Introduction:
The Department of History at UCLA offers advanced graduate studies
leading to the Ph.D. in both Southeast Asian History and South
Asian History. Both these fields interact with other fields of
history, including strengths in East Asia and the Near East (West
Asia), and with regional strengths in other disciplines.
In Southeast Asian History, students
may choose to work with Geoffrey Robinson (modern
Indonesia and East Timor; human rights; political violence; and
U.S. policy in Southeast Asia) or Michael Salman
(Philippines; U.S. involvement; colonialism and post-colonialism).
The Department’s strength in this field is augmented by
a university-wide program in Southeast Asian Studies that has
Title VI status and FLAS funds. Students are also encouraged to
draw on Southeast Asian strengths in Art History, Anthropology,
Asian Languages and Cultures, Political Science, Asian-American
Studies and other disciplines. Consult the faculty list for details
of faculty specialization.
In South Asian History, Vinay
Lal's teaching and research focuses on modern India,
post-colonialism, historiography, popular and public culture in
South Asia, and the politics of knowledge systems. Sanjay
Subrahmanyam holds the Doshi Chair in Indian History.
His research interests range between the fifteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. His work encompasses the following fields: South Asian
economic history; Indian Ocean trade in the medieval and early
modern periods; comparative history of empires; Mughal history;
and South Indian cultural and social history. Students will also
be able to interact with faculty specializing in South Asia in
disciplines such as Comparative Literature and Art History. Consult
the faculty list for details of faculty specialization.
Students interested in applying for
admission to our program should write directly to the History
Department's Graduate Advisor, Jinny Oh, to the coordinator of
the field, Professor Lal, or to any of the above faculty whose
interests they share, care of the History Department, UCLA.
Financial support for outstanding candidates
is available, up to four years, including two years of Departmental
Teaching Assistantships in our introductory undergraduate survey
courses in South and Southeast Asian History. Incoming and continuing
students in Southeast Asian History may apply for FLAS scholarships
administered by the Center for Southeast Asian Studies (see www.international.ucla.edu/cseas).
Foreign
Language Requirements:
Language competence will be a factor
in admission to candidature. Before proceeding to their dissertation
students must pass reading comprehension examinations in at least
two relevant languages. Normally, competence will be required
in the language of the country or cultural area studied. UCLA
offers Hindi, Sanskrit, Pali, Vietnamese, Thai, Tagalog and Indonesian,
and will encourage intensive summer courses in other South and
Southeast Asian languages. A reading comprehension will also be
required of at least one language other than English external
to the region, normally drawn from French, Dutch, Portuguese,
Spanish, Arabic, Persian (for South Asia) Chinese or Japanese
(for Southeast Asia). However, with the approval of the student's
advisor, the student may petition to have the second language
also be drawn from the country or cultural area being studied
by the student.
Course
Requirements:
Candidates for the Ph.D. must meet
(a) the special requirements for admission to the doctoral program
listed above; and (b) the general requirements set forth under
the Graduate Division. An excellent command of English, spoken
and written, the ability to read at least two foreign languages,
and an acquaintance with general history are expected of all candidates.
Students must select four fields of
study, one of which must be an approved field in Anthropology,
Economics, Geography, Comparative Literature, Philosophy, Political
sScience, or other allied subjects. The allied field must be comparable
in size and scope to the history fields listed above. Students
should select the fields in consultation with their faculty adviser
and must receive the Department's approval of all four fields
not less than three months before the written qualifying examination
is taken.
All students are required to complete
at least one continuing two-or three-quarter seminar, or alternatively,
a continuing sequence of at least two graduate courses approved
by the GGCC. This seminar, or its alternative, must include completion
of a substantial research paper based at least in part on primary
sources. Faculty serving on doctoral committees may require such
courses as they deem necessary for preparation for qualifying
examinations. Courses taken to fulfill M.A. degree requirements
may also be used to satisfy Ph.D. requirements.
All students must write a dissertation
prospectus (which could be written for credit as a history 596
or 597) expected to contain: (a) a full statement of the dissertation
topic; (b) an historiographical discussion of the literature bearing
on the topic; (c) a statement of the methodology to be employed;
and (d) a survey of the sources sufficient to demonstrate the
viability of the topic. The prospectus must be approved by the
dissertation adviser prior to the oral qualifying examination
(see below). After approval, copies will be given to each member
of the examining committee.
Written
and Oral Qualifying Examinations:
Before admission to candidacy, students
must pass written and oral qualifying examinations. Both the written
and oral examinations are considered by the committee in arriving
at a judgment of a student’s performance. Students with
outstanding incompletes may not be permitted to sit for these
exams.
Students are required to take written
examinations in at least three of their four chosen fields.
These examinations are designed to test not merely factual knowledge,
but also a student’s power of historical analysis and synthesis,
critical ability, and capacity for reflective thinking. A knowledge
of the history of any area includes a reasonable knowledge of
its historiography and bibliography; of its geography; and of
its political, cultural, economic, and other historical aspects.
The written examination is normally prepared and administered
by the chair of the committee and read by the entire committee.
Full-time graduate students must begin the written examinations
not later than the end of the ninth quarter of graduate work (See
Time-to-Degree).
After completing the written examination,
all students are required to take an oral examination
that focuses on their dissertation prospectus. The oral examination
is conducted by four faculty members, one from each of the student’s
four fields. In most cases, the oral examination is held shortly
after the written examination or, at the discretion of the doctoral
committee, as late as six months after the written examination.
The written examination must be passed before the oral examination
can be taken. Students will need to obtain the "Field Committee
Orals" form from the Graduate Office in the History department.
A copy of "Steps for the Orals" can be obtained from
the Graduate Office.
The members of the doctoral committee
determine whether or not an examination may be repeated (normally
only once), based on their prognosis of a student’s potential
for successfully completing both the written and oral examinations
within a specified period of time to be designated by the doctoral
committee, but not to exceed one calendar year.
Dissertation
Research and Writing:
Dissertation research usually requires
at least one year of primary source fieldwork in Asia. The dissertation
itself should be completed as expeditiously as possible after
a student finishes his or her field research. A final oral examination
may or may not be required, at the discretion of the Ph.D. dissertation
committee. Each Ph.D. should not only be an important original
contribution to its field of primary research, but should (with
revisions if required) be of publishable quality.
Last updated December 20, 2004