Holocaust: History and Memory
Lecture, three hours; discussion, two hours. Holocaust, murder of six million Jews by Germans in Nazi-occupied Europe during World War II, is one of crucial events of modern history. Examination of origins of Holocaust, perpetrators and victims, and changing efforts to come to terms with this genocide. Exploration of forces that led to Holocaust, including emergence of scientific racism, anti-Semitism, and machinery of modern state. Consideration of debates about implementation of genocide, including significance of gender and sexuality, relationship between war and genocide, meanings of resistance and culpability, and political and philosophical implications of Holocaust. Exploration of how genocide of European Jewry was intertwined with targeting of other victims of Nazi rule, including Roma, Slavs, black Germans, disabled, homosexuals, and political opponents of National Socialism. P/NP or letter grading.
Review Summary
- Clarity
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10.0 / 10
- Organization
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10.0 / 10
- Time
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5-10 hrs/week
- Overall
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10.0 / 10
Reviews
I loved Professor Stein's class. Her lectures were basically documentaries and had by far the best quality out of any lectures I've ever seen. The content of the course was really well organized and I found the material to be very interesting. Would recommend!
Honestly this was a really interesting GE but I felt like there was a lot of reading expected from us
Generally, good lecturer, interesting content. The papers were not the easiest grading, there was little feedback on how to improve and even so, the past papers were not applicable to the future ones.
Displaying all 3 reviews
Course
Grading Information
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No group projects
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Attendance not required
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2 midterms
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Finals week final
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67% recommend the textbook
Previous Grades
Grade distributions not available.