Internationally known for our innovative historical and anthropological approaches to the study of social, cultural, and policy change.
Graduate Program
News
University-wide article, Social Justice Is Core to Sustainability Efforts at Carnegie Mellon, features Dr. John Soluri's class the Politics of Coffee, Dr. Ezelle Sanford's Grand Challenge Course on health care disparities and recent Global Studies graduate Eric Moreno.
Read Dr. Edda Fields-Black New York Times op-ed Black Families Can Now Recover More of Their Lost Histories.
Dr. Joe Trotter wins the John Lewis Award for History and Social Justice from the American Historical Association.
Dr. Edmund Russell created an interactive digital map on telegraph history.
Courses
79-345 - Roots of Rock and Roll
Taught by: Professor Scott Sandage
Roots of Rock and Roll is about open source, collaborative innovation and the impact of social and technological change on American music. The class focuses on early "remix" music (slave songs, Anglo-Appalachian ballads, ragtime, and Depression era blues and country) and revolutionaries like Chuck Berry, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, and Janis Joplin. The class format is informal lecture and discussion.