Academics
Latin American Studies is a multi-disciplinary program involving more than a dozen full-time faculty from various University departments.
The Minor in Latin American Studies
Students may earn an interdisciplinary minor in Latin American Studies by completing a total of six approved courses (18 credits or more) drawn from at least three different academic departments. This list is subject to change, based on course offerings in a given year from the various departments participating in the program. In addition to the six courses the minor also requires proficiency in either Spanish or Portuguese, equivalent to three years of college-level language study.
A student seeking to earn a minor in Latin American Studies must submit a proposed plan of study to the Director of the program,listing the coursesthey will take to fulfill the requirements. All programs of study must be approved by the Director, who will advise the student on the selection of appropriate introductory and capstone courses, as well as opportunities for studying in Latin America.
Students seeking to earn a minor in Latin American Studies must submit a proposed plan of study to the Director no later than the second semester of their sophomore year. This allows students in the minor to take advantage of the special events to which they are invited, as well as to appropriately plan their courses of study both at Boston College and/or abroad.
- Introduction to Caribbean Writers(AADS 2199) withRhonda Federick
- Political Communication: Latin America's Public Sphere (COMM 2237) withErnesto Livon-Grosman
- The Latin American Documentary (COMM 4437) with Ernesto Livon-Grosman
- Participatory Action Research: Gender, Race, Power (APSY 8912) withBrinton Lykes
- The Colonial Imagination: History and Identity in Latin America (SPAN 6614) withSarah Beckjord
- Literature of the Hispanic Caribbean (SPAN 6660) withSarah Beckjord
- Literature of the Fantastic in Latin America (SPAN 6674) withSarah Beckjord
- Early Spanish American Women Writers (SPAN 6678) withSarah Beckjord
- History and Identity in Spanish America (SPAN 6614) withSarah Beckjord
- Writing and Memory in the Andean World (SPAN 6655) withSarah Beckjord
- Latin American Short Story (SPAN 6628) withSarah Beckjord
- Borderlines: Immigration and Borderlines (SPAN 6636) withElizabeth Rhodes
- Spanish Short Story Since Clarin (SPAN 6647) withIrene Mizrahi
- Hispanic Nobel Prize Winners in Literature(SPAN 6652) withIrene Mizrahi
- The Poetic Generation of 1927 (SPAN 6667) withIrene Mizrahi
- Modern and Post Modern(SPAN 6689) withIrene Mizrahi
- Travelers in Latin America (HIST 4370) withSylvia Sellers-Garcia
- Colonial Latin America(HIST 2301) withSylvia Sellers-Garcia
- Latin America in the World I (HIST 1063) withSylvia Sellers-Garcia
- Inquisition in Spain and Spanish America(HIST 4371) withSylvia Sellers-Garcia
- Latin America in the World II (Spring Semester)(HIST 1064) with Genevieve Dempsey
- Modern Latin America(HIST 2302) withMaria Picone
- Borders and Frontiers in Modern Latin America(HIST 4302) withMaria Picone
- Resisting and Rebelling I(HIST183201) withSylvia Garcia-Sellers
- Mexico between Fact and Fiction(HIST437301) withSylvia Garcia-Sellers
- Spanish American Philosophy(PHIL 4423) withGary Gutler
- Latin American Politics(POLI 4100) withJennie Purnell
- Understanding Latinos: Cultural Productions(SPAN662401) withHumberto Delgado Velázquez
- Faith & Conflict: Religion & Social Change in Latin America(SOCY 3342) withGustavo Morello
- Introduction to Latin American Societies(SOCY1036) withGustavo Morello
Graduate Study
A formal agreement was established in 2002 between the Latin American Studies Program at Boston College and the Center for Latin American Studies at Georgetown University. Ҵý students who demonstrate excellence in Latin American Studies at the undergraduate level may pursue an accelerated course of study for the Master's degree in Latin American Studies at Georgetown.