2024-2025 Undergraduate General Catalog

HIST 202 History of the Northern Plains (US)

The American Great Plains are a living ecosystem. The predecessors of today’s Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara moved onto the Plains at the beginning of the 11th century. The horse allowed the Lakota to move onto the Plains centuries later, and they were followed by Euromericans. Each group saw its economic, cultural, and technological developments shaped by its relationship to the Plains. This is true for prosperous and difficult times.  Environmental factors—drought or rain, for example--have shaped how people have viewed the Plains. Whether it was the “Great American Desert” or the “Best Poor Man’s land,” the Plains have influenced our understanding of the region many of us call home. Using Deitrich Bonhoeffer's argument that "action be in accordance with reality" this course explores how the history of the Great Plains shapes contemporary understandings many of our students call home. By exploring how humans have interacted with this living ecosystem over the centuries, a better understanding of the promise and peril the Great Plains entail is possible. Students will leave with a new understanding of the community that they come from.

Credits

3

Cross Listed Courses

NPST 202

Notes