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Nov 21, 2024
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2010-2011 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Holocaust and Genocide Studies Concentration
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Undergraduate Concentration
The Holocaust and other genocides are studied to enhance our understanding of the society from which we came, the society in which we live, and the society to which we currently are giving shape. By studying the Holocaust and genocide, we learn about collusion and resistance; about the hot violence of mass murder and the cold violence of the modern, bureaucratic machinery of death; and about suffering and adaptation to suffering. We learn how societies disintegrated, step by step, and how ordinary men, women, and children both participated in and were affected by this disintegration. We learn, in short, a tremendous amount about what we need to know now to help us make the world a better place, wherever we might be.
The undergraduate concentration in Holocaust and Genocide Studies provides students with solid grounding in the history of the Holocaust and other genocides. Students also take a series of courses in a variety of disciplines to ensure a critical and sophisticated understanding of the various facets of these atrocities. The undergraduate program of study encompasses history, sociology, government, geography, international development, psychology and literature. Program Faculty
Taner Akçam, Ph.D.
Paul Burke, Ph.D.
Debórah Dwork, Ph.D.
Jody Emel, Ph.D.
Anita Häusermann Fábos, Ph.D.
Everett Fox, Ph.D.
Thomas Kuehne, Ph.D.
Olga Litvak, Ph.D.
Ken MacLean, Ph.D.
Srinivasan Sitaraman, Ph.D.
Valerie Sperling, Ph.D.
Shelly Tenenbaum, Ph.D. - Director
Robert D. Tobin, Ph.D.
Jaan Valsiner, Ph.D.
Johanna Ray Vollhardt, Ph.D.
Kristen Williams, Ph.D.
Courses
- GEOG 197 - Native Americans, Land and Natural Resources
- HGS 115 - Authority and Democracy: The History of Modern Central Europe
- HGS 130 - Genocide
- HGS 131 - Suffering and Evil in Jewish Tradition
- HGS 135 - History of Armenia
- HGS 142 - Central Europe in the Long 19th century (1756-1914)
- HGS 153 - Europe in the Age of Extremes: the 20th Century
- HGS 174 - The Jewish Experience
- HGS 175 - Holocaust: Agency and Action
- HGS 214 - Mass Murder and Genocide Under Communism
- HGS 230 - History of the Armenian Genocide
- HGS 234 - Racial Thought and Body Politics in Modern Europe (1500-2000)
- HGS 236 - Gender, War and Genocide in 20th Century Europe
- HGS 240 - Human Rights and International Politics
- HGS 253 - 20th-Century Europe
- HGS 259 - Modern Germany
- HGS 260 - Rescue and Resistance During the Holocaust
- HGS 261 - Jewish Children in Nazi-Occupied Europe
- HGS 262 - Jews and Christians in the Ancient World
- HGS 265 - Life and Death in the City: Occupied Europe, 1939-1945
- HGS 266 - Refugees
- HIST 106 - Modern Europe, 19th & 20th Centuries: Ethnicity, War, and Genocide
- HIST 128 - History of Modern Israel
- HIST 143 - War and Peace: Central Europe, 1914-2003
- HIST 162 - The History of the Modern Middle East
- HIST 165 - Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
- HIST 185 - The Russian Revolution, 1890-1938
- HIST 237 - The Holocaust Perpetrators
- HIST 247 - The Western Powers and the Armenian Genocide
- HIST 255 - History of the Jews in Eastern Europe
- HIST 262 - Genocide, Denial, Facing History and Reconciliation
- HIST 268 - Special Topics: Advanced Topics in the Study of Genocide
- HIST 273 - Life Under Occupation
- HIST 276 - Collective Memory and Mass Violence
- HIST 283 - Eastern European Jewish Diaspora: Culture and Community in Twentieth Century US, USSR and Israel
- HIST 292 - Yiddish Literature and the History of Jewish Secular Culture
- HIST 352 - The Holocaust Through Letters and Diaries
- PSCI 136 - Sub-Saharan Africa: Issues and Problems
- PSCI 146 - The United Nations and International Politics
- PSCI 278 - Genocide in Comparative Perspective
- PSCI 289 - Advanced Topics in International Relations
- PSYC 276 - Advanced Topics in Cultural Psychology
- PSYC 315 - Social and Cultural Psychology of Genocides
Program Requirements: Holocaust and Genocide Studies
The Holocaust and Genocide Studies concentration may be pursued in conjunction with any major. Students are required to take seven courses that include:
- Two courses from section A
- One course from section B
- One course from section C
- A capstone seminar
The seven courses must be taken from at least three different departments. At least two of the total seven courses must be at the 200 level. The program faculty members will serve as advisors to students, providing guidance in selecting courses and developing a capstone experience. Two of the following three courses:
Section A
Two from this list are required. Section B
One from this list is required.
* Can fulfill Section B requirements only if not taken as one of the three core courses.
Section C
One from this list is required.
** Can fulfill Section C requirements only if not taken as one of the three core courses.
- GEOG 197 - Native Americans, Land and Natural Resources
- GOVT 146 - United Nations and International Politics
- GOVT 214 - Mass Murder and Genocide Under Communism **
- GOVT 240 - Human Rights and International Politics
- GOVT 278 - Holocaust and Genocide in Comparative Perspective
- GOVT 289 - Advanced Topics in International Politics: International Law and Human Rights
- GOVT 289 - Advanced Topics in International Politics: Nationalism, Ethnic Conflict, and International
- HIST 106 - Modern Europe, 19th & 20th Centuries: Ethnicity, War, and Genocide
- HIST 135 - History of Armenia
- HIST 230 - History of the Armenian Genocide
- HIST 262 - Genocide, Denial, Facing History and Reconciliation
- HIST 276 - Collective Memory and Mass Violence
- ID 285 - States of Violence: Culture, Trauma, and Identity in Asia
- SOC 130 - Genocide **
- PSYC 264 - Social and Cultural Psychology of Genocides
Capstone Courses
The capstone requirement may be fulfilled through a directed-research project or seminar. Students must receive permission from the instructor to count a seminar as the capstone experience. Examples of seminars that fulfill the capstone requirement are: |
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