Global History
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Global History


Convenor: W. Miles Fletcher

Program Description

The graduate program in global history emphasizes the study of processes that transcend regions, nations, and even any single civilization. These processes include colonialism and imperialism, nationalism, international relations, environment, religion, ideologies, labor, migration/diaspora, industrialization, peace and war, science and technology, slavery, women/gender, commerce/trade, popular culture, and demography. Those doing global history attempt to see these and related developments from a planetary perspective, applying historical insights to diverse peoples and cultures in ways not possible from the vantage point of established regional and national history.

The Graduate Program

Students entering the field take two foundational seminars introducing major works while at the same time defining a primary thematic area of research. The choice of advisor and the focus of M.A. and Ph.D. research will reflect that thematic area. Because global history involves studying processes that have an impact beyond a single nation or region, students may take courses with faculty specializing in several different areas. Aside from the courses available in the History Department, students may find useful offerings in other departments at this university and at Duke University. Those interested in more detail regarding the course of study and regulations governing the global history field should see the Ph.D. Program in Global History.

Recently inaugurated, UNC's doctoral global history program has a strong base of faculty with wide ranging interests as well as active engagement by currently enrolled graduate students. Support is available for language training as well as for overseas research. A Global History Group, consisting of both faculty and graduate students, administers the field and sponsors speakers and discussions.

Click here for information about Comprehensive Exams in Global History

Faculty

Daniel Botsman Associate Professor Prinston Japanese social history, Comparative history of pre-modern societies, law and empire in early modern and modern periods, women and gender; Japanese society in the Tokugawa and Meiji periods
Christopher R. Browning Frank Porter Graham D.P. Wisconsin Comparative genocide, holocaust studies,  Modern German history
Kathryn J. Burns Associate Professor Harvard Gender/women's history, Colonial Latin American
John C. Chasteen Daniel W. Patterson D.T.P. UNC-CH Popular and political culture, 19thcentury Latin America, especially Brazil,
W. Miles Fletcher Professor, Associate Chair, & Undergraduate Director Yale Japanese history, Industrialization, international trade, business history and the political economy of modern Japan
Karen Hagemann James G. Kenan D.P.  Hamburg, Berlin History of gender, nations and nationalisms in a comparative perspective, Modern German and European history, Modern German and European history of military and war (18-20 C.); cultural and gender history of the the nation, the military, and warwomen's and gender history, social and cultural history, military history; German and European women's and gender history (18-20 C.), history of masculinities, social and cultural history, history nation, military and war. 
Michelle King Assistant Professor   Chinese history, gender history, cross-cultural interactions, Comparative gender, colonialism/imperialism, late imperial China. eighteenth- and nineteenth-century China
Lloyd S. Kramer Dean Smith D.T.P. &  Dept. Chair Cornell Nationalism, cross-cultural exchanges in the modern period, modern European intellectual history
Christopher Lee Assistant Professor Stanford Sub-Saharan Africa, imperialism, post-colonial studies 
Wayne E. Lee Associate Professor Duke Early modern military history, Colonial and Native America, British empire
Lisa A. Lindsay Associate Professor  Michigan African history, slavery and slave trade, colonialism and imperialism, gender history.
Terence V. McIntosh Associate Professor  Yale Economic and social history; early modern Europe, Early Modern European economic and social history
Cynthia Radding Gussenhoven D.P. UC-San Diego Colonial Latin America, early republic, environmental history, ethnohistory, comparative
Yasmin Saikia Associate Professor  Wisconsin Memory; Local narratives; Post-Colonial South Asia; Colonialism, nationalism, gender issues, gender history, Islam and Identity politics
Sarah D. Shields Associate Professor Chicago Islamic civilization; modern Middle East, history of gender and nation. 
Jay M. Smith John Van Setters D.T.P.   Michigan Comparative Revolutions, language and identity, political cultures, Early modern French history, cultural, intellectual
Michael Tsin Associate Professor Princeton Modern Chinese history; Nationalism, coloniality and modernities, cultural studies

 

Graduate Students Pursuing a Degree in Global History

 

Graduate Students Taking Global History as a Second Field

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