History
Is everything history? Just about. History is
the study of the human past. Does that rule anything out? To take an
example, we don’t study dinosaurs. But the history of paleontology and
paleontologists is fair game, and in studying that one will probably
learn something about dinosaurs. Historians study all aspects of human
history and are open to all the methods developed by various
disciplines. It is a field for people with gargantuan intellectual
appetites. (By the way, Gargantua was a fictional character created by
the sixteenth-century French satirist François Rabelais. You may
encounter him in HIS 106.)
At MCC our task is to provide courses that
freshmen and sophomores would take at a four-year school, and that
means most of what we do is offer broad, introductory surveys of large
areas of history: African-American history (103, 104); the United
States (111, 112); Western Civilization (105, 106, and 108); East Asia
(253, 254); and Russia (225, 226). A student can meet three of the
SUNY General Education requirements (American History, Western
Civilization, and Other World Civilizations) by taking history
courses. We also offer more specific 200-level courses. At present,
most of them focus on the U.S. and on war. We are a relatively new
history faculty, however, and we may expand our offerings--so keep your
eyes open for new courses as we try them out. There are no
prerequisites for any history course. |