HIST 600s


HIST 601 Canadian History I (0.50) LEC,SEMCourse ID: 001560
Department Consent Required

HIST 602 Canadian History II (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001559
Department Consent Required

HIST 603 Nationalism and Ethnic Policies of Multinational States (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012549
The course explores the concept of nationalism and the responses of multiethnic states to nationalist challenge. Students will examine theories of nationalism and discuss its creative and destructive potential. Pursuit of national self-determination led to the birth of new states and the disintegration of old ones: ethnic tensions were another product of nationalism. Different types of states have addressed ethnic problems in different ways: some have sought to maintain harmonious multicultural communities: others have preferred to assimilate or segregate minorities; yet others have engaged in ethnic cleansing. We will trace the roots of nationalism and the consequences of its rise, and we will also discuss the impact of state system on the ethnic policy.
Department Consent Required

HIST 604 Theory and Practice of Insurgency and Counterinsurgency: Historical and Contemporary Issues (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 001561
This seminar offers a comparative analysis of insurgency and counterinsurgency from the 19th century to the present. It examines resistance to foreign invaders in Europe, the century of rebellion in Mexico in 1810-1917, anti-colonial wars of national liberation, Marxist revolutionary movements in South-East Asia and Latin America, the upsurge of Islamic fundamentalism and urban guerrilla warfare. The course will focus on the sources of insurgencies, their nature and the support they drew from various social groups. In each case, the government's response will also be investigated. We will analyse theories of guerrilla thinkers and pacification models and pay particular attention to the gap between intended and actual policies, and the plight of civilians caught in crossfire.
Department Consent Required

HIST 605 Global Governance in Historical Perspective (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012550
This course examines the various ways global actors have identified and tried to solve global problems in the twentieth century. We will study the interactions between international organizations, state actors, non-governmental organizations, and informal interest groups as they have confronted global issues such as war, immigration, international trade, human rights, and environmental and health crises.
Prereq: Global Governance graduate students only. All others require permission of department.

HIST 606 International Development in Historical Perspective (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012847
This course examines the theory of international development and how it has been applied in practice. As well, students will assess the records of various international actors in terms of their success or failure in providing development assistance. They will also study the interactions between international organizations, states, non-governmental organizations and more informal interest groups through their involvement in overseas development assistance. Finally, the role played by the Cold War in determining Overseas Development Assistance priorities will be examined.
Department Consent Required

HIST 607 Human Rights in Historical Perspective I (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012970
The course will examine developments in human rights, primarily during the twentieth century. Weekly discussions based on assigned readings will offer students an opportunity to explore such questions as: What are "human rights" and how are they different from any other rights? Where do human rights come from? Why do they change over time, and by whom and by what means are changes effected? Is there a role for the historian in explaining this process, and can the lessons of history be applied to public policy and to continuing human rights issues? The focus for our study is the formation and evolution of international human rights, but with attention paid to Canadian events to assess the relationship between domestic and global human rights innovations.
Department Consent Required

HIST 608 Human Rights in Historical Perspective II (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012971
In this sequel to HIST 607, students will have an opportunity to pursue a primary research project on an approved topic in the history of human rights. A series of progress meetings and research consultations will lead towards a "conference" where students will present their own research and comment on their classmates' draft papers.
Department Consent Required
Prerequisite: HIST 607

HIST 610 War and Society in the Twentieth Century (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012181
This course will explore the impact of twentieth century war on the English - speaking world, especially Canada. It will introduce students to the many ways in which historians have studied the First and Second World Wars, as well as other conflicts. Our seminar presentations and research papers will sample the 'old military history' of tactics and strategy, and we will also examine the 'new military history' that focuses on the social, economic and cultural impact of war.
Department Consent Required

HIST 611 War and Society in the Twentieth Century II (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 012177
History 611 forms the research component of the course. Students will write a research paper based on primary sources on a topic chosen with the professor's consultation. The paper will be approximately 30-35 pages in length (7500-9000 words). The class will meet throughout the term to discuss the process of research and writing. Each student will also present his or her working drafts to the class for discussion. Marks will be based on the quality of constructive comment raised in each class, as well as on the final paper submitted at term's end.
Department Consent Required
Prerequisite: HIST 610

HIST 612 Indigenous Rights and Claims: A Global Perspective (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 001568
This course examines the historical and political background of Indigenous rights in comparative and global perspective. It will consider the patterns of Indigenous-Newcomer relations, the nature and origins of treaties, and Indigenous protests against external incursions into traditional territories. The course will focus on developments around the world in the period after World War II, and will examine such themes as the emergence of Indigenous rights movements, the origins and status of legal claims, political accommodations and international efforts to address Indigenous aspirations. Particular attention will be paid to the development of international Indigenous organizations, coordinated protests and challenges to national governments, and the engagement of international organizations (i.e., through the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples).
Department Consent Required

HIST 614 Space, Identity and Culture: Reading in Canadian Social History (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 013344
In this course you will master both classic and cutting-edge historical scholarship in Canadian Social History. You will read works that interrogate and historicize the traditional foci of social historians - class gender and race. You will read works informed by cultural theory, especially concerning the occupation of social space and the expression of experience of particularized social identities. Each week, we will meet together in seminar to discuss the substance, theoretical orientation, methodology, and historiographical significance of the assigned material. As such, active reading and constructive participation in seminar are key. In addition, you will be required to lead seminar discussions and write an historiographical paper.
Department Consent Required

HIST 620 Early Modern History I (0.50) LEC,SEMCourse ID: 001578
Department Consent Required

HIST 621 Early Modern History II (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001579
Department Consent Required

HIST 622 Microhistory and the Lost Peoples of Europe (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 013808
This course borrows its title from the famous collection of essays edited by Edward Muir and Guido Ruggiero. The course explores how historians use narrative to (re)construct past realities. It looks closely at the uses, abuses, and limitations of microhistory as a genre and exposes students to important trends in social history. Though the bulk of the material deals with Europe in the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries, the course is methodological in nature and is intended for all graduate students of social history. Students in HIST 622 read the great microhistories including Davis' The Return of Martin Guerre, LeRoy Ladurie's Montaillou and Caranaval at Romans, Spence's The Death of Woman Wang, Ginzburg's Night Battles, and others. Through these sources students acquire a deep understanding of the historiography surrounding this genre. In addition, HIST 622 exposes students to the various non-historical theorists (sociological, anthropological, etc.) whose works inform the microhistorical method.
Department Consent Required

HIST 626 Modern European History I (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001582
Department Consent Required

HIST 627 Modern European History II (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001583
Department Consent Required

HIST 632 History of the United States I (0.50) LEC,SEMCourse ID: 001590
Department Consent Required

HIST 633 History of the United States II (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001591
Department Consent Required

HIST 635 Race in Modern History I (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001592
Department Consent Required

HIST 636 Race in Modern History II (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001593
Department Consent Required

HIST 651 Historians and Public Policy (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001602
Department Consent Required

HIST 653 Public History Interpretation (0.50) LECCourse ID: 001604
Department Consent Required

HIST 660 Transnational and Global History: Old Problems and New Directions (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 014737
This course examines transnational and global historical processes, focusing on temporal and geographic scales of analysis outside of traditional national histories, and promotes linking the local and the global. It looks at global forces influencing particular societies and encourages students to place themselves outside conventional local, regional, and national boundaries, and will critically consider a number of the metanarratives that have informed and continue to inform historiography, particularly idea such as modernity, progress, and the ongoing preoccupation with the 'rise of the west'. Given these questions, and the almost endless scope of a course that purports to take the world as its focal point, weekly seminars will begin with a discussion of the possibilities offered by as well as the limits to transnational/global/world history, the various interpretative frameworks in use and their proponents as well as the challenges that transnational/global/world history poses. We will then focus on particular case studies or themes so as to promote discussion that is as much historiographical as it is historical. Such themes/case studies may include: feminism and imperialism, famine and climate change, disease and ecology, military technology and governmentally, global trade and the rise of consumer society(s), colonial knowledge and shifting ideas of race.
Department Consent Required

HIST 691A Directed Studies (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 001615
Department Consent Required
1 Global Intimacies

HIST 691B Directed Studies (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 001616
Department Consent Required
1 Knowledge Mobilisation
2 Medieval History
3 Post-1945 European History
4 US History
5 Performing Indigenous History

HIST 691C Directed Studies (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 001617
Department Consent Required

HIST 700s


HIST 701 Major Field Oral Qualifying Examination (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 009427
Department Consent Required

HIST 704 Major Field Written Qualifying Examination (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 001627
Department Consent Required

HIST 705 First Minor Area of Concentration (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 001630
Department Consent Required

HIST 706 Second Minor Area of Concentration (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 001631
Department Consent Required

HIST 710 Canadian History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 009428
Department Consent Required

HIST 712 Scottish History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010523

HIST 714 Early Modern European History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010525
Department Consent Required

HIST 715 Modern European History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010526
Department Consent Required

HIST 719 War and Society Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 012972
This field will attract those who are interested in the impact of military conflict, in conventional and non-conventional forms, on civil society. It will focus in particular on the two World Wars and the "small wars" that developed in the last part of the twentieth century, and be flexible enough to include a range of related topics across time and place that reflect the interests of faculty and students.
Department Consent Required

HIST 725 Cold War Era History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013809
Major field seminars meet biweekly throughout the Fall and Winter terms for discussion of a reading list of 50 books selected by the instructor. During the subsequent Spring term major field participants read a further 50 books selected by the instructor in consultation with each participant's supervisor.
Department Consent Required

HIST 726 Medieval History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013810
Major field seminars meet biweekly throughout the Fall and Winter terms for discussion of a reading list of 50 books selected by the instructor. During the subsequent Spring term major field participants read a further 50 books selected by the instructor in consultation with each participant's supervisor.
Department Consent Required

HIST 727 World History Major Field (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013811
Major field seminars meet biweekly throughout the Fall and Winter terms for discussion of a reading list of 50 books selected by the instructor. During the subsequent Spring term major field participants read a further 50 books selected by the instructor in consultation with each participant's supervisor.
Department Consent Required

HIST 759 War and Society Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013079

HIST 760 Canadian History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001638
Department Consent Required

HIST 761 British History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001639
Department Consent Required

HIST 762 Scottish History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010529
Department Consent Required

HIST 763 Community Studies Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001640
Department Consent Required

HIST 764 Early Modern European History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010530
Department Consent Required

HIST 765 Modern European History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010531
Department Consent Required

HIST 766 Gender, Women and Family Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001641
Department Consent Required

HIST 767 Race, Class, Imperialism and Slavery Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010532
Department Consent Required

HIST 768 United States Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001642
Department Consent Required

HIST 769 International Relations Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 010268
Department Consent Required

HIST 770 Science, Medicine and Technology Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001643
Department Consent Required

HIST 771 Minor Area of Concentration (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 001644
This minor area is arranged between the student and a professor, and falls outside of those other minor areas enumerated in the calendar. The participants will provide the department and the Graduate Studies Office with a course name, which will appear on the student's transcript, in order to more specifically identify the minor area
Department Consent Required

HIST 775 Cold War Era History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013812
Minor area seminars meet biweekly throughout the Fall and Winter terms for discussion of a reading list of 50 books selected by the instructor.
Department Consent Required

HIST 776 Medieval History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013813
Minor area seminars meet bi-weekly throughout the Fall and Winter terms for discussion of a reading list of 50 books selected by the instructor.
Department Consent Required

HIST 777 World History Minor Area Seminar (1.00) SEMCourse ID: 013814
Minor area seminars meet biweekly throughout the Fall and Winter terms for discussion of a reading list of 50 books selected by the instructor.
Department Consent Required