About US

Missions and Goals

The History Department seeks to acquaint students not only with facts and narratives about the past and change over time, but also with the methods and tools historians use when constructing narratives. Focus on both fact and method gives students better ability to critically analyze the problems that have faced human population across history and how humans have addressed those problems. Coursework should stimulate discussion and consideration of questions of historical identity, such as the role of the nation state in history, the uses and abuses of history as well as specific narratives or “stories” about events and people from the past. Our goal is the production of students with sophisticated critical thinking skills directed not only at the past but potentially any field of academic inquiry.

We seek to continue providing a well-balanced program in our established areas of strength – America, East Asia, Europe, and the North – while expanding our ability to guide students in the study of Native American history, comparative world history, environmental history, and diverse methodological fields. This geographical and methodological not only provides the basis of what is generally considered to be a basic Liberal Arts program in History, but also develops good citizens for Alaska with high-level knowledge of Alaska’s needs, its relation to the world, and how these factors have changed over time. Although we are primarily an undergraduate faculty, we offer graduate level courses through the Northern Studies Program, especially the concentration in Northern history.

The Benefits of a History Degree:

 

 Opportunities in Unexpected Places

Read article here

Careers in History Majors diagram