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Rice Course Schedule, Spring 1999
History (HIST)

Rice Course Schedule as of 03/26/1999. This schedule is maintained by the Office of the Registrar (reg@rice.edu).

Additional information about Rice courses is available on the Rice Academic Information page. NOTE: Course web pages are available for some HIST courses.


HIST   102 EUROPE'S 500 YEARS 1815-PRES             Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * RESTRICTED DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Continuation of Hist 101. May take courses separately.
Recommended for Freshmen and Sophomores.
Offered with additional work as Hist 302.
001 MWF     09:00AM-09:50AM RH*110   Stokes, Gale                   *CURRENT ENR: 16

HIST   118 THE UNITED STATES,1877-PRESENT           Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
A continuation of Hist 117 (though 117 is not a prerequisite) from the
Reconstruction to the present.
001 TTH     09:25AM-10:40AM HB*453   Dailey, Jane                   *CURRENT ENR: 15

HIST   151 FRESHMAN SEMINAR:RECORDING THE PAST IN H Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Exploration of how historical texts and moving images offer different
approaches to understanding the past.  Includes the relationships of
evidence, narrative method and authorial intent in both media as well as
discussion of films and ancient and modern historical works.
Limited enrollment.
Prereq- see instructor by first class meeting.
001 W       07:00PM-10:00PM FL*525   Maas, Michael                  *CURRENT ENR: 9
001                                  Bixel, Patricia                *CURRENT ENR: 9

HIST   212 AMERICAN THOUGHT & SOCIETY II            Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * RESTRICTED DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
A topical introductory survey of nineteenth and twentieth century
American history, primarily concerned with intellectual and social
developments underlying the surface of events.
Offered with additional work as Hist 312.
001 TTH     09:25AM-10:40AM SH*207B  Haskell, Thomas                *CURRENT ENR: 16

HIST   220 CONTEMPORARY CHINESE CULTURE             Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * RESTRICTED DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
This introductory ("foundational") course is designed to encourage
creative ways of thinking about "Cultural China"--a broad-ranging
concept that includes the People's Republic, the newly established
Special Administrative Region (SAR) of Hong Kong, the Republic of China
on Taiwan, and overseas Chinese communities throughout the world.  The
course will be team-taught and will employ a number of different media,
including not only printed texts but also films, videotapes, slides, and
materials on the world-wide web.  It will involve group projects
(emphasizing cooperation rather than competition), wide-ranging
discussions, and a number of interesting guest lecturers, including Wang
Meng, former Minister of Culture of the PRC and one of China's leading
novelists. Offered with additional work as Hist 310.
Also offered as Anth 220.
001 W       03:00PM-06:00PM RH*110   Smith, Richard                 *CURRENT ENR: 14
001                                  Lee, Benjamin                  *CURRENT ENR: 14

HIST   232 THE MAKING OF MODERN AFRICA              Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
This course surveys the transformation of Africa from the late 19th
century to the present. The topics covered include: Europe and Africa in
the 19th century; the scramble for and the partition of Africa; the
evolution of the colonial state; economic change in the 20th century;
plantation and peasant agriculture, mining and industrialization, wage
and migrant labour, African capitalism, rural differentiation, the roots
of hunger and poverty; social change in the 20th Century:  the invention
of ethnic identity; the emergence of the elites; cultural
policies--language, leisure; the changing roles of women; relilgion and
cultural resistances; the rival conceptions of law and order, changes in
medicine and healing, urbanization; political developments:  ethnic
unions, poliltical parties, and decolonization; Africa since
independence:  the economic and political crises.
001 TTH     10:50AM-12:05PM SH*307   Odhiambo, Atieno               *CURRENT ENR: 32

HIST   250 CHINESE CULTURE                          Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * RESTRICTED DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An introduction to the language, philosophy, religion, art, literature,
and social customs of China.
Offered with additional work as Hist 450.
001 TTH     01:00PM-02:20PM RH*110   Smith, Richard                 *CURRENT ENR: 24

HIST   294 WAR IN THE MODERN WORLD                  Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
The theory, practice, and experience of war in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.  Reading includes selections from Clausewitz and
Liddell Hart.  Offered with additional work as Hist 394.
001 TTH     02:30PM-03:50PM RH*110   Gruber, Ira                    *CURRENT ENR: 40

HIST   295 THE AMERICAN SOUTH                       Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An introductory survey of the history of the American South, from the
development of Native American cultures to the present. A
lecture-reading course, it will emphasize social, cultural, and
intellectual history, with much attention to the origins and development
of slavery and the plantation economy, the rise of southern
distinctiveness, Civil War and Reconstruction, sharecropping, political
reform, the civil rights movement, the rise of the Sunbelt, southern
religion, music, and literature, and the future of southern regionalism.
Offered with additional work as Hist 395.
001 MWF     10:00AM-10:50AM DH*1070  Boles, John                    *CURRENT ENR: 42

HIST   298 AMERICAN LEGAL HISTORY II                Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An introduction to the development of American law from Reconstuction to
the present.  This course examines the ways in whcih law shaped and was
shaped by major transformations in economy, society, and political
culture: emancipation, industrialization, progressive reform, the New
Deal, race-and gender-based movements for civil rights, and the "crisis"
of postmodernism.  Major themes include the legal response to
industrialization, the emergence of new conceptions of individual
rights, and the legal underpinnings of the modern liberal state.
Readings include legal materials (cases, statues, treatises), as well
as major monographic interpretations.  History 297/397 is not a
prerequisite.
Offered with additional work as Hist 398.
001 MWF     01:00PM-01:50PM PL*118   Willrich, M.                   *CURRENT ENR: 6

HIST   300 INDEPENDENT STUDIES                      Credits 1.00  Spring 99
Independent study under the supervision of a history faculty member.
Prereq- permission of instructor.
001                                  TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   302 EUROPE'S 500 YEARS 1815-PRES             Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 102.  Students may not receive credit for
both Hist 102 and 302.
Recommended for Juniors and Seniors.
001 MWF     09:00AM-09:50AM RH*110   Stokes, Gale                   *CURRENT ENR: 5

HIST   304 UNDERGRAD INDEPENDENT READING            Credits 3.00  Spring 99
Independent reading under the supervision of a faculty member.  Open to
a limited number of advanced students with special permission.
001                                  TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 3

HIST   307 IMPERIAL ROME FROM CAESAR TO DIOCLETIAN  Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
How did Rome acquire, maintain, and understand her empire?  This course
considers the development of a political, social, and ideological system
fitted to an empire reaching from Scotland to Mesopotamia during the
three centuries of Rome's greatest power.
001 TTH     01:00PM-02:20PM PL*212   Maas, Michael                  *CURRENT ENR: 32

HIST   310 CONTEMPORARY CHINESE CULTURE             Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * RESTRICTED DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 220 (and Anth 220).  Students may not
receive credit credit for both Hist 220 and Hist 310 (or Anth 220/310 or
any combination thereof).
001 W       03:00PM-06:00PM RH*110   Smith, Richard                 *CURRENT ENR: 7
001                                  Lee, Benjamin                  *CURRENT ENR: 7

HIST   312 AMERICAN THOUGHT & SOCIETY II            Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 212.  Students may not receive credit for
both Hist 212 and 312.
001 TTH     09:25AM-10:40AM SH*207B  Haskell, Thomas                *CURRENT ENR: 2

HIST   313 THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION                   Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Mexico is run today by politicians who see themselves as the heirs to
the 1910-1917 revolution.  Yet their authorization government rules
Mexico in nearly the same way as did the dictatorships they ousted.
This lecture and discussion course will examine the roots of the Mexican
Revolution, the development of the coalitions of peasants, workers, and
middle-class politicians that participated in the conflict and the slow
institutionalization that followed.
001 MWF     09:00AM-09:50AM FL*525   Wolfe, Joel                    *CURRENT ENR: 14

HIST   318 THE UNITED STATES,1877-PRESENT           Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 118. Students may not receive credit for
both Hist 118 and 318.
001 TTH     09:25AM-10:40AM HB*453   Dailey, Jane                   *CURRENT ENR: 7

HIST   322 PHYSICAL SCIENCE FROM NEWTON TO EINSTEIN Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
A survey of the physical science from the establishment of the Newtonian
world view, Ca. 1700, to its breakdown in the twentieth century.
001 TTH     02:30PM-03:50PM RH*111   Van Helden, Albert             *CURRENT ENR: 8

HIST   323 KINGSHIP, STATE AND THE SYMBOLOGY OF POW Credits 3.00  Spring 99
From Charlemagne to the Renaissance, this course will trace both the
concrete ways in which kings acquired power at the expense of barons,
cities, popes and emperors to create the great European national
monarchies, and how they legitimized their often vulnerable position by
creating an "ideology of monarchy" through symbol, ritual, and myth.
001 T       02:30PM-05:30PM FL*528   Kelly, Samantha                *CURRENT ENR: 6

HIST   333 GALILEO IN CONTEXT                       Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
The Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) is usually remembered
as one of the founders of modern science and a martyr who was condemned
for his scientific ideas.  In this course we will examine his life and
work in the context of European science at the turn of the seventeenth
century and the culture of the absolutist courts in Italy.  Subjects
covered in depth include experimentation, the role of mathematics in
science, Galileo's celestial discoveries with the telescope, and his
trial.  Class time will be devoted as much as possible to discussions of
Galileo's writings. Students will be expected to familiarize themselves
with the Galileo network project, use it as an information resource and
where appropriate, contribute material to it.
No prior expertise in science or computers required.
Enrollment limited to 30.
001 TTH     10:50AM-12:05PM FL*525   Van Helden, Albert             *CURRENT ENR: 7

HIST   336 CARIBBEAN HISTORY: 1838 TO THE PRESENT   Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Social, economic, and political history of the people from the abolition
of slavery to the emergence of independent nations in the modern era.
001 MWF     10:00AM-10:50AM FL*525   Cox, Edward                    *CURRENT ENR: 14

HIST   351 AMERICA SINCE 1945                       Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Survey of major economic, social and political developments in the
United States since 1945.
001 TTH     10:50AM-12:05PM RH*110   Matusow, Allen                 *CURRENT ENR: 90

HIST   355 MODERN GERMANY, 1890-1990                Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Examination of German history from the crisis of the monarchical regime
before World War I to the unification of East and West Germany in
1989-90, with emphasis on political attempts to come to terms with
challenges posed by organized capitalism by the political demands of
the working classes, and by advanced technology.  Includes the
dictatorship of World War I, Weimar democracy and the welfare state,
the National Socialist revolution, and the West German model of a
welfare state under law vs. the East German model of "real, existing
socialism."
001 MWF     11:00AM-11:50AM FL*525   Caldwell, Peter                *CURRENT ENR: 19

HIST   380 INTELLECTUAL POLITICS IN POSTWAR FRANCE  Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
We will examine the rise and fall of three major intellectual paradigms
in postwar France--existential humanism, poststructuralism, and
neoliberalism--as they relate to broader themes of French political and
cultural history.
001 W       02:00PM-05:00PM FL*517   Wolin, Richard                 *CURRENT ENR: 7

HIST   384 THE CRUSADES:HOLY WAR IN MEDIEVAL CHRIST Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Examination of the Crusades (11th to 15th centuries) from the point of
view of both Christian Europe and the Islamic Near East.  Includes the
political and military history of the Crusades, as well as the social,
cultural and religious transformations that caused, and were wrought by,
these conflicts.
001 TTH     09:25AM-10:40AM RH*110   Nirenberg, David               *CURRENT ENR: 50
001                                  Sanders, Paula                 *CURRENT ENR: 50

HIST   394 WAR IN THE MODERN WORLD                  Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 294.  Students may not receive credit for
both 294 and Hist 394.
001 TTH     02:30PM-03:50PM RH*110   Gruber, Ira                    *CURRENT ENR: 16

HIST   395 THE AMERICAN SOUTH                       Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 295. Students may not receive credit for
both Hist 295 and 395.
001 MWF     10:00AM-10:50AM DH*1070  Boles, John                    *CURRENT ENR: 22

HIST   398 AMERICAN LEGAL HISTORY II                Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 298.  Students may not receive credit for
both Hist 298 and 398.
001 MWF     01:00PM-01:50PM PL*118   Willrich, M.                   *CURRENT ENR: 6

HIST   404 HONORS THESIS                            Credits 3.00  Spring 99
Continuation of Hist 403, which is prerequisite for enrollment.
Completion of this course is required to obtain credit for Hist 403.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 5

HIST   410 KENYA IN MODERN HISTORY                  Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
This course will trace the path of the transformation of Kenya from
tribal societies to a modern state.  A background survey of the
migrations, settlement and emergence of precolonial societies will be
provided.  The underlying cultural unities of the precolonial societies
will be sketched, as well as the precapitalist socioeconomic formations.
The course will then cover:  Kenya in the 19th century; the British
conquest of Kenya; the colonial state and its contradictions; the
colonial economy; educational and religious changes; social and cultural
changes; the traditions of resistance and collaboration; the invention
of tribes; clan, district and territorial politics; Mau Mau, decolon-
ization and constitutional changes; the post colonial state; Kenyan
societies towards the end of the 20th century.
001 TH      02:30PM-05:30PM FL*517   Odhiambo, Atieno               *CURRENT ENR: 5

HIST   424 NAVIGATION & CARTOGRAPHY                 Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Navigation and cartography changed more rapidly in the period from 1400
to 1600 than in any other period prior to the 20th century.  Topics
covered include the history of projections, origin of latitude and
longitude scales, compass roses, ship design and related subjects.  A
list of the subjects covered apears at <http://www.rice.edu/latitude>.
Enrollment limited to 15.
001 F       01:00PM-04:00PM FL*525   Seed, Patricia                 *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   425 COLONIAL/POST  COLONIAL DISCOURSE        Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
The course will cover one of the most important theoretical issues in
the study of the Third World peoples, namely how Europeans and Americans
have created definitions of who these people are, and how they behave,
by virtue of not their systems of knowledge but ours.  The constitution
of colonized peoples as subjects of knowledge by their colonizers is
known as colonial discourse; the reactions of the colonized,
post-colonial discourse.  The first half of the course will analyze the
theories of colonial and post-colonial discourse, the second half will
deal with examples from Latin America, Africa, and South Asia.
Prereq- Either one Third World history course (any area) or a course in
literary or anthropological theory.
Offered with additional work as Hist 524.
001 TH      02:30PM-05:30PM FL*412   Seed, Patricia                 *CURRENT ENR: 3

HIST   427 HISTORY OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT, 19 Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Examination of the modern civil rights movement, with emphasis on the
goals and strategies of major spokespersons and leaders, as well as the
achievements of the campaign.  Includes the extent of its success or
failure and whether or not an "unfinished" agenda needs to be completed.
Enrollment is limited to 15.
001 F       01:00PM-04:00PM FL*524   Cox, Edward                    *CURRENT ENR: 11

HIST   429 TECHNOLOGIES OF NATIONALISM              Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
The rise of the modern nation-state and the development of nationalism
throughout the globe took place in an era of scientific and
technological innovation.  In this seminar we will analyze, through a
series of case studies from around the world, the close relationship
between nationalism and technology.  Topics that will be studied include
the advent of the railroad, urban feforma nd renewal, automobility, air
travel and warfare, the space race, and the information technology
revolution.
Enrollment limited to 15.
001 M       02:00PM-05:00PM FL*528   Wolfe, Joel                    *CURRENT ENR: 11

HIST   450 CHINESE CULTURE                          Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An enriched version of Hist 250.  Students may not receive credit for
both Hist 250 and 450.
001 TTH     01:00PM-02:20PM RH*110   Smith, Richard                 *CURRENT ENR: 10

HIST   464 FOREIGN POLICY OF NIXON AND KISSINGER    Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Seminar requiring three short research papers.
Enrollment limited to 15.
Prereq- permission of instructor required.
001 W       02:00PM-05:00PM FL*525   Matusow, Allen                 *CURRENT ENR: 16

HIST   470 THE CULTURE OF MUSEUMS                   Credits 3.00  Spring 99
This course will explore the museum as a central institution of Western
Culture since the eighteenth century.  Topics include the politics of
collecting and display, the representation of national pasts and ethnic
"other" in museums, exhibitions, and the cultural marketplace, the
museum as public space, and museums as sites of knowledge and
classification of objects.  Readings will be drawn from a variety of
approaches, both historical and theoretical, and will be supplemented by
working visits to Houston-area institutions.  The scope of the course is
comparative in terms both of insitutions and of culture, but special
attention will be paid to art museums and to France.
Also offered as Fren 493 and Hart 493.
001 W       02:00PM-05:00PM FL*528   Sherman, Daniel                *CURRENT ENR: 6

HIST   477 THE IDEA OF HUMAN RIGHTS                 Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
An in-depth examination of the intellectual and historical origins of
the discourse of human rights.  We will begin with the birth of the
concept of "natural right", review major criticisms in this concept, and
then study the way this idea was institutionalized in the course of the
French and American Revolutions as well as the American case.  After
examining recent controversaries surrounding feminism and the "rights of
man", we will conclude by focusing on the way new discourse of human
rights emerged out of the ashes of WWII to play a major role in the
legitimation of right and left-wing dictatorships in the 1980s and
1990s.
Enrollment limited to 15.
001 M       07:00PM-10:00PM FL*525   Wolin, Richard                 *CURRENT ENR: 13

HIST   482 WOMEN IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH              Credits 3.00  Spring 99
           * DISTRIBUTION COURSE: GROUP II
Southern women were divided along lines of class, region, and above all,
race.  Yet the lives of black and white women in the south were
intimately intertwin both before and after Emancipation.  How did
slavery and it's legacies affect relationships among women, and between
women and men?  What forces and issues brought southern women together
and what held them apart?  How did race affect construction of gender?
We will look at women's lives in the South from the mature slave system
of the 1830s through the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.
Enrollment limited to 20.
Also offered as WGST 417.
001 TH      02:30PM-05:30PM FL*525   Dailey, Jane                   *CURRENT ENR: 13

HIST   502 MASTER'S HISTORICAL RESEARCH             Credits 1.00  Spring 99
See Hist 501.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 0

HIST   504 GRADUATE TOPICS                          Credits 2.00  Spring 99
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 2

HIST   512 DIRECTED READ-AMERICAN HIST I            Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   514 DIRECTED READ AMERICAN HIST II           Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   516 DIRECTED READINGS IN MILITARY HISTORY    Credits 4.00  Spring 99
001 TBA     TBA                      Gruber, Ira                    *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   518 DIRECTED READ-SCIENCE & TECH             Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   522 DIRECTED READ.MEDIEVAL HISTORY           Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   524 COLONIAL/POST COLONIAL DISCOURSE         Credits 4.00  Spring 99
Graduate version of Hist 425,
Students may not receive credit for both Hist 425 and 524.
001 TH      02:30PM-05:30PM FL*412   Seed, Patricia                 *CURRENT ENR: 0

HIST   526 DIRECTED READ AFRICAN HISTORY            Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      Odhiambo, Atieno               *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   528 DIRECTED READ.NON-WESTERN HIST           Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 5

HIST   530 DIR.READ.MOD.EUROPEAN HIST I             Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 2

HIST   532 DIR.READ.MOD.EUROPEAN HIST II            Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   548 MARX                                     Credits 4.00  Spring 99
This course provides in introduction to key concepts of Marxist theory,
including alienation, production, reification, and revolution, through
close reading of original sources.  The course further traces the
dissemination of these concepts into literary theory, cultural studies,
and the social sciences.  A series of short secondary readings identify
the impact and continuing charge provided by Marxist theory for
addressing aporias of representation, theories of subjectivity, new
political movements, transnationality, and post-industrial capitalism.
Enrollment limited to 15.
Also offered as Engl 587.
001 T       02:30PM-05:30PM FL*525   Caldwell, Peter                *CURRENT ENR: 11
001                                  Joseph, Betty                  *CURRENT ENR: 11

HIST   566 SEMINAR: WAR & REVOLUTION                Credits 4.00  Spring 99
The emphasis in this course will be on the Anglo-American world of the
17th and 18th centuries, but students may choose topics that go beyond
the immediate focus of the course.
Enrollment limited to 15.
001 M       02:00PM-05:00PM FL*525   Gruber, Ira                    *CURRENT ENR: 4

HIST   573 EUROPEAN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY            Credits 4.00  Spring 99
Research seminar on selected themes and figures in modern European
intellectual history.  Topic for 1998-99: Leibniz and Kant.  Open to
qualified undergraduate students with permission of instructors.
001 W       02:00PM-05:00PM SH*207B  Kulstad, Mark                  *CURRENT ENR: 2
001                                  Zammito, John                  *CURRENT ENR: 2

HIST   586 U.S. CONST & LEGAL HISTORY               Credits 4.00  Spring 99
Significant constitutional and legal original research questions
stressing civil liberties, criminal law, civil-military relations, race
relations, and urban problems.
001 TBA     TBA                      Hyman, Harold                  *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   587 U.S. CULTURAL & INTELLECTUAL HISTORY     Credits 4.00  Spring 99
An intensive survay of the literature of cultural/intellectual history,
focusing on 19th century America.
Enrollment is limited to 15.
001 TH      02:30PM-05:30PM FL*528   Haskell, Thomas                *CURRENT ENR: 3

HIST   591 GRADUATE READING                         Credits 1.00  Spring 99
Graduate reading in conjunction with another course.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 1

HIST   592 GRADUATE READING                         Credits 1.00  Spring 99
See Hist 591.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 2

HIST   593 GRADUATE READING                         Credits 1.00  Spring 99
See Hist 591.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 0

HIST   598 READINGS IN AMERICAN LEGAL HISTORY       Credits 4.00  Spring 99
For graduate students only.
Enrollment limited to 15.
001 W       02:00PM-05:00PM HB*21    Willrich, Michael              *CURRENT ENR: 3

HIST   800 PH.D RESEARCH                            Credits 3.00  Spring 99
Doctoral dissertation.
001 TBA     TBA                      TBA                            *CURRENT ENR: 20



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