Course Catalog 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
History
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Annemarie H. Sammartino, Professor of History; Chair of History
Zeinab Abul-Magd, Professor of History
Matthew Bahar, Associate Professor of History
Rishad Choudhury, Assistant Professor of History
Jiyul Kim, Visiting Instructor of History
Owain Lawson, Visiting Assistant Professor of History
Shelley Lee, Professor of History and Comparative American Studies
Pablo Mitchell, Professor of History and Comparative American Studies
Tamika Nunley, Associate Professor of History
Emer O’Dwyer, Associate Professor of History and East Asian Studies
Renee C. Romano, Robert S. Danforth Professor of History, Professor of Africana Studies and Comparative American Studies
Leonard V. Smith, Frederick B. Artz Professor of History
Danielle Terrazas Williams, Associate Professor of History
Ellen Wurtzel, Associate Professor of History
Courtesy Appointments
Tania Boster, Executive Director, Integrative & Experiential Learning, Assistant Professor
Laura Herron, Associate Dean for Academic Standing and Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies
Visit the department webpage for up-to-date information on department faculty, visiting lecturers, and special events.
History encompasses the study of peoples, cultures, and institutions across many periods of time. The History Department offers courses on the United States, Latin America, Europe, Russia, the Middle East, and South, East, and Central Asia. History classes examine these areas from a variety of historical approaches, including political, social, cultural, intellectual, economic, and environmental perspectives. Many also focus on gender, religion, labor, race, and/or ethnicity. Some courses concentrate on particular national or regional histories, while others are comparative, transnational, or global.
See information about Research, Internships, Study Away, and Experiential Learning (RISE).
Advanced Placement
Students with a grade of 4 or 5 on the US History, European History, or World History AP examinations may receive one full course of social science credit toward graduation for each qualifying score.
Students receiving scores of 6 or 7 for IB History of the Americas or IB European may also receive one course of social science credit toward graduation. To apply for graduation credit for other IB courses, students should bring the transcript, the syllabus, and a sample written work to the History Department chair for review. Students may not receive credit for both AP and IB courses in overlapping areas. No student may receive credit toward graduation for any combination of more than 2 courses in either the IB or AP programs in History. AP or IB credit is granted only during the first year that a student enrolls at Oberlin College.
All AP or IB courses transferred in through the History Department count toward the 5-course (20 credit) maximum that may be transferred for all courses taken before matriculation, as per Oberlin College. Credit from AP or IB courses do not count towards the 9-course History major requirements.
Capstone Courses
The History major does not have a required capstone, but majors are encouraged to consider pursuing a senior capstone that focuses on advanced work in their area of interest through either the one-semester Senior Projects course (History 500), available to seniors by consent of the instructor, or the two-semester Honors Program (History 501-502), open to students admitted to the Honors program.
Private Readings
Students may request that individual faculty members supervise private readings. Private readings must focus on material that is not covered in the regular History Department curriculum.
Explore Winter Term projects and opportunities.
Majors and Minors
Courses- HIST 376 - Westworlds: Research Seminar in Western History
- HIST 382 - Afro-Asian America: Intraminority Connections in Historical Perspective
- HIST 383 - Borders, Wars, and Refugees from the Ottoman Empire to ISIS
- HIST 385 - Environmentalism of the Poor & Water
- HIST 389 - Archaeologies of China
- HIST 392 - Soviet History and Cinema: Art, Propaganda, and Politics, 1908-1949
- HIST 396 - Seminar: US Foreign Policy and MENA
- HIST 399 - War and Civilization
- HIST 404 - Race, Citizenship, Punishment
- HIST 405 - Age of Fracture: The United States since 1973
- HIST 407 - Civil War Era
- HIST 412 - Lords, Peasants, and Pigs on Trial: popular and elite culture in early modern Europe
- HIST 420 - Big Government: A Legal and Cultural History of Bureaucracy in China
- HIST 422 - Migration in 20th Century Europe
- HIST 427 - Borderlands
- HIST 430 - Environmental History of the Middle East and North Africa
- HIST 435 - Museums: A Social, Political, and Institutional History
- HIST 443 - Colloquium: Crisis of Confidence: American History and Culture in the 1970s
- HIST 444 - Gender and Sexualities in China
- HIST 454 - International Relations Theory for Historians
- HIST 460 - Medieval Terrorism, Opportunism, or Acts of Love?: A Study of Crusade Historiography
- HIST 472 - Colloquium: Early Modern Atlantic World
- HIST 473 - Colloquium: Violence and Terror in Early America
- HIST 479 - Colloquium: Readings in 20th Century Urban History
- HIST 481 - Stalinism
- HIST 482 - Discrimination in Modern Japan
- HIST 486 - France and Algeria 1830-1962
- HIST 487 - Women of Latin America
- HIST 488 - US South
- HIST 489 - Armies, Militias, and Jihad in MENA
- HIST 492 - The 1960s
- HIST 493 - Repairing the Past: Readings in Historical Justice
- HIST 500 - History Senior Projects
- HIST 501 - Senior Honors
- HIST 502 - Senior Honors
- HIST 910F - London, England, Britain: National Identities and Their Discontents
- HIST 910H - London, England, Britain: National Identities and Their Discontents
- HIST 912F - Museum Narratives
- HIST 912H - Museum Narratives
- HIST 995F - Private Reading - Full
- HIST 995H - Private Reading - Half
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