As the Gary Hess Lecture approaches and our speaker, Bill Allison, is a distinguished graduate of our program, we take the opportunity to share this post of our colleague Dr. Doug Forsyth about the department’s contributions to the field of Policy History —Amílcar E. Challú
By Kasandra Fager, BGSU History MA student, edited by Chloe S. Kozal
Imagine the best museum you have visited, whether that was a
Presidential Museum, a battlefield, or an art museum. Did it have
interactive exhibits, a planetarium, an easy-to-read narrative, or a
family-friendly atmosphere? Well, if nothing comes to mind, consider
Grand Rapids, Michigan as your next destination!
≈ Comments Off on “1972: From the End of the Vietnam War to the Beginning of Watergate”, Dr. Benjamin Greene’s presentation featured in Wapakoneta Daily News
As we reflect on 50 years since 1972, we contemplate how past events and historical figures impact our present history. Students of Dr. Greene will learn more about this influential period in the HIST 3334/3334H: The Vietnam War course in Fall 2022.
Chloe S. Kozal has been passionate about researching how civilians express their political views through art during tumultuous periods of history in Latin America. A continuation of her research and her article (Communication from Far: The Role of Subversive Mail Art During the Argentine Dirty War (1976-1983), this podcast investigates how Mexican artists and mail artists brought change and protest during the Mexican Dirty War.
Nicholas Hartzell- NPR Mexican Debt Crisis Talk
A podcast on the Mexican Debt Crisis in 1982. Listen on Spotify!
Connor Przysiecki- NAFTA, the Economy, and Mexico’s Public Heath Crisis
In Connor’s own words: ” This is my final project for a course I’m taking (Spring 2022) at Bowling Green State University, Modern Mexico. I’ve never done a project in this format. I’m open to civil conversations in the comments, if you’d like more context on a particular subject within this area of study. Enjoy!”
As a remembrance of our colleague Professor Emeritus Don Rowney, who recently passed away, we share below Dr. Doug Forsyth’s eulogy with minor edits for brevity. We thank Dr. Forsyth for sharing the text.
As
early as my on-campus job interview at Bowling Green, in spring 1996, it became
clear to me that Don Rowney was the faculty member at the university who was
most interested in having me as a colleague.
My wife, Mercedes, and I drove out to northwest Ohio in early summer of
1996, as I looked for a place to live.
Don and Susan invited us over for dinner, and I paid my first visit to
the Old West End Historical District in Toledo, where Don and Susan were
living, where Susan is still living, and where I would go on to live for
twenty-four years and counting. I still
remember vividly that dinner, on the porch behind Don and Susan’s house, and in
particular one detail. Don asked
Mercedes, who was and is a professor at Brown University in Providence, Rhode
Island, why she had accompanied me on the long drive out to the Midwest as I
looked for a place to live. ‘Do you
think I’m going to leave my husband back here, without making sure it’s a
decent place?’ she quipped. Don looked
at her with this peculiar expression of delight he sometimes had, when someone
said something unexpected, and in his view particularly amusing—it was the
first, but not the last time I saw that expression on his face. And that sealed it—he and Mercedes became
friends for life. Mercedes and I made life-long friends in the Old West End,
and in many cases they were already friends of Don and Susan. I think I owe not just the continuation of my
career to Don, but also a good deal of the happiness I’ve derived from living
in this part of the world, over the past quarter century.
This is a paper that was written by Kasandra Fager, a graduate student in the 2021-22 cohort and recipient of The Donna M. Nieman Award for Undergraduate Research Excellence in History. Fager recently published an article featuring some of the research in this paper in the NW Ohio History Journal.
When
you look around a city, what do you see? I am sure that you see buildings,
factories, streets, and homes like any other city or town in America. You would
also probably see parents rushing to and from work, grandparents running to the
grocery store, and children playing ball in the streets. These things are
normal and have been considered as such for centuries, but have you ever
stopped to consider how we got here and who or what came before us? In history
class, we learned how the wilderness and the Native Americans lived on this
land before the Europeans came and the rest is, as we say, history. Today, I
want to stop for a moment and consider how the land in Bowling Green, Ohio was affected
by the battle between Native Americans and Europeans to live on and
commercialize the land to better understand our nation’s environmental and
economic history.
≈ Comments Off on Dr. Nwauwa gives lecture entitled “Igbo Scholars and the Making of the New African Intellectual Tradition: Prof K. O. Dike in Perspective”
Dr. Apollos Nwauwa, Professor of History & Africana Studies at Bowling Green State University, gave a lecture with the Igbo Studies Association on Saturday, January 2. Read more about and view the lecture below:
The post-World War II period in Africa was accompanied by a new intellectual revolution in which a distinguished scholar of Igbo extraction, Professor Kenneth Onwuka Dike, was in the vanguard. The emergent transformation was most evident in African studies, especially in the realm of African historical consciousness, African historical thought, and African historical methodologies. This study explores not only the pioneering role of Professor Dike in inaugurating this new intellectual revolution but also in expanding the corollary frontiers that crystallized and augmented several African political and intellectual concepts of his time. Dike’s efforts stimulated a new intellectual consciousness that rescued African studies and African history from the colonialist, racist and patronizing tradition of his time.
This is part of an ongoing series of posts about the work of students in BGSU in public history. Joshua Dubbert is a graduate student in the M.A. in history. He studies 19th-century America, Victorian Culture, and the composer Stephen Foster. To learn more about our history programs, visit bgsu.edu/history.
I recently visited the Stephen Foster Memorial Museum in Pittsburgh, PA to do research for my Public History Capstone project, entitled Stephen Foster, at Home in the 19th Century. The project deals with 19th-century composer Stephen Collins Foster, author of some of the most famous songs in American history including “Oh! Susanna,” and “Camptown Races.” It will be available through an Omeka site that will be linked permanently on the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for American Music website. The central contribution of the project will be a synthesis of the conceptual and physical aspects of home relating to Foster, anchored in the early to mid-Victorian era. It will be the first study to examine Foster solely in relation to the Victorian idea of “home.”
Rob Carlock earned an MA in History and a Graduate Certificate in Public History from BGSU in May 2019. This fall, he will enter his second year in the PhD Program in History at George Mason University.
Bowling Green State University was my home for 6 years as I worked my way through my bachelor’s and master’s degrees in history. I then left Ohio to pursue a PhD in history at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, sadly leaving behind a support network and family I had built during my time there. It has certainly been a challenge, especially since my first year has been synchronous online learning due to COVID-19. Although I have yet to meet my peers and faculty in-person, I was able to connect with many of them and begin to forge new relationships. With my peers, my connection is definitely a sense of unity that we are tackling such a daunting task together; with the faculty, my connection is a sense of confidence and support as they encourage me to continue identifying and expanding on my interests.
Author: Brittany Von Kamp, recent graduate from the History M.A. program
When pursuing a publisher for
his book manuscript Beyond Truman: Robert H. Ferrell and Crafting the Past
(Rowman & Littlefield, 2020), author Dr. Douglas Dixon responded with a
laugh—that several editors rejected the book’s thrust, saying: “Nobody cares
about historians.” Dixon explained that this was a major hurdle in getting the
book to readers who, in fact, do care about the challenges faced by past masters
in doing history. What challenged
Ferrell, as the field evolved into the twenty-first century was postmodernism,
the New Left, and social and cultural history.
Though Dixon feels Ferrell is an important person to study, the book is
much more than merely a study of this important presidential, diplomatic, and
military historian, though his biography is central to it. Instead, the author
had to find a way to make Ferrell’s world larger than the historian himself, to
fit Ferrell into the larger historical narrative – a task that many historians
face as they write about their own research. In the end, Dixon says that “the
book is not just about Ferrell; it’s about the larger culture of history and doing
history,” particularly in the last half of the twentieth century to the present
day.