Course Guide

During the summer of 2024, the UMass History Department is offering 12 online classes. Each class fulfills one or more UMass general education requirements, including Historical Studies (HS), United States Diversity (DU), and Global Diversity (DG) requirements.

All classes are open to UMass students and the general public. The summer semesters run May 21-July 3 and July 8 - August 16, 2024. Join us!

For questions about course content, contact the faculty member teaching the course. For general questions about the UMass History Department's online classes, contact @email. For all other questions, including registration and records, contact U+.

Enrollment Begins March 18!

An image of a map under text that reads "Summer Session 1"
An Egyptian hieroglyph

History 110: World to 1500

Anna Taylor, HS DG, 4 credits

This course explores some of the most ancient cultures of the world, including Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China, and Meso-America, through ancient primary sources and artifacts.

Historical photo of three Black men at a lunch counter.

History 154: Social Change in the 1960s

Julia Sandy, HS DU, 4 credits

This course focuses on the "Long Sixties," a period stretching from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s. We will look in new ways at topics you are probably already familiar with: the civil rights movement, the anti-Vietnam War movement, counterculture, sexual experimentation, and never trusting anyone over 30. We will also explore aspects of the Sixties you may not know about or associate with a different era, such as the Great Society, a thriving conservative movement, environmentalism, and gay rights. Students will view online lectures, participate in online discussions, and complete assignments which include reviewing music, movies, and books from the sixties.

Black and white photo of three men playing soccer.

History 281: Global History of Soccer

Yuri Gama, HS DG, 4 credits

Soccer is without question the world’s most popular sport. Its impact reaches beyond entertainment to influence and reflect cultural values and identities, economic interests and power relationships between peoples and nation states. The course takes a historical approach by surveying important developments within the game and how they impacted people at the local, national and international level. Select case studies examine in detail the particular ways the sport has promoted and/or challenged significant global phenomena such as the expansion and resistance to imperialism and authoritarianism, the development of racial and national identities and gender relationships.

Black and white photo of football players mid-game.

History 283: American Gridiron Football

Joel Wolfe, HS, 4 credits

This class examines the history of American gridiron football from its earliest days as a game played primarily at elite colleges through its development into the most popular spectator sport in the United States. The class examines the complex and contentious history of race and ethnicity in football, and its place in American politics from Theodore Roosevelt’s intervention to keep the sport legal to present-day controversies over everything from race and sexuality to patriotism.

A black and white etching of figures surrounding a candle.

History 387: The Holocaust

Sean Hough, HS DG, 4 credits

This course explores the causes and consequences of what was arguably the most horrific event in all of history. Topics include both the long-term origins of the Holocaust in European racism and anti-Semitism and the more immediate origins in the dynamics of the Nazi state and the war against the Soviet Union. Particular attention will be given to the debates and controversies, including the motivations of German and non-German perpetrators, bystanders, and collaborations, the place of the Jew and non-Jews in Holocaust historiography, the continuities of racism and genocide and their comparability, and the consequences of the Holocaust for memory and world politics. Open to rising sophomores, juniors and seniors.

A sepia-toned photograph of five women standing on a dock and directing two fire hoses into a body of water.

History 389: U.S. Women's History since 1890

Jennifer L. Nye, HS DU, 4 credits

This course explores the relationship of women and gender to the social, cultural, economic, legal and political developments shaping American society from 1890 to the present. It examines change over time in family life and intimate relationships, including marriage, divorce, sexuality and reproduction (sterilization, birth control, abortion, reproductive technologies, adoption); the civil and political participation of women, including voting, jury service, military service, and holding political office; and paid and unpaid labor, including employment discrimination and sexual harassment.  The course will pay particular attention to gender and leadership in various social movements such as suffrage, civil rights and racial justice, welfare rights, reproductive rights and justice, and the anti-rape and battered women’s movements.  We’ll consider the long arc of feminist activism, as well as conservative resistance and backlash.  This course will specifically focus on how class, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability and immigration status have shaped women's historical experiences. Sophomore level and above.

A historical photo of a city square under text that reads "Summer Session 2"
A historical rendering of a world map as two conjoined circles, surrounded by illustrations from mythology and theology.

History 111: World Since 1500

Richard Chu, HS DG, 4 credits

In this course, you will be invited to explore the continuities, connections, trends, and ruptures in world history from the late fifteenth century to the present. We will investigate the historical processes that formed the modern world, including cross-cultural interactions, capitalism, global migration, colonization and decolonization, nationalism and imperialism, trade networks, revolutions, and war. Topics include the foundation of European empires, the spread of Islamic world powers, the establishment of the African slave trade, the rise of MIng/Qing China and Tokugawa in Japan, the two world wars, the rise of globalization and climate change. The course emphasizes the multiple perspectives and experiences that shaped world history, including the determinant role played by non-European societies in making the modern world. Course readings include a textbook, some documentaries or movies, and a set of primary sources that provide a window into the diverse human experiences in history.

An illustration of a king on a throne surrounded by attendants and animals.

History 131: Middle East II

Mohammad Ataie, HS DG, 4 credits

This course will explore the political, social, and cultural history of the modern Middle East, with an emphasis on its interconnections with the rest of the world, most notably Europe and the US. We begin with the rise of the Safavid Empire in Iran and the Ottoman Empire in the Eastern Mediterranean and Western Asia. We then look at the shifting balances of power within these empires which were caused by both internal and external forces. Next, we move into the era known as the “Modern” Middle East, exploring both the essential role of European imperialism in shaping this period and trans-regional reactions to it. We continue on towards our final destination, the present day, examining particular events and longer trends that have fundamentally shaped the region, including the First World War and the politics that literally drew the map of the area, the occupation of Palestine, Nasserism and Pan-Arabism, the Lebanese civil war, the Iranian Revolution, and the rise of Political Islam. We end our course with a look at the post-2010 Arab Uprisings and the Israeli occupation of Palestine.

A black and white photograph of African leaders waving and leading a crowd.

History 161: History of Africa since 1500

Anotida Chikumbu, HS DG, 4 credits

This course is broadly designed to help students understand the major historical events that have influenced and impacted African people from pre-colonial times to the present. Students will gain a historical frameworks for interpreting contemporary issues in African societies and their relations with the world. The class will be divided into 3 parts: pre-colonial social and economic systems; imperialism, colonization and resistance; post-colonial developments.

 

A row of vintage medicine bottles.

History 264: History of Health Care and Medicine

Emily Hamilton, HS DU, 4 credits

This course investigates the social meaning of medicine, health care, and disease in the U.S. from 1600 to the present. Major topics will include: the evolution of beliefs about the body; medical and social responses to infectious and chronic disease; the rise of medical science and medical organizations; the development of medical technologies; the role of public and government institutions in promoting health practices and disease treatments; and a particular focus on the history of reproductive health and justice. To explore the human experience of medicine, readings will address the experience of being ill, the delivery of compassionate care, the nature of the relationship between practitioner and patient, and ethics. Throughout the semester, the class will link medicine to broad issues in American history by examining the effects of class, race, religion gender, age, sexual orientation, lifestyle, and geographic region on health and medical care, as well as exploring themes such as consumerism, social movements and activism, politics and health care, patient expectations, and medical ethics. Course materials will include recent scholarly literature in the history of medicine, writings by physicians and patients, historical documents, films, websites, audio interviews, and artifact studies. 

A historic photo of a parade headed by women holding a rainbow banner that reads "Lesbians of color" in English and Spanish.

History 265: U.S. LGBT and Queer History

Alison Russell, HS DU, 4 credits

This course explores how queer individuals and members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities have influenced the social, cultural, economic, and political landscape in United States history. With a focus on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the course covers topics such as the criminalization of same-sex acts, cross-dressing, industrialization and urbanization, feminism, the construction of the homo/heterosexual binary, transsexuality and the "lavender scare" during the Cold War, the homophile, gay liberation, and gay rights movements, HIV/AIDS, and (im)migration. We will often look to examples from the present to better explore change over time and the modes and influences that shape both current and past understandings of gender and sexual difference.

A historical illustration of a man in a baseball uniform holding a baseball bat.

History 280: History of Baseball

Joel Wolfe, HS, 4 credits

This class examines the history of baseball from its earliest days as a game for young men in New York City in the mid-19th century to the present and its professional leagues in the United States and elsewhere in the world. The class studies the rise of sport as a leisure activity and then industry, the creation of the major leagues, the racial integration of baseball, the rise of free agency, the steroid era and beyond. Students are expected to complete the assigned reading for discussions.