The Department of American Culture is an academic department at a Research I university that traces its origins back to 1935. It has been one of the top American Studies hubs in the country and is recognized internationally. We are committed to interdisciplinary scholarship in the multivalent field of humanities and humanistic social sciences and to undergraduate and graduate education that fosters understanding of complex histories, struggles, and various creative productions and expressions that reflect the many complex cultures of the United States and the Americas in a global context. The department's mission and values arise from long-standing commitments to rigorous inquiry and knowledge production. Our groundbreaking understandings, interpretations, and critiques probe intersections of transnational, national, and diasporic identities and their socially constructed aspects such as race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexuality, disability, indigeneity, religion, and region. Our wide-ranging faculty includes historians, literary and cultural studies scholars, and social scientists, as well as artists and practitioners. American Culture's impressive interdisciplinary reach encompasses areas from Native languages, museums, and architecture, through technology, medical histories, dance, music, to religions, social movements and institutions, material culture, cuisines, and digital media.