American Studies Research

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MPhil/PhD

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Part Time, Full Time

RESEARCH PROFILE
  • Current number of academic staff: 3 (plus associates in a number of other departments).
  • Current number of research students: 5.
  • Recent publications:
    • The Cambridge Companion to WEB DuBois.
    • Colonial Encounters in New World Writing: Performing America.
    • Concentration Camps on the Home Front: Japanese Americans in the House of Jim Crow.
    • Imperial Entanglements: Iroquois Change and Persistence on the Frontiers of Empire.
    • Living for the Revolutions: Black Feminist Organizations, 1968-1980.
    • Writing the Pioneer Woman.
  • Partner organisations: The Department is regularly involved in collaborative partnerships with major cultural and academic institutions. Informal and formal exchange relationships for postgraduate students are in place with the University of North Carolina and the University of Hong Kong.

KEY FACTS
Student destinations
Students receiving supervision from American Studies staff have gone on to research associateships and teaching at US and UK institutions, including Cambridge, Dundee, Leeds Metropolitan, Nottingham and Plymouth University.
Head of group/division
Dr Clare Birchall, Senior Lecturer, Institute of North American Studies
Duration
Expected to be: MPhil two years FT, three years PT. PhD three years FT, four-six years PT. Normal start date September but students may commence at other times by arrangement.
Location
Strand Campus.
Year of entry 2013
Offered by
Arts and Sciences Cross-School Initiatives
Institute of North American Studies
Closing date
No deadline for applications. Students interested in applying to funding should be aware that deadlines for this differ, therefore applicants should view the Graduate Funding Pages at http://www.kcl.ac.uk/study/pg/funding/sources/index.aspx for more information.   
Intake
No set number.
Fees
CONTACTS
Contact information
Postgraduate Officer, Centre for Arts & Sciences Admissions (CASA)
tel: +44 (0) 20 7848 2555
fax: +44 (0) 20 7848 7200
Email Website

RESEARCH DESCRIPTION

Research strengths cover a broad range of historical periods and disciplines, with staff committed to interdisciplinary explorations and contextual understanding. Staff publications and research interests include:

  • Examinations of American art, literature and civil and natural history in the late 18th and 19th centuries;
  • Historical approaches to American sport;
  • American cultural studies;
  • Contemporary American popular culture;
  • Dialogues between literature, science and cultural discourse in early 20th-century America;
  • Interactions between African American literature, philosophy and the social sciences;
  • Relations between poetry trends in phenomenology and aesthetics and also between poetry and anthropology;
  • New ways of conceptualising queer cultural history in the context of the American South;
  • The incarceration of Japanese Americans in the context of race discourse and the built environment; mass media, globalisation, and identity formation;
  • Native and European–American relations in the colonial period; Native American culture and photography;
  • Corporate culture, terrorism and representations of the city;
  • Conspiracy theories;
  • Transparency and open government;
  • Government and cultural secrecy.

The University libraries, the British Library and the diverse cultural venues of London make the city an unparalleled resource centre for American Studies in Europe.



Staff interests associated with the research programme and its research groups

Interests:
19th and 20th-century poetry; Henry James; Anglo-American modernism; post-WWII American novel; literature and philosophy.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2379
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Interests:
British and American military thought in the 20th century; the American Civil War.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2831
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Clare Birchall joined the Institute of North American Studies in September 2012. Before arriving at King’s, she taught Cultural Studies at the University of Kent. With a first degree in English from Exeter, Clare went on to study Critical Theory at Sussex.

Clare is the author of Knowledge Goes Pop: From Conspiracy Theory to Gossip (Berg, 2006) and co-editor of New Cultural Studies: Adventures in Theory (Edinburgh University Press, 2007). She has also edited special issues of the journals Theory, Culture and Society (Dec 2011) and Cultural Studies (Jan 2007). Her most recent research is concerned with the relationship between secrecy and transparency in the digital age.

Alongside more traditional scholarship, Clare is involved with a number of digital projects. She is the reviews editor for the online journal Culture Machine; an editorial board member and series co-editor for the Open Humanities Press; and part of the team behind the JISC-funded Living Books about Life series. These books, produced by an international network of humanities and social science scholars, repackage and re-present open access science-related research on topics such as air, bioethics, surveillance and, Clare’s own contribution, invisibility. By creating 21 such ‘living books’ in seven months, the series represents a new model of publishing in a sustainable, low-cost manner. Clare also collaboratively produces a series of online videos entitled Liquid Theory TV.

Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 7091
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Interests:
  • American intellectual and cultural history
  • The history of ideas of race
  • The American civil rights and black power movements
  • Pan-Africanism and black diasporic identities
  • The history of jazz
  • Urban history, particularly the history of Harlem and New York City
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 7196
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Interests:
The history and business of American and British culture, especially cinema, popular music, but also the publishing industry and museums. Other interests include: the Harlem Renaissance, Duke Ellington and the cultural history of New York City.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 1358
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Interests:
Dr Jane Elliott's research focuses on three main areas:
  • post-1945 fiction, with a particular emphasis on the intersection between popular forms and political theory
  • contemporary theory
  • the novel during and after postmodernism.

She also has interests in contemporary fantasy fiction and film, ethnic American literature, and contemporary American popular culture.

Tel:
+44 (0) 7848 7185
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Interests:

19th-century American culture, including the culture of home; the history and historiography of the American West, especially in a transnational context; women's studies and women's writing; material culture and its representation in popular cultural forms.

Tel:
020 7848 1254
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Interests:
The historical production of human difference; American and cross-cultural comparative queer history; histories of race, gender, and sexuality; Japanese-American incarceration during World War II; queer literary texts; documentary film and photography.

Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2285
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Interests:
Lisa has broad teaching experience across 19th and 20th century English literature with an interest in trauma narrative in 20th century modernism. Her dissertation Dreaming the Unspeakable: Hemingway and O'Brien's Soldier Narratives and the Traumatic Landscapeexplored how writers borrowed the form and function of dreams to express the otherwise incommunicable horrors of war.

 

Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 7091
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Interests:
  • American founding
  • United States early republic
  • Early American state formation
  • Early American public finance
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Interests:
Avant-garde and experimental film; special effects; aesthetic theory and philosophy; film cultures.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 1681
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Professor Gilroy’s areas of scholarly interest encompass postcolonial studies, particularly with regard to London, post-imperial melancholia and the employment of English victimage; the literature and cultural politics of European decolonisation; African American intellectual and cultural history, literature and philosophy; the formation and reproduction of national identity especially with regard to race and 'identity'; the literary and theoretical significance of port cities and pelagics. Gilroy has also published on art, music and social theory.

His current projects are the writing of Alain Locke, the cultural significance of aerial bombardment and the autobiographical writing generated by colonial wars.

Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 7151
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Interests:
  • How empires shape economy, society, politics, and culture at both their centres and peripheries
  • How ideas and sensibility have a Weberian long durée, and how, reciprocally, material facts - in particular nature, technology, and economy - order culture and feeling
  • The British Empire (from Tudor expansion to decolonisation), and the impact of imperial expansion on the British isles
  • French expansion and its impact on economy and society (c. 1500-1850)
  • Global and transnational history, in particular Atlantic history
  • The History of the Caribbean, in particular its intellectual life (both elite and ‘from below’) since 1800
  • Anti-colonial movements in the Twentieth Century
  • Imperialism after decolonisation, in particular the neo-imperial moment (since c. 1990)
Tel:
020 7848 1076
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Interests:
Writing of the early Americas; the Southern Gothic; slavery; Native American writing.
Tel:
020 7848 1375
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I work on the relationship between politics and popular culture in contemporary US and European history, with a particular focus on religion and sports. My research on these transnational phenomena contributes to broader scholarly debates about the creation of global ‘publics’ and about the cultural layers of international politics. Deploying anthropological and sociological approaches to combine transnational and comparative perspectives, I use sport and religion as keys to unlock the emotional, cultural, and political history of the 20th century.

In my first book Cold War in the Stadium: A Political History of West and East German Sports, 1950-1972 (published in German, 2007) I explored how international sports competitions affected individual and popular emotions, generated cultural meanings, and therefore became keenly contested amongst politicians and cultural functionaries during the Cold War. I am currently broadening the international perspective of my work on sports through a volume entitled More than Games: Sport Events, Consumption, and the Global World of Sports, 1896-2008 (ed. with Stefan Wiederkehr, currently under peer review for Palgrave MacMillan). This book explores the global realities that are produced by transnational transfers and their local limits in the field of sports. My future research in the field of sports history will focus on the interplay of religion and sports in US nation-building processes in the 20th century.

My current research on religion focuses on the transnational dimension of US evangelicalism in the second half of the 20th century. Building on my interest in the interplay between politics, culture, and the dynamics of transnational movements, I explore how evangelicalism affected, and was in turn changed by, the creation of an international consumer culture and the political framework of a Free World in Europe and the United States. In this study, I compare the mass-revival meetings – the so-called crusades – that the American evangelist Billy Graham held in the 1950s and 1960s in London, Berlin and New York. My work examines the unique ways in which expressions of religion and spirituality are transformed by intertwined secularization and modernization processes in Western societies.

Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 1036
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ACADEMIC ENTRY REQUIREMENTS
General entry advice

A first class or good 2:1 BA degree and/or taught MA qualification or overseas equivalents. Degrees do not have to be in American Studies but some demonstrable knowledge of American culture, history or literature is required.


APPLYING TO KING'S
To apply for graduate study at King's you will need to complete our graduate online application form. Applying online makes applying easier and quicker for you, and means we can receive your application faster and more securely.
King's does not normally accept paper copies of the graduate application form as applications must be made online. However, if you are unable to access the online graduate application form, please contact the relevant admissions/School Office at King's for advice.

APPLICATION PROCEDURE

You should consult staff publications and research interests to determine whether your topic can be supervised within the department. A 1,000 word research project outline should be submitted, which may be revised in consultation with your prospective supervisor and submitted with your graduate application form. Admission to the department's research programmes will initially be for the MPhil but students are expected to transfer to the PhD proper by the end of the first year, and no later than the end of the second year, on the recommendation of the departmental graduate upgrading panel.

September, January, and April start dates available. Applicants are strongly encouraged to start their degree at beginning of the academic year in September, when the College offers a full induction programme.



PERSONAL STATEMENT & SUPPORTING INFORMATION
No information required.

FUNDING
AHRC, Graduate School, & School of Arts & Humanities studentships and bursaries, self-funded.


Student profiles

American Studies Research MPhil/PhD
King's has certainly provided me with an intellectually stimulating environment and I enjoy the exchange of diverse perspectives that occurs daily through the American Studies programme. I have enjoyed attending numerous seminars, teaching seminars for an undergraduate post-WWII American fiction course, taking language classes through King's Modern Language Centre, and participating in various conferences, notably one that took place in Tangier, Morocco.