American Stories: Place, Power, and Imagination

A First-Year Ampersand Program

American Stories: Place, Power, and Imagination

If an American landscape could tell a story, what would it say?

American Stories is a two-semester course sequence that introduces students to the multidisciplinary and critical study of American culture, history, politics, and society. Students will practice reading landscapes from the nineteenth century to today, uncovering untold stories of American places and the people, politics, and power that shaped them. In both semesters, students will have the opportunity to engage in dynamic discussions, participate in immersive site visits, and hear from guest speakers—including experts and community members.

American Stories Students

Examining America is one of the few courses I’ve come across where you get the opportunity to venture out into the world and really interact with your surroundings. The experience has taught me to find learning in places I never expected.

Conrad L., Class of 2026

Ampersand for me has been more than a first-year educational experience. Ampersand has created an atmosphere of life-long friends that I can learn and grow together with.

Zach O., Class of 2023

The AMCS Ampersand program was a great way to adapt to college academics. I loved having a cohort for the full year; it created a sense of community where I met some of my best friends while exposing me to what American Culture Studies has to offer!

Aidan B., Class of 2025

I have had an amazing experience in Ampersand. Through this class, I have been able to make some of my most meaningful relationships at WashU through conversations about our respective identities in contemporary America.

Emille T., Class of 2023

My ampersand program really allowed for a close learning relationship with my professors and a small group of students. I’d recommend freshmen to sign up for one, even if it’s in a department they’re not sure about majoring in.

Sawyer L., Class of 2023

How to Sign Up

The sign-up process with priority review for first-year programs and seminars begins on Monday, May 19, 2025, at 12 p.m. (CT). To participate in priority review, please submit your application in the first 24 hours after applications open or by Tuesday, May 20, 2025, at 12 p.m. (CT). The link to the application form will be available on the First-Year Programs homepage during that time. You will need your WashU Key to apply. For each of the Ampersand Programs you wish to rank in your top four choices, you will need to complete a separate statement of interest (no more than 500 words) answering a program specific question. For American Stories: Place, Power, and Imagination the 2025 application question is: If you could time-travel to any American city at any point in history, where would you go and why? What would you hope to learn?

First-Year Programs Homepage

Our Courses

American Stories: Place, Power and Imagination

The first semester of this Ampersand program introduces ways of seeing and interpreting American histories and cultures, as revealed in the built environment and stories of our cities. We will travel through time and place, touching down in Boston, Charleston, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and more. The course encourages students to read landscapes as multilayered records of past and present social relations, and to speculate for themselves about cultural meanings. It also introduces students to the social, economic, and political forces that have profoundly shaped the American urban landscape.

 

American Stories: St. Louis, Power, and the Making of an American City

A scholar of St. Louis history once claimed, "St. Louis will seem to have been located in entirely different parts of the country throughout its history." In many ways, it's a city that defies easy characterization. It's been a place of great possibility and promise, and of hopelessness and betrayal—and very often all of these things at once. The second semester of this Ampersand program will explore the history of St. Louis as a place of many places, reading the city from the nineteenth century to today. Discovering what makes St. Louis a uniquely American city, the course will take interdisciplinary approaches to reading compelling primary source documents, engaging in site visits, and conversing with local guest speakers from artists to public historians to archivists.

On Location

Ampersand students receive priority enrollment!

American Culture Studies students travel to new locations to explore fundamental questions of identity through the study of interdependent relationships between cultures and places. 

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