The History Department cultivates in our students a passion for and a critical understanding of the past while developing their intellectual, analytical, and rhetorical abilities. Through a variety of courses that examine societies far removed from each other in space and time, students discover the richness, diversity, and complexity of human history. The Department also helps students understand the contested nature of historical knowledge by introducing them to the various ways in which historians have interpreted the past. We engage students in issues that provoke historical debate, and familiarize them with the nature and uses of historical evidence. This critical study of the past allows our students access to a far wider range of human experience than any individual could acquire in a single lifetime, making History essential to a liberal arts education. History majors who fulfill the Department’s academic requirements will be broadly trained in careful reading, rigorous analysis, effective writing, and oral communication, skills with applications for all students in all fields. By exposing students to many places and times and allowing them to develop expertise in a few regions, epochs, or comparative themes, they will acquire 1) substantial and substantive knowledge of the past, 2) conceptual understanding of history as a scholarly discipline, 3) professional skills necessary for independent historical research and writing, and 4) a sense of the perspective that historical study provides. |
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| Contact information: | ||
| About the History Program: | ||
| Bryant "Tip" Ragan (Professor and Chair) e-mail Tip |
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| About the History Department | ||
| Sandy Papuga (Office Coordinator) e-mail Sandy |
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Department of History, Phone: 719-389-6523 |
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The Rocky Mountain Undergraduate Review is a Colorado College peer-reviewed journal that publishes outstanding student work in the social science fields. Last year, Rob Brown's (history '08) submission was published. This year, perhaps yours will be!
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Sheep grazing outside Palmer Hall, 1904 |
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In March 2008, Tip Ragan interviewed Nathalie Zemon Davis, former president of the American Historical Association and historian of early modern France (left) and Denis Crouzet, research professor at the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique and historian of the French Reformation (right), for the plenary session, "L'Histoire Engagée," at the annual meeting of French Historical Studies in New Brunswick, New Jersey. |
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Family of legendary C.C. history professor Tom K. Barton celebrates the 2004 dedication of the Barton Room, Palmer 217, in 2004. |
