…number of different forms (research report, exhibit plan, archival finding aid, and so on), but should be equivalent in substance to a graduate level course. The topic and scope of the project must be approved by the faculty adviser, who must also receive or view the project prior to awarding…
The following list of interdisciplinary programs may be of interest to students majoring in history not only because they are in and of themselves interesting, but because a number of history courses can be used to satisfy these programs’ requirements. That is, some history courses can both serve to fulfill…
Course offerings and rotations are scheduled in order to accommodate students whose work, family, or financial obligations limit the hours when they can attend or the number of courses they can take each term. All classes meet once weekly, in the early evening. The Graduate Program in History offers eight…
…Concentrations Business, Finance, & Economics Culture, Literature, & Art Empires, Imperialism, & Colonialism Gender, Sexuality, & Society International Relations and Global Affairs Law, Politics, & Government Public & Professional History Race, Ethnicity, & Immigration Religion, Philosophy, & Ideas Science, Technology, & Medicine War, Peace, & Diplomacy World Cultures & Civilizations…
…the attention that it deserves. This symposium is organized around a significant new paper by Professor Philip Scranton (Rutgers-Camden Department of History, emeritus), entitled “Managing Communist Enterprise: Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, 1945-1970,” that itself emerges from a major project being undertaken by Professor Scranton and Professor Patrick Fridenson to examine…
…of Pennsylvania Commentator: Eileen Ryan, Assistant Professor of History, Temple University April 6, 2018 (Friday), 4:00-6:00 p.m. “To Change the Economics of Your Life’: Black Women in the International Ladies Garment Workers Union” JANETTE GAYLE, Assistant Professor of History, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Commentator: Kathy Peiss, Roy F. and…