Much like the multifaceted object of study itself, our historians specializing in race approach the topic with complex, multilayered, and interdisciplinary lenses and methods. While our strengths are in the Americas, our foci stretch across the Pacific and Atlantic into racialized hierarchies in East, Southeast, and South Asia, crises of migration and citizenship in Europe, and the nexus of gender and state-craft in Africa. Imperialism, transnationalism, and globalism may be buzzwords in other departments, but our faculty seriously considers the value of comparative history, the movement beyond center-periphery in imperial and postcolonial studies, and the centrality of race and racialization in the study of global human rights history. Drawing from the strength of other disciplines in the humanities and social sciences, our historians of race look towards the multiple intersecting axes through which race must be understood: gender, class, sexuality, nationality, religion, and space, among many others. Our scholars of race are experts in legal, political, social, cultural, visual, and material histories. We are constantly in active scholarly conversation and programming (if not also affiliation) with other units on campus, such as the Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture and the Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality.
کمک هزینه تحصیلی
دوره های کارآموزی
هزینه دوره ها یک شاخص است و باید به عنوان راهنما مورد استفاده قرار گیرد گرفتن اطلاعات دقیق عزینه
The Department of History offers a PhD program centered on rigorous research within a vibrant and diverse intellectual community. While most of our students have a history degree (BA) or degrees (BA and MA), we accept students with a variety of backgrounds and interests. Your writing sample should be a complete self-contained work. The ideal sample should be in the field of history (or a closely related field) that you plan to pursue at Chicago. Include the class or publication for which the sample was written. For papers longer than twenty-five pages, please flag a section for the committee. Your candidate statement should explore specific academic interests and explain how they fit with our faculty's research and teaching strengths. You should discuss your preparation for graduate study and, where applicable to your scholarly plan, your language training and preparation. The most helpful letters of recommendation come from faculty members who can access your ability to work on your proposed historical topic. The GRE requirement cannot be waived, the history subject test is not required, successful applicants generally have high GRE scores. There is no minimum foreign language requirement to enter the program, but successful applicants should possess strong language skills in their proposed research language(s) and be aware of the language requirements for the various fields. All students are required to take a language exam in the first quarter of the program. The University of Chicago accepts either the internet-Based Test (iBT) of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) for the purpose of meeting the English language requirement. Minimum required scores in the IELTS are an overall score of 7, with sub scores of 7 in each section. The Minimum TOEFL Score - No less than 25 on each subsection(100)
تاریخ ددلاین مشخص نیست با یک مشاور IDP صحبت کنید برای اطلاعات بیشتر
Further information
If you aren't eligible for the above entry requirements, you might ant to explore pathway options at University of Chicago. If you want to find out more, speak to our counsellors.