2019-2020 Graduate Studies Bulletin
History
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W. Dean Kinzley, Chair
Overview
The Department of History at the University of South Carolina strives to achieve the highest standards of excellence in both conventional and applied history fields. A traditionally excellent Southern history department is complemented by a strong faculty that provides graduates and undergraduates a wide variety of American, European, and non-Western fields and periods from ancient to modern, and themes from Science, Technology, and the Environment to Culture, Identity, and Economic Development. The public history program is among the best in the nation and prepares graduate students for the museum and historic preservation job markets.
Subject to funding, financial assistance is offered by way of a limited number of renewable graduate assistantships each year.
Provided there is sufficient funding, the department awards several research assistantships to advanced doctoral students. Further, the department makes several postdoctoral appointments (of no more than one year) to new Ph.D.s, to give them experience teaching upper-division undergraduate courses in their field.
Graduate students receiving assistantships from the department are entitled to reduced fees (including in-state tuition) regardless of residence status. Those who hold assistantships for the spring semester or have letters of notification for the fall semester are entitled to reduced fees during the summer terms.
Admissions
The history department admits students once a year, in April, although accepted students ordinarily begin work in the fall, with approval from the graduate committee, they may defer enrollment for up to one year. Completed applications shall be received by The Graduate School no later than January 7 of the year they are to be considered.
For the 2012-2013 academic year, there were 180 applicants for our graduate programs; 17 enrolled (ten in the Ph.D. program and seven in the M.A. in Public History program). This class has an average GRE score of 1345 (old scoring scale) or 312 (new scoring scale) on two of the three components of the exam and an average undergraduate GPA of 3.65.
Incoming Ph.D. students who hold a master’s degree from another university must complete all of our Ph.D. requirements or demonstrate that they have completed similar course work. The Graduate Committee normally takes previous graduate work in history into account, which may speed the student’s progress toward the doctorate.
Degree Programs
Degrees offered include the M.A. in History, M.A. in Public History, and the Ph.D. in History. In addition, a joint master’s program in library and information science and public history is offered. For more information visit: Public History / Library and Information Science, M.A. / M.L.I.S. The Department of History also oversees the Certificate of Graduate Study in Museum Management.
No more than 6 hours of courses in either the M.A. or PhD. programs may be taken at the 600 level. All other courses shall be at the 700 or 800 level. Courses taken at the 800 level may be repeated but only with permission of the Committee on Graduate Studies. Thesis or dissertation research and writing courses (799 and 899) may be taken as many times as deemed necessary by the student’s advisor and with the approval of the Committee on Graduate Studies.
Programs and Courses
Programs
CoursesHistory- HIST 562 - The Middle East and the United States: 1800 to the Present
- HIST 599 - Topics in History
- HIST 640 - South Carolina History
- HIST 641 - The American South Comes of Age
- HIST 692 - Historic Preservation Field Experience—Charleston, S.C
- HIST 700 - Topics in History
- HIST 701 - Reading Seminar in Colonial American History
- HIST 702 - Reading Seminar in American History, 1789-1876
- HIST 703 - Reading Seminar in American History since 1876
- HIST 704 - Reading Seminar in Ancient History
- HIST 705 - Reading Seminar in Medieval History
- HIST 706 - Reading Seminar in Early Modern European History
- HIST 707A - Reading Seminar in Modern European History, 1789-1900
- HIST 707B - Reading Seminar in European History, 1900-Present
- HIST 708 - Reading Seminar in Russian and East European History
- HIST 709 - Reading Seminar in British History, 1500-1815
- HIST 710 - Reading Seminar in British History since 1815
- HIST 712 - Reading Seminar in Special Fields
- HIST 713 - The Age of the Antonines
- HIST 715 - The Crusades
- HIST 716 - Normandy, France, and England, 911-1453
- HIST 720 - Introduction to the Study of History
- HIST 721 - England Under the Tudors and Stuarts
- HIST 722 - England Under the Tudors and Stuarts
- HIST 725 - Modern British History
- HIST 726 - Modern British History
- HIST 727 - European Intellectual History, 1815-1900
- HIST 728 - European Intellectual History, 1900-1960
- HIST 729 - France since 1815
- HIST 730 - Russia from Peter the Great to Nicholas I
- HIST 731 - Russia, 1855-1930
- HIST 732 - European Diplomatic History, 1870-1914
- HIST 733 - Contemporary Europe
- HIST 734 - Empire and Nation in Modern Europe
- HIST 735 - State and Society in Eastern Europe
- HIST 739 - Readings in Pre-Modern Chinese History
- HIST 740 - China and the West, 1840-1949
- HIST 741 - Readings in the Social History of Sport
- HIST 744 - French Revolution and Napoleonic Era
- HIST 745 - Readings in Modern Japanese History
- HIST 748 - The Middle East and North Africa, 1798-1962
- HIST 752 - Readings in American Colonial History
- HIST 753 - The Coming of the Civil War, 1815-1860
- HIST 754 - Rise of Industrialism
- HIST 755 - Contemporary United States
- HIST 756 - United States History, 1800-1850
- HIST 757 - African American Women in Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
- HIST 758 - Capital City Field School: Theory and Practice of Historic Preservation
- HIST 761 - Southern Intellectual and Cultural History
- HIST 762 - The New South
- HIST 763 - Victorian America
- HIST 764 - History of American Women
- HIST 765 - Readings in American Diplomatic History, 1776-1914
- HIST 766 - Readings in American Diplomatic History, 1914-present
- HIST 770 - Latin American History
- HIST 772 - Exploring Ethnohistory
- HIST 773 - History of Mexico
- HIST 774 - Atlantic World History, 15th to 19th Century
- HIST 775 - Comparative History of Slavery in the Americas from the 15th to the 19th Century
- HIST 776 - History of Brazil
- HIST 780 - Readings in Modern Military Thought
- HIST 781 - History and Theory of Museums
- HIST 782 - Business History
- HIST 783 - History and Theory
- HIST 784 - Modern British Material Culture
- HIST 785 - Comparative History of Time
- HIST 786 - Comparative Applied History, U.S. and U.K
- HIST 787 - Material Culture Studies
- HIST 788 - Memory, History, and Space
- HIST 789 - Historic Site Interpretation
- HIST 790 - Archival Administration and Techniques
- HIST 791 - Historical Editing
- HIST 792 - Historic Preservation
- HIST 793 - State and Local History
- HIST 794 - Research for Teaching
- HIST 795 - Special Topics: Study Travel in History
- HIST 796 - European Historiography
- HIST 797 - American Historiography
- HIST 798 - Internship in History
- HIST 799 - Thesis Preparation
- HIST 800 - Topics in History Research
- HIST 801 - Research Seminar in Colonial American History
- HIST 802 - Research Seminar in American History, 1789-1876
- HIST 803 - Research Seminar in American History, 1876-present
- HIST 804 - Research Seminar in Ancient History
- HIST 805 - Research Seminar in Medieval History
- HIST 806 - Research Seminar in Early Modern European History
- HIST 807 - Research Seminar in Modern European History
- HIST 810 - Research Seminar in British History
- HIST 811 - Research Seminar in Latin American History
- HIST 812 - Research Seminar in East Asian History
- HIST 813 - Research Seminar in African History
- HIST 814 - Research Seminar in Middle Eastern and Islamic History
- HIST 815 - Dissertation Prospectus Seminar
- HIST 816 - Historical Research Methods
- HIST 899 - Dissertation Preparation
Museum Management
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