The Division of Humanities and Fine Arts includes over twenty departments and programs, offering twenty-nine undergraduate degrees and twenty-eight graduate degrees. Almost half of the courses taught in the College are offered in the Division of Humanities and Fine Arts.
Graduate students receive rigorous professional training that prepares them for careers in academia, the arts, public and cultural institutions, and related fields. Internationally recognized scholars and artists teach undergraduate and graduate students and advance their fields with innovative research, publications, and creative activity that both preserve our traditions and map new fields of study. A wide variety of collaborative research projects, departmental centers, and interdepartmental programs and consortia promote interdisciplinary teaching and scholarship that bring together students and faculty across the Division, the College of Letters and Science, and the university.
The Division of Humanities and Fine Arts works diligently to promote research and teaching for its graduate students. Each year Dean David Marshall has found ways to support graduate student education.