Mar 28, 2024  
2021-2022 UMass Dartmouth Graduate Catalog 
    
2021-2022 UMass Dartmouth Graduate Catalog [Archived Catalog]

Luso-Afro-Brazilian Studies and Theory PhD


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PhD in Luso-Afro-Brazilian Studies & Theory

The PhD in Luso-Afro-Brazilian Studies and Theory builds on the success and potential of existing undergraduate and graduate Portuguese programs at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. The unique demographics of Southeastern Massachusetts, with its large proportion of Portuguese speakers of Portuguese, Brazilian and Cape Verdean descent, has long been an important factor in supporting the growth and development of the field of Luso-Afro-Brazilian studies at UMass Dartmouth.The PhD program draws on the wide range of multidisciplinary scholarly competence represented by the faculty working on our campus. With its dedicated faculty, all of whom teach graduate courses in the MA and PhD programs, the Department of Portuguese is the largest Portuguese program in the nation. Additionally, there are several faculty members in the Departments of Sociology/Anthropology, History, Political Science, and Public Policy whose scholarly expertise falls largely or primarily in the area of Portuguese, Brazilian, or Lusophone African studies and who are formally affiliated with the graduate programs in Portuguese. Additionally, one graduate course per academic year is taught by the occupant of the Hélio and Amélia Pedroso/Luso-American Foundation Endowed Chair in Portuguese Studies, which brings to UMass Dartmouth renowned senior scholars in the field for semester-long periods of teaching and research.

Program Structure

Credits

The PhD in Luso-Afro-Brazilian Studies and Theory requires a minimum of 54 graduate course credits and 12 dissertation credits. Successful applicants to the program who hold an MA degree from UMass Dartmouth or another institution may be allowed to transfer up to a maximum of 30 credits from the MA level toward their doctoral degree coursework.

Candidates who apply to and are admitted directly to the PhD program, and who do not already hold a relevant MA degree, are evaluated by the Graduate Studies Committee at the end of their second semester of coursework. Contingent on the results of the evaluation, the Committee may authorize continuation of PhD candidacy or recommend that the candidate pursue an MA degree and be reevaluated for admission to PhD candidacy upon its completion.

Required Coursework

Required coursework comprises a minimum of 6 courses (18 credits) in 600- and 700-level seminars, including a minimum of 2 courses (6 credits) at the 700 level, one of which must be POR 710, Literary and Cultural Theory. The remaining 36 credits may be taken at the 500 level, either in the Department of Portuguese or from an approved list of courses in other departments.

PhD General Examination

The General Examination takes place in the candidate’s last semester of coursework and consists of an eight-hour (2 x 4hr.) written exam and an oral exam. The oral exam is to be taken within a week of the written examination and serves the purpose of clarifying and expanding upon the candidate’s answers to the written exam’s questions. The General Examination is based on a reading list prepared by the candidate in consultation with his or her advisor and subject to approval by the Graduate Studies Committee. The reading list and the written examination encompasses four areas: period ( e.g., Romanticism), genre (e.g., lyric poetry), area (Brazil, Portugal, or Lusophone Africa), and problematics (e.g., representation of the city in literature and the arts). As a more specific example, a candidate who intends to write his or her doctoral thesis on the novelist Paulina Chiziane’s questioning of gender relations in postcolonial Mozambique will most likely be examined in the following four areas: 1) postcolonialism, particularly in the African context; 2) theory and history of the novel, with special emphasis on the development of the genre in African literatures; 3) literary and cultural history of Lusophone Africa; and 4) gender theory and African feminisms.

The organization of reading lists for candidates whose doctoral dissertation projects fall outside the area of literary and cultural studies will be adjusted on a case-by-case basis, in consultation with the candidate’s faculty advisor and with the approval of the Graduate Studies Committee.

Candidates who successfully pass the General Examination advance to the presentation of their dissertation proposal. A candidate who fails the examination is allowed to retake it once; failure to pass the General Examination upon the second attempt results in automatic termination of candidacy.

Approval of Dissertation Proposal

A formal oral presentation and defense of the PhD dissertation proposal takes place in the same semester as the General Examination, but at least two weeks later. The candidate submits a 15-page written prospectus of the dissertation, presents it before the Graduate Studies Committee and answers questions and addresses suggestions and concerns raised by the members of the committee.

PhD Dissertation

Each candidate’s Dissertation Committee, consisting of at least three faculty members and chaired by the candidate’s graduate advisor, monitors the dissertation’s timely progress. Presentation and defense of a satisfactory dissertation fulfills the degree requirements. The dissertation defense consists of a public lecture on the dissertation and a subsequent oral examination by the candidate’s dissertation committee.

Admission Process

The Office of Graduate Studies must receive a completed application form, application fee, three letters of recommendation, official transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate records, a personal statement, and reports of required examinations before an application is complete and is sent to the department for consideration. Application materials and instructions are available at https://www.umassd.edu/graduate/apply/ or by calling 508-999-8604.

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