MIT HOMEMIT History Faculty
HISTORY FACULTY HOME
CONTACT SITEMAP
FACULTY & subjects
BY FACULTY
BY SUBJECT
BY FIELD
BY SEMESTER
UNDERGRADUATE INFORMATION
MAJORS
MINORS
CONCENTRATORS
UROP
GRADUATE INFORMATION
subjects
NEWS
LECTURES
Semester        
Available History subjects on MIT OCW can be viewed at:
http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/History/index.htm
SPRING 2010
Number Title Time Location Instructor

21H.102
HASS-D,
CI-H

American History since 1865

Capozzola

21H.105
American Classics    

Maier

21H.112 The American Revolution     Maier
21H.117

The Black Radical Tradition in America

 

 

Wilder

21H.126

America in Depression and War

   

Jacobs

21H.131 The U.S. in the Nuclear Age: Politics, Culture, and Society since 1941    

Jacobs

21H.231J American Urban History I     Fogelson
21H.234J Downtown (meets with 11.339)     Fogelson

21H.302
HASS-D, 5; CI-H

The Ancient World: Rome

Broadhead
21H.306 The Medieval World 200-1500     Goldberg
21H.309 Charlemagne: Emperor of Europe     Goldberg
21H.406 Julius Caesar and the Fall of the Roman Republic     Broadhead

21H.433
HASS-D, 5; CI-H

The Age of Reason: Europe from the 17th to the Early 19th Centuries

Ravel

21H.467J
HASS-D, 4
Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society, 1917-Present

 

 

Wood

21H.504

East Asia in the World: 1500-2000 AD

 

 

Chapman

21H.573

Religion and Politics in Modern South Asia

 

 

Roy

21H.577J Film, Fiction, and History in Inda, 1905-2005     Roy
21H.580 From the SIlk Road to the Great Game: China, Russia, and Central Asia, 500-2000 AD     Chapman

21H.615
CI-H

The Middle East in the 20th Century

 

 

Der Matossian

21H. 631

Palestine and the Arab-Israeli Conflict

 

 

Der Matossian

21H.802 Latin America: Revolution, Dictatorship, and Democracy: 1850-Present     Ravel

21H.916

The Ghetto: From Venice to Harlem

 

 

Wilder

21H.931

Seminar in Historical Methods

 

 

Capozzola

     

 
MIT History Faculty Home
Copyright 2000 © Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Comments and questions to history-www@mit.edu