archive
Timothy Gilfoyle on "The Changing Forms of History"
Should history be a book discipline? What constitutes "acceptable scholarship" in history? Professor Timothy Gilfoyle considers the rich and diverse forms that historical scholarship take from books, digital media, and public history projects in his article "The Changing Forms of History" in April's edition of Perspectives on History, the AHA newsmagazine.
Voices of Chicago Women Activists
Celebrate Women's History Month with the Women & Leadership Archives and the Chicago Area Women's History Council. Come hear multimedia excerpts of oral histories by Columbia College honors students featuring Chicago women activists and leaders. The event will be held on Sunday, March 16th from 2:00pm-5:00pm on the 1st floor of Piper Hall.
What was Chrysler Village and how did it get its name?
Public History graduate students know and shared their work on a historic nomination for the neighborhood with Ask Geoffrey on WTTW the other night. LEARN MORE
Closing the Gap
Sarah Doherty (PhD '12) reflects on the importance of the Preparing Future Faculty Program in equipping her, and other minority doctoral students, with the skills necessary for a career in academia. LEARN MORE
Student Exhibition Explores Campus Activism in the 1980s
“Voices in Solidarity with Central America: Campus Activism in the 1980s” examines the varied ways Loyola students, faculty, and staff responded to U.S. government aid to Central America’s militaries during the civil wars in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala.
Created by undergraduates in Professor Dina Berger's Cold War in the Americas seminar (HIST 300), the exhibit is based upon original research from collections in the University Archives and focuses on campus organizations, classroom-related activities, and campus events to illustrate how Loyola’s campus was a place for intense debate and activism in the last decade of the Cold War.
The exhibition will be on display on the first floor of Cudahy Library. It officially opens on Thursday, December 5th, at 3 pm, and runs through March 9, 2014.
Check back in a few weeks for a story on the students who created the exhibition.