2020-2021 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of History
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Alexander Bay, Ph.D., Chair
Professors: Keene, Slayton;
Associate Professors: Bay, Klein, Threat;
Instructional Associate Professor: Cumiford;
Assistant Professors: Jarquin, Koerber;
Instructional Assistant Professor: Fouser.
History is our collective memory, an understanding of our heritage, of who we are and how we came to be. The history major not only provides students with the knowledge and tools of history, but also provides a sense of roots, as well as a broader perspective on the diverse regions and peoples of the world. Training in history teaches students how to think, how to analyze different kinds of problems and is solid training for such careers as teaching, law, business, historic preservation or archival management.
Departmental Honors
The history faculty award departmental honors to graduating senior history majors who have demonstrated outstanding academic work in history. To be considered for departmental honors, students must achieve a GPA that ranks them in the top 25 percent of senior history majors. The department also gives an outstanding senior award each year to a graduating senior based on GPA, participation in Phi Alpha Theta and quality of the senior thesis.
Extracurricular Opportunities
In addition to an outstanding curriculum, the major in history at Chapman offers students opportunities to work on projects associated with the Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education. The department also offers study abroad experiences in London and other cities. Internships at area archives and museums are available. Membership in Phi Alpha Theta, the national history honors society, is offered to students with a GPA of 3.100 in 12 credits of history courses and an overall GPA of 3.000. Phi Alpha Theta sponsors graduate school workshops, lectures, films and trips that are open to all members of the Chapman community. Members of Phi Alpha Theta enjoy opportunities to travel to regional and national student conferences to deliver papers and can enter competitions for scholarships and prizes offered by the national Phi Alpha Theta headquarters.
Graduate Study in History at Chapman
Chapman University offers the Master of Arts in War and Society as either a one-year accelerated program or a two-year, interdisciplinary course of study that expands the study of warfare beyond its military, diplomatic and political dimensions by examining the social and cultural aspects of how societies go to war, experience war and its consequences. The thematic areas that comprise the war and society program are: war and race, war and gender, war and empire, war and justice, war and migration, war and culture, war and science, war and the military experience and war and the Holocaust. Methodologically the program emphasizes exploring theoretical frameworks, professional historical practices and diverse historical materials including written, visual and oral historical evidence. For more information, see the Chapman Graduate Catalog.
DegreesBachelor of ArtsMinorAccelerated Program
CoursesHistory- HIST 101 - United States History Survey I
- HIST 103 - United States History Survey II
- HIST 110 - Western Civilization: From Mesopotamia to the Renaissance
- HIST 112 - Western Civilization: From the Reformation to Modern Times
- HIST 114 - History and Identity: Irishness and Irish History
- HIST 134 - The Historian as a Sleuth: Crime in 19th-Century Britain
- HIST 135 - Historian as a Sleuth - Crime in 20th Century United States
- HIST 141 - Food in World History
- HIST 160 - African Voices: African History to 1800
- HIST 180 - Modern Latin American History
- HIST 190 - East Asia History and Popular Culture
- HIST 192 - History of Modern South Asia
- HIST 199 - Individual Study
- HIST 200 - A History of Sexuality
- HIST 201 - The Rise of World Civilizations
- HIST 202 - Modern World Civilizations
- HIST 205 - Global Environmental History
- HIST 208 - U.S. - Latin American Relations
- HIST 210 - Modern Middle East History
- HIST 211 - Mother Russia and Uncle Sam During the Cold War: Conflict and Coexistence
- HIST 220 - The Vietnam Wars
- HIST 221 - Native American History: The Struggle to Be Heard
- HIST 222 - Apartheid and Resistance in South Africa
- HIST 223 - The Sixties
- HIST 224 - United States Women’s History
- HIST 225 - Colonial American Frontier Conflicts 1607-1680
- HIST 228 - African American Historical Experience
- HIST 229 - Experimental Course
- HIST 230 - Chicano/a History and Culture to 1865
- HIST 231 - Chicano/a History and Culture, 1848-Present
- HIST 233 - Disability and American Life
- HIST 234 - 3,000 Years of Jewish History
- HIST 240 - History of America through Sport
- HIST 250 - Why Africa Matters: African History 1800-Present
- HIST 252 - History and Film
- HIST 255 - From Kabbalah to Hummus: Jewish History since 1500
- HIST 256 - Film and American History
- HIST 258 - Latin American History Through Film
- HIST 260 - Asian History and Film
- HIST 262 - History of the Samurai
- HIST 264 - Empire and War in East Asia: History and Memory
- HIST 275 - Iran/Iraq: A Parallel History
- HIST 291 - Student-Faculty Research/Creative Activity
- HIST 296 - History Seminar
- HIST 297 - The Holocaust in History and Film
- HIST 299 - Individual Study
- HIST 301 - U.S. Environmental History
- HIST 304 - The Ancient Mediterranean World
- HIST 305 - Daily Life in Modern Europe
- HIST 306 - The Middle Ages
- HIST 307 - Germany and the Holocaust
- HIST 308 - Early Modern Europe
- HIST 309 - History of the British Empire
- HIST 310 - Modern Europe
- HIST 311 - Russian History
- HIST 312 - History of Spain and Portugal
- HIST 313 - Modern British History
- HIST 315 - Archaeology of Ancient Israel
- HIST 317 - Migration in World History
- HIST 319 - Israel/Palestine: 3000 Years
- HIST 320 - History on Trial: African Struggles for Truth and Justice
- HIST 322 - Global History of U.S. Civil Rights Era and Decolonization 1940s-1980s
- HIST 324 - African History through Film, Literature and Music
- HIST 325 - Politics of the Contemporary Middle East
- HIST 328 - American Colonial History
- HIST 329 - Experimental Course
- HIST 330 - America and Its Revolution: The Bonfires of Change
- HIST 331 - Comparative Revolutions
- HIST 332 - Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction
- HIST 333 - Images of American History
- HIST 336 - Conflict and Change in America: 1920-1945
- HIST 337 - World War II
- HIST 338 - America After the War, 1945-1960
- HIST 339 - Immigration, Border Consciousness and the Chicano/a Experience
- HIST 340 - American Diplomatic History and Foreign Policy
- HIST 342 - The History of Everyday Life in America: Cooking, Cleaning, Life and Death
- HIST 345 - Popular Music, History, and Culture
- HIST 346 - Travel Course: Topics in Historical Tours
- HIST 346i - A Tale of Two Cities
- HIST 349 - ‘We Shall Overcome’: White Terror, Black Struggle, and American Memory
- HIST 352 - Chinese Civilization
- HIST 354 - From Samurai to Pokemon: A Social History of Modern Japan
- HIST 355 - Disease, Power and Sex: Medicine and the Body in East Asia
- HIST 357 - History of Jewish Migration
- HIST 358 - Jewish Life from Napoleon to Hitler
- HIST 359 - Elie Wiesel: Life and Works
- HIST 363 - The Arab World: Colonialism to Revolution
- HIST 365 - Topics in the Holocaust
- HIST 365a - Perpetrators, Witnesses, and Rescuers
- HIST 365b - The Holocaust: Memoirs and Histories
- HIST 366 - Capitalism and the Modern World
- HIST 367 - The Holocaust in Eastern Europe
- HIST 369 - History of Terrorism in the United States
- HIST 371 - U.S. Business and Entrepreneurial History
- HIST 372 - California History
- HIST 373 - U.S. Economic History
- HIST 374 - European Economic History
- HIST 388 - Technology and the Media in the United States
- HIST 392 - Pre-Columbian and Colonial Latin America
- HIST 398 - The Historian’s Craft
- HIST 399 - Individual Study and Research
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