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Major History-Literature

What You’ll Study in the Bachelor’s Degree in History-Literature

The history-literature major supports a more tailored, robust exploration of both subjects than would be possible if you majored in one or the other. In the history-literature program, you will develop the analytical skills necessary to study the relationship between past and present and to utilize literature for the illumination of history and vice versa. Choose to study a wide range of periods, languages, and literary canons, or focus on one while applying a diversity of approaches to your inquiries, including social, intellectual, economic, cultural, gender, legal, and imperial.

Roadmap to the BA in History-Literature at ºìÌÒÊÓƵ

Students who wish to combine history and literature in a manner that isn’t feasible under the requirements of the Division of History and Social Sciences or the Division of Literature and Languages can pursue an interdisciplinary course of study. Students have the flexibility to take classes in both literature and history departments in working up to their petition to the history-literature program.

Year One

Start Exploring

The history and literature departments both emphasize a diversity of approaches to research and criticism. Dive into the options with introductory classes that span various periods, languages, and cultures.

Start developing your ability to conduct independent inquiry and fashion your own analytical and critical interpretations of history and literary scholarship. Meet early with a member of the history-literature committee to consider how your thesis is best suited for this interdisciplinary program. Consider options for studying abroad. History-literature majors are encouraged to do so for one semester in their sophomore or junior year.

Humanities 110 is an important component to every student’s first year, offering an interdisciplinary view of human society that can be a platform to further exploration of both history and literature.

Explore Humanities 110

Year Two

Establish Your Direction

Continue your educational journey with additional history and literature requirements, following the strategic coursework created with the history-literature committee. Practice the analytical and methodological skills to do research that combines and crosses the fields of literature and history. Learn to discuss, analyze, and assess professional academic scholarship and to engage in literary approaches. Most students in the history-literature major spend a semester abroad; begin to explore study abroad opportunities.

Discover Study Abroad Opportunities

Year Three

Pursue Your Passion and Expand Your Expertise

Continue to apply more advanced methodologies of both historical scholarship and literary critique. Take your literary and historical analysis to the next level and dive deeper into the focus of your senior thesis. Petition the history-literature committee for admission.

Take the junior qualifying exam, designed by the history-literature committee to specifically certify your preparedness for your proposed project.

Collaborate with your primary adviser in the field to which your project leans, and also your secondary adviser in the other field.

Year Four

Display Your Knowledge and Skills

Execute and defend a significant independent research project that combines the techniques of historical and literary study. Create a meaningful exchange or tie between the two disciplines. Reflect critically on the work you’ve done and determine how you will apply your history-literature degree beyond ºìÌÒÊÓƵ.

Why Study History-Literature at ºìÌÒÊÓƵ?

Experienced Faculty in an Interdisciplinary Program

Learn from passionate, knowledgeable professors in both history and literature.

  • Professor Michael Breen, history & humanities: early modern French and European social, political, and cultural history
  • Professor Jacqueline Dirks, history & humanities: American social and cultural history, US women’s history
  • Professor David T. Garrett, history & humanities: Latin America and early modern Spain
  • Professor Benjamin Lazier, history & humanities: modern Europe, intellectual history
  • Professor Margot Minardi, history & humanities: early American republic
  • Professor Diego Alonso, Spanish & humanities: aesthetics, rhetoric, and politics
  • Professor Ann Delehanty, French & humanities: medieval and early modern periods
  • Professor Jay Dickson, English & humanities: British 21st-, 20th-, and 19th-century fiction
  •  Professor Katja Garloff, German & humanities: modern German literature, German Jewish culture, and film and media studies
  • Professor Catherine Witt, French & film and media studies: poetry and poetics, theatre, and critical theory

Enthusiastic Support of Individualized Coursework

Once you’ve demonstrated the necessity of a history-literature major to support your intended topic of expertise, staff in both history and literature can provide a wide range of insight, expertise, and support. Whether your proposed research leans more towards history or literature, professors and peers across departments will enrich your pursuits and challenge you to push them further.

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