21H.102 The Emergence of Modern America 1865-Present, Spring 2003
Author(s)
Faculty, History Department
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Alternative title
The Emergence of Modern America 1865-Present
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This subject studies the changing structure of American politics, economics, and society from the end of the Civil War to the present. We will consider secondary historical accounts and primary documents to examine some of the key issues in the development of modern America: industrialization and urbanization; U.S. emergence as a global power; ideas about rights and equality; and the changing structures of gender, class, and race. This subject also examines the multiple answers that Americans gave to the question of what it means to be an American in the modern age. As a communications intensive subject, students will be expected to engage intensively with the material through frequent oral and written exercises.
Date issued
2003-06Other identifiers
21H.102-Spring2003
Other identifiers
21H.102
IMSCP-MD5-7f21cec7e4cc5de5e6e09bfd0b46902b
Keywords
America, politics, economics, society, post-Civil War, industrialization, urbanization, global power, equality, gender, class, race
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