American Studies Handbook


Table of Contents

  1. Mission Statement
  2. Faculty
    1. Core Faculty
    2. Affiliates
  3. Advising
  4. Declaring a Major in American Studies
  5. The American Studies Major
  6. American Studies Coursework
    1. The Foundation Course
    2. Integrative Seminars
    3. History Requirement
    4. Clusters
    5. The Capstone Project
      1. Senior Special Project (SSP)
      2. Senior Honors Thesis (HT)
  7. Independent Study
  8. Internships
  9. Study Abroad

Mission Statement

American Studies is a quintessentially interdisciplinary endeavor that seeks to cut across disciplinary boundaries in its analysis of U.S. society and culture. It examines the historical, social and cultural underpinnings of what is commonly referred to as the "American experience."  The intellectual signature of Tufts' American Studies Program is its emphasis on how the intersecting dynamics of race, ethnicity, class, and gender produce dissimilar "American" experiences for individuals and groups, and how political, economic and social systems shape crucial public domains such as education, health, work and the environment. We are also interested in critical studies of representation in the performing arts, the visual arts, humanities and popular culture. American Studies has also been increasingly concerned with the ways that other countries perceive and interpret the United States and, conversely, how people in the United States perceive and represent their neighbors inside and outside of the Western hemisphere.

Established in 1980, the American Studies Program at Tufts University offers a Bachelor of Arts in American Studies.  The sequence of courses starts with introductory surveys that analyze power structures and compare systems of difference and inequality. Students continue with American Studies seminars on featured topics and a "cluster" of courses drawn from departments throughout the university focusing on one of several themes. Finally, in the senior year, American Studies students design a capstone special project or honors thesis related to their cluster. As a part of its educational philosophy, the American Studies Program also encourages majors to engage with and contribute to the public sphere as interns, artists, activists and scholars. For this reason, many of our students choose to double major in English, History, International Relations, Political Science, or Sociology, and in programs such as Peace and Justice, Environmental Studies, Community Health and Women's Studies. The American Studies Program at Tufts enables students to develop the critical skills and intellectual flexibility necessary to prepare them for life and work in an increasingly fragmented, complex, and diverse society.

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American Studies Faculty

Courses that count towards an American Studies major are taught by faculty from throughout the university. Some faculty are actively engaged in the American Studies Program, and are designated as either Core Faculty or Affiliates. Regardless of their status, all share a commitment to the AMER mission statement and to American Studies students.

Core faculty are full- or part- time faculty who regularly teach courses with an AMER prefix. Full-time core faculty advise majors as well as students doing special projects and theses related to American Studies. Part-time core faculty are adjunct faculty whose duties do not include advising majors, although they may elect to advise students’ projects or theses.

Affiliates teach courses in other departments or units and contribute to American Studies in one of several ways: their courses are routinely used by American Studies students to fulfill their clusters; they regularly supervise AMER theses and projects; and/or they are actively engaged in AS meetings and other activities.

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Advising

Because American Studies is an interdisciplinary field, most of the courses fulfilling the requirements for the major are selected from departments and other interdisciplinary programs across the university. This flexibility offers students the opportunity to explore a particular theme or topic from an interdisciplinary perspective, but it also means that they bear more responsibility for designing their major curriculum. Working with their adviser(s) is thus crucially important, particularly in the process of constructing an intellectually coherent program of study. The student’s adviser should be a core or affiliate faculty with expertise closely related to the cluster theme they intend to pursue. The Director can help students identify possible advisers, but it will be their responsibility to meet with him or her to ask if s/he will agree to advise them. The student’s adviser will help them identify possible topics for their Senior Special Project or Honors Thesis; s/he may also agree to serve as adviser to the student’s SSP or HT, but this is not required.

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Declaring a Major in American Studies

As in other departments and programs, students declare their majors in the spring semester of their sophomore year. Once the student has decided on American Studies, (and if s/he he does not already have an adviser for American Studies) make an appointment with the Director, Deborah Pacini Hernandez or Jean Wu, either of whom can serve as a temporary adviser until a cluster has been selected. At this point, a student may want to change his/her adviser to someone with expertise in that area. Before meeting with the American Studies adviser for the first time, fill in an American Studies Planning Worksheet (available online), which will indicate the current status of the foundation and distribution requirements as well as any courses the student may have taken that fulfill the American Studies major.

Many AMER students are double majors, often with other interdisciplinary majors: See the Tufts Bulletin under “School of Arts and Sciences, Department or Program Major” regarding double counting. This is particularly important for those doing interdisciplinary or disciplinary minors along with their American Studies major, because the rules for double counting among the two types of minors are different.

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The American Studies Major

Note: These guidelines apply to students declaring their major in 2008; those who declared their major before 2008 may choose from the old or new guidelines but not mix the two.

Undergraduate Major Requirements
To graduate with a Bachelor of Arts degree in American Studies, a student must complete ten credits: One Foundation course AMER10-20 (one credit); one Integrative Seminar AMER 181-190 (one credit); one History course with at least two-thirds of course content focused (on some aspect of the U.S. (one credit); five credits that form a coherent interdisciplinary cluster (see clusters below). The last two credits are fulfilled by AMER 198, Senior Special Project, taken in either the fall or spring semester of the senior year for one credit, plus one elective credit (course content to coordinate with course work of interdisciplinary cluster); OR AMER 199, Senior Honors Thesis, taken in both semesters of the senior year for two credits. The Senior Special Project or Honors Thesis must integrate course work of interdisciplinary cluster.

A minimum of three of the courses you take to fulfill your major requirements will have AMER prefixes, and will be taught by Core American Studies faculty—the Foundation course, an Integrative Seminar and the Senior thesis/project seminar -- although students may well take additional courses with AMER prefixes that will count towards their cluster or as an elective.

AMER courses are organized according to a two- or three- digit system: double digit courses are open to first years and sophomores, but not to graduate students; three-digit courses are more advanced and are open to graduate students -- although graduate students are expected to do substantial additional work.

AMER Foundation courses are numbered 10-20; Integrative Seminars are numbered in the 180s, and the SSP/HT seminar is numbered 198 or 199 respectively. Additionally, a Featured Topics in American Studies series (AMER 40-70/140-170) include cross-listed courses, as well as courses taught by American Studies faculty that are neither Foundation courses nor Integrative Seminars. Featured Topics courses that receive a three-digit number must require students to do a substantial research paper, and are open to graduate students. Special Topics (AMER 194+section number) are new courses taught by visiting faculty or those courses not yet been approved by the curriculum committee.

The majority of the courses taken to complete the major will be from other departments, whose numbering systems vary. At least two of the courses taken to complete the cluster must be at an intermediate or advanced level (in most, but not all cases, at the 100 level); in other words, a cluster may not be composed of five introductory-level classes. Be aware that some of the more advanced courses relevant to a cluster may have departmental pre-requisites. On occasion, American Studies majors have been granted admission to such courses if they can demonstrate an appropriate degree of preparation via other courses as well as a solid intellectual reason for wanting to take the course. Please consult an adviser before petitioning for admission to such courses.

The majority of AMER courses count towards the Social Science distribution, although some count towards the Humanities or Arts distribution. Consult the online Bulletin at studentservices.tufts.edu (click on Registrar) for up-to-date information about courses that fulfill distribution requirements.

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American Studies Coursework

Note: These guidelines apply to members of the class declaring their major in 2008; those who entered the major before 2008 may choose from the old or new guidelines but not mix the two.

The Foundation Course (AMER 10-20)
Even before declaring a major in American Studies, we strongly recommend taking one of the AMER Foundation courses, either Race in America (AMER 12) or American Identities (AMER 16). Foundation courses are introductory surveys that explore and compare systems of power, difference and inequality in the United States. They also introduce the concepts and methodology of interdisciplinarity, and familiarize students with the program goals of American Studies at Tufts. They are open to first-years and sophomores. While not all students will go on to declare a major in American Studies, these courses are intended to serve as gateway courses to the major. Students who wish to take more than one Foundation course can count it towards their cluster if it is relevant to their topic, but it cannot count as an Integrative Seminar.

If a student has not taken a Foundation course prior to declaring the major, s/he should take it as soon as possible, as American Studies majors must take their foundation course by the end of their 5th semester (i.e., before the second semester of their junior year). Students intending to go abroad their junior year must be aware of this requirement and plan ahead accordingly.

Integrative Seminars (AMER180-190)
Designed primarily for majors (but open to adequately prepared non-majors), Integrative Seminars have a defined thematic focus, and are small enough to allow for intensive discussions and collaborative learning. Students may take more than one Integrative Seminar, but they cannot double count their required Integrative Seminar for their cluster as well.

History Requirement
Majors must complete one History course in which at least two thirds of the content covers the United States, or alternatively, that focuses on the relationship between the United States and other parts of the globe. History courses offered by the Experimental College may count towards a cluster cluster, but may not substitute for the requirement to take a course from the History Department. Transfer students may petition to have relevant courses from history departments at other colleges or universities count towards this requirement, but AP courses will not satisfy this requirement. Students who take a US History class while studying abroad must receive approval from the History Department at Tufts before requesting credit towards the American Studies history requirement.

Clusters
An interdisciplinary cluster of five credits is chosen by the student to prepare for advanced work in the SSP/HT. The cluster is also an opportunity for students to take courses with instructors who might become SSP/HT mentors. The director and other faculty advisers work closely with students in tailoring individual programs reflecting particular interests and providing a framework for the continued integration of knowledge at more advanced levels.

American Studies faculty have constructed lists of automatically approved courses for each cluster, which students and their advisers will consult as they design their program of study. If a student or his/her adviser believes a course is relevant to the program goals but the course is not on the list, the student may request permission from the Director to add it to the cluster. At least two of the courses counting towards the cluster must be at an intermediate or advanced level. One (but no more) independent reading OR internship course can count towards the cluster.

If students have particular interests that are not addressed in the list of existing clusters, they may decide to design their own cluster in consultation with a relevant adviser. This cluster must structurally resemble the existing clusters, i.e. they must combine at least two or three courses focusing specifically on the selected theme; the remaining courses must be related to this theme but not required to be 100% focused on it. The Director of American Studies must approve independently designed clusters. Independently designed clusters must be declared and approved by the second semester of the junior year.

Current Clusters Listing
Revised November 2007

The cluster themes are:

For the most complete information on clusters, including which courses are included in each cluster, download the PDF file by clicking below:

View Clusters Listings

The Capstone Project
All American Studies majors must complete a capstone project related to their cluster topic, in which they demonstrate their command of the basic knowledge, theories, methodologies and intellectual implications of their chosen subject. Mastery of the historical period in which the project is set is also an instrumental part of the work, and should be integral to the framing and analysis of the project. As consciously interdisciplinary work, the capstone project should manifest students’ versatility in employing various interdisciplinary approaches to constructing knowledge. Students should be prepared to make a strong commitment to the capstone project, and should arrange their senior year schedules to allow them to devote the time necessary to contribute to the seminar and the project it fosters.

The capstone project can take the form of a one-semester Senior Special Project or a two-semester Senior Honors thesis. Typically AMER 198 is taken for one credit and AMER 199 is taken for two. However, both the SSP and HT are variable credit courses, ranging from 0.0 - 3.0 credits, depending on the breadth and quality of work submitted. Depending on which capstone option a student selects, s/he will register for one of the following courses in the senior year.

Senior Special Project (SSP) and Honors Thesis (HT)
The AMER Senior Seminar is designed to help students master the intellectual and methodological components of their capstone projects and, at the same time, to build a community of independent scholars. To help students meet these goals, the seminar includes several assignments, which constitute 30% of the final grade for both the SSP and the HT: the written assignments cover specific sequential aspects of the research process; the oral presentation of work in progress in the seminar prepares students for the oral defense with the faculty committee at the completion of the project.

Senior Special Project (AMER 0198) is a semester-long senior seminar for one credit. Research papers will be a minimum of 35 pages, although other media are acceptable for part of the 35 pages, e.g., a film, play, artwork, photography, musical production. If other media are chosen, students will be asked to write a ten-page paper in addition to the project, demonstrating their understanding of the history and critical context of their work in its particular genre and form.

Senior Honors Thesis (AMER 0199) is a year-long course taken for a minimum of two credits.

Doing an Honor’s Thesis is an opportunity to dedicate a full year of research on a topic of interest to the student, and will prepare the student for graduate-level work. The Honors Thesis, however, represents an extra dimension to the already substantial commitment to a Senior Special Project, so it should be undertaken only by students willing to invest an extraordinary effort that will result in an original thesis of very high quality. The subject and scope of the Honors Thesis, agreed upon in advance by the student and his/her advisers, are substantially greater than those of the SSP: theses generally run at least 75 pages, instead of 35 pages for the SSP. Honors Thesis committees require three readers (instead of two for the SSP) who will mentor the student throughout the year, one of whom must be affiliated with the American Studies Program. It is preferable that the Director of the project be a faculty member under whom the student has already studied by taking the course(s) offered in the area of expertise relevant to the student’s project.

Prior to enrolling in AMER 0199, a student should give a great deal of thought to this decision and plan to meet with faculty advisers in the junior year. S/he should be on the Dean's List before the senior year when registering for AMER 199, and you s/he must register his/her intention to complete an Honors Thesis with the Dean's Office in Dowling Hall in the fall of the senior year. (See the Tufts University Bulletin for precise instructions and details.) If a student is planning to be abroad during the junior year, s/he must complete these arrangements either prior to leaving, or be prepared to handle them while abroad.

Honors Thesis students’ progress will be assessed in early December by their primary reader, their AMER 199 instructor, and AMER Program Director. Failure to complete AMER 199 assignments and make adequate progress on research and preliminary writing will result in an HT becoming an SSP.

Only students who have done an Honors Thesis will be recommended for Highest Latin honors in American Studies. Earned honors will appear on the student's transcript, but not on the diploma.

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Independent Study

Students wishing to do an independent study project related to their cluster topic before initiating their SSP/HT must find an adviser and sign up for AMER 193. No more than one Independent Study course can count towards the cluster.

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Internships

The American Studies Program at Tufts encourages its students to learn from and become engaged in their community, including the Greater Boston metropolitan area where they are residents while they are at Tufts. AMER internships, available only to AMER majors, are a valuable way of achieving these goals. AMER students should register for AMER 0099; if they choose to use it towards a cluster, they must receive a letter grade, not pass/fail. A minimum of 150 hours of work for the semester is required.

The student is responsible for finding the organization willing to accept an internship including an on-site professional-level supervisor. The student also has to find a faculty member to supervise the internship. The student must prepare a concise proposal explaining the nature of their internship as well as their goals and motives. The proposal must be approved by the Director of American Studies prior to registration and must be completed no later than the add/drop deadline for the semester. If the internship is taken for a letter grade, there is a requirement of a 10-page paper to be submitted to the faculty adviser who will grade it. A student may choose to register for the internship pass/fail, but must be aware that there can only be two notations of an internship on a student’s transcript, and only one counted in any given cluster.

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Study Abroad

We encourage AMER majors to study abroad because international travel offers rich opportunities for reflecting upon US society and culture from different vantage points; for example, how the US has influenced other parts of the world, or how the US is perceived by the citizens of other countries. Nevertheless, students majoring in American Studies must work carefully with their advisers prior to going abroad in order to ensure that they can complete their major requirements if courses they take abroad do not transfer into American Studies.

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