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Students from all parts of the country have been attracted to our graduate program during the last two decades. One reason
is close student-faculty working relationships. Normally, about 16-20 graduate students study with members of the graduate
faculty. Another factor is the highly individual nature of study programs jointly developed by the student and the graduate
advisor which produces Popular Culture Master's theses covering a wide-range of topics and subject areas. Each program is designed to fit the interests and needs of the individual
graduate student. A third advantage is the excellent holdings of the University Library, especially in popular culture materials. The Music Library and Sound Recordings Archives, with some 700,000 items, is the finest academic collection of popular music in the United States. The Ray and Pat Browne Library for Popular Culture Studies contains an extraordinary collection of popular print materials ranging from hardcover best-sellers to movie posters and
television scripts.
Also of importance is the location of Bowling Green State University near excellent research resources. The Henry Ford Museum
and Greenfield Village, Ohio Historical Society, University of Michigan, and the Toledo and Detroit Art Museums are within
a 100-mile radius. Michigan State University, Ohio State University and the City of Cleveland are all within a two-and-a-half-hour
drive.
The graduate program in popular culture is an interdisciplinary Master's degree program. Students often take classes outside
of the Department in such other disciplines as English, American culture studies, history, journalism, sociology, political
science, communication studies, and art history. Graduate courses offered by the Department of Popular Culture are accessed
online using the prefix "POPC" at http://webapps.bgsu.edu/classes/search.php.
Students have gone on to Ph.D. programs in folklore, history, English, American studies, and other disciplines. Many students
create vocational specialties for themselves by electing courses from one or more disciplines. These specialties often include
internships outside of the university. During the past few years our graduate students have been placed in internships in
public relations companies, at magazine publishing houses, at private schools, at an international sports reactive, at historic
villages and museums, and at an organization dedicated to preserving folk art.
The Department is able to offer a number of graduate assistantships for the Fall Semester of each academic year. Normally,
these assistantships are for teaching, research, or other duties assigned within the Department of Popular Culture.
For further information, including application forms for admission and for assistantships, see the related links below or
write to:
Graduate Coordinator Department of Popular Culture 108 Popular Culture Building Bowling Green State University Bowling Green, Ohio 43403-0190 Main Office: 1-419-372-2981 Fax: 1-419-372-2577 E-mail: popc@bgsu.edu
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