History faculty member Joe Cope and Rob Doggett from the English Department escorted a group of Geneseo alumni on a ten day learning trip to Ireland in July and August. The trip featured visits to a number of sites of historical and cultural interest, including historical walking tours on the Gaelic Revival and 1916 Rising in Dublin, a tour of Derry's 17th century city walls and sites associated with the Troubles, a free day in Sligo, and tours of the Connemara District. In the summer of 2015, Tom Greenfield from the English Department will be organizing a similar trip, which will also allow alumni to interact with students in Ireland as part of a four week study abroad course run by Doggett and Cope.
Friday, August 15, 2014
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Sherry Leung (class of 2014) Receives Prestigious COPLAC Award
For the second consecutive year, a Geneseo History major has won the Consortium of Public Liberal Arts Colleges' David J. Prior Award. Sherry Leung joins last year's winner, Cory Young, in having been honored for her essay on civic engagement and liberal arts education. Profiles of Sherry, Cory and other Prior Award winners can be found here.
The College has also put together a video featuring Sherry reading her essay:
The College has also put together a video featuring Sherry reading her essay:
Monday, April 21, 2014
Jordan Kleiman Wins SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching
We are pleased to announce that Associate Professor of History Jordan Kleiman was named as one of three Geneseo faculty to receive the SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching. This brings a total of seven Chancellor's Awards for Excellence in Teaching to the History Department. Congratulations!
The press release can be found here.
The press release can be found here.
Sunday, April 6, 2014
2014 Phi Alpha Theta Regional Conference at SUNY Buffalo State
Ten Geneseo History majors presented research at the annual Phi Alpha Theta West/Central Regional Conference held at SUNY Buffalo State on 5 April. In attendance were Neal Hunter, Peter Olsen-Harbich, Clare Flynn,
Alec Tare, Nikita Rumsey, Brittany Lauda, Todd Christensen, Liz
Dierenfield, Liam Collins, and Cindy Trieu. Four students received "honorable mention" prizes for their efforts. Thanks to our students for another great showing at the Phi Alpha Theta conference!
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Geneseo Students at the Syracuse Cold Case Initiative Program
Over Spring Break, Geneseo alumnus Keven Adams (2012) and
current student Todd Christensen (pictured here) attended a Syracuse University
Conference, sponsored by the Law School's Cold Case Initiative, “Looking Back,
Moving Forward: 50th Anniversary Commemoration of the Civil Rights Movement 1964-2014”. At the conference, they heard presentations by and met
with Civil Rights Movement veterans and other activists and scholars. For more information, see: http://www.syr.edu/coldcaselaw/conference.html
Monday, March 17, 2014
Teachers' Day 2014
On Friday, March 14, the History Department hosted its first "Teachers' Day" event. Conceived of as an opportunity to put Geneseo History faculty in touch with local high school educators, the event attracted 45 teachers representing districts in Livingston, Monroe, Genesee, Steuben, and Wyoming Counties. Morning workshops led by Joe Cope, Justin Behrend and Cathy Adams focused on early modern European expansion and colonialism and the abolition movement. In the afternoon, teachers had the opportunity to tour the Livingston County Historical Museum in Geneseo and heard a keynote address entitled "Six Things New Yorkers Should Know about the Iroquois" by Michael Oberg. This event was made possible thanks to generous contributions to the History Department by Geneseo alumni Joe and Elaine Bucci; high school teachers were able to attend the event free of charge thanks to this support. Press coverage of the event can be found here.Thursday, January 16, 2014
Fall and Winter 2013-4 Events and Accomplishments
In October, the History Department hosted the annual Bill
Gohlman Memorial Lecture in Global History. We had Tim Nicholson (class
of 2004 and currently Assistant Professor at SUNY-Delhi) on campus to speak on
"East African Students in a Post-Imperial World". We had terrific
student turnout for an impressive presentation on Tim's research on Cold
War-era Tanzania and it was nice catching up with another successful alumnus
of the College.
Also in October, two History majors traveled to the Council of Public Liberal Arts College's annual undergraduate research conference at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. Liz Dierenfield presented a seminar paper she wrote for Professor Kleiman entitled “'Oh, Lord, Don’t Let ’Em Drop That PCB on Me': African Americans, Religion, and the Origins of the Environmental Justice Movement" and Christina Kennedy presented on a directed study that she and Stephanie Tyree completed under the direction of Professor Stolee entitled "“Starved to Death: Discerning between Famine and Genocide in 1932 Ukraine”.
Also in October, two History majors traveled to the Council of Public Liberal Arts College's annual undergraduate research conference at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. Liz Dierenfield presented a seminar paper she wrote for Professor Kleiman entitled “'Oh, Lord, Don’t Let ’Em Drop That PCB on Me': African Americans, Religion, and the Origins of the Environmental Justice Movement" and Christina Kennedy presented on a directed study that she and Stephanie Tyree completed under the direction of Professor Stolee entitled "“Starved to Death: Discerning between Famine and Genocide in 1932 Ukraine”.
In early Two Geneseo History majors also traveled to the Phi Alpha Theta National Conference in Albuquerque in January to present original research. Alec Tare presented a paper entitled "Knocking
off their Irons as Fast as They Could: Slave Ship Rebellions and the Secret
Spirit of the Middle Passage," which he wrote for Professor Behrend, and
Adam Camiolo presented a paper entitled "Becoming Natick: Praying Towns,
Missionaries, and Re-examining the Covert Spiritual War," which he
wrote for Professor Oberg.
Faculty also had a number of accomplishments in the fall. In addition to the awards and honors noted elsewhere on this blog, Professor Oberg was named McLellan Visiting Distingushed
Professor of North Country History and Culture at SUNY-Plattsburgh for the Spring 2014 semester. Professor Oberg will be on leave from Geneseo in the spring and will have a one week residency at Plattsburgh as part of this program. Emilye Crosby was named as a fellow with the National Humanities Center for the 2014-5 academic year and received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship award for the 2015-6 academic year. These leaves will allow Professor Crosby to continue work on a major monograph project entitled Anything I Was Big Enough To Do: Women and Gender in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
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