UT Dallas 2020 Graduate Catalog

School of Arts and Humanities

The School of Arts and Humanities offers three graduate degree programs: History, Humanities, and Latin American Studies.

Degrees Offered

Faculty

Professors: Charles R. Bambach, Richard Brettell, David F. Channell, Milton A. Cohen, Sean J. Cotter, Fred I. Curchack, Pamela Gossin, Ming Dong Gu, Dennis M. Kratz, Enric Madriguera, Manuel (Manny) Martinez, Adrienne L. McLean, Zsuzsanna Ozsváth, David A. Patterson, John J. Pomara, Rene Prieto, Timothy (Tim) Redman, Thomas P. Riccio, Robert Xavier Rodríguez, Nils Roemer, Rainer Schulte, Erin A. Smith, Charissa N. Terranova, Michael Thomas, Theresa M. Towner, Frederick Turner, Marilyn Waligore

Associate Professors: Matthew Brown, J. Michael Farmer, John C. Gooch, Charles Hatfield, Shelley D. Lane, Jessica C. Murphy, Monica Rankin, Natalie J. Ring, Mark Rosen, Maximilian Schich, Eric Schlereth, Shilyh Warren, Daniel B. Wickberg, Michael L. Wilson

Assistant Professors: Rosemary Admiral, Ashley Barnes, Katherine Davies, Anne Fischer, Erin Greer, Kimberly Hill, Whitney Stewart, Nomi Stone, Benjamin (Ben) Wright

Clinical Professors: Michele Hanlon, Carie King, Catherine Parsoneault, Maribeth (Betsy) Schlobohm, Dennis Walsh

Clinical Associate Professors: Kenneth Brewer, Greg L. Metz, Linda Salisbury, Jeffrey Schulze, Lorraine Tady

Clinical Assistant Professors: Paul Galvez, Shelby Hibbs, Pia Jakobsson, Sarah Kozlowski, Michael McVay

Research Assistant Professor: Debra Pfister

Senior Lecturers: Barbara Baker, Karen Baynham, Lori Gerard, Janece Glauser, Misty Owens, Allison Templeton, Patricia Totusek

Professors Emeritus: Joan Chandler, R. David Edmunds, Michael S. Simpson

Associate Professors Emeritus: Peter Park, Gerald L. Soliday, Deborah A. Stott

Distinguished Research Scholar: Bonnie Pitman

Professors of Instruction: Kathy Lingo

Associate Professors of Instruction: Lawrence Amato, Zafar Anjum, Bei Chen, Diane Durant, Kelly P. Durbin, Kathryn C. Evans, Melissa Hernandez-Katz, Thomas M. Lambert, Mary Medrick, Jonathan Palant, Christopher (Chris) Ryan, Monica M. Saba, Sabrina Starnaman

Assistant Professor of Instruction: Christina Montgomery

Objectives

The School of Arts and Humanities is committed to interdisciplinary programs that investigate the linkages between the arts and the humanities by fusing critical with creative thinking, theoretical with practical endeavors.

Facilities

The School of Arts and Humanities provides specialized facilities for academic research and creative expression. The Jonsson Building contains seminar rooms for classes in history, Humanities, and Latin American Studies as well as faculty offices and a graduate student lounge. The Edith O'Donnell Arts and Technology Building houses studios for painting, photography, and digital and new media arts. Sculpture and printmaking studios are located in the Research and Operations Center West. The SP/N Gallery offers 6,000 square feet of state-of-the-art exhibition space and is home to the Comer Collection of Photography. It is located in the Synergy Park North 2 building. Performance venues for dance, theater, and music include the University Theatre and the Jonsson Performance Hall.

Admission Requirements

The University's general admission requirements are discussed on the Graduate Admission page.

Each application is considered on its individual merits.

Normally students applying for admission to the Graduate Programs in History of Ideas, Humanities, Literature, and Visual and Performing Arts should have previous academic degrees (BA, BM, BS, BFA, MFA or MA) in arts and humanities fields and a grade point average of 3.3 (especially in upper-division undergraduate or graduate work).

Normally students applying for admission to the Graduate Program in History should have a previous degree (BA or BS) in history or related disciplines and a grade point average of 3.3 (especially in upper-division undergraduate work).

Normally students applying for admission to the Graduate Program in Latin American Studies should have a previous degree (BA or BS) in arts and humanities fields, demonstrated interest and experience in Latin American studies, and a grade point average of 3.3 (especially in upper-division undergraduate work).

The School of Arts and Humanities does not require the Graduate Record Examination for admission to graduate programs.

Full-time and Part-time Students

Students can pursue the graduate degrees in humanities on a full- or part-time basis. Full-time students normally register for nine or more semester credit hours per term. The school takes care to accommodate part-time study by scheduling both day and night classes, thus allowing students flexibility in organizing individual schedules.

Degree Requirements

The University's general degree requirements are discussed on the Graduate Policies and Procedures page.

The approach to graduate education in the School of Arts and Humanities is flexible. Within the specific degree requirements listed in the graduate catalog, each student plans a program of studies in consultation with an assigned advisor.

To have courses taken outside the school applied to one of its degrees, students must seek prior approval from the school's Associate Dean for Graduate Studies. They may also petition to have appropriate transfer courses applied to reduce the required number of semester credit hours for a degree at UT Dallas. The school's Associate Dean for Graduate Studies may require students with background deficiencies to take additional courses at the undergraduate or graduate level to remedy those deficiencies.

Active involvement in the process of artistic creation and performance is basic to the design of the Visual and Performing Arts. Therefore, students at the MA level with an emphasis on Visual and Performing Arts are required to take at least one ensemble/workshop, and those working toward a PhD with an emphasis on this area are required to take at least one additional ensemble/workshop. Students undertaking creative projects for master's portfolios or doctoral dissertations must demonstrate their competency as artists by including in their degree plans a minimum number of studios, ensembles, or workshops related to a proposed medium: two for the MA and four for the PhD.

Research

The research interests of the faculty reflect the interdisciplinary mission of the School. In addition to the research activities of individual faculty, six centers and institutes that promote interdisciplinary research are located within the school: the Center for Translation Studies, the Ackerman Center for Holocaust Studies the Center for Asian Studies, the Center for Values in Medicine, Science and Technology, the Center for U.S-Latin American Initiatives, and the Edith O'Donnell Institute of Art History. Because the School combines the Humanities and the Arts, many faculty are engaged in the creation and performance of artistic works in music, drama, literature, and the visual arts.

Updated: 2020-02-04 09:13:26 v5.670695