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Dec 21, 2024
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HIST 372 - U.S. Women’s History, 1890-1990 This course examines transformations in women’s economic status, political participation, educational opportunities, and familial and reproductive lives from the late nineteenth to the late twentieth century in the United States. We consider how structural changes and political movements involved and affected women of different classes, races, and ethnic groups. Major topics will include: women’s increased participation in the paid labor force, especially wage work by married women with children; political struggles for equal rights (e.g., woman suffrage, pay equity); the separation of sexuality and reproduction; and the intellectual origins and development of feminism, as well as the arguments of those who opposed it.
Unit(s): 1 Group Distribution Requirement(s): Distribution Group II Prerequisite(s): Sophomore standing Instructional Method: Conference Grading Mode: Letter grading (A-F) Not offered: 2024-25 Group Distribution Learning Outcome(s):
- Evaluate data and/or sources.
- Analyze institutions, formations, languages, structures, or processes, whether social, political, religious, economic, cultural, intellectual or other.
- Think in sophisticated ways about causation, social and/or historical change, human cognition, or the relationship between individuals and society, or engage with social, political, religious or economic theory in other areas.
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