HIS
101 WORLD CULTURES
World Cultures will examine various civilizations in Africa, Asia
and what is today called the Middle East. Our foci of study will include
the role and impact that trade, education, science, philosophy, technology,
famine, and war have had on the rise and fall of civilizations in
these geographic regions. Throughout, our concern will be the "differences"
and "similarities" between civilizations, countries, and
peoples of Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. Three credit hours.
Offered Spring semester (d); offered Fall semester (e).
HIS
140 EARLY UNITED STATES HISTORY
The history of America from Colonial times to the Spanish American
War. Emphasis will be placed on the Colonial development, American
Revolution, the Civil War, and Reconstruction. Three credit hours.
Offered Fall semester (d & e).
HIS
150 CONTEMPORARY UNITED STATES HISTORY
An exploration of American history from 1900 to the present. Three
credit hours. Offered Fall semester (d & e).
HIS
200 AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY
A comprehensive study of the historical impact of the Black community
upon American society in the twentieth century. Three credit hours.
Prerequisite: HIS 150 or SOC
100. Offered as needed.
HIS 298 SPECIAL
TOPIC IN HISTORY
(Topic to be specified each semester course offered.)
HIS
310 URBAN HISTORY
A concentrated study of the development of American urban areas from
Colonial times to the present. Three credit hours. Prerequisites:
HIS 150 and SOC
100. Offered as needed.
HIS
315 HISTORY OF ETHNIC AMERICA
This course will focus on the history of various ethnic groups in
America. This focus will include their historical roles, their socio-cultural
perspectives and practices, and important historical and empowerment
struggles involving education, employment, religion, language, the
law, and organizing strategies for strengthening their ethnic group
development so as to challenge, change, and expand America's pluralistic
theory, principles, and practices. Three credit hours. Prerequisite:
Junior standing. Offered Spring semester in even numbered years (d);
offered Spring semester in odd numbered years (e).
HIS
350 AMERICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Economic history of the United States from Colonial times to the present
emphasizing economic causes for war, tariffs, the labor movement,
industrial revolutions, and contemporary problems in economic history.
Three credit hours. Prerequisites: HIS
140 or HIS 150; and ECO
200. Offered as needed.
HIS
360 THE SIXTIES: AN AGE OF REVOLUTIONS
This course examines the meaning behind the events and changes brought
about during the decade of the 1960's. The political, social, and
cultural movements of the decade are explored through the eyes of
extraordinary and ordinary people. Three credit hours. Prerequisite:
Junior standing. Offered as needed.
HIS
370 MYTH OF THE MELTING POT: A HISTORY OF AMERICAN RACISM AND PREJUDICE
An exploration of the manner in which immigrants and minority groups
have been treated in American society; detailed analysis and discussion
of historical documents, articles, and books. Three credit hours.
Prerequisite: SOC 100. Offered as needed.
HIS
380 EUROPEAN HISTORY AND THE BERLIN WALL
A study of how the history of Europe in the twentieth century symbolically
parallels the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall. Three credit hours.
Prerequisite: Junior standing. Offered as needed.
HIS
390 HOLLYWOOD'S AMERICA: UNITED STATES HISTORY THROUGH MOVIES AND
TELEVISION
A study of the American experience via movies and television against
a backdrop of the United States' cultural life in the late nineteenth
century to the last decade of the twentieth century. Three credit
hours. Prerequisites: WRT 200, any two
Social Science courses, and Junior standing.
Offered as needed.
HIS 398 SPECIAL
TOPIC IN HISTORY
(Topic to be specified each semester course offered.)
HIS
401 THE HISTORY OF BUFFALO
A study of the historical, geographical, sociological, religious,
political, and economic developments of Buffalo. Emphasis is to be
placed on the period following the burning of the city during the
War of 1812 to the present day. This course also will focus on the
city as a resource for primary research. Three credit hours. Prerequisites:
WRT 200 and Junior standing. Offered
as needed.
HIS
402 THE HISTORY OF NEW YORK STATE
This course covers the Empire State from the early occupation to the
present. Emphasis will be on historical, geographical, sociological,
political, and economic developments. These will be viewed within
a multicultural context. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: HIS
140 or HIS 150 or Junior standing.
Offered Spring semester in even numbered years (d); offered Fall semester
in odd numbered years (e).
HIS
410 WAR AND PEACE IN THE NUCLEAR AGE
This course examines the origins and evaluation of the nuclear competition
between the United States and the Soviet Union and its impact upon
the world. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: Junior standing. Offered
Spring semester (d); offered Fall semester (e).
HIS
450 EARLY CONSTITUTIONAL CONFLICT
The history of the U.S. Constitution as a product of three hundred
years of American legal and intellectual thought. Particular attention
will be paid to those who wrote the Constitution, the philosophical
influences on them, and the resulting debates at the Constitutional
Convention. Three credit hours. Prerequisites: HIS
140 and POL 101. Offered as needed.
HIS
451 CONTEMPORARY CONSTITUTIONAL CONFLICT
The history of the Constitution from the post Civil War period to
the present. Emphasis will be placed on Supreme Court decisions, how
they affected reform movements, civil rights and civil liberties.
Three credit hours. Prerequisites: HIS
150 and POL 101. Offered as needed.
HIS
456 HISTORICAL ISSUES
(Topic to be specified each semester course offered.)
This course allows the social science group in the liberal arts division
to offer specialty courses that are not included in our regular course
offerings. Included are various histories of Asia, Africa, Latin America,
Europe, Americas, United States and the Middle East. A student may
take this course more than once for credit under different topics.
Three credit hours. Prerequisite: Junior standing. Offered Fall
semester in even numbered years (d); offered Spring semester (e).
HIS 498 INDEPENDENT
STUDY IN HISTORY