American Studies Minor

Coordinator: Assistant Professor Proctor

American Studies is the interdisciplinary study of American culture. The minor provides an opportunity for students to meld interests in the culture and history of the United States in a way that they cannot in single, traditional disciplines. Students will combine knowledge and methods from anthropology, art history, communications, history, law, literature, political science, sociology and other disciplines to interrogate multiple perspectives, recognizing how various individuals, peoples and groups help create American society as well as challenge its institutions, both within and outside the United States.

“America” is here understood to comprise not only the geographically and historically delineated space of the United States, but also the symbolic construction of “America” and “American.” As a result, students will understand “America” through a variety of methodological lenses, ranging from “myth and symbol,” the earliest methodology of American Studies that interrogated recurring themes in texts that reflected American culture, to contemporary combinations of multidisciplinary approaches. American Studies also provides a place for investigating American culture in the rest of the world and throughout history, ranging from its significance during the age of exploration to its current influence in the global experience.

The American Studies minor complements many majors and provides an opportunity for students to explore their intellectual interests beyond single disciplines. Students will find that the program provides an experience that supplements training for graduate and professional programs as well as various professions. 

Minor Requirements:

Required course: 4 sh

AMS2100Concepts in American Studies

4 sh

Select sixteen hours of American Studies-related courses: 16 sh

AMS2110American Gangsters

4sh

AMS2200Playing in the USA

4

ANT1123Exploring Virtual Space

4 sh

ANT3235Anthropology of the Internet

4 sh

ARH3000Issues in L.A. Art & Architecture

4 sh

ARH3200Issues in Contemporary Art

4 sh

ARH3210Issues in American Art

4 sh

COM1000Communications in a Global Age

4 sh

COM3330Religion and Media

4 sh

COM3340Politics and Media

4 sh

COM3350Sports and Media

4 sh

COR3000Race, Memory, and the "Lost Cause"

4 sh

COR3580American Crime Fiction through a Legal Lens

4 sh

COR4050Prison Nation: Deconstructing the Prison Industrial Complex

4 sh

CTA3060Development and Influence of Cinema

4 sh

ECO3120Money and Banking

4 sh

ENG2230American Literature Before 1865

4 sh

ENG2240American Literature After 1865

4 sh

ENG2250African-American Literature Before 1945

4 sh

ENG2260African-American Literature Since 1945

4 sh

ENG2350Asian-American Literature

4 sh

ENG3340Native American Literature

4 sh

ENG3351Narratives of Slavery Before and After Emancipation

4 sh

ENG3590African-American Novels

4 sh

GBL1060Preparatory Seminar for Hawaii: Nation or State?

1 sh

GBL2060Hawaii: Nation or State? In Search of Hawaiian Identity

4 sh

GEO3600Geography of North America

4 sh

HST1210Unruly Origins: US to 1865

4 sh

HST1220Contested Democracy: US From 1865

4 sh

HST3520Canada/U.S. Relations Since 1865

4 sh

HST3570America's Civil War

4 sh

HST3630African-American History, 1850-Present

4 sh

HST3640History of Women in the U.S.

4 sh

HST3930LGBTQ History in the United States

4 sh

IDS2140The Italian-American Experience

4 sh

IDS2220The Black Man in America

4 sh

MSP1500Museum Studies & Public History

4 sh

MUS3403History of American Music

4 sh

MUS3404African-American Composers

4 sh

MUS3420History of Jazz

4 sh

PHL3630Rap, Race, Gender, and Philosophy

4 sh

POL1110American Politics

4 sh

POL3010American Political Thought

4 sh

POL3130American Politics and Film

4 sh

POL3160Race to the White House

4 sh

POL3220State and Local Government and Politics

4 sh

POL3240Civil Liberties

4 sh

POL3250The Presidency

4 sh

POL3260Congress

4 sh

POL3280Race and Ethnicity in American Politics

4 sh

PUB3420U.S. Foreign Policy

4 sh

REL1120Religion and Power

4 sh

REL1280Religion, Race, and Resistance

4 sh

REL1860Spirituality and the Secular

4 sh

REL3300Religion and American Popular Culture

4 sh

REL3360Religion and War in America

4 sh

SOC2210Rethinking Race: Inequality, Colorblindness, and the "Post-Racial" Era

2 sh

SOC3110Sociology of Families

4 sh

SOC3410Racism and Race in the United States

4 sh

SOC3440Protest: Legacy of the 1960'S

4 sh

SOC3510Sociology of Popular Culture

4 sh

SOC3550Criminology

4 sh

  • At least 8 semester hours must be at the 3000-4000 level
  • No more than 8 semester hours can have the same prefix, unless it is AMS
  • Students wishing to include a course not on this list or which does not clearly indicate American content in its title may submit the syllabus of a proposed course to the coordinator for approval. 

Total Credit Hours: 20

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