United States Major
The U.S. History graduate program at the
University of Arizona offers students an excellent graduate
experience with many opportunities to develop their research
and teaching skills. The department is large enough to offer
a wide variety of courses, many of which are graduate-only
colloquia and seminars, and small enough to offer the individual
attention that students need. Some students also gain valuable
experience as teaching assistants and more advanced students
also have opportunities to teach their own courses during
the winter and summer sessions. Students work with faculty
who specialize in a broad spectrum of topics and employ
diverse methods to explore social, cultural and political
history. Faculty fields include: womens history, the history of the West,
Native American history, urban history, the U.S.-Mexico
Borderlands and the Southwest, Mexican American history,
immigration history, labor history, environmental history,
Jewish history, and the history of foreign relations. The
facultys expertise in the history of the south complements
its established reputation in the history of the west, enabling
students to develop skills in regional comparisons. The
departments focus on Mexican and Latin American history
complements the U.S. strengths in Mexican American, immigration,
and U.S.-Mexico Borderlands history. Similarly, the Universitys
Womens Studies Program and the department's program
in Comparative Women's History provide additional depth
to the departments offerings in U.S. womens
history.
Resources for students:
The Department of History and
the University offer a wealth of resources for students
in the areas of research, training, and support. The University
of Arizona Library collections are especially rich in materials
related to U.S. History and the southwest. In addition to
published books, the library has archival holdings and substantial
microform holdings of documents, reprints, journals, and
so on. Also available for research are the Udall Center
for Studies in Public Policy on campus, the University's
Photography museum archives, and the Arizona Historical
Society whose rich collection of Southwestern material has
already formed the basis of many books and is located just
next to the University.
Faculty
Karen Anderson
- 20th C. U.S., women, social
Juan Garcia - 20th century, Mexican American
David Gibbs -- 20th century foreign relations
Benjamin Irvin - Early American, the American Revolution
Jack Marietta - U.S. Colonial and Revolution
Oscar Martinez - 20th C. U.S., Mexican-U.S. Borderlands, Mexican
American
Katherine Morrissey - 19th/20th C. U.S., west, environmental
Roger Nichols - 19th C. U.S., Native American
Michael Schaller - 20th C. U.S., foreign policy, U.S. and Asia
Dissertations in Progress
| Salvador Acosta |
Crossing Borders, Erasing Boundaries: Inter-Ethnic Marriages in Tucson, 1854-1930.
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| Pamela Bennett |
Sometimes Freedom Wears a Woman’s Face: Native American Women Veterans of World War II
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| Marcus Burtner |
Proliferating Natures: Social and Natural Complexity in the Tucson Bowl, 1907-1975
|
| Sean Duffy |
Shell Game: The United States and Afghan Opium Relationship
|
| Vilja Hulden |
Employers, Unite? Organized Business Responses to the Rise of Labor Unions in the United States, 1900-1917
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| Katrina Jagodinsky |
Racial and Gendered Aspects of State Formation in Western Borderlands: A Comparative Study of Oregon and Arizona Territories
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| Masami Kimura |
Modernity as the Ideological Nexus of the Cold War Japanese-American Alliance.
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| Chrystel Pit |
“How Can We Turn Them into Good Citizens?”: A Comparative Study of Mexican Immigrants in Tucson, Arizona and Algerian Immigrants in Marseille, France in the Post-1960’s Era.
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| Neil Prendergrast |
Celebrated Seasons: A Natural History of Four American Holidays.
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| Luke Ryan |
The Indians Would Be Too Near Us: Indians, Paths of Disunion in the Making of Kansas, 1848-1865.
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| Robin Zenger |
Race, Gender, and Citizenship in 1950’s Panama. |
Recently Completed Dissertations and Recent Ph.D. Placement
Denise Bates
(2006) |
Negotiations of Power: Tribal-State Relations in the 1970’s Deep South.
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Fawn-Amber Montoya
(2006)
|
Mines, Massacres, and Memories: Colorado Fuel and Iron’s Creation of a Company in Southern Colorado, 1880-1919. |
Catherine A. Pomerleau
(2005)
|
Among and Between Women: Califia Community, Grassroots Feminist Education, and the Politics of Difference, 1975–87 |
| Jane Haigh (2008) |
“Political Power, Patronage, and Protection Rackets: Municipal Politics and Corruption in Denver 1889-1904.” |
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