continent:"North America" country:"United States" city:"City of South Bend, Indiana" tags:"history"
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Published by: University of Notre Dame | Language: English
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African American History II is a course that examines the broad range of experiences of African Americans from the close of the American Civil War to the 1980s. We will explore both the relationship of blacks to the larger society and the inner dynamic of the black community. We will devote particular attention to Reconstruction, the migration of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North, and the political machinations of the African American community. This course was also cross-listed as AFAM 30202, AMST 30341, ESS 30306, and HESB 30458.
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Published by: University of Notre Dame | Language: English
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This course will give students an opportunity to learn more about the ways in which Americans have thought about crime and insanity and how their ideas have changed over time. The 19th century witnessed a transformation in the understanding of the origins of criminal behavior in the United States. For many, a religious emphasis on humankind as sinful gave way to a belief in its inherent goodness. But if humans were naturally good, how could their evil actions be explained? Drawing on studies done here and abroad, American doctors, preachers, and lawyers debated whether environment, heredity, or free will determined the actions of the criminal. By the early 20th century, lawyers and doctors had largely succeeded in medicalizing criminality. Psychiatrists treated criminals as patients; judges invoked hereditary eugenics in sentencing criminals. Science, not sin, had apparently become the preferred mode of explanation for the origins of crime. But was this a better explanation than what had come before? This course was also cross-listed as AMST 40327, GSC 30504, HESB 30474, and STV 40130.
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Published by: University of Notre Dame | Language: English
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This course offers an introduction to differing conceptions of disease, health, and healing throughout American history, the changing role and image of medicine and medical professionals in American life, and the changing social and cultural meanings and entanglements of medical science and practice throughout American history. This course was also cross-listed as AMST 30372, HESB 30435, HPS 93753, and STV 30126.
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