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ACADEMIC PROGRAMS

Birmingham-Southern College Catalog 2016-2017

145

agricultural, and traditional society into a powerful and culturally diverse urban,

industrial, and modern nation. Topics will include political challenges to the status quo,

the formation of a national economy, labor strife, urbanization, immigration, the rise of

the welfare state, World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and the Vietnam War as

well as the civil rights movement and the late twentieth-century conservative political

movement.

HI 155 Reforming America (1)

A study of the ideas, events, and people influencing major reform movements from the

colonial period to 1877. Emphasis is placed on notable reform campaigns directed toward

social, political, and economic change in America and the successes and limitations of

those efforts. Some topics include social transformations in the Chesapeake and New

England colonies; political thought in the American Revolution; evangelical

Protestantism; responses to Native American removal legislation; social welfare

campaigns relating to public education, temperance, prison, and asylum reforms;

abolitionism and racial equality; anti-immigration organizations; and women’s rights.

HI 181 East Asian Civilization I: Introduction to Chinese Civilization (1)

A comprehensive introduction to the history of Chinese civilization from its beginnings

to the seventeenth century. Key topics include the formation of ancient Chinese

civilization, the growth and development of the three main traditions of learning and

religion (Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism), the evolution of China’s imperial

system of government, patterns of land tenure, the development of commercialized

agriculture and urban centers, and the ways in which Chinese historians have written

about their national past. Fall.

HI 182 East Asian Civilization II: Introduction to Japanese Civilization (1)

A comprehensive introduction to the history of Japanese civilization from its beginnings

to the seventeenth century. Key topics include the formation and evolution of Japan’s

imperial system, the “way of the warrior” (bushido), the evolution of Buddhism and

Confucianism in relation to the native “Shinto” tradition, patterns of land tenure, the

transition from rule by civilian aristocrats to the emergence of military rule, and the ways

in which Japanese historians have written about their national past. Spring.

HI 201 History of American Media (1)

An examination of the role of print media, radio and television, film, and computer

technology in shaping the transition of American society from traditional forms of print

and broadcast media to the rise of the information age. Emphasis will be placed on

students reading, seeing, and hearing original documents, broadcasts, and photos (or

commentaries upon them). (Also listed as MFS 201.) Spring.

HI 205 The Old South (1)

The development and flourishing of the antebellum plantation society, the institution of

slavery, and the rise and fall of Southern nationalism. A Leadership Studies designated

course.