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Graduate School-Newark
 
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American Studies 050
Behavioral and Neural Sciences 112
Biology 120
Business and Science 137
Chemistry 160
Creative Writing 200
Criminal Justice 202
Economics 220
English 350 (Includes American Literature 352)
Environmental Science 375
Environmental Geology 380
Global Affairs 478
History 510
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Jazz History and Research 561
Management 620
Mathematical Sciences 645
Nursing 705
Peace and Conflict Studies 735
Physics, Applied 755
Political Science 790
Psychology 830
Public Administration 834
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Urban Environmental Analysis and Management
Global Urban Systems 977 (Joint Ph.D with NJIT)
Women's and Gender Studies 988
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  Graduate School-Newark 2020-2022 Programs, Faculty, and Courses History 510 Graduate Courses  

Graduate Courses

26:510:504 Reading and Writing Narrative History (3) Critical reading and writing of narrative history, one of history's oldest literary forms.
26:510:505 History in Fiction and Fact (3) Juxtaposes closely related worlds of history, biography, memoir, and fiction in order to explore the past, the nature of historical understanding, and the possibilities of creative historical writing.
26:510:506 The Poetics of History (3) Exploration of one or more of the literary forms that history has taken since Herodotus. Those forms include (but are not limited to) epic, chronicle, drama, narrative, interpretive essays, monographs, statistical studies, and social scientific reports.
26:510:508 Topics in Transnational History (3) Selected topics in transnational history
26:510:514 United States Diplomatic History (3) Selected topics in United States diplomatic history.
26:510:515 Topics in the History of Gender (3) Selected topics in the history of gender.
26:510:516 The West, Islam, and the Middle East (3) Examination of the historical relationship between Europe/the West and the Islamic world of the Middle East and surrounding regions from the advent of Islam in the seventh century to today.

26:510:517 Capitalism and Socialism (3) The history of Western economic systems and ideologies from the origins of capitalism in early-modern Europe through the rise of socialism in the 19th century and social democracy in the 20th century. Topics include the agricultural and industrial revolutions; liberal ideologies and policies of the 19th century; Marxism and socialist thought; the Soviet model; the Great Depression; growth of the welfare state after World War II; and the problem of underdevelopment.
26:510:520 Topics in the History of Technology   (3) Selected topics in the history of technology.
26:510:521 Topics in South Asian History (3) Introduction to major themes in South Asian history and debates in the historiography of the Indian subcontinent from prehistoric times to the European colonial conquest. These themes can include religious and nonwestern nationalism in South Asia, communalism, postcolonial thought, peasant movements, subaltern studies, and modernity.
26:510:525 Colloquium in the History of Women   (3) Readings and discussion on the history of women in the United States and Western Europe.
26:510:526 Problems and Readings in African-American History (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in the history of Afro-Americans in the United States.
26:510:527,528 Selected Topics in European   Political and Diplomatic History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in European political and diplomatic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:529,530 Selected Topics in European   Intellectual and Cultural History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in European intellectual and cultural history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:531,532 Problems and Directed Readings in American Diplomatic History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in American diplomatic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:533,534 Selected Topics in American   Social and Economic History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in American social and economic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:537,538 Problems and Readings in the   Ancient World (3,3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature of the ancient world.
26:510:539 Please delete
26:510:541 Problems and Readings in European History 1350-1650 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in European history from 1350 to 1650.
26:510:542 The History of Health and International Development (3) Examines the history of western efforts to promote health and nutrition in the developing world from the beginnings of tropical medicine. Traces the history through colonial health services to the development of the Global Programme on AIDS. Explores the various economic and political interests and underlying cultural assumptions that have shaped the development of ideas and practices associated with international health and development.
26:510:543 Topics in World History (3) Selected topics in world history.
26:510:545 19th Century Europe (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in European history since 1850.
26:510:546 20th Century Europe (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in European history since 1850.
26:510:547 Comparative World Colonialism (3) This course examines a series of significant moments and issues in Europe's twentieth-century history, including the World Wars; political and economic reactions to the Depression; the Spanish Civil War; postwar reconstruction and the development of the welfare state; youth culture, rock music, and protest movements of the 1960s; the conservative backlash in Thatcher's Britain and elsewhere; decolonization and its impact on Europe, including immigration of non-European peoples; and the collapse of communism. Using a combination of primary and secondary sources, the course examines a range of historical subfields, from cultural and intellectual to social and economic history.
26:510:548 Environmental History of North   America (3) Explores the dialogue between humankind and the environment in North America over the course of the last four centuries. Examines the latest and most interesting work done in the new field of environmental history to see what such a perspective has to offer.
26:510:549 Topics in Latin American History (3) An introduction to the field of modern Latin American history.
26:510:551,552 Selected Topics in American   Intellectual and Cultural History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in American intellectual and cultural history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:553,554 Selected Topics in American   Political and Legal History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in American political and legal history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:555,556 Selected Topics in American Urban   and Ethnic History (3,3) Examination of issues and methods in American urban and ethnic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:557 War, Technology, and Society (3) Examines key themes in the interrelationship between warfare, technology, and society from the beginnings of modern warfare until World War I. Primary emphasis placed on the historical connections between violent conflict, the technical means by which it is carried out, and the sociopolitical environment within which wars take place. Topics include the effect of technology on war and the effect of war on technological change and development.
26:510:558 Selected Topics in European Social   and Economic History (3) Examination of issues and methods in European social and economic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
26:510:559 Cities in Change I (3) The process of urbanization as seen in the growth of historic European and North American cities and in the underdeveloped world: the revival of towns in the Middle Ages; the royal capital as center of power; rise of an urban way of life; 19th-century industrial cities; changing city forms and functions of the 20th century; urban values in politics, business, and material culture.
26:510:560 Cities in Change II (3) The process of urbanization as seen in the growth, decline, and revival efforts of Newark, New Jersey. Examination of the economic, political, geographical, and social factors that helped shape Newark as New Jersey's most important city but also as one of the most troubled urban communities in the United States. Attention to the origins of Newark's decline and its relationship with suburban communities in northern New Jersey. The settlement of European immigrants and rural Afro-Americans in the late 19th and 20th centuries and recent efforts to revive the city's political, economic, and cultural life.
26:510:561 Problems in United States Foreign Policy (3) Major historiographical problems and recent literature in U.S. foreign policy.
26:510:562 The Urban Environment (3) Examines the role of the economy, culture, and technology in shaping the urban environment. Makes extensive use of Newark and the New York metropolitan area, including field observations and local research. In addition to other topics, explores in detail spatial relationships, the role of transportation, and the development of suburbia.
26:510:563 Topics in the History of Health (3) Selected topics in the history of health.
26:510:564 History of Urban Education (3) Examines the development of urban school systems in the United States; school reform movements and programs to improve city schools; the recruitment of urban teachers; the role of race, immigration, ethnicity, and class in educational performance; and the effects of suburbanization, desegregation, and deindustrialization on urban schools.
26:510:565 Public History (3) Introduction to the principles and practices of public history.
26:510:566 Writing American History (3) Exploration of the ways in which American history has been written and the issues that historians of America face when writing about its history.
26:510:567 Global Environmental History (3) A global view of human interactions with the natural world, mixing broad themes such as colonialism and industrialization with detailed case studies in an effort to understand the complicated ways that people and the environment have mutually shaped one another in different places and at different times. Because environmental change often transcends national boundaries, this course places important subjects in environmental history such as disease, agriculture, pollution, and environmentalism into a global context.
26:510:568 Topics in Environmental History (3) Selected topics in environmental history.
26:510:569 American Legal History to 1860 (3) Readings and discussion on the legacy of common law after the Revolution. The emergence of legal instrumentalism and the evolution of tort, contract, and damages in the context of industrialism and economic growth.
26:510:570 Topics in American Legal History (3) Readings and discussion on the growth of legal formalism, the evolution of substantive due process, changes in legal education and the legal profession, and the evolution of private law.
26:510:571 Introduction to Historical Method (3)   Examines major theoretical approaches that have been used by historians and looks at some of the works that have employed those approaches.
26:510:572 Philosophy of History (3) General survey of major trends in historiography and of leading issues in the philosophy of history.
26:510:573,574 Problems in Central European   History (3,3) Topics in the 19th- and 20th-century political, social, and intellectual history of Germany. Also examines the Hapsburg monarchy and its successor states.
26:510:576 Problems and Readings in American   History, 1492-1789 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1492 to 1789.
26:510:577 Problems and Readings in American   History, 1789-1865 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1789 to 1865.
26:510:581 Problems and Readings in American History, 1865-1914 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1865 to 1914.
26:510:583 Problems and Readings in American History, 1890-1945 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1890 to 1945.
26:510:585 Problems and Readings in American   History, 1945 to Present (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history since 1945.
26:510:586 American Immigration History (3) Examines the history of immigration to urban America since the 19th century, examining the causes of immigration, adaptation to America, return migration, race, group differences, the development of ethnic identities, changing American immigration policy, and the impact of immigration and ethnicity on American society.
26:510:589,590 Problems and Readings in   African History (3,3) Various problems in African history, from the ancient African civilizations to the present day. Topics vary from year to year; contact the instructor for current topics.
26:510:591 City and Disease in History (3) Explores the dynamic interaction between the growth of cities and changes in the experience and location of disease. Presumes the intertwining of these two historical developments in the birth of a distinctly urban identity, one predicated on the notion that the modern city is somehow inherently diseased. Focuses on the New York and Newark metropolitan areas in the 19th and 20th centuries. Among the topics considered are epidemic outbreaks; quarantines; the technology and organization of sanitation and hygiene; the professional formation of public, industrial, and occupational medicine; and medical and popular responses to immigration.
26:510:592 African Intellectual History (3) Selected topics in African intellectual history.
26:510:593 Culture and Science in the History of American Medicine (3) Provides an overview of American medical history and a familiarity with the theoretical and practical ramifications of different approaches to the complex relationships between medicine, science, and culture. Topics include the extent to which medicine is or has been scientific; reasons why science has been considered so important to medicine's professional culture; and the degree to which medicine's professional culture has been shaped by science as well as other factors, such as economic and political self-interest, technology, class, race, gender, and other kinds of cultural values.
26:510:594 Technology, Environment, and Medicine in World History, 1500-1900 (3) Examines the interrelationship between the emerging modern world system and changes in technology, environment, and medicine, with particular emphasis on European overseas expansion and its impact in non-Western regions.
26:510:595 Social History of American Medicine Since 1800 (3) Topics include the practices of 19th-century regular medicine; the relation between medical concepts and mainstream social thought; the treatment of women's health; antebellum alternative healers and alternative politics; the triumphs of late 19th- and early 20th-century medical therapeutics; the emergence of medicine as big business; medicine and racism; the emergence of nursing as a profession; modern medicine in an international perspective; New Age healing; the AIDS crisis and AIDS activism; and contemporary debates on the future of health care in the United States.
26:510:596 History of the Body in Modern Western   Culture (3) Considers medical or scientific history primarily in terms of implications for bodily experience in everyday life. Begins with grand narratives of historical shifts in bodily perceptions and practices, and proceeds to more focused narratives of changing bodily experience, engaging key distinctions between genders, classes, and species as well as perceptions of pain and internal bodily structure. Materials will be drawn from early modern and modern Europe, as well as more recent bodily experience in the United States.
26:510:597 Technology, Culture, and History (3) Treats the relationship between technology and cultural values in a variety of historical and geographical settings, from early modern Japan to 20th-century America. Examines the ways in which cultural ideals, conceptions, and preconceptions serve to influence the rate and manner of technological change, as well as the ways in which technology affects social and cultural life.
26:510:598 History of Technology, Environment,   and Medicine: Theory and Method (3) A team-taught course that surveys the methods employed in the three fields. Explores the interdisciplinary nature of each field and the value of interdisciplinary scholarship.
26:510:599 Social History of Communication (3) Treats selected themes in the history of communication in different social and cultural contexts, from the ancient world to the 20th century. Topics include orality, proto-literacy, and literacy in ancient and medieval cultures; printing and the development of print culture in the early modern world; the communication revolution of the late 19th and early 20th centuries; and historiographical debates over the role of communication technologies in society.
26:510:600 Research Seminar (3) Research Seminar
26:510:618 Seminar: Teaching of History (3) Experience in the planning of a course, leading discussions, and lecturing under the supervision of the student's major professor. Critiques made by both the professor and the seminar participants.
26:510:619 Internship in Public History (3,3) Professional training in various aspects of public history through on-site internships at local historical and cultural institutions, such as the New Jersey Historical Society and the Newark Museum. Students acquire skills in one or more of four areas: manuscripts curatorship, exhibitions and research, collections cataloging, and education and the public.
26:510:694 Master's Essay (3) The master's essay is a substantial piece of written work, the capstone of the M.A./M.A.T. program for those students who elect not to write a 6-credit master's thesis. The essay is undertaken in consultation with an adviser.
26:510:695 Individual Studies in History (3) Prerequisite: Permission of the director of graduate programs. Offered both semesters.
26:510:696 Advanced Individual Studies in History (3) Prerequisite: Permission of the director of graduate programs. Offered both semesters.
26:510:697,698 Research in History (3,3) Normally reserved for M.A. thesis credit.   
26:510:800 Matriculation Continued (E1)

NJIT COURSES
48:510:620 City and Disease in History (3) Explores the dynamic interaction between the growth of cities and changes in the experience and location of disease. Presumes the intertwining of these two historical developments in the birth of a distinctly urban identity, one predicated on the notion that the modern city is somehow inherently diseased. Focuses on the New York and Newark metropolitan areas in the 19th and 20th centuries. Among the topics considered are epidemic outbreaks, quarantines, the technology and organization of sanitation and hygiene, the professional formation of public, industrial and occupational medicine, and medical and popular responses to immigration.
48:510:622 Culture and Science in the History of American Medicine (3) Provides an overview of American medical history and a familiarity with the theoretical and practical ramifications of different approaches to the complex relationships between medicine, science, and culture. Topics include: the extent to which medicine is or has been scientific; reasons why science has been considered so important to medicine's professional culture; and the degree to which medicine's professional culture has been shaped by science as well as other factors, such as economic and political self-interest, technology, class, race, gender, and other kinds of cultural values.
48:510:624 Technology, Environment, and Medicine in World History, 1500-1900 (3) Examines the interrelationship between the emerging modern world system and changes in technology, environment, and medicine, with particular emphasis on European overseas expansion and its impact in non-Western regions.
48:510:626 Social History of American Medicine Since 1800 (3) Topics include the practices of 19th-century regular medicine; the relation between medical concepts and mainstream social thought; the treatment of women's health; antebellum alternative healers and alternative politics; the triumphs of late 19th- and early 20th-century medical therapeutics; the emergence of medicine as big business; medicine and racism; the emergence of nursing as a profession; modern medicine in an international perspective; New Age healing; the AIDS crisis and AIDS activism; and contemporary debates on the future of health care in the United States.
48:510:628 Gender, Science, and Technology in the Modern World (3) Introduction to a wide range of political and cultural analyses of science and technology, with an emphasis on recent feminist critiques of science. Explores the questions of scientific neutrality; the gendering of scientific knowledge; the relationship between science, technology, and capitalism; the role of science in international politics; and why science has not freed women.
48:510:630 History of the Body in Modern Western Culture (3) Considers medical or scientific history primarily in terms of implications for bodily experience in everyday life. Begins with grand narratives of historical shifts in bodily perceptions and practices, and proceeds to more focused narratives of changing bodily experience, engaging key distinctions between genders, classes, and species as well as perceptions of pain and internal bodily structure. Materials will be drawn from early modern and modern Europe, as well as more recent bodily experience in the United States.
48:510:632 Technology, Culture, and History (3) Treats the relationship between technology and cultural values in a variety of historical and geographical settings, from early modern Japan to 20th-century America. Examines the ways in which cultural ideals, conceptions, and preconceptions serve to influence the rate and manner of technological change, as well as the ways in which technology affects social and cultural life.
48:510:634 Environmental History of North America (3) Explores the dialogue between humankind and the environment in North America over the course of the last four centuries. Examines the latest and most interesting work done in the new field of environmental history to see what such a perspective has to offer.
48:510:635 History of Technology, Environment, and Medicine: Theory and Method (3) A team-taught course which surveys the methods employed in the three fields. Explores the interdisciplinary nature of each field, and the value of interdisciplinary scholarship.
48:510:637 Global Environmental History (3) A global view of human interaction with the natural world, mixing broad themes such as colonialism and industrialization with detailed case studies in an effort to understand the ways that people and the environment have mutually shaped one another. Because environmental change often transcends national boundaries, this course places important subjects in environmental history such as disease, agriculture, pollution, and environmentalism into a global and transnational context.
48:510:638 Social History of Communication (3) Treats selected themes in the history of communication in different social and cultural contexts, from the ancient world to the twentieth century. Topics include: orality, proto-literacy, and literacy in ancient and medieval cultures; printing and the development of print culture in the early modern world; the communication revolution of the late 19th and early 20th centuries; and historiographical debates over the role of communication technologies in society.
48:510:640 The Urban Environment (3) Examines the role of the economy, culture, and technology in shaping the urban environment. Makes extensive use of Newark and the New York metropolitan area, including field observations and local research. In addition to other topics, explores in detail spatial relationships, the role of transportation, and the development of suburbia.
48:510:642 The History of Health and International Development (3) Examines the history of western efforts to promote health and nutrition in the 'developing world" from the beginnings of tropical medicine. We will trace this history through its many permutations from the establishment of colonial health services to the development of the Global Programme on AIDS. In doing so, we will explore the various economic and political interests and underlying cultural assumptions that have shaped the development of ideas and practices associated with international health and development.
48:510:644 War, Technology, and Society, 1500-1914 (3) Examines key themes in the interrelationship between warfare, technology, and society from the beginnings of modern warfare until World War I. Primary emphasis placed on the historical connections between violent conflict, the technical means by which it is carried out, and the sociopolitical environment within which wars take place. The effect of technology upon war and considerations of the effect of war on technological change and development. Samples the rich tradition of thought and ideas produced by philosophers and theorists on these themes.
48:510:645 American Legal History to 1860 (3) Readings and discussion on the legacy of common law after the Revolution; the emergence of legal instrumentalism; and the evolution of tort, contract, and damages in the context of industrialism and economic growth.
48:510:650 History of American Conservatism (3) Examines postwar American conservatism through classic works and contemporary studies. Topics include the rise of conservatism, groups under the conservative umbrella, and the rise of the right as related to key events in postwar history (Cold War, McCarthysim, the '60s, the suburbs, and urban change). Course interrogates postwar conservatism with respect to American political and intellectual history and in relation to histories of gender, race, class, sexuality, place, and religion. 
48:510:652 Topics in the History of Technology (3) Selected topics in the history of technology.
48:510:653 Topics in European Intellectual and Cultural History (3) Examination of issues and methods in European intellectual and cultural history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
48:510:654 Topics in American Intellectual and Cultural History (3) Examination of issues and methods in American intellectual and cultural history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
48:510:655 Topics in American Urban and Ethnic History (3) Examination of issues and methods in American urban and ethnic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
48:510:656 Topics in the History of Health (3) Selected topics in the history of Health.
48:510:657 Topics in Environmental History (3) Selected topics in environmental history.
48:510:658 Topics in American Legal History (3) Readings and discussion on the growth of legal formalism, the evolution of substantive due process, changes in legal education and the legal profession, and the evolution of private law.
48:510:660 The Enlightenment in Britain (3) The 18th century was the age of the Enlightenment. Great Britain became a unified polity and the most powerful imperial force in the world. This course examines the Enlightenment in Britain against the backdrop of war and empire, imperial consumer culture, the growth and significance of sociability and politeness, representations of gender, the writing of cultural history, social uses of science/technology, print culture, and competition among varying notions of ethnic identity.
48:510:661 Problems and Readings in European History since 1850 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in European history since 1850.
48:510:662 Problems and Readings: Hist/U.S. Foreign Policy and Diplomacy (3) Examination of issues and methods in American diplomatic history, with a consideration of some leading problems in the field.
48:510:663 Problems and Readings in American History, 1492-1789 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1492 to 1789.
48:510:664 Problems and Readings in American History, 1789-1865 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1789 to 1865.
48:510:665 Problems and Readings in American History, 1865-1914 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1865 to 1914.
48:510:666 Problems and Readings in American History, 1890-1945 (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history from 1890 to 1945.
48:510:667 Problems and Readings in American History, 1945-Present (3) Introduction to the major historiographical problems and recent literature in American history since 1945.
48:510:701 Master's Thesis (6) For students writing a master's thesis in the history of technology, environment, and medicine. Prerequisite: Permission of graduate history adviser.
48:510:702 Master's Essay (3) For those who don't write a 6-credit thesis, the 3-credit Master's Essay caps the M.A./M.A.T. A substantial work done with an adviser. The master's essay may be: 1. an interpretive historical essay based on primary source research; 2. a narrative history based on primary source research; (Prerequisite: R510:504, R510:505, or R510:506); 3. a historiographical essay; 4. a content-focused curriculum design, either a course or significant portion thereof; or 5. a design for an historical museum exhibition/other work in public history. Prerequisite: Permission of graduate history adviser.
48:510:725, 726, 727 Independent Study in History (3) Prerequisites: Permission of graduate history adviser and course instructor.
 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 848-445-info (4636) or colonelhenry.rutgers.edu.
Comments and corrections to: One Stop Student Services Center.

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