Courses

Students will need to use Workday to manage their course planning and registration for the 2024 Winter session.

Contact for assistance with HIST_V courses:

History Undergraduates - janet.mui@ubc.ca

History Graduates - hist.grad@ubc.ca

The History Major is in the Humanities & Creative Arts breadth area. Learn more about the new Ways of Knowing breadth requirements for students entering the BA degree program in 2024-25 and consult the Ways of Knowing Breadth Explorer.

We offer the following courses that meet the Place and Power breadth requirement:

  • HIST 107 - Global Indigenous Histories
  • HIST 305 - History of British Columbia
  • HIST 400 - Practice of Oral History

Course descriptions for SEMINAR and SPECIAL TOPIC courses can also be revealed by following these steps:

  1. Search your course code in the search bar (e.g. HIST 305).
  2. Click into your course listing to expand the text to reveal the "sections", which can be expanded by clicking on the '+'.
  3. Expand your "lecture" section (e.g. HIST 305-201) by clicking on that section's '+' button.
  4. The corresponding drop-down screen should reveal a course description.

Note: Not every seminar or special topic course have unique descriptions.

  • History

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  • Capstone Seminars
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  • Honours
  • Honours in History and International Relations
  • Pre-Modern

Displaying results with search value "Loo" — 20 of 32 results

Global Environmental History

HIST 106

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2019 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

The impact humans have had on the environment, and the ways in which the physical environment has shaped human history: climate, agriculture, energy use, and urbanization.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Lecture T 11:00 - 12:30 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1A 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1B 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1C 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1D 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1E 1 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1F 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Global Environmental History

HIST 106

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2020 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

The impact humans have had on the environment, and the ways in which the physical environment has shaped human history: climate, agriculture, energy use, and urbanization.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Web-Oriented Course T 9:30 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1A 2 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1B 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1C 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1D 2 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1E 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1F 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Global Environmental History

HIST 106

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2021 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

The impact humans have had on the environment, and the ways in which the physical environment has shaped human history: climate, agriculture, energy use, and urbanization.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Lecture T 9:30 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Section Description

The impact humans have had on the environment, and the ways in which the physical environment has shaped human history: climate, agriculture, energy use, and urbanization.

L1A 2 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1B 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1C 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1D 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1E 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1F 2 Discussion F 15:00 - 16:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Global Environmental History

HIST 106

keyboard_arrow_down
glassheim-eagle loo-tina
2024 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

The impact humans have had on the environment, and the ways in which the physical environment has shaped human history: climate, agriculture, energy use, and urbanization.

Sections (9)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
227 2 In-Person Lecture Th 11:00 - 12:30 Glassheim, Eagle
201 2 In-Person Lecture M 12:00 - 13:30 Loo, Tina
L1B 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Glassheim, Eagle
L1D In-Person Discussion
L1A 2 In-Person Discussion Th 14:00 - 15:00 Glassheim, Eagle
L2A 2 In-Person Discussion W 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina
L2B 2 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina
L2D 2 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Loo, Tina
L2C 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina

Global Indigenous Histories

HIST 107

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thrush-coll
2022 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

An introduction to the experiences of Indigenous peoples and the nature of colonialisms around the world since 1500, and an introduction to historical practices and perspectives.

Sections (5)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Lecture W 14:00 - 16:00 Thrush, Coll

Section Description

This course is an introduction to Indigenous and colonial histories at a global scale. While we will pay attention to local Coast Salish histories, as a way of acknowledging where UBC stands, we will also look at the experiences of Indigenous peoples in diverse places around the world. The course also serves as an introduction to doing Indigenous history, by working with a wide range of primary sources created by Indigenous people. No background in Indigenous issues is required, although it is welcome.

L01 2 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Thrush, Coll
L02 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Thrush, Coll
L03 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Thrush, Coll
L04 2 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Thrush, Coll

History of Canada: Moments that Matter

HIST 235

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2020 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

An introduction to major turning points in Canadian history. Exploration of the social, political, cultural, and environmental transformations/revolutions that have shaped Canada from early European colonialism to the twenty-first century.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Web-Oriented Course M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1A 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1B 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1C 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1E 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1F 1 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1K 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

History of Canada: Moments that Matter

HIST 235

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2021 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

An introduction to major turning points in Canadian history. Exploration of the social, political, cultural, and environmental transformations/revolutions that have shaped Canada from early European colonialism to the twenty-first century.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Lecture M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Section Description

An introduction to major turning points in Canadian history. Exploration of the social, political, cultural, and environmental transformations/revolutions that have shaped Canada from early European colonialism to the twenty-first century.  HIST 235 will introduce students to the methods of historical practice, including primary-source analysis, historical writing, library and research skills, and public history.

L1A 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1B 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1C 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1E 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1F 1 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1K 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

History of Canada: Moments that Matter

HIST 235

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2022 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

An introduction to major turning points in Canadian history. Exploration of the social, political, cultural, and environmental transformations/revolutions that have shaped Canada from early European colonialism to the twenty-first century.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Lecture M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1A 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1B 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1C 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1E 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1F 1 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill
L1K 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

History of the Indigenous Peoples of North America

HIST 302

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thrush-coll
2022 Winter Term 1/2Credits: 6

Indigenous peoples from pre-contact to the present in Canada and the U.S. Topics include colonial frontiers, disease, fur trade, government policies, environment, gender, religion, oral narratives, activism, urbanization, and identity.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
001 1-2 Lecture T, Th 15:30 - 17:00 Thrush, Coll

Section Description

This course examines the long history of Indigenous nations and peoples and settler and other forms of colonialism in territories that are currently claimed by Canada and the United States. Topics will include ecological exchange, warfare, the law, gender and race, politics, and popular culture. The majority of the readings for the course are produced by Indigenous people, although we will also look at colonial narratives to better understand the workings of settler colonialism, a phenomenon that continues into the present.

Britain, 1945 to the Present

HIST 319

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lanthier-michael
2021 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Survey of recent British history, with emphasis on de-colonization, emergence of the welfare state, new social movements and patterns of immigration, and Britain's changing relationship with Europe.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Lecture M, W, F 13:00 - 14:00 Lanthier, Michael

Section Description

In 1945, Great Britain had just emerged victorious from the most devastating war in history and still controlled the largest empire the world has ever seen. Many people in the island nation and abroad assumed that the first industrial nation was in robust health and would naturally continue to play a leading international role during the decades ahead.

In 2021, the same country seems to be a very different place, gripped by unrest and a profound, long-standing malaise. The fallout from Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic are merely the latest in a long series of events that many Britons see as indicative of decline and even decadence. Britain and its people seem to be in search of a role and an identity in the rapidly changing world of the twenty-first century

In this course, we will study the challenges that Britain has faced since the end of the Second World War. We will look at the creation of the welfare state, the demise of the British Empire, immigration and racial conflict, “Swinging London” and the 1960s, second-wave feminism, labor unrest and the decline of heavy industry, Thatcherite neo-liberal economics, and Tony Blair’s New Labour.

Honours Tutorial - HONOURS TUTORIAL

HIST 321B

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loo-tina-merrill
2022 Winter Term 2Credits: 6

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Tutorial Th 10:00 - 12:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Section Description

People and Other Animals

Non-human creatures have been present at every major event in human history and we’re only coming to recognize that fact and grapple with its significance. In this course we’ll look at the ways the different humans have interacted with animals, both “wild” and “domestic” over time, focussing, for instance, on hunting, domesticating livestock, keeping pets, exploiting animal labour, studying animals scientifically, and displaying exotic and performing creatures. Our readings will touch on questions about how we find traces of the animal past, on animal agency and intelligence, and our moral obligations to animals.

Canada Since 1945: Affluence and Anxiety in the Atomic Age.

HIST 326

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2019 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

Includes immigration policy; the welfare state; Aboriginal peoples; the Cold War; resource economies and national politics; continentalism and free trade; constitutional crises; conflicting nationalisms; and new social movements. Credit will only be granted for one of HIST 326 or 426, if 426 was taken before 2007W.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Lecture T, Th 15:30 - 17:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Canada Since 1945: Affluence and Anxiety in the Atomic Age.

HIST 326

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2020 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

Includes immigration policy; the welfare state; Aboriginal peoples; the Cold War; resource economies and national politics; continentalism and free trade; constitutional crises; conflicting nationalisms; and new social movements. Credit will only be granted for one of HIST 326 or 426, if 426 was taken before 2007W.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Web-Oriented Course M, W, F 9:00 - 10:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Canada Since 1945: Affluence and Anxiety in the Atomic Age.

HIST 326

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2022 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Includes immigration policy; the welfare state; Aboriginal peoples; the Cold War; resource economies and national politics; continentalism and free trade; constitutional crises; conflicting nationalisms; and new social movements. Credit will only be granted for one of HIST 326 or 426, if 426 was taken before 2007W.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Lecture M, W 9:30 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Canada Since 1945: Affluence and Anxiety in the Atomic Age.

HIST 326

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina
2024 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

Includes immigration policy; the welfare state; Aboriginal peoples; the Cold War; resource economies and national politics; continentalism and free trade; constitutional crises; conflicting nationalisms; and new social movements. Credit will only be granted for one of HIST 326 or 426, if 426 was taken before 2007W.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 In-Person Lecture M, W 09:30 - 11:00 Loo, Tina

Histories of the American West

HIST 340

keyboard_arrow_down
thrush-coll
2021 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Frontier ideologies in relation to race, gender, class, sexuality. Place-making and historical narrative in and about the western part of the United States.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Lecture T, Th 17:00 - 18:30 Thrush, Coll

Section Description

The American West
It goes without saying that the “westering” experience and the notion of the “frontier” have been central to national, community, and individual self-fashioning in the United States since before the nation even existed. In this course, we look at the ways in which diverse peoples have engaged with each other and with the landscape of the American West, with a focus on the late nineteenth century and the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. We take as our premise the knowledge that the “frontier” has never “closed” (and may never have existed). Topics to be included range from Indigeneity to nuclearism, from gendered constructions of space and place to race and white supremacy, and we will pay special attention to the popular culture of/in “the West” – a place that may or may not exist.

Modern Middle Eastern History

HIST 352

keyboard_arrow_down
unwalla-pheroze
2021 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

Politics, culture, society, war, and diplomacy; themes include colonialism, nationalism, and authoritarianism; emphasis on the 20th and 21st centuries.

Sections (5)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Lecture T, Th 9:30 - 11:00 Unwalla, Pheroze

Section Description

This course introduces students to the history, politics and culture of the modern Middle East. At a fundamental level, the course aims to facilitate the adoption of an informed, critical approach to the study of the Middle East’s past and present. While there will be much discussion of war, conflict, and political developments, we will also engage with social, cultural and intellectual trends, looking to everyday life and common people in addition to major political events and personas.

Throughout the course, students will debate and interrogate popular historical and contemporary representations of the region and its populations. We will seek to understand the impact of these representations in spurring conflict, colonial endeavors, resistance, and false dichotomies between ‘us’ and ‘them.’ On this last note, we will all critically reflect on our own past and present visions of the Middle East and our role in perpetuating positive and negative ‘images’ of the region and its peoples.

L01 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Unwalla, Pheroze
L02 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Unwalla, Pheroze
L03 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Unwalla, Pheroze
L04 1 Discussion F 15:00 - 16:00 Unwalla, Pheroze

Europe Since 1950

HIST 370

keyboard_arrow_down
lanthier-michael
2021 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Europe since the middle of the twentieth century. Themes include the Cold War, the development of separate social and political systems in Western and Eastern Europe, the emergence of the welfare state, and the problems of European integration.

Sections (5)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 Lecture M, W 15:00 - 16:00 Lanthier, Michael

Section Description

This course will explore these diverse attempts to reconstruct a divided Europe after 1945 and chart a new course for countries that had recently dominated the globe. We will focus on the two very different political and economic systems that existed on either side of the Iron Curtain until the revolutions of 1989. We will also look at how Europeans transformed their countries into modern welfare states while attempting, however tentatively, to transcend the very concept of the traditional Western nation-state.

L01 2 Discussion W 16:00 - 17:00 Lanthier, Michael
L02 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00 Lanthier, Michael
L03 2 Discussion F 15:00 - 16:00 Lanthier, Michael
L04 2 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Lanthier, Michael

Environmental History of North America

HIST 396

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina-merrill
2022 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

Overview of land use and environmental change in Canada and the United States; examines ideas and practices that shaped indigenous and non-indigenous resource exploitation, management, and activism to the end of the twentieth century.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
101 1 Lecture M, W 9:30 - 11:00 Loo, Tina Merrill

Environmental History of North America

HIST 396

keyboard_arrow_down
loo-tina
2024 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Overview of land use and environmental change in Canada and the United States; examines ideas and practices that shaped indigenous and non-indigenous resource exploitation, management, and activism to the end of the twentieth century.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
201 2 In-Person Lecture M, W 09:30 - 11:00 Loo, Tina