Apr 04, 2026  
2022-2023 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2022-2023 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

HS 238 Prejudice and Persecution in Western History


Prejudice has been expressed in different forms throughout Western history. We examine how prejudice  is activated into actual persecution in five case studies according to specific criteria, from ancient to  modern times: religion; gender; anti-Semitism; race; and sexuality. Our case studies are: ancient Roman  persecution of Christians; the ‘great witch-hunt’ in late medieval/early modern Europe; hatred of Jews,  from the ancient world to the Holocaust; racism in America against people of African descent, from  slavery to the present; and homophobia, particularly since the late 19th century until the present. We will  establish the main facts of each case, the nature of the particular prejudices or prejudices present, how  these were turned into actions and policies, their impact, and, ultimately, attempt to theorize what  prejudice is, how best to explain it, and why, in certain situations, it is activated into persecutory actions  and policies.