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HIS 501
Archaeology and Material Culture
This course (H-Craft 3b) focuses on how archaeological resources and material culture (such as artefacts, landscapes, architecture, and art) can be utilized to understand the past. It also explores how these resources can be integrated into documents-based historical study and newer endeavours, such as oral history. It defines historical archaeology and material culture as distinct but closely related fields, surveys their evolution as academic disciplines, and considers the limitations, challenges, and biases of these approaches.
Weekly Contact: Lecture: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Course Count: 1.00
Billing Units: 1

Prerequisites
None
Co-Requisites
None
Antirequisites
None
Custom Requisites
None
Mentioned in the Following Calendar Pages
*List may not include courses that are on a common table shared between programs.
- Arts and Contemporary Studies Professional Table I
- Arts and Contemporary Studies Professionally-Related Table II
- Criminology and History Double Major
- Criminology and History Professional Table II
- English Professionally-Related Table IV
- English and History Double Major
- English and History Professional Table II
- HIS 755 - Themes in Material Culture
- History
- History Politics and Governance Professional Table II
- History Professional Table II
- History and Philosophy Double Major
- History and Philosophy Professional Table II
- History and Politics and Governance Double Major
- History and Sociology Double Major
- History and Sociology Double Major Professional Table II
- Minor in History
- Open Elective Table
- Philosophy Professionally-Related Table IV
- Politics and Governance Professionally-Related Table IV
- Psychology Professionally-Related Table IV
- Public Administration and Governance Professionally-Related Table I