2020-2021 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of History
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Return to: 3000 College of Arts and Sciences and Departments
Asian Studies
Faculty Coordinator: Ghulam Nadri, gnadri@gsu.edu, Department of History
The Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies (BIS) program in Asian Studies offers students an opportunity to acquire knowledge of this important and unique world region and a career-oriented range of skills. It allows students to follow a course plan with concentration in international business and economy. By taking a set of courses, students may also take a minor in international business. For students interested in teaching English in China, Japan, Korea, or elsewhere in Asia, it allows a concentration in English as a Second Language (ESL) with an option to obtain a TEFL certificate from the Department of Applied Linguistics (TEFL Certificate). Students interested in Asian societies and cultures will have the option to concentrate in Chinese, Japanese, or Indian/South Asian studies. It allows students to choose from a large pool of courses (taught by Georgia State faculty experts in their regions and disciplines) appropriate to their areas of concentration.
The minor in Asian Studies is an excellent complement to many other majors. Students pursuing a career in teaching English as a second language, international politics, international business, world history, world/comparative religions or another field, should consider a minor in Asian Studies as a way to strengthen their academic/professional credentials and increase marketable skills.
Academic Advisement for Undergraduate Students
Academic advisement for undergraduate students is provided through the University Advisement Center (freshman through junior status/fewer than 90 hours) and the college’s Office of Academic Assistance (senior status/90 or more hours). See Office of Academic Assistance for additional information.
Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Arts students should also consult regularly with the faculty program coordinator for the specific program regarding course selection, program plans, experiential learning, and other academic opportunities.
Program Admission
Students may enroll in a concentration upon admission to Georgia State University. Students who wish to change their major to this degree program should select a concentration in consultation with their academic advisor and the faculty coordinator. A 2.0 Georgia State University GPA is required.
Students who enroll in a concentration will be required to submit a course plan checklist to demonstrate their understanding of the degree requirements. It is highly recommended that students develop a course of study with their specific faculty coordinator before taking coursework in the degree program to avoid taking courses that will not count towards graduation.
University Grade-Point Average and Grade Requirements
Georgia State University undergraduate students must achieve an overall institutional grade-point average of 2.0 and a major GPA of 2.0 to receive a bachelor’s degree from the university. Grades of C- can be used to satisfy graduation requirements. However, some courses have prerequisites that require a grade of C or higher. (See 1460 GPA Requirement for additional information.)
Graduation with Distinction in the Major
This unit offers undergraduate students with the opportunity to earn the designation of graduation with distinction in the major. Please contact the undergraduate director for the specific criteria for this honor.
History
20th floor, 25 Park Place Bldg.
404-413-6385
history.gsu.edu
Michelle Brattain, Chair
Robert Baker, Undergraduate Director
Historians study various aspects of humanity’s recorded past. Some historians explore the rise and fall of empires, while others describe the everyday lives of men and women. They are interested in every period of the past and all parts of the world. Historians also examine the principles and theories that influence the writing of history. They seek to understand the forces that have structured human life and the ideas that have shaped the way people perceive and experience their worlds. Historians are concerned with change and continuity within societies and interactions among cultures. Historians pay particular attention to the effect of perspectives and values because their discipline involves the interpretation of findings, not just the collection of facts. History can teach us many lessons, not simply about our past but also about the paradoxes and potentials of our present.
The Department of History offers a wide range of courses in African, Asian, European, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and United States history. Arranged in three levels - introductory, intermediate, and advanced - these courses afford students an opportunity not only to become familiar with a body of historical knowledge but also to enhance their skills as readers, discussants, writers, and researchers. Because it emphasizes analytic and critical thinking, history prepares students for further professional training in education, international studies, journalism, law, politics, and public policy, and for all manner of careers. All students can benefit from the insights history provides into the human condition.
Academic Advisement for Undergraduate Students
Academic advisement for undergraduate students is provided through the University Advisement Center (freshman through junior status/fewer than 90 hours) and the college’s Office of Academic Assistance senior status/90 or more hours). See Office of Academic Assistance for additional information.
Program Degree Requirements
Students should complete the freshman courses in history in the core curriculum and HIST 3000 - Introduction to Historical Studies-CTW before enrolling in other history courses numbered 3000 and above. In all lower-division history courses the department requires that majors attain a minimum grade of C.
The department requires a total of 30 hours in upper-division history. At least one course must be taken from each of the areas of American, European, and African/Asian/Latin American/Middle Eastern History. All majors must take HIST 4990 - Historical Research-CTW after completing HIST 3000 and at least four other upper-division courses. However, students enrolling in the dual degree BA/MA program may elect to substitute a graduate level research course for HIST 4990 . No more than 15 hours of upper-division history may be transfer credits.
In addition to the Program Degree Requirements, students must fulfill the College of Arts and Sciences Degree Requirements (see College Degree Requirements ) and the University Degree Requirements (see 1400 University Degree Requirements and Graduation ).
University Grade-Point Average and Grade Requirements
Georgia State University undergraduate students must achieve an overall institutional grade-point average of 2.0 and a major GPA of 2.0 in Areas G and H to receive a bachelor’s degree from the university. Grades of C- can be used to satisfy graduation requirements. However, some courses have prerequisites that require a grade of C or higher. (See 1460 GPA Requirement for additional information.)
Graduation with Distinction in the Major
This unit offers undergraduate students with the opportunity to earn the designation of graduation with distinction in the major. Please contact the undergraduate director for the specific criteria for this honor.
ProgramsBachelor’sDual DegreeMinorCoursesHistory- HIST 3000 - Introduction to Historical Studies-CTW
- HIST 3100 - Introduction to Global History
- HIST 3200 - North America before 1800
- HIST 3210 - United States in the Nineteenth Century
- HIST 3220 - United States in the Twentieth Century
- HIST 3230 - American Environmental History
- HIST 3240 - History of Sports and Leisure
- HIST 3250 - Religion in American Life
- HIST 3260 - The Harlem Renaissance
- HIST 3270 - History of the 1970s and 1980s
- HIST 3300 - History of Capitalism
- HIST 3400 - History of Sex
- HIST 3410 - History of Food
- HIST 3420 - Historical Aspects of Public Health and Medicine
- HIST 3500 - The Ancient Mediterranean
- HIST 3505 - Classical and Early Modern Western Political Thought
- HIST 3510 - Medieval Mediterranean/Islamic World
- HIST 3515 - North Africa and the World to 1800
- HIST 3520 - Early Modern Europe, 1500-1789
- HIST 3525 - Modern Western Political Thought
- HIST 3530 - Europe Since 1789
- HIST 3540 - Film and the Holocaust
- HIST 3615 - The Indian Ocean World
- HIST 3620 - The Atlantic World: Encounters, Empires, Diasporas, Revolutions
- HIST 3625 - War in Europe and America Since 1500
- HIST 3630 - Empires in the Modern World
- HIST 3635 - Media, Technology, and Popular Culture
- HIST 3640 - Piracy from Ancient to Modern Times
- HIST 3645 - Contemporary Africa
- HIST 3650 - Africa and the world
- HIST 3660 - 20th Century World
- HIST 3665 - History of Ideas about Race
- HIST 3675 - Teaching Difficult Topics in United States History
- HIST 3690 - Honors Readings
- HIST 3700 - China and Japan to 1600
- HIST 3710 - China and Japan since 1600
- HIST 3715 - Modern Japan
- HIST 3720 - Colonial Latin America
- HIST 3730 - Latin America since 1810
- HIST 3740 - Mexico
- HIST 3780 - Middle East 600-1800
- HIST 3790 - The Middle East since 1800
- HIST 3800 - History of India from the Indus Civilization to the Present
- HIST 3850 - China, India, and the Modern World Economy
- HIST 3900 - Human Rights in Historical Perspective
- HIST 4100 - Philosophy of History
- HIST 4190 - American Culture and Ideas I
- HIST 4200 - American Culture and Ideas II
- HIST 4220 - The American City
- HIST 4225 - Immigrants in America
- HIST 4230 - Foreign Relations of the United States
- HIST 4245 - The United States in the 1960s
- HIST 4255 - U S Civil War and Reconstruction
- HIST 4260 - African-American Women
- HIST 4270 - Topics in African American History
- HIST 4280 - Enslavement and Resistance in North America
- HIST 4290 - Enslavement in the Americas
- HIST 4300 - The American South
- HIST 4310 - Georgia
- HIST 4315 - Civil Rights Memory in the United States and South Africa
- HIST 4320 - Metropolitan Atlanta
- HIST 4325 - Introduction to Public History and Historic Preservation
- HIST 4330 - Oral History
- HIST 4340 - Administration and Use of Historical Archives
- HIST 4345 - Case Study in International Preservation
- HIST 4350 - Film and History
- HIST 4430 - American Jewish History
- HIST 4450 - History of Crime in America
- HIST 4460 - Bills of Rights
- HIST 4470 - The Founders’ Constitution
- HIST 4480 - Special Topics in History, Northumbria
- HIST 4490 - Topics in American History
- HIST 4532 - Crime, Law and Society in Early Modern Europe
- HIST 4540 - Britain and the World, 1500-1700
- HIST 4550 - Britain and the World since 1700
- HIST 4570 - France Since 1715
- HIST 4575 - German History to 1900
- HIST 4580 - German History since 1900
- HIST 4600 - Russia and the Soviet Union Since 1861
- HIST 4615 - Scientific Revolutions
- HIST 4620 - Europe: Culture and Ideas
- HIST 4630 - European Intellectual History I: From Medieval to Marx
- HIST 4635 - European Intellectual History II: From Marx to Postmodernism
- HIST 4640 - The Holocaust
- HIST 4650 - Gender and Sexuality in European History
- HIST 4690 - Topics in European History
- HIST 4730 - History of Haiti
- HIST 4740 - Latin American Revolutions
- HIST 4750 - Eastern Africa and the Horn of Africa
- HIST 4772 - Women in Africa
- HIST 4870 - Honors Thesis I
- HIST 4880 - Honors Thesis II
- HIST 4885 - Special Topics in Heritage Preservation
- HIST 4890 - Topics in World History
- HIST 4960 - British American Culture Seminar I
- HIST 4961 - British American Cultural Seminar II
- HIST 4970 - Independent Study
- HIST 4975 - Study Abroad
- HIST 4980 - Internship
- HIST 4990 - Historical Research-CTW
- HIST 4995 - Directed Readings BI S -CTW
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