CHAIR: JAMES S.
OLSON
NAVIGATION: History Major BA
| Teaching Certification | History
Minor | Course Descriptions
FACULTY: Barker,
Bilhartz, R.
Bruce, S. Bruce,
Cashion, Castillo-Crimm,
Coffey, Hendrickson,
Pappas, Pruitt,
Rowe, Shadle,
Steele
A knowledge of history is the key to the future.
History is the foundation of virtually all academic disciplines
because intellectual progress is based on a critique of traditional
assumptions, dogmas, and paradigms. In a series of writing-intensive
courses, students develop analytical, verbal, and cultural
skills that can be applied to a variety of professional settings.
History students enhance their critical abilities by examining
original texts, acquiring research skills, learning to write,
and analyzing social, political, economic, and cultural change
over time, talents that will serve them well in any employment
setting. Although most history students pursue careers in
teaching, museum studies, and records management, they can
also be found working successfully in medicine, the law, government
service and business.
History majors are required to take four semesters of a single
foreign language. The languages offered at Sam Houston State
University are French, German, and Spanish. However, any language
can be accepted in transfer. Because the Sam Houston Memorial
Museum is part of Sam Houston State University, history majors
interested in museum careers have the opportunity of completing
a museum internship as part of their undergraduate curriculum.
History majors at Sam Houston State University
will graduate with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree.
Scholarships: A variety of University and departmental
scholarships are available. Since all history department scholarships
are arranged by faculty nomination, students do not apply
for them directly. Information on University scholarships
may be obtained from the Office
of Academic Scholarships, telephone (936) 294-1672.
REQUIRED HISTORY COURSES FOR MAJORS
The Bachelor of Arts degree requires 36 semester credit hours
of course work, including HIS 163, 164, 265, 266, and 369.
All History majors are required to complete at least one 400-level
history course. At least 12 hours of advanced history must
be taken in residence.
Curriculum:
Bachelor of Arts
Major In History |
First Year |
Credit |
Second Year |
Credit |
HIS 163, 164 |
6 |
HIS 265, 266 |
6 |
ENG 164, 165 |
6 |
Component Area 4 (Literature) |
3 |
MTH (164 or approved substitute) |
3 |
Component Area 6 (Computer
Literacy) |
3 |
Component Area 3 (Natural Science, from
two departments) |
8 |
Foreign Language 263, 264 |
6 |
Foreign Language 141, 142 |
8 |
POL 261, POL (200 - Level) |
6 |
KIN 215 |
1 |
PHL 261 |
3 |
|
32 |
Minor |
3 |
|
|
|
30 |
|
|
|
|
Third Year |
Credit |
Fourth Year |
Credit |
HIS 369 and HIS 398 |
6 |
ART, DNC, MUS, THR or PHL
366 |
3 |
HIS 376, 377, 378 or 379 |
3 |
HIS (Advanced) |
6 |
HIS (Advanced) |
6 |
HIS (400-level) |
3 |
Component Area 4
(Visual & Performing Arts) |
3 |
Minor |
9 |
Minor (Advanced) |
6 |
Advanced Electives |
12 |
ENG (200 level or higher) or SCM |
3 |
|
33 |
Elective |
6 |
|
|
|
33 |
|
|
Curriculum:
Bachelor of Arts
Social Science Composite
History Emphasis |
Secondary Teaching Certificate
|
First Year |
Credit |
Second Year |
Credit |
HIS 163, 164 |
6 |
HIS 265, 266 |
6 |
ENG 164, 165 |
6 |
GEO 161, 265 |
6 |
MTH 164 (or approved substitute) |
3 |
Component Area 4 (Literature)
|
3 |
Component Area 3 (Natural Science, from
two departments) |
8 |
POL 261, POL (200-level) |
6 |
Foreign Language 141, 142 |
8 |
Foreign Language 263, 264 |
6 |
KIN 215 |
1 |
Component Area 6
(Computer (Literacy) |
3 |
|
32 |
|
30 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Third Year |
Credit |
Fourth Year |
Credit |
GEO 266, 369, 471 |
9 |
POL 378 |
3 |
SOC 261 |
3 |
PHL 366 |
3 |
ECO 234 |
3 |
HIS 400 - level |
3 |
Component Area 4
(Visual & Performing Arts) |
3 |
HIS 300 - or 400 - level |
9 |
HIS 369, 398 |
6 |
HIS 331, 332, 333, 336, 381,
389, 391 or 478 |
3 |
HIS 376, 377, 378 or 379 |
3 |
Advanced Electives* |
15 |
SCM 161 or 384 |
3 |
|
36 |
|
30 |
|
|
*TEACHER CERTIFICATION
Students seeking a Bachelor of Arts (BA) Degree with teacher
certification at the secondary level (grades 8-12) should
use their 18 elective hours and an additional 9 hours to satisfy
the required certification courses. The required education
courses are listed below, and with teacher certification,
the BA degree total is 134 hours. Those students not seeking
certification should use their electives to fulfill the University
requirement for advanced hours.
SED 383, 394, 464, 480, 496, 497, RDG 392, SED 374 or PSY
374
For teacher certification, no grade below C in social science
courses is accepted.
MINOR IN HISTORY
Minor in History (without Teacher Certification)
A minor in history requires 21 semester credit hours, including
163, 164, 265, 266, and nine hours of upper-level history electives.
For history courses, no grade below C is accepted.
Minor in History (with Teacher Certification)
A history minor with teacher certification requires 27
semester credit hours, including HIS 163, 164, 265, 266, 369,398,
(376 or 377 or 378 or 379), (331 or 332 or 333 or 336 or 381
or 389 or 391 or 478 or 495), and three hours of any upper-level
history elective. For history courses, no grade below C is
accepted.
HISTORY COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
UNITED STATES HISTORY
HIS 163 UNITED STATES HISTORY TO 1876.
[HIST 1301] The colonial origins of the United States and
growth of the Republic to 1876. Credit 3.
HIS 164 UNITED STATES HISTORY SINCE
1876. [HIST 1302] Continuing survey of the United States
to the present. Credit 3.
HIS 360 AMERICAN RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
A study of selected themes bearing on the relation of religion
and culture in America from colonial times to the present.
Credit 3.
HIS 361 THE UNITED STATES AND THE
VIETNAM WAR. The course will focus on the United States
involvement in Southeast Asia from 1945 to 1975. In particular,
it will deal with the issues of nationalism and communism
in Southeast Asia, the first Indochina war between the French
and Vietnamese, the United States military effort in Indochina
from 1965 to 1975, and the postwar political, economic, and
social problems in the region. The course will also deal with
the impact of the Vietnam War on American culture and foreign
policy. Credit 3.
HIS 376 EARLY AMERICA TO 1783.
A survey of early American history from the beginnings of
European colonization through the American Revolution and
the War for American Independence. Credit 3.
HIS 377 AMERICA IN MID-PASSAGE,
1783-1877. The course will survey United States history
from 1783 to 1877 and will examine the origins of the U.S.
Constitution, the early republic and rise of the two party-system,
the nature of Jeffersonian and Jacksonian democracy, the sectional
crisis and the Civil War, and the era of Reconstruction. Credit
3.
HIS 378 THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN
AMERICA, 1877-1945. This course will examine United States
history from 1877 to 1945 and will include discussions of
the Industrial Revolution, the Populist and Progressive movements,
World War I, the era of the 1920s, the Great Depression and
New Deal, and World War II. Credit 3.
HIS 379 RECENT AMERICA, 1945 TO
THE PRESENT. This course will examine United States history
from the end of World War II to the present and will include
discussions of the Cold War; the civil rights and environmental
movements; the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and the war on global
terrorism; the public policy debates surrounding the role
of the federal government in the modern economy; and the evolution
of American popular culture. Credit 3.
HIS 382 IMMIGRATION AND ETHNICITY
IN AMERICAN HISTORY. A study of ethnic group relations,
nativism, and racism in the historical development of American
civilization, with special emphasis on the patterns of assimilation
and non-assimilation of particular ethnic groups. Credit 3.
HIS 383 AMERICAN WOMEN'S HISTORY.
A survey of American women's history, focusing on everyday
concerns (including work, marriage, family, sexuality, reproduction,
and education) and on the social forces which have aided or
blocked change in women's roles in American society. Particular
attention is paid to differences in race, class, and ethnicity.
Credit 3.
HIS 385 AMERICAN DIPLOMATIC HISTORY.
A study of selected topics in American Diplomatic History.
Credit 3.
HIS 386 THE MILITARY AND WAR IN
AMERICA. This course is a survey of the American military
experience from the Colonial period to the present; emphasizing
the growth of the military institution and the relationship
between that institution and American society. Credit 3.
HIS 392 AMERICAN INDIAN HISTORY.
A course which will examine the history of Native Americans
in the United States. Although the emphasis is historical,
the course does include ethnographic material. Credit 3.
HIS 393 AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY.
A comprehensive course in the African American experience
which explores the various forces shaping race relations in
the United States. Credit 3.
HIS 398 TEXAS AND THE SOUTHWEST.
As a study of the Greater Southwest, this course surveys Spanish
expansion and the Spanish-French rivalry in the lower Mississippi
region and Texas. Special emphasis is given to geographic
factors and cultural developments. Credit 3.
HIS 468 THE ERA OF THE AMERICAN
REVOLUTION, 1763-1789. An intensive study of the issues
of conflict between English continental colonies and British
imperial policy which led to the movement for independence.
Consideration is also given to internal colonial conflicts
and attempts to solve the federal problem culminating in the
formation of the Constitution. Credit 3.
HIS 469 THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION.
An examination of the sectional conflicts of the 1850s and
the Civil War. This is primarily a military, political, institutional
and diplomatic study. Credit 3.
HIS 470 THE HISTORY OF THE WEST.
A study of the settlement and development of the Trans-Mississippi
West and its influence upon national and international affairs.
Credit 3.
ENGLAND AND BRITISH EMPIRE HISTORY
HIS 363 TUDOR-STUART ENGLAND, 1485-1714.
This course explores the era of the Wars of the Roses, the
Reformation and Henry VIII, the Elizabethan Renaissance, the
English Civil War and the Stuart restoration, following the
major themes of social, political, economic and intellectual
development during the period. Credit 3.
HIS 364 MODERN ENGLAND, 1714 TO
PRESENT. A continuation of HIS 363, emphasizing the effects
of industrial change, the enmity of France in foreign affairs,
Great Britain's renewed expansion overseas following the American
Revolution, movements favoring social and economic reform,
and political trends to the present. Credit 3.
HIS 381 BRITISH EMPIRE AND COMMONWEALTH.
The study of the British Empire and Commonwealth to the present
time. Special emphasis is given to the rise of colonial and
dominion nationalism, the imperial conferences, and the unfolding
of the British Commonwealth of Nations. Credit 3.
LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY
HIS 391 COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA.
This course is designed to trace the conquest and development
of the colonial institutions of Spain and Portugal in the
Americas, including the Spanish borderlands as the center
of Spanish colonial activity and power in the Americas. Credit
3.
HIS 495 SOUTH AMERICA: THE NATIONAL
PERIOD. The development of the South American Republics
form their independence to the present. Social, economic,
and political development will be closely examined. Credit
3.
EUROPEAN HISTORY
HIS 265 WORLD HISTORY FROM THE DAWN
OF CIVILIZATION THROUGH THE MIDDLE AGES. [HIST 2311] A
survey of world history from the dawn of civilization in Mesopotamia,
China, India, Egypt, and Mesoamerica through the Middle Ages
in Europe and Asia. The Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Reformation,
as well as the rise of nation states and the commercial economy
are stressed as background to modern history. Recommended
as a basic history course for all liberal arts majors. Credit
3.
HIS 266 WORLD HISTORY FROM THE RENAISSANCE
TO THE AGE OF IMPERIALISM. [HIST 2312] A survey of world
history since sixteenth century. Special attention is given
to European expansion overseas, imperialism and colonization,
the Industrial Revolution, the Enlightenment, the French Revolution,
nineteenth century nationalism and democracy, and the colonial
rebellions in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Such 20th century
problems as World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and the
collapse of the Soviet Union are also considered. Recommended
as the second half of a basic history course for all liberal
arts majors. Credit 3.
HIS 333 RELIGION IN WORLD HISTORY.
This course will survey the origins, development, and modern
manifestations of the major living world religions. It will
discuss the peoples, times and places of the founders of each
tradition, the classical literature within each tradition
and the canonization of these sacred writings, and the significant
sects and schisms within the religions that have influenced
major events in world history. Credit 3.
HIS 336 THE MODERN MIDDLE EAST.
This course will study the political, social, economic, and
cultural development of the Middle East since the seventeenth
century. The course will study such topics as the decline
of traditional empires; the encroachment of Europe; the Eastern
Question, the development of nationalism among the Turks,
Arabs, and Iranians; Islam and modern ideologies; and the
Middle East in the twentieth century. Credit 3.
HIS 365 RUSSIAN HISTORY. After
an introduction to the roots of Russia (Kiev, Christianity,
the Mongol occupation, Ivan the Terrible, the Times of Troubles),
the course of Russian history from Peter the Great to the
present is surveyed. Credit 3.
HIS 367 EUROPE IN THE AGE OF ABSOLUTISM
AND REVOLUTION, 1648-1815. Europe in the Age of Absolutism
and Revolution. A study of main trends in European history
from 1648 to 1815. A major emphasis is on the Ancient Regime,
the French Revolution and the period of Napoleon. Credit 3.
HIS 368 EUROPEAN HISTORY, 1815-1914.
The history of the principal European powers from the Congress
of Vienna to World War I. Credit 3.
HIS 369 THE WORLD IN THE TWENTIETH
CENTURY. A study of global politics and diplomacy since
World War I. Credit 3.
HIS 370 ANCIENT HISTORY. The
history of the civilizations of the Ancient Near East, Greece,
and Rome with special emphasis upon their contribution to
the cultural heritage of the western world. Credit 3.
HIS 371 MEDIEVAL HISTORY. A
study of the political, economic, social, intellectual, and
religious institutions and developments in Europe from the
collapse of the Roman Empire in the fifth century to the Renaissance.
Credit 3.
HIS 334 RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION.
A history of Europe from the humanistic movement of the fourteenth
century to the seventeenth century, with particular emphasis
on intellectual and aesthetic trends as well as political
sidelights. Credit 3.
HIS 335 GERMANY AND CENTRAL EUROPE
SINCE 1815. A study of German and Central European history,
emphasizing the principal political, economic and social trends
since the Congress of Vienna. Credit 3.
HIS 480 MODERN FRANCE: FROM THE
REVOLUTION TO THE PRESENT. This course is a survey of
the history of France from the French Revolution to the present.
Credit 3.
ASIAN HISTORY
HIS 331 EARLY ASIAN HISTORY. A
survey of Asian history from its beginnings to the fourteenth
century. The emphasis is on the social and political foundations
of traditional Asian society and the historical influences
of religion on Asian culture. Credit 3.
HIS 332 MODERN ASIAN HISTORY.
A survey of Asian history since the fourteenth century. The
emphasis is on the modernization of Asia and the influence
of colonization, nationalism, and industrialization on present-day
Asia. Credit 3.
HIS 478 MODERN CHINA AND JAPAN.
This course will focus on the history of modern China and
Japan from the last Chinese dynasties to the present, with
emphasis on the resilience and weaknesses of China's imperial
system; the challenges posed to China's traditions by Western
economic and cultural penetration; China's twentieth century
experiments in forms of government and in direction of its
cultural development; and the political, economic, social,
and intellectual history of Japan from the beginning of the
Meiji period (1868) to the present. Credit 3.
COURSES OF SPECIAL INTEREST
HIS 372 HISTORIOGRAPHY. A course
required of all history majors. Special emphasis is devoted
to a survey of historical interpretations and to the development
of research skills. Credit 3.
HIS 387 WORLD WAR II. A comprehensive
study of the World War II period, emphasizing the events leading
to the war in Europe, the progress of the war in the entire
European theatre, the collapse of the Axis in 1945, the aftermath
of the war, and the Cold War. In the Pacific theatre, the
course traces the emergence of Japan, the effects of the collapse
of the European colonial powers on Japan, relations between
the U.S. and Japan, and the outbreak and progress of the Pacific
war through the defeat of Japan. Team taught. Credit 3.
HIS 389 AFRICA: PAST AND PRESENT.
A survey of the problems, potentials, and upheavals of Modern
Africa. Emphasis is on such topics as the impact of the slave
trade on African society, racial conflicts, apartheid, the
emergence of African nationalism, the end of white colonial
rule, and the difficulties of achieving economic and political
stability in Contemporary Africa. Credit 3.
HIS 475 READINGS IN HISTORY.
A course designed especially for advanced students in history
with schedule problems who are capable of independent study.
Prerequisite: Twelve hours of history and approval of the
department chair and the instructor directing the study. This
course may be taken for Academic Distinction credit. See Academic
Distinction Program in this catalogue. Credit 3.
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