Inaugural Postdoctoral Fellow
Nguyet Nguyen brings new perspective to the Vietnam War.
Contact:
Gautham Rao
Graduate Director
Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ’s PhD in History will prepare you for a career as an educator, researcher, analyst, and writer working in academia, public and institutional history, and other fields requiring investigative and analytical skills. In this program, you will develop a deeper understanding of how historians investigate and interpret the past while you explore the past with your own original research.
You will receive a high level of mentorship and develop close working relationships with your professors. Under the guidance of our award-winning faculty, our students complete strong dissertations and present work at top conferences while making valuable connections and gaining experience in the Washington, DC, area.
This program is ideal for students interested in American and modern European history, including Russian history. Our department also has strengths in a variety of subfields, including public history, African American history, women’s/gender history, politics and foreign relations, and Jewish history. This diversity will open your options for research and allow for specialization without sacrificing breadth of study.
Our program combines rigorous training in scholarship with the flexibility to pursue your intellectual interests. Our coursework will give you a solid foundation in historical theory and methodology, research methods, and United States or modern European history. Together with your academic advisor, you will design a program of study to match your academic goals. You will acquire and demonstrate mastery of tools of research, such as foreign languages, quantitative research methods, oral history, new media, and other methodologies. Your doctoral examinations will be tailored to fit your individual fields of study. You will then pursue your own research in writing your doctoral dissertation.
The Department will supervise PhD dissertations in the history of Modern Europe (normally for the period 1789 to the present), United States history (including the colonial period), US foreign relations, and modern Jewish history.
See all admissions and course requirements.
Our history faculty makes national news, uncovers under-represented areas of history, and guides doctoral students, helping them generate innovative and influential research. From predicting presidential elections to publishing award-winning books and articles, our distinguished professors produce relevant historical scholarship and will train you do the same. With academic and professional mentorship from our faculty, you will you will enter the field as a thoroughly prepared and well-connected scholar.
Pursuing your doctorate in the nation’s capital provides you with unparalleled access to renowned museums, archives, institutions, and resources. From the Library of Congress, Smithsonian Institution and National Archives to the DC Historical Society, our students are only a metro ride away from exceptional local and national repositories. As part of the , students at Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ are able to take courses at colleges and universities throughout the DC metropolitan area, providing the opportunity to work with a variety of faculty in diverse programs and fields of study.
A truly global city, DC, contains hundreds of embassies, cultural organizations, and enclave communities. Brimming with history, the DC area offers Civil War battlefields, the Capitol, Mount Vernon, the White House, and countless landmarks of the colonial period, Revolutionary War, Civil War, and more recent American history. The city is also home to smaller historical organizations like the DC Historical Society and the DC Preservation League. Whether your interest is global, national, or local, this historic city undoubtedly has something for you.
Our students go on to become university and college faculty and administrators or work in federal and state governments, for museums and archives, and in other exciting fields. Our alumni teach at universities around the world, from the University of Houston in Texas to University of Prince Edward Island in Canada and Ludwig Maximilians Universität in Munich. Our PhDs hold positions with the nation’s most important institutions, including the Library of Congress, Department of State, National Archives and Records Administration, American Historical Association, National Endowment for the Humanities, US Holocaust Memorial Museum, and the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
The Department will supervise PhD dissertations in the history of Modern Europe (normally for the period 1789 to the present), United States history (including the colonial period), US foreign relations, and modern Jewish history.
Graduates of the history PhD program are working as professors, researchers, and directors across the US and at international locations. Here is a list of where select graduates have or are currently working:
PhD candidate Reza Akbari presented at the Middle East Studies Association's annual conference in Montreal, Canada. His presentation,  argued that America's drive to keep Iran's nuclear program peaceful began decades before the establishment of the Islamic Republic.
PhD candidate Andrew Sperling published "," detailing the events of an antisemetic attack on Jewish teens at a Halloween party in 1950.Â
Theresa Runstedtler's new book on Black ballplayers of the 1970s and '80s setting the NBA up for success: Black Ball: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Spencer Haywoof, and the Generation that Saved the Soul of the NBAÂ (2023).
Doctoral student Maurizio Recordati Koen won first prize in the 2022 for in RUSI Journal.
John Schmitz (CAS/PhD '07) published .
Doctoral student Jonah Estess presented his paper, "Mo’ Money, Mo’ Problems: The American Revolution and the National Origins of the Politicization of Money" as part of the panel at this year's Business History Conference.
Andrew Demshuk published .
PhD candidate Katherine Kitterman ·É°ù´Ç³Ù±ðÌý´Ç²Ô for the Washington Post.
Nguyet Nguyen brings new perspective to the Vietnam War.