The history major requires all students to take a minimum of 30 credits
or ten courses (excluding one-credit courses). The major aims to assure
that all students have taken at least one course in a broad range of areas
of the world, including at least two outside the history of Europe and the
United States. It also aims to assure some exposure by all students to
history prior to 1800, when there is much less evidence for making
historical judgments than in the modern era, as well as requiring at least
one course from the modern era. Apart from these distribution
requirements, students are free to pursue their interests in one or more
areas of history in as much depth as they choose.
The history major has two methodological requirements. The aim of these
requirements is to train students how to understand the contingency of
historical interpretation and the kinds of debates that result, to frame
historical questions, to learn to use primary sources to find the evidence
necessary to develop historical analysis and prove historical arguments,
and to write papers that develop those arguments in clear and coherent
prose. First, all history majors are required to take a 3000-level seminar
that has a one-credit Historical Methods laboratory co-requisite (with the
number 3000). It is not sufficient to take the 3000-level seminar without
the co-requisite laboratory in order to satisfy this requirement. Second,
all history majors must take one of the department's 6000-level capstone
seminars. For majors, the History Methods laboratory is a prerequisite for
taking the capstone seminar. All 6000-level seminars have, as one of their
central requirements, a major research paper of at least 20 pages that
incorporates the analytical, research and writing skills that define the
capstone experience in history.
Requirements of the History Major:
- The History major consists of ten courses totaling at least 30
credits, excluding one-credit courses.
- All majors must take at least three seminars:
- One of those must be a 3000-level Historical Methods Seminar.
- One of those must be a 6000-level Advanced Seminar.
- Both of these courses must be taken at Tulane.
- No more than Three 1000-level courses may count toward the major.
- Courses that do not have a letter grade cannot count toward the major
with the exception of approved transfer credits.
- History majors must satisfy the following distribution requirements:
- Students must take at least one pre-1800 course and at least one
post-1800 course.
- Students must take at least one course in four of the following six
areas: Africa (HISB), Asia (HISC), Europe (HISA and HISE), Latin
America (HISL), Middle East (HISM), and United States (HISU).
Advanced Seminars:
Advanced seminars - numbered 6000 to 6999 - are open to sophomores,
juniors and seniors, and also to graduate students. Sophomores may require
permission from the course instructor to enroll in a 6000-level seminar.
Capstone in History:
All 6000-level seminars satisfy the Capstone requirement in history. In
these courses, students will develop specialized historical and
theoretical knowledge through the integration of approaches, cases,
skills, and ideas from across the breadth of their major that they have
learned in earlier courses. The skills integrated will include the
understanding of what it means to go into a subject in-depth, the
development of a defensible thesis, the use of primary sources (when
available) critically to support historical argument, a sophisticated
understanding of historical context and change over time, and differences
in historical interpretation and methodology. Students will be expected to
demonstrate their understanding in written work (including a major
independent research paper), oral presentation, and/or classroom
discussions. Students may not complete the Capstone until their
junior/senior year. History majors should take one 3000-level Methods
Seminar before registering for a Capstone seminar.
Pre-1800 Courses
Ancient and Medieval History (HISA)
- All HISA courses are included under Ancient and Medieval History with
the exception of HISA 3230 - Great Captains from Alexander the Great to
Patton
- The following courses in Classical Studies can be counted toward the
history major, as European history courses prior to 1800:
- CLAS 1010 - The Rise of Rome
- CLAS 2320 - Greek Temples and Festivals
- CLAS 3020 - The High Roman Empire
- CLAS 3050 - Ancient Historiography
- CLAS 3090 - Law and Society in Ancient Rome
- CLAS 3120 - Etruscans and Early Rome
- CLAS 1010 - The Rise of Rome
- CLAS 2320 - Greek Temples and Festivals
- CLAS 3020 - The High Roman Empire
- CLAS 3050 - Ancient Historiography
- CLAS 3090 - Law and Society in Ancient Rome
- CLAS 3120 - Etruscans and Early Rome
- CLAS 3160 - The Aegean Bronze Age
- CLAS 3190 - Pompeii: Life in a Roman Town
- CLAS 3200 - Greek Religion
- CLAS 3310 - Tyrants and Democrats in Ancient Greece
- CLAS 3610 - Sex and Gender in Antiquity
- CLAS 4080 - Seminar in Ancient Society and Economy
- CLAS 4130 - Egypt Under the Pharaohs
- CLAS 4180 - Seminar in Ancient Religion
- CLAS 4320 - War and Power in Ancient Greece
- CLAS 6080 - Seminar in Ancient Society and Economy
- CLAS 3160 - The Aegean Bronze Age
- CLAS 3190 - Pompeii: Life in a Roman Town
- CLAS 3200 - Greek Religion
- CLAS 3310 - Tyrants and Democrats in Ancient Greece
- CLAS 3610 - Sex and Gender in Antiquity
- CLAS 4080 - Seminar in Ancient Society and Economy
- CLAS 4130 - Egypt Under the Pharaohs
- CLAS 4180 - Seminar in Ancient Religion
- CLAS 4320 - War and Power in Ancient Greece
- CLAS 6080 - Seminar in Ancient Society and Economy
African History (HISB)
Asian History (HISC)
- HISC 2010 - History of China, Prehistory to 1800
Modern Europe (HISE)
- HISE 1210 - Europe and a Wider World: From the Renaissance to 1789
- HISE 2160 - Europe in the 18th Century
- HISE 2240 - Russian History from the 9th to the Mid-19th Centuries
- HISE 2320 - Early Modern England
- HISE 2410 - Spain, 1369-1716
- HISE 2420 - The Age of Reformation
- HISE 3300 - Death, Disease, Destitution and Despair in Early Modern
Europe
- HISE 6050 - The Italian Renaissance
- HISE 6100 - Renaissance and Reformation, 1450-1660
- HISE 6330 - Imperial Spain, 1469-1716
- HISE 6350 - Crime and Punishment in Hanoverian England
- HISE 6360 - English Civil War
- HISE 6370 - Seminar in Early Modern England
Latin America (HISL)
Middle East (HISM)
- HISM 2200 - History of Islam to 1400
- HISM 6140 - Islam and the Western Mediterranean World, 1000-1900
United States (HISU)
Post-1800 Courses
African History (HISB)
- HISB 2130 - History of Southern Africa
- HISB 2140 - History of Eastern Africa
- HISB 3240 - Human Rights and Genocide in Africa
- HISB 3250 - Archiving Africa
- HISB 4210 - History of Development in Africa
- HISB 4250 - The Atlantic Slave Trade
- HISB 6070 - Gender in African History
- HISB 6110 - Slavery and Emancipation in Africa
Asian History (HISC)
Modern Europe (HISE)
- HISE 1220 - The Emergence of the Contemporary World Since 1789
- HISE 2170 - Europe in the 19th Century
- HISE 2210 - Modern Germany
- HISE 2250 - Russian History: The End of the Empire and the Soviet
Period
- HISE 2330 - Modern Britain
- HISE 3270 - Literature and Society in Russia, 1800-1917
- HISE 3280 - Literature and Society in Russia, 1917-1991
- HISE 3190 - The Spanish Civil War
- HISE 3290 - Origins of the Second World War, 1919-1939
- HISE 3513 - History of the Jews in Russia, 1772-2000
- HISE 4140 - Household, Gender, and Sexuality in Early Modern Europe
- HISE 4350 - Britain in Decline?
- HISE 6140 - Revolutionary-Napoleonic Europe, 1789-1815
- HISE 6380 - Seminar in Modern British History
- HISE 6420 - Readings in the Holocaust
- HISE 6510 - The Russian Revolution, 1900-1924
- HISE 6511 - Stalin's Russia, 1924-1953
- HISE 6512 - In Stalin's Shadow: The Soviet Union, 1953-1991
Latin America (HISL)
- HISL 2770 - Modern Mexico
- HISL 2790 - Central America
- HISL 2820 - Modern Brazil
- HISL 2840 - History of Argentina
- HISL 3200 - History of Voodoo and Other African Derived Religions
- HISL 3720 - Seminar: Topics in Modern Latin America and Caribbean
History
- HISL 3800 - Colloquium: Caribbean Revolutions
- HISL 4740 - Caribbean Cultural History
- HISL 4780 - Women in Latin American History
- HISL 6600 - Peasants, Rebellion and the State in Latin America
- HISL 6610 - Modernity and Its Discontents in Latin America
- HISL 6850 - United States-Latin American Relations
Middle East (HISM)
- HISM 1200 - The Contemporary Middle East
- HISM 2210 - History of Modern Middle East, 1750 to the Present
- HISM 3220 - The Arab-Israeli Conflict
- HISM 6060 - Seminar in the Modern Middle East and North Africa
United States (HISU)
- HISU 1420 - The United States from 1865 to the Present
- HISU 2410 - Women and Gender in U.S. History: 1830 to the Present
- HISU 2480 - Louisiana History
- HISU 2620 - The New South, 1865-Present
- HISU 2630 - US Foreign Relations Before World War
- HISU 2640 - US Foreign Relations Since 1945
- HISU 2650 - US Immigration History
- HISU 2700 - African-American Freedom
- HISU 3220 - Autobiography and Southern Identity
- HISU 3642 - US War in Vietnam
- HISU 3840 - Popular Culture and the Rise of Consumerism
- HISU 4560 - The Civil War and Reconstruction
- HISU 4694 - Creation of Jazz in New Orleans
- HISU 6510 - Recent U.S. from 1945 to the Present
- HISU 6540 - African-American Culture
- HISU 6590 - United States Legal History, 1865-1975
- HISU 6630 - US Labor and Migration
- HISU 6840 - US Empire
- HISU 6850 - United States-Latin American Relations
Writing Practica
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