Graduate students should register for 9-12 credit hours per semester.
- Options for graduate classes also include independent studies (HST 990 & HST 690), and courses offered outside the History Department.
Please see the PhD and MA Programs of Study Handbook, or contact our current Graduate Director or Office/Graduate Coordinator for more information.
Class | Title | Day/Time | Location | Instructor | Course Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
HST 600 | Boderlands and Empires from the Margins | M 9:30-12:15 | 151 Eggers Hall | Murphy | |
HST 600 | Mexico-US Relations | M 12:45-3:30 | 209 Eggers Hall | McCormick | |
HST/MES 600 | Global Histories of the Modern Middle East and North Africa | T 9:30-12:15 | 151 Eggers Hall | A. Kallander | Readings in recent scholarship on the modern Middle East and North Africa with attention to global contexts and processes such as colonialism and capitalism. The course will emphasize historical approaches and methodologies but will be interdisciplinary in nature. Students from all disciplines welcome as are advanced undergraduates. We will combine conversations and analysis of shared readings, different readings on a shared topic or theme, with independent work. Topics may include colonial and post-colonial theory, gender, sexuality, race, religion and identity, security and insecurity, human rights and humanitarianism, science, technology, health and the environment, depending on student interest. |
HST 803 | Theories and Philosophies of History | T 12:30-3:15 | 151 Eggers Hall | Jashari | |
HST 645 | History of International Relations | W 9:30-12:15 | 151 Eggers Hall | Khalil | |
HST 804 | Graduate Research Seminar | W 3:30-6:15 | 151 Eggers Hall | Kutcher |