Graduate Program

The History Department offers a masters program that qualifies students for employment in a number of fields, including teaching and government research, though in past years a substantial number of people admitted to this program have ultimately gone on to pursue the Ph.D. As with the Doctoral Program, the Master’s Program accepts a limited number of students in the fall semester. Prospective students should be aware that funding opportunities for masters students are limited, as Graduate School regulations stipulate that students pursuing only a master’s degree in a department that offers a doctoral degree cannot be awarded a teaching assistantship or similar forms of funding. For additional information on financial aid for Master’s students, go to:

http://www.stonybrook.edu/finaid/applying/federal.shtml

Program Requirements:

Students in the masters program follow the same course of study as entering doctoral students. They are expected to develop a concentration in a region or period, or in an interdisciplinary field, and to conduct research in this area of concentration in the core seminar.

A. Coursework:

The required coursework for the Master’s degree consists of 30 credit hours distributed in the following manner. Descriptions of these courses may be found above, under the Doctoral Program Coursework.

  1. Core Seminar (HIS 525/526, 524/527, 3 credits each semester): This course provides an intensive, year-long introduction to historical theory and research and familiarizes students with the thematic organization of the Stony Brook graduate program. All full-time students in the master’s program are required to take this course, which is offered only as a fall/spring sequence, during their first year.
  2. Two Field Seminars (3 credits each): The department offers a number of field seminars designed to familiarize students with the history and historiography of specific regions: Europe, the United States, Latin America, Asia, and Africa. . These courses are offered—at a minimum—on a two-year cycle, though many of them are offered each year. Students choosing to concentrate in the history of a specific region are encouraged, but not required, to complete both parts of the field seminar sequence where available.
  3. Two Theme Seminars (3 credits each): The theme seminars are the heart of the department’s commitment to the theoretically informed, interdisciplinary study of history. Theme seminars generally fall under the department’s major themes: Gender, Race, and Sexuality; Nation-State, Civil Society, and Popular Politics; Empire, Colonialism, and Globalization; and Environment, Health, Science and Technology. A minimum of two theme seminars is offered each semester. Topics change regularly, and students are free to choose among the theme seminars being offered.
  4. Four Electives (3 credits each): The remaining 12 credits can be selected from Field Seminars, Theme Seminars, the graduate courses offered in conjunction with other departments (e.g. Sociology, Africana Studies, and Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies).

Below is one sample course of study for students in the masters program:

Fall: for 12 credits. HIS 524: Core Seminar

HIS 521: Field Seminar — United States History to the Civil War HIS 541: Field Seminar — Colonial Latin America

HIS 5XX: Theme seminar

Spring: for 12 credits. HIS 526: Core Seminar

HIS 522: Field Seminar — United States History since the Civil War

HIS 5xx: Outside course (elective) HIS 5XX: Theme seminar (elective)

B. Language Requirement:

Master’s students with a concentration in European history must pass a written exam in an appropriate foreign language, and students in Latin American history must pass a written exam in Spanish or Portuguese. The other areas of concentration currently do not require a foreign language for the master’s degree.

C. Oral Examination:

By the Fall semester of their second year, the MA student should identify his/her two-person Orals Committee. The student’s Advisor will examine the MA student in readings in his/her major geo-political field (Modern Europe, Colonial North America, etc.); a second faculty member will examine the student in a complementary field (usually based on a Theme seminar). The MA Oral Exam is taken at the end of the student’s course of study. By the end of the Fall semester or the beginning of the Spring semester of Year 2, the MA student shall present to his Orals Committee a list of books and topics to be examined. Preparation for the Oral Exam may be completed through the Orals Workshop during the semester of the examination. The student should arrange the exam’s time and date with the two faculty members on the Committee, as well as through the Graduate Coordinator’s office. The MA exam will be approximately one hour, and graded as a “pass with distinction,” “pass,” or “fail.” In the rare event of failure, the MA student may petition to take the Oral Exam a second time, at a future date.

Advising:

Upon acceptance of the student into the graduate program, the graduate director will assign the student an advisor based on the interests identified by the student in her/his application to the program. If the student decides to make a significant change in field of interest, her/his advisor should be changed accordingly, in consultation with the graduate director.

The advisor will meet with each advisee during the registration period of the first semester to discuss the structure and requirements of the program and the student’s individual course of study. The advisor will meet with the student for the same purpose each semester. Course and requirement check-off sheets will be given to the student each semester, which will be filled out for the Department’s Graduate Office in consultation with the advisor.

The advisor will be present and participate in the annual Faculty Meeting and Student Conference at the end of the academic year. MA students will be evaluated according to their academic performance and progress (see “Advising and Evaluation” under the Doctoral program). If there are concerns or problems, the student’s advisor will meet with the student to discuss them. However, it is hoped that all MA students will keep in close touch with their advisors about their progress over the course of the academic year.

Master’s Students Seeking to Enter the Ph.D. Program:

Master’s students seeking to continue in Stony Brook’s Ph.D. program must submit a formal application to the Graduate School. Admission into the Ph.D. program is not guaranteed. Meanwhile, MA students are welcome to participate in all departmental activities, described above.

Graduate Blog

Environmental History

Monday, May 14th, 2012

Congratulations to Gregory Rosenthal, whose article “Life and Labor in a Seabird Colony: Hawaiian Guano Workers, 1857-1870″ has been accepted for publication in the journal Environmental History.  Environmental History is the world’s leading scholarly journal in environmental history and the journal of record in the field.  Gregory prepared and wrote the first versions of this paper last year, in the department’s core seminar for entering graduate students.

Congratulations to Gregory Rosenthal, whose article “Life and Labor in a Seabird Colony: Hawaiian Guano Workers, 1857-1870″ has been accepted for publication in the journal Environmental History. Environmental History is the world’s leading scholarly journal in environmental history and the journal of record in the field. Gregory prepared and wrote the first versions of this paper last year, in the department’s core seminar for entering graduate students.

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Mwagi Njagi, Stony Brook History Ph.D., has become Director of American University Programs in Kenya and adjunct professor in its School of International Service. Congratulations!

SSRC: Drugs, Security & Democracy (DSD) Fellowship

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Congratulations to Froylán Enciso, History Department, Ph.D. candidate, on his recent award from the SSRC in its highly competitive Drugs, Security and Democracy (DSD) Fellowship program. The DSD program supports research on organized crime, drug policy, issues of governance, and associated topics across the social sciences and related disciplines in Latin America and the Caribbean. The fellowship seeks to develop a concentration of researchers who are interested in policy-relevant outcomes and membership in a global interdisciplinary network.

Journal of Latin American Studies

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Congratulations to Mark Rice, History Department, Ph.D. candidate, whose article entitled “Transnational Business and U.S. Diplomacy in Late Nineteenth-Century South America: W. R. Grace & Co. and the Chilean Crises of 1891″ was selected for print into the Journal of Latin American Studies, a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Cambridge University Press. The Journal presents recent research in the field of Latin American studies in economics, geography, politics, international relations, sociology, social anthropology, and history.

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

The Departments of History and Technology and Society and the Humanities Institute

Stony Brook University

Present

Ann Green
Department of History and Sociology of Science

University of Pennsylvania

“Rethinking Energy Histories and Landscapes”

horses pulling plow

Current concerns over energy consumption and environmental consequence are creating growing scholarly interest in energy history, and especially in understanding the energy transitions of the past.   Changes in the kinds of energy consumed and in levels of energy consumption have long been central to an understanding of industrialization.   Yet the focus has been largely on wood, coal and oil, overlooking other forms of widely consumed energies.  This talk emphasizes the critical role of animal power in American industrialization, and reexamines how the question of transition away from animal power is understood in historical literature.
Monday, April 30, 2012
3:30 p.m. Humanities 1008

Ann Green is the author of, among many publications, “Horses at Work: Harnessing Power in Industrial America” (Harvard UP, 2008), winner of the 2009 Pioneer America Society Fred B. Kniffen Award for best book.

HIS 563/CEG 536: South Asian History Field Seminar/Introduction (Fall 2012)

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

This course will provide an advanced introduction to South Asian history and historiography from the early modern period to the present. We will cover major works on key themes, including precolonial cultural relations, colonialism and imperialism, the politics of religious identity, anti-colonialism and nationalism, decolonization and partition, and postcolonial developments. Readings of classics of the field – drawn from various schools of historiography – will be supplemented with selections from relevant primary sources. This is not a survey course, and does not attempt to be comprehensive. No prior knowledge of the field is prerequisite, and the course will begin with a rapid thematic survey of South Asian history. This course is jointly designed for History PhD and MA students for whose research and teaching a knowledge of South Asian history will be useful, and for MAT students who intend to teach South Asian and global history at the advanced secondary level. Requirements include preparation and participation, a series of short response or feedback papers, project presentation, and either a topical historiographical essay (for HIS 536 students), or a lesson plan (for CEG 536 students).

Suzanne Swartz, Chosen for Prestigious Museum Internship

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Suzanne Swartz, PhD student in Department of History chosen for Lipper Internship Program at the Museum of Jewish Heritage

Swartz, a PhD student in the Department of History, has studied the Museum’s exhibitions, heard testimony from Holocaust survivors and attended seminars led by Museum scholars. “Lippers” then begin sharing the knowledge they have obtained with their communities’ schools by giving presentations on Jewish heritage and the Holocaust. “Training was informative and supportive, but on another level personal and moving,” said Swartz. “It fully prepared me to begin working with students, and I am also taking new perspectives and insights with me about the importance of education and remembrance.”

Talk by Conevery Bolton-Valencius, Wednesday, Feb. 8 at 1 p.m., 1008 Humanities

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

The Departments of History and Geosciences and the Humanities Center

Stony Brook University

Present

Conevery Bolton-Valencius

Department of History, University of Massachusetts Boston

new madrid earthquakes

Vernacular Science of the New Madrid Earthquakes:

Creating Knowledge in the Early United States

In the winter of 1811-12, a series of sizable tremors rippled out from the middle Mississippi Valley.  What we now term the New Madrid earthquakes were of immediate and pressing concern to the North Americans displaced, shaken, or frightened by them.  This presentation, from a forthcoming book on changing historical understandings of the New Madrid Seismic Zone, argues that the intense public interest and discussion surrounding the New Madrid earthquakes reveals a multi-faceted world of vernacular science in the early United States.

During the long sequence of earthquakes and in the months, years, and decades after, observers took weather measurements; recorded the effects of the shocks on their homes, livestock, and their own bodies; created devices for revealing the intensity and direction of the shocks; and investigated a multitude of effects from fouled wells to strange mineral deposits.  They reported Native American accounts from near the epicenters and from further west.  In ways both idiosyncratic and creative, early Americans attempted to convey and come to terms with these sudden and disruptive temblors. Accounts of the quakes demonstrate the blurred nature of expert and nonexpert discussions in the early nineteenth century.  Because of the lack of clear consensus about the mechanisms or causes of earthquakes, people in borderland regions along the Ohio and Mississippi Valley became not simply witnesses but theorists of the dramatic seismicity they had experienced.  Their attempts to record and explain events that overwhelmed them reveal a broadly-shared and vigorous culture of science in the early United States.

This earlier history also highlights the surprising forgetting of the quakes in the late nineteenth century, a forgetting that took place for social and environmental as well as scientific reasons.  The New Madrid quakes represent an event once taken for granted that receded almost into tall tale for the better part of a century.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

1 p.m. Humanities 1008

Graduate Core Seminar Recommended Readings, Part 5

Monday, November 28th, 2011

Environment, Medicine, Techno-Science

Crosby, Alfred. Ecological imperialism : the biological expansion of Europe, 900-1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986.

Drayton, Richard. Nature’s government : science, imperial Britain, and the “Improvement” of the World. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000.

Foucault, Michel. The order of things : an archaeology of the human sciences. New York: Vintage Books, 1994.

Haraway, Donna. Primate visions : gender, race, and nature in the world of modern science. New York: Routledge, 1989.

Harding, Sandra. The science question in feminism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986.

Kuhn, Thomas. The structure of scientific revolutions. 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970.

Latour, Bruno. Laboratory life : the construction of scientific facts. 2nd ed. Princeton  N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986.

McNeill, J. R. Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth-Century World. New York: Norton, 2000.

Mitman, Greg. Ecology, community, and American social thought, 1900-1950. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992.

Reverby, Susan. Examining Tuskegee : the infamous syphilis study and its legacy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009.

Richards, John F. The Unending Frontier: An Environmental History of the Early Modern World. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003.

Shapin, Steven, and Simon Schaffer. Leviathan and the air-pump : Hobbes, Boyle, and the experimental life. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1985.

White, Richard. The Organic Machine. New York: Hill and Wang, 1996.

Worster, Donald. Dust Bowl : the southern plains in the 1930s. 25th ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Graduate Core Seminar Recommended Readings, Part 4

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Gender, Race, Sexuality

Brown, Wendy. States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 1995.

Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York: Routledge, 1999.

Bynum, Caroline Walker. Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion. New York: Zone Books, 1992.

Chauncey, George. Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Makings of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940. New York: Basic Books, 1994.

Foucault, Michel. The History of Sexuality. Vintage Books ed. New York: Vintage Books, 1990.

Gilroy, Paul. The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1993.

Goldberg, David. The racial state. Malden Mass.: Blackwell Publishers, 2002.

Hunt, Lynn Avery. The Family Romance of the French Revolution. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992.

Nirenberg, David. Communities of Violence: Persecution of Minorities in the Middle Ages. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 1996.

Sinha, Mrinalini. Specters of Mother India : the global restructuring of an Empire. Durham: Duke University Press, 2006.

Stoler, Ann Laura. Race and the Education of Desire: Foucault’s History of Sexuality and the Colonial Order of Things. Durham: Duke University Press, 1995.