2024-2025 Academic Catalog 
    
    Nov 18, 2024  
2024-2025 Academic Catalog

American Studies, leading to a B.A. degree


Program Director:  Dr. Christopher Borick, Professor of Political Science

The discipline of American Studies is aimed at exploring American society and culture(s) from multiple disciplinary perspectives.  Students are invited to shape their majors by choosing, based on their interests and strengths, among courses in a variety of fields, for example history, literature, political science, anthropology, sociology, art, music, theatre, economics, religion, philosophy, communication, and women’s and gender studies.

Honors in American Studies

The honors program in American Studies is designed for majors who are interested in doing graduate work in American Studies or in another cognate field.  Students must be especially motivated and committed to the interdisciplinary intellectual work that this concentrated, intensely focused experience demands.  Students are invited by a faculty member during the spring semester of junior year to participate in the American Studies Honors Program.  The course work includes two semesters of independent study in the senior year devoted to the development and completion of an honors thesis.  Students submit a prospectus for their honors program by the end of the spring semester of junior year.  The prospectus should describe a year-long independent study that engages approximately two different academic disciplines and a thesis that, in its final draft, will consist of at least 40 pages.

Major Requirements


Majors complete eleven courses, including the core requirements, the senior seminar, and six electives.  To remain an American studies major, a student must maintain a 2.00 grade point average in all courses designated as meeting the major requirements.

Required Courses:


Note:


Students are encouraged (but not required) to use the courses in the elective field to build a concentration in such areas as ethnic studies, gender studies, or a field that reflects the particular student’s interests, for example law and literature, art and politics, or media and society.