HIST 4726: Nation of Immigrants

   3 Credit Hours

  A&S Gen Ed: Distribution-Arts & Humanities, Diversity-U.S. Perspective

   Restricted to students with 27-180 credits (Sophomores, Juniors or Seniors) only

Examines the shifting kaleidoscope of immigration to the United States in the 19th and 20th centuries. Considers immigrant motives, cultures and experiences; changing cultural and political ideas about the value of immigration; the relationship of immigration and immigration policy to ideas about the American national project; the creation and consequences of immigration law. We focus on both the human drama of immigration and on making sense of the statistics and policy arguments regarding immigration.

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the historical contours of immigration to the U.S. and American responses to immigration, as well as basic terminology related to this;
  • Assess the argument and evidence in academic articles and distinguish between different types of argument and evidence (e.g. quantitative vs. qualitative, primary vs. secondary sources);
  • Synthesize information from different academic articles on related topics;
  • Locate and make use of academic, peer-reviewed scholarship in immigration history in their own research projects;
  • Contextualize individual experiences of immigration with scholarship and data on historical patterns.

In this course, you will

   Engage in text-based discussions that hone your skills in assessing evidence and ask you to think creatively about immigrant experience and reception of immigrants;

   Get peer comments on your research and see what other people are working on;

   Conduct a small research project based in family history.**  You might, for example, use databases like Ancestry.com and/or interview relatives, and then use academic scholarship on immigration and more to contextualize an individual’s immigration experience. For examples, see my student showcase webpage, /faculty/hulden-vilja/student-showcase . (**alternatives available if family history does not work for you)

 

Meet Your Instructor
Vilja Hilden

Vilja Hulden

  vilja.hulden@colorado.edu

My name is Vilja Hulden, and I'm a Teaching Associate Professor in the Department of History at CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ. My research is on early 20th-century American labor history, but at CU, I regularly teach classes on immigration as well as on the Vietnam War and the United States in the postwar decades more broadly (HIST 4166, HIST 2166, and HIST 4435). I also teach the department's historical methods class (HIST 3020) with a Vietnam theme and an overview course on American history to 1865 (HIST 1015).

What I like best about teaching is seeing what students make of course materials. My favorite part is those moments when a genuine exchange of thoughts takes place—not as a one-way transmission from me to students but as a multi-directional conversation between historical and scholarly texts, students and myself.