Class Number: 1462
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 08/25/2018 - 12/21/2018 Del Norte Hall 3550 Joan Peters
Status: Closed
Session: Regular Academic Session
Units: 3.00
Class Components: Lecture
Career: Undergraduate
Start Date: 08/25/2018
End Date: 12/21/2018
Grading: Letter Grade

Class Availability

Information below is 24 hours old.
Enrollment Total: 31
Available Seats: 0
Wait List Capacity: 10
Wait List Total: 0


Textbook / Other Materials

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 9780199765065
Title: America Divided
Author: Isserman
Publish: Oxford University Press

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 9781879960855
Title: Borderlands La Frontera: New Mestiza (25th Anniv)
Author: Anzaldua
Publish: Aunt Lute Books

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 9780446600255
Title: Bless Me, Ultima (Rack Size)
Author: Anaya
Publish: Warner Books, Incorporated

More textbook information including prices

Enrollment Information

  • Upper Division
  • Interdisciplinary Approaches Mission Pillar
  • Multicultural Perspectives Mission Pillar
  • Repeatable up to 9 units.
  • Upper Div - C Arts and Humanities
  • Upper Div - D Social Sciences


Notes

  • Prerequisite course required. Consult CSUCI Catalog
  • Cross-listed course
  • "The Revolutions of the Sixties and Seventies" explores the Civil Rights, Anti-War, Chicano, Women's, and Gay movements (often infused with sex, drugs and rock and roll) that changed the culture of this country. This semester¿s offering of Tradition and Transformation examines the oral, written, and filmed narratives that explore those times. Students will themselves create new narratives of the period by reflecting and writing on their own understanding of it. We will place a special emphasis on what lessons about organizing, backlash, and social change we can apply to contemporary American politics.
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