History Courses

  • 100-level courses are Historical Introductions. These courses serve to introduce students to the central historical narratives, debates, temporal constructs, habits of mind, and foundational skills within the discipline of history. 100-level courses are most appropriate for first- and second-year students. A number of seats in 100-level courses will be reserved for first- and second-year students.

    200-level courses are Historical Explorations. These courses allow students to practice and refine their historical skills and methods while they continue to expand their content knowledge. In addition, each 200-level course helps students explore one subfield or methodological approach within the discipline of history. 200-level courses are most appropriate for first- and second-year majors and non-majors of any year.

    300-level courses are Historical Innovations. These courses challenge students to evaluate the relationship between historical theory and practice, and they emphasize independent research and original knowledge creation. 300-level courses are designed for majors in their second year or beyond. To ensure that students are prepared for advanced work, each 300-level course will have as prerequisite sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor.

    HIST-425W, 426W, 450W, 451W, and 475W are Capstone Seminars for history majors. In these courses, students demonstrate their ability to complete collaborative and independent intellectual work of the highest caliber. The prerequisite for these courses is HIST-200W and at least one 300-level history course, or permission of the instructor.

    HIST/GWSS-101. Empire, Patriarchy, and Race: People and Power in Premodern World History

    Why did patriarchy emerge in human societies? What different ideas of gender, sexuality, and family shaped people’s lives? How and why did empires form, and what social inequalities and cultural trends supported imperial power? What connected different regions of the globe and how did global and local environmental trends affect those connections? How have modern ideas of imperialism, gender, and race influenced our historical knowledge? Using these questions as a driving force, we will explore the history of the premodern world by examining the ever-changing relations between the powerful and seemingly-powerless. We will prioritize the perspectives of non-Western peoples in their cross-cultural encounters and exchanges, and we will analyze socio-political power structures, race and ethnicity, and patriarchy. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H.)

    HIST/GWSS-102. Empire, Patriarchy, and Race: People and Power in Modern World History

    How have modern individuals’ lives been shaped by people in power throughout history? How did Westerners use the tools of empire, patriarchy, and race to dominate colonized groups? In what ways did colonized and non-hegemonic peoples attempt to assert agency over these tools and their lives? What are the environmental legacies of these processes? How have ideas of imperialism, gender, and race influenced our historical knowledge of the modern world? Using these questions as a driving force, we will explore the history of the modern world by examining the ever-changing relations between the powerful and seemingly-powerless. We will prioritize the perspectives of non-Western peoples in their cross-cultural encounters and exchanges and we will analyze socio-political power structures, race and ethnicity, and patriarchy. Three hours per week.Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H.)

    HIST-103. GOAL! Sport in World History

    As fans, gym-goers, parents, and athletes, millions of people across the globe spend a significant part of their life involved in sports and other kinds of physical activity. According to Western, Christian ideology, participating in sports teaches us the values of hard work and healthy patriotism. Yet non-Western people and minoritized societies have always influenced sport, from pre-invasion West Africa swimming communities to athlete-activists who have shown that participating in modern sports can never be apolitical. In this course, students will explore and reflect critically on how and why people have used and/or engaged in sporting practices to achieve political aims. We will focus special attention on how minoritized communities across the world have been discriminated against in sport, and also how they shaped sporting practices in order to fight back. In addition, we will explore how sporting ideas and practices circulated globally and were adapted by communities to fit their local conditions. Lastly, we will consider our obligations towards one another as citizens of the sporting world informed by sport-based inequities. Three hours per week.Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H, O.)

    HIST-125. Defining America: Early American History in its Global Contexts

    What does “America” mean? Who is “American”? How did inhabitants of the United States and the world come to define these terms and ideas? How have their meanings changed over time? By analyzing a series of defining moments in early American history—from Turtle Island and earliest times through the U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction—we will discuss, interrogate, and analyze varied and often competing perspectives on these questions. Struggles over land, citizenship, religion, freedom, rights, and power will be at the heart of our discussions. Three hours per week.Four semester hours. (DN, H, O.)

    HIST/GWSS-126. Defining America: Modern U.S. History in its Global Contexts

    What makes the United States of America unique, and what does it mean to be American? This course explores the stories of working people, economic elites, the descendants of the enslaved, government officials, cultural icons, and innovators of all races, genders, and physical abilities. Such stories offer us multiple perspectives on the past, and by understanding and questioning them, we will study the country’s relationship to slavery, suffrage, civil and human rights, and accessibility, as well as its political, technological, economic, and ideological contributions, obligations, and shortcomings. Ultimately, we will gain an appreciation of what it means to be American and what America means to the world, beginning in the aftermath of the American Civil War and extending to the present. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H, O.)

    HIST-150. Introductory Special Topics in History

    A 100-level course dealing with special subject areas and periods that are not regularly taught. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H, or GN, if so designated, contingent upon the topic.)

    HIST-151. From Genji to Godzilla: Japanese Society and Culture in Historical Perspective

    What makes anime so fascinating to the world? How did Japan become one of the Axis powers during World War II? Why is Godzilla one of the most revered movie characters of all time? Why did the U.S. incarcerate over 120,000 Japanese immigrants and Japanese-American citizens during World War II? How did sushi get so global? In this course, we explore these questions from a variety of Japanese perspectives. Particular attention will be placed upon Japan’s historical and modern relations with its neighbors in East Asia as well as with the world more broadly. We will assess scholarly literature, primary source documents, and contemporary digital and social media. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (H, GN.)

    HIST-152. Emperors, Warlords, and “Commies”: China from 1644 to the Present

    Is China a superpower? Who was Mao Zedong? Why were the 2008 Beijing Olympics such a big deal? These are some of the questions we seek to unravel in this course. Special attention will be paid to the formation of China’s modern national borders and the problems inherent in this imperial expansion; China’s experience of Western and Japanese imperialism and the scars these experiences left behind; the collapse of the country’s dynastic structure and the emergence of the Chinese Communist Party; the upheavals of the Mao era; the effects of the post-1980s global economic boom; and international representations of China as simultaneously opaque and yet open, monolithic and yet dynamic. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST-200W. Theories and Methods in History

    What has been, is, and arguably should be “history”? How has the study and knowledge of history been connected to the exercise of power in societies past and present? How can we study and generate historical knowledge—i.e., how can we “do” history? In this course we consider the “history of history” from antiquity onwards and around the globe, analyzing in particular how cultural trends and theoretical approaches have affected the study of history and how power and privilege have influenced historical knowledge. We explore and acquire historical skills such as critical reading and analysis, argument construction, historical synthesis, and research, and we learn how to apply them in digital contexts. This course is open to History, American Studies, and East Asian Studies majors and History minors with second-year standing or higher; and to other students with the permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours.

    HIST-202. History of Stuff: East Asia and the World in 10 Objects

    Why do we call our dinner plates “China”? Was there more than one Silk Road? When did contact between East and West first occur and why? These are the kinds of questions we seek to answer in this course. Through discussions of material history, we unravel in class the many connections between people, things, and ideas that have always bound East Asia and the rest of the world together. Each week, we look at a type of object (for example, bronze vessels, horses, silver, and bodies), using it as a lens into the specific social, cultural, and historical situation of China and other parts of East Asia vis-à-vis the world. Course themes include material culture complexes, commodity chains, consumption practices, cultural contact, and social change. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST/MUS-203. The Expense of Musical Appropriation and the Dividends of Collaboration

    There is a rich history of people from different nations, ethnicities, and races exchanging ideas and sharing cultures. For African peoples and their descendants in the diaspora, such exchanges became tools that helped them survive oppression and overcome marginalized positionalities, even as they made contributions to the global pop industry. This course studies local musical cultures in Africa, the Caribbean, and the United States, and their global circulation, to question the appropriation, adaptation, and commercialization of music. It asks what the term “appropriation” means and how one may distinguish borrowing and collaboration from theft and exploitation. We will learn basic music theory and use introductory digital music production tools to translate what we learn into audio projects and civic engagement workshops. We strongly encourage the participation of those with no music experience. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H, LINQ.)

    HIST/ENGL-212. Bears Make History: U.S. Higher Education and Digital Entrepreneurship in the Archive and Online

    Ursinus College has a history, and you’re going to tell it. Using an array of digital media, students in this course will become part of the shaping and recounting of the history of Ursinus College and its community. We will consider Ursinus’s place in a broader history of U.S. colleges and universities and will examine how digital humanities is influencing archival research. Students will learn a variety of digital tools, and will analyze and evaluate existing digital history projects. The final part of the semester will be devoted to the collaborative design, pitch, construction, and public dissemination of digital group project/s based on materials from the Ursinusiana Archive. This course is part of the IMPACT curriculum supported by the U-Imagine Center for Integrative and Entrepreneurial Studies. Prerequisite: One Ursinus ENGL or HIST course, or permission of the instructors. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (H, LINQ.)

    HIST-225. Native North America

    This course examines Native American peoples’ lives, cultures, and politics from earliest times to the present. By considering ethnohistory as a field and method, we will consider Indigenous peoples of North America on their own terms and will ask how they shaped the broader history of the continent and the world. We will discuss migration, disease, slavery, religion, and Native peoples’ politics and encounters with imperial powers and European peoples during the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. We will ask how Native Americans shaped the development of the U.S. in the nineteenth century and will consider the consequences of U.S. empire in North America in the twentieth century and to explore how Native peoples and communities continue to shape North American histories, cultures, and societies in the twenty-first century. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H, O.)

    HIST-226. Philadelphia Story: Public Histories in the City

    What stories can a city relate? What historical clues might we find within and beneath urban streets? Whose pasts might we uncover? Using Philadelphia as our guide, this course explores the American nation’s layered pasts. Course topics include William Penn’s first encounter with Native peoples; the city’s role in the founding of the United States and the negotiation of the politics of slavery and freedom; and the historical foundations and development of modern incarceration. Central to discussions will be the analysis of documentary and material sources as well as questions of memory, public history, and historical preservation. Through field trips and course work, students will interrogate the construction of contemporary historical sites in order to better understand a place, a nation, and the diverse array of people therein. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H.)

    HIST/GWSS-227. Witches, Drudges, and Good Wives: Gender, Race, and Sex in Early America

    How can we recover the experiences of individuals based upon archival fragments? How did social hierarchies based on the intersections of gender, race, and sex shape individuals’ lives in early America and contribute to their historical erasure? While considering biography as a mode of historical investigation, we will work to define evolving conceptions of gender, race, and sex in early America, and we will uncover the lives of individuals whose experiences were shaped by the communities in which they found themselves and whose stories some sought to appropriate, hide, or silence altogether. In doing so, we will learn much about these individuals and will better understand the forces that sought and perpetuated their erasure. Students will complete a biographical project on a figure of their choosing. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H.)

    HIST-228. Struggle & Triumph: Modern African American History

    This course explores African Americans’ contributions to the cultural, political, economic, and intellectual development of the United States of America and the world. By studying this history, we will learn about the varying perspectives that represent African Americans and gain a greater appreciation of the diversity within their communities. With the help of Africana political theory, this course will complicate our understanding of how the nation’s laws operate in times of calm and crisis, who historically has been entitled to the rights of citizenship and why, and how the nation’s people have viewed difference. We will emphasize African American leadership and participation in social justice activities, and will actively consider the various obligations of individuals, communities, citizens, and governments. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H, O.)

    HIST-250. Special Topics in History

    A 200-level course dealing with special subject areas and periods that are not regularly taught. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (H; DN or GN, if so designated, contingent upon the topic.)

    HIST/GWSS-251. African Journey: From Colonization to a Continent of Nations

    Even in the twenty-first century, Africa and its people are misunderstood and misrepresented. Stereotypes promote a narrow view of a vast continent rich with diverse peoples, ideas, and experiences. This course considers African history from the onset of European colonialism to the near present. While learning about the modern historical development of the continent in broad strokes, we will survey some of the broader scholarship and approaches to studying African history, considering its centrality to historical progress. In doing so, we will compare and contrast African people’s experiences with colonialism, decolonization, and independence/neo-colonialism while placing emphasis on women’s experiences and the function of gender. Other important themes include culture, economics, and international relations. We will privilege the perspectives, epistemologies, and contributions of Africans. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST-252. This Course Ends in a Bloody Uprising: China to 1644

    Culminating in a dramatic role-play of the Wanli Succession Crisis of 1587, this course charts the rise and fall of China’s imperial dynasties beginning with the mythical Xia (ca. 2070-1600 BCE) and ending with the bloody uprising that ushered in the Qing empire (China’s last dynasty) in 1644. In examining this “dynastic cycle,” students will use the historical tools of role-playing, public speaking, and debate to explore important historical themes such as personhood, gender, religion, power, class, race, and ethnicity from a specifically Chinese viewpoint. They will also seek to answer, by taking on semester-long roles in pre-modern Chinese society, broad questions related to humans’ obligations to each other. The course adheres to the Reacting to the Past model of historical learning. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H, O.)

    HIST/ENV-254. Ecoambiguities: Environment and History in China and Japan

    How has China become known as one of the most polluted places on earth? What has been the fallout of the 3/11 Fukushima nuclear disaster, and what are its historical antecedents? This course examines the relationship between humans and the natural environment in China and Japan from the earliest histories of each nation to the present in order to answer these and other important questions. Course themes include human-animal relationships, exchange and exploitation of natural resources, the built environment, the environment in cultural representations, ecological disasters, and the emergence of modern policies and attitudes towards environmental exploitation. Students will be introduced to the field of environmental history, using recent developments in global environmental studies as a theoretical foundation. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST-255. Rulers and Ruled: Authoritarianism in Postcolonial States

    In this course, students will explore how Western colonial rule, foreign intervention, and domestic actors have contributed to authoritarian rule in postcolonial and post-imperial states from the nineteenth century onward. Students will examine the historical factors—colonial, international, and domestic—that can influence states’ development of authoritarian practices. Each semester, course content will compare the histories of two states, including the nations’ past histories with foreign rule. Examples include South Africa and Indonesia, or Fascist Spain and Communist China. Students will therefore gain the skills to be able to analyze holistically and comparatively the resurgence of authoritarianism and challenges to democracy in the twenty-first century. We will consider what contemporary post-colonial and post-imperial states and citizens should do in order to reconcile their complicated pasts and create more equitable societies. Three hours per week.Four semester hours. (H, GN, O.)

    HIST-277. Martyrs, Victims, and Perpetrators: Nationalism and Memory in Modern European History

    This course will explore how Europeans purposefully crafted their nations’ histories and memories for political ends from 1789 until the present. In the process of designing official nationalisms and memories to portray certain national characteristics, they also purposefully selected and/or excluded the experiences of groups such as women, Jews, and other minoritized people. Students will examine the relationship between nationalism and memory through specific case studies, such as the French Revolution, the 1848 Revolutions, new imperialism, the Holocaust, Cold War, and decolonization. To apply our understanding of the connections between European nationalist history and memory, for the final project students will propose a meaningful, public commemoration of an under-represented community and its history. We will constantly ask ourselves how European governments and citizens should reconcile their discriminatory pasts through historical and commemorative practices in order to meaningfully create more equitable futures. Furthermore, we will examine Europeans’ political, gendered, and racial beliefs and practices that created harmful injustices for their minoritized communities. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H, O.)

    HIST-299. History Tutorial

    Individual study and directed reading on a selected historical topic and completion of an annotated bibliography of works read. Open only to students majoring in history. Offered as requested. Prerequisites: HIST-200W and prior consent of a member of the history department who agrees to serve as tutor. One hour per week. One semester hour.

    HIST/GWSS-303. Women’s Activist Auto/Biographies

    Women in various geographic and political contexts have been central actors in the processes of history. However, because women have frequently been viewed as secondary to their male counterparts, their lives have not commanded the same amount of attention. This course seeks to broaden our understandings of the politics, cultures, and social justice initiatives of various societies by studying women’s personal lives and political struggles. Through the life writing of women in places like Kenya, South Africa, India, and the United States of America, we will learn how their participation in social movements, state politics, and cultural work helped make women’s and human rights a central topic in the broader march toward the liberation of their people. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor.  Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H.)

    HIST-307. Revolutions in the Atlantic World

    The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were tumultuous. Revolutionaries in Haiti, France, the United States, and Latin America called and fought for rights and liberty, and worked to define what it meant to be both human and free. They did this work in times of great change: canals, railroads, Indigenous dispossession, and a “transportation revolution” facilitated the growth of markets in the new United States, while industrial revolutions and evolving ideologies of rights, labor, and colonialism competed to cultivate and define a new world order. By examining these moments of struggle and change, we will work to define what we—and historians—mean by “revolution,” and we will ask how these moments both formed a foundation and left lingering consequences for the world we live in today. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST-308. A World at War: The Global History of WWI

    This course will de-center Europe in the First World War by focusing primarily on the global, non-Western perspectives that shaped the conflict and its legacies. In 1914, British, French, German, Austro-Hungarian, Russian, and Ottoman empires had brutally colonialized much of the world. They then actively brought imperial soldiers and laborers to the front lines. Importantly, colonized people worldwide used the war as an opportunity to advocate for a myriad of ideals. Some sought more imperial rights, others rejected European violence, and still others spread anticolonial movements. We will primarily focus on the global, non-Western contexts where the impact of ideas about race, gender, and nationalism shaped the inequities in people’s lives, as well as the impact of and responses to colonialism that shaped those ideas. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H.)

    HIST-330. Street Scrapers, Seamstresses, and the Enslaved: Work, Labor, and Capitalism in the Early Republic

    Prostitutes, street scrapers, enslaved laborers, textile workers: such diverse individuals contributed to the making of the U.S. economy. Throughout this course, we will work to uncover the lived experiences of these workers and examine the ways in which the early U.S. economy developed as a result of their labor. We will examine how ideas of race, class, and gender contributed to social hierarchies and a gap between the wealthy and impoverished, and we will analyze workers’ and capitalists’ roles in making the social and economic worlds of the early American republic. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor.  Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H.)

    HIST/GWSS-332. Liberated Minds: African American Intellectual History

    People of African descent have occupied a unique sociopolitical position in the United States. The realities of their captivity and enslavement, and their resilience in the face of discrimination and racial terrorism, have given them a distinct place in national and world history. Throughout their time in America, they developed a multitude of ideas about economics, citizenship and nationalism, legislation, U.S. foreign policy, education, health, and art and culture. This course will explore the diverse ideas that have developed from this distinct, yet internally diverse, community. We will read about the major bodies of African American thought and research specific aspects of Black intellectual production since the late nineteenth century, including Black nationalism, feminism, liberalism, conservativism, and radicalism. Special priority will be given to how sex and gender inform intellectual production.  Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H.)

    HIST-350. Advanced Special Topics in History

    A 300-level course dealing with special subject areas and periods that are not regularly taught. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, GN, H, or O if so designated, contingent upon the topic.)

    HIST-351. Africa’s Cultures of Resistance

    This course studies the histories of musical cultures and industries in Africa during an age of advancing communications networks and the seemingly ever-increasing democratization of technology. It analyzes cultural trends, such as the development of High Life and Afropop, in the context of anti-colonial and anti-apartheid movements. It also explores how processes like the evolution of global hip-hop culture and the rise of the internet helped fortify bridges between historically oppressed peoples within and across national and continental boundaries. We will get to know individual people and will recognize those people, as well as regional sounds like HipLife and Bongo Flava, as central agents in African and global history. With the concept of ubuntu as our guide, we will deepen our conscious participation in global pop.  Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST-352. Personhood in East Asian Literary History

    What does it mean to be human? To be good? To be a fully realized person? These and other questions are explored in this course from a specifically East Asian viewpoint. Covering the last five thousand years of Chinese, Korean, and Japanese history, course readings draw upon philosophical, religious, poetic, dramatic, and fictional writings that convey foundational East Asian ideas of how to exist as part of complicated and ever-evolving social networks, to build and maintain social relationships, to love, to die, and to find meaning in life. Special attention in our weekly discussions will be placed on putting the texts we read into dialogue with important themes from the Common Intellectual Experience. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (GN, H.)

    HIST-354. Monsters in East and Southeast Asia

    Monsters represent deep fears and anxieties, and thus offer a space to consider the causes, consequences, and perceptions of social, cultural, political, and economic change. This course explores the history of east and southeast Asia through the lens of monstrosity. We will examine different contexts (including China, Japan, and Vietnam) in which monsters and ideas of monstrosity have been produced, seeking to understand underlying trends that may have shaped collective behavior. We will also endeavor to define and characterize the nature of monsters and monstrosity in east and southeast Asian contexts. Topics include monsters in the imagination, religious monsters, monsters in artistic and literary representation, the monstrous feminine, the monstrous other, human monstrosity and post-humanism, monsters on film, and monsters in popular culture. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (H, GN.)

    HIST/GWSS-377. Cold War in Europe: Immigrants, Labor, and Gender

    How did individuals experience the Cold War? Students will explore this question by studying how Eastern and Western European nations overtly politicized the bodies of every gender, as well as workers and immigrants, in order to fight the Cold War as substitute soldiers. Yet these communities developed individual and cultural agency in activities and behaviors that influenced their government’s policies during this time. We will explore these themes against the backdrop of major moments, and will discuss the root ideas that informed states’ policies that inequitably affected the lives of immigrants and workers of all genders. Furthermore, we will consider how our Cold War biases continue to shape our obligations as historians towards Western versions of this history and as well as to each other. We will lastly reflect on how governments should care for their geopolitical status as well as their citizens’ gender and labor rights, and how citizens should respond to government actions. Prerequisite: sophomore standing and any 200-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (DN, H, O.)

    HIST-381. Internship

    An academic/work experience under the supervision of a faculty internship adviser and an on-site supervisor. Students must document their experience according to the requirements delineated in the College catalogue section on Internships. Open to junior and senior history majors and minors; interested students should consult with a faculty member in the History Department before enrolling. The term during which the internship work is performed will be noted by one of the following letters, to be added immediately after the internship course number: A (fall), B (winter), C (spring), or D (summer). Internships undertaken abroad will be so indicated by the letter I. The intern must complete a minimum of 120 hours of work. Graded S/U. Prerequisites: a declared major or minor in history and approval of a faculty internship adviser. Three semester hours. (XLP.)

    HIST-382. Internship

    An academic/work experience under the supervision of a faculty internship adviser and an on-site supervisor. Students must document their experience according to the requirements delineated in the College catalogue section on Internships. Open to junior and senior history majors and minors; interested students should consult with a faculty member in the History Department before enrolling. The term during which the internship work is performed will be noted by one of the following letters, to be added immediately after the internship course number: A (fall), B (winter), C (spring), or D (summer). Internships undertaken abroad will be so indicated by the letter I. The intern must complete a minimum of 160 hours of work. Graded S/U. Prerequisites: a declared major or minor in history and approval of a faculty internship adviser. Four semester hours. (XLP.)

    HIST/ANTH-385. Historical Archaeology Field School

    A four-week summer archaeology course offered in conjunction with The Speaker’s House, a non-profit that owns and is restoring the Frederick Muhlenberg house and property in Trappe, Pennsylvania. The field school course in Historical Archaeology will combine instruction in archaeological methods and theory with hands-on excavation training and experience at an important historical site. Through assigned readings and classroom discussions, on-site training and experience, and weekly laboratory study, field school students will learn historical archaeology techniques and develop the ability to identify and interpret discovered artifacts and place archaeological information within a cultural/historical framework. Six semester hours.

    HIST-400W. Research

    Independent research, under the guidance of an adviser, directed toward the production and oral presentation of a historical project or paper. Prerequisite: HIST-200W, approval of a faculty adviser, and permission of the department. Prerequisite or co-requisite: a History Capstone Seminar. Offered as needed; in rare circumstances, a student may take this course more than once. Four semester hours. (XLP.)

    Note: HIST-400W does not fulfill the capstone requirement.

    HIST-425W. Native American Activism and Red Power

    During the 1960s and 1970s, the American Indian Movement exploded onto the U.S. political scene with the occupation of Alcatraz Island and the dramatic standoff at Wounded Knee. Yet American Indian activism possessed a long history, from boarding school defiance to the birth of the National Congress of American Indians and the “Red Progressive” movement. This course will examine the Red Power moment in the context of that longer and ongoing history of activism in order to ask how and why American Indians fought for political rights, sovereignty, and cultural endurance. We will also consider and discuss various forms of activism and how historians have thus far theorized and examined Native peoples’ activist pasts. Prerequisite: HIST-200W and at least one 300-level history course, or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (CCAP.)

    HIST-426W. Out of Place: The Historical Geography of African Americans

    African Americans have often been seen as “out of place” due to the nature of their arrival and conditions of their residency in the U.S. Deeming them variously and simultaneously “criminals” and “enemies,” “carefree” and “cool,” the American mainstream has assigned Black people a multitude of competing and contradictory places. As a result, this marginalized group has had to carefully navigate uneven geographic and sociopolitical terrains. This course provides an in-depth exploration of Black people’s agency and experiences in urban and rural spaces, especially Philadelphia. We will analyze place-based conditions that have shaped people’s lives and contributed to the reasons why they travel to, remain in, or leave a locale, and we will learn how “place” has helped mold self-perception, creativity, and collective actions for social justice. Prerequisite: HIST-200W and at least one 300-level history course, or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (CCAP.)

    HIST-450W. Seminar on Special Topics in History

    A Capstone Seminar dealing with special subject areas and periods that are not regularly taught. The course devotes particular time and attention to the four open questions that frame the Ursinus Quest, in particular What will I do? Prerequisite: HIST-200W and at least one 300-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (CCAP.)

    HIST-451W. Ancient China: Myth and Material Culture

    This course examines a range of primary and secondary sources—from historical documents, to literary texts, to archaeological site reports, to visual culture, to scholarly treatises—to critically introduce students to the history and archeology of early Chinese civilization from the early Neolithic period (ca. 6,000 BCE) to the end of the Western Han dynasty (206 CE). By combining textual, archaeological, and theoretical perspectives, it trains students to approach China’s earliest history in a multi-disciplinary fashion. Prerequisite: HIST-200W and at least one 300-level history course; or permission of the instructor. Three hours per week. Four semester hours. (CCAP.)

    HIST-491W. Research/Independent Work

    This course is open to seniors who are candidates for departmental honors. Interested students should consult with their faculty adviser no later than October of their junior year. Prerequisite: HIST-200W, approval of a faculty adviser, and permission of the department. Prerequisite or co-requisite: a History Capstone Seminar. Four semester hours. (XLP.)

    HIST-492W. Research/Independent Work

    A continuation of HIST-491W. Prerequisites: HIST-491W, approval of a faculty adviser, and permission of the department. Four semester hours. (XLP.)