An Expert Contrasts the Movie “300” to Herodotus

On Thursday, Sept. 11, local classicist William Scott Proffitt visited UB to introduce the 2007 action movie 300 to students and faculty in the Bogomolny Room.  Proffitt made the screening special by discussing the original sources for our knowledge of the ancient Battle of Thermopylae.  He compared and contrasted the historical and archeological sources to the different scenes in the movie.  Then, the audience enjoyed a free screening of the film with fresh-popped popcorn, courtesy of the UB Students Events Board.

Leonidas

Jacques-Louis David’s painting of King Leonidas hangs in the Louvre, Paris (click to enlarge).

 

 

Dr. Hudgins’ New Book

Photography, World War I, and Gender History combine in Dr. Hudgins’ new book, out this month as an open access pdf here: http://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/handle/10023/5016.

The book, entitled, Hold Still, Madame: Wartime Gender and the Photography of Women in France during the Great War, uses army photographs, magazine illustrations, and postcards to discuss how women in France were represented during the First World War.  The volume is fully illustrated and free to all.

Next up for Dr. Hudgins will be a new book proposal on the broader topic of early photography and gender.

Rol 1917 ouvroir

Here a commercial photographer captured women and children on the steps of a workshop for unemployed women during World War I.  The image (1917) would be made available for use by the press.  BNF/Gallica.

Dr. Francesca Gamber Wins UB’s Fund for Excellence Grant

History adjunct faculty member Francesca Gamber just received news that her grant proposal to create a 2-year survey of African-American history courses in the Division of Legal, Ethical and Historical Studies has received funding for $10,000.  Gamber, who has taught African-American women’s history several times in the division, will begin this new cycle of courses in the fall of 2015.  The first two courses will present a general survey of African-American history, and the courses in the following academic year (2016-2017) will offer more culturally-oriented, upper-level courses.  All four of Dr. Gamber’s courses will be taught in the online format, in order to give UB students maximum flexibility.  But at the same time, she is planning several “real-world” opportunities for students, and hopes to collaborate with other history faculty in the division.  Dr. Hudgins, who assisted with the grant proposal, wishes to thank Dean Bryan and the Fund for Excellence Committee for making this exciting opportunity possible!

Interested in online history courses?  No need to wait for 2015.  Dr. Gamber is also teaching history online this fall for UB.  Look for her name in the course schedule for Fall 2014.

Frankie

Francesca Gamber also coordinates internships for students in the Baltimore City Public School system.  She may be reached at fgamber@ubalt.edu 

History Alum Receives Scholarships for Graduate School

History Major Tony J. Johnson (YGCAS 2013) has received Maryland Senatorial and Delegate scholarships to pursue his graduate studies in Public Administration.  Tony will start graduate school right here at UB in the fall, across the street in the College of Public Affairs.

Information for how to apply for a Senatorial or Delegate Scholarship is available online here.  Good luck with your studies, Tony!

History Alumna Profiled in the Baltimore Social Innovation Journal

Ms. Natasha Jones (UB class of 2011) gave a shout out to the UB History program in a recent magazine feature about her work in public history.  Jones, a digitization specialist for the Johns Hopkins University’s Sheridan Libraries, hopes to create an online database of information about Baltimore’s public art treasures.  Ultimately, she hopes that locals and visitors alike will be able to use their smartphones to enjoy public-art walking tours, discovering the history behind the murals, statues, monuments, and contemporary installation along the way. We’re always happy to hear from our history alumni, so let us know what you’ve been up to by emailing the program director, Nicole Hudgins, at nhudgins@ubalt.edu.

Why is there a statue of Martin Luther at Lake Montebello?

Dr. Hudgins’ Summer Session Students Discuss Modern Art at the BMA

Students in Professor Hudgins’ IDIS 301 World Cultures course headed to the Baltimore Museum of Art on Wednesday to enjoy a docent-led tour of the famous Cone Collection of Modern European art.  We discussed the aesthetic and historical connections between Cézanne, Matisse, Monet, and other French artists of the late 19th and early 20th century.  The BMA displays pictures by all of those artists, along with Picasso, Gauguin, Degas, and more.  The tour is part of Professor Hudgins’ course on France this summer, which focuses on history, art, literature, and food.

Baltimore_Museum_of_Art_entrance
The BMA is open Wed.-Sun. and is free to enter.

Monet-at-BMA

 

 

 

Dr. Thomas Carney Returns from his Research Trip to England

Professor Carney’s research on Irish immigration to Ohio led him to the archives in Birmingham, England, where many Irish migrants journeyed in the nineteenth century.  Dr. Carney has determined that some U.S.-bound immigrants stopped in England for work before continuing across the Atlantic.  He looked at all sorts of letters, ledgers, and census documents while in England in May.  The good news is that he finished the research he needed to do there for his next book.  The bad news is that he broke his ankle while away!  History students can send their greetings while he recovers to tcarney@ubalt.edu.

Below is a Belle Epoque advertisement for Cadbury chocolate — established and made in Birmingham.  Click to enlarge.

Cadbury's_Cocoa_advert_with_rower_1885

The History of Girls’ Ed in Baltimore

On May 15 one of our faculty members, Dr. Betsy Nix, presented her latest work at the spring Faculty Symposium in the LEHS division.  “Sweat Equity,” which will be a chapter in the forthcoming Baltimore Sports, examines the founding of Bryn Mawr School for Girls in the 1870s.   Challenging gender norms for the time, Bryn Mawr incorporated competitive athletics into the school curriculum, a century before Title IX promised equality for women in public education.  LEHS presents a faculty symposium every semester, to provide a forum for professors to discuss their latest research.

New Phi Alpha Theta Members Celebrate at this Spring’s Ceremony

On May 2, undergraduate students Kelsey Scanlon, Ann Zelenka, Christopher Finke, and Marshall Odell gathered in the Learning Commons lounge to undergo their induction into Phi Alpha Theta, the national history honors society.  Presided over by UB History Club faculty sponsor Nicole Hudgins, each of the students celebrated their achievement and received the certificate of their lifetime membership.  LEHS chair Dr. Fred Guy, faculty members Betsy Nix and Boram Yi, and a few family members joined them.  Dr. Hudgins addressed the group by reminding new members to embrace the joy of history and the humanities.  Congratulations, history and jurisprudence students!

Student Plans Internship at Baltimore’s Sports Legends Museum

Current history major Brian Jeffries told us that he has been in contact with the director of the Sports Legends Museum at Camden Yards, and that an internship for Fall of 2014 is in the works!

All history majors at UB can pursue an internship for credit in the History Program, once they have successfully completed the required HIST 295.  Contact Dr. Hudgins for details at nhudgins@ubalt.edu.