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OVERVIEW

What does it mean to be human? This question has long been the basis of inquiry in the humanities, which encompass a wide variety of disciplines at Puget Sound. The Interdisciplinary Humanities Emphasis (IHE) allows students to engage with questions of enduring significance while tackling some of the most pressing issues that confront our society today, including environmental crisis, technological change, systemic racism and xenophobia, the breakdown of civil society and political discourse, war between religions, and changing conceptions of gender and sexualities.  

The IHE’s seven innovative pathways are designed to complement any major, and allow students to customize their own academic experiences while simultaneously fulfilling core and graduation requirements. Students who complete the emphasis become strong writers, researchers, and thinkers able to respond thoughtfully and solve problems creatively.

A student who satisfies the requirements within a single pathway is eligible to receive the Interdisciplinary Humanities Emphasis designation on their transcript. This notation signals that the student has, through significant thematic, interdisciplinary study, mastered the skills of critical and creative thinking and of clear and effective writing fostered by the humanities disciplines. These skills form the basis for engaged citizenship and professional success in virtually any career.

The program also offers interdisciplinary courses that are not incorporated into the pathways, but draw on several disciplines to explore a focused topic.

 

Jessamyn Navis '23
ALUMNA
Jessamyn Navis '23

"While the subjects I’ve explored in my IHE have spanned from Prussian statues to Phantom … each course has centered on a form of popular, everyday media and asked questions about how it forms our visual world. I’ve found that using these unconventional or overlooked materials often complicates dominant frameworks of historical knowledge, illuminating fuller, more intricate pictures of the past and present."

SAMPLE COURSES

EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING

A sampling of ways our students learn through experience:

  • Katharine Etsell '17 studied history and art in Vienna
  • Ayse Hunt '19 presented her paper "Digital Strategies and Access in the Art Museum" at a conference in Vienna
  • Corey Friedman '17 interned in Madrid, where he now works
  • Peter O'Meera '18 interned at the Institute of Ideas in London
  • Summer research grants like Kate Gladhart-Hayes '20, "The Half-Life of Environmental Racism"

JOBS

Our alumni work at:

  • S&P Global Ratings (associate director)
  • Tacoma Art Museum (marketing and communications manager)
  • Oracle (senior data cloud taxonomist)
  • United States Department of State (foreign service officer)
  • UCLA (coordinator for assessment, research, and special projects)

CONTINUE STUDYING

Our alumni continue their studies at:

  • New York University (Ph.D., art history)
  • University of California, Berkeley (Ph.D., art history)
  • Iowa State University (biology)
  • University of Wisconsin - Madison (law school)
  • Duke University (Ph.D., history)

FACILITIES

Kittredge Gallery
KITTREDGE GALLERY

Kittredge Gallery provides two gallery spaces to host exhibitions and artist talks throughout the year, in addition to annual shows showcasing student work.

Digital learning space
DIGITAL HUMANITIES COMMONS

This workspace featuring technology including smartboards allows students to collaborate on digital projects involving the humanities.

Rare book in the Archives & Special Collections section of the library.
ARCHIVES & SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

This area of the library provides a wide variety of historic media, ephemera, manuscripts, and rare books.