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671 - 680 of 788 results for: HISTORY

HISTORY 364: History of Prisons and Immigration Detention (AMSTUD 264, CSRE 264, HISTORY 264)

This course will explore the history of the growing prison and immigration detention systems in the United States. They will pay particular attention to how they developed and how they affect different populations.
Last offered: Winter 2025 | Units: 4-5

HISTORY 365: American Marxism (AMSTUD 265, HISTORY 265)

Marxism, in its many varieties, has a long history in the United States and this course will study many dimensions of its presence and influence in the country. Marx himself wrote extensively about the U.S., and many in the 19th century avidly followed his writing and activism. We will then study the reception of Marxism in America in the 20th century in the socialist, communist and liberation movements. Marxism also influenced many intellectuals, artists, and writers. Activists in protest and revolutionary movements of many kinds, including the student movements of the 1960s, the Black power and other movements or minority and marginalized communities, international solidarity efforts, and the environmental and other contemporary movements. We will consider how Marxism has been understood, interpreted, used, and criticized through American history up through the 21st century.
Terms: Spr | Units: 5
Instructors: Chang, G. (PI)

HISTORY 368: Women of the Movement (AFRICAAM 208, AMSTUD 208, FEMGEN 208, FEMGEN 308, HISTORY 268, RELIGST 208, RELIGST 308)

This seminar will examine women and their gendered experience of activism, organizing, living, and leading in the Modern Civil Rights Movement. Undergraduates register for 200-level for 5 units. Graduate students register for 300-level for 3-5 units.
Last offered: Spring 2024 | Units: 3-5

HISTORY 369: Thinking About Capitalism (HISTORY 269)

What is capitalism? An economic and social system that maximizes both individual freedom and social good? An exploitative arrangement dependent on the subordination of labor to capital? A natural arrangement guided by a munificent invisible hand? Or a finely tuned mechanism requiring state support? This class offers undergraduate and graduate students a forum to consider these questions by reading selected works by historians, sociologists, economists, and other thinkers. Together we will work our way through primary sources from the twentieth century, using them to examine how capitalism has been understood, conceptualized, defended, and attacked. We will study the history of debates about markets, the state, and social organization, taking capitalism as both an economic system and a culture. Permission number required to enroll. Please contact Professor Burns at jenniferburns@stanford.edu to request permission to enroll in the course.
Terms: Aut | Units: 5
Instructors: Burns, J. (PI)

HISTORY 371: Graduate Colloquium: Explorations in Latin American History and Historiography (ILAC 371)

Introduction to modern Latin American history and historiography, including how to read and use primary sources for independent research.
Last offered: Winter 2025 | Units: 4-5

HISTORY 371C: Iberian Expansion: One World or Many (COMPLIT 251A, COMPLIT 351A, CSRE 251, CSRE 351, HISTORY 271C, ILAC 251, ILAC 351)

The conquerors, missionaries, and historians who reflected on Iberian overseas expansion during the early modern period often asked themselves a crucial question: was there only one world or many? Were the Americas a 'New World,' unknown to the ancients, entirely detached from the rest of human history? Even after the invasion and occupation of the Americas, many European chroniclers continued to think that the world was divided into three parts - Europe, Asia, and Africa. In their descriptions of the Americas, they drew heavily on histories and travel reports pertaining to other epochs and locales, especially contemporary Asia and ancient Rome. At the same time, indigenous elites and mestizo authors in the Americas used 'Old World' history and news of distant conflicts to reflect on the immediacy of their historical experience. In this course, students will consider the ways in which diverse authors in New Spain (Mexico), Peru, and Brazil contemplated themselves in relation to remote more »
The conquerors, missionaries, and historians who reflected on Iberian overseas expansion during the early modern period often asked themselves a crucial question: was there only one world or many? Were the Americas a 'New World,' unknown to the ancients, entirely detached from the rest of human history? Even after the invasion and occupation of the Americas, many European chroniclers continued to think that the world was divided into three parts - Europe, Asia, and Africa. In their descriptions of the Americas, they drew heavily on histories and travel reports pertaining to other epochs and locales, especially contemporary Asia and ancient Rome. At the same time, indigenous elites and mestizo authors in the Americas used 'Old World' history and news of distant conflicts to reflect on the immediacy of their historical experience. In this course, students will consider the ways in which diverse authors in New Spain (Mexico), Peru, and Brazil contemplated themselves in relation to remote times and places: from Greco-Roman Antiquity to Lutheran Germany, the Ottoman Mediterranean to the Apocalyptic End of Times. Students will analyze the many reflections, distortions, inversions, translations, uncanny resemblances, and strange parallel dimensions that resulted from these intellectual experiments. Primary sources include chronicles, poetry, theater, Afro-Catholic festivals, pictographic codices, feather mosaics, and maps. All texts offered in the original language and in English translation whenever possible. For graduate students and advanced undergraduates.
Last offered: Spring 2022 | Units: 3-5

HISTORY 372B: Colonial Mexico: Images and Power (ARTHIST 277, HISTORY 272, ILAC 214, ILAC 314)

How did images maintain, construct, or transform political power during the conquest and colonization of Mexico? The creation and destruction of visual materials in this period had a complicated relationship with power. The pictographic codices that celebrated the expansive Aztec Empire were created after its fall; and the conquistadors' indigenous allies painted some of the most triumphalist narratives of the conquest. Friars accused indigenous peoples of "idolatry" both to justify the destruction of their images and objects, and to construct legal defenses of their humanity. Colonial authorities frequently claimed Afro-Catholic festivals were seditious. In light of such complexity, official histories that recount the top-down consolidation of royal and viceroyal power are suspiciously simple. What counter-narratives do images and other visual phenomena from this tumultuous period offer? This course introduces students to major texts from Colonial Mexico (royal chronicles, conquistado more »
How did images maintain, construct, or transform political power during the conquest and colonization of Mexico? The creation and destruction of visual materials in this period had a complicated relationship with power. The pictographic codices that celebrated the expansive Aztec Empire were created after its fall; and the conquistadors' indigenous allies painted some of the most triumphalist narratives of the conquest. Friars accused indigenous peoples of "idolatry" both to justify the destruction of their images and objects, and to construct legal defenses of their humanity. Colonial authorities frequently claimed Afro-Catholic festivals were seditious. In light of such complexity, official histories that recount the top-down consolidation of royal and viceroyal power are suspiciously simple. What counter-narratives do images and other visual phenomena from this tumultuous period offer? This course introduces students to major texts from Colonial Mexico (royal chronicles, conquistadors' tales, letters, poems, festival accounts) alongside a fascinating trove of images (painted codices with Nahuatl texts, feather mosaics, and indigenous heraldry) and considers how experiences of images and spectacles were transformed into textual accounts ("ekphrasis" or the literary device of description). Taught in Spanish with accommodations for non-ILAC students who are still improving their language skills
Last offered: Spring 2023 | Units: 3-5

HISTORY 373: Mexican Immigration to the United States (HISTORY 273)

This course is an introduction to the history of Mexican migration to the United States. Barraged with anti-immigrant rhetoric and calls for bigger walls and more restrictive laws, few people in the United States truly understand the historical trends that shape migratory processes, or the multifaceted role played by both US officials and employers in encouraging Mexicans to migrate north. Moreover, few have actually heard the voices and perspectives of migrants themselves. This course seeks to provide students with the opportunity to place migrants' experiences in dialogue with migratory laws as well as the knowledge to embed current understandings of Latin American migration in their meaningful historical context.
Last offered: Spring 2023 | Units: 4-5

HISTORY 374C: Mexicans in the United States (AMSTUD 274C, CHILATST 274, HISTORY 274C)

This course will explore the history of Mexican migrants and Mexican Americans from 1848 to the present.
Terms: Aut | Units: 4-5

HISTORY 375: Haiti: Past, Present, and Futures (AFRICAAM 274C, FRENCH 274, GLOBAL 275, HISTORY 275)

How can historical knowledge and methods be applied towards social innovation to problem-solve pressing economic, political, social, and environmental issues? This course investigates this question by analyzing the history, present, and futures of Haiti. While every nation has a creation story, few are as unique and particular as Haiti, the only country established through slaves revolting and wresting their freedom. The course will explore key moments in Haiti's complex and dynamic history, from the culmination of the Haitian Revolution in 1804 to the present day. The long aftermath of indemnity and debt, invasion and occupation by other nations, political instability, and its current status as a failed state present Haiti as an important site for analyzing the meanings of nation, peoplehood, and sovereignty in the modern world. This course analyzes the experiences and ideas of Haitians in shaping governance, the economy and labor, education, family life and gender roles, the law, rel more »
How can historical knowledge and methods be applied towards social innovation to problem-solve pressing economic, political, social, and environmental issues? This course investigates this question by analyzing the history, present, and futures of Haiti. While every nation has a creation story, few are as unique and particular as Haiti, the only country established through slaves revolting and wresting their freedom. The course will explore key moments in Haiti's complex and dynamic history, from the culmination of the Haitian Revolution in 1804 to the present day. The long aftermath of indemnity and debt, invasion and occupation by other nations, political instability, and its current status as a failed state present Haiti as an important site for analyzing the meanings of nation, peoplehood, and sovereignty in the modern world. This course analyzes the experiences and ideas of Haitians in shaping governance, the economy and labor, education, family life and gender roles, the law, religion, culture and the arts, the environment, geopolitics, and the very question of how Haitian history is researched, remembered, and narrated. Course content will include documentary films, political texts, novels, legislation, essays, economic data, art, and scholarly research. In analyzing these sources and engaging with heads of NGO's, writers, and academic researchers students will explore how academic research can impact policy and social entrepreneurship.
Terms: Win | Units: 5
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