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Graduate Course Proposal Form Submission Detail - HIS7939
Tracking Number - 5451

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Current Status: Removed from DB by orginator -
Campus:
Submission Type: New
Course Change Information (for course changes only):
Comments: Withdrawn at faculty request 9/29/16


Detail Information

  1. Date & Time Submitted: 2016-04-15
  2. Department:
  3. College: HT
  4. Budget Account Number:
  5. Contact Person: Julia F. Irwin
  6. Phone:
  7. Email:
  8. Prefix: HIS
  9. Number: 7939
  10. Full Title: The U.S. and the Global Cold War
  11. Credit Hours: 3
  12. Section Type: -
  13. Is the course title variable?:
  14. Is a permit required for registration?:
  15. Are the credit hours variable?:
  16. Is this course repeatable?:
  17. If repeatable, how many times?: 0
  18. Abbreviated Title (30 characters maximum):
  19. Course Online?: -
  20. Percentage Online: 0
  21. Grading Option: -
  22. Prerequisites:
  23. Corequisites:
  24. Course Description: This readings course examines the history of the United States in the context of the Global Cold War, c. 1945-1990.

  25. Please briefly explain why it is necessary and/or desirable to add this course:
  26. What is the need or demand for this course? (Indicate if this course is part of a required sequence in the major.) What other programs would this course service?
  27. Has this course been offered as Selected Topics/Experimental Topics course? If yes, how many times?
  28. What qualifications for training and/or experience are necessary to teach this course? (List minimum qualifications for the instructor.)
  29. Objectives: In this class we will:

    •discuss central themes in the history of the United States in a global context, c. 1945-1991

    •become familiar with significant authors, arguments, and texts in the historiography of this era

    •develop students’ skills in researching and writing historiographical essays and historical scholarship

  30. Learning Outcomes: After completing this course, students will be able to:

    •enumerate central themes in the history of the United States in a global context, c. 1945-1991

    •identify, describe, and analyze (orally and in writing) the authors, arguments, and texts that constitute the historiography of this era

    •propose, conceptualize, research, and write a historiographical review, thesis or dissertation chapter, or historical journal article based on U.S. history in a global context, c. 1945-1991

  31. Major Topics:
  32. Textbooks:
  33. Course Readings, Online Resources, and Other Purchases: •James T. Sparrow, Warfare State: World War II Americans and the Age of Big Government (978-0199791019)

    •Reinhold Wagnleitner, Coca-Colonization and the Cold War: The Cultural Mission of the United States in Austria After the Second World War (978-0807844557)

    •Robert J. MacMahon, The Cold War: A Very Short Introduction (978-0192801784)

    •Andrea Friedman, Citizenship in Cold War America: The National Security State and the Possibilities of Dissent (978-1625340689)

    •Thomas Borstelmann, The Cold War and the Color Line: American Race Relations in the Global Arena (978-0674012387)

    •Laura Belmonte, Selling the American Way: U.S. Propaganda and the Cold War (978-0812221190)

    •David Engerman ed., Staging Growth: Modernization, Development, and the Global Cold War (978-1558493704)

    •Jacob Hamblin, Arming Mother Nature: The Birth of Catastrophic Environmentalism (978-0199740055)

    •Thomas Borstelmann, The 1970s: A New Global History from Civil Rights to Economic Inequality (978-0691157917)

    •Judy Tzu-Chun Wu, Radicals on the Road: Internationalism, Orientalism, and Feminism during the Vietnam Era (978-0801478901)

    •Ryan Irwin, Gordian Knot: Apartheid and the Unmaking of the Liberal World Order (978-0199855612)

    •Kirsten Weld, Paper Cadavers: The Archives of Dictatorship in Guatemala (978-0822356028)

    •Walter LaFeber, Michael Jordan and the New Global Capitalism (978-0393323696)

  34. Student Expectations/Requirements and Grading Policy: Participation and Engagement (40%)

    Three Book Reviews: One 500-word, One 750-word, and One 1,000-word (20%)

    A: 93-100 A-: 90-92 B+: 87-89 B: 83-86 B-: 80-82 C+ 77-79

    C: 73-76 C-: 70-72 D+: 67-69 D: 63-66 D-: 60-62 F: Below 60

  35. Assignments, Exams and Tests:
  36. Attendance Policy: Course Attendance at First Class Meeting – Policy for Graduate Students: For structured courses, 6000 and above, the College/Campus Dean will set the first-day class attendance requirement. Check with the College for specific information. This policy is not applicable to courses in the following categories: Educational Outreach, Open University (TV), FEEDS Program, Community Experiential Learning (CEL), Cooperative Education Training, and courses that do not have regularly scheduled meeting days/times (such as, directed reading/research or study, individual research, thesis, dissertation, internship, practica, etc.). Students are responsible for dropping undesired courses in these categories by the 5th day of classes to avoid fee liability and academic penalty. (See USF Regulation – Registration - 4.0101,

    http://usfweb2.usf.edu/usfgc/ogc%20web/currentreg.htm)

    Attendance Policy for the Observance of Religious Days by Students: In accordance with Sections 1006.53 and 1001.74(10)(g) Florida Statutes and Board of Governors Regulation 6C-6.0115, the University of South Florida (University/USF) has established the following policy regarding religious observances: (http://usfweb2.usf.edu/usfgc/gc_pp/acadaf/gc10-045.htm)

    In the event of an emergency, it may be necessary for USF to suspend normal operations. During this time, USF may opt to continue delivery of instruction through methods that include but are not limited to: Blackboard, Elluminate, Skype, and email messaging and/or an alternate schedule. It’s the responsibility of the student to monitor Blackboard site for each class for course specific communication, and the main USF, College, and department websites, emails, and MoBull messages for important general information.

  37. Policy on Make-up Work:
  38. Program This Course Supports:
  39. Course Concurrence Information:


- if you have questions about any of these fields, please contact chinescobb@grad.usf.edu or joe@grad.usf.edu.