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UNDERGRADUATE
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        Bailkin, J.
        Behlmer, G.
        Campbell, E.
        Dhavan, P.
        Dong, M.
        Ebrey, P.
        Felak, J.
        Findlay, J.
        Gamboa, E.
        Giebel, C.
        Glenn, S.
        Gowing, A.
        Gregory, J.
        Guy, R. K.
        Harmon, A.
        Hevly, B.
        Johnson, R.
        Jonas, R.
        Joshel, S.
        Jung, M.
        Leiren, T.
        Lopez, S.
        McKenzie, R. T.
        Nam, H.
        Nash, L.
        Noegel, S.
        Nomura, G.
        O'Mara, M.
        O'Neil, M.
        Poiger, U.
        Pyle, K.
        Rafael, V.
        Rodriguez-Silva,I
        Rorabaugh, W.
        Salas, E.
        Schmidt, B.
        Schwarz, F.
        Sears, L.
        Singh, N.
        Smallwood, S.
        Spafford, D.
        Stacey, Robert
        Stacey, Robin
        Taylor, Q.
        Thomas, C.
        Thomas, L.
        Thurtle, P.
        Toews, J.
        Walker, J.
        Warren, A.
        Werrett, S.
        Williams, M.
        Yang, A.
        Young, G.
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Moon-Ho
Jung: Areas of Graduate Study
The field of Asian American history encompasses a broad range of topics
and methodologies that often cross disciplinary and geopolitical boundaries.
Students pursuing this field are expected to read widely and critically,
with an emphasis on historiographical shifts and debates. In particular,
they will investigate how the field has evolved over time and challenged
and reproduced traditional narratives of U.S. history. Students are also
encouraged to converse with a vibrant community of faculty and graduate
students specializing in Asian American Studies at UW.
Students will explore how race and nation have been articulated in U.S.
history, framed theoretically and globally. Students may choose to emphasize
particular time periods, theoretical approaches, and geopolitical frameworks
as they study how racial concepts, representations, and practices shaped
American national identities. Possible topics of concentration include
whiteness, imperialism, labor migration, and transnational social movements.
*Students may not offer a field in the Comparative History division as
a first field.
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