CONTACT CfAH
Sensenbrenner Hall, 004
(414) 288-3200
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²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù’s Center for the Advancement of the Humanities provides a space for students to come together and engage the most important questions of life outside of the classroom. Whether you are already a member of several campus clubs and organizations or a first-year student still finding your way, we hope you’ll make the Center a home away from home as you navigate the journey of self-discovery and growth that is college life.
Interested in majoring or minoring in the humanities? Here are the majors and minors offered at ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù.
Are you interested in research in the Humanities?
Disciplinary Honors in the Humanities (fondly known as HiH) might just be the program for you.
In the program:
*You work on an intensive research project in a cohort of your peers.
*You do this work on a subject of your choice.
*And you receive a Disciplinary Honors designation on your transcript.
*You do not need to be in Core Honors to join, but you will become part of the program.
*You need a 3.2 GPA.
*If you have any questions, please contact the program director: kristen.foster@marquette.edu
Virtues in the Public Square is an undergraduate certificate program that engages undergraduates in a twelve hour multimedia course. The program explores seven virtues––wisdom, justice, courage, temperance, humility, generosity, and friendship––through the lenses of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. This academic, non-sectarian curriculum translates the classical traditions of virtue for modern audiences. Oriented toward service to one another, this course models how humanity’s various spiritual paths can overlap to collectively forge a common good.
The Center for the Advancement of the Humanities welcomes applications for its Story Fellows Lab undergraduate initiative. The aim of this initiative is to create a space for community building around shared identities, values, and struggles, as well as to foster the cultivation of storytelling as a community-based healing approach. Through this initiative, the CfAH thus aims to promote a conception of the person as primarily part of a community rather than as an isolated individual.
As part of this initiative, the CfAH offers up to $2,500 to fund Story Fellows teams. These funds may be used in a variety of ways including but not limited to the following: purchasing team supplies, books, providing refreshments, attending cultural activities, and engaging with community partners.
More information on the Story Telling Fellows Lab is provided in the document below.