Sample Courses:
  • AAH-208 Business of Visual Art and Contemporary Entrepreneurship
  • AMU-131 Music of Black America
  • ECO-234 Japanese-American Finance & Trade Relations
  • EGL-255 Discourses on the Vietnam War
  • HST-128 The American Jewish Experience
  • MLT-289 Literature of the Mexican-American Border
  • PSC-272 The Environment, Energy and U.S. Politics
  • SOC-233 Race, Class, and Gender in American Society
After Union:
After Union
  • Partner, Forum Music Village Recording Studio
  • Vice President, Strategic Partnerships, Grameen America Inc.
  • Coordinator of Multicultural Recruitment, Union College
  • Educator, Teach for America
  • Marketing and Public Relations Intern, Roberson Museum and Science Center
  • 1st Lt., Infantry, U.S. Army

American Studies

Our American Studies program presents a dynamic exploration of our nation, both as a geographical area, and a cultural and political space. This interdisciplinary field draws on courses from 12 departments, giving a broad perspective of the history, art, politics, religion, popular culture, literature and other features of American life.

Choosing from among more than 160 courses, students analyze the diverse character of the American experience, shaped by gender, race, class, sexuality, geography and ethnicity. These experiences are studied within a context of global economic, cultural and political relations.

This highly individualized program tailors coursework to personal interests and needs. Students develop a thematic core around which to build a unique and innovative course of study. Themes may be centered on a specific era (e.g., antebellum America or the United States since the Cold War) or a topic (e.g., the emergence of mass culture or issues of ethnicity and race in American life). One unique opportunity students pursue is Union’s Civil Rights Public History Mini-term, a three-week tour of sites of the major civil rights actions in the South.

As an American Studies major, you will develop many of the same skills as other majors in the Social Sciences and the Humanities, including writing, critical thinking and research, and therefore open up similar career paths for life after Union. Recent graduates of the program have found positions in business, teaching and government service, while others have gone on to law school, M.B.A. programs, and M.A. and Ph.D. work in various disciplines, including history, literature, visual arts and American Studies.