The Master of Arts (MA) Degree

As an organizing principle, “from evidence to action” expresses the Theatre Studies faculty’s commitment to a process that moves from collecting and analyzing evidence to creating action in the forms of written and performed research.

We deploy a variety of methodologies and approaches to collect and analyze various forms of evidence—documents, interviews, images, objects, as well as play scripts. Our methodologies reflect the most current developments in theatre research, while still respecting tried and true methods of the past. These methods include: Historiography, Ethnography, Cultural Studies, Critical Race and Gender Studies, Dramaturgy, and Textual Analysis. In addition to offering specific courses in each of these methods, they are integrated throughout our curriculum.

Each of these diverse methods shares a commitment to exploring performances in their social, historical, and political contexts. The Theatre Studies faculty’s scholarship and creative activity is grounded in the belief that performance, from ancient Greek tragedies to the most postmodern performance art, is part of a vital process through which citizens shape their communities. The Theatre Studies faculty considers its members’ work as scholars and artists integral to that ongoing process.

Whether performances originate in ethnographic or archival research or move more traditionally from page to stage, they are this area’s subject matter. Whether performances are live or mediated through technology, they are respected as evidence to be approached through scholarly research and analysis.

In keeping with the overarching principle of evidence into action, these specific themes in the curriculum and in the research and creative interests of the faculty can be identified:

PROFESSIONAL TRAINING OBJECTIVES:

The Theatre Studies faculty assumes that we are preparing students to work professionally. Primary placement objectives for MA and PhD students include research universities and top liberal arts colleges as well as dramaturgy and literary management positions in regional theatres and leading small theatre companies in urban centers.

Specifically, the MA is designed for students interested in pursuing doctoral studies, teaching in secondary schools or junior colleges, or in strengthening their academic preparation for professions such as literary management and dramaturgy.

The PhD prepares students for careers in teaching and research at the college and university levels and a variety of careers in the arts and related professions.

Distinctive Features of Graduate Theatre Studies at FSU

Faculty and Staff: