Students
Tuition Fee
Not Available
Start Date
Not Available
Medium of studying
Not Available
Duration
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Details
Program Details
Degree
Bachelors
Major
Cultural Studies | History
Area of study
Social Sciences | Humanities
Course Language
English
About Program

Program Overview


American Studies Major, B.A.

The B.A. major in American studies provides stimulating opportunities to explore the diversity of America peoples, places, institutions, texts, and performances. Students investigate how American societies form and fragment over time, how dreams are envisioned and embodied, how narratives are constructed and contested, and how histories are written and rewritten. Our courses engage with a variety of historical, literary, artistic, political, economic, legal, social, cultural, racial, and ethnic situations within the United States and in broader global, international, and comparative perspectives.


Student Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of the American studies program, students should be able to:


  • Apply critical skills of analysis to a variety of primary historical sources and/or cultural expressions
  • Exercise advanced writing skills that demonstrate clear articulation of ideas and effective expression of understanding
  • Assess the value of interdisciplinary learning by engaging with a variety of disciplinary perspectives on the study of America within their major elective courses
  • Interpret national traditions and ideals from different local, regional, transnational, and/or global situations and from diverse ideological and/or ethnic perspectives
  • Report satisfaction with the American studies major and its value for their postgraduate academic and professional careers

Requirements

In addition to the program requirements, students must:


  • earn a minimum final cumulative GPA of 2.000
  • complete a minimum of 45 academic credit hours earned from UNC–Chapel Hill courses
  • take at least half of their major core requirements (courses and credit hours) at UNC–Chapel Hill
  • earn a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.000 in the major core requirements. Some programs may require higher standards for major or specific courses.

The major in American studies consists of nine courses, with at least four courses numbered 200 or higher.


Course List Code | Title | Hours
---|---|---
Core Requirements|
AMST 101| This Place Called "America"| 3
One of the following options:| 3
AMST 102| Myth and History in American Memory|
AMST/HIST 110| Introduction to the Cultures and Histories of Native North America|
AMST 210| This Place Called "The South"|
AMST 255| Difference and Power in American Culture(s)|
AMST 277| America's Role in the Global Environment |
FOLK 202| Everyday Cultures: Folklore in America|
Seven additional elective courses selected from other AMST, FOLK, and CHER courses. 1, 2| 21
Additional Requirements|
Of the nine (9) total courses in the major, at least four (4) must be numbered 200 or higher|
Total Hours| 27


  1. Not including AMST 396, AMST 493, AMST 691H, AMST 692H, FOLK 496, FOLK 691H, FOLK 692H.
  2. Up to three (3) Americanist courses offered outside the department, numbered 200 or higher, when approved by the Director of Undergraduate Studies.

Special Opportunities in American Studies

Honors in American Studies

The American Studies major offers students the opportunity to pursue research projects under the direction of outstanding faculty and to engage in a small, specially designated seminar with peers who are also writing theses. Students propose their thesis and contract with a faculty advisor during the semester prior to the beginning of their senior year. During their senior year, majors register for a thesis research seminar (AMST 691H) in the fall and enroll in an AMST 692H independent study seminar course with their faculty advisor in the spring.


Experiential Education

The Department of American Studies offers a seminar on Service Learning in America (AMST 398) and offers credits for approved internship projects (AMST 493). Students have learned about American studies by serving the community in museums, schools, social agencies, and other cultural institutions. Many courses in the folklore program also offer experiential education credit through ethnographic training and fieldwork opportunities.


Study Abroad

The Department of American Studies encourages students to consider a semester or more of study abroad and has developed close relations with several American studies programs in different countries. Studying American experience in international contexts is an integral part of understanding the place and influence of the United States in the world. Student learning is enhanced by the perspectives gained by examining how American subjects are taught in universities around the globe as well as by encountering the international students who enroll in American studies courses in Chapel Hill.


Undergraduate Awards

The department awards Julia Preston Brumley Travel Scholarships to help fund international travel and study abroad. The Peter C. Baxter Memorial Prize is awarded annually to the outstanding senior majoring in American studies. The Jenny Tone-Pah-Hote Prize is awarded annually for the outstanding senior honors thesis.


Undergraduate Research

The department offers credit for AMST 396 and FOLK 495. Majors can develop a two-semester honors thesis project (AMST 691H and AMST 692H) in consultation with an advisor. Students have received summer undergraduate research fellowships, earned research support and travel awards, and presented their work at academic conferences and at the Annual Celebration of Undergraduate Research each spring.


Department Programs

Majors

  • American Studies Major, B.A.
  • American Studies Major, B.A.–American Indian and Indigenous Studies Concentration

Minors

  • American Studies Minor
  • American Indian and Indigenous Studies Minor

Graduate Programs

  • Ph.D. in American Studies
  • M.A. in Folklore
  • Graduate Minor in American Studies
  • Graduate Minor in Folklore

Courses

  • American Studies (AMST)
  • Cherokee (CHER)
  • Folklore (FOLK)
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