This is an archived copy of the 2017-18 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.utexas.edu/.

Admission and Degree Requirements

All entering students must hold a bachelor's degree with a major in Spanish and Portuguese, or must demonstrate equivalent knowledge. All students must demonstrate proficiency in a second language; this requirement may be fulfilled by exam, previous credit, or ten to twelve semester hours of additional coursework.

All graduate students must complete Iberian and Latin American Languages and Cultures 380 or 381, as well as twelve semester hours of elective coursework in their first three long semesters. By the end of the third long semester, students must have selected or been assigned a mentor from among the department's graduate faculty.

Further requirements specific to the master's degree and the doctoral degree are given below.

Master of Arts

The MA degree is available only to students enrolled in the PhD degree program in Iberian and Latin American languages and cultures who wish to complete a master's on the way to the doctorate, and those who are allowed by the Graduate Studies Committee to elect to receive a terminal master's degree after having successfully submitted and defended a doctoral qualifying paper. If the doctoral qualifying paper is deemed unacceptable, the student may still petition to receive the MA, requesting that the doctoral qualifying paper be used as the basis for satisfying the master's report requirement. Students who are approved to complete the MA degree requirements must register for Iberian and Latin American Languages and Cultures 398R during the semester of their graduation.

Doctor of Philosophy

General Requirements

The doctoral program in Iberian and Latin American languages and cultures includes three tracks which share the same five-year structure, described below. These tracks are: (1) Iberian and Latin American literatures and cultures, (2) literatures and cultures in Portuguese and Spanish, and (3) Iberian and Latin American linguistics. All students must demonstrate proficiency in a second language beyond Spanish or Portuguese. In the first and third tracks, the second language may be any language other than English that is relevant to the student's proposed field of study and is approved by the graduate adviser. Students in the second track must choose Spanish or Portuguese as the second language.

Students seeking the PhD must complete a minimum of fifty-four semester hours of coursework. Coursework includes the following required courses: Iberian and Latin American Languages and Cultures 380 or 381, 385T, 394, 395, 396, 398T, 399R or 999R, and 399W or 999W. The remaining semester hours may be fulfilled through elective courses at the graduate level, as approved by the graduate adviser. At least fifteen of the twenty-seven semester hours of elective coursework must come from courses offered by the Department of Spanish and Portuguese.

For doctoral students, the fourth long semester is dedicated to the elaboration of the doctoral qualifying paper. In the first half of the semester, in consultation with the student's mentor and two additional readers appointed by the graduate adviser, each student must write and submit a paper demonstrating a mastery of a specialized topic, theoretical rigor, sophisticated research techniques, and a command of structure, academic style, and organization. If all three readers deem the paper acceptable, the student will defend the paper before the committee during the second half of the semester.

Upon the successful completion of the doctoral qualifying paper, students will enroll in nine hours of additional elective coursework, generally taken in the fifth long semester.

The sixth and seventh long semesters are dedicated to the preparation of the doctoral dissertation fields and proposal. In the sixth long semester, in consultation with a Dissertation Proposal Committee (consisting of the student's mentor, three other Graduate Studies Committee faculty members from the department, and one faculty member from outside the department), each student will prepare and write critical summaries of a number of field lists. If the Dissertation Proposal Committee considers the list and accompanying summaries acceptable, the student will develop a doctoral dissertation proposal, under the supervision of his or her mentor, which the student will defend before the twelfth week of the seventh long semester. The student will also enroll in Iberian and Latin American Languages and Cultures 385T, Teaching Practicum during the seventh long semester.

Tracks

Iberian and Latin American Literatures and Cultures

The Iberian and Latin American Literatures and Cultures track addresses the broad range of linguistic and cultural contacts that currently comprise our field. This track allows students to complete their primary coursework in Spanish, with a focus that may include the multiple languages and cultures of Latin America (including the U.S.), Spain, the Caribbean, Africa, or Asia, or related diasporas. Students will then choose a specialization in the literature and culture of a second language relevant to their research. This could be Portuguese, Nahuatl, a Mayan language, French, Arabic, Hebrew, Yiddish, Yoruba, a Creole language, etc. 

Luso-Brazilian Cultural and Media Studies

The Luso-Brazilian Cultural and Media Studies track, is designed for students who wish to acquire the cultural capital and critical thinking skills crucial to a global understanding of Brazil, Portugal, and the Portuguese-speaking populations of Africa and Asia. While also addressing a range of media and cultural contacts, this option allows students to complete their primary coursework in Luso-Brazilian literature, film, and culture, choosing either Spanish or another relevant language as the basis of a secondary research focus. This track is designed to bridge the traditional divide between Brazil, the Americas, and the Lusophone world.

Iberian and Latin American Linguistics

In the Iberian and Latin American Linguistics track, students pursue coursework in areas that bridge theoretical and applied approaches in the study of the structural and meaning-bearing properties of standardized and local languages, the sociolinguistics of the Ibero-American world, the development of second languages in natural and academic settings, and the qualitative and quantitative analysis of speech samples collected in the field and in the laboratory. This training is supported and augmented by coursework in the core linguistic areas of phonology and syntax as well as in the research methods of phonetics, discourse analysis, corpus linguistics, psycholinguistics, and anthropological linguistics through the offerings of graduate programs in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and allied departments, including linguistics, French and Italian, curriculum and instruction, psychology, communication, anthropology, and Latin American studies.