HIST 171

Spring 2024 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 3 hours.

U.S. history survey beginning with the diverse peoples who have populated North America since before the age of contact with Europeans and extending forward through the advent of European colonialism, the movement for independence, the foundation of the republic, the Civil War, and Reconstruction, ending in 1877. The course provides an introduction to historical interpretation, with particular attention to racialized and other forms of social, political, and economic inequality and struggles for freedom and democracy.

Credit is not given for both HIST 171 and HIST 170.

Students must register for one discussion and one lecture section.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Fall 2022 for:

Cultural Studies - US Minority
Humanities – Hist & Phil
HIST 171 class schedule data for spring 2024
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
34048
Discussion/
Recitation
ADA
12:00PM -12:50PM
F
Davenport Hall
Eberhardt, G
Hogarth, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/16/24-05/01/24
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - US Minority course.
34051
Discussion/
Recitation
ADD
10:00AM -10:50AM
F
Lincoln Hall
Eberhardt, G
Hogarth, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/16/24-05/01/24
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - US Minority course.
34052
Discussion/
Recitation
ADE
2:00PM -2:50PM
W
Gregory Hall
Eberhardt, G
Hogarth, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/16/24-05/01/24
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - US Minority course.
34061
Lecture
AL1
12:00PM -12:50PM
MW
Animal Sciences Laboratory
Hogarth, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/16/24-05/01/24
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - US Minority course.
Section Info:
Description: U.S. history survey beginning with the diverse peoples who have populated the Americas since before the age of contact with Europeans. The course provides an overview of the development of the Americas through myriad networks of peoples, ideas, and goods spanning the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Focus is on the structuring of society based on race, class, and gender during the tumultuous time period encompassing the movement for independence, the solidification of slavery, Indigenous land dispossession, the Mexican-American War, the Civil War, and Reconstruction.
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