2015-16 Pomona College Catalog 
    
    May 25, 2024  
2015-16 Pomona College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG] Use the dropdown above to select the current 2023-24 catalog.

Courses


Check major and minor requirement sections in the Departments, Programs and Areas of Study section to determine if specific courses will satisfy requirements. Inclusion on this list does not imply that the course will necessarily satisfy a requirement.

Click here  to view a Key to Course Listings and Discipline codes.

 

History

  
  • HIST036 PO - Women of Honor, Women of Shame: Women’s Lives in Latin America and the Spanish-Speaking Caribbean, 1300-1900

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2015.
    Instructor(s): A. Mayes
    Credit: 1

    Overview of the life chances, economic opportunities and social expectations for women of European, Indigenous and African descent during and after colonial rule in Latin America and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean. (Latin America and the Caribbean)
  
  
  • HIST040 AF - History of Africa to 1800

    When Offered: Each fall.
    Instructor(s): S. Lemelle
    Credit: 1

    History of Africa from the earliest times to the beginning of the 19th century. Attention given to the methodology and theoretical framework used by the Africanist, the development of early African civilizations and current debates and trends in the historiography of Africa. (Core course, Africa, African Diaspora and Middle East)
  
  • HIST041 AF - History of Africa from 1800

    When Offered: Each spring.
    Instructor(s): S. Lemelle
    Credit: 1

    History of Africa from the 19th century to recent times. Attention given to political and economic aspects of Africa’s development process. Methodological and theoretical frameworks utilized by Africanists, as well as current debates and trends in African historiography are covered. (Core course, Africa, African Diaspora and Middle East)
  
  • HIST042 PO - Worlds of Islam

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2015.
    Instructor(s): A. Khazeni
    Credit: 1

    A global history of Islamic societies since the fourteenth-century, examining the period when Islam became a world religion. Approaches the integrated histories of the Asian, African and Indian Ocean worlds. (Africa/African Diaspora, South Asia, and the Middle East.
  
  • HIST043 PO - Middle East and North Africa Since 1500

    When Offered: Each spring.
    Instructor(s): A. Khazeni
    Credit: 1

    Survey of the social, political and cultural history of the Middle East and North Africa since 1500, examining the transition from the age of empires to the emergence of nation-building projects in the region.  Subjects include state and society under early modern Islamic empires; Western colonialism and imperialism; the integration of the region into the world economy; and the emergence of the nation state system in the Middle East and North Africa. (Africa, African Diaspora and Middle East)
  
  • HIST047 SC - Church of the Poor in Latin America


    Credit: 1.0

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  • HIST060 PO - Asian Traditions

    When Offered: Each fall.
    Instructor(s): S. Yamashita
    Credit: 1

    Historical introduction to the civilizations of China, India, Korea and Japan. Examines major institutional, social and cultural developments from pre-history to 1500: the advent of sedentary agriculture, urbanization, the emergence of the first states, class relations, important religious and philosophical changes and the formation of distinctive cultural identities. (Core course, Asia)
  
  
  • HIST062 PO - Modern East Asia: China, Japan and Korea in 20th Century

    When Offered: Each spring.
    Instructor(s): A. Chin
    Credit: 1

    History of China, Japan and Korea from the late 19th century to the late 20th century. Focuses on transnational themes, such as revolution, colonialism and modernity that have shaped the politics and identities of East Asians in recent times. (Core course, Asia)
  
  • HIST070 PO - Early Modern Europe: Renaissance to the Napoleonic Wars

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2014.
    Instructor(s): G.Kates
    Credit: 1

    An introduction to European history between the Renaissance and the Napoleonic Wars. Topics include the waning of the Middle Ages, the Protestant and Catholic Reformations, New World trade and settlement, Thirty Years War, Absolute and Constitutional Monarchy, Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment and French Revolution. Special attention paid to religion, politics and changes in gender and social norms. (Core course, Europe Since the Renaissance)
    This course has been revised for 2016-17.  
  
  
  • HIST070B SC - Introduction to Modern U.S. History


    Credit: 1.0

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  • HIST071 PO - Modern Europe Since 1789

    When Offered: Each spring.
    Instructor(s): P. Chu
    Credit: 1

    Modern Europe Since 1789. Introduction to the major economic, political and social developments in European society since the French Revolution, including the Industrial Revolution, Nationalism, Marxism, the Russian Revolution, political and economic imperialism, World Wars I and II, the Great Depression, the Holocaust and the development of the European Union. (Core course, Europe Since the Renaissance).
  
  
  
  • HIST073 PO - Ordinary People

    When Offered: Fall 2015.
    Instructor(s): G. Kates
    Credit: 1

    How did common Europeans live before industrialization? Marriage & love, conflict and violence, heresy and belief, work and play, environment & food production; family and childrearing; health and dying. Approaches from key schools of history, including Marxism, Annales School and microhistory.
  
  
  
  
  • HIST081 HM - Science and Technology in the Early Modern World


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  • HIST082 HM - Science and Technology in the Modern World


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  
  
  • HIST100AIPO - Indian Ocean World

    When Offered: Each spring.
    Instructor(s): A. Khazeni
    Credit: 1

    This course explores the histories of people scattered, settled, lost and found around the Indian Ocean. The course approaches the history of the Indian Ocean as a global maritime space, an economic route and cultural crossroads connecting the Middle East, Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia and Europe. Ranging from the spice trade and the culture of dhows, the times of the advent of Islam and the traditional Middle Eastern vessels that sailed with the monsoon winds, to the exploration and discovery of the “Indies” and the age of European imperialism and colonialism, the course examines the Indian Ocean world through the framework of transnational and global history. Readings include travel writing and works of literature. (Africa, African Diaspora, and Middle East)
  
  • HIST100C CH - Chicana/Latina Histories

    When Offered: Spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): T. Summers Sandoval
    Credit: 1

    Reading seminar analyzing the historical experiences of Chicanas and Latinas. Foregrounds gender, race, class and sexuality, examining these women’s responses to conquest, capitalism, racism and patriarchy. Investigates their struggles for justice, connections to other “Third World” women and formations of feminist theory and practice. Letter grade only. (United States)
  
  • HIST100CDPO - The Chinese Diaspora

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2015.
    Instructor(s): A.Chin
    Credit: 1

    Examines the history of Chinese emigration in the 20th century, its political and social implications to China, its peripheries and the rest of the world. Topics will include the concept of “diaspora,” “Sinophone” studies, the sense of belonging among overseas Chinese, community and identity formations. Letter grade only. (Asia)
  
  • HIST100D PO - Political Protest and Social Movements in Latin America

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2016.
    Instructor(s): M. Tinker Salas
    Credit: 1

    The political landscape of Latin America has changed dramatically since the 1980s, when neo-liberal policy predominated. The backlash to these policies has transformed the political landscape in most countries where the rise of mass movements and popular discontent has produced the election of reformers, progressives and even socialists. The seminar seeks to contextualize the emergence of new social and political movements throughout Latin America. (Latin American and Caribbean History)
  
  • HIST100EUPO - European Intellectual History 1500-1800

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2012.
    Instructor(s): G.Kates
    Credit: 1

    Focusing on social, political and religious thought, this primary-source based survey from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment (16th to 18th centuries) will feature works by such authors as Machiavelli, Galileo, Spinoza, Locke, Montesquieu, Rousseau and Malthus. Letter grade only. (Europe Since the Renaissance)
  
  • HIST100F PO - Food, Culture and Power in Asia and the Pacific

    When Offered: Spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): S. Yamashita
    Credit: 1

    An exploration of the ways that scholars are now interpreting the food and foodways of Asia and the Pacific. We begin with the earliest food production in the Asia-Pacific region and then consider in turn the advent of royal cuisines, the emergence of popular food cultures in towns and cities, the impact of Euro-American imperialism on indigenous culinary practices and the contemporary food situation in an era of globalization. Letter grade only. Next offered Spring 2017. (Asia)
  
  • HIST100G PO - California: Past, Present, Future

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2016.
    Instructor(s): V.Silverman
    Credit: 1

    From the European conquest to the current economic crisis, Californians have contended with a series of upheavals often at a great human cost. The effects of these changes have been projected into the future through stories and films as well as more sober predictions. This upper-division reading seminar offers students a chance to learn the current scholarship about this tarnished golden state while gaining insight on how the place has been formed and what may come. (United States)
  
  • HIST100I CH - Race, Culture and Identity in Latin America

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2014.
    Instructor(s): T. Summers Sandoval
    Credit: 1

    Latin America incorporates Indigenous, European, African and Asian traditions. Examines the interplay between race, identity, culture, gender and nationalism; the multifaceted process of ethnicity and race relations; challenges to elite preferences; alternative cultural identities such as Indigenismo and Negritude; impact of immigration; and current state of nationalism. (Latin America and the Caribbean)
  
  • HIST100K PO - History/Biography/Autobiography

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): H. Wall
    Credit: 1

    Study of American history using biographies, autobiographies and biographical fiction. Accounts of individual lives used to explore lives of “ordinary” Americans, as well as prominent social and political issues. Topics include Vietnam War; civil rights movement; political and social dissent; industrialization; ethnic, racial, religious and gender conflicts; slavery; continental expansion; and creation of the American republic. (United States)
  
  • HIST100N CH - Mexico-United States Border

    When Offered: Fall 2015.
    Instructor(s): M. Tinker Salas
    Credit: 1

    Examines transformation of the Mexico-U.S. border from an internal frontier to an international boundary. The “border” penetrates deep into both Mexico and the United States and influences the politics, economy and culture in both countries. Focuses on changes that Mexicans, U.S. and Indigenous peoples experience as a result of border interaction. (Latin America and the Caribbean)
  
  • HIST100Q CH - Social Movements in 20C Mexico

    When Offered: Fall 2015.
    Instructor(s): M. Tinker-Salas
    Credit: 1

    Examines major mobilizations beginning with the Revolution of 1910. Focuses on labor, peasant, guerrilla and indigenous movements. Seeks to uncover history of Mexico’s armed left and to draw links with contemporary groups. Will look at how today’s Zapatistas draw on a tradition of legal and clandestine mobilizations. (Latin America and the Caribbean)
  
  • HIST100S PO - The Science of Empire

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2017.
    Instructor(s): P. Chu
    Credit: 1

    This seminar explores the history of science in connection with the expansion of European empires. We examine how knowledge about peoples and environments helped Europeans extend control around the world and how dynamics of power shaped scientific understandings. Our readings highlight the history of anthropology, ecology, geography and medicine and the evolution of such concepts as race, ethnicity and nature.
  
  • HIST100T PO - Global Environmental Histories

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): P.Chu
    Credit: 1

    This seminar explores different approaches to environmental history, from classic works by Alfred Crosby and James Scott to more recent scholarship, focusing on diverse ways of telling stories about people and nature. Our readings highlight the environmental consequences of industrialization, imperialism and totalitarianism; human and “natural” disasters; the emergence of the environmental sciences; and conservation and environmental politics in non-US contexts. (Europe since the Renaissance)
  
  • HIST100U AF - Pan-Africanism and Black Radical Traditions

    When Offered: Each spring.
    Instructor(s): S. Lemelle
    Credit: 1

    Examination of the historical evolution of the Pan-African concept and its political, social and economic implications for the world in general and for Black people in particular. Discussion of 20th century writers of Pan-Africanism in terms of the contemporary problems of African Americans. Prerequisites: a lower-division Africana studies (AF) course and permission of instructor. (Africa, African Diaspora and Middle East, United States)
  
  • HIST100W PO - The American Political Tradition

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; last offered spring 2014.
    Instructor(s): H. Wall
    Credit: 1

    Major political debates, issues, ideas and conflicts from the American Revolution to Reconstruction. Includes the framing of the Constitution, Indian removal, women’s rights, slavery and anti-slavery, sectionalism and the coming of the Civil War. Emphasis on primary sources. (United States)
  
  • HIST100WCPO - Earliest Christian Views of Islam

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2016.
    Instructor(s): K. Wolf
    Credit: 1

    Over the course of the century following Muhammad’s death in 632, Muslim armies dominated the eastern, southern and western shores of the Mediterranean, areas that, up until then, had been in Christian hands. How Christian commentators came to terms with this religio-political transformation of their world is the subject of this seminar. Primary sources drawn primarily from Greek, Syriac, Arabic and Latin authors will be supplemented by the works of modern scholars. Letter grade only. (Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean)
    This course has been revised for 2016-17.  
  
  • HIST100WMPO - Martyrdom in Early Christianity and Islam

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2015.
    Instructor(s): K. Wolf
    Credit: 1

    Martyrdom played a key role in defining Christian perfection from the second to the fourth century, Even after the Roman Empire embraced the church, the cult of saints–built on the physical remains of the martyrs-kept their memories and their influence alive. The prominence of martyrdom and martyr veneration in the Christian tradition ultimately helped lay the groundwork for martyrdom as a feature of Islam. Modern scholarly studies of martyrdom in the early Christian Mediterranean up to the emergence of Islam will be the focus of this seminar. Letter grade only.
  
  • HIST100WRPO - Medieval Spain

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2017.
    Instructor(s): K. Wolf
    Credit: 1

    It is widely noted that Christians, Muslims and Jews lived together (that is, experienced convivencia) in relative harmony for significant periods of medieval Spanish history and in the process benefited materially and culturally from their interrelationship. In this course, we will take a critical and nuanced look at the idea of convivencia and how it relates to the historical realities of medieval Spain and, by extension, to those of the modern world. Letter grade only. (Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean)
    This course has been revised for 2016-17.  
  
  • HIST100X PO - Modern Caribbean Pro-Seminar

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2013.
    Instructor(s): A. Mayes
    Credit: 1

    This seminar examines U.S. and European imperialism in the Caribbean by paying attention to how images of the Caribbean’s environment, along with ideas about the sexual behavior and racial “character” of Caribbean people, informed imperialist and neo-imperialist policies in the region. (Latin America and the Caribbean).
  
  • HIST100Z PO - Doing History

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2017.
    Instructor(s): H. Wall
    Credit: 1

    This course examines historical works from a range of fields and periods in order to explore the kinds of approaches, questions, topics and forms of evidence we use to make sense of history. We will use the readings - some classics in their fields, others notable for innovative approaches or significant contributions - to consider the many different ways in which we read, write, study and use history and historical materials. (United States/Europe Since the Renaissance)
  
  • HIST101 PO - Ancient Greece

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2016.
    Instructor(s): B. Keim
    Credit: 1

    This course explores the history of ancient Greece, from the wrath of Achilles to the campaigns of Alexander the Great, from the archaic world of Odysseus to the democratic splendors of Periclean Athens (ca. 1200 – 323 B.C.E.) There will be a strong emphasis on critical engagement with the entire range of primary sources, including the Homeric epics, the histories of Herodotus and Thucydides and the material and archaeological remains. (Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean)
    This course has been revised for 2016-17.  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  • HIST110AKPO - Gunpowder Empires: Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2016.
    Instructor(s): A. Khazeni
    Credit: 1

    The history of the interregional Islamic “gunpowder empires” of the early modern period: the Ottomans, Safavids and Mughals. Examines the ways in which Muslim empires ruled heterogeneous populations and expansive frontiers and became involved in global patterns of trade and cross-cultural exchange between the fifteenth and nineteenth centuries. Letter grade only. Previously offered as HIST100AKPO. (Africa, African Diaspora, and Middle East)
  
  • HIST110D PO - Researching the Cold War

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2018.
    Instructor(s): P.Chu
    Credit: 1

    The Cold War, defined by the ideological conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union, was global in scope. This seminar explores its origins and development, including superpower rivalry, the forging and fracturing of socialist alliances and competition in the Third World. Students produce an original research paper based on recently declassified materials and other primary sources. Letter grade only.
  
  • HIST110F PO - Food and the Environment in Asia and the Pacific

    When Offered: Spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): S. Yamashita
    Credit: 1

    A research seminar that explores the relationship of food and the environment in Asia and the Pacific over the last century (1915-2015). Focuses on things that explain that relationship: chefs, specific dishes, “cuisines,” marketing, and localizing food movements. Readings will include classic pieces on food, chef’s autobiographies, recipes, menus, and philosophies of new localizing food movements. Letter grade only.
  
  • HIST110H PO - Research Topics in American History, 1500-1900

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2017.
    Instructor(s): H. Wall
    Credit: 1

    Research seminar culminating in a research paper substantially based on primary sources dealing with any aspect of American history up to 1900. Letter grade only. (United States)
  
  • HIST110J PO - State, Citizen, Subject: Modern Japan

    When Offered: Each fall.
    Instructor(s): S. Yamashita
    Credit: 1

    An examination of the Pacific War, its impact and legacy. Topics include modern Japanese representations of themselves, the “other,” the past and official Japanese government descriptions of selected topics and popular reception of these formulations. Readings include relevant theoretical literature and selections from wartime and postwar school textbooks, personal correspondence, diaries, memoirs, fiction and oral history. (Asia)
  
  • HIST110K PO - Topics in Ancient History

    When Offered: Spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): B. Keim
    Credit: 1

    This research seminar offers students the opportunity to build on their earlier ancient history coursework and engage more critically with a broad range of primary, secondary and comparative sources. All readings will be done in translation. Assignments will include in-class presentations and a research paper. Prerequisite: HIST 010 PO  or HIST 101 PO . Letter grade only. (Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean)
  
  • HIST110L PO - US Labor and Working-Class History

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2016.
    Instructor(s): V. Silverman
    Credit: 1

    Seminar examines the experiences of working people from the early 19th century to the present at work, at home and in politics. Introduces competing interpretations of trade-union ideology and politics, as well as working-class cultures and social experiences. Special emphasis on the roles of race and gender in the making of the American working class. (United States)
  
  • HIST110S CH - Latino/a Oral Histories

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; last offered spring 2015.
    Instructor(s): T. Summers Sandoval
    Credit: 1

    This course explores use of oral histories in historical research of marginalized communities, investigating issues such as memory and the “body as archive.” Provides overview of oral history theory, practice and ethical concerns. Students apply course knowledge in research project incorporating Latino/a oral histories. Letter grade only. (United States)
  
  • HIST110U PO - Urban Spaces in East Asia

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2016.
    Instructor(s): A.Chin
    Credit: 1

    This course explores the making of space, place and geography in recent historical work. The course begins with an exploration of theoretical works that interrogate the significance of space as a critical element of social theory and historical consideration. After establishing a firm theoretical foundation, the course then proceeds through exploring questions of coloniality, civil society, activism and state space. Students will also have to do a research project about public spaces in East Asia. (Asia)
  
  • HIST110V PO - Gender, Sexuality and Feminisisms in Modern East Asia

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; last offered spring 2014.
    Instructor(s): A. Chin
    Credit: 1

    Research seminar focuses on primary sources that have shaped the conceptualization of gender, sexuality and feminisms in Modern China, Japan and Korea. Topics include feminist interpretations and critiques of women’s status and inequality articulated activists and theorists, gender and nationalism, “comfort women,” sex rights and queer movements. Previously offered as HIST100V PO. (Asia)
  
  • HIST110WHPO - Heresy and Church

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2017.
    Instructor(s): K. Wolf
    Credit: 1

    A research seminar focused on the history of religious dissent in Europe from the 11th through the 13th centuries, using it as a way to understand changes in medieval religiosity as well as the evolution of ecclesiastical responses to these changes. The course will culminate in students producing their own research papers on the subject. Letter grade only. (Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean)
  
  • HIST110WWPO - Holy War in Early Christianity and Islam

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2018.
    Instructor(s): K.Wolf
    Credit: 1

    A research seminar that explores the history of religiously sanctioned violence from the beginning of the Christian tradition in the 1st century through the rise and spread of Islam in the seventh century. The course will culminate with students producing their own research papers on the subject. Letter grade only. Previously offered as HIST013 PO. (Ancient and Medieval Mediterranean)
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  • HIST117B SC - Contemporary Latin America and the Caribbean


    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  
  
  • HIST121 PO - Early America

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2013.
    Instructor(s): H. Wall
    Credit: 1

    Social and cultural development of early American settlements from the 16th century onward. Emphasizes cross-cultural contacts and conflicts, origins and development of slavery and the development of religious, ethnic, racial, creole and colonial identities. Letter grade only. (United States)
  
  
  • HIST122 PO - Enslavement and Captivity in Early America

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2016.
    Instructor(s): H.Wall
    Credit: 1

    This course will examine the impact of forced labor, captivity, and enslavement in early America, with particular attention to the development of Native American forms of slavery, kinship, and captive exchange; and the origins and consolidation of African and African American chattel slavery and the emergence of slave societies in early America. Letter grade only.
  
  
  • HIST124 PO - The U.S. in the Middle East

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2012.
    Instructor(s): V. Silverman
    Credit: 1

    The U.S. role in the making of Southwest Asia and North Africa. Competing interpretations of the evolution of American involvement with states and peoples including: the end of the old imperial systems, the European era, the Cold War, economic interests, nationalist and cultural revolutions, wars, interventions and the Israeli-Arab conflict. (Africa, African Diaspora and Middle East, United States). Prerequisite: a HIST course.
  
  
  • HIST126 PO - Revolutionary America, 1750-1800

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2016.
    Instructor(s): H. Wall
    Credit: 1

    Social and political change. The sources and effects of the Revolution; 18th-century social history; changes in political thought, society and politics in the new republic; and the emergence of a national culture. (United States)
  
  • HIST127 CH - American Inequality

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2013.
    Instructor(s): T. Summers Sandoval
    Credit: 1

    An historical investigation of the role of race in 20th century United States history. Using recently published scholarly works, films and music, our analysis centers the lives of African American, Chicano and Latino, Native American and Asian American populations, in particular their encounters with racial ideologies and structures and struggles for equality. Letter grade only. (United States)
  
  • HIST127 HM - 20th-Century U.S. History


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  • HIST128 HM - Immigration/Ethnicity in the US


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  • HIST128 PO - U.S. and the World: 1890-Present

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2016.
    Instructor(s): V. Silverman
    Credit: 1

    A history of the interactions of Americans and foreigners from the end of the Indian Wars to the end of the Cold War. Explores how and why the United States changed from a regional to a world super power in the context of the changing international system. (United States)
    This course has been revised for 2016-17.  
  
  • HIST131 HM - The Jewish Experience in America


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
  • HIST131 SC - Working People in the Americas: Race, Labor and Organizing


    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.
  
 

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