2021-2022 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Historical Studies (HIST)
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AMY FROIDE, Chair
G. DEREK MUSGROVE, Graduate Program Director
DENISE MERINGOLO, Public History Track Director
Degree Offered
M.A. (Degree Types )
Professors
FROIDE, AMY, Ph.D., Duke University; Early modern Britain, early modern Europe, European women’s history
KARS, MARJOLEINE, Ph.D., Duke University; Early America, U.S. women’s history, gender, religion
RUBIN, ANNE SARAH, Ph.D., University of Virginia; Civil War, the U.S. South, 19th-century America
VAPORIS, CONSTANTINE N., Ph.D., Princeton University; Japan, East Asia, women and gender in East Asia
Associate Professors
BOUTON, TERRY, Ph.D., Duke University; United States early republic, American Revolution
CHAPIN, CHRISTY FORD, Ph.D., University of Virginia; U.S. political, economic, and business history
MCDONOUGH, SUSAN A., Ph.D., Yale University; Medieval social history; medieval Jewish-Christian relations, gender and sexuality
MERINGOLO, DENISE D, Ph.D., George Washington University; Public history and material culture, 20th-century women’s political history and feminist theory, critical race theory, U.S. social and cultural history, 1860 to the present
MUSGROVE, GEORGE DEREK , Ph.D., NYU; U. S. history, post-1945 U. S. politics, black power, black electoral politics
OYEN, MEREDITH, Ph.D., Georgetown University; U.S. history and U.S. diplomatic history, history of East Asian-American
RITSCHEL, DANIEL, D.Phil., Oxford University; Great Britain, economic and social policy, historiography
SCOTT, MICHELLE R., Ph.D., Cornell University; 20th century America, African American history, civil rights, gender and women’s history, music culture
SONG, NIANSHEN, Ph.D., U of Chicago; Chinese, Inter-Asian, and Transnational History.
Assistant Professor
VANWYCK, BRIAN, Ph.D., Michigan State University; Modern Germany, Immigration, Turkish History
VOERKELIUS, MIRJAM, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, Soviet Russia, History of Science,
Environment
ZAIDI, NOOR, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, Middle Eastern, Islamic World, Gender
Shady Grove Faculty
Senior Lecturer
NOLAN, ANDREW, Ph.D. University of Illinois; US 20th century, cultural and intellectual history; Constitutional
BLAIR, MELISSA, Ph. D. University of Delaware; Public History, Architectural History, Maryland
The Master of Arts program in Historical Studies is designed to accommodate a variety of interests and career paths, including students who are considering going on for a Ph.D., those already engaged in K-12 teaching, and those who wish to enter the growing field of public history. The program is characterized by a core emphasis on academic training in historiographical methods and theory, current conceptual tools and techniques for organizing historical evidence, and primary research in a large number of subject/area specialties.
Department faculty focus their research and teaching in the following fields: United States history (all periods and several sub-areas including politics and public policy, social history, diplomatic history, economic/business history, urban history, women’s history, military affairs, and race relations/civil rights), Pre-Modern European history (including the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and early modern England), Modern European history (with particular emphasis on Britain, France, Germany, Eastern Europe, history of the Holocaust, and Russia), Atlantic World history, institutional and policy history, and Asian history, with particular emphasis on the history of China and Japan.
The program includes the option of a Public History track which offers an opportunity to explore the theory, scholarship, and practice of public history. Faculty specialize in community-based work in the fields of preservation, museum studies, and digital public history.
The Department schedules courses and events to suit full-time and part-time, evening students.
The admission requirements and procedures for the M.A. in Historical Studies program correspond to the requirements set forth by the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Applications, which should be submitted through the Graduate School, must include:
- The graduate admissions application form,
- A statement of academic goals and research interests which identifies the faculty members with whom you would most like to work,
- A Resume’ or CV,
- An undergraduate transcript,
- A 5-10 page sample of their academic or professional writing that demonstrates their writing, research, and analytical skills, and
- Three letters of recommendation that provide information about your potential as a scholar and your ability to engage in the academic work of history at the graduate level. (Candidates with questions or concerns regarding such letters are invited to consult with the Graduate Program Director well before the application deadline.).
The GRE is NOT required to apply to this program, though students are welcome to submit their results.
All applicants wishing to be considered for departmental funding (which may include a teaching or research assistantship, or any departmental funding not issued directly by the federal government) must check the relevant boxes under “Financial Assistance Information” in Section V of the application form.
The initial deadline for applications to the M.A. in Historical Studies program is February 15 of each year. Admissions will continue on a rolling basis until August.
The Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery contains a collection of about 500,000 volumes. The history collection is particularly strong in U.S. history (including state and local history), British history and modern European history. A reference and bibliographical collection of about 25,000 volumes, together with a wealth of online bibliographical and data services, provides comprehensive aid for historical research. Graduate students also have access to a rapid delivery system of materials from the massive collective resources of all the libraries in the University System of Maryland. The library and archival resources of the Baltimore-Washington area, which include the Library of Congress and the National Archives at College Park, are the largest in the world.
Financial Assistance
The Department of History annually awards a limited number of assistantships to full-time students accepted into the M.A. in Historical Studies program. These confer tuition remission, a stipend of $14,000, and health insurance benefits. Both new applicants and continuing students in the Historical Studies program are eligible to apply.
To be considered for an assistantship, new applicants must check the relevant boxes under “Financial Assistance Information” in Section IV of the Graduate School application form, and submit it by the February 15 application deadline. Continuing students wishing to be considered for an assistantship must send (by the same deadline) a letter indicating their interest and qualifications to the Historical Studies Graduate Program Director.
The Graduate School has specific guidelines concerning assistantships. Among them are the requirement that only full-time students can serve as graduate assistants. To be considered full-time, a student must be registered for a minimum of nine credits in each Fall and Spring semester for the year under consideration. The credits that a student earns as a graduate assistant contribute to this nine credit requirement. So, a student who serves as a part-time GA (10 hours per week) is expected to register for six credits that lead toward his/her degree and GRAD 600 (three credits). Full-time GAs, who work up to 20 hours per week, should register for a minimum of four credits that lead toward his/her degree and GRAD 601 (five credits).
Once a student is awarded an assistantship by the Department, the Graduate Program Director will assign them to a supervisor. Students and their supervisor are encouraged to organize their work schedule in whatever manner is mutually agreeable, so long as it meets the guidelines laid out in the Graduate Assistant Handbook.
ProgramsMaster of ArtsCoursesHistory- HIST 529 - Writing American History
- HIST 601 - History of the Old South
- HIST 602 - History of the New South
- HIST 603 - The American Colonies
- HIST 605 - Comparative Slavery: Africa and the New World
- HIST 607 - The Founding of the American Nation, 1774-1815
- HIST 608 - Women & Crime in US Memory
- HIST 613 - American Revolution
- HIST 614 - Historic Preservation in the United States
- HIST 618 - The American House: Everyday Architecture in America
- HIST 619 - The Jacksonian Era
- HIST 620 - Introduction to Assistive Technology and Accessibility Research
- HIST 621 - The American Civil War
- HIST 622 - Documenting America, 1877-1945
- HIST 625 - Making a Buck: The History of American Capitalism
- HIST 626 - Objects in History/Objects as History: Material Culture and Museum Studies for Historians
- HIST 627 - Digital Public History: Using Digital Tools to Interpret Difficult Pasts
- HIST 629 - History of Baltimore
- HIST 635 - 20th-Century American Foreign Policy
- HIST 636 - The Rise of China and the United States’ Response
- HIST 641 - Origins of Modern America, 1877-1920
- HIST 642 - The United States, 1917-1945
- HIST 643 - The United States Since 1945
- HIST 645 - History of Science to 1700
- HIST 646 - History of Science Since 1700
- HIST 647 - History of Civil Rights Since the Civil War
- HIST 648 - American Political History
- HIST 649 - From Black Power to Black Lives Matter: The Black Freedom Struggle in the Post-Civil Rights Period
- HIST 650 - Social History of American Medicine
- HIST 653 - Ancient Greece
- HIST 655 - The Roman Republic
- HIST 656 - The Roman Empire
- HIST 657 - Byzantine Civilization
- HIST 658 - Japan to 1800
- HIST 659 - Japan Since 1800
- HIST 662 - Medieval Europe
- HIST 663 - Jews, Christians and Muslims in the Middle Ages
- HIST 665 - The Renaissance
- HIST 666 - The Reformation
- HIST 668 - The Age of Enlightenment
- HIST 669 - Femininity and Masculinity in the Middle Ages
- HIST 670 - Tudor and Stuart England
- HIST 671 - Industrial Britain
- HIST 672 - Victorian Britain
- HIST 673 - 20th-Century Britain: The Age of Decline
- HIST 677 - History of China to 1644
- HIST 678 - History of China, 1644-1912
- HIST 679 - History of China, 1912-1949
- HIST 680 - Contemporary China, 1949 to the Present
- HIST 681 - History of Modern France, 1789-1989
- HIST 683 - German History, 1789-1914
- HIST 684 - German History Since 1914
- HIST 685 - Russia to 1900
- HIST 686 - Soviet History on Trail
- HIST 687 - Europe, 1815-1914
- HIST 688 - Europe, 1914 to the Present
- HIST 691 - European Intellectual History: the 19th Century
- HIST 692 - European Intellectual History: the 20th Century
- HIST 701 - The Study of History
- HIST 702 - The Practice of History
- HIST 703 - Readings in European Historiography
- HIST 704 - Readings in Asian Historiography
- HIST 705 - Introduction to Public History
- HIST 710 - Seminar in Political History
- HIST 711 - Public History Practices
- HIST 712 - Seminar in Economic History
- HIST 713 - Seminar in Social History
- HIST 714 - Seminar in Intellectual History
- HIST 715 - Seminar in Cultural History
- HIST 716 - Seminar in Historiography
- HIST 717 - Seminar in the History of Science
- HIST 718 - Seminar in Gender and Women’s History
- HIST 730 - Empire
- HIST 735 - History and Memory
- HIST 736 - Intorduction to Oral History
- HIST 790 - Internship in Historical Studies
- HIST 798 - Special Topics in Historical Studies
- HIST 799 - Master’s Thesis Research
- HIST 801 - Institutional and Policy History
- HIST 7700 - Master’s Special Study
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