Schedule of Events
History Department Poster Session, Dinner, and Phi Alpha Theta
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Ullman Commons 101
The first hour will be a student poster session highlighting the very best work of the year and conference presentations. It will be followed by dinner and the Honors Society Induction. The first hour is open to the public. The 6:00 dinner is invitation only.
Student Abstracts
New EMpire, Same Excuses
Student(s):
Joseph Bizjack
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves
Addiction in Empire
In the case of alcohol, the French used it for trade with the Native American tribes in order to create a dependent relationship and exploit the fur trade. The American colonists also used alcohol for trade in their expeditions through the interior of North America. In another case, opium became a major tool of the British and other European nations in China taking advantage of the Chinese for economic gain using an addictive substance. The examination of imperial documents, including letters, treaties and speeches from the French, British, and early Americans, highlights the fact the imperial representatives knew the addictive substances made the indigenous people more able to be manipulated, while documents from the indigenous people also demonstrate this awareness and their efforts to limit the exchange.
Student(s):
Nolan Dellibovi
Faculty Mentor:
Samuel Claussen
Addiction in Empire
In the case of alcohol, the French used it for trade with the Native American tribes in order to create a dependent relationship and exploit the fur trade. The American colonists also used alcohol for trade in their expeditions through the interior of North America. In another case, opium became a major tool of the British and other European nations in China taking advantage of the Chinese for economic gain using an addictive substance. The examination of imperial documents, including letters, treaties and speeches from the French, British, and early Americans, highlights the fact the imperial representatives knew the addictive substances made the indigenous people more able to be manipulated, while documents from the indigenous people also demonstrate this awareness and their efforts to limit the exchange.
Student(s):
Nolan Dellibovi
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Samuel Claussen
Perceptions of Islam in Early America
Student(s):
Nicholas Dilley
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves
The Forgotten History of New Mexico and the Tlaxcalans
Student(s):
Stefan Henning
Faculty Mentor:
Professor Michaela Reaves
Life Behind the Iron Curtain
Life Behind the Iron Curtain
Oral histories describe experiences that a survey of history may gloss over; oral histories allow others to see the events from the personal, rather than the political viewpoint. This honors project is an extension of the Cold War class and asks the question of personal experiences of “war” between 1945 and 1991. We are conducting this project to gain insight into the experiences of those living under Communist jurisdiction during the Cold War. Over the course of the semester a number of interviews we asked people from Korea to East Berlin, Ukraine to Vietnam, and Azerbaijan to Cuba about their experiences of the Cold War. The subject of this poster presentation is women behind the Iron Curtain in East Berlin and the Ukraine. So far, we have discovered that life during the Cold War in Soviet countries was dramatically different from life in the Western world. Those living under Communist rule did not have access to any outside information and were only aware of news and current events as told to them by the Communist party. Our preliminary thesis is that while people living in Western countries, such as the United States, were hyper-aware of the Cold War, those living on the Eastern side of the Iron Curtain did not know that there was a Cold War going on.
Student(s):
Anais Henson, Lee-el Asulin
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reaves
The Praying Indians and King Philip’s War: An Unsung Tale of Heroism in 17th Century New England
The purpose of this paper is to address the role of the Praying Indians in King Philip’s War and to bring attention to their combative abilities and strategic value. Primary sources such as New England court documents, John Eliot’s works, and testimonies from Major Gookin, Increase Mather, and other colonial officials were integrated into the narrative. Unfortunately, much of Native American history has been lost or was never physically recorded, and because of this, great care has been taken to ensure that their actions and voices were extracted from the colonial documents and presented in this paper in a manner that is both historically correct and respectful.
Student(s):
Shane Kroeber
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves
The effect of War and the Atomic bombs on Japanese Animation and Manga
Student(s):
Clara Lum
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reaves
The Barbary States from the Perspective of the Early American Press
Student(s):
Chase Reichenbach
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves
The Barbary States from the Perspective of the Early American Press
Student(s):
Chase Reichenbach
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves