Subject | Course | Section | Course Title | Course Description | Instructor | Files | Term |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ITAL | 102 | 001 | Introduction to Italian Language 2 |
A continuation of ITAL 101, with more emphasis on conversation and everyday uses of language. |
Roberta Cauchi-Santoro | ITAL 102_R.Cauchi-Santoro_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 |
ITAL | 101 | 001 | Introduction to Italian Language 1 |
An intensive study of the fundamentals of grammar and conversation. The language laboratory will be used. |
Yuri Sangalli | ITAL 101_Y.Sangalli_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 |
HUMSC | 102 | 001 | Great Dialogues: Politics and Morality |
What is the relationship between politics and morality? Are they opposites? Can they be integrated? This course investigates the way our own dialogue with core texts, from the Renaissance to the present (authors may include Machiavelli, Shakespeare, Wollstonecraft, Marx, Conrad, and Arendt), offers ways of thinking through the dilemmas and issues raised by these texts and present in our culture. |
HUMSC 102_J.Greenwood_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 | |
HIST | 450 | 001 | The History Capstone |
The capstone challenges students with an opportunity to synthesize and showcase, at a high level of achievement, the disciplinary skills and knowledge they have gained during the course of their studies in History. It encourages students to pursue individual research interests and presentation formats as limited only by historical methodology, academic rigour, and the consent of the instructor. |
Ryan Touhey | HIST 450_R.Touhey_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 |
HIST | 422 | 001 | Special Topics in History: The Freak Show |
This seminar is a special study of a selected topic in history. Please see course instructor for details. |
Jane Nicholas | Winter 2020 | |
HIST | 391 | 001 | Special Topics in History: The Black Death |
One or more term courses will be offered from time to time as announced by the History Department. Topics will be dependent upon special research and/or instructional interests of faculty. |
HIST 391_J.Komornicka_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 | |
HIST | 313 | 001 | History of the Family in North America |
This course will consider the history of private interactions between family members in North America, as well as the family's relationship to public forces such as politics, the law, social movements, and the economy. Other topics covered in this course include changing conventions of courtship and dating, marriage, divorce, parenthood, and childhood. |
Jane Nicholas | Winter 2020 | |
HIST | 304 | 001 | Heresy and Religious Crises in Late Medieval Europe |
An exploration of the impact of social crises on late medieval religious modes of expression. Topics will include the Great Famine, the Black Death, the Avignon Papacy and Western Schism, the development of heretical movements, and the eventual disintegration of European religious unity. Cross-listed with MEDVL 304, RS 342 |
HIST 304-MEDVL 304-RS 342_J.Komornicka_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 | |
HIST | 260 | 001 | Europe: 410-1303 |
The political, cultural, economic, and ecclesiastical development of Europe from the fall of the Roman Empire to the end of the high middle ages. Cross-listed with MEDVL 260 |
HIST 260-MEDVL 260_J.Komornicka.pdf | Winter 2020 | |
HIST | 254 | 001 | Canada Since 1867: A New Nation |
This course examines Confederation, the rise of political parties, Canadian external relations, western discontent, the impact of both World Wars, and political and economic changes in Canada since 1867. |
Ryan Touhey | HIST 254_R.Touhey_Winter 2020.pdf | Winter 2020 |