Biola_Catalog_19690101NA

409 HISTORY OF SOUTH ASIA (3) History and culture of the South Asian subcontinent from the earliest times, through the eras of European expansion, British rule, and the nationalist movement to the present. 410 HISTORY OF SOUTHEAST ASIA (3) History and culture of modern Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaya, Indonesia, and the Philippines from earliest times; the expansion of European influence, and the growth of nationalism in Burma, Indonesia, Indo-China, and the Philippines. 415 HISTORY OF THE NEAR EAST (3) Fundamental social, economic, and political changes in the Near East; post-World War II development. Offered on sufficient demand. 416 HISTORY OF MODERN RUSSIA (3) Social and political history of modern Russia, with an analysis of Czardom, the revo­ lutionary movement, and the establishment and development of the Soviet regime. Offered on sufficient demand. 417 DIPLOMATIC HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES (3) American diplomatic history from the standpoint of the concepts of neutrality, isola­ tion, expansion, manifest destiny, and the Monroe Doctrine. Offered on sufficient demand. 418 HISTORY OF THE EXPANSION OF CHRISTIANITY (3) The background, origin, development, and spread of the Christian religion; emphasis on the modern era. 419 HISTORY OF COMMUNISM (3) Background, origin, development, teachings, and techniques of expansion of inter­ national Communism; the role of the Soviet Union in the Communist movement. Alter­ nate years, offered 1969-70. 420 HISTORIOGRAPHY (3) The nature and discipline of history; major problems of historical interpretation. 421 SEMINAR IN HISTORY (3) Special studies in history, including current problems; practice in techniques of research and formal writing. 451, 452 AREA SEMINAR IN HISTORY (3, 3) An intensive study of the geographic areas of Europe, the United States, Latin America, or Asia, according to the special needs of the stndPnt. Offered on sufficient demand. LINGUISTICS 301 GENERAL LINGUISTICS (3) An introduction to the methods for systema tic observation of language phenomena. 331 PHONETICS (3) The science of the articulate sounds of human speech; classification, reproduction, and proper recording of speech sounds; principles of phonetic change. 332 PHONEMICS (3) The theory and method for reducing languages to writing; extensive transcription and analysis of a non-Indo-European language from a native informant. Prerequisite: Linguistics 301 or 331. 97

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