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2016-2017 Greensburg Campus Catalog
University of Pittsburgh Greensburg
   
2016-2017 Greensburg Campus Catalog 
    
 
  May 14, 2024
 
2016-2017 Greensburg Campus Catalog [Archived Catalog]

Course Information


Special Courses

Pitt-Greensburg offers a variety of special courses that students may use to enhance their educational experience. The special courses include independent studies, internships, excellence courses, study abroad courses, and capstone courses. Most of the special courses are optional, but for some majors (e.g. criminal justice) an internship is required, and the capstone course is required of all majors.

An independent study allows a student to explore a topic for which no course is available at Pitt-Greensburg or extend the exploration of a topic begun in a regular course. To arrange for an independent study, a student must find a faculty sponsor and work with the sponsor to develop a course plan. Independent study courses are available in every department. See an advisor for more details.

Internships allow students to earn credits toward graduation while gaining on-the-job experience in their majors. An internship is required in some majors (e.g. criminal justice and the journalism track in English writing), but it is available as an elective in most majors. Students are expected to find their own internship opportunities, but faculty advisors and the Office of Career Services may be aware of employers looking for interns and can provide suggestions about seeking an internship. Some departments ask students to complete an internship application. See a faculty advisor for more information.

Pitt-Greensburg students have an opportunity to study abroad in a country/region of their choice. Academic credits are earned while abroad and will transfer directly back into the student’s academic degree requirements. See the study abroad coordinator for more information.

As part of the new Pitt-Greensburg curriculum that took effect in fall 1999, every Pitt-Greensburg student must complete a senior seminar or a senior project as a capstone to the work in the major program. The faculty views the capstone course as a significant enhancement to the UPG degree program because it provides students with the opportunity to bring together the themes and skills of the major. Capstone work typically involves research and both written and oral reports.

Departmental Course Listings

Please note, when searching courses by Catalog Number, an asterisk (*) can be used to return mass results. For instance a Catalog Number search of ” 1* ” can be entered, returning all 1000-level courses.

 

History

  
  •  

    HIST 0101 - WESTERN CIVILIZATION 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A history of the West from the Industrial Revolution to the late Twentieth Century, the period when Europe and its overseas extensions dominated world history.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0125 - RELIGIONS OF THE WEST


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Tenets of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0176 - CHRISTIANITY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Historical survey of Western Christianity, its beliefs, practices, and forms of social organization, from the First Century to the present.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0180 - 19TH CENTURY EUROPE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Through textbook and lecture, the students will become familiar with the major political developments that took place in Europe between the French Revolution and World War I. Original source material will be used to acquaint the students with social roles and attitudes during the period.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 0187 - WORLD WAR II-EUROPE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The causes of WW II are surveyed, including World War I, the Russian Revolution, the Great Depression, and the rise of fascist regimes. The determinants of German expansionism will be discussed and related to the outbreak of war in 1939. The military struggle receives attention, but such topics as economic mobilization, propaganda, occupation policies, resistance movements and the Holocaust are also discussed. The course concludes with an analysis of war time diplomacy, the Postwar settlement, and the onset of the Cold War.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0302 - SOVIET RUSSIA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the history of the USSR from 1917 to the present. Particular attention is paid to the revolutionary transformation of society, the construction of the Soviet state and Soviet society, and to the ways in which state and society relate.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0405 - RELIGION IN ASIA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An overview of the nature and role of religion in India, China, and Japan set against societal and cultural developments.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0500 - COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    History of Latin America during the period of Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Rule, from 1500 to 1825.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0501 - MODERN LATIN AMERICA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    History of the Latin American republics from independence, in 1825, to the present.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0505 - UPG EXCHG: HISTORY OF MEXICO


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The Study Abroad office has approved the general agreement of collaboration between the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg and the Universidad de Guanajuato in which faculty and students will be exchanged.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0575 - HISTORY OF MDRN CENTRAL AMERC


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will cover the history of central America from conquest to the present day. Emphasis will be on the social and economic development of indigenous peoples, national identity and human rights in the 19th and 20th centuries. The course will also study the history of the influence of the US on the region; with stress on the history of social movements, revolution, tenuous peace agreements, globalization and the continuation of social unrest still present in central America today.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0600 - UNITED STATES TO 1877


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an introductory, lower division, course that develops the history of United States from the 1400s through the 1880s.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0601 - UNITED STATES 1865-PRESENT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An introduction to American history from the Civil War to the present which emphasizes selected topics on changes in American society and politics as an earlier agrarian society became an industrial-urban one and as the nation took up an ever larger role in world affairs.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0640 - AMERICAN MILITARY HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A survey of the American military experience from the early colonial period to the most recent experiences in the gulf war and Afghanistan. The course explores the impact of warfare and military forces in the development of the United States. Emphasis is placed on the context of American warfare and how it has influenced our history and way of life.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0675 - WITCHES TO WALDEN POND


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A survey of American religious history from the colonial period through the civil war.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0710 - WORLD HISTORY TO 1500


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is an introduction to the global history of humanity from its beginnings to about the year 1500, emphasizing common trends across regions and cultures.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0711 - WORLD HISTORY 1500 TO PRESENT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is an introduction to the last five centuries of human history: the rise of the Western powers, continuity and change elsewhere in the world, and the emergence of modernity.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0756 - INTRO TO ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course aims to introduce students to Islamic and Middle Eastern History from the time of the Prophet (ca. 600 C.E.) to the Iranian Revolution in 1979. We will proceed chronologically, focusing mainly on political events. However, a special emphasis will be given to the formation of the Islamic tradition, its evolution across different regions and cultures in time, and its interaction with other traditions. In the modern era, we will particularly explore the Islamic societies’ political, cultural, and military encounter with the rising power of the West in the Middle East. In addition to the several historical processes and developments such as modernization, nation-building, Islamic fundamentalism and globalization, which have shaped the history of the Middle East in the last two centuries, our class discussions will also touch on the main theoretical perspectives that have stamped the studies of Islam and the Middle East. Here, concepts such as orientalism, defensive development, and modernity will constitute our main focus.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0810 - ENGLAND SINCE 1689


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Surveys the development of English social, political, economic and cultural history to the present.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1005 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course entails the exploration of a special topic chosen by the instructor.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1006 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course entails the exploration of a special topic chosen by the instructor.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1007 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course entails the exploration of a special topic chosen by the instructor.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1008 - PUBLIC HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will examine the theory and practice of public history, including museums and historical sites, archive and record collection, historical preservation, genealogy and historical societies. The changing purposes, functioning and goals of these organizations will be examined, as well as some of their basic tools and techniques. Students will participate in projects which give them some actual experience in the methodology and/or operation of these areas.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1010 - HISTORICAL INQUIRY & METHODS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course introduces students to the historian’s craft. Students will learn the nature of historical knowledge, how to locate, document, and interpret a diverse array of historical evidence, and how to produce a research proposal using primary and secondary sources. It emphasizes that history is both a social science and an interpretive art. Accordingly, it will expose students to recent interdisciplinary trends in historical methodology and historical schools of thought and debate. The primary aim of this course is to instruct prospective and actual history majors in what it means to think, write, and verbally communicate like a historian.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL; Junior
  
  •  

    HIST 1012 - IMAGES OF WOMEN IN FILM


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Films have provided us with our images of beauty and of star” quality. We have learned from them how Romantic heroines behave, have seen in them both role models and villains. It is important that we learn to analyze the message that films are sending us about women, rather than passively absorbing them. This course will explore how movies have portrayed women since the 1930’s. Each class period will be devoted to a feature film, and discussion of it. Films will be drawn from America and Europe, and samplings will be from “women’s films” and mainstream productions.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1022 - WOMEN IN MODERN EUROPE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An examination of the ways women’s roles have changed in the course of the transition from traditional to post-industrial society. Emphasis is on family history, changing occupational options, and the movement towards female equality.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1035 - 20TH-CENTURY WORLD


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A history of the world between the years 1900 and 2000. Takes a broad, global approach to the political, social, and cultural developments that characterize the twentieth century. The course covers developments in Asia, Europe, and elsewhere, and emphasizes the ideological systems that motivated many of the great conflicts of the century.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1075 - SLAVERY IN THE ATLANTIC WORLD


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Examines slavery in the Americas from the Atlantic perspective (including Africa and Europe) from the fifteenth century through the present, with special emphasis on slave trades, the plantation systems, daily life, slavery and race, resistance, and abolition.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL; Junior
  
  •  

    HIST 1104 - THE CRUSADES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An examination of the crusades from both Christian and Muslim perspectives. Emphasizes crusading in and around the holy land, but also gives some attention to crusades within Europe. Considers political, social, and religious contexts in both Latin Europe and the Islamic Middle East.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1123 - MODERN BRITAIN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Political, economic and social change in Britain from the early 18th century to the present are examined in depth. Topics include the pre-industrial social structure, the origins of political stability, the making of the Industrial Revolution, popular protest and political reform, Britain’s supremacy during the Victorian era, imperialism and the rise of labor, the impact of total war, and the emergence of the welfare state. A discussion of Britain’s future prospects concludes the course.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1140 - HISTORY AND CULTURE OF SPAIN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will survey the history and culture of Spain from medieval times to the present. Emphasis will be placed on Spanish geography, the interaction between the different cultures that lived in Spain, as well as Spanish art, architecture, and literature. The highlights of the course include the rise and fall of the Spanish empire, the Spanish Civil War, Spain under Fanco, Redemocratization and modern Spain in the 21st century.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1158 - BRITISH IMPERIALISM


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This class will cover the last phase of British imperialism during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The focus will be on the nature and meaning of the British empire abroad as well as back home in the motherland. Topics will include new imperialism, the scramble for Africa as well as World War. This course is a complement to the one offered in sociology on American imperialism.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1197 - BLACK DEATH: PLAGUE & HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The Black Death, the great epidemic of 1347-1350’s was the most profound epidemiological-ecological crisis Europe had ever experienced.  Between 30 and 70% of the population of the western world vanished.  In the wake of this demographic disaster economic, psychological, social, literary and even artistic processes were profoundly altered.  This epidemic can be traced through extensive primary sources ranging from literature to art history - from population statistics through village desertions.  This course will introduce these data and examine the consequences of the Black Death.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1313 - HISTORY OF RUSSIAN REVOLUTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the origins, contours, and dynamics of the Russian Revolution of 1917, as well, as the period 1918-1921 during which the new Soviet State fought for its survival.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1314 - USSR 1918-1932


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the first 15 years of Soviet rule during which the fate of the Revolution of 1917 was determined. The Civil War, new economic policy, collectivization of agriculture, five-year plan, and cultural revolution receive concentrated attention.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1315 - STALIN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the USSR during Stalin’s reign, 1929-53. Each facet of his reign—industrial development, collectivization, class war, and repression—receive detailed attention as does WWII and the Cold War.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1338 - WEIMAR AND NAZI GERMANY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Focuses on the factors in German life that made Hitler’s success possible and on the Nazi episode in German history. Also covers Hitler’s Germany.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Junior
  
  •  

    HIST 1367 - 20TH CENTURY EUROPE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Explores the most significant and dramatic episodes of contemporary history, both political and intellectual, including World Wars I and II, Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, inflation, depression, and the explosion of cultural modernism.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1400 - COLONIAL AMERICA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that develops the history of the North American English colonies from around 1400 through the early 1760s.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1402 - ANARCHISM: HIST, THRY & PRACT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar will examine the origins, development, and influence of anarchism from its heyday (1860s-1930s) until the present. Adopting a multidisciplinary approach, it will survey the major personalities, complex ideas, vexing controversies, and diverse movements associated with Western and non-Western anarchism. Traditional anarchist concerns with state power, authority, capitalism, social inequality, nationalism, and militarism will be explored. It will also examine anarchist advocacy of individual and collective liberation, mutual aid, workers’ organization, direct democracy, alternative education, sexual freedom, social ecology, and direct action. Lastly, this seminar will analyze contemporary anarchism and its relationship to current globalizing processes.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1492 - 1492 & BEYOND:CULTS IN CONTEXT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The discovery of the new world not only was a historic moment but ushered in the modern world. This course will utilize anthropology and history to examine the social transformations which arose from the culture contact of native American, European and African cultures in the 16th through 19th centuries and their present implications.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1522 - BRAZIL


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The course begins with an overview of Brazilian culture and of the country’s enormous resource base. Cultural change is traced through the pre-Columbian, colonial, imperial, and republican periods. A major theme throughout is the evolution of a Portuguese heritage into today’s distinctive Brazilian national culture. The country is then divided into five regions as a means of understanding its internal diversity. Popular American ideas about subjects like carnival, the Amazon Rainforest, coffee, Copacabana Beach, and the huge foreign debt are also dealt with.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1525 - MEXICO, AZTECS TO THE PRESENT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Mexican history from the Aztecs to the present. We will discuss the conquest, the Colonial Era, the struggle for independence, nineteenth-century liberalism, the porfirian dictatorship, the Twentieth-Century Revolution, the formation of a single party state, the temptations of socialism, the oil boom, the debt crisis, and the crisis of the system” now being experienced by Mexico.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1565 - RACE AND GENDER LATIN AMERICA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course provides a historical analysis of the social construction of race and gender in Latin America from the colonial period to the present. Emphasizing the interconnectedness of categories of difference”, it will explore how the categories of race and gender were constituted in relation to specific historical, socioeconomic, cultural, and political relations. The primary objective will be to ascertain how definitions of race, gender, and gender roles evolved in Latin America.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1580 - 19TH CENTURY LATIN AMERICA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course discusses the major political, economic, social and ideological developments of the Latin American world from the Independence Wars (1810-1825) to the first decade of the Twentieth Century. Emphasis will be placed on the similarities and differences among the newly emerging nations as they sought to find individual and recognizable status in the industrialized Western world.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1583 - 20THC LATIN AMERCN REVOLUTIONS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A comparative examination of instances of social and political revolution in 20th Century Latin American history. Cases considered include the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917), the Bolivian Revolution (1952), the Cuban Revolution (1959), and the Nicaraguan Revolution (1979).
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1585 - US-LATIN AMERICAN RELATIONS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A survey of US-Latin American from 1800 to the present.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1586 - LATIN AMERICAN REVOLUTIONS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A comparative examination of instances of social and political revolution in Latin American history. Cases considered include the Haitian Revolution (1791-1804), the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917), the Bolivian Revolution (1952), the Cuban Revolution (1959).
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1590 - ANDEAN SOCIETIES: POLIT & CULT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the history of the Andean nations, with a primary focus on Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia. The course covers the pre-Columbian period, the Conquest, the Colonial Era, the Revolutions, and the 19th and 20th Centuries.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1610 - UNITED STATES COLONIAL


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that develops the history of the North American English colonies from around 1400 through the early 1760s.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1611 - AMERICAN REVOLUTION 1763-1791


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that considers the history of Revolutionary America between the 1750s and the 1790s.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1612 - UNITED STATES 1789-1840


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A history of ideas — social, literary, scientific, political — that expressed and shaped the culture.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1614 - CIVIL WAR HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that considers the impact of the Civil War upon the development of the United States.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1616 - ANTEBELLUM AMERC 1790-MEXC WAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is a course in the history of the United States from the late 1780s through the late 1840s. It will focus on the processes involved in the evolution of the United States from a pre-industrial, relatively traditional society into a more modern, industrializing nation. We will consider topics involving commercial, manufacturing, agricultural and demographic development, changes in gender, social-economic and racial relationships, the creation of partisan politics and an analysis of American expansion.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1619 - UNITED STATES SINCE 1945


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Social, economic, and political changes in American society since World War II. Topics include the post-industrial economy, urbanization, women, minorities, education, political movements, government, parties, and political participation. Emphasis is on the massive changes during those years and the impact on people, institutions and government.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1620 - THE VIETNAM WAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is designed to acquaint the student with American involvement in Southeast Asia, in particular with the second Indochina War. Some attempt will be made to provide a background of Vietnamese historical and cultural perspective. The major portion of the course will focus on American policy, at home and abroad, and the manner in which five American presidents tried to deal with the Indochina problem”.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1625 - HISTORY OF THE AMERCN FRONTIER


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores the settlement and development of frontier regions across the continent, emphasizing 19th century experiences. Diverse and distinctive frontier societies emerged from the processes associated with land acquisition, exploration, Indian relations, Westward migration, economic development, social organization, governance, and urbanization. The different and conflicting interpretations of the frontier experience raise important questions and perspectives about the character of American society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1635 - US IMMIGRATION HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Immigration history will address the four great waves of immigration to the United States: the colonial period, the 1830-1860 period, the 1878-1924 wave and the 1960 to the present migration. Causes of migration, the journey itself, the process and pace of acculturation and the impact on the contemporary United State’s society will all be examined.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1645 - AMERICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The course presents a survey of the strategic factors in the economic development of the United States from colonial times to the great depression. The topics covered include the record of economic growth, the process industrialization and its major phases, British mercantilism, the role of technological change, demographic history, the slave economy, distribution of income, urbanization, and the financial sector.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1655 - AMERICAN WORKERS 19TH CENTURY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines American working class formation, development, and recomposition during the nineteenth century, and workers’ impact on American economic, political, and cultural development.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1656 - AMERICAN WORKERS 20TH CENTURY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the experiences of American workers during the second Industrial Revolution of the early Twentieth Century, the emergence of a government-sponsored national system of labor relations in the 1930s and 1940s, the structural changes in the economy and labor force since 1950, and the subsequent breakdown of the new deal formula for class relations.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1660 - GENDER & SEXTY IN US TO 1865


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This upper-level course is part of a two-course sequence which surveys the history of women in the United States. Part 1 focuses on women’s experiences from the 1600s to the 1880s with special attention to class, ethnic, and geographic differences among women.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1661 - US GENDER/SEXUALITY SINCE 1865


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This upper-level course is part of a two-course sequence which surveys the history of women in the United States. Part 2 focuses on women’s experiences from 1865 to the present with special attention to class, ethnic, and geographic differences among women.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1668 - HISTORY OF PITTSBURGH


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores the development of Pittsburgh’s life and landscape from its frontier origins in the 18th century to its Renaissance of the mid-20th century. The city and its region are addressed as a case study in American social history and urbanization. Pittsburgh offers the opportunity to examine the transformation from a commercial city to an industrial metropolis with the attendant social, political, labor, and redevelopment issues which characterize American urban life.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1715 - EMPIRES IN THE MODERN WORLD


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Through lecture and discussion, this course reviews empires in world historical context. Themes of governance, economy, war, culture, social organization, and colonies and decolonization are explored in three segments: empires 1400-1800, 1800-2000, and the future of empire.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
  •  

    HIST 1730 - THE MONGOLS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Explores the political and social histories of the mongol empire and its successor states across Eurasia during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and considers their larger world historical context.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1745 - SPECIAL TOPICS - STUDY ABROAD


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The study of special topics related to a study abroad experience.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1750 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    The study of special topics in history.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1753 - THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE (1300-1923)


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course traces the history of the ottoman empire from its origins as an obscure band of frontier warriors, to the highpoint of its geopolitical power in the sixteenth century, and on to its further evolution as an increasingly complex and peaceful society, down to the opening of the period of European imperialism and nation building. It will address not only the ottomans’ political power, but also those economic, social, and cultural factors that helped explain that power and gave the empire such a distinctive place in the history of Western Europe, Balkans and the middle east.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1775 - ORIGINS OF CHRISTIANITY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course presents a historical-critical investigation of Christian origins. Special attention is paid to varieties of 1st century Hellenistic and Palestinian Judaism within the Greco-Roman world. Primary readings include selected Biblical passages and apocrypha, 1st century historians and philosophers (Josephus, Tacitus, Suetonius, and Philo), the New Testament corpus (including Paul and the Pastorals), and selected readings from the Dead Sea Scrolls. In addition there will be assignments from various modern New Testament critics, historians, and theologians.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1793 - HISTORY OF IRAN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Surveys the long history of Iran, also known as Persia, from ancient times to the present. Covers the Persian empire of antiquity and traces the introduction of foreign cultures over the centuries - Greeks, Arabs, Turks, and Europeans to create the multifaceted society of modern Iran. Classical culture and religious history are discussed, as are modern political developments in the 20th and 21st centuries.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: SOPHOMORE
  
  •  

    HIST 1900 - HISTORY INTERNSHIP


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    This course enables students to combine academic training and practical work experience related to the major.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: Satisfactory/No Credit
  
  •  

    HIST 1901 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 9
    Individual project administered under the supervision of a faculty member.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1947 - RISE OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY STATE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the history of the National Security State in the United States, tracing its origins from the early 20th century with a particular focus on the rise and expansion at the federal level after WWII. Areas of focus will also include the increasing use of surveillance in the United States, including those by various federal and state agencies, corporations, organizations, and individuals.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HIST 1955 - HISTORY CAPSTONE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is to be taken by majors in the senior year. It will presume a basic knowledge of historical information and technique. Utilizing a research seminar format, students will develop a substantial group or individual research project. Following discussion and revision, they will complete this research project. The project will be presented to the seminar in both written and oral form.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Junior
  
  •  

    HIST 1970 - UNDGR TEACHING ASST EXPERIENCE


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course involves student participation as an undergraduate teaching assistant (UTA) for a history course under the supervision of a faculty member.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Practicum
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis

History of Art and Architecture

  
  •  

    HAA 0010 - INTRODUCTION TO WORLD ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is intended to introduce the student to major monuments of Western art from Egypt to the 20th century, and to demonstrate the tools of analysis with which one may approach a work of art as an aesthetic object and as a historic document.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0013 - INTRODUCTION TO ART 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Introduction to art 2 trains students to analyze a work of art and specify concretely its cultural and historical context. Examples drawn from the 17th through the 20th centuries.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0015 - ART APPRECIATION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course introduces students to the technical, aesthetic and historical aspects of architecture, sculpture, painting and drawing. Emphasis will be placed on analyses of the visual elements used in fine arts such as color, line, shape, texture and the principles of design. Students will investigate the purposes of art and visual communication, and develop a heightened sense of critical thinking that allows them to investigate different modes of representation, styles and media in a multicultural society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0030 - INTRODUCTION TO MODERN ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The course will present a chronological survey of Western European, Russian, and American art from the mid-nineteenth century to the present (impressionism to post-modernism). In addition to charting the dramatic stylistic and conceptual changes in art during this time period, the course will consider the historical circumstances which caused a disintegration in accepted notions of what constituted a significant work of art.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0032 - MICHELANGELO


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Chronological analysis of Michelangelo’s career as painter, sculptor, architect. His life will be considered in terms of the social, political and religious climate of Renaissance Italy, concluding with his influence on his contemporaries and succeeding generations.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0050 - INTRODUCTION TO MEDIEVAL ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A survey of the architecture, painting, sculpture and minor arts of the medieval world from ca. 300 To ca. 1450 With the emphasis on visual analysis of period styles.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0057 - MEDIEVAL ART & ARCHITECTURE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers a survey of architecture, sculpture, painting and mosaics from the medieval period, dating from the 4th through the 13th centuries. The transformation of artistic styles during these 10 centuries used the stylistic foundations of the early Christian period as a point of departure, as medieval styles evolved into the Hiberno-Saxon Carolingian, Ottonian, Romanesque and gothic movements. Socio-economic developments and religious philosophies will also be examined from these periods.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0060 - MASTRPIECES OF WESTERN PAINTNG


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will help students with no experience in the arts feel comfortable when they visit a museum or discuss paintings, upon completing this course a student should not only have an easy familiarity with some of the greatest masterpieces of European and American painting, but he or she should also have attained the background and skill to understand and to discuss paintings they might discover in a gallery, antique shop or home. This course is especially intended for students without background in the arts.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0090 - INTRO TO CONTEMPORARY ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores the latest developments in contemporary art in the context of changes in world visual cultures since the 1960s. The first weeks will concentrate on the transformations of artistic practice that occurred initially in pop art, and on the minimal-conceptual shift in Western art. This will be followed by a survey of the diversification of artistic practice in the 1980s and 1990s, including the emergence of new internationalisms reflecting postcoloniality, global contemporary art and digital media.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0115 - LIFE/ART ANTIQU:EGYPT,GRK,ROMN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will explore the art and architecture of the Greek and Roman periods, starting with the pre-Greek peoples, the Egyptians, and finishing with the late Romans. Social, political, and religious issues will be examined.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0130 - WOMEN IN ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will investigate the various ways women have been portrayed in the visual arts, as well as how women artists have portrayed the world. Approaching the material chronologically, this course will select representations of women and female artists from antiquity through the 20th century, and examine both the contextual position of women in society and the artistic styles.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Any HAA or FA course or permission of instructor
  
  •  

    HAA 0150 - ANCIENT ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The Mediterranean Sea is a lake and its shores have produced many important cultures and artistic traditions. The course will survey the artistic and cultural traditions of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Aegean, from the Neolithic to the end of the Bronze Age (ca. 6000-1200 BCE), a formative period for the cultures that developed in these regions. Special attention will be paid to: 1) the relationship between the artistic traditions of these areas and the societies which produced them, and 2) the way in which influences from one culture were transformed by another.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HAA 0205 - ART OF THE VICTORIAN ERA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will offer a sampling of images, in a slide-lecture format, in an effort to research and review the arts of the Victorian period. The student will investigate the arts that mirrored the society of the time. Artists of Victorian England as well as artists abroad will be utilized in an in-depth view of the visual arts during this unique time in Western visual arts.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0211 - INTRODUCTION TO ART 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Introduction to history of art designed to train students to analyze a work of art and specify concretely its cultural and historical context. Examples drawn from ancient, medieval, renaissance, and more recent cultures.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0212 - INTRODUCTION TO ART 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course trains students to analyze a work of art and specify concretely its cultural and historical context. Examples drawn from the 17th through the 20th centuries.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0225 - MEDIEVAL ART & ARCHITECTURE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers a survey of architecture, sculpture, painting and mosaics from the medieval period, dating from the 4th through the 13th centuries. The transformation of artistic styles during these 10 centuries used the stylistic foundations of the early Christian period as a point of departure, as medieval styles evolved into the Hiberno-Saxon Carolingian, Ottonian, Romanesque and gothic movements. Socio-economic developments and religious philosophies will also be examined from these periods.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HAA 0230 - ART APPRECIATION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course introduces students to the technical, aesthetic and historical aspects of architecture, sculpture, painting and drawing. Emphasis will be placed on analyses of the visual elements used in fine arts such as color, line, shape, texture and the principles of design. Students will investigate the purposes of art and visual communication, and develop a heightened sense of critical thinking that allows them to investigate different modes of representation, styles and media in a multicultural society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0250 - INTRO TO NON-WESTERN ART 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers a survey of the major non-Western ancient cultures from around the world, including the art of the Americas, of the far east, Indonesia, Africa, India and Islamic nations. While this diverse selection of cultures exposes students to aesthetic principles and artistic functions and meanings which do not derive from our cultural ideals, it also helps students develop a vocabulary for the description and analysis of works of art and to provide them a basic understanding of the methods and aims of art historical study.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0255 - ART OF THE ANCT: THE GREEKS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    From its emergence out of the dark ages in the 8th century, through its height during the classical age of 5th century BCE, and into its transformation into the Hellenistic age ending in the 1st century BCE, this course will explore the fascinating culture and art of the Greeks using archaeological and art historical approaches. HAA 0212 is recommended, but not required.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0302 - RENAISSANCE ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    We will explore the arts - painting, sculpture, architecture, and the decorative arts - that flourished in Italy between 1250 and 1590. The renaissance is one of the great epochs of western culture; this course offers an introduction to the visual evidence that reveals the development of new attitudes about human life and its meaning. Emphasis will be on works of those revolutionary individuals who transformed the arts - Giotto, Donatello, Brunelleschi, Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael, Bellini, titian, and Palladio, to name only the most important.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HAA 0312 - RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The Renaissance is one of the great epochs of Western culture; this course will emphasize the works of revolutionary individuals who transformed the arts; Giotto, Donatello, Brunelleschi, Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael, Bellini, Titian, and Palladio, to name only the most important. In addition, this course will also consider definitions of the term “baroque” in relation to the history of taste and later responses to the 17thc artistic achievement.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0350 - BAROQUE ART


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will consider the careers of the major painters and sculptors of Italy (Caravaggio, the Carracci, Bernini, Cortona, Gaulli), Spain (Ribera, Zurbaran, Velazquez, Montanes, Murillo), France (G. De la Tour, P. De Champaigne, Poussin, Claude, le Brun, Puget), Flanders (Rubens, van Dyck, Jordaens) and Holland (Hals, Rembrandt, Vermeer, Ruisdael) in the 17thC. It will also consider definitions of the term baroque” in relation to the history of taste and later responses to 17thC artistic achievement.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    HAA 0370 - REMBRANDT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This core level art history course, intended for a beginning student with no background in art history (but also open to devotees and majors), offers an introduction to Rembrandt by an intensive examination of his life, and his art; paintings, drawings, and etchings. The course is arranged chronologically, so that as the term proceeds we follow Rembrandt from his earliest training and his fascination with baroque dynamism through his greatest success as Amsterdam’s most popular portraitist to his moving and universal final works.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HAA 0400 - SPECIAL TOPICS-MODERN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Special topics in modern art.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
 

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