HISTORY 396D: Modern Japan
Introduces students to the major historical problems and historiographic trends in the study of modern Japan from the Meiji period to the present. Themes include approaches to late Meiji culture and politics, the formation of imperial subjects and citizens, agrarian society and politics, gender in modern Japan, empire and modernity, total war and transwar state and society, U.S. occupation, and postwar Japan.
HISTORY 397: The Cold War and East Asia (HISTORY 297)
Explores how East Asia negotiated superpower rivalry and global ideological competition during the Cold War. Considers the ways in which China, Japan, and Korea were more than battlegrounds for US-Soviet contestation and played active roles in defining the nature and dynamics of the conflict. Re-examines conventional narratives and periodizations against alternative conceptual models and interpretive frameworks highlighting the constructed nature of the struggle as well as the role of historical and cultural factors in shaping the East Asian experience.
HISTORY 399E: Preparing for International Field Research: Public Svc or Research, Electronic Version
Restricted to students studying at a Stanford Overseas Studies campus; same course content as
HISTORY 299X. Problems involved in research abroad: ethical issues; safety; security and conduct; human subjects protocol. Methodologies of research: interviewing, networking, case studies, participant observation, large surveys. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
HISTORY 401B: Spatial History, Part II
Prerequisite: 401A.
HISTORY 414A: Medieval History
| Repeatable
2 times
(up to 10 units total)
HISTORY 414B: Medieval History
| Repeatable
2 times
(up to 10 units total)
HISTORY 421A: Early Modern Russia
| Repeatable
2 times
(up to 10 units total)
HISTORY 422A: Research Seminar on the History of the Russian Empire
HISTORY 422B: Research Seminar in Imperial Russia
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