College Catalog: 2010-2011
School of American and International Studies (AIS): American Studies (B.A.)
Website: Salameno School of American and International Studies
The American Studies major encourages exploration of the character of the United States as a unique multicultural mosaic functioning within an emerging global order. The program bridges many disciplines as it focuses on the various expressions of American society contained in its history, art, and literature. Through an analysis of its political and social development, students gain insights into the national dynamic; and through inquiry and debate of an ethical standard, students gain a perspective to evaluate the nation’s actions and beliefs.
Students majoring in American Studies receive a solid grounding in American culture in history to better understand its evolution; in political structure to better recognize the forces and instruments of change; in literature to experience American society from varied perspectives; and in the pluralism of our society, with particular attention to race, gender, and ethnicity. Course clusters and sequences exist in women’s studies, African American studies, international outlooks, and social pluralism. At the upper level, students encounter course work relating to each of the following themes: America’s role in the world, American regionalism, American thought and values, and American artistic expression. Inherent in the American Studies major is the recognition of the nation’s developing response to the challenges and opportunities of an ever-expanding global commitment.
It is apparent, therefore, that American Studies graduates, having gained appreciation and comprehension of the changing global context, will enjoy increasing career choices as the demand for Americanists grows. Additionally, the major’s liberal arts emphasis on thinking, analyzing, evaluating, and communicating provides excellent preparation for both career entry and graduate study. American Studies graduates find employment in a wide variety of fields, including education, communications, publishing, and historic preservation, as well as in museums and archives. Advanced degrees are most often pursued in law, business, museum studies and American studies.
The American Studies major leads to the B.A. degree, and is offered through the School of American and International Studies.
A minor is not available.
- Transfer students who have 48 or more credits accepted at the time of transfer are waived from the courses marked with a (W) below. Waivers only apply to General Education Requirements NOT School Core or Major Requirements.
- Double counting between General Education, School Core, and Major may be possible. Check with your advisor to see if any apply.
- Subject & Course # – Title & Course Description
- GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS
- ENGL 180 - COLLEGE ENGLISH
- AIID 201 - READINGS IN HUMANITIES (W)
- SELECT ONE –
- BADM 115 - PERSPECTIVES OF BUSINESS AND SOCIETY (W) OR
- SOSC 101 - SOCIAL ISSUES (W)
- SELECT ONE – (W) GE-HISTORY CATEGORY: HIST 101-110
- SELECT ONE – GE-SCIENCE WITH EXPERIENTIAL COMPONENT CATEGORY
- SELECT ONE – GE-MATHEMATICS CATEGORY: MATH 101-121
- SELECT ONE – GE-INTERCULTURAL NORTH AMERICA CATEGORY
- SELECT ONE – GE-INTERNATIONAL ISSUES CATEGORY
- SELECT ONE – (W) GE-TOPICS SOCIAL SCIENCE CATEGORY
- SCHOOL OF AMERICAN AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REQUIREMENTS
- AIID 101 - FIRST YEAR TOPICS: LIBERAL STUDIES (W)
- FOUNDATIONS I AND
FOUNDATIONS II AND
INTERMEDIATE I OR
PROFICIENCY TEST
(SEE AIS WORLD LANGUAGE REQUIREMENT) - AMERICAN STUDIES MAJOR REQUIREMENTS
- AMER 125 - INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN STUDIES
- HIST 101 - INTRODUCTION TO US HISTORY I
- HIST 102 - INTRODUCTION TO US HISTORY II
- One Course from each of the following Intermediate Categories (200 level) *:
- American Literature (AMR 1)
- AMER 220 - COMICS AND AMERICAN CULTURE
- AMER 250 - PURSUING THE AMERICAN DREAM
- LITR 220 - SURVEY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE I (was 202)
- LITR 221 - SURVEY OF AMERICAN LIT II (was 218)
- LITR 223 - SURVEY OF AMERICAN POETRY (was 221)
- LITR 224 - AMERICAN DRAMA (was 287)
- LITR 226 - AMERICAN SHORT STORY (was 204)
- LITR 228 - COLONIAL AMERICAN LITERATURE (was 242)
- LITR 230 - 19TH CENTURY AMERICAN LITERATURE (was 227)
- LITR 231 - 19TH CENTURY AMERICAN WOMEN AUTHORS (was 225)
- LITR 232 - 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN NOVEL (was 240)
- LITR 233 - HARLEM RENAISSANCE (was 280)
- LITR 234 - CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN LITERATURE (was 217)
- LITR 235 - AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE (was 230)
- LITR 236 - MULTICULTURAL LITERATURE (was 252)
- LITR 276 - LITERATURE OF THE AMERICAS (was 255)
- American Politics (AMR 3)
- AMER 235 - THE AMERICAN ENVIRONMENT
- ENST 207 - PUBLIC POLICY
- POLI 223 - AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
- POLI 225 - AMERICAN DIPLOMACY
- POLI 257 - ETHNIC POLITICS IN AMERICA
- Gender Issues (AMR 4)
- HIST 231 - US WOMENS AND GENDER HISTORY
- LITR 231 - 19TH CENTURY AMERICAN WOMEN AUTHORS (was 225)
- SOSC 217 - MINORITY WOMENS ISSUES
- SOSC 223 - WOMEN WRITERS: A MEDLEY OF VOICES
- SOSC 280 - WOMEN IN CONTEMP SOCIETY
- African-American Studies (AMR 5)
- AMER 241 - AFRICAN AMERICAN CULTURE AND CIVILIZATION
- ARHT 241 - AFRICAN & AFRICAN AMERICAN ART
- CNTP 320 - BLACK EXPERIENCE THROUGH THEATER (was 210)
- HIST 221 - AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY I
- HIST 222 - AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY II
- LITR 233 - HARLEM RENAISSANCE (was 280)
- LITR 235 - AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE (was 230)
- MUSI 202 - THE BLACK EXPERIENCE THROUGH MUSIC
- MUSI 205 - MUSIC AND DANCE IN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA: NORTH AMERICA
- MUSI 233 - HISTORY OF HIP-HOP AND RAP MUSIC
- MUSI 237 - HISTORY OF JAZZ
- SOCI 240 - THE BLACK FAMILY
- SOSC 215 - AFRICAN AMERICANS IN FILM
- Multicultural Studies (AMR 6)
- AMER 206 - ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICANS
- AMER 214 - NATIVE AMERICANS
- ANTH 238 - URBAN ANTHROPOLOGY
- ARHT 241 - AFRICAN & AFRICAN AMERICAN ART
- COMM 234 - INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION
- HIST 232 - IMMIGRATION TO AMERICA
- IBUS 202 - CANADA AND THE US: ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL RELATIONS
- LITR 236 - MULTICULTURAL LITERATURE (was 252)
- MUSI 205 - MUSIC AND DANCE IN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA: NORTH AMERICA
- MUSI 232 - HISTORY OF ROCK 'N' ROLL
- MUSI 249 - AMERICAN MUSICAL TRADITIONS
- POLI 257 - ETHNIC POLITICS IN AMERICA
- SOCI 215 - SOCIOLOGY OF RACE RELATIONS
- One Course from each of the following Advanced Categories (300-400 Level)*
- American Regionalism (AMR 7)
- AMER 305 - INSIDE AMERICA
- AMER 325 - READING AMERICAN REGIONS
- ENST 320 - GEOGRAPHY OF THE AMERICAN WEST
- ENST 358 - GEOGRAPHY OF NORTH AMERICA
- ENST 365 - THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST
- HIST 311 - THE AMERICAN WEST
- LITR 326 - AMERICAN ROMANTICISM (was 331)
- America in the World (AMR 8)
- AMER 310 - U.S. RELATIONS TOWARD AFRICA
- AMER 330 -
- HIST 326 - 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY
- HIST 327 - THE COLD WAR
- INTL 250 - CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS (was 335)
- INTL 310 - CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- POLI 312 - UNITED NATIONS: WORLD POLITICS
- POLI 315 - AMERICA'S VIETNAM EXPERIENCE
- POLI 349 - AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY
- BADM 316 - WORLD POLITICAL ECONOMY
- MKTG 350 - INTERNATIONAL MARKETING
- ECON 304 - POLITICAL ECONOMY OF GLOBAL CAPITALISM
- American Thought and Values (AMR 9)
- AIID 311 - DISABILITY STUDIES
- AMER 307 - TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE IN AMERICA
- AMER 309 - HOLOCAUST AND MEDIA
- AMER 315 - CLASS IN AMERICA
- CNTP 310 - BLACK EXPERIENCE IN MEDIA
- HIST 302 - PUBLIC HISTORY
- HIST 313 - EARLY AMERICAN RELIGIOUS HISTORY
- HIST 322 - AMERICA BETWEEN THE WARS
- HIST 323 - AMERICA SINCE 1945
- HIST 324 - AGE OF SEGREGATION
- HIST 325 - BLACK POWER YEARS
- PHIL 330 - AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY
- POLI 308 - CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS IN AMERICAN POLITICS
- POLI 309 - CIVIL RIGHTS
- POLI 310 - THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS
- POLI 317 - AMERICAN PARTY POLITICS
- POLI 318 - POLITICS OF STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT
- POLI 321 - THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT
- POLI 323 - CAMPAIGNS AND ELECTIONS
- POLI 340 - AMERICAN PRESIDENCY
- POLI 355 - NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY
- POLI 360 - CONFLICT RESOLUTION
- SOSC 308 - AFRICAN AMERICAN SOCIAL AND POLITICAL THOUGHT
- SOSC 352 - POLITICAL LEGACY OF MALCOLM X
- American Artistic Expression (AMR A)
- AMER 311 - AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHY, AMERICAN VISUAL CULTURE
- AMER 317 - AMERICAN CRIME FICTION&FILM
- ARHT 322 - AMERICAN ART I:CONTACT TO 1865
- ARHT 325 - AMERICAN ART II: 1865-1945
- CNTP 347 - AMERICAN INDEPENDENT CINEMA
- CNTP 348 - LATINO IMAGES AND HOLLYWOOD
- COMM 347 - THE NEW TV CRITICISM
- LITR 314 - TRANSATLANTIC 19TH CENTURY POETRY (was 305)
- LITR 320 - COMIC AMERICAN NOVEL (was 308)
- LITR 326 - AMERICAN ROMANTICISM (was 331)
- LITR 334 - AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN WRITERS
- LITR 338 - LATINO LITERATURE OF THE USA (was 341)
- LITR 378 - BLACK ODYSSEY (was 320)
- THEA 323 - AMERICAN EXPERIMENTAL THEATER: 1950 TO THE PRESENT
- THEA 331 - THEATER AND SOCIETY I
- THEA 334 - THEATER AND SOCIETY II
- CHOOSE ONE (please see your advisor)
- AMER 410 - THE AMERICAN STUDIES SEMINAR
- AMER 401 - AMERICAN STUDIES INTERNSHIP
- 400-LEVEL INDEPENDENT STUDY
- 400-LEVEL DISCIPLINARY SEMINAR
- *Note: double counting between categories is not permitted; some courses may count toward General Education – see your advisor
Note: A 2.0 GPA in the major is required for graduation.
General Education Requirements
Graduation Requirements
School of American and International Studies Website
Faculty Profiles