Graduate Programs - Collaborative Programs
Editing Medieval Texts - PH.D.
The Collaborative Program in Editing Medieval Texts offers intensive training in the editing of Latin and vernacular manuscripts, including music. Training in all areas is based on a sound knowledge of Latin and covers editorial practices, resources and principles of editing Latin manuscripts. http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/medieval/programs/collaborative.html for further information or email medieval@chass.utoronto.ca.Health Care, Technology, and Place - PH.D.
Sexual Diversity Studies - M.A./PH.D.
The Mark S. Bonham Centre hosts a collaborative graduate program in Sexual Diversity Studies at the M.A. and Ph.D. levels for faculty and students interested in questions about how we understand sexual diversity and sexual practices.
Among these questions are how we frame and categorize sexual differences, why we fear some and celebrate others, how medical, religious, and political authorities respond to them. What is the nature of sexual identity and orientation? How and why is sexuality labeled as lesbian, heterosexual, perverse, normal, gay, or queer? How do cultures at different times and places divide the sexual from the non-sexual? http://storm.uc.utoronto.ca/content/view/237/1316/ for more information or email sexual.diversity@utoronto.ca
South Asian Studies - M.A./PH.D.
The interdisciplinary Collaborative Program in South Asian Studies is designed for M.A. and Ph.D. students who wish to acquire a nuanced understanding of this region as a secondary area of specialization while pursuing graduate studies in another discipline. The focus is necessarily broad in that it provides students with an understanding of ancient and modern history, social change, economic development, contemporary politics, religious traditions, literary culture, and a spectrum of related topics. http://www.utoronto.ca/csas/index.html for more information or email ai.asianstudies@utoronto.ca.Women & Gender Studies - M.A./PH.D.
The Graduate Collaborative Program in Women’s Studies (GCWS) provides a formal educational context for the purpose of interdisciplinary research in women’s and gender studies and advanced feminist scholarship. The program, offered at the master’s and doctoral levels, provides a central coordinating structure to facilitate and disseminate women’s studies research through graduate student research symposia, lectures, circulation and discussion of work in progress, conferences, and publications. http://www.wgsi.utoronto.ca/ for more information or email grad.womenstudies@utoronto.ca.Women's Health - M.A./PH.D.
The Collaborative Program in Women’s Health is a new collaborative graduate program at the University of Toronto that is the first of its kind in Canada. Given the breadth of its disciplinary representation it is also likely the first of its kind internationally.