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American Culture Major

The major in American Culture at Michigan offers undergraduate students a wide range of courses that engage the rich cultural and social facets of the United States, both as the U.S. lives in the global world, and as the global world lives within the U.S. One of the top American studies departments in the world, Michigan's Department of American Culture finds its uniqueness and strength in a dialogue among its ethnic and digital studies programs, and with the interdisciplinary concerns of the field.


Our courses integrate a full array of materials, themes, and approaches from many fields: not only historical and literary study, but also visual studies, musicology, film/media, and gender/sexuality studies, among others. The American Culture curriculum emphasizes the diversity of American society, paying particular attention to ethnic, gender, economic and other forms of social difference and inequality. At the same time, it emphasizes the importance of studying U.S. citizenship and national belonging, including Americans' (sometimes conflicting) ideals, as well as the range of different experiences of what it has meant — and continues to mean — to be American. Our courses explore these issues in both historical and contemporary settings.


All American Culture students have an opportunity to tailor the major based on their own intellectual and career interests. Students will take AMCULT 300: "Practices of American Culture" (previously AMCULT 275); AMCULT 498: "Senior Capstone in American Culture"; a set of flexible breadth requirements; and a combination of open electives based on their particular goals. With small seminars, excellent and committed faculty, and award-winning advising, American Culture offers students a challenging and rewarding sense of community within the larger College and University experience.