At the University of Illinois study in Early Modern Europe is supported by a half-dozen faculty in History, and by a wide network of scholars in other departments. Students in this field will benefit from a regular range of early modern thematic graduate courses with the primary faculty, and from long-standing graduate student reading groups, a faculty/graduate student colloquium, and frequent presentations by visiting scholars. We work closely with Illinois faculty specializing in Early Modern Europe from the English and foreign language departments, art history, and our area studies centers. The campus already benefits from several related interdisciplinary reading groups, including the Renaissance Seminar.
No field of graduate study has more ties with other fields than Early Modern Europe. Our graduate seminars enroll students working in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, medievalists, and students of Asian, African, Latin American and U.S. history. Conversely, graduate students specializing in early modern Europe are encouraged to cross the boundaries of region, nation, periodization, discipline, and method to produce outstanding and original work in this dynamic field. The field "Early Modern Europe II" gives more emphasis to developments in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Key faculty (see Directory for details on their work)
Clare Crowston
Craig Koslofsky
Dana Rabin
Rana Hogarth
Robert Morrissey
John Randolph
David Sepkoski
Maria Todorova