HIST 4175
Last Updated
- Schedule of Classes - October 16, 2017 11:09AM EDT
- Course Catalog - June 14, 2017 7:15PM EDT
Classes
HIST 4175
Course Description
Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2016-2017.
The period between around 1870 and World War I was an era of unprecedented global interconnectedness. Telegraph wires, steamships, and railways crossed oceans and continental frontiers, fundamentally changing how human beings understood their relationship to each other and to their world. This seminar will explore the period from a variety of vantage points. We will revisit sites on all continents and encounter a diverse cast of characters. Our goal will be to engage worldwide integration, not narrowly in economic terms, but as an array of profound social, political, cultural, and spatial transformations. How was space reordered and governed? What methods were used to mobilize labor? How did global connections shape inequality between and within societies, producing extraordinary prosperity alongside poverty, famine, and war? We will bring these questions to our conversations in a way that would both resonate with current events and enhance our understanding of particular national contexts.
When Offered Spring.
Distribution Category (HA-AS)
Regular Academic Session. Combined with: AMST 4175, NES 4675
-
Credits and Grading Basis
4 Credits Graded(Letter grades only)
-
Class Number & Section Details
-
Meeting Pattern
- R Uris Hall 254
Instructors
Maggor, N
Share
Or send this URL: