HIS History CoursesHUM199Y1
Undergraduate seminar that focuses on specific ideas, questions, phenomena or controversies, taught by a regular Faculty member deeply engaged in the discipline. Open only to newly admitted first year students. It may serve as a distribution requirement course; see page 44. HIS103Y1
An analysis of the development of the international system, from 1648 to 1945, which highlights the role of war as an instrument of national policy, as a determinant of the system of states and as a threat to international society. HIS104Y1
The events since 1600, the consequences of which continue to resonate through primary documents, historical additional reconstructions, students are exposed to the processes by which the past is given meaning. Students are encouraged to be aware of the impact of events and be sensitive to the inter-connectedness of the past. HIS106Y1
North and South America and the Caribbean from Columbus to the American Revolution: aboriginal cultures, European exploration, conquest and settlement, the enslavement of Africans, the ecological impact of colonization. HIS107Y1
This course examines how various histories of East Asia can be written. Topics as varied as Chinese uses of New World silver in the 17th century, the shifting fortunes of Korean shamanism, and the Tokyo War Crime Trials are used to ask questions about Eurocentrism. HIS109Y1
The shape of traditional society; the forces at work on the social, political, economic, cultural and intellectual structures of Western Europe since the high Middle Ages: the structure of Traditional Society; the First Period of Challenges, 1350-1650; the Second Period of Challenges, 1650-1815; Confidence, Stability and Progress, 1815-1914; the Collapse of the Old Order and the Condition of Modern Europe, 1914-1945. JHP200H1
This course is intended to make students better acquainted with some key political ideas and to see how these ideas have been applied and misapplied in the real world of politics. Political arguments and techniques of political persuasion are assessed. JHP204Y1
The history of Ukraine from earliest times to the present. Economic, political, and cultural movements; Kievan Rus, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Cossack state, national revival, twentieth century statehood, and unification. HIS206Y1
Jewish history from the rise of Islam until the 17th century: demography, self-government, messianic movements, and economic activity. Introduction to modern historiography. HIS208Y1
A survey of Jewish history in Europe and North America since 1648: the origins of Jewish modernity; emancipation; the Jewish Enlightenment; Reform Judaism; anti-semitism and Jewish responses; Zionism; the decline of East European Jewry and the rise of North American Jewry; the Holocaust. HIS220Y1
Economic, political, religious, and educational ideas and institutions of the Middle Ages, from the late Roman period to the fifteenth century. HIS232Y1
The nature of European imperialism; expansion and development of the British Empire; Imperial strategy; the impact of war and nationalism; thoughts on the Commonwealth. HIS238H1
An introduction to the history of early modern England with reference to politics, religion and social structure. HIS239H1
An introduction to the history of modern England with emphasis on the search for identity with reference to the nation, the crown, class, gender, age, political parties, race and ethnicity. HIS241H1
An introduction to modern European history from Napoleon to the outbreak of World War I. Important political, economic, social, and intellectual changes in France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy, and other countries are discussed: revolution of 1848, Italian and German unification, racism and imperialism, the evolution of science, art, and culture, labour protest, and the coming of war. HIS242H1
The evolution of European politics, culture, and society from 1914: the two world wars, Fascism and Nazism, the post-1945 reconstruction and the movement towards European integration. HIS243H1
The political, social, economic, and intellectual history of continental Europe. The Renaissance, the Reformation, Counter-reformation, growth of the territorial monarchies, the religious wars. HIS244H1
The political, social, economic, and intellectual history of continental Europe. Development of royal absolutism, social change and the crisis of the ancient regime, the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, the Napoleonic era. HIS245Y1
An introductory survey tracing womens participation in the political, economic, intellectual, and social history of Europe from the High Middle Ages to the Twentieth Century. HIS249Y1
This course provides a general overview of the ABC relationship over the course of the 20th century. Topics such as World War I, The Battle of the League of Nations, interwar diplomacy, reactions to fascism in the 1930s, World War II, the origins of the Cold War, atomic diplomacy, jultilateral trade, Korea and Vietnam, detente, and the end of the Cold War are dealt with. HIS250Y1
A survey or Russian history from Rus to the present. Themes include: origins of Russian history, influence of Orthodox Christianity, establishment of autocracy and serfdom, Westernization, rise of a Russian intelligentsia, emancipation, nationality question, modernization, women question, revolutionary movements, Russian revolutions, the rise and fall of the Soviet Union. HIS251Y1
The Polish, Czech, and Hungarian background; the Balkans in the late medieval and early modern periods. Renaissance, Reformation and Counter-reformation, decline and national awakening to the beginning of the 19th century. Partitioned Poland, nationalism in the 19th century; World War I, Peace Settlement, interwar years and the Communist period. HIS263Y1
An introductory survey with extra focus on major themes and problems. Designed particularly for students who may wish to do further work in history or Canadian Studies. HIS271Y1
A survey of the economic, social, cultural, and political history of the United States from the colonial era to present times. HIS280Y1
A broad overview of the history of China from earliest times to the present. The emphasis is on how the meaning of China and the Chinese people has changed through history. HIS281Y1
Political, military, social, economic, and intellectual history of Japan from beginning of Tokugawa period (1603) to the present. Emphasis on the long term modernization and democratization of Japan, and passage through imperialism and militarism to peace. HIS282Y1
An introductory survey of Indian history from its sources in the archeological remains of Harappa and Mohenjo Daro to the present. HIS291Y1
The evolution of Spanish and Portuguese America from pre-Columbian civilizations to the wars of independence. HIS292Y1
A survey of Latin American history from the wars of independence to the present day. HIS294Y1
An exploration of changes in the structure of Caribbean society beginning in 1492, including European contact, the conquest of native peoples, the emergence of large plantations, the impact of slavery, patterns of resistance and revolt and the changes brought about by emancipation. HIS295Y1
Historical development of African peoples through the partition of Africa. Population movement, the development of trade and technology, the growth of kingdoms and empires, Islam, the slave trade, increasing impact of the industrial West. HIS299Y1
HIS301Y1
This course treats the political, social, and religious history of Spain and its empire ca.1450-1714, including the history of colonial Latin America. HIS303Y1
The course treats contact and conflict between Christians, Muslims, and Jews in the premodern Mediterranean world. Within the framework of broad political and economic developments, the course explores a range of topics, including holy war, slavery, religious polemics, colonialism, the commerce in goods and ideas, and ethnic relations HIS304Y1
Course emphasizes the interaction of Christians, Muslims, and Jews, and the cultural and political distinctiveness of Castile and Aragon in the development of state, society, and culture in medieval Spain. It also treats the conquest and colonization of Spanish America in light of medieval developments. HIS305H1
This course examines the connections between popular culture and politics in the modern Caribbean. Aspects of popular culture such as sport, religion, and social constructions of gender will be discussed. The impact of post-war migration, race and racial nationalism and the upheavals of the 1960s on popular culture in the Caribbean will also be themes. HIS306Y1
(formerly HIS306H1) 52L HIS310Y1
The political, intellectual, and social history of Italy from the French Revolution to the establishment of the Republic. Topics include the old regime, the revolution of 1848, unification, the role of the church, Fascism, and World War II. HIS311Y1
Canadian international affairs in a broader context. Anglo-American as well as Canadian-American relations; the European background to questions such as the League of Nations, appeasement and rearmament, which directly affected Canada without this country being consulted. HIS312H1
The peopling of Canada by immigrant groups from the 1660s tot he 1970s. Immigration and multiculturalism policies; migration and settlement; ethnic communities; relations with the host society. HIS313Y1
Canadian labour history from political action to collective bargaining in the period from Confederation to the present. HIS314Y1
A general survey tracing the political, social, and cultural development of a distinct society in Quebec and the rise of self-conscious French-speaking communities elsewhere in Canada. HIS316H1
The rise of advertising as an economic, moral, and cultural force in the 19th and 20th centuries. Attention to advertising as a form of communication, the role of the mass media, stereotyping and the culture of consumption. Majority of course material deals with the experiences of the United States and Canada, focusing on the period after 1945. HIS317Y1
Political, social, and international developments in Germany from 1815 to unification in 1990. A number of films are featured. Topics include early German nationalism, the 1848 revolution, Bismarcks wars of unification, the path to war in 1914, hyper-inflation, Weimar culture, the Nazi seizure of power, the Final Solution, and the two Germanies in the post-war era. HIS318Y1
A survey of major themes in the history of change in the Canadian environment from the 15th century to the present which include exploration, resource exploitation, settlement, industrialism, conservation and modern ecology. HIS319H1
The development of foreign policy in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa from the late 19th to the end of the 20th century in comparative perspective. Focus is on the international aspect of nation-building and nationalism, tracing the emergence of the respective national identities as they moved beyond their British Empire colonial status to become fully independent states. HIS320Y1
Empire and reconstruction of society in the early Middle Ages, with emphasis on the Christian church, literate culture, and social institutions. The focus is Western Europe, but Islam and the Byzantine Empire are not disregarded. HIS321H1
An examination of the emergence of a mature industrial society in the United States from the end of reconstruction to the 1907 financial panic, focusing on the impact of the newly emergent industrial organization on labour, farmers, and consumers and the new political system. HIS322Y1
Chronological survey of the history of medieval Europe from 1100 to approximately 1450. The three main topics are: the formation of the modern states, the impact of urban development, and the evolution of spirituality. HIS323Y1
Reflecting on the life cycle and rites of passage in the medieval period gives the opportunity to study the daily lives of peasants, nobles, monks, nuns, and burghers, and to observe from an interesting angle the differences between female and male life experiences. HIS325H1
The history of Imperial Russia from Peter I to 1917. The development of its political institutions, social and economic structures, cultural and intellectual values. Emphasis on the relations of society and the state and among the various social groups of the Empire. HIS328Y1
An examination of political, social and economic developments in Chinese history from 1800 to the present day. Main topics are the decline of the Imperial order and the challenge of Western imperialism; the Republican period; the rise of the Communist movement; the Peoples Republic of China. HIS331Y1
A survey of the history of the Baltic region from the prehistoric times to the present day. Analysis of the political and social history of the Baltic countries (Estonia, Latvia, Lithunia) in Eastern and Northern European context, Christianization and Crusades; Hanseatic trade; imperial policies and feudal realities; National Awakening; emergence of independence; communist era and the Baltic Revolution. HIS332H1
(formerly HIS332Y1) 26L HIS333Y1
An examination of the impact of 20th-century Latin American revolutions on the lives of their participants. HIS334Y1
The diplomatic, economic and military activities of Russia, Germany, Austria, France, Great Britain and the U.S. vis a vis Central Europe. Russian and German expansion, partitions of Poland, disintegration of the Ottoman Empire, the Napoleonic and World Wars, political systems created in Vienna, Versailles and Yalta, the Cold War and the disintegration of the Soviet outer empire. HIS337Y1
Major themes in late seventeenth and eighteenth century British history with a thematic focus on intellectual, cultural and social developments. Topics include the English urban renaissance, the birth of a consumer society, the Scottish Enlightenment and the early stages of the British industrialisation. HIS338Y1
German state policy towards the Jews in the context of racist ideology, bureaucratic structures, and varying conditions in German-occupied Europe. Second Term considers responses of Jews, European populations and governments, the Allies, churches, and political movements. HIS339Y1
Major aspects of English history from the end of the 18th century to the death of Queen Victoria: the Industrial Revolution, the rise of parliamentary democracy, the role of social class, the development of modern cities, the emergence of the modern state, Victorian religion, the Victorian family, the role of aristocracy in an industrialized society. HIS341Y1
The comparative intellectual, cultural and social history of western Europe with particular focus on France, England, Scotland and Germany. Examines the impact of Enlightenment ideas on European attitudes to race, gender, politics, economics and religion through the study of the press, the salons, voluntary bodies and consumer culture. HIS342Y1
The great figures and movements in modern intellectual history viewed in their historical context: Condorcet, de Maistre, Comte, Durkheim, Kant, Hegel, Ranke, Weber, Nietzsche, Darwin, Freud, etc. HIS343Y1
An introduction to the historical origins and evolution of modern intelligence services. Topics to be studied include: intelligence in wartime; technological change; intelligence failures; covert operations; counter-espionage; the future of spying. The impact of the popular culture, both in fiction and film is also examined. HIS344Y1
The course, configuration and crises of the organized international system in Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. The roles of individuals, institutions and ideas in the maintenance of, and breakdowns in, international peace and security. HIS346Y1
Survey of ideas behind major problems of Japanese history since 1600. Confucianism and National Studies in the Tokugawa period, 19th century westernization, 20th century nationalistic reaction, democratic and secular thought since 1945. HIS347H1
The history of Chinese foreign relations from 1842 to the present day, with emphasis on the foreign relations of the Peoples Republic since 1949. Topics include: imperialism in China, Sino-Soviet relations; the Deng era rapprochement with the West; contemporary issues such as Hong Kong, Taiwan, regional security. HIS348H1
Changing concepts of state authority, attitudes toward religion, emigration, the study of popular culture, regional differentiation and economies, social structure and politics, nationalism. HIS349Y1
Political, social, economic, and cultural history of France. Stress is placed on modern historiographical trends. HIS350Y1
How childrearing has altered across the ages, whether the couple is held together by romance or property, and how the family is connected to the outside community. Changes in the size of families, in the composition of the household, and in the roles of women as mothers and wives. Material is included from both North America and Europe, and ranges from the 17th century to the present. HIS351Y1
A survey of the history of Twentieth-Century Russia. The social, economic, and political development of Twentieth-Century Russia, with an emphasis on the Russian Revolution and Stalinism. Stress is placed on modern historiographical issues. HIS352H1
This course addresses issues of gender and Jewish culture from a historical perspective. Covering Jewish societies from early modern Europe to contemporary America, we examine womens and mens positions in religious practice and Jewish life. Topics include: the Jewish family, the synagogue, conversion, and Jewish womens religious experiences. HIS353Y1
Social and political history of Poland from the 10th to the 20th century. Analysis of the political history in a broader, central European context; consequences of Christianization of medieval Poland and the Polish-Lithuanian union; Sarmatian culture, Antemurale, Polish Messianism and Cordon sanitaire. HIS354Y1
(formerly HIS399H1, 399Y1) 52L HIS355H1
Crime and criminal justice in England in the industrial age; the relationship of crime, society, and economy. HIS356Y1
Origins of Jewish nationalism in 19th-century Europe; creation of the Zionist political movement; varieties of Zionist ideology; Zionist diplomatic and state-building activity; conflict with the Palestinian Arabs; the establishment of the state and its development since 1948. HIS357Y1
(formerly HIS357H1) 52L HIS358H1
Survey of the development of Ruperts Land and the Pacific Northwest to 1885. The focus is on aboriginal-white relations, the growth of fur trade society, the beginnings of settlement and the regions entry into Confederation. HIS359H1
The role of nationalism, race and ethnicity, class conflict and ideologies in the recent development of Caribbean societies; Europes replacement by the United States as the dominant imperial power in the Caribbean; how this mixture of regional and international pressures has led to widely differing political systems and traditions. HIS361Y1
An examination of cultural, political and economic themes in Canadas history since 1900. HIS363H1
A lecture course which deals thematically with gender issues in Canadian history (including familial roles, changing patterns of work and employment, and participation in the public sphere). HIS364H1
Selected topics in the history of modern India: the cultural, political and economic impact of the British Raj; nationalism, communalism, regional differentiation; social structure and change, cultural values and problems of identity; party structure and political change. HIS365H1
The making of the Ontario community from the time of the initial European contacts with the First Peoples to Confederation in 1867. Exploration of race relations; the Ontario origins of Canadas Conservative and Liberal parties; ethnic clashes and accommodations; imperial policies vs. colonial realities; womens role on the pioneer farm; and the growth of the education system. HIS367H1
The apparatus, the character, and the significance of an increasing volume of images, in particular of the body, since 1800 in Europe and North America. Introduction to concerns of cultural history: power and knowledge; self and identity; gender and sexuality; class, age, and race; and the pursuit of pleasure. HIS369Y1
(formerly HIS369H1) 52L HIS370H1
A survey of the economic, social, political, and cultural history of black America from Reconstruction until recent times. Among the central issues dealt with are: segregation and disfranchisement; the Great Migration; the rise of the ghetto; the Civil Rights Movement; emergence of an underclass. HIS371H1
Examines the evolution of 17th- and 18th-century American society as Europeans strove to conquer a new environment and establish communities. As we examine the development of regional economies, race, gender, labor systems, production and consumption, we begin to understand the origins of the American society as we know it today. HIS372Y1
A survey and analysis of the political, economic, and social institutions and foreign policy commitments of the United States from 1890-1992. HIS374H1
This course looks at the early origins of American consumerism. It begins with 17th-century England and the economic imperatives within the Atlantic World, then traces the changing attitudes of 18th-century Americans towards consumer goods, fashion and style that led to the mass consumption of the 19th century. HIS375Y1
An examination of popular culture and its relationship to society during the first eighty years of the 20th century. By examining popular music, literature, radio, movies, sports, television, and other leisure activities, the course analyzes the manner by which groups such as blacks, ethnics, young people, and women used new means of communication to create a new popular culture in America. HIS377Y1
A survey and analysis of the involvement of the United States in world affairs from the 1890s to the 1980s. HIS378H1
A survey of one of the most turbulent decades in American history. Examines the political, social, economic and cultural revolutions that transformed the face of America. HIS379H1
Examines the social, cultural, political and economic features of the American colonies and analyses the forces leading to Revolution and Independence. The impact of the Revolution on domestic and public life of both men and women, and on African-American and aboriginal peoples are explored. HIS380Y1
The political, social, and economic history of China from the period of political and economic reorganization in the Song dynasty to the final glory of the imperial order down to the end of the 18th century and its decay in the 19th. HIS381H1
Covers the genesis and growth of Indian classical civilization, Indus Valley, Vedic age, Buddhist age, mauryas, and Gupta empire. The focus is on ancient Indian political, social, and economic ideas and institutions. HIS382H1
Hindu and Muslim historiography; military organization; the city; aristocracy and court life, religious syncretism, militant sects (Sikhism). HIS383H1
(formerly HIS383Y1) 26L HIS384H1
Early Canadian history (ca. 1500-1800), emphasizing colonization, Native peoples of Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes; establishment of French and British colonies; interaction of natives and European colonizers. HIS385H1
A study of political, economic, and social change in the British colony of Hong Kong from 1842 until the present day. HIS386Y1
Social and political history of Muslims of South Asia since A.D. 712. The growth of Muslim community, conversion, social stratification, and social structure; mediaeval Muslim legacy in administration, art, literature, and religion. Muslim identity, nationalism, and Islamic modernism as reflected in the writings of intellectuals such as Sayyid Ahmad Khan, Iqbal, Jinnah, Abul-Kalam Azad, Mawdudi, and Parwiz. HIS387H1
The economic, political and social history of Ontario from the creation of the province in 1867 to the demise of the Peterson government in 1990. Special attention is paid to federal/provincial relations; northern development; political leadership; and immigrant life. HIS388H1
A study of French society, politics and culture from the Paris Commune to the 1990s. Special attention is paid to watersheds like the Dreyfus Affair and the Vichy regime, to issues of regionalism/nationalism, cultural pluralism, womens rights, intellectual and cultural trends, and decolonization. HIS389H1
In-depth examination of historical issues. Content in any given year depends on instructor. See Undergraduate Handbook or History website for more details. HIS393H1
An examination of the role of slavery in the development of the American South from the early colonial period through the Civil War. Topics include: the origins of slavery, the emergence of a plantation economy, the rise of a slaveholding elite, the structure of the slave community, and the origins of the war. HIS394H1
The history of South Asian migration with particular emphasis on 20th-century immigration to North America and the establishment of South Asian Diaspora Society in Canada: push and pull factors, transnationality, culture transfer, sojourning and settling, race, class gender issues, adaptation and defence of tradition. HIS395Y1
An in-depth examination of historical issues. Content in any given year depends on instructor. See Undergraduate Handbook. HIS396Y1
The course examines the major economic and political transitions that have occured in Africa form the abolition of the trans-Atlantic slave trade to the era of structural development. The interaction between the internal dynamics of African history and external forces is examined and different regions of Africa compared. HIS398H0/399Y0
HIS400Y1
TBA HIS401Y1
This course covers international relations from World War II to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Topics include the breakdown of the wartime alliance, Soviet predominance in eastern Europe, the Western response, NATO, atomic weaponry. HIS403H1
The course focuses on aspects of Jewish-Christian relations ca.300-1600, such as royal and ecclesiastical Jewish policies; religious polemics; intellectual collaboration; social and economic interaction; anti-Judaism and religious violence. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS404H1
This seminar interdisciplinary and studies past environmental change in North America. Topics include: theory and historiography; the pre-European environment; contact; resource development; settlement, industrial urban environments; ideas about nature in religion, literature and North American culture; conservation and the modern environmental movement. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS405Y1
A course on Canadian external relations since 1945. Topics include Canada and the Cold War, the Korean War, the Suez crisis and the war in Vietnam, membership in international organizations, and bilateral relations with other countries. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS406Y1
A critical exploration of the cultural work of "race" in scientific constructions of "woman" with a concentration on 20th Century America. Topics include the early history of gynecology, engenics, reproductive politics, treatment of cancer, and the rise of both genetic and cultural theories of race and variability. HIS407H1
Historiographical controversies and the latest empirical findings concerning social conflict and political mobilization under Bismarck and Wilhelm II. Problems raised by competing schools of interpretation include definitions of the authoritarian state, bourgeois hegemony, localism and regionalism, radical nationalism, workers culture, and gender relations. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS408Y1
Relations between blacks and whites in the United States from the colonial period to recent times with emphasis on slavery. HIS409H1
Problems raised by the coexistence of different national, linguistic and cultural groups: bilingualism; cultural diversity vs. national unity; relations between nationality and identity, religion and the state, etc. Differences between French and English-Canadian views and their impact on French-English relations and those with cultural/ethnic minorities. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS410H1
Social and cultural approaches to understanding spectacles, crowd behaviour, and parades in the Canadian past, 1660s - 1980s. HIS411Y1
This seminar explores topics in the history of modern European colonialism. These include conquest and resistance, identities, forms of colonial power, imperial culture and ideology. By examining the relationship between Europe and the rest of the world, the course sheds light on a wide range of fields, both geographically and thematically. HIS412Y1
Reading of Balthasar Russows Chronicle of the Province of Livonia (1584) and discussion of Danish, Swedish, German, Polish and Russian apsirations for hegemony in the Baltic Sea region. Political and social history of the Livonian Wars (1558-1583); everyday life history of the Baltic people in Early Modern Eastern and Northern European context. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS413H1
A study of critical moments and problems in the French-English relationship with emphasis on the period since Confederation. HIS414Y1
(formerly HIS414H1) 52S HIS418H1
Students explore the changing roles of women of various social classes in Imperial Russian history through an examination of their domestic and public lives. Themes include: the importance of 18th century female rule, the women question, reform of family and property law, female radicalism and impact of industrialization. HIS419Y1
The evolution of the tastes, patterns of consumption, and leisure products which together defined the affluent lifestyle that matured in the postwar era. Attention to the effects of technology; gender stereotypes; how people used the mass media; the genres of advertising, mass entertainment, and sports; fads, fashions, and heroes. Focus on the period after 1945. JHP419Y1
Economics, history, and political science applied to relations with the communist world, Europe, francophonie; food, resources, energy; trade, monetary policy, immigration, the new international economic order; human rights, law of the sea, nuclear proliferation, United Nations participation. (Given by the Departments of Economics, History, and Political Science) TRN420Y1
Evaluation of the nature of foreign policy negotiation and decision-making from the perspective of the practitioner. Case studies selected from major episodes in the practice of diplomacy after 1945. Particular attention paid to the evolution and impact of Canadian institutions and the role of personalities. (Given by the Departments of History and Political Science) HIS421H1
(formerly HIS421Y1) 52S HIS422H1
A comparative examination of the politics and culture of collaboration in British India, Japanese-occupied China, and Vichy France. HIS423H1
(formerly HIS423Y1) 26S HIS424Y1
This seminar explores the social function and meaning of violence in medieval society, and the development of rituals and institutions to control violence. Among the topics treated: Germanic blood feud, aristocratic violence and chivalry, criminal justice systems, violence against minorities, and violence and gender. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS425H1
A look at some basic problems of historical study, approached by means of an analysis of the work of a number of historians and philosophers of history, representing different schools of thought and time periods from ancient times to the present. HIS426H1
An analysis of the writings of historians in order to understand their treatment of subject matter, methods, modes of thought, discourse, and explanatory styles. The historians we examine come mostly from 20th-century North America and Europe, along with a few from other cultures and earlier times. HIS427H1
The Golden Legend or Readings on the Saints, compiled by Jacobus de Voragine C. 1260, serves as the basis for a seminar on the relation of history and legend as understood in the High Middle Ages. HIS428H1
The first goal of this seminar is to help students read the sources with a more critical eye, especially narrative sources (Lives of Saints) and normative sources (rules and customaries). The second goal is to study the evolution of the monastic ideal from its origin to the 12th century. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS429Y1
Examines the historiography, theories and trappings of fascist movements and regimes. Special attention is afforded to a number of case studies. Regional focuses include: Germany, France, Italy and Eastern Europe. The course deciphers the political, cultural and social dimensions of fascism through definitions and origins of fascism; fascism and xenophobia; fascism and gender; fascism and empire; and fascist aesthetics and literature. HIS430Y1
Readings and discussions in social and cultural historians dealing with dissident sexualities in the Christian West from the 16th century to the present. HIS431H1
The course looks at the issues of first-wave feminism by comparing experiences of women in Canada, the United States and Britain. HIS432H1
The students define together with the professor eight different topics (e.g. relics, masculinity, leprosy, clothes, recluses, peasants houses, gynecology and the peace of God). Each topic is approached through a class discussion, on the basis of a common corpus of secondary sources, plus presentations by the students. HIS433H1
To explore the history of Polish Jews from the Partitions of Poland to the present time, concentrating on the 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries: situation of Polish Jews in Galicia; Congress Kingdom of Poland; Prussian-occupied Poland before 1914; during World War II; and post-war Poland. Focus on an analysis of primary sources. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS434Y1
The origin of Rus, international trade, the impact of nomadic peoples, the introduction of Christianity, the economic system an the problem of feudalism, the political structure and the dilemma of princely succession; literature and architecture; the displacement of political power centres and depopulation, the preservation of the Kievan heritage. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS436Y1
The impact of the Cold War on life in the West through a study of selected popular culture themes and modes of production that helped shape the era. Four themes include "Living with the Bomb," "Living with the National Security State," "Living with Spies," and "Women Living with the Cold War." (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS437H1
A seminar in which students explore a few of the important issues arising from the history and historiography of Stuart England. Students locate the political narrative in its social and economic context and as a product of subsequent historiographical development. HIS438H1
Focusing on the institution of the inquisition, this seminar explores the response of ecclesiastical and secular authorities to religious heterodoxy. Among the groups prosecuted by the inquisition discussed: Cathar heretics in France, crypto-Jews, and crypto-Muslims in Spain, and witches in Italy. HIS439H1
A seminar on the history of women in Russia and the Soviet Union from the reform era to the present. The purpose is to assess the impact of socio-economic structures, ideology, and political developments on the changing lives of women in Russia/USSR. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS442Y1
Analyzes the religious, social and psychological roots of antisemitism and traces its development in Europe from the Middle Ages through the early twentieth century. The course compares and contrasts antisemitism and other forms of prejudice and examines Jewish-Gentile relations in terms of minority-majority relations throughout the continent. HIS443H1
Developments in popular/lay/local religion as expressed in a variety of cultural, political, and social forms from 1400-1600; the relation of these forms to both Catholic and Protestant institutional churches. Impact of Renaissance humanism on notions of kinship, order, community, perfection. HIS444H1
An examination of American history from the beginning of European settlement in the 17th century until the industrial revolution at the beginning of the 19th century. Emphasis will be on the social, cultural and economic history, including such topics as cultural contact, labor, material culture, gender, race, urbanization and industrialization. HIS445H1
What is a nation? Are nations ancient or modern, unchanging or malleable? Do nations create states, or does the state create the nation? This course seeks to answer these questions through an examination of nationalism, primarily in Europe, from the 1700s through the present. HIS446H1
The course examines the relationship between gender and the experience of slavery and emancipating several Atlantic world societies from the 17th-19th centuries. Areas to be covered are the Caribbean, Brazil, the U.S. South, West and South Africa and Western Europe. HIS447Y1
This course focuses on selected issues and topics in American social and cultural history during the past 100 years. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS448Y1
Studies in the culture and controls of rural and urban societies during the Enlightenment with special emphasis on southern Europe. HIS449Y1
The role of the intelligentsia in East European national revivals; the ethnographic and literary revival; the language question; the press and cultural organizations; education; religion; and political movements. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS450Y1
History of Soviet cinema from the 1920s to the present. Emphasis on theorist-filmmakers of the Soviet school of montage, the musical comedy of the Stalin era, Cold War cinema, and the relation between documentary and fiction film and its development from the 1920s to the late Soviet period. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS453H1
How the peoples of Eastern Europe tried to organize their domestic affairs, and in what international context they sought to operate, in order to survive as national entities and later to preserve their newly-won independence and territorial integrity. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) JHP454Y1
World War I and the Russian Revolution: the Ukrainian independence movement; the Soviet Ukraine and west Ukrainian lands during the interwar period; World War II and the German occupation; the Soviet Ukraine before and after the death of Stalin. Socio-economic, cultural, and political developments. (Given by the Departments of History and Political Science) (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS455H1
From the Great Reforms to the Stalinist purges. Traditions and the dynamics of peasant (and landlord) society; pressures of industrialization and urbanization; revolutionary intelligentsia and its relation to the worker and peasant masses; the state bureaucracys efforts to induce and regulate social development. Concentration on the experiences of workers and peasants. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS456Y1
An examination of black slavery in Latin America, with emphasis on the lives of the slaves, from the conquest of America to abolition in the 19th century. HIS457Y1
An examination of how the history of 19th and 20th century Sub-Saharan Africa has often been pathologized between the normative extremes of tradition and modernity. The primary aim is to understand the subtle stratagems people in different parts of Africa adopted to negotiate their positions within the wider world. Cultural and social themes are stressed, but not to the exclusion of economic and political considerations. HIS458Y1
Tsarist and Soviet foreign relations from the Crimean War to the present with emphasis on continuity and change. The seminar examines major themes in Russian and Soviet foreign policy behaviour on the basis of assigned readings. HIS459H1
Challenges to the hegemony of biomedical science constantly arise and include social and reform movements such as alternative medicine (e.g. homeopathy, Thomsonianism, chiropractic); animal rights (anti-vivisectionism); and feminism. This course explores these and other challenges to identify their origins, similarities, and differences in 19th- and 20th-century North America and Britain. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS460H1
Primary research on selected topics in the development of health care in Canada. HIS461H1
The 20th century has been an age of experiments for Poland. Universal, general problems of democracy, authoritarianism, totalitarianism, communism, socialism, free market and centrally planned economies, are examined, as are the ongoing adjustments made by the Polish people. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS462H1
A seminar exploring the evolution of Canadian political culture, with emphasis on the political ideas and leadership of the Prime Ministers. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS463H1
An introduction to the principal topics in the development of health care in Canada, including therapies, medical research, the organization of the medical profession, hospitals and paramedical treatment, and the role of the state. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS464Y1
The prairie West since the mid-19th century. The emergence of a distinctive region and its place in Canadian development. HIS465Y1
Ideas behind the transformation from traditional institutions to constitutional democracy; the rise and fall of imperialism and militarism; Japanese identity and Japans place in the world. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS466H1
Selected topics in a specific period of Canadian history. Content in any given year depends on instructor. Please see Departmental Handbook for complete description. HIS468H1
The emphasis in this course is on Native peoples, settlement issues and settler society; economic development; women; reform movements; other distinctive aspects of the history of the Maritime region and Newfoundland. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS469H1
This course examines the interaction between religion and culture in Canada from colonial times to the present with emphasis on primary documents. HIS471H1
This course considers the origins and evolution of U.S. experiences with globalization: attention is paid to economic, technological, cultural, and institutional developments during the past century. HIS472H1
(formerly HIS472Y1) 26S HIS473Y1
The course examines United States foreign policy as it relates to a number of major episodes in the international politics of East and South East Asia during the Cold War. Attention is paid to the role of other international actors. Topics include the Korean War and the Vietnam War HIS474H1
(formerly HIS474Y1) 26S HIS475H1
This course explores the origins, consolidation, and unmaking of segregationist social orders in South Africa and the American South. It examines the origins of racial inequality, the structural and socio-political roots of segregation, and the twin strategies of accommodation and resistance employed by black South Africans and African Americans. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS476Y1
The history of Black Americas seen through the eyes of some of the men and women who experienced it. Attention is given to slavery but emphasis is on the twentieth century. Students examine autobiographical works, novels, and film. HIS477Y1
Examination of the impact of industrialism on Victorian society and values. Concentration on Victorian social critics including Engels, Owen, Dickens and Morris and Victorian material culture especially the country house, the paraphernalia of gentility, the urban slum. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS478Y1
The extent to which the United States has been a melting pot, including migrations to and settlement patterns in America, concepts of nationality and race, and the processes of assimilation and acculturation. Blacks and Native Americans are also discussed, especially their nationalism and sense of common origin. HIS479Y1
An analysis of the political, social, and economic institutions and foreign policy commitments of the United States from 1941 to 1992. HIS481H1
The course deals with the historiographical presuppositions and the historical writings of Buddhists, Jains, Hindus and Muslims. The course examines original chronicles and historical biographies (in English translations) belonging to these four great religious traditions of India. HIS482Y1
A study of international relations in the crisis years between the two world wars. The course focuses on the varieties of history employed to understand the twenty years crisis. The nature of historical memory and historical sources are explored. Students will work with diplomatic documents from the period. HIS483Y1
This course treats various aspects of the social, economic, legal and political history of women. A specific topic and period are selected for intensive study each year. The primary focus is on western Europe, but with substantial reference to the comparative experience of women in North America and eastern Europe. HIS485H1
(formerly HIS485Y1) 26S HIS488Y1
The development of intelligence techniques and operations in wartime conditions; the role of espionage, cryptanalysis and deception in deciding the battles and campaigns of the Second World War. HIS489H1
Introduces students to some of the main issues in the history of psychiatry. Readings from the secondary historical literature are distributed and discussed in class, covering such topics as changes in the nature of psychotic illness, the psychoneuroses, disorders of the mind/body relationship, and the psychiatric diagnosis and the presentation of illness. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS490H1
Topics include caudillo politics in the 19th century, the spread of commercial agriculture, peasant and/or Indian revolts, the formation of the early labour movement and banditry (social and anti-social). Focus on Mexico, Peru, Cuba, and Brazil. (Joint undergraduate-graduate) HIS491Y1
(formerly HIS491H1) 52S HIS492Y1
Britains response to the French Revolution and revolutionary wars studied through selected topics in political theory, the history of popular movements, the experience of industrialization and foreign policy. HIS493H1
Issues of identity and difference in the meeting of Natives and Europeans during colonization of Canada. Eastern, Western and Arctic Canada, 16th- to early 19th-centuries. HIS494Y1
Slavery has often been used to define both kinship and citizenship in African history, just as slavery and citizenship have been seen as threats to kinship, and kinship and slavery have been seen as obstacles to citizenship. This course examines the relationship between these three topics in West African history. HIS495Y1
An in-depth examination of historical issues. Content in any given year depends on instructor. See Undergraduate Handbook or History website for more details. HIS496H1
An in-depth examination of historical issues. Content in any given year depends on instructor. See Undergraduate Handbook or History website for more details. HIS497Y1/498H1
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