News
Hilliard receives PEAES fellowship
Kathleen Hilliard has been awarded a 2017-2018 fellowship from the Program in Early American Economy and Society at the Library Company of Philadelphia. It funds one month of research at the Library Company and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania in support of her book, Bonds Burst Asunder: The Revolutionary Politics of Getting By in Civil … Continue reading Hilliard receives PEAES fellowship
Hilliard receives fellowship
Kathleen Hilliard has been awarded the 2017-2018 Suzanne and Caleb Loring Fellowship on the Civil War, Its Origins, and Consequences by the Boston Athenaeum and Massachusetts Historical Society. It funds 8 weeks research in Boston this summer. The fellowship funds research for her book project, Bonds Burst Asunder: The Revolutionary Politics of Getting By in … Continue reading Hilliard receives fellowship
Andrews gives presentation at New York University
On February 17th, Prof. James T. Andrews presented “Narrating the Soviet Metropolis: Visual Culture, Underground Architectural Space, and the Moscow Metro” at the Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia at New York University. In his talk, Prof. Andrews showed how iconographic public spaces can have critical discursive meanings when they are juxtaposed across … Continue reading Andrews gives presentation at New York University
Low wins ASEH award
Christopher Low has won the Alice Hamilton Prize from the American Society for Environmental History for his article ‘Ottoman Infrastructures of the Saudi Hydro-State: The Technopolitics of Pilgrimage and Potable Water in the Hijaz.’ The award is for the best article on environmental history published outside of the Society’s own journal, Environmental History. Congratulations to … Continue reading Low wins ASEH award
Seitz receives prestigious fellowship
Jack Seitz, a PhD candidate in History has been awarded a 2016-2017 Stephen F. Cohen Robert C. Tucker Dissertation Research Fellowship (CTDRF) for his dissertation project, ‘Colonizing the Countryside: Scientific Agriculture and Colonial Control on the Kazakh Steppe, 1881-1928.’ The fellowship is sponsored by the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies together with … Continue reading Seitz receives prestigious fellowship
Professor Pamela Riney-Kehrberg edits a major new book on the history of rural America
"Routledge has just published a major new anthology, The Routledge History of Rural America, edited by Professor of History Pamela Riney-Kehrberg, who also wrote the introduction, contributed an essay, and co-authored another essay in the volume. In addition to Professor Riney-Kehrberg, among the twenty-six contributors are current ISU history faculty Jeff Bremer, Julie Courtwright, and … Continue reading Professor Pamela Riney-Kehrberg edits a major new book on the history of rural America
Jeremy Best interviewed on KHOI Local Talk
Jeremy Best recently appeared on KHOI Community Radio in Ames, Iowa on the program Local Talk. Kay Puttock interviewed Jeremy as part of a program entitled Mind Body Medicine about the Bruno Groening Circle of Friends, an organization of spiritual healers with origins in post-World War II Germany. Jeremy’s comments provided the program with historical … Continue reading Jeremy Best interviewed on KHOI Local Talk
Maria Howe wins two research awards
Maria Howe, a PhD candidate in History, has won two awards to fund her research this summer on water policy in the American West. One is a James H. Bradley Fellowship from the Montana Historical Society. It funds four weeks of research in the Historical Society’s collections. The other is the Gordon Morris Bakken Scholarship … Continue reading Maria Howe wins two research awards
History major Dan Gavin featured in story about the Farm House Museum
Dan Gavin, an ISU History major, was recently interviewed about his job as an intern at the Farm House Museum. Read the entire story here.