General Catalog 2025-2026
History
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About the Department
Blain Roberts, Department Chair
Social Science Building, Room 101
559.278.2153
socialsciences.fresnostate.edu/historydept/
History is the study of humanity’s recorded past. It encompasses all aspects of human behavior, social organization, and cultural development. The arts and the sciences, the development of technology, and changing economic forces are as much a part of history as is politics or social conflict. History is also one of the broadest and most universal of the humanities. Just as the personalities of individuals are shaped through the totality of their past experiences, so cultures and institutions also develop in time.
Students of history are engaged in a journey through time in which they can witness and compare the development of a variety of cultures and the interrelations between people in many different circumstances. Through the study of past events, history provides a great storehouse of experience by which the theories of the other social sciences can be tested. And through its analysis of the development of institutions and cultures, it provides one of our best tools for understanding social phenomena.
The study of history can help students understand themselves and their culture better and develop a more tolerant and humane spirit toward others. In this way, knowledge of the past can help all of us meet the problems of today with greater understanding and compassion.
Program
The History Department offers a major and minor in history for the Bachelor of Arts degree, a graduate program leading to the Master of Arts, and courses for use in the teaching credential program. It participates in the interdisciplinary programs and minors in Armenian studies, Asian studies, classical studies, Latin American studies, African studies, Jewish studies, and women’s studies. History courses may also be used as electives toward graduation in most other majors, and the History Department encourages students to take minors and second majors in other fields as well.
The History Department is a chartered member of Phi Alpha Theta National History Honor Society. Our chapter is Alpha Kappa Beta.
What You Can Learn
- How immigration shaped the history of the Central Valley
- What caused the Civil War and why it matters today
- How to analyze material objects to understand the premodern histories of China, Japan, and Korea
- How imperialism, capitalism, and industrialization forged inequalities across and within the Global South
- What video and board games reveal about 20th-Century America
- How and why global feminist movements emerged in the 20th Century
Faculty
The Department of History has more than 15 faculty members offering a wide variety of courses in the history of Europe, the United States, Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
Career Opportunities
History majors are trained to read with comprehension and to compare and analyze both written and oral material. In addition, they must know how to evaluate evidence and sources, how to critique the writing of others, and how to do research and write on their own.
What You Can Do
Prepare for careers in:
- business
- law
- government service
- librarianship
- journalism
- publishing
- public relations
- social services
- urban planning
- foreign service
- insurance
- marketing
- advertising
ProgramsCertificatesBachelorMasterMinorCoursesHistory- HIST 1 - Western Civilization I
- HIST 2 - Western Civilization II
- HIST 3 - Colonial Americas
- HIST 4 - Introduction to Historical Skills
- HIST 5 - European Civilization
- HIST 6 - East Asian Civilization
- HIST 7 - African Civilization
- HIST 8 - Republics of Latin America
- HIST 9 - Russian and Eurasian Civilization
- HIST 11 - American History to 1877
- HIST 12 - American History from 1877
- HIST 13 - Empires of the Middle East
- HIST 15H - Trials of Century
- HIST 20 - World History I
- HIST 21 - World History II
- HIST 100W - Introduction to Historical Research and Writing
- HIST 101 - Women in History
- HIST 102T - Topics in Women’s History
- HIST 103 - History of Early Christianity
- HIST 104 - History of Women and Men in Modern Europe
- HIST 105 - Armenian Genocide in Comparative Context
- HIST 106 - Armenians in North America
- HIST 107 - Modern Middle East
- HIST 108A - Armenian History I: Ancient and Medieval
- HIST 108B - Armenian History II: Modern and Contemporary
- HIST 109T - Studies in Middle East and Africa
- HIST 110 - Ancient Near East
- HIST 111 - Ancient Greece and Egypt
- HIST 112 - Ancient Rome
- HIST 113 - History of Israel and Palestine
- HIST 114 - Gender, Sexuality and the Family in the Middle East
- HIST 115 - Ancient Israel
- HIST 117 - Alexander the Great & Hellenistic World
- HIST 119T - Studies in Ancient History
- HIST 120 - Europe after Hitler: 1945 to Present
- HIST 121 - The Middle Ages
- HIST 122 - Medieval Culture
- HIST 124T - Studies in Medieval History
- HIST 125 - Renaissance
- HIST 126 - Reformation
- HIST 127 - Women & Power in Early Mod Europe
- HIST 128 - Early Modern Europe and the World
- HIST 129T - Studies in Intellectual and Social History
- HIST 130 - Early Modern Monsters
- HIST 131 - Europe in the 18th Century
- HIST 132 - Revolutionary Europe
- HIST 133 - Europe in the 20th Century
- HIST 134 - 20th Century Dictators
- HIST 135 - European Cultural History
- HIST 136 - Interwar Crisis: Europe 1914-1945
- HIST 137 - Modern Italy: Napoleon to Present
- HIST 138 - World War II: A Global Conflict
- HIST 139 - European Diplomatic History 1890-1945
- HIST 140 - Holocaust
- HIST 141 - Modern Germany
- HIST 142 - Tsarist Russia
- HIST 143 - Russia and Eurasia in the 20th Century
- HIST 144 - Warfare in the Western World
- HIST 145 - Spain and Portugal
- HIST 146 - Gendered Perspectives on U.S. Immigration
- HIST 147 - Disease and Medicine in Global History
- HIST 149T - Studies in Modern European History
- HIST 149TZ - England from Chaucer to Shakespeare
- HIST 150 - England to 1485
- HIST 151 - British Empire
- HIST 152 - British History in Film
- HIST 153 - United States During the Cold War
- HIST 154 - Jewish American Popular Culture
- HIST 155 - Queer History of the United States
- HIST 156 - U.S. Cultural History, 1877-Present
- HIST 157 - Modern Africa
- HIST 158 - The American Civil War
- HIST 159 - The Reconstruction of America, 1865-1900
- HIST 160 - The Great American Civilizations: Maya, Aztec, Inca
- HIST 161 - Multicultural Brazil
- HIST 162 - South America
- HIST 163 - History of Games in the United States
- HIST 164 - 19th Century Mexico
- HIST 165 - Modern Mexico
- HIST 166 - United States – Latin American Diplomacy
- HIST 167 - Social Revolution in Latin America
- HIST 168 - Latin American History in Film
- HIST 169T - Studies in Latin American History
- HIST 170 - The American Colonies, 1607-1763
- HIST 171 - The American Revolution, 1763-1815
- HIST 172 - Jacksonian America, 1815-1848
- HIST 173 - Jews in American Film
- HIST 174 - United States History, 1914-1945
- HIST 175 - United States History, 1945-Present
- HIST 176 - The Atlantic World, 1500 - 1800
- HIST 177 - American History in Film
- HIST 178 - History of African Americans
- HIST 179T - Studies in United States History
- HIST 180 - History and Autobiography
- HIST 181 - Anti-Semitism from the Medieval to Modern World
- HIST 182 - Westward Movement Since 1848
- HIST 183 - The Hispanic Southwest
- HIST 184 - Modern China through Literature, Film, and Music
- HIST 185 - Modern Japan through Literature, Film, and Music
- HIST 186 - American Immigration and Ethnic History
- HIST 187 - California History
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