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AMER-ST 250
Introduction To American Studies I
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This course is the first half of the year long, required introductory course in American Studies. It is also open to all undergraduates. It focuses on works and authors, from the turn-of-the century to the present, who are generally considered part of the American Studies canon and emphasizes understanding what America is/was according to these writers. The course is grounded in questions of citizenship, civic responsibility, ethics, character, progress and westward expansion. It will also look at the place of distinct disciplines (political science, English, anthropology, history, sociology, communication studies) in grappling with many of these questions. The course will introduce students to American Studies as an area of study and interdisciplinary scholarship as a methodological tool. Offered: Fall Semester.
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Credits: 3 hours
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AMER-ST 251
Introduction To American Studies II
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This course is the second half of the year long, required introductory course in American Studies. It is also open to all undergraduates. Students will be expected to locate themselves within American Studies as an area of study and will be pushed to think critically about the field by looking at the work of scholars in Cultural History, Media Studies, Regional Studies, Black Studies, Public History, Critical Legal Studies, Women's Studies and American Studies in an international context. Students will also be encouraged to place this scholarship in dialogue with that from the first semester in order to look at the boundaries of a field that is constantly changing. Prerequisite: A&S 250 Offered: Winter Semester.
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Credits: 3 hours
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AMER-ST 300CD
American Social Film: Silver Screen And The American Dream
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This course will combine American social history and American film history. Using Hollywood entertainment films, the course will look at Hollywood as an indicator of social, political and economic conditions in the United States from the early 1900s to the late 1950s. The main topics are war and the threat of war, poverty and affluence, racial tensions, censorship, and political zealotry. A paper is required and a social history textbook, a film history textbook, a play by Arthur Miller, an a collection of articles constitute core readings. This course is offered as a cluster with COMM- ST 402CD and ENGLISH 300cd
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Credits: 3 hours
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AMER-ST 301
American Stds: Is/Tutorial: Themes In The American Popular Arts
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This course uses the popular arts as an entree to the examination of stereotypes in American life, to a better understanding of challenges to tradition, and to assessing the consequences of conflict that have resulted from cultural pluralism. This is a modified independent study course. Students are exposed to some of America's best-known literature, films and music. Instructional audio tapes and traditional literature about American Culture show the relevance of examples of popular art to broader themes.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 301P
American Studies:Is/Tutorial:Themes In The American Popular Arts
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This course uses the popular arts as an entree to the examination of stereotypes in American life, to a better understanding of challenges to tradition, and to assessing the consequences of conflict that have resulted from cultural pluralism. This is a modified independent study course. Students are exposed to some of America's best-known literature, films and music. Instructional audio tapes and traditional literature about American Culture show the relevance of examples of popular art to broader themes.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 302
Survey Of American Studies
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This course offers a look at changes and continuities in American life from the era of British colonization to the present. It emphasizes philosophical, scientific and creative ideas that have had lasting effects, changing social structure, the factors that determine lifestyle, and the consequences of the national preoccupation with pluralism and consensus. The course also covers the main features of American political history.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 302P
Survey Of American Studies
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This course offers a look at changes and continuities in American life from the era of British colonization to the present. It emphasizes philosophical, scientific and creative ideas that have had lasting effects, changing social structure, the factors that determine lifestyle, and the consequences of the national preoccupation with pluralism and consensus. The course also covers the main features of American political history.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 303PW
Methods & Problems In American Studies
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This course examines four topics that are important in American culture; each topic is approached from a different methodological perspective. The topics (problems) are related to cultural resources in the Kansas City area (such as a museum exhibit or a library research collection) and may change from semester to semester. Methods of problem solving are determined by the topic; however, students should expect to participate in oral history, interpretation of material culture, and traditional archival research and document analysis.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 303WI
Methods & Problems In American Studies
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This course examines four topics that are important in American culture; each topic is approached from a different methodological perspective. The topics (problems) are related to cultural resources in the Kansas City area and may change from semester to semester. Methods of problem solving are determined by the topic; however, students should expect to participate in oral history, interpretation of material culture, and traditional archival research and document analysis.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 340
Seminar: Critical Issues In American Culture
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An interdisciplinary seminar which will examine various cultural topics relevant to understanding contemporary issues in American society. Students will write individual research papers as well as offer critiques of each other's work.
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Credits: 3 hours
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AMER-ST 340P
American Material Culture: The 20th Century
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This course will focus on the material culture of modern and post-modern America. This is an area of inquiry particularly well-suited to the examination of material culture resources. Students will be required to write a term paper or do a material culture project.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 340PP
American Material Culture: The 1950s
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This course will focus on the period of American culture from demobilization after World War II to the end of the 1950s--an era particularly well-suited to employing material culture resources as evidence. Students will be required to write a term paper or do a material culture project.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 341
American Material Culture: Objects And Images
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This course will examine American cultural and social history from earliest times to the present, with a special emphasis on the ways artifacts and visual images can provide information and insight about the American experience.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 341P
American Material Culture: Objects And Images
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This course will examine American cultural and social history from earliest times to present, with a special emphasis on the ways artifacts and visual images can provide information and insight about the American experience.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 342
American Material Culture: Museums
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This course will focus on local institutions that use material culture in their presentation of history and the American experience.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 342P
American Material Culture: Museums
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This course will focus on local institutions that use material culture in their presentation of history and the American experience.
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Credits: 4 hours
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AMER-ST 375
Censorship And Popular Culture In America
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The First Amendment to the Constitution states that "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech or the press." The American experience, however, is that controversial books, radio and television programs, motion pictures, and, most recently, the Internet have been subjected to various types of censorship. This course will study the censorship of popular culture in America.
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Credits: 3 hours
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AMER-ST 380
Decade Of Dissent: The 1960S
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The social movements and conflicts that developed during the 1960s continue to define American culture in the 1990s. Questions of racial and gender equity, a greater willingness to challenge authority, concerns about the environment, and a new openness about issues of sexuality all developed during the Sixties and remain as arenas of debate today. This course will examine the origins, contexts, and major themes of these social and cultural movements.
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Credits: 3 hours
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AMER-ST 400
Special Studies
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Pertinent courses from academic units throughout campus may be cross-listed with this course and applied to the major's requirements in American Studies.
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Credits: 1-3 hours
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AMER-ST 400A
Special Studies
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Credits: 1-3 hours
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