sacklunch Posted September 1, 2013 Posted September 1, 2013 It's that time again! Please list where you plan to apply and your subfield.....and later your acceptances, rejections, and waitlists! LET THE FUN BEGIN!!! sacklunch and Yetanotherdegree 2
Yetanotherdegree Posted September 2, 2013 Posted September 2, 2013 Can I play? I think I've decided not to apply this fall, but I'm starting extra-early to put stuff together for an application the following year, and I'll be going through all the steps in anticipation of 2014. Plus, there's still a possibility that I will get stuff sorted out and do it after all... Why am I waiting, you might ask? Because my languages are insufficient and I could use a couple of more current references. I'm doing a couple of courses this year, but I also have a job and family commitments, so it seems sensible to do this slowly and do it right. Where applying? Duke (Div School ThD, Religion PhD), UNC-CH (Religion PhD) Subfield: Early Christianity/ Historical Theology/ Church History (the emphasis is the same in all areas; sub field varies depending on how the institution likes to name stuff). JDM, how 'bout you?
sacklunch Posted September 2, 2013 Author Posted September 2, 2013 Are you in NC currently? my tentative list: Duke (PhD), Toronto (NMC, Religion), Harvard (NELC, Religion), Yale (NELC, Religion), ND (Theology), Wisconsin (Semitics), Marquette (Theology), GTU/Berkeley. Some others that I will likely apply. Applying broadly in HB, but with folks who work with LXX and DSS (some overlap with NT, patristics, classics).
MBIGrad Posted September 2, 2013 Posted September 2, 2013 (edited) Applying: Yale (Ancient Christianity), Princeton (CJA), Harvard (CJA), Duke (NT), UNC (Qumran/NT), FSU (RWA), UT Austin (RWA), Emory (NT), Baylor (NT). With a relatively weak possibility of an application to UVirginia (NT/Second Temple). Maybe Vanderbilt MA (Classics). Almost applied to ND, Brown, UChicago. And can I bust out some non-PhD-applicant-appropriate language and say that it is "lame-sauce" that all the California schools have stopped doing Ancient Christianity/Biblical Studies. Edited September 2, 2013 by MBIGrad
Body Politics Posted September 2, 2013 Posted September 2, 2013 Best of luck, friends. (I don't envy you one bit!)
MsBOOM Posted September 4, 2013 Posted September 4, 2013 Applying to one and only one. Georgetown with a focus in Religious Pluralism. doobiebrothers 1
Ben W. Posted September 8, 2013 Posted September 8, 2013 Applying to SLU, ND, and CUA for certain; other possibilities include Toronto, Loyola, and Marquette
ûl ʾašerātō Posted September 8, 2013 Posted September 8, 2013 Are you in NC currently? my tentative list: Duke (PhD), Toronto (NMC, Religion), Harvard (NELC, Religion), Yale (NELC, Religion), ND (Theology), Wisconsin (Semitics), Marquette (Theology), GTU/Berkeley. Some others that I will likely apply. Applying broadly in HB, but with folks who work with LXX and DSS (some overlap with NT, patristics, classics). You'll only be able to apply to one department within GSAS at Yale, unlike Harvard. So, you'll need to decide between applying to NELC (for Assyriology?) or Religious Studies (HB or Ancient Judaism probably). Obviously Troxel at Wisconsin would provide a good fit, and Hutton is going to be big time. Who would you work with at Berkeley/GTU or Harvard for LXX/DSS? Also, have you considered Brown? Between Olyan and a prodigious NT/Early Christianity/Classics faculty, you might be well served there. And, what is the state of HB at Duke presently? I've heard the Meyers are retiring. Do you work with Davis? Best of luck!
sacklunch Posted September 9, 2013 Author Posted September 9, 2013 You'll only be able to apply to one department within GSAS at Yale, unlike Harvard. So, you'll need to decide between applying to NELC (for Assyriology?) or Religious Studies (HB or Ancient Judaism probably). Obviously Troxel at Wisconsin would provide a good fit, and Hutton is going to be big time. Who would you work with at Berkeley/GTU or Harvard for LXX/DSS? Also, have you considered Brown? Between Olyan and a prodigious NT/Early Christianity/Classics faculty, you might be well served there. And, what is the state of HB at Duke presently? I've heard the Meyers are retiring. Do you work with Davis? Best of luck! Sent you a PM!
Kuriakos Posted September 12, 2013 Posted September 12, 2013 If anyone has Baylor questions, shoot me a PM. Yetanotherdegree 1
marXian Posted September 12, 2013 Posted September 12, 2013 Good idea, Kuriakos. I can answer questions about Northwestern and studying theology in a religious studies department more generally. Yetanotherdegree 1
Ando Posted September 12, 2013 Posted September 12, 2013 Boston University Rice SMU UChicago Boston College UVA Focusing on the intersection between Islamic mysticism and politics during the 13th-15th centuries (haven't nailed down the specificities yet for my proposal). I currently go to UChicago Divinity so if anyone has general questions do let me know.
sogdia Posted September 14, 2013 Posted September 14, 2013 If any of you have questions about UVa, particularly their JCA program, feel free to PM me. Good luck!
seroteamavi Posted September 14, 2013 Posted September 14, 2013 Boston College seems to have the most confusing and unnavigable of all doctoral application waters. Has anyone applied to study early or medieval Christianity there? I take it one would not go through the STM, correct?
Tollelege Posted September 14, 2013 Posted September 14, 2013 seroteamavi, I am a current Ph.D. student in early Christianity at Boston College. Regarding your question, the answer is no; you do not apply through the STM but through the theology department. PM me if you have any questions.
RedDoor Posted September 17, 2013 Posted September 17, 2013 After about a year of lurking, I finally decided to join the Cafe. Feels like a minor accomplishment! I'm finishing a Th.M this year (May 2014 completion), but I hope to begin applying this semester for Ph.D. programs. My focus in on NT, particularly the gospel of Luke. Any advice will be appreciated! (I'm dreading the GRE) I'll be applying (budget allowing) to all of these schools. First choices: St. Andrew's (Wright, Hafemann, etc), Cambridge (Gathercole), Emory (Johnson, Holladay). Second Choices: Boston College, Boston U, Princeton. Vanderbilt was one of my first choices, but they are not accepting NT Ph.D. applications. Bummer.
Kuriakos Posted September 22, 2013 Posted September 22, 2013 After about a year of lurking, I finally decided to join the Cafe. Feels like a minor accomplishment! I'm finishing a Th.M this year (May 2014 completion), but I hope to begin applying this semester for Ph.D. programs. My focus in on NT, particularly the gospel of Luke. Any advice will be appreciated! (I'm dreading the GRE) I'll be applying (budget allowing) to all of these schools. First choices: St. Andrew's (Wright, Hafemann, etc), Cambridge (Gathercole), Emory (Johnson, Holladay). Second Choices: Boston College, Boston U, Princeton. Vanderbilt was one of my first choices, but they are not accepting NT Ph.D. applications. Bummer. The UK schools don't give a rip about the GRE so that is nice, but getting funding is very difficult for Americans. Even if you get to work with NTW at St. Andrew's, it'll cost you. You might be better off at a second choice with little or no debt vs. going what 100K in debt (no idea really)? In light of that, I'd consider applying to a few more US programs.
RedDoor Posted September 25, 2013 Posted September 25, 2013 The UK schools don't give a rip about the GRE so that is nice, but getting funding is very difficult for Americans. Even if you get to work with NTW at St. Andrew's, it'll cost you. You might be better off at a second choice with little or no debt vs. going what 100K in debt (no idea really)? In light of that, I'd consider applying to a few more US programs. Thanks for the advice. Honestly, I'd much rather do a 3 year program vs. a 5 year program, but I definitely don't want $100K+ of debt on top of my already impressive amount of debt. I'm polishing up my proposals for the UK programs, but after that I'll hit the GRE books.
Kuriakos Posted September 28, 2013 Posted September 28, 2013 Funded position in the UK: http://historicaljesusresearch.blogspot.com/2013/09/nt-phd-studentship-at-st-marys.html Yetanotherdegree and Body Politics 2
Body Politics Posted September 29, 2013 Posted September 29, 2013 Chris Keith is a great guy. I met with him at SBL last year to talk about that PhD. I only withdrew my app because I didn't feel ready to dive straight into a dissertation. But if you're ready for it, he would be a fantastic person to study under.
RedDoor Posted September 29, 2013 Posted September 29, 2013 Funded position in the UK: http://historicaljesusresearch.blogspot.com/2013/09/nt-phd-studentship-at-st-marys.html Thanks for this. What tier would you consider SMCU?
Body Politics Posted September 29, 2013 Posted September 29, 2013 Lower, but only because it is a new program at a small school. Keith is a mover and a shaker, though, and very respected and well-connected in the field; you would be rubbing shoulders with some big-name European scholars. RedDoor 1
Kuriakos Posted September 29, 2013 Posted September 29, 2013 Thanks for this. What tier would you consider SMCU? Lower, but only because it is a new program at a small school. Keith is a mover and a shaker, though, and very respected and well-connected in the field; you would be rubbing shoulders with some big-name European scholars. I'd say BP is right on target.
MBIGrad Posted September 30, 2013 Posted September 30, 2013 University of Helsinki has a funded PhD position as well. People there study GThomas and socio-cognitive approaches. 2,400 pounds a month. Big faculty. Finnish is a cool language, too (program is English).
Perique69 Posted October 3, 2013 Posted October 3, 2013 Thanks for the advice. Honestly, I'd much rather do a 3 year program vs. a 5 year program, but I definitely don't want $100K+ of debt on top of my already impressive amount of debt. I'm polishing up my proposals for the UK programs, but after that I'll hit the GRE books. Frankly, it's easy to be accepted to most UK programs. Aside from poor or no funding, the other drawback is competing for jobs. I realize a 3 year program can be more appealing than the usual 5 to 8 (or more!) year top-tier American programs. But unless you somehow have a secure teaching job lined up post-graduation, it'll be incredibly tough to convince most American schools that a 3 year (research only) UK degree is more attractive than graduates from top and 2nd tier American programs. Also, unless you're independently wealthy, it's a horrible financial choice to take on significant debt for any PhD in religion/theology. My advice: only go where your full tuition is covered and you're paid a competitive stipend for at least 5 years. Kuriakos, RedDoor, Lux Lex Pax and 1 other 3 1
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