UC’s PhD in American Studies enables scholars to analyze the United States within transnational and Indigenous frameworks, blending humanities, social science, and creative methodologies.
GIS deep-map tracing settler-colonial land patents onto present-day real-estate holdings
Podcast series unpacking climate dystopias in 21st-century U.S. cinema
Critical essay on disability narratives in Depression-era WPA murals
Digital humanities project visualizing interstate highway displacement of Latinx barrios
Ethnography of patriot merchandising at NASCAR events
Comparative study of Chinese Exclusion Act rhetoric and contemporary immigration bans
Archival recovery of Indigenous activism in early national parks policy debates
Symposium on Afrofuturist re-imaginings of the Constitution
Interactive map of queer bar geographies before and after HIV/AIDS crisis
Analysis of gig-economy labor songs as new American folk tradition
VR walking tour of redlined neighborhoods layered with homeowner oral histories
White paper on reparative public history for Confederate monument sites
NLP topic modeling of Congressional testimonies on tech antitrust hearings
Photo-essay on environmental justice along the Mississippi River Chemical Corridor
Study of evangelical climate-skeptic media ecosystems on YouTube
Public art installation interrogating surveillance culture in post-9/11 airports
Teaching toolkit linking K-Pop fandom activism to U.S. civil rights history
Digital archive of migrant farmworker comics and graphic storytelling
Policy analysis of Puerto Rican self-determination referenda coverage in U.S. media
Crowdsourced oral-history platform on COVID-19 mutual-aid networks
Re-envision ‘America’ through UC’s boundary-crossing PhD.
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