Dec 21, 2024  
2023-2024 Catalog 
    
2023-2024 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

History


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Go to: Division of History and Social Sciences  

Faculty

Michael P. Breen
Old Regime France; medieval and early modern European legal, social, and cultural history; Renaissance Italy. On sabbatical 2023-24.

Jacqueline Dirks
American social and cultural history, United States women’s history.

David T. Garrett
Latin America and early modern Spain.

Joshua P. Howe
Environmental history, history of science, twentieth-century United States.

Benjamin Lazier
Modern Europe, intellectual history.

Liz Matsushita
African, Middle Eastern, and South Asian history and humanities.

Mary Ashburn Miller
Revolutionary-era France and Europe, modern European cultural and intellectual history.

Margot Minardi
Colonial and revolutionary America, nineteenth-century United States.

Radhika Natarajan
Modern imperial Britain.

Padraig Riley
Nineteenth-century United States, slavery, political history.

Xue Zhang
Modern and early modern China, nineteenth-century Qing empire, Chinese frontiers.

Curriculum

At Reed, history is treated as a basic component of general education. The department attempts to include in its course offerings as many periods and areas of study as student enrollment and available faculty make possible. The priority, however, is on diversity of approach-constitutional, intellectual, economic, social, diplomatic, cultural-rather than on specific coverage of conventional fields. The aim is to arouse sufficient interest in history to stimulate a student’s independent inquiry and the necessary analytical thought and perspectives that go with historical study.

The department tries to inculcate students with a sense of history-to impress them with the legacy, conscious or unconscious, that each present has inherited from its past, as well as the many perspectives one can have on that legacy. While many graduates have become prominent as professional historians and teachers of history, it is even more as a fundamental contribution to liberal, humanistic education and the development of a critical intelligence, carried through in many different professions and ways of life, that the department program is conceived and directed to majors and nonmajors alike.

The department expects students to develop competence in various periods and areas of history, as specified in the course requirements below, and to attain analytical skills common to all fields of history. The junior qualifying examination in history requires students to analyze a significant piece of recent scholarship in the discipline. The examination is offered once each semester, in conjunction with the junior seminar. Students in the major ordinarily take the exam in the first four weeks of the semester in which they are enrolled in Junior Seminar (HIST 411 ). The department encourages but does not require its students to pursue the study of a foreign language.

For students who wish to pursue interdisciplinary study in American history and some other area-for example, literature, economics, or government-Reed offers an American Studies  major. Among other possible programs are interdisciplinary majors involving history, such as History/Literature  and International and Comparative Policy Studies with a Concentration in History Environmental Studies with a Concentration in History , or Comparative Race and Ethnicity Studies with a Concentration in History .  

Note: 300-level history courses are ordinarily open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors, and to first-year students only with the consent of the instructor.

Programs

    Majors

    Courses

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