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May 13, 2024
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HIST 273 - Women and Gender in the Modern West 5 Credits Examines the relationship between historical events and women’s lives and the impact of ideas and attitudes about gender, race, class, and sexuality on individuals of both sexes in modern western history.
Fees
Quarters Typically Offered
Designed to Serve Students seeking a transfer course and those interested in the history of women, gender, and sexuality. Active Date 2011-04-20
Grading System Decimal Grade Class Limit 38 Contact Hours: Lecture 55 Lab 0 Worksite 0 Clinical 0 Other 0 Total Contact Hours 55 Degree Distributions: AA - Diversity & Globalism
- Social Science Area I
Course Outline I. Women in Early Modern Politics and Life
II. Women & Gender in the Era of the French & American Revolutions
III. Women & Family in the New Industrial Society
IV. 19th C. Resistance, Revolution & Reform Movements
V. Gender, Sexuality & Imperialism
VI. Women in War & Revolution
VII. The Modern Girl in the Interwar Era
VIII. Women & Gender in World War II
IX. Gender in the Postwar Era
X. Gender at the Turn of the Millennium
Student Learning Outcomes Evaluate textual, visual, and statistical evidence for author intent, bias, intended audience, and factuality
Articulate ideas and arguments clearly in oral and written form
Place historical events in the history of women and gender within broader social, cultural, and political developments
Summarize the ways in which modern daily life is influenced by historically constructed ideas about gender and sexuality
Describe the ways in which 19th and 20th century conflicts, integration, continuity and advances have influenced individual lives
Construct reasonable interpretations about the significance or meaning of historical events on the basis of source evidence.
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