History 157 - US in Wld: 1898-PRESENT

Spring
2014
01
4.00
Vanessa Gordon
MW 11:00AM-11:50AM
Amherst College
HIST-157-01-1314S
FAYE 115
vwalker@amherst.edu

[US] This course investigates the United States’ foreign relations in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries and seeks to understand why and how it has become increasingly involved in world affairs. Starting with the War of 1898 and closing with the contemporary global war on terrorism, it examines the interplay of domestic and foreign considerations that have defined the “American Century.” This period raises important questions about the nature of American power in relation to traditional empires. The course asks students to think critically about the United States in the context of imperialism, and explore how Americans, both in and out of government, sought to reconcile domestic values and identities with the country’s growing global presence. It investigates the ideological, economic, political, social, racial, and security considerations that shaped America’s emergence as a world power and formed the basis of modern American foreign policy and domestic society.  Three class meetings per week.


Spring semester.  Professor Walker.


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Multiple required components--lab and/or discussion section. To register, submit requests for all components simultaneously.
You must take one section for each of the following coreqs : HIST-157F
Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.