Class Number: 1290
Description: Hours: Three hours lecture per week Prerequisite: HIST 300 and successful completion of Golden Four GE Areas (1A, 1B, 1C, 2) Description: Bringing literature and history together, this course exposes students to a diverse range of work in art, literature, films, and history. It cultivates the students' intellectual understanding of the topic from both a cross-disciplinary and a cross-cultural perspective. It emphasizes reading, writing, analytical skills, and communication skills. Topics and themes may vary under the same title. Repeatable by topic.

Info has been updated in the last 30 minutes
Days Time Date Range Location Instructor
TTH 10:30 AM - 11:45 AM 08/22/2015 - 12/21/2015 Bell Tower 1302 Joan Peters
Status: Closed
Session: Regular Academic Session
Units: 3.00
Class Components: Lecture
Career: Undergraduate
Start Date: 08/22/2015
End Date: 12/21/2015
Grading: Letter Grade

Class Availability

Information below is 24 hours old.
Enrollment Total: 33
Available Seats: 0
Wait List Capacity: 10
Wait List Total: 0


Textbook / Other Materials

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 978-0-19-531986-6
Title: America Divided: The Civil War of the 1960s
Author: Isserman
Publish: Oxford University Press

More textbook information including prices

Enrollment Information

  • Upper Division
  • D: Social Perspectives
  • UDIGE: Interdisciplinary
  • Repeatable up to 9 units.
  • C3B: Multicultural


Notes

  • CULTURAL REVOLUTIONS OF THE SIXTIES AND SEVENTIES IN AMERICA: HISTORY, LITERATURE, FILM Come study the movements that forever changed America into the country we now live in: The Civil Rights Movements (Black Power, United Farm Workers), The Anti-War Movement, The Women¿s Movement, The Gay Rights Movement, The Youth Movement ¿ from Woodstock to The Haight. The people who made these movements brought us ideas we now take for granted such as multiculturalism, gender equality, gay marriage. But the great changes they brought about came at the price of disruption, chaos, violence and a backlash that still haunts us. This course explores these revolutions and the music that made it all possible.
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