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The Arts and Humanities faculty is dedicated to providing the highest quality interdisciplinary education to undergraduates and it has developed a curriculum that maintains the best standards and strengths of traditional disciplines while offering student-centered instruction of contemporary significance. Programs offered by this faculty are Studies in the Arts (Performing and Visual), Communication Studies, Historical Studies, Literature, Languages and Culture Studies, and Philosophy and Religion, and at the Graduate level, the Master of Arts Program in American Studies (MAAS).
Students are encouraged to pursue individualized learning experiences, and all majors are expected to demonstrate their personal accomplishment in a senior-year project involving a research thesis in the humanities or a public presentation in the arts. Seminars, colloquia, and artistic presentations complement the curriculum by emphasizing the need for cross-disciplinary approaches to comprehending human complexities and enjoying creative endeavors.
Supporting physical facilities include art, dance, and music studios; a state of the art Communications video-editing lab and studio; an art gallery, an electric piano lab, a creative writing lab, and the resources of the Performing Arts Center.
The Arts and Sciences Building houses exceptional studio facilities for studying and practicing the visual arts. The facility includes studio spaces for painting, printmaking, graphic design, photography, computer graphics, and sculpture, as well as a woodshop and independent work areas. Each studio has been designed to provide optimum conditions for the production of art with emphasis on safety and the environment.
All the programs in Arts and Humanities are supported by extensive library and media resources.
The Master of Arts Program in American Studies (MAAS) which makes its home in the School of Arts and Humanities asks what it means to be “American.” It interrogates the forces that hold Americans together, while also recognizing that “America” has always been a contested category whose meaning has changed over time. The American Studies program also builds on Stockton University’s long-standing commitment to interdisciplinary teaching and scholarship. The program’s faculty members are respected scholars in traditional disciplines, such as literature, history, art history, and communications, as well as interdisciplinary fields, including Latin American and Caribbean studies, women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Native American studies, Africana studies, Jewish studies, postcolonial studies, and studies of American culture and the environment.
The arts and humanities are flourishing at Stockton, which is good news for students, parents, and the communities in which they live and work. The arts and humanities are not only the heart and soul of the liberal arts college, but they provide the skills – innovation, critical thinking, oral and written communication, and complex-problem solving – that employers have identified as most crucial to success in life after college. The artists and scholars who make up the faculty of the School of Arts and Humanities demonstrate their mastery of these skills through their own increasingly prominent scholarly and creative work and through their teaching. The faculty’s ongoing commitment to pedagogical innovation gives students exciting opportunities to apply what they learned through exhibitions, performances, presentations, research, internships, and travel. We welcome you to the School of Arts and Humanities, where students have the best of both worlds: they study what they love and get the skills they need.