates pop and rock  music in their socio-cultural  contexts, investigating the nexus between  socio-political developments and musical expression. Focuses on the interactions  between different cultures, the development of international youth styles,  music as political expression, and cultural imperialism. Prerequisites: junior  or senior status and consent. Offered spring of odd-numbered years.