ACADEMIC PROGRAMS
The instructional program in Middle
East studies has particular strengths in Ancient Semitic
Languages; Anthropology; Arabic, Hebrew, Persian and
Turkish Languages, Literature and Culture; Hebrew Linguistics;
Comparative Studies and Literature; History (Ancient,
Islamic, Judaic, Ottoman and Persian); International/Middle
East Relations; Islamic Art and Architecture; Folklore;
and Jewish and Islamic Philosophy. In the professional
fields, program strengths in the College of Business,
Food and Agriculture, City and Regional Planning, and
Landscape Architecture are being supplemented with new
initiatives in the School of Natural Resources.
Foreign Language Degrees
A Bachelor of Arts in both Arabic and Hebrew is
offered through the Department of Near
Eastern Languages and Cultures (NELC). An individualized
study program is available for students with unique language
interests. Degree requirements are a minimum of 40 hours
of language beyond the mandatory 101-104 course sequence.
A minor in Arabic, Hebrew, Persian or Turkish requires
20 hours of elementary and intermediate language instruction
and 20 hours in other language and area studies courses.
The M.A. program in NELC offers
study in some of the world’s richest languages,
literatures, and cultural traditions including Arabic,
Hebrew, Persian, and Turkish, as well as a number of
ancient Near Eastern languages, among them Aramaic, Biblical
Hebrew, and Ugaritic. The curriculum is rigorous but
flexible, preparing students for professional employment
in business, education, or government, or for the pursuit
of doctoral work involving NELC languages
in the study of the dynamically changing societies of
the Near East. Students may specialize in one NELC language
or in two coherently combined NELC languages,
in consultation with the faculty advisor.
Area Studies Degrees
Area studies undergraduate interdisciplinary
degrees include a major with a Middle
East area studies concentration in the Undergraduate
International Studies Program (UISP). Degree requirements
consist of 30 hours in either Arabic, Hebrew, Persian
or Turkish, as well as 40 hours in Political Science,
History, Economics, or other Middle East-related International
Studies courses.
The interdisciplinary B.A. in Islamic
Studies is offered through the College of Humanities,
while the Melton
Center for Jewish Studies offers the B.A. in Jewish
Studies. Individualized undergraduate degree programs
are available in the Colleges of Agriculture, Humanities,
and Social and Behavioral Sciences.
An undergraduate certificate degree
in Middle East studies, offered by UISP, requires the
successful completion of 20 hours of an appropriate Middle
Eastern language and 30 hours of interdisciplinary coursework.
Minors in Islamic Studies, International Studies and
Jewish Studies are offered in the College of Humanities, UISP,
and the Melton
Center for Jewish Studies.
Students interested in a broad interdisciplinary
approach may pursue either an MA or a PhD in the Department
of Comparative Studies.
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