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Learning @ Columbia: Resources for Columbia Alumni
Taught by Columbia faculty, e-seminars are three- to five-hour learning experiences that combine multimedia, interactivity, and collaborative discussion in a wide range of subject areas. This page will highlight on a rotating basis a selection from our archive of more than 100 e-seminars.

To view our entire library of e-seminars for free, please visit Columbia Educational Resources Online.*
Alumni must supply their University Network ID (UNI) to access these sites.

Medicine
Cardiac Management for the Female Patient
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among American women. In this e-seminar, Dr. Elsa-Grace V. Giardina, professor of clinical medicine and director of the Center for Women's Health at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, reviews the latest advances in cardiac care as they specifically relate to women.
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Culture and Society
Intellectual and Cultural History of the United States, 1890–1945: The Rise of Consumer Culture
In this seminar, the sixth of the series Intellectual and Cultural History of the United States, 1890–1945, Professor Casey Nelson Blake describes the consumer culture of the 1920s and Middle America's ambivalent embrace of it, particularly as portrayed in Robert and Helen Lynd's sociological study Middletown. He also examines critiques of this new American ethos by such intellectuals as H. L. Mencken, Sinclair Lewis, T. S. Eliot, Margaret Mead, and Malcolm Cowley, and concludes by examining the fate of the Harlem Renaissance in the hands of mainstream consumerist culture.
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Literature
An Adventure with Words: James Joyce's Ulysses
Joyce is famous for his use of interior monologue (for which the term stream of consciousness was coined), but in Ulysses he uses a variety of narrative modes—third-person, sounded, interior, and fourth-estate narration. Recognizing and identifying the function of each is crucial to understanding this classic novel. Professor Seidel is a well-known Joyce expert, and this e-seminar provides a unique and invaluable point of access to Joyce's most famous (and, unfortunately, famously difficult) work.
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Politics
A Political History of Pakistan
Professor Oldenburg, a leading scholar of South Asian culture and history, unravels the story of Pakistan, delving into the tumultuous past of this Muslim nation. Carefully examining its struggle to establish a national identity throughout the half-century of its existence, he narrates Pakistan's history from the viewpoint of its Muslim majority population while also explaining the perspectives of those nations with whom Pakistan has been at war.
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Multimedia Icons
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America Since 1945: The Rise of the Right
In The Rise of the Right, the final e-seminar in the ten-part series America Since 1945, historian Alan Brinkley discusses the emergence of conservatism as a powerful political and cultural force in the United States during the past quarter-century.
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