Doctoral Program
The Humanities and Critical/Cultural Studies division embraces interdisciplinary approaches to communication, merging insights and training from multiple perspectives grounded in humanistic and critical approaches. This division draws insights from the long traditions in the humanities, critical social sciences, media, and cultural studies. Our faculty and graduate students work within and across recognized disciplinary subfields (including rhetoric, media studies, and organization communication) to better understand the aesthetic and/or political dimensions of institutions, cultures, social structures, and lived experiences. We produce socially relevant research that requires creative imagination, academic rigor, historical awareness, and a collaborative and critical spirit.
HC/CS students engage in research and coursework that encourage the development of insights through qualitative, textual, and field methodologies and cultivate understandings of historical and contemporary discourses, technologies, and practices. Whether you seek a career in academia, the industry, or governmental and non-governmental organizations, you will become a critical educator and researcher of communication through rigorous coursework, independent and collaborative research projects, and teaching opportunities.
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Doctoral students in the HC/CS division work close with the following graduate faculty who specialize in media studies, rhetoric, and organizational communication with foci including race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, power, politics, health, religion, and globalization.
Isaac Blacksin, Assistant Professor
Heidi A. Campbell, Professor
Nathan Crick, Professor
Tasha N. Dubriwny, Associate Professor
Bryce Henson, Assistant Professor
Antonio La Pastina, Associate Professor
Jennifer Mercieca, Professor
Kristan Poirot, Associate Professor
George Allen Vllaneuva, Associate Professor
Darrel Wanzer-Serano, Associate Professor
Anna Wiederhold Wolfe, Associate Professor
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HC/CS faculty invite creative boundary-crossing interdisciplinary researchers to apply to our program. Interested applicants should have research interests that align with humanities, cultural studies, and/or the critical social sciences in the communication, rhetorical, and/or media studies. Prospective applicants are strongly encouraged to contact Tasha N. Dubriwny (Associate Head of Graduate Studies) and any of the graduate faculty listed with whom they are most interested in working.
To learn more about our doctoral admissions process and review of applications, visit Applications & Admissions.