UTA HISTORY

Transatlantic History

Doctoral Program
Department of History
University of Texas at Arlington
Transatlantic History Program, Department of History, Box 19529,
601 S. Nedderman Drive, 201 University Hall, Arlington, TX 76019
. . . Tel: (817) 272-2861 . . . Fax: (817) 272-2852 . . . Email: history@uta.edu . . .

Program Description Admissions Degree Requirements Courses Schedules Financial Support Faculty Job Opportunities Request Form Related Sites

Note: Course syllabi may be accessed from  the Schedules page.

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UTA
HISTORY
NEWSLETTER
2008

TRANSATLANTIC HISTORY AT UTA

TRANSATLANTIC
HISTORY STUDENT
ORGANIZATION
(THSO)

SPRING 2009
UTA HISTORY COURSE 
DESCRIPTIONS


Program Description: The Ph.D. Handbook

 
The Program
       The University
       Institutional Resources
       The Graduate Faculty
       Dissertations:  Completed and in Progress
Admissions:  How to Apply
Degree Requirements:
       The Course of Study
       Diagnostic Evaluation
       The Comprehensive Exam
       Continuous Enrollment and Leave of Absence
       Dissertation
             Writing a Dissertation
             Dissertation Prospectus Format
             Dissertation Prospectus Cover Sheet
Financial Support
       UTA Fellowships and Teaching Assistantships
       The Gradudate Dean's Texas Resident 
                       Dissertation Fellowship Program  
       Travel Funding
Transatlantic Academic Associations
Additional Links:
        Graduate Admissions Policy
        Office of Graduate Studies
        Admissions Center For Graduate Programs
        Liberal Arts Graduate Forum
        Graduate Catalogue
        Graduate School Financial Aid Information

The Program

In Fall 1998, the University of Texas at Arlington implemented a Ph.D. program in Transatlantic History. The Ph.D. Program in Transatlantic History is unique within the large number of doctoral programs at American universities since it focuses on the interactions of people and regions across the Atlantic from the fifteenth century to the present time. Unlike traditional programs that are often defined by political boundaries, this program explores the interactions and cross-cultural developments between Europe, Africa, and the Americas over the last six centuries. It has as its goal the solid grounding of graduate students in the history of the contact and interaction between peoples and regions of Europe and Africa with North and South America . To study the interrelations between Europe, Africa, and the Americas , students enroll in a sequenced curriculum that offers coursework in discovery, exploration, and the history of cartography, migrations, colonization, frontiers, transnational social movements and economic interactions. The dissertation must be an original, substantial, and significant contribution to this scholarly field of transatlantic history.

Since the field of transatlantic history is still evolving and resists by its very nature clear categorization and delineation of subfields along language and national lines, this program does not offer traditional subfields. Students will define their areas of study and dissertation topic in consultation with the Ph.D. Advisor and the other members of the graduate faculty. The dissertation topic chosen by the student should have a correlation with the language skills of that student and his/her interests. 

The University

UT-Arlington (UTA), with 25,000 students, including over 5,000 at the graduate level, is one of the largest public universities in Texas. Centrally located in the growing Dallas-Fort Worth area, UTA is accessible and affordable to a diverse body of students, both part-time and full-time.

UTA has grown with the city of Arlington (2005  pop., 362,000). Founded in 1895 as tiny Arlington College, serving a farming community of several hundred people, the school has undergone several changes in name and mission. In 1959 it became a 4-year college, and in 1965 was transferred from the Texas A & M to the University of Texas System. In 1967, the school was renamed the University of Texas at Arlington. The past quarter-century has witnessed explosive growth, especially in graduate programs. In 1966, six departments began advanced degree programs; in the 1990's, there are available to students about 70 different graduate programs, masters and doctoral.

Institutional Resources

Ph.D. students in the Transatlantic History program will have direct access to the rich materials found in the UT-Arlington Library's Special Collections. Central to research in this program is The Virginia Garrett Cartographic History Library, which contains 7,500 maps and 1,400 atlases and geographies. Special Collections has over 6,500 linear feet of manuscript archives. Recently, the UT Regents Special Collections Enhancement Fund designated $700,000 to Special Collections, an amount to be matched by another $700,000 in gifts from outside sources, for a total grant of $1.4 million. A Center for the History of Cartography was created in 1991, whose Director has published on historical geography. A faculty member holding an Endowed Chair in the History of Cartography also provides strong support for the Ph.D. program in Transatlantic History. For forty-two years, the Department of History has sponsored the annual Walter Prescott Webb Lectures, many of whose published volumes have been on Transatlantic themes. In addition, in 1998, the university inaugurated the Virginia Garrett Lectures on the History of Cartography, which will be an annual series of symposia topics and resulting publications on the study of mapping.


    


Maps Courtesy of the Special Collections Division, The University of Texas 
at Arlington Libraries, Arlington, Texas. 


Copyright © 1998, UTA History Department
All Rights Reserved