Program PDF - History at the University of Missouri

Transcription

Program PDF - History at the University of Missouri
Department of History
Student Recognition Ceremony
Read Hall
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Faculty Alumni Lounge, S-304
Memorial Union
12:30 p.m.
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Welcome
Professor John Wigger
Chairman, Department of History
Phi Alpha Theta
Associate Professor Linda Reeder
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Phi Alpha Theta Faculty Adviser
Department Scholarships Assistant Professor Ilyana Karthas
Undergraduate Studies Committee
Arts & Science Scholarships
Associate Professor Michelle Morris
Undergraduate Studies Committee
Honors & Undergraduate Theses
Associate Professor Linda Reeder
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Associate Professor Linda Reeder
History Department Internships
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Internship Coordinator
Graduate Student Achievements Associate Professor Lois Huneycutt
Director of Graduate Studies
Kinder Forum on Constitutional Democracy
Fellows/Internships/DC Program
Professor Jeff Pasley
Associate Director of the Kinder Forum
on Constitutional Democracy
Please join us for lunch at the conclusion of today’s event
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College of Arts and Science Undergraduate Scholarships
The College of Arts and Science awards undergraduate student scholarships. These highly
competitive awards are given to students from across the college who must excel both
academically and in extracurricular activities.
2014-15 Arts and Science Scholarship recipients
Cameron Brown Mary Cate O’Brien
Conor Fagan Summer Perlow
Katherine Hobbs
Audrey Sanders
Megan Matheny
Caroline Spalding
History Department Undergraduate Scholarships
Thanks to the generosity of private donors, the History Department is able to offer a
number of merit-based scholarships. Below are brief descriptions of each of the scholarships
awarded this year, followed by the scholars’ names.
Glenn M. McCaslin Memorial Scholarships
A memorial scholarship honoring Glenn M. McCaslin, BA, BJ ‘49. This gift is awarded to
outstanding history majors at MU with a minimum overall GPA of 3.0 and history GPA of 3.2
or above.
Cameron Brown
Lauren Herbig
Kathryn Leeper
Emma McIntyre
Jack Meyerhoff
Caroline Spalding
Allen & Maude Clarke McReynolds Scholarships
This endowment was started by Elizabeth McReynolds Rozier and Allen McReynolds, Jr. on
behalf of their parents, Allen and Maude Clarke McReynolds. Awards are given to one or more
outstanding students who are majoring in history.
Hannah Aldrich
Conor Fagan
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Harvey A. & Nellie K. Deweerd
Memorial Teaching Award
This memorial scholarship, honoring Harvey and Nellie Deweerd, is awarded to one or more
outstanding students in the Department of History who are majoring in history and who show
an interest in and aptitude for teaching history.
Nathaniel Brose
Katherine Hobbs
Brian Moreno Audrey Sanders
Tom Berenger Opportunities for Excellence Scholarships:
World renowned actor, Tom Berenger, established this scholarship because of his
association with the University of Missouri and his love for world history. The fund is used to
promote professional growth for teaching, research and service that will elevate students to
higher levels of achievement. This award is given to students majoring in history with a
minimum overall GPA of 3.0 and a history GPA of 3.2 or above.
Sam DickeCale Spangler
Brianna Westervelt
History Department Honors/Undergraduate Theses
Highly-qualified students in the Department of History can choose to write an honors or
undergraduate thesis to fulfill their capstone requirement. They must have a 3.3 cumulative
GPA to be eligible for the honors thesis. For an entire year, students work with a faculty
adviser on a research project of their choice, producing an impressive thesis which they
defend before a faculty committee. Successful completion of the honors thesis graduates a
student with “Honors In” the Department of History.
Students Writing Honors Theses/Undergraduate Theses
Zachary Berger
Robert Britz
Nathaniel Brose
Jana St. Eve
Emma McIntyre
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Adviser: Jonathan Sperber
Adviser: Linda Reeder
Adviser: Mark Carroll
Adviser: Mark Carroll
Adviser: Keona Ervin
Honors thesis (Fall 2014)
Undergraduate Thesis (Fall 2014)
Honors Thesis (Spring 2015)
Honors thesis (Spring 2015)
Honors thesis (Spring 2015)
Honors/Undergraduate Theses Descriptions
_ Nathaniel Brose
Adviser: Mark Carroll
Beginning in the early seventeenth century, two distinct cultures developed in the
Massachusetts and Virginia colonies. Much more than historians have recognized, British
law and social arrangements influenced the development of these early colonies in their
first two decades of existence through the instrumentality of evolving charters and legal
codes. The British monarchy employed corporate charters to create joint stock companies
whose organizers sought to settle “undeveloped” land situated on the eastern seaboard of
the present-day United States. Colonial charters shaped the balance of political power
between the colonies and the mother country and socioeconomic and political development within each colony. The first Virginia Charter, issued in 1606, protected and
demarcated land and created a means for land ownership, as did the 1629 Massachusetts
Bay charter. Also fundamentally influencing the divergent socioeconomic, cultural, and
political development of the Virginia and Massachusetts colonies were various legal codes
that their respective corporate company charters authorized and facilitated, including
Dale’s Code (1611) and the Massachusetts Laws and Liberties (1648).
_ Emma McIntyre
Adviser: Keona Ervin
The title of my thesis is “An Old ‘ERA’ in a New Decade: Women’s Organizations and the
Campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment in St. Louis, 1972-1980”
This thesis explores the campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment in St. Louis. It
considers how St. Louis functioned as a microcosm for national trends in the women’s
movement and the New Right in the 1970s, and examines the ERA from a grassroots perspective, by focusing on three local women’s organizations: the National Organization for
Women, the League of Women Voters, and STOP-ERA. Extensive use of manuscript
collections and interviews allows for an exploration of the convergence of industrial decline in major cities and competing factions of feminism and antifeminism, as well as the
rise of the New Right locally.
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Undergraduate History Society
The Undergraduate History Society is an association for those students interested in history.
The group sponsors faculty lectures, career-related events, conducts fund-raising activities
and social events involving faculty, undergraduates, and graduate students.
2014-2015 Society Officers
President - Conor Fagan
Vice-President - Andrea Provance
Treasurer - Brett Reynolds
Faculty Adviser - Assoc. Prof. Linda Reeder
Phi Alpha Theta
Originally established at the Univeristy of Arkansas in 1921 and in our department in 1984, Phi Alpha Theta is an American honor society for undergraduate
and graduate students and professors of history. Its mission is to promote the
study of history through the encouragement of research, good teaching,
publication and the exchange of learning and ideas among historians. This year,
the department is pleased to induct five new members into the Society:
Steven M. Dotson
Conor M. Fagan
Jennifer D. Perritt
Joshua Stanley Sultan
Andrew Wisniewsky
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History Department Internships
The Department of History offers students the opportunity to gain valuable work experience
while earning academic credit. Working in conjunction with our Director of Undergraduate
Advising and Curriculum, Jenny Morton, students can choose from a number of off-campus
sites where they learn to work independently on a chosen project under a site supervisor:
University of Missouri Archives, National History Day, State Historical Society of Missouri,
Missouri State Archives, Boone County Historical Society, The Missouri State Museum, the
Museum of Missouri Military History, the Riverview Cemetery, and the Missouri Department
of Transportation.
Independently arranged internships are also a possibility for interested students.
State Historical Society
of Missouri
National History Day
http://whmc.umsystem.edu/nhd/nhdmain.html
http://www.umsystem.edu/shs/index.shtm
The National History Day competition in Missouri
Founded in 1898, the State
encourages 6th through 12th grade students to conduct
Historical Society of Missouri is the extensive research and to explore historical subjects
preeminent research facility for the study of the Show related to an annual theme.
Me State’s heritage.
Archives/Manuscripts Program
Supervisor: Laura Jolley
Intern:
Fall 2014 - Brian Moreno
Oral History Program
Supervisor: Jeff Corrigan
Supervisor: Maggie Mayhan
Interns:
Fall 2014 - Delan Ellington, Colin Iglehart, Andrea Provance
Spring 2015 - Andrew Toepfer
Interns:
Fall 2014 - Bishop Davidson, Kelly Scanlon
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The Museum of
Missouri Military
History
http://visitjeffersoncity.com/2009/08/
museum-of-missouri-military-history
The Missouri Military History Museum in Jefferson City
provides student interns the opportunity to be involved
in a variety of internship projects both during the
academic year and the summer. The current focus of
the internship is examining how the Missouri National Guard has served both the residents of the state of
Missouri and the larger U.S. population from the late
1800’s to the
present day. Included are activities of the Guard in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Kuwait, Guantanamo Bay, and Kosovo.
Supervisor: Charles Machon
Interns:
Fall 2014 - Joseph McWard
Spring 2015 - Allyson Ayers, Gunnar Dulle, Brandon Engelbach
Missouri State
Archives
http://www.sos.mo.gov/archives/
The Missouri State Archives in Jefferson City is
the repository for state records of historical value.
Interns with the Archives have the opportunity to:
• Develop an expertise in accessing, researching,
and analyzing primary documents such as
birth, death, and marriage certificates; probate,
cemetery, and war records.
• Be part of the electoral process–during elections assist the office of the Secretary of State.
Supervisor: Shelly Croteau
Interns:
Fall 2014 - Tighe McCandless
Spring 2015 - Hannah Aldrich
Boone County Historical Society
http://www.boonecountyhistoricalmuseum.org
University of
Missouri
Archives
http://muarchives.missouri.edu/
The Archives was established to collect and preserve
the historical records of the University of Missouri.
Interns have an opportunity to participate in any
number of opportunities depending upon the current
needs/projects under way.
Supervisor: Gary Cox
Intern:
Spring 2015 - Mziyanda Noruka
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The Boone County Historical
Museum and Maplewood Home
encompass the history and culture
of Columbia and Boone County, Missouri from
prehistory to the present. Interns can expect to
receive experience in working in a small museum
setting, an historic home, and interacting with
both amateur and professional researchers.
Supervisor: Chris Campbell
Interns:
Fall 2014 - Abby Meyer, Lindsey Roberts, Daniel Spink
2014-2015 Kinder Society of Fellows
https://democracy.missouri.edu/about/2015-kinder-scholars
The Society of Fellows is a competitive, all-expense-paid fellowship program exclusive to
undergraduate students enrolled at the University of Missouri. The Society provides a select
group of undergraduate students with the opportunity to engage in a year-long intellectual
exploration of the historical and philosophical foundations of American Constitutional
Democracy. The following are history students who are in the Society this year.
Nathaniel Brose
Lauren Herbig
Bishop Davidson
John (Jack) Meyerhoff
Samuel Dicke
Caroline Spalding
Conor Fagan
2014-2015 Kinder Scholars D. C. Program
https://democracy.missouri.edu/programs/undergraduate/kinder-scholars
The Kinder Scholars Program affords a unique opportunity, exclusive to University of
Missouri undergraqduate students, to combine coursework on the foundations of American
constitutional democracy with a related ten-week internship in the nation’s capital. This
combination of coursework and an academically-based internship allows students to gain a
thorough understanding of how America’s constitutional democracy functions. The program
also offers significant financial assistance to all participants, providing each member of the
class of Kinder Scholars with housing as well as a $1,000 stipend to help defray living
expenses and other costs associated with the program.
History students who are part of the inaugural D. C. Program are:
Lauren Herbig Calvin Lynch
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Graduate Program 2014-2015
The Department of History has a robust graduate program and a faculty who are committed to excellence in
graduate education. Lecture courses, seminars and directed research projects are available on the histories of
western Europe, Russia, Great Britain, Africa, East Asia, Latin America and the United States. While students
are expected to get specialized training in the fields of their choice, they are also urged to develop a broad
historical background.
The following masters students are projected to receive their MA degrees at the
Graduate School’s Spring 2015 commencement ceremony
Stanley Maxson
Adviser: LeeAnn Whites
Colton Ochsner
Adviser: Jonathan Sperber
Svyatoslav Puyat
Adviser: Lois Huneycutt
J. Matthew Ward
Adviser: LeeAnn Whites
MU Distinguished Master’s Thesis Award 2015
Jenna Rice for her thesis titled, “Just Rage’: Causes of the Rise in Violence in the
Eastern Campaigns of Alexander the Great”
Adviser: Ian Worthington
Graduate School Doctoral Fellows
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Christopher Deutsch
Adviser: Catherine Rymph
Travis Eakin
Adviser: Jonathan Sperber
Danielle Griego
Adviser: Lois Huneycutt
Luke Schleif
Adviser: John Wigger
Graduate School MA Fellow
J. Matthew Ward
Adviser: LeeAnn Whites
The following PhD students passed their comprehensive exams/advanced to
candidacy in Fall 2014 and early Spring 2015
Brandon Flint
Adviser: John Wigger
Craig Forrest
Adviser: Catherine Rymph
Katelynn Robinson
Adviser: A. Mark Smith
Danielle Griego
Adviser: Lois Huneycutt
Luke Schleif
Adviser: John Wigger
Sean Rost
Adviser: Catherine Rymph
The following doctoral students are projected to receive PhD degrees
at the Graduate School’s Spring 2015 commencement ceremony
Autumn Dolan
Adviser: Lois Huneycutt
Jay Ward
Adviser: Robert Collins
Cassandra Yacovazzi
Adviser: John Wigger
Superior Graduate Student Award
(Awarded by the Graduate Student Association)
Stanleyt Maxson
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The research of the following masters and doctoral students was recognized with
awards, grants, fellowships, or prizes.
Departmental Dissertation Fellows (2015-16)
Hunter Hampton
Adviser: John Wigger
Todd Morman
Adviser: Mark Carroll
Josh Nudell Adviser: Ian Worthington
Jenny Wiard
Adviser: John Wigger
State Historical Society’s James Goodrich Fellow (2014-15)
Todd Barnett
Adviser: Wilma King
Kinder Dissertation Fellowships
The Kinder Forum on Constitutional Democracy is a collaborative project between the Political Science and History Departments and is supported by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching
America’s Founding Principles and History. The mission of the Forum is to promote teaching
and scholarship on the American constitutional and democratic traditions, broadly construed to
include both the origins of those traditions and their applications and reinterpretations in later
periods and around the world.
2014-2015
Jenny Wiard
Jonathan Root Cassie Yaccovazzi
Adviser: John Wigger Adviser: John Wigger Adviser: John Wigger
2015-2016
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Chris Deutsch
Adviser: Catherine Rymph
Darin Tuck
Adviser: John Wigger
Summer Travel Grant Recipients
Through a variety of endowments, the department is able to provide funding for graduate
students, enabling them to conduct research during the summer months. The students listed
below are recipients of travel grants from one or more of the following funds:
Charles & Jean Nauert Travel Fund, Department of History Summer Travel Grant, Emmet
Larkin Fellowship, and the William Wilcher Endowment Travel Grant.
Todd Barnett
Adviser: Wilma King
B. Taylor Craft
Adviser: Lois Huneycutt
Travis Eakin
Adviser: Jonathan Sperber
Brandon Flint
Adviser: John Wigger
Craig Forrest
Adviser: Catherine Rymph
Connor Lewis
Adviser: Kerby Miller
Sarah Lirley-McCune Sean Rost
Adviser: LeeAnn Whites
Adviser: Catherine Rymph
Jenna Rice
Adviser: Ian Worthington
Luke Schleif
Adviser: John Wigger
Seth Torpin
Adviser: Kerby Miller
William Wilcher Conference Fellows
These students were provided funds from the Wilcher Endowment to travel
to professional conferences.
Heather McRae
Fall 2014
Katie Sheffield
Niña Verbanaz
B. Taylor Craft
Spring 2015
Sarah Lirley-McCune
Seth Torpin
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Graduate Technology Fellow
These fellowships are to enable highly-qualified graduate students to develop online
courses that they will teach in the semester after completion of the fellowship.
2015-2016 Fellows
Sarah Lirley-McCune
Luke Schleif
Adviser: LeeAnn Whites
Adviser: John Wigger
Professional Activities and Publications
Our masters and PhD students participate as fully as possible in academia.
Listed here are some of their activities.
_ Todd Barnett – King
• Friends of the University of Wisconsin Libraries Research Grant, Madison, Wisconsin
_ Taylor Craft - Huneycutt
Papers:
• “A Brothel of Blaspheming Jews: Gallia and the Revolt against King Wamba,” 32nd
Annual Illinois Medieval Association Conference (February 2015)
• “Gallia, Nurse of Treachery: The Jews of Narbonne in the Revolt against King Wamba,”
58th Annual Missouri Valley History Conference (March 2015)
_ Chris Deutsch – Rymph
• Moody Research Grant from the LBJ Foundation Research Grant from the Harry S.
Truman ​​Library Institute
Papers:
• “Finding Food’s Nature: Industrial Meat Production at the Feedlot,”Agricultural History
Society, Provo Utah, 2014
_ Autumn Dolan – Huneycutt
• Jim Falls Prize for Best Graduate Paper for her paper titled “’Rise and Take Them from
the Altar’: Women’s Devotional Exchanges at the Translation of Roman Relics in
Carolingian Francia,” annual meeting of the Mid-America Medieval Association,
March 2015
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_ Brandon Flint – Wigger
• Torrey M. Johnson, Sr. Evangelism Research grant from the Billy Graham Center
Archives, Wheaton College
_ Joe Genens – Huneycutt
Paper:
• “Memory and the Battle of Hastings: The Vilification of Harold and the Norman Feigned
Retreat,” 32nd Annual Illinois Medieval Association Conference, February 2015,
St. Louis, Missouri
_ Hunter Hampton – Wigger
• Visiting Scholar at the M. J. Murdoch Charitable Trust, summer 2015
• 2014-2015 Stephens College Distinguished Teaching Award nominee
• 2014-2015 Mizzou ROAR Professor of the Year nominee
_ Connor Lewis – Miller
• Society for the Study of Labour History Post-Graduate £500 bursary summer research
travel
_ Sarah Lirley-McCune – Whites
• William E. Foley Research Fellowship, Missouri State Archives
Papers:
• “‘I Know No Reason for her Act’”: Mothers Who Committed Suicide, St. Louis, Missouri,
1875 to 1900,” Southern Association of Women Historians Conference, Charleston, SC
(June 2015)
• “‘I Know No Reason for her Act’”: Mothers Who Committed Suicide, St. Louis, Missouri,
1875 to 1900.” Missouri Conference on History,Chesterfield, Missouri (March 2015)
Publication:
• “Death of a Prostitute: Suicide and Respectability in St. Louis, 1875 to 1900,” Missouri
Historical Review, January 2015
Teaching: • Technology Fellow Summer and Fall 2015 for History 1200 online
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_ Colton Ochsner - Sperber
• “Dr. Carl du Prel’s ‘Transcendental Self-Prescription’: Metaphysical Darwinism & its
Emanations in fin-de-siècle Germany, The Grosteque, the Absurd, and the Deviant:
Transforming the Bounds of the Normative - 23rd Annual Graduate Student Symposium,
Departmentof Germainc Languages and Literatures, Washing University, St. Louis, MO
(March, 2014)
Book Review
• Steve Choe, “Afterlives: Allegories of Film and Mortality in Early Weimar Germany”
(Berkeley, CA: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014)” Focus on German Studies 22, 2015.
,
_ Cvhris Paolella - Huneycutt
Papers:
• “Leniency Towards the Enslaved in the Lombard Laws,” Illinois Medieval Association
Conference, St. Louis, Missouri (February, 2015)
_ Jenna Rice – Worthington
• Classical Association of the Middle West and South, Honorable Mention for her paper
titled: “Why Was Alexander’s India Campaign so Bloody?”
_ Josh Rice - Wigger
• Assistant Professor of History, Department of History, Lone Star College, Tomball, Texas
Book Review:
• “Cherokee Sister: The Collected Writings of Catharine Brown, 1818-1823,” ed. Theresa
Strouth Gaul, Great Plains Quarterly 35, no. 1 (Winter 2015), 120-121.
Grants and Awards:
• Memorial American History Award, National Society of the Colonial Dames, 2014.
*$5,000 honorarium
• Humane Studies Fellowship, Institute for Humane Studies, 2014-2015.
*$2,000 honorarium
• Summer Institute Participant, Jack Miller Center, 2014. *$1,000 honorarium
• Travel Grant, Institute for Humane Studies, 2014.
• Dissertation Fellowship, University of Missouri, Fall 2014
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Josh Rice, con’t.
Invited Talk
• “Laying Tracks: The War of 1812 and the Divergence of the United States and Canada,” Captain Thomas Fristoe Chapter of the National Society United States Daughters of 1812, Columbia, MO, March 2014
Presentations:
Give to Caesar What Is Caesar’s”: Finding Church and State in Antebellum Indian
Missions” Institute for Humane Studies Annual Academic Research Colloquium,
Washington D.C., November 2014.
• ”Gospel Bonds, Gospel Boundaries: Missionaries Grapple with Class, Race, and Cultural Difference on the Antebellum Prairie,” 36th Annual Meeting of the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic, Philadelphia, PA, July 2014.
• “
_ Root, Jonathan - Wigger
Paper:
• “I Have Become All Things to All People” at the 2014 meeting of the Conference on Faith and History at Pepperdine University
Article:
• “Pounds Off for Jesus: Oral Roberts University and the Fat Body, 1976-1978,”
published in Fat Studies
_ Sean Rost – Rymph
• Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism travel grant
Luke Schleif – Wigger
• IHS Research Grant
• Evangelism Research Grant from the Billy Graham Center Archives at Wheaton College
• Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives Research Grant
_ Katherine Sheffield - Huneycutt
Paper:
• “Henry I, Robert Curthose, Orderic Vitalis, and the Use of Reputation Management as a
Tool in the Conflict over Normandy in 1100-1106” at the Western Society for French
History Conference, San Antonio, Texas
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_ Seth Torpin – Miller
• Emmet Larkin Fellowship from the American Conference for Irish Studies
Book Reviews:
• Niall Ó Ciosáin, Ireland in Official Print Culture 1800-1850: A New Reading of the
Poor Inquiry. Irish Studies Review
• Daragh Curran, The Protestant Community in Ulster, 1825-45: A Society in Transition.
Irish Studies Review
Papers:
• ‘Antrim under the Whigs: Law, Order, and Historiography,’ Midwestern Regional
Meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies, Rochester, Michigan
_ Darin Tuck – Wigger
• Kinder Dissertation Fellowship, Kinder Forum on Constitutional Democracy
Papers:
• “John Brown” in War and Religion: An Encyclopedia of Faith and
Conflict
• “Blessed are the Peacemakers: Religion, Manhood, and
Nonviolence During the American Civil War,” Conference on Faith and History, Malibu,
California, October 2014
_ Colby Turberville – Huneycutt
• Best Paper Award at the Phi Alpha Theta Regional Conference for his paper titled “Carolingian Strategies for Solidarity and Empire: Pepin the Younger to Louis the Pious,”
Omaha, Nebraska, March 2015
_ Jenny Wiard – Wigger
• Department of History Dissertation Fellowship
• Kinder Dissertation Fellowship, Forum on Constitutional Democracy
Papers:
• “’Sunday in America’: Billy Sunday and the Participatory Tradition in American Civic
and Religious Life,” research presentation for the Forum
on Constitutional Democracy
• “Outside the Glory Barn: Billy Sunday’s Revival Assistants, Their Ministries, and Urban
Evangelism in Progressive America,” Malibu, California
• “Make Way for Billy Sunday: Laying the Groundwork for Sunday’s Urban Revivals,”
Wichita, Kansas
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_ Cassie Yacovazzi – Wigger
• Dissertation Defense:
“‘So Many Foolish Virgins’: Nuns and Anti-Catholicism from Maria Monk to the
Know-Nothings,” December 2014
• Kinder Forum on Constitutional Democracy Dissertation Fellowship
• Forum on Constitutional Democracy Travel Award, Summer 2014
• SHEAR (Society for Historians of the Early American Republic) Travel Award, July 2014
• John D. Bies International Travel Scholarship, Summer 2014
Papers:
• “‘Beware of Foreign Influence’: Anti-Catholicism and Religious Liberty in Early
America,” Columbia, Missouri
• “No Bibles Allowed: Perspectives on Catholic Approaches to Scripture in Nineteenth-Century Convent Narratives,” Conference on Faith and History, September 2014
• “Our Country, Our Women: The Influence of Anti-Convent Propaganda on the Massachusetts Know-Nothing Party,” SHEAR Annual Meeting, July 2014
• “From the Wilderness to the Cloister: Gender, Culture, and Civilization in Indian and
Convent Captivity Narratives,” Popular/American Culture Association Conference,
February 2014
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Thank you to the Department of History staff, Patty Eggleston, Melinda Lockwood, Jenny Morton, Lynn
Summers, and Nancy Taube for their on-going cooperation and assistance. Thank you to Lynn for the
event coordination, Nancy for overseeing the details our graduate program, Melinda for the brochure and
to Jenny Morton, Director of Undergraduate Advising and Curriculum for
coordination of the undergraduate program.
MU is an equal opportunity institution
Desktop/Dept. of History Files/Brochures/Undergraduate/Student Recogniton/2015/Program
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