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A summary of each course to help with your selection.
Course ID
Course
HIST 107
HIST 107
The Ancient and Medieval World
Course Credits: 3
Examines key themes in world history from antiquity to the seventeenth century AD. Students will analyze political and religious developments and systems of cultural and economic exchange. Students will be introduced to the historical and archival way of knowing so they can gain an effective means of understanding, appreciating, and critiquing the past to better understand the present and prepare for the future.
Prerequisite(s): None. (2-1; 2-1)
HIST 108
HIST 108
The Modern World
Course Credits: 3
Examines key themes in the development of the modern world from the seventeenth to the late twentieth century. Students will analyze significant political, religious, economic, and cultural changes. Students will be introduced to the historical and archival way of knowing so they can gain an effective means of understanding, appreciating, and critiquing the past to better understand the present and prepare for the future.
Prerequisite(s): None. (2-1; 2-1)
HIST 230
HIST 230
History of Nursing
Course Credits: 3
This course examines the development of Canadian nursing over the past four centuries, with an emphasis on the twentieth century. Based on an understanding of nursing as rooted in a Christian ethos of caring for strangers, this course critically explores the ways in which religion, politics, gender, race, economics, technology, culture, war, and epidemics have influenced the development of nursing both nationally and globally.
Cross-listed: NURS 230
Prerequisite(s): None (3-0; 3-0)
HIST 304
HIST 304
Late Medieval Europe
Course Credits: 3
An inquiry into a period of Europe's past in which beliefs, attitudes, and institutions, moulded in the previous centuries, were consolidated into shapes that mark modern European (and North American) culture. The outlines of the modern state and of the modern family. An examination of late medieval civilization for indications of decline and rebirth. Signs of struggle between forces of tradition and of innovation, idealism and material or corporeal realities, and gender relations.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of History, or instructor’s consent.
NB: Not offered every year. See department chair.
HIST 306
HIST 306
History of Economic Thought
Course Credits: 3
An investigation of the overlap of economic history and economic thought all the way from ancient Greeks philosophers, through medieval scholastics, to mercantilist businessmen, to Adam Smith and the classical economists of the Industrial Revolution, to macroeconomists emerging from the Great Depression, and into the twenty-first century. Students examine the main economic questions and themes of these various periods including: What is the good life? Is business moral? How do selfish individuals promote societal good through markets? What is the proper role and scope of government? As an inquiry-based course, students will have considerable latitude to examine topics of particular interest to them in more detail.
Cross-listed: ECON 306
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of History, or instructor’s consent.
NB: May not be offered every year.
HIST 307
HIST 307
Renaissance Europe
Course Credits: 3
An examination of the social, intellectual, artistic, political, and economic transformations that gave rise to, and followed in, the wake of the rebirth of ancient Greek and Roman culture that began in Italy in the mid-14th century and spread to the rest of Europe for the next 200 years.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of History, or instructor’s consent.
NB: Not offered every year See department chair.
HIST 308
HIST 308
Reformation Europe
Course Credits: 3
An examination of the social, intellectual, artistic, and political history of Western Europe from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, with a special emphasis on changes in theology and devotional practices, and the ensuing wars of religion, as the Protestant and Catholic Reformations spread throughout Europe.
Cross-listed: RELS 368
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of History, or instructor’s consent.
NB: Not offered every year. See department chair.
HIST 309
HIST 309
The Age of Enlightenment
Course Credits: 3
An examination of the main events, individuals, and ideas in European history from 1600 to 1789. Key topics include: the growth of absolutism, the Scientific Revolution, and the Enlightenment; the development of new political and economic theories; artistic and cultural movements; the rise of the public sphere; religious revivals; and changes in marriage, the family and gender roles.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of History, or instructor’s consent.
NB: Not offered every year. See department chair.
HIST 310
HIST 310
History in Practice
Course Credits: 3
An exploration of the various manifestations of the practice of history in the public sphere. Students will be exposed to the ways in which communities, regions, nations, and others polities collect, manage, create, present and understand their histories, pasts, and stories. Analyze how forms of historical consciousness show themselves in archives and museums, films and theatrical productions, monuments and memorials, anniversaries and celebrations, government policies and sporting achievements, genealogy and national origin stories, etc. Practical application of historical skills and tools through communication with public historians, visits to local historic sites, completing relevant assignments and engaging experiential learning. Students will gain valuable experiences and knowledge related to a variety of areas where public history is practiced and will be exposed to career opportunities in history. This course is a prerequisite for other History Practicum opportunities
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of History, or instructor’s consent.
NB: This course is the prerequisite for any history practicum (HIST 315). Not offered every year. See department chair