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General Information
Background Information
The first course in interdisciplinary Humanities at San Francisco
State University was offered in 1941 by Professor Elias Arnesen.
Arnesen was explicitly reviving "the Humanistic Tradition" by proposing
interdisciplinary and integrative study in literature, philosophy,
history, art, and music." By 1943, a student could choose a minor
in Humanities at San Francisco State College. The attempt to introduce
humanistic study did not go unchallenged. A group of Arnesen's colleagues
publicly denounced these new "fusion courses" and issued solemn
warnings about the dangers of interdisciplinary study, but enough
students and faculty believed in the value of the idea to keep the
program alive and thriving. In 1947, the first graduate Humanities
course was offered. By the late 1950s students could take a full
complement of courses lead to the B.A. and to the M.A. in Humanities.
San Francisco State's leadership in developing the Humanistic tradition
soon made itself felt. Students trained here went on to found Humanities
programs in secondary schools and the state's burgeoning junior
colleges. Other state college campuses structured their own Humanities
programs based on the San Francisco State model. In the 1960s, San
Francisco State faculty were instrumental in founding the California
Humanities Association, and continues to play a vital role in that
organization today. The Humanities Symposium, begun in 1993, fosters
student and faculty intellectual exchange on the campus. The interests
and expertise of the Humanities faculty today range over the entire
spectrum of art, thought, and society in world cultures, and a number
of the faculty have achieved international renown with their published
works. At the center of this diversity of students and accomplishments
of the faculty is a common core: an unqualified commitment to the
preservation, enrichment, and expansion of the tradition of humanistic
study. The department's current course offerings allow us to accommodate
a wide range of student interest. Among the department's particular
strengths are our offerings in critical theory and methodological
issues in the humanities, in American studies, in the cultural history
of cities, in critical writing, and in the study of cyberspace.
The M.A. degree program encourages students to develop an understanding
of the diversity of human cultures through courses on various aspects
of South American, North American, African, South Asian, East Asian,
and European cultures.
Department Chair
Associate Professor Saul Steier
Phone: 415-338-3129
E-mail: sauls@sfsu.edu
Graduate Coordinator
Professor Mary Scott
Phone: 415-338-7425
E-mail: mscott@sfsu.edu
Graduate Advisors
Professors Bertram, Birt, Chandler, Garcia-Moreno, Jacobowitz, Leonard, Luft, Ruotolo, Scott, Shobhi, Steier.
Department Secretary
Annette Speed
Phone: 415-338-1830
Email: aspeed@sfsu.edu
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