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Honours Programme Information Session – 18 February, 9am

The History Department will be hosting an Honours Programme Information Session on Monday, February 18 from 9 am to 10:30 am in ECH 201 (The Faculty Lounge).

Any students interested in learning more about the Honours Programme are welcome to attend. We’ll briefly introduce you to the characteristics of the programme and then review the senior seminars that will be offered in 2013-14. Faculty and current honours students will be on hand to answer any questions you might have.

Refreshments will be available.

For more information, contact the History Department’s Honours Director, Dr. Michael Dawson (mdawson@stu.ca).

“Civilizing Missions in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia” in paperback

 

Dr. Carey Watt’s co-edited book is now out in paperback!!

[From the publisher:]

Civilizing Missions in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia: From Improvement to Development highlights the complexities and contradictions of British and Indian civilizing missions in South Asia.

[It] demonstrates how the civilizing mission can serve as an analytical rubric with relevance to many themes in the colonial and postcolonial eras: economic development, state building, pacification, nationalism, cultural improvement, gender and generational relations, caste and untouchability, religion and missionaries, class relations, urbanization, NGOs, and civil society.

more…

Kimberley Maguire to present at the AUUHCC

Congratulations to Kimberley Maguire whose paper has been accepted by the selection committee of this year’s Atlantic University Undergraduate History and Classics Conference (AUUHCC).

Her paper’s working title is “‘New’ English Identity?: The Creation of a New English Identity Around the 2004 Commemoration of St. Croix Island and How it was Rejected by Passamaquoddy and Acadian Peoples.”

The AUUHCC will be held at UNB Fredericton from March 15 to 17, and Kimberley will present her work on March 16 at 3:30 in Carleton Hall 106.

More research recognition

More congratulations are in order for Dr. Karen Robert who has received a St. Thomas University Global and International Studies Initiative (GISI) Research Grant for her research project “Driving Fear: The Ford Falcon As Instrument and Icon of Argentina’s Cold War Terror: 1960-Present.”

Patrick Craig ’10 finds work at the Provincial Archives

Here is a happy message from a former student of ours:

“I graduated from STU with a double major in History and Political Science in 2010. After having been away for two years, I returned to campus for a four week work placement at the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick. Following my four weeks, I continued to volunteer a lot of my time there and was ultimately asked if I would participate in the creation of the Scottish Web Portal. In addition to that job, I also volunteer some time at the Records Centre in Industrial Park. This experience has ultimately helped me decide to move into the Archives/Records Management field.”

History faculty research recognised

CONGRATULATIONS to the five members of the History Department who were awarded Research Grants by the Senate Research Committee this year.

Dr. Robin Vose took the only Major Research Grant for his proposal “The Inquisitor’s Matrix II: A Survey of Inquisition Manuals in the British Library, London”

The General Research Grants went to the following research projects:

Dr. Rusty Bitterman for “Atlantic Connections: The Jonathan Worrell Family in Early 19th-Century PEI, Barbados, Britain, and France”

Dr. Michael Dawson for “The Economic, Social, and Cultural Significance of Jell-O”

Dr. Bonnie Huskins for “Citizen of the Atlantic: Using Life and Writings of Royal Engineer William Booth to Investigate the Relationship between ‘local’ and ‘transatlantic’ Communities in the Late 18th Century”

Dr. Janet Mullin for “Homes and Hells: Shifting spaces in middle-class gaming in nineteenth-century England, 1800-1850”

Do you wish to publish your paper in Astrolabe?

“The Saint Thomas University Society for History (STUSH) is looking for submissions to the Astrolabe, STU’s student produced history journal. Students are encouraged to send us their history papers that received a grade of A- or higher. Students from all years are encouraged to make a submission. Submissions can be sent to STUhistorysociety@gmail.com before December 20th, 2012.

A second call for papers will be made at the beginning of the winter term for students who had ungraded assignments from the fall term. We would ask that an electronic copy of the paper still be sent to STUhistorysociety@gmail.com by December 20th as a place holder.

We look forward to seeing the submissions!”

 

Atlantic University Undergraduate History and Classics Conference – Call for Papers

7th Annual Conference at the University of New Brunswick, Fredericton on March 15-17, 2013

Submission Deadline: Friday, January 11, 2013
Submit your abstract to: eliz@unb.ca

The organizers of the 2013 Atlantic University Undergraduate History and Classics Conference (AUUHCC) invite interested undergraduate students from Atlantic Canadian universities to submit presentation proposals for the upcoming 2013 conference. Both the History and Classics departments of the University of New Brunswick will be hosting this event.
We are accepting proposals for papers pertaining to the fields of history and classical studies to be presented this coming spring. Applicants from all fields are encouraged to submit historically minded abstracts. These can focus on aspects such as literature, society, politics, psychology, art, music, etc. The above list is not exhaustive and all topics dealing with the study of history are welcome, in accordance with the interdisciplinary tradition of the conference.
All interested applicants are asked to submit a 200-300 word abstract to eliz@unb.ca by Friday, January 11, 2013. Please indicate your need for audio/visual equipment if applicable. The organizers hope to respond by January 30 to allow presenters sufficient time to arrange transportation to Fredericton.

Course offered in Winter 2013

Annual History Lecture by Rick MacInnes-Rae

Lecture title: “Learn History Now, So You Won’t Have To During The War: How Understanding History Helps us in the Global Present”

 

Date: Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Time: 7:00 PM-9:00 PM
Location: Ted Daigle Auditorium – Edmund Casey Hall, Fredericton, NB, Canada

 

 

 

 

An award-winning Canadian journalist whose international reporting has taken him to more than 60 countries, some of which no longer exist and others he can’t believe still do exist, will deliver the annual history lecture at St. Thomas University.

Rick MacInnes-Rae believes that we should “Learn History Now, So You Won’t Have To During The War: How Understanding History Helps us in the Global Present.” The lecture will take place Tuesday, Oct. 16 at 7 pm at the Ted Daigle Auditorium in Edmund Casey Hall.

“In the lecture, I will touch on salmon (literally) and shellfire (literally) and the need to recognise the sullen blackhearts who cherry-pick history for their own base advantage,” said MacInnes-Rae, recently appointed CBC’s World Affairs Correspondent.

“MacInnes-Rae’s work in journalism embodies some of the diverse perspectives from everyday people all around the world,” said History Professor Brad Cross.

“As a seasoned foreign and war correspondent, he has witnessed first-hand some of the most compelling transformations of our times and grounded them in the context of local and global history. Those who attend MacInnis-Rae’s talk will get a great chance to see how our unique World History programme can help them understand present-day global issues.”

MacInnes-Rae was recruited by the CBC while still a student and he formally joined the corporation in 1977, after graduating with a journalism degree from Ryerson Polytechnical University. He then worked in Newfoundland, New Brunswick and Toronto before joining National Radio News. In 1984, he became a national reporter which included secondments to the Washington bureau. International assignments followed; the war in El Salvador, Noriega’s fall in Panama, Hurricanes Gilbert and Hugo, the San Francisco earthquake, unrest in Haiti.

In 1992, he won Best Investigative Report from the Canadian Association of Journalists, for a series on the growth of hate groups. He previously shared two medals at the New York Radio Awards. A year later, he was appointed London Correspondent and he was based in London from 1993 to 1999, but more than two solid years of it were spent out-of-country on assignment, much of it in zones of conflict.

For his reports from Lebanon, Iraq and Rwanda, he has won three citations from the Prix Bayeux, an international competition in France recognising war correspondents who “excel under perilous conditions.” Amnesty International also recognised his work in Africa with its radio award in 1997, and again in 1999 for coverage in Kosovo. In 2002 he was a finalist in Canadian Association of Journalists investigative awards for his Dispatches documentary Who Killed Father One-Speed September 5, 2001.

 

General Event: http://w3.stu.ca/stu/events/events_view.aspx?id=100836