We are currently accepting applications for the graduate program. The preferred deadline for both domestic and international applicants is March 1 (extended to April 1 for Fall 2023 admissions). Applications received by this date will receive preference for admissions review and allocation of available funding. The final deadline is June 1.
A limited number of application fee waivers will be granted based on financial need on a first-come, first-served basis. Applicants may request a fee waiver once the application is ready to submit.
UMass Boston's American Studies master's program equips you to unpack our country's social and cultural movements with practical applications in policy, government, archival work, and more.
What is American Studies?
American Studies is an interdisciplinary field that centers on historically-rich and socially-engaged scholarship and teaching. The American Studies graduate program at UMass Boston has earned a national reputation as one of the top master's programs in the field. With tools adapted from cultural and social history, film and popular music studies, critical race and ethnic studies, and queer theory, this academic MA encourages students to immerse in one year of core courses and one year of guided study and research. Our vision of American Studies is expansive. Our longstanding commitment to the study of power dynamics in the culture of the United States has been energized by emerging formations in the field – ranging from transnational and postcolonial frames to sound studies and critical tourism studies. Graduates of the program have gone on to PhD programs in American Studies, gender and women's studies, economics, and other related fields; museum and library work; municipal and state government; and more.
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About the Students
American Studies students are a remarkably varied and vibrant group. They come to UMass Boston with varying degrees of training in American Studies – virtually all arrive with some sense that this interdisciplinary approach will help prepare them for the work they want to do in the future, academic and otherwise. The American Studies master's program is highly customizable and students have focused their research on a wide variety of topics - from an audience study of The Rocky Horror Picture Show to a community study of Washington DC's "Little Ethiopia". Alumni have presented their research at a number of conferences, including the Popular Culture Association and the American Studies Association, as well as spoken to general audiences at Comic-Con. Some go on to PhD programs at schools including Yale University, New York University, University of North Carolina, Boston University, and University of Minnesota. Others use their American Studies MA to pursue careers in public history, museum work, high school and community college teaching, journalism, and more.
