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The Graduate Program : Other Resources

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Consortium for Literature, Theory and Culture
The Consortium for Literature, Theory and Culture brings together faculty and graduate student from the Division of Humanities and Fine Arts, as well as affiliates from other disciplines, to advance collaborative research in literary studies, broadly defined. While grounded in the study of national literary traditions, it seeks to encourage interdisciplinary and theoretical reflections on literature and culture in global and comparative contexts.

Through graduate curricula, research projects, colloquia, and lectures, the Consortium encourages dialogue among faculty and students from various departments. It allows graduate students in particular to enter into a research community in which they can benefit from the remarkable strengths in literary studies at UCSB, where there are over eighty-five professors teaching literature in the Division of Humanities and Fine Arts alone. The Consortium also awards fellowships to incoming graduate students and dissertation stipends to advanced students whose work engages in theoretical and interdisciplinary topics in literary studies.

Interdisciplinary Humanities Center
One of the nation's most active and innovative centers for conferences, lectures, panels and other intellectual events that cross the disciplines and draw a wide spectrum of international scholars. In the recent past, the Center has mounted major conferences and lecture series on a diverse group of topics, "Psychoanalysis and Deconstruction," "Interpreting Goethe's Faust Today," "The White Rose: Art and Resistance," "Los Angeles: City of Exile," "Translating Cultures: The Future of Multiculturalism," "Africa After Gender? An Exploration of New Epistemologies for African Studies," "The Global Rise of Religious Politics," and "Narrative at the Outer Limits."

The IHC also sponsors research projects proposed by individual UCSB faculty members and graduate students and sponsors interdisciplinary team-taught seminars such as "The Invention of the Author," "Advanced Critical Writing for Graduate Students," and "The Construction of Gender in the Jewish and Christian Traditions." Several of these seminars have been co-taught by faculty members from the Department of Germanic, Slavic and Semitic Studies. These courses include "Classicism and Romanticism in European Music and Letters," offered by Wolf Kittler, and "Authority," offered by Elisabeth Weber.

The Center has hosted a variety of national conferences for associations like the Western Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and the American Society for Aesthetics.

The IHC sponsors several prestigious Lecture Series, such as The Global Peace, Security, Human Rights Lecture Series, the Global Forces in the Post-Cold War World Lecture Series, and the Taubman Foundation Endowed Symposia in Jewish Studies. The Center also provides support for seventeen Research Focus Groups consisting of faculty and graduate students from several departments who share research interests. Topics of these groups include Jewish Studies; Queer Theory; Gender, Media and Globalization; Human-Animal Relationships; Religion, Ecology and Culture; East-Central European and Russian Studies; and Transnational Cultural Studies.

Recent guests of the Center have included Art Spiegelman, Amos Oz, Elaine Sciolino, Stephen G. Bloom, Ambassador Dane F. Smith, Peter Brooks, Edgar M. Bronfman, and Michael Ignatieff.

Women's Studies
An interdisciplinary program that offers a doctoral emphasis in cooperation with the departments of English, Germanic, Slavic and Semitic Studies, History and Sociology. Students in the graduate program in German may petition at any stage of their Ph.D. work to add the doctoral emphasis in Women's Studies by applying directly to the Women's Studies Program. Within the women's studies doctoral emphasis, students will be directed to four areas of concentration that include courses focusing on theory, epistemology and topics related to the student's own research. Faculty affiliated with the women's studies doctoral emphasis will serve on the student's Ph.D. oral examination and dissertation committee.

Women's Center
A Center devoted to understanding the evolving roles of women and men and to expanding educational, professional and personal opportunities for women. The Women's Center Gallery exhibits the work of women artists, and the Women's Center Library houses a special collection of books and periodicals pertaining to women. The Center also maintains up-to-date files on hundreds of gender-related topics. In cooperation with other departments and student groups, the Women's Center brings a large number of eminent women -- writers, artists and public figures -- to campus each year. In addition, the Faculty Lectures Series features feminist scholars whose research and teaching are expanding the traditional curriculum and unfolding new ways of thinking. Recent guests have included Barbara Smith, Lani Guinier, Linda Evans, Judith Baca, Donna Lupiano, Lorna Simpson, Jewelle Gomez, Diana Nyad, Alix Olson, Wendy Kamenoff, Monica Palacios, and June and Jean Millington.

Transcriptions Project
The Transcriptions Project (Literature and the Culture of Information) was started in 1998 with a seed grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Housed in a "studio"-like computing environment, the Project creates courses, online resources, and research events that focus on the relation between contemporary information culture and literature, including the literatures of such previous "information revolutions" as the ages of orality, writing, print, and early electronic media. Staffed by faculty specializing in fields ranging from medieval literature to contemporary "new media" and "hypertext," Transcriptions supervises the English Department's undergraduate specialization in Literature and the Culture of Information and is closely associated with the University of California Digital Cultures Project, a multi-campus research initiative headquartered at UCSB in connection with Transcriptions.

Center for Black Studies
A Center conducting research on the historical, social, economic and political forces that have affected people of African descent throughout the world. The Center sponsors a faculty development program that awards doctoral fellowships to Ph.D. candidates. It also organizes and presents seminars, lectures and symposia and serves as a liaison between the campus and the Santa Barbara community.

Center for Chicano Studies
Created to develop, conduct and support interdisciplinary research on the history and contemporary conditions of the Mexican-origin population in the United States. The Center also organizes, promotes and sponsors a variety of special public-service events that are conducive to a better understanding and appreciation of Chicano/Mexicano society and culture and that work to advance Chicano scholarship.

Dramatic Art
A department whose distinctive feature is its wide range of offerings in dramatic literature, theory and theater history. The Ph.D. program concentrates on literary, critical and historical research and welcomes graduate students from other humanities departments.

Medieval and Renaissance Studies Programs
Programs designed to bring together faculty members and students from various disciplines that are concerned with the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Both programs provide an opportunity for the kind of boundary crossing that is an important part of much current work in the humanities. The programs sponsor lectures, faculty and student colloquia and occasional interdisciplinary courses that enhance graduate study.

Davidson Library
UCSB's major research facility. As a member of the Association of Research Libraries, it participates in cooperative programs and policy development with other major research libraries to provide collections and services for the UCSB community. The library has over 2.6 million books and bound journals and is linked by computer to the University of California's entire collection, which includes over thirty million volumes. The UCSB collection grows by about fifty-thousand volumes annually. CD-ROMs are available for free researching of MLA bibliographies, Dissertation Abstracts International and other sources. Researchers may request on-line searches in such data bases as MLA's complete on-line files and the arts and humanities citation index. The Interlibrary Loan Service offers computerized access to research materials and is linked to libraries around the world. Faculty and students may also utilize MELVYL, an on-line catalogue for holdings of the entire UC System, and the library's Research Consultation Service, which provides individual consultation for complicated research problems.
Department of Special Collections:
The Department of Special Collections collects, maintains and makes accessible rare, valuable and unique materials which support UCSB students, faculty and research programs, as well as the local national and international scholarly community. Special Collections acquires materials by gift, transfer and purchase, in accordance with general library procedures. The department's holdings are non-circulating but are available for research in the reading room during posted hours. http://www.library.ucsb.edu/speccoll/

UCSB Alumni Association
The Alumni Association helps represent UCSB to alums and is their voice on campus. A monthly newsletter and a quarterly publication bring the campus to alumni everywhere. It also helps UCSB maintain current contact information on former students.

Division of Humanities and Fine Arts
Ranging from traditional areas that have been at the heart of a liberal arts education for thousands of years (such as Classics, History, and Philosophy) to programs that are redefining the university in the 21st Century (such as Media Arts and Technology and Film Studies) the arts and humanities at UCSB represent both the past and the future. The Division of Humanities and Fine Arts includes a broad spectrum of languages and literatures, as well as the performing and visual arts. Our departments and interdisciplinary programs focus on the intellectual, historical, and artistic traditions of cultures throughout the world and the modes of expressions and representation that have given them voice and form. Building on this foundation, the arts and humanities are responding to the cultural changes that must be engaged in the university and in a global society of the 21st century.

 

© 2004 UCSB Department of Germanic, Slavic and Semitic Studies. gd-germ@gss.ucsb.edu