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Fall 2025 Undergraduate Catalog
History, BA
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Department of History, College of Arts and Sciences
Degree Awarded: Bachelor of Arts in History
Chair: Sara Lipton
Director of Undergraduate Studies: Eric Zolov
Office: S-301 Social and Behavioral Sciences
Phone: (631) 632-7500
Minors of particular interest to students majoring in History: Africana Studies (AFS), International Studies (INT), Latin American and Caribbean Studies (LAC), Political Science (POL), Women’s and Gender Studies (WST), Foreign Languages
History is the systematic study of peoples, states, and societies from antiquity to our current times. Using both written records and material artifacts, historians attempt to reconstruct and interpret change over time in every facet of human experience, from political and economic systems to family life and gender roles, to name a few. The study of history is not only intrinsically interesting, but also contributes useful insights into the contemporary world and its problems.
History majors develop an in-depth knowledge of a specific region of the world, including its history, geography, and culture. In the process, they also learn how to conduct historical research, and to develop convincing arguments based on the evidence they uncover. Effective oral and written communication skills are strongly emphasized in all history courses.
Many History majors choose careers in law, teaching, archival or library science, or museum work. Because it emphasizes research and writing, history is also excellent preparation for many fields, including journalism, diplomacy, and international business. Combined with a concentration in science, the History major is also a good background for medicine or other health science professions.
The Department’s offerings range over many eras, regions, and topics, concentrating on the United States, Europe, Africa, Latin America, East Asia, the history of science, and women’s history. Surveys of these fields are offered at the 100 level for the United States and Europe and the 200 level for other areas. Students interested in the study of history should take these survey courses first, as prerequisites for more advanced coursework. American and European courses at the 200 level customarily examine a specific period, while 300-level courses typically examine specific topics (such as social or political history) or countries (such as Mexico or India). Students design their own pathway through the major based on the selection of one of five possible thematic concentrations. HIS 301 , a required methods class normally taken in a student’s third year, is designed to hone the reading, writing, and research skills to prepare for success in the research-intensive capstone seminar (HIS 401 ). The study of history emphasizes the mastery of large amounts of information and the ability to demonstrate that mastery through skillful writing.
Each semester the Department posts full descriptions of course offerings on its website. Students interested in history, whether as a major, a minor, a social science course related to their major, or for general liberal arts purposes, are invited to review the History Department website and to seek advice from the Department’s director of undergraduate studies and other faculty members.
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Degree Requirements
The major in History leads to the Bachelor of Arts degree. All courses must be taken for a letter grade. No grade lower than C may be applied toward the major. At least 12 credits in Requirement A and B must be taken within the Department of History at Stony Brook. Completion of the major requires 39 credits. Study within the Area of the Major
9 courses (27 credits) distributed as follows: Thematic Cluster
A thematic cluster of 4 courses at the 200-level or above (minimum 2 courses at the 300-level) selected from the following thematic clusters: Arts, Ideas & Culture; Empires, Violence & Global Connections; Health, Science & Environmental Change; Law, Politics & Social Justice; Race, Religion, Gender & Sexualities (12 credits). See course lists below. Upper-Division Writing Requirement:
Satisfactory completion of HIS 401 with a grade of C or better. Students should consult with the department advisor to ensure that their plan for completing the Upper Division Writing Requirement is consistent with university graduation requirements for General Education. Students completing the Stony Brook Curriculum (SBC) must complete a course that satisfies the “Write Effectively within One’s Discipline” (WRTD) learning objective to graduate. The Upper Division Writing Requirement is consistent in most cases with the SBC learning outcomes for WRTD. Notes:
- No transferred course with a grade lower than C may be applied toward Requirement A.
- HIS 447 , HIS 487 , HIS 488 , HIS 495 , HIS 496 may not be used to satisfy major or minor requirements.
History Courses by Thematic Cluster
Arts, Ideas & Culture
- HIS 201 - The Ancient Near East 3 credits
- HIS 202 - Ancient Greece 3 credits
- HIS 203 - Ancient Rome 3 credits
- HIS 206 - Europe in the Age of Discovery, 1348-1789 3 credits
- HIS 210 - Soviet Russia 3 credits
- HIS 212 - Ancient History of Mesoamerica 3 credits
- HIS 213 - Colonial Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 214 - Modern Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 218 - Ancient, Medieval, & Early Modern South Asia 3 credits
- HIS 219 - Introduction to Chinese History and Civilization 3 credits
- HIS 220 - Japan in the Age of Courtier and Samurai 3 credits
- HIS 223 - Regional History of Africa 3 credits
- HIS 225 - Jewish History from Antiquity to the Middle Ages 3 credits
- HIS 226 - Modern Jewish History: Dilemmas of Difference 3 credits
- HIS 227 - Islamic Civilization & Muslim Societies 3 credits
- HIS 229 - Victorian Britain 3 credits
- HIS 235 - The Heirs of Rome: The Early Medieval World, 300-1000 3 credits
- HIS 236 - The World of the Later Middle Ages, 1000-1500 3 credits
- HIS 247 - Modern Korea through Visual Culture 3 credits
- HIS 256 - Tacos to Telenovelas: Latin American Popular Culture 3 credits
- HIS 261 - Change and Reform in the United States, 1877-1919 3 credits
- HIS 262 - American Colonial Society 3 credits
- HIS 263 - Age of the American Revolution 3 credits
- HIS 264 - The Early Republic 3 credits
- HIS 273 - U.S. History, 1900-1945 3 credits
- HIS 274 - U.S. History, 1945-2000 3 credits
- HIS 285 - Games, Burlesques, and Spectacles: Popular Culture in 19th-Century America 3 credits
- HIS 303 - The Crusades and Medieval Society 3 credits
- HIS 304 - Religion, Magic and Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe 3 credits
- HIS 308 - Britain and France in the Age of Revolution 3 credits
- HIS 312 - From Empire to Third Reich: Germany, 1890-1945 3 credits
- HIS 315 - Nazi Empire 3 credits
- HIS 318 - Modern European Intellectual History 3 credits
- HIS 320 - Latino New York 3 credits
- HIS 327 - The Arts as History 3 credits
- HIS 328 - History of New York City 3 credits
- HIS 334 - Women and Gender in Pre-Modern European History 3 credits
- HIS 336 - Women and Gender in Modern European History 3 credits
- HIS 337 - History of Korea 3 credits
- HIS 344 - Modern Japan 3 credits
- HIS 351 - Revolutionary China: Politics, Culture, and Power 3 credits
- HIS 353 - Postwar Japan 3 credits
- HIS 379 - Rebels & Revolutionaries: 1960s Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 383 - The World of Jane Austen; Jane Austen in the World 3 credits
- HIS 385 - Aztec Civilization 3 credits
- HIS 386 - The Maya 3 credits
- HIS 387 - Cuba: Island of Consequence 3 credits
Empires, Violence & Global Connections
- HIS 201 - The Ancient Near East 3 credits
- HIS 202 - Ancient Greece 3 credits
- HIS 203 - Ancient Rome 3 credits
- HIS 206 - Europe in the Age of Discovery, 1348-1789 3 credits
- HIS 210 - Soviet Russia 3 credits
- HIS 212 - Ancient History of Mesoamerica 3 credits
- HIS 213 - Colonial Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 214 - Modern Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 215 - Long Island History 3 credits
- HIS 216 - History of U.S.-Latin American Relations 3 credits
- HIS 218 - Ancient, Medieval, & Early Modern South Asia 3 credits
- HIS 219 - Introduction to Chinese History and Civilization 3 credits
- HIS 221 - Introduction to Modern African History 3 credits
- HIS 227 - Islamic Civilization & Muslim Societies 3 credits
- HIS 229 - Victorian Britain 3 credits
- HIS 230 - Britain since 1688: Four Nations in the World 3 credits
- HIS 235 - The Heirs of Rome: The Early Medieval World, 300-1000 3 credits
- HIS 236 - The World of the Later Middle Ages, 1000-1500 3 credits
- HIS 239 - From Columbus to Darwin: Investigating Nature, Medicine, and Science in the Americas 3 credits
- HIS 241 - Nazi Genocide and the Holocaust 3 credits
- HIS 247 - Modern Korea through Visual Culture 3 credits
- HIS 248 - Modern Europe, 1815-1914 3 credits
- HIS 249 - Modern Europe, 1914-1945 3 credits
- HIS 250 - The Second World War, 1939-1945 3 credits
- HIS 251 - Europe Since 1945 3 credits
- HIS 256 - Tacos to Telenovelas: Latin American Popular Culture 3 credits
- HIS 263 - Age of the American Revolution 3 credits
- HIS 264 - The Early Republic 3 credits
- HIS 265 - Civil War and Reconstruction 3 credits
- HIS 266 - History of the United States West 3 credits
- HIS 273 - U.S. History, 1900-1945 3 credits
- HIS 274 - U.S. History, 1945-2000 3 credits
- HIS 281 - Global History and Geography 3 credits
- HIS 283 - The History of Latinos in the United States 3 credits
- HIS 287 - Crime and Criminal Justice in the U.S. 3 credits
- HIS 288 - Wealth and Inequality in Early America 3 credits
- HIS 289 - Wealth and Inequality in America’s Corporate Age 3 credits
- HIS 293 - Disease in American History 3 credits
- HIS 302 - Environmental History in Global Perspective 3 credits
- HIS 303 - The Crusades and Medieval Society 3 credits
- HIS 308 - Britain and France in the Age of Revolution 3 credits
- HIS 312 - From Empire to Third Reich: Germany, 1890-1945 3 credits
- HIS 314 - Indigenous-Settler Relations in the United States 3 credits
- HIS 315 - Nazi Empire 3 credits
- HIS 320 - Latino New York 3 credits
- HIS 323 - Women of Color in the U.S. 3 credits
- HIS 325 - Civil Rights and Black Power 3 credits
- HIS 332 - Postcolonial South Asia 3 credits
- HIS 337 - History of Korea 3 credits
- HIS 338 - Asian and Pacific Islanders in American History 3 credits
- HIS 344 - Modern Japan 3 credits
- HIS 348 - Colonial South Asia 3 credits
- HIS 351 - Revolutionary China: Politics, Culture, and Power 3 credits
- HIS 352 - Environmental History of China 3 credits
- HIS 353 - Postwar Japan 3 credits
- HIS 356 - Zionism, Israel, and the Middle East 3 credits
- HIS 361 - Slavery and Freedom in the Making of the Atlantic 3 credits
- HIS 362 - Unsettled Decade: The Sixties 3 credits
- HIS 364 - Oceans Past: World History from a Maritime Perspective 3 credits
- HIS 365 - Environmental History of North America 3 credits
- HIS 366 - Carceral Studies: Histories of Policing, Prisons, and Surveillance 3 credits
- HIS 379 - Rebels & Revolutionaries: 1960s Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 381 - Chocolate, Coffee & Cocaine: Global Commodities 3 credits
- HIS 383 - The World of Jane Austen; Jane Austen in the World 3 credits
- HIS 385 - Aztec Civilization 3 credits
- HIS 386 - The Maya 3 credits
- HIS 387 - Cuba: Island of Consequence 3 credits
- HIS 389 - Mexico: From Revolutions to Cartels, 1810-2020 3 credits
Health, Science & Environmental Change
Law, Politics & Social Justice
Race, Religion, Gender & Sexualities
- HIS 213 - Colonial Latin America 3 credits
- HIS 215 - Long Island History 3 credits
- HIS 218 - Ancient, Medieval, & Early Modern South Asia 3 credits
- HIS 221 - Introduction to Modern African History 3 credits
- HIS 223 - Regional History of Africa 3 credits
- HIS 225 - Jewish History from Antiquity to the Middle Ages 3 credits
- HIS 226 - Modern Jewish History: Dilemmas of Difference 3 credits
- HIS 227 - Islamic Civilization & Muslim Societies 3 credits
- HIS 229 - Victorian Britain 3 credits
- HIS 235 - The Heirs of Rome: The Early Medieval World, 300-1000 3 credits
- HIS 236 - The World of the Later Middle Ages, 1000-1500 3 credits
- HIS 241 - Nazi Genocide and the Holocaust 3 credits
- HIS 247 - Modern Korea through Visual Culture 3 credits
- HIS 248 - Modern Europe, 1815-1914 3 credits
- HIS 249 - Modern Europe, 1914-1945 3 credits
- HIS 261 - Change and Reform in the United States, 1877-1919 3 credits
- HIS 265 - Civil War and Reconstruction 3 credits
- HIS 277 - The Modern Color Line 3 credits
- HIS 282 - African American History Since 1877 3 credits
- HIS 283 - The History of Latinos in the United States 3 credits
- HIS 285 - Games, Burlesques, and Spectacles: Popular Culture in 19th-Century America 3 credits
- HIS 295 - History of North American Cities and Suburbs 3 credits
- HIS 303 - The Crusades and Medieval Society 3 credits
- HIS 304 - Religion, Magic and Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe 3 credits
- HIS 314 - Indigenous-Settler Relations in the United States 3 credits
- HIS 318 - Modern European Intellectual History 3 credits
- HIS 320 - Latino New York 3 credits
- HIS 323 - Women of Color in the U.S. 3 credits
- HIS 325 - Civil Rights and Black Power 3 credits
- HIS 327 - The Arts as History 3 credits
- HIS 328 - History of New York City 3 credits
- HIS 331 - Immigration in American History 3 credits
- HIS 332 - Postcolonial South Asia 3 credits
- HIS 334 - Women and Gender in Pre-Modern European History 3 credits
- HIS 336 - Women and Gender in Modern European History 3 credits
- HIS 338 - Asian and Pacific Islanders in American History 3 credits
- HIS 339 - Recent African American History 3 credits
- HIS 350 - Topics in African History 3 credits
- HIS 353 - Postwar Japan 3 credits
- HIS 356 - Zionism, Israel, and the Middle East 3 credits
- HIS 360 - Changing Families: US History to 1860 3 credits
- HIS 361 - Slavery and Freedom in the Making of the Atlantic 3 credits
- HIS 362 - Unsettled Decade: The Sixties 3 credits
- HIS 366 - Carceral Studies: Histories of Policing, Prisons, and Surveillance 3 credits
- HIS 369 - Religion and Politics in Africa 3 credits
- HIS 370 - US Social History from 1860 to 1940 3 credits
- HIS 374 - Surveillance State: A History of U.S. Domestic Spying 3 credits
- HIS 383 - The World of Jane Austen; Jane Austen in the World 3 credits
- HIS 385 - Aztec Civilization 3 credits
- HIS 386 - The Maya 3 credits
- HIS 391 - Topics in Ancient and Medieval Europe 3 credits
History Honors Program
Departmental majors with a minimum g.p.a. of 3.50 in history courses and related disciplines as specified in the major requirements are eligible to enroll in the History honors program at the beginning of their senior year. The student, after asking a faculty member to be a sponsor, must submit a proposal to the Department indicating the merit of the planned research. The supervising faculty member must also submit a statement supporting the student’s proposal. This must be done in the semester prior to the beginning of the project. The honors paper resulting from a student’s research is read by two historians and a member of another department, as arranged by the director of undergraduate studies. If the paper is judged to be of unusual merit and the student’s record warrants such a determination, the Department recommends honors. SBC Courses
This table illustrates major courses that can also be used to fulfill SBC requirements. (See Note 1 & Note 2) SBC Category | Required Major Courses | Optional Major Courses (see Note 3) | ARTS | | | GLO | HIS 101, HIS 102 | HIS 100, HIS 113, HIS 201, HIS 202, HIS 203, HIS 206, HIS 212, HIS 213, HIS 214, HIS 216, HIS 218, HIS 220, HIS 221, HIS 223, HIS 225, HIS 226, HIS 227, HIS 229, HIS 230, HIS 235, HIS 236, HIS 241, HIS 247, HIS 248, HIS 249, HIS 250, HIS 251, HIS 256, HIS 300, HIS 307, HIS 315, HIS 340, HIS 344, HIS 353, HIS 373, HIS 379, HIS 381, HIS 386, HIS 387 | HUM | | HIS 218 | LANG (see Note 4) | | | QPS | | | SBS | HIS 101, HIS 102, HIS 103, HIS 104 | HIS 100, HIS 113, HIS 116, HIS 206, HIS 213, HIS 214, HIS 215, HIS 216, HIS 220, HIS 221, HIS 223, HIS 226, HIS 227, HIS 229, HIS 230, HIS 247, HIS 250, HIS 256, HIS 261, HIS 262, HIS 263, HIS 273, HIS 274, HIS 280, HIS 282, HIS 283, HIS 285, HIS 287, HIS 288, HIS 289, HIS 295, HIS 299 | SNW | | | TECH | | | USA | HIS 103, HIS 104 | HIS 113, HIS 116, HIS 215, HIS 261, HIS 262, HIS 263, HIS 264, HIS 265, HIS 266, HIS 273, HIS 274, HIS 277, HIS 280, HIS 282, HIS 283, HIS 285, HIS 287, HIS 288, HIS 289, HIS 295, HIS 299, HIS 339 | WRT | | | STAS | | HIS 237, HIS 238, HIS 239, HIS 281, HIS 286, HIS 293, HIS 302, HIS 329, HIS 352, HIS 364, HIS 365, HIS 398 | EXP+ | HIS 401 | HIS 444, HIS 487, HIS 488, HIS 496 | HFA+ | | HIS 327, HIS 383 | SBS+ | | HIS 239, HIS 300, HIS 303, HIS 304, HIS 307, HIS 308, HIS 309, HIS 310, HIS 312, HIS 314, HIS 315, HIS 318, HIS 320, HIS 323, HIS 325, HIS 327, HIS 328, HIS 331, HIS 332, HIS 334, HIS 336, HIS 337, HIS 338, HIS 339, HIS 340, HIS 344, HIS 348, HIS 350, HIS 351, HIS 353, HIS 356, HIS 360, HIS 361, HIS 362, HIS 363, HIS 366, HIS 368, HIS 369, HIS 370, HIS 371, HIS 373, HIS 374, HIS 379, HIS 380, HIS 381, HIS 383, HIS 385, HIS 386, HIS 387, HIS 389, HIS 390, HIS 391, HIS 392, HIS 393, HIS 396, HIS 399 | STEM+ | | | CER | | HIS 225, HIS 314, HIS 348, HIS 356, HIS 361, HIS 369 | DIV (see Note 5) | HIS 103, HIS 104 | HIS 256, HIS 261, HIS 262, HIS 264, HIS 265, HIS 283, HIS 288, HIS 307, HIS 309, HIS 310, HIS 314, HIS 320, HIS 323, HIS 331, HIS 360, HIS 361, HIS 366, HIS 370, HIS 371, HIS 381, HIS 389 | ESI | HIS 301 | HIS 239, HIS 332, HIS 365, HIS 385, HIS 387 | SPK | HIS 401 | HIS 320, HIS 458 | WRTD | HIS 401 | HIS 459 | Note 1: Some course information may be subject to change. Please contact your major advisor for additional consultation. Note 2: For majors that require study in a related area or completion of a minor, visit the respective program’s “Major SBC Courses” page to view expanded SBC options. Note 3: Denotes any course in which students can choose from more than one option. These may include, but are not limited to, major electives, concentration/track/specialization courses, or calculus/physics/chemistry sequences. Note 4: CEAS majors, the Athletic Training major, the Respiratory Care major, and the Clinical Laboratory Sciences major are exempt from the LANG learning objective. Students enrolled in the major in Social Work are exempt from the LANG learning objective, but are required to enroll in and pass with a letter grade of C or higher the first semester of an elementary foreign language course numbered 111, or satisfy through alternate methods. Note 5: Students are responsible for completing the general education requirements published in the Bulletin that was current as of the first semester of matriculation (or rematriculation). The following student groups must satisfy the DIV learning objective as part of their degree requirements: - Freshmen who matriculate in the Fall of 2019 or later
- Transfer students who matriculate in the Spring of 2020 or later
- Students who rematriculate in the Fall of 2019 or later
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