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In addition to meeting the degree requirements of their respective
departments, Contemporary History Institute students take four core
courses in contemporary history.
Three of these courses are seminars
offered consecutively during the fall, winter, and spring quarters
of the Ohio University academic year. The fourth course is an individual
tutorial, internship, or elective. By catalog number, the four core
courses are:
CH 601
Introduction to Contemporary History
This seminar investigates the nature
of contemporary history, major
philosophical and conceptual approaches, interpretive trends and
methodologies, and opportunities for interdisciplinary analysis.
Recent texts have included: Stephen Jay Gould, Times Arrow/Times
Cycle; James Gleick, Chaos: Making a New Science; David Hackett
Fischer, Historians Fallacies; Joyce Appleby, Lynn Hunt, and
Margaret Jacob, Telling the Truth About History; and
Joan Wallach
Scott, Feminism and History. (Click here
for current syllabus)
CH 602
Themes in Contemporary History
The CH 602 seminar examines major forces that have shaped the contemporary
world: nationalism, revolution, democratization, globalization,
ethnic and racial conflict, etc. Recent texts have included: Edward
Said, Culture and Imperialism; Peter Burke, History and Social Theory;
Samuel P. Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking
of World Order; and David Williams, Japan: Beyond the Edge of History.
(Click here for current syllabus)
CH 603
Issues in Contemporary History
The CH 603 seminar
focuses on contemporary issues with policy implications.
Students apply the conceptual and methodological approaches encountered
in CH 601 and 602 to selected problems facing current decision-makers.
Recent texts have included: Ernest R. May and Richard E. Neustadt,
Thinking in Time: The Uses of History for Decision-makers; Stephen
Carter, The Culture of Disbelief; Christopher Lasch, The Revolt
of the Elites; Thomas Sowell, Race and Culture; and Catherine MacKinnon,
Only Words. (Click here for current syllabus)
CH 604
Special Project in Contemporary History
This course provides an opportunity for individualized study in
the field in which the students thesis or dissertation is
to be written. It usually takes the form of a one-to-one
tutorial
with an expert outside Ohio University, but internships and even
enrollment in courses at other universities can be used to meet
this requirement. The Institute covers transportation and living
expenses for students doing tutorials. Tutors have included: Umberto
Eco, Paul Fussell, Melvyn Leffler, Robert McMahon, John Mearsheimer, Robert Pastor, and Michael Walzer.
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