Additional Rules:
- At least 2 of the 7 electives must be AMST courses.
- At least 3 of the 7 electives must be at the 3000-level or above.
The undergraduate major in American Studies provides a rigorous and diverse program of study that offers students a generous amount of intellectual range and scholarly flexibility, while still remaining rooted in a shared and coherent curricular experience. Requirements for the major include two specific courses that all majors must take. The first of these is Introduction to American Studies (AMST 2001), a 3-credit introductory lecture course that introduces students to the field, its history, and a wide variety of potential areas of study. Students are strongly encouraged to take this course either prior to or soon after declaring the major (i.e. in first or second year), or in their third year if necessary. The second required course is Theories and Methods of American Studies (AMST 3001), a 3-credit, reading-and-writing-intensive course that allows students to more thoroughly explore past and present scholarly currents and an array of theoretical and methodological approaches within the field. Additionally, all majors must take a 3-credit, 4000-level AMST capstone seminar prior to graduating. The capstone course is generally intended to be taken in Fall or Spring of the fourth year.
The remainder of the major requirements consist of seven electives (21 credits in total), at least two of which must be taken under the AMST course designation, and at least three of which must be taken at the 3000 level or higher. The first stipulation ensures that students will take at least five of their ten total courses within the Department, ensuring a consistent and coherent academic experience while still providing the flexibility for interdisciplinary exploration. The second stipulation also ensures that students are taking at least five of their ten required courses in an upper-level classroom context, ensuring a suitably rigorous and intensive academic experience. Furthermore, at least three of the seven electives (9 credits) must fulfill one each of the following area requirements (students may not use the same course to fulfill more than one area requirement):
- Historical Approaches: These are courses that are rooted in a clearly-defined historical scope and that expose students to historical methodologies and/or archival research practices. This requirement assures that American Studies students will graduate with a firm command of the importance of historical context and a nuanced understanding of historical research and historiography.
- Race and Ethnicity: These are courses that are rooted in questions, topics, and issues related to the fields of critical race and ethnic studies. This requirement assures that American Studies students will graduate with a keen understanding of the ways that ideas about racial and ethnic difference and struggles for recognition and equality have shaped the United States and the American hemisphere more broadly.
- Transnational and Regional: These are courses that either deal with the United States’ position in relationship to international and global contexts and relations, or that deal with specific regions of the United States itself and the sets of political, social, and cultural concerns facing these regions. This requirement assures that students graduate with an understanding that the United States is far more complex, varied, and diffuse than a simple monolithic nation state, and that the borders of the nation are not the only delineation of “America.”
Sample Course List for Area Requirements:
Historical Approaches:
AMST 1050 – Slavery and Its Legacies
AMST 2660 – Spirituality in America
AMST 2753 – Arts and Cultures of the Slave South
AMST 3221 – Hands-On Public History
ENGL 3150 – American Renaissance
ENGL 3430 – American Literature to 1865
ENGL 4500 – W.E.B. Du Bois
HIUS 2001 – American History to 1865
HIUS 2002 – American History Since 1865
HIUS 2052 – America and War Since 1900
HIUS 2053 – American Slavery
HIUS 3011 – The Colonial Period of American History
HIUS 3031 – The Era of the American Revolution
HIUS 3051 – The Age of Jefferson and Jackson, 1789-1845
HIUS 3071 – The Coming of the Civil War
HIUS 3072 – The Civil War and Reconstruction
HIUS 3161 – Viewing America, 1940-1980
HIUS 3162 – Digitizing America
HIUS 3171 – US Since 1945: People, Politics, Power
HIUS 3231 – The Rise and Fall of the Slave South
HIUS 3281 – Virginia History to 1900
HIUS 3471 – History of American Labor
HIUS 3490 – From Motown to Hip-Hop
HIUS 3641 – American Indian History
HIUS 3651 – Afro-American History to 1865
HIUS 3652 – Afro-American History Since 1865
HIUS 3654 – Black Fire
HIUS 3671 – History of the Civil Rights Movement
HIUS 3853 – From Redlines to Subprime: Race and Real Estate in the U.S.
MDST 3310 – Sound and Cinema
MDST 3375 – History of Music and Broadcasting in the U.S.
MDST 3903 – Media and Protest: The 1960s
MUSI 2070 – Popular Musics
MUSI 2120 – History of Jazz Music
RELG 2160 – Religion in American Thought and Life from 1865 to the Present
WGS 3612 – Gender and Sexuality in the United States, 1865-Present
Race and Ethnicity:
AMST 1050 – Slavery and Its Legacies
AMST 2753 – Arts and Cultures of the Slave South
AMST 3180 – Introduction to Asian American Studies
AMST 3200 – African American Political Thought
AMST 3321 – Race and Ethnicity in Latinx Literature
AMST 3323 – Hemispheric Latinx Literature and Culture
AMST 3407 – Racial Borders and American Cinema
AMST 3470 – Cultures of Hip-Hop
AMST 3641 – Native America
AAS 1010 – Intro to African American Studies I
AAS 1020 – Intro to African American Studies II
AAS 2224 – Black Femininities and Masculinities in the US Media
AAS 3810 – Race, Culture, and Inequality
AAS 3853 - From Redlines to Subprime: Race and Real Estate in the U.S.
ANTH 2250 – Nationalism, Racism, Multiculturalism
DRAM 3070 – African American Theater
ENGL 3140 – African-American Literature II
ENGL 2572 – Black Writers in America
ENGL 4500 – W.E.B. Du Bois
ENGL 4500 – Black Queer Culture
HIEU 2102 – Modern Jewish History
HIUS 2053 – American Slavery
HIUS 3641 – American Indian History
HIUS 3651 – Afro-American History to 1865
HIUS 3652 – Afro-American History Since 1865
HIUS 3654 – Black Fire
HIUS 3490 – From Motown to Hip-Hop
HIUS 3853 – From Redlines to Subprime: Race and Real Estate in the U.S.
MDST 3105 – Latino/a Media Studies
MDST 3760 - #BlackTwitter and Black Digital Culture
MUSI 2120 – History of Jazz Music
PLAP 3700 – Racial Politics
RELA 2850 – Afro-Creole Religion in the Americas
SOC 2442 – Systems of Inequality
SOC 3410 – Race and Ethnic Relations
Transnational/Regional:
AMST 2753 – Arts and Cultures of the Slave South
AMST 3323 – Hemispheric Latinx Literature and Culture
AMST 3407 – Racial Borders and American Cinema
AMST 3880 – Literature of the South
AMST 4401 – Literature of the Americas
ANTH 2250 – Nationalism, Racism, Multiculturalism
HIEU 2102 – Modern Jewish History
HILA 2002 – Modern Latin America, 1824-present
HIUS 3231 – The Rise and Fall of the Slave South
HIUS 3281 – Virginia History to 1900
MDST 3115 - Breaking Bad: Once Upon a Time with the Pests
MDST 3310 – Sound and Cinema
AMST 3355 – Border Media
AMST 3465 – America and the Global South in Literature and Film
MDST 3105 – Latino/a Media Studies
MDST 3110 – Hollywood Goes to Asia
MDST 3584 – Global Cinema
RELA 2850 – Afro-Creole Religion in the Americas
SOC 3480 – Sociology of Globalization