USC Catalogue 2018-2019 [ARCHIVED CATALOGUE]
History
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The Department of History offers courses in ancient, medieval and modern European history; in both North and Latin American history; in the history of Asia and in world history. Some of the department’s courses are chronological, some national or regional and some are thematic, with special strengths in gender, race and ethnicity, popular culture, medicine and urban history. The faculty is committed to continuous review and revision of the department curriculum, as student needs and professional emphases shift. Many departmental courses meet general education requirements and various programs for majors and non-majors are available. The department offers an honors program for qualified seniors. Honors programs are individually arranged through consultation with the honors director. Completion of an honors thesis is required. The Department of History offers the BA, a minor, and PhD in History; the BA in Law, History, and Culture; the BA in History and Social Science Education; the BA in Contemporary Latino and Latin American Studies, the minor in History, the minor in Resistance to Genocide and the minor in the History and Culture of Business.
Social Science Building 153
(213) 740-1657
FAX: (213) 740-6999
Email: history@dornsife.usc.edu
dornsife.usc.edu/hist
Chair: Karen Halttunen, PhD
Faculty
University Professor and Leo S. Bing Chair in English and American Literature and Professor of English, Art History, and History: Leo Braudy, PhD
University Professor: Jacob Soll, PhD
Gordon L. MacDonald Chair in History and Professor of History and East Asian Languages and Cultures: Joan Piggott, PhD
Shapell-Guerin Chair in Jewish Studies and Professor of History: Wolf Gruner, PhD
Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities, Linda and Harlan Martens Director of the Early Modern Studies Institute and Professor of History and Anthropology: Peter C. Mancall, PhD
Barbara Streisand Professor of Contemporary Gender Studies and Professor of History, Gender Studies and English: Alice Echols, PhD*
Myron and Marian Casden Directorship of the Casden Institute for the Study of Jewish Role in American Life and Professor of History: Steven Ross, PhD*
Professors: Lisa Bitel, PhD; William Deverell, PhD*; Philip J. Ethington, PhD; Richard W. Fox, PhD; Ariela Gross, PhD (Law); Karen Halttunen, PhD; Kyung Moon Hwang, PhD; Daniel Klerman, PhD (Law); Lon Kurashige, PhD; Paul Lerner, PhD*; Carolyn Malone, PhD (Art History); John Pollini, PhD (Art History); George J. Sanchez, PhD* (American Studies and Ethnicity); Vanessa Schwartz, PhD (Art History); Nayan Shah, PhD (American Studies and Ethnicity); Brett Sheehan, PhD*; David Sloane, PhD (Public Policy)
Associate Professors: Marjorie R. Becker, PhD; Bettine Birge, PhD (East Asian Languages and Cultures); Daniela Bleichmar, PhD (Art History); Christelle Fischer-Bovet, PhD (Classics); Jason Glenn, PhD; Joshua Goldstein, PhD; Sarah Gualtieri, PhD* (American Studies and Ethnicity); Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, PhD; Ramzi Rouighi, PhD (Middle East Studies); Francile Wilson, PhD (American Studies and Ethnicity)
Assistant Professors: Richard Antaramian, PhD; Maya Maskarienc, PhD; Ketaki Pant, PhD; Edgardo Perez Morales, PhD; Benjamin Uchiyama, PhD; Aro Velmet, PhD
Assistant Professor (Teaching): Lindsay O’Neill, PhD
Professor Emerita of History and John R. Hubbard Chair in British History Emerita: Judith Bennett, PhD*
Professor Emerita of History and John R. Hubbard Chair in British History Emerita: Cynthia Herrup, PhD
Professor Emerita and John R. Hubbard Chair Emerita in History: Carole Shammas, PhD
Emeritus Professors: Elinor A. Accampo, PhD; Lois W. Banner, PhD*; Gordon M. Berger, PhD; Roger Dingman, PhD; Charlotte Furth, PhD; Paul W. Knoll, PhD; Franklin D. Mitchell, PhD; D. Brendan Nagle, PhD; Edwin J. Perkins, PhD; Azade-Ayse Rorlich, PhD
Associate Professor Emeritus: Terry L. Seip, PhD*
*Recipient of university-wide or college teaching award.
Undergraduate Degrees
Advisement
The Department of History has one full-time staff adviser available to provide academic advisement, assist in the navigation of department and university requirements, review progress and future plans. Students interested in a major or minor in the department should contact the adviser to schedule a meeting. Faculty advisers are also available to offer guidance on pursuing the field of history both within and beyond USC.
Honors Program for History (BA)
The department offers a two-semester honors program, in which qualified students spend their first semester in an honors track in an upper-division seminar or take in their concentration. During the second semester, all honors students are required to take in which each completes a thesis project on a topic of his or her choosing under faculty direction. Contact the department honors director for further information. To graduate with honors, department majors must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 in their major course work and a B+ or higher in .
Honors Program for History and Social Science Education (BA)
The department offers a two-semester honors program, in which qualified students spend their first semester in an honors track in an upper-division seminar on in their concentration. During the second semester, all honors students are required to take in which each completes a thesis project on a topic of his or her choosing under faculty direction. Contact the department honors director for further information. To graduate with honors, department majors must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 in their major course work.
Honor Society
The department sponsors its own local chapter of Phi Alpha Theta, the national history honor society. Phi Alpha Theta provides opportunities for students to take their interest in history beyond the classroom and to cultivate their intellectual pursuits in a community setting.
Membership is open to history majors and other interested students with a 3.33 GPA in history courses and a 3.0 overall GPA. For more information contact the honors director.
Teaching Credential Requirements
Credential requirements in California and elsewhere are complex and changeable. Students interested in preparing for public school teaching should contact the Credentials Office, Rossier School of Education, and the undergraduate adviser, Department of History, for up-to-date information.
Interdisciplinary Minor in Early Modern Studies
This minor brings together the resources of the departments of English, History and Art History to study the literatures and cultures of Europe and the Americas from the late medieval period to 1800. For a complete listing of requirements, see .
Interdisciplinary Middle East Studies Minor
See the .
Interdisciplinary Race, Ethnicity and Politics Minor
See .
Interdisciplinary Russian Area Studies Minor
See .
Interdisciplinary Law and Society Minor
See .
Graduate Degrees
The graduate program in History offers a rigorous course of study that balances depth in particular fields with a broad, transnational, and interdisciplinary perspective. We train our students in historical methods, research, critical analysis of written and visual sources, historical writing, and historical pedagogy through intensive reading courses, seminars, and tutorials. This training culminates in the PhD dissertation, a significant scholarly and historiographical contribution to the study of a field.
Admission Requirements
Prerequisites
An applicant should have an undergraduate degree or an MA degree in history or a related discipline. Promising students trained in other fields will also be considered.
Criteria
All applicants must take the general test of the Graduate Record Examinations. The subject test in history is not required. In addition, applicants must submit at least three letters of recommendation from college-level instructors and a sample of written work from a college-level history, social science or humanities course. This material should be submitted to the director of the graduate program for the Department of History.
Procedure
For complete information on the doctoral program, prospective applicants should address inquiries to Graduate Admission, Department of History, SOS 153, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0034. Information on the programs is also available online at dornsife.usc.edu/hist/doctoral-program/.
Degree Requirements
These degrees are under the jurisdiction of the Graduate School. Refer to the section and section of this catalogue for general regulations. All courses applied toward the degrees must be courses accepted by the Graduate School.
Advisement
Students should seek advice on their program of studies from the Director of Graduate Studies, a professor in their major field of study and other members of their qualifying exam committee.
Bachelor’s Degree
Minor
Master’s Degree
Doctoral Degree
Other Courses
- • HIST 378m Introduction to Asian American History
- • HIST 379 Arabs in America
- • HIST 380 American Popular Culture
- • HIST 381 Cinema and History
- • HIST 382 The Middle East, 500–1500
- • HIST 383 The Modern Middle East
- • HIST 384 Popular Culture in the Middle East
- • HIST 385 Anglo-American Law before the 18th Century
- • HIST 386 American Legal History
- • HIST 387 From Alexander to Cleopatra: The Mediterranean in an Age of Expansion
- • HIST 388 Women and Gender in North American History through 1920
- • HIST 389 Modern Iran
- • HIST 390 Special Problems
- • HIST 392 The Southern California Armenian Diaspora
- • HIST 393g Quantitative Historical Analysis
- • HIST 394p The Great Muslim Empires of the Near East and India
- • HIST 395 Sex and the City: Constructing Gender in London, 1700-1900
- • HIST 401 The Roman World
- • HIST 402 Cultural Heritage, Religion, and Politics in the Middle East
- • HIST 403 Carolingian Europe
- • HIST 404 Seminar in Korean History
- • HIST 405 Traveling in the Early Medieval Mediterranean
- • HIST 406 Special Periods in Medieval History
- • HIST 407 Europe in the 10th Century
- • HIST 410 The Age of Humanism and Reformation
- • HIST 413 The Age of Revolution
- • HIST 414 Contemporary Europe
- • HIST 415 Medieval and Early Modern Russia
- • HIST 416 History of Imperial Russia: 1689–1917
- • HIST 417 History of Soviet Russia: 1917–1991
- • HIST 420 European Intellectual and Cultural History: The 19th Century, 1790–1870
- • HIST 421 European Intellectual and Cultural History: The Turn of the Century 1880–1920
- • HIST 422 European Intellectual and Cultural History: The 20th Century, 1920 to the Present
- • HIST 424 Family, Work, and Leisure in Russian History
- • HIST 425 The Era of the First World War
- • HIST 426 Gender, Family, and Society in Europe and the United States, 1500–Present
- • HIST 427 The German Question: Nation and Identity in Modern Central Europe
- • HIST 428 Life and Death in Nazi Germany
- • HIST 429 Street Life: Urban Culture in Modern Europe
- • HIST 430 The Indian Ocean World
- • HIST 432 Britain in the 18th Century
- • HIST 437 Seminar in Modern Chinese History
- • HIST 438 Seminar in Pre-Modern Japanese History
- • HIST 440 Early Modern World History
- • HIST 441 Modern World History
- • HIST 442 The Ethics of Financial and Political Accountability
- • HIST 443 Race and Religious Riots in Modern World History
- • HIST 444 Mass Violence and Comparative Genocide in Modern World History
- • HIST 446 Resistance to Genocide
- • HIST 451 The Mexican Revolution
- • HIST 452 Beauty and the Body in Historical Perspective
- • HIST 453 The Age of Emancipation
- • HIST 454 The World Pirates Made: Piracy and Privateering, 1500–1815
- • HIST 455 Advanced Topics in African-American History
- • HIST 456 Race, Slavery, and the Making of the Atlantic World
- • HIST 457 The American West
- • HIST 458 History of California
- • HIST 460 War, Race, and the Constitution
- • HIST 461 19th Century American Thought
- • HIST 462 20th Century American Thought
- • HIST 463 The Constitutional History of the United States
- • HIST 464 Culture, Money, and Power: Japanese-American Relations since 1853
- • HIST 465 America in the Cold War World, 1945–1991
- • HIST 466 New World Orders: US and the Atlantic World, 1918-2018
- • HIST 470 The Spanish Inquisition in the Early Modern Hispanic World
- • HIST 473 Colonial Latin America Seminar
- • HIST 474 Sex, Gender, and Colonialism in Latin America, 1492 to 1820
- • HIST 478 The United States, 1789–1850
- • HIST 480 Seminar in Middle East History
- • HIST 481 Producing Film Histories
- • HIST 482 Jesus in American History and Culture
- • HIST 484 The United States, 1919–1939
- • HIST 487 The United States since 1939
- • HIST 488 Teaching History in the Secondary Schools
- • HIST 490x Directed Research
- • HIST 492 Honors Thesis
- • HIST 494 Seminar in New Historical Writing
- • HIST 495 American Lives: Biography and Autobiography in the United States Past
- • HIST 496 Internship in Public History
- • HIST 497 Senior Seminar in Early Modern Studies
- • HIST 498 Seminar on Selected Historical Topics
- • HIST 499 Special Topics
- • HIST 500 Introduction to Graduate Historical Studies
- • HIST 505 Studies in Early Medieval History
- • HIST 506 Studies in Later Medieval History
- • HIST 508 Studies in the Renaissance
- • HIST 509 Studies in the Reformation
- • HIST 510 Studies in Early Modern European History
- • HIST 511 Studies in Early Modern British History
- • HIST 514 Studies in Modern European History, 1789–1914
- • HIST 515 Studies in Modern European History: Europe’s 20th Century
- • HIST 517 Studies in Russian History
- • HIST 520 Modernity and Its Visual Cultures
- • HIST 525 Studies in British History
- • HIST 534 Studies in Modern Japanese History
- • HIST 535 Studies in Japanese History
- • HIST 536 Studies in Chinese History
- • HIST 540 Studies in Modern East Asian History
- • HIST 544 Feminist Theory for Historians
- • HIST 546 Comparative History of Women and Gender in the West to 1800
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