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Nov 21, 2024
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2016-2017 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
History, PhD
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Return to: Programs of Study
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Overview
The department offers a graduate program in two broad areas: United States and Atlantic History, with tracks in the history of the United States and in the history of the Atlantic World, and Holocaust History and Genocide Studies, with tracks in Holocaust History and in Genocide Studies.
Graduate course work includes reading seminars (colloquia), research seminars, and individual tutorials for both reading and research purposes. Graduate students may also register in upper-division undergraduate courses at a graduate level that requires more intensive work. First- and second-year students in the doctoral program take three courses each semester, one of which must be expressly devoted to the production of a research paper. Faculty advisers help incoming students design their programs, which may include courses in other departments.
Ph.D. Requirements
Briefly put, the Ph.D. is awarded after you have:
1) met your residence requirement,
2) passed your annual reviews,
3) taken two years of course work,
4) met your language requirement(s),
5) passed an oral examination in three fields,
6) written an acceptable dissertation. History Faculty
Program Faculty
Taner Akçam, Ph.D.
Debórah Dwork, Ph.D.
Janette T. Greenwood, Ph.D.
Willem Klooster, Ph.D.
Thomas Kuehne, Ph.D.
Nina Kushner, Ph.D., Chair
Douglas Little, Ph.D.
Lex Jing Lu
Olga Litvak, Ph.D.
Drew McCoy, Ph.D.
Ousmane Power-Greene, Ph.D.
Amy Richter, Ph.D.
Adjunct Faculty
Richard Ford, Ph.D.
Everett Fox, Ph.D.
Thomas Massey, Ph.D.
Mark Miller, Ph.D.
Meredith Neuman, Ph.D.
Kristina Wilson, Ph.D. Affiliate Faculty
Robert Dykstra, Ph.D.
Alden Vaughan, Ph.D. Emeriti Faculty
George A. Billias, Ph.D.
Daniel Borg, Ph.D.
Paul Lucas, Ph.D. Research Faculty
Paul Ropp, Ph.D. Graduate History Courses
Courses offered within the last 2 Academic Years
- HIST 301 - Era of the American Revolution
- HIST 302 - The Early American Republic
- HIST 304 - Special Topics in American History
- HIST 305 - Renaissance and Reformation
- HIST 308 - The Idea of History
- HIST 310 - Research Seminar
- HIST 311 - American Consumer Culture
- HIST 312 - History of Sexuality: 1750 to the Present
- HIST 313 - Gender and the American City
- HIST 314 - The American Civil War
- HIST 315 - The Age of Lincoln
- HIST 316 - Special Topics: African-American Internationalism
- HIST 317 - Reconstruction: America after the Civil War, 1865-1877
- HIST 319 - History of American Women
- HIST 322 - History of the American South
- HIST 323 - The Civil Rights Movement
- HIST 324 - Russian Visual Culture
- HIST 326 - Comparative Colonialism
- HIST 328 - Early Modern Britain
- HIST 330 - History of the Armenian Genocide
- HIST 331 - Origins of Modern America, 1877-1914 (formerly America in the Gilded Age)
- HIST 332 - Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism: Intellectual History of China
- HIST 334 - History of Racism in Modern Europe
- HIST 335 - The Atlantic World
- HIST 336 - Gender, War and Genocide in 20th Century
- HIST 337 - The Holocaust Perpetrators
- HIST 338 - America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1917-1991
- HIST 343 - American Antiquarian Society Seminar in American Studies
- HIST 345 - U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East Since 1945
- HIST 352 - The Holocaust Through Letters and Diaries
- HIST 360 - Rescue and Resistance During the Holocaust
- HIST 362 - Genocide, Denial, Facing History and Reconciliation
- HIST 366 - Refugees
- HIST 376 - Collective Memory and Mass Violence
- HIST 377 - America’s Founding Fathers: Memory and Meaning
- HIST 385 - Proposal Writing
- HIST 386 - The Vietnam War
- HIST 393 - African American Social and Political Movements
- HIST 394 - Graduate Research Symposium
- HIST 395 - Dangerous Women
- HIST 397 - Master’s Thesis
- HIST 399 - Graduate Readings
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