2011-2012 Bulletin 
    
    May 02, 2024  
2011-2012 Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]

History


Chair: Robert Dawidoff
(909) 621-8612
Humanities@cgu.edu
www.cgu.edu/history

 

Faculty

Click here to see faculty listing.  

 

Academic Program

Coordinated by the core faculty of the Graduate University, the faculty in history draws on the combined faculties of The Claremont Colleges with a resulting staff equivalent to that of a much larger university. Yet, because of the unique organization of the Graduate University, the history faculty can emphasize individual instruction and frequent advising and mentoring. Students have maximum access to faculty, staff, and facilities. The students who enter the department each year are carefully selected on the basis of interest and proven ability.

The history department provides advanced professional education as preparation for a variety of careers through the three programs it offers: the MA in History , the MA in History and Archival Studies , and the PhD in History . Traditionally, historians have worked in academic settings as scholars and teachers, or in closely related institutions such as libraries, archives, and museums. Increasingly, however, advanced education in history is being regarded as broad-based humanistic training, equipping students with research capabilities, writing skills, analytical methods, and communications skills that are useful in many fields. The History Department welcomes students who wish to teach in secondary schools, community colleges, four-year universities, and students who intend non-teaching careers.

Instruction in history is carried on in seminars. Classes are small and the favorable student-faculty ratio allows for an unusual amount of individual attention from faculty members. Students work with faculty advisers in planning their course of study; candidates for the Ph.D. work closely with a faculty committee composed of professors in the student’s fields of study.

The Libraries of The Claremont Colleges provide excellent research facilities and resources. Also in Claremont is the library of the Claremont School of Theology. The Huntington Library, one of the world’s finest research libraries for English and American history, is in nearby San Marino.

Concentrations

The department offers a number of interdisciplinary concentrations related to the fields of American or European history, such as American Studies, European Studies, and Early Modern Studies (see below).   For more information about these concentrations and their requirements, students should consult with their advisors and the History Department Student Handbook.

Early Modern Studies

Early Modern Studies is a transdisciplinary concentration available to master’s students in the Arts and Humanities departments of English, History, and Philosophy.  It is aimed at 1) preparing students for PhD-level work at U.S. universities in one of the above three disciplines or 2) providing a discrete course of study that complements CGU MA coursework in archival or museum studies.

To complete a concentration in Early Modern Studies, a student must take five courses in the early modern period, 1200 - 1714, of which two must be outside the discipline in which the student is earning the degree.  Courses in Latin Reading and Paleography are also required, as well as at least one course that is based upon bibliographic inquiry into the extensive collections of early modern print and manuscripts housed in Special Collections at Claremont’s Honnold/Mudd Library. 

 

Links to Specific Degrees or Further Information

History, MA 

History and Archival Studies, MA 

History, PhD