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Graduate Program
Faculty
Environment
Financial Aid
Resources
Ph.D. Exam
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Welcome to the Latin
American History home page at FIU!
The Department
of History's track on Latin America is supported by the
exceptional depth and reputation of the
faculty, thoughtful mentoring, and exciting research areas. It
is further strengthened by the University's comprehensive commitment
to the study of Latin America and the Caribbean, and by Miami's
extraordinary
array
of
cultures, stretching from Mexico to Argentina.
Links in this page provide information
on the application
process, sources of financial support, institutional resources,
and
the doctoral examinations.
FIU's master's and doctoral programs
in History offer a concentration on Latin America. The master's degree provides a
strong foundation for professional or further academic work, while
the doctoral program's emphasis
on the Atlantic world affords Latin American concentrators the
opportunities to pursue cross-cultural research.
The Latin American track in the
Department of History's graduate program at FIU is regarded as
having one of the nation's strongest representations of faculty
dedicated full-time to Latin America. The graduate track
in Latin America serves as an intellectual nerve center of the Department
of History's comparative doctoral preparation. The Latin
American component provides students with breadth
across time and space in general courses and thematic focus in
seminars.
Requirements for the Master's and Ph.D. programs,
along with graduate courses are
available from the on-line catalog. Beyond the faculty in History,
students have at their disposal one of the country's richest set
of courses on Latin America spanning the social science
and humanities.
FIU's
commitment to Latin American Studies is reflected in the exceptional
strengths found in Latin American History. You're invited
to explore our program, links to Latin American resources at
FIU and
financial
support.
The Latin American
Concentration
Students concentrating on Latin America
work with some of
the most highly respected scholars in the nation. The Latin American
concentration serves as an intellectual nerve center of the
Department's doctoral program in Atlantic History. It
affords students courses that cut
across
time and space through the seminars' innovative thematic approaches.
Students explore some
of the most exciting developments in the field, including nation-building,
environmental history, demographic transitions,
race and group identities, family and society, the development of
the state, and gender relations.
FIU's commitment to Latin America
is reflected in its exceptional strengths in the Department of History and
the curricular opportunities beyond the Department across
the social science and humanities. In
addition, the University's Latin American & Caribbean
Center serves as a hub of scholarly activities and funding sources.
Faculty
| Faculty Expertise |
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Grants, Honors |
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N. David Cook,
Texas '73 Professor: Colonial Andes; Ethnohistory; Historical
demography
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ACLS, Guggenheim, Mellon, Wenner-Gren, Ford, Fulbright, Doherty |
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| Sherry
Johnson, Florida '95, Associate
Professor: 18th-19th Caribbean; Cuba; Women; Environmental |
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Mellon, Wilgus, Vance, Kislak Prize, Cabrera Prize, NEH |
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| Bianca Premo, UNC '01, Assoc. Professor. Childhood,
Gender, Legal History, Colonial Peru, Mexico) |
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Burkhardt, NEH, ACLS, Fulbright,
Ford Foundation, American Philosophical Society
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| Mark D. Szuchman, Texas
'76 Professor: 19th-20th Southern Cone; Family; Urban; Nation-building |
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Fulbright, NEH, SSRC, Doherty, Fulbright-Hays, Conference Prize, PCCLAS
Prize |
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| Victor Uribe, Pittsburgh
'92 Associate Professor: 18th-19th Colombia; Mexico;
Legal; Nation-building |
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Mellon, Fulbright, Tibesar Prize, NEH |
Environment
No other area in the United States offers
a richer or more varied Latin American environment than Greater Miami.
The numerous galleries specializing in Latin American artists
reflect the region's role as a center of artistic exchange in the
Americas. The musical setting encompasses salsa to symphony,
zapateo to tango. A fully bilingual population melds the language
of Borges and García Marquez seamlessly with that of Hemingway
and Hiassen.
Spanish and Portuguese language
films are seen on a regular basis. Restaurants and
cafés serve foods ranging from the zestful tastes of Mexico
to the beef and pasta of Argentina. Daily newspapers and publications
from throughout Latin America add to the vibrancy of the
region's political,
social,
and economic environments.
Financial Aid
Graduate Assistantships
are available from the Department of History on a competitive basis.
Graduate assistantship provide a stipend and tuition waivers.
Assistantships for students in the PhD program provide support
throughout the 12 months of the calendar year. Students in the
MA program are covered for the academic year (Fall and Spring).
In addition, history graduate students in the Latin
American concentration have been successful in competing
for fellowships offered through the Latin American & Caribbean
Center from various sources, including the Mellon Foundation, the
Foreign Language and Areas Studies program of the Department of
Education, and the Organization of American States, among others. For
additional information, consult the College
of Arts and Sciences' Graduate
Support page.
Resources
The Green Library. The eight-story Steven and Dorothea Green Library,
completed in 1998, towers above the University Park campus. With
its state-of-the-art electronic and networking capabilities,
the library offers some of the most advanced text retrieval mechanisms
in the State of Florida. FIU's library forms part of the
powerful consortium of Florida libraries, the FCLA. The
holdings on Latin America are significant. Moreover, the
history collection stands as the Latin American collection's
strongest component, with special stre ngths on Argentina, Mexico, Peru, and the
Levi Marrero manuscript collection on colonial Cuba.
The Latin American & Caribbean Center. LACC is
a federally supported National Resource Center for language and
area studies. LACC supports research and training endeavors
through its grants and fellowship programs. The
Latin American History faculty and graduate students have benefited
from a long-standing collaboration ranging from co-sponsorship
of seminars and conferences to curricular activities. In
addition, LACC serves as the meeting ground for many of the
latinamericanist faculty from throughout the College of Arts and
Sciences, further enhancing the students' academic experiences.
The Cuban Research Institute. The CRI was established in 1991 by the Provost
of Florida International University (FIU) upon the recommendation
of a faculty committee, so as to fulfill, in thearea of Cuban and
Cuban-American Studies, the University's three-fold mission: research,
teaching, and service.
As the largest institution of public higher education in southern
Florida, FIU (a part of the State University System of Florida)
has unique obligations and opportunities in developing Cuba-related
programs. The CRI has secured significant external
funds and served
as the editorial site Cuban Studies, the field's leading
journal.
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