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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Defending The Call To Preach In Shirley Caesar’S Gospel Autobiography, Angela Nelson Jun 2023

Defending The Call To Preach In Shirley Caesar’S Gospel Autobiography, Angela Nelson

Popular Culture Faculty Publications

Shirley Caesar, a celebrated, multiple award-winning gospel singer and preacher, used and retold stories about three transformative spiritual experiences to build a case for defending her call to preach. These ritualistic spiritual events included chronicling her conversion, spirit baptism, and call experiences. In this discussion, I examine the contexts of Caesar’s familial and religious backgrounds, Christian Protestant preaching culture and gender, Caesar’s “parable” and “prolegomenon” of purpose, and Caesar’s defense of her call to preach. I conclude by exploring the ways in which, as an “outsider within,” Caesar’s “defense case story” negotiated and dissented from theological narratives about the place …


Fellowship Application Sample, Ryan Ebright Apr 2023

Fellowship Application Sample, Ryan Ebright

ICS Fellow Applications

No abstract provided.


Fellowship Application Sample, Angela Ahlgren Apr 2023

Fellowship Application Sample, Angela Ahlgren

ICS Fellow Applications

No abstract provided.


Fellowship Application Sample, Micheala Walsh Dr. Oct 2022

Fellowship Application Sample, Micheala Walsh Dr.

ICS Fellow Applications

No abstract provided.


Inequality, Living Standards And Growth: Two Centuries Of Economic Development In Mexico, Ingrid Bleynat, Amilcar Challú, Paul Segal Nov 2020

Inequality, Living Standards And Growth: Two Centuries Of Economic Development In Mexico, Ingrid Bleynat, Amilcar Challú, Paul Segal

History Faculty Publications

Historical wage and incomes data are informative both as normative measures of living standards, and as indicators of patterns of economic development. We show that, given limited historical data, median incomes are most appropriate for measuring welfare and inequality, while urban unskilled wages can be used to test dualist models of development. We present a new dataset including both series in Mexico from 1800 to 2015 and find that both have historically failed to keep up with aggregate growth: per worker GDP is now over eight times higher than in the nineteenth century, while unskilled urban real wages are only …


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2020, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2020

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2020, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Experiences Of Teaching In Transition: The Move Online, Spring 2020, Matt Schumann Jan 2020

Experiences Of Teaching In Transition: The Move Online, Spring 2020, Matt Schumann

History Faculty Publications

Anyone who experienced the transition to online course delivery in Spring 2020 probably had an opinion on it. Twenty-nine respondents completed this 20-minute survey on technical, emotional, pedagogical, and administrative aspects of the transition, including both faculty and students. The data gathered here offers an enduring testimony of their lived experience, and may inform a variety of pedagogical research.


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2019, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2019

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2019, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


An Economic Interpretation Of Rhode Island’S 1788 Referendum On The Constitution, Ruth Wallis Herndon, John E. Murray Jan 2019

An Economic Interpretation Of Rhode Island’S 1788 Referendum On The Constitution, Ruth Wallis Herndon, John E. Murray

History Faculty Publications

In their 1788 popular referendum, Rhode Island voters overwhelmingly rejected ratification of the Federal Constitution: 92 percent against and 8 percent for adoption. The town-by-town voter lists, correlated with tax and estate records, show that "yea" voters were significantly wealthier than “nay” voters. Available data also indicates that "yea" wealth was concentrated in personal estate rather than real estate. Both these findings support Charles Beard's original economic interpretation of the Constitution. Our detailed data provides new evidence about town-level voters, supplementing the usual data Beard’s supporters and critics have used from state ratifying conventions and the Philadelphia constitutional convention. We …


Exit, Voice, And Public Reason, Kevin Vallier Aug 2018

Exit, Voice, And Public Reason, Kevin Vallier

Philosophy Faculty Publications

Public reason liberals appeal to public deliberation to ensure that a legal order can be publicly justified to its citizens. I argue that this voice mechanism should be supplemented by exit mechanisms. By allowing citizens to exit legal orders they believe cannot be publicly justified, citizens can pressure states to change their laws. This exit pressure is sometimes more effective than deliberation. I explore federalism as an exit mechanism that can help public deliberation establish a publicly justified polity.


“We Need This Television Just Like Any Other American Citizen”: The Battle Over Western Tv Boosters, 1952-1961, James C. Foust May 2018

“We Need This Television Just Like Any Other American Citizen”: The Battle Over Western Tv Boosters, 1952-1961, James C. Foust

School of Media and Communication Faculty Publications

In the wake of the Federal Communication Commission's 1952 Sixth Report and Order, which established plans for a nationwide television system, it became clear that traditional station allocations could not provide service to many isolated mountainous regions. Thus enterprising tinkerers, appliance store operators, and others set up so-called booster stations to broadcast the signals of urban stations into isolated western towns. However, the FCC wanted the boosters shut down, contending that they threatened the overall television allocation plan and could potentially create dangerous interference. Booster operators and viewers who depended on them were able to enlist the help of Western …


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2018, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2018

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2018, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Bgsu’S Women’S, Gender, And Sexuality Studies: The Battle Against Power-Based Violence On Campus, Aimee Burns, Tarishi Verma Dec 2017

Bgsu’S Women’S, Gender, And Sexuality Studies: The Battle Against Power-Based Violence On Campus, Aimee Burns, Tarishi Verma

WS 6800/MC 6400 Women's Studies Archive Project

2018 marks the 40th anniversary of Bowling Green State University’s Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies program. As a part of a Humanistic Research Methods course, we conducted archival research to explore a variety of research questions that were concerned with the 40 year evolution of the program. Our research question: How has the program worked toward raising awareness and advocating against power-based violence. We utilized poetic inquiry, collage work, and performance art to complete this project.


Women Issues, Fatimah Alasiri Dec 2017

Women Issues, Fatimah Alasiri

WS 6800/MC 6400 Oral History Interview

Oral History Interview included the change, purpose, and population of women's studies program over time. Also, the role of gender in feminism, women movement, and liberal perspectives. Media representation of women and women rights


Ambigüedad Y Rebeldía En El Tono Económico De El Periquillo Sarniento, Amilcar Challú Oct 2017

Ambigüedad Y Rebeldía En El Tono Económico De El Periquillo Sarniento, Amilcar Challú

History Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2017, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2017

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2017, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Towards An Anthropometric History Of Latin America In The Second Half Of The Twentieth Century, Amílcar E. Challú, Sergio Silva-Castañeda Dec 2016

Towards An Anthropometric History Of Latin America In The Second Half Of The Twentieth Century, Amílcar E. Challú, Sergio Silva-Castañeda

History Faculty Publications

We examine the evolution of adult female heights in twelve Latin American countries during the second half of the twentieth century based on demographic health surveys and related surveys compiled from national and international organizations. Only countries with more than one survey were included, allowing us to cross-examine surveys and correct for biases. We first show that average height varies significantly according to location, from 148.3 cm in Guatemala to 158.8 cm in Haiti. The evolution of heights over these decades behaves like indicators of human development, showing a steady increase of 2.6 cm from the 1950s to the 1990s. …


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2016, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2016

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2016, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2015, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2015

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2015, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Mexico’S Real Wages In The Age Of The Great Divergence, 1730-1930, Amilcar Challú Mar 2015

Mexico’S Real Wages In The Age Of The Great Divergence, 1730-1930, Amilcar Challú

History Faculty Publications

This study builds the first internationally comparable index of real wages for Mexico City bridging the eighteenth and the early twentieth century. Real wages started out in relatively high international levels in the mid eighteenth century, but declined from the late 1770s on, with some partial and temporal rebounds after the 1810s. After the 1860s real wages recovered and eventually reached eighteenth-century levels in the early twentieth century. Real wages of Mexico City’s workers slid behind those of high-wage economies to converge with the lower fringes of middle-wage economies. The age of the global great divergence was Mexico’s own age …


Neither “Headache” Nor “Illness:” The False Narrative Of Syphilis And Its Origin In Europe, Michael W. Horton Jun 2014

Neither “Headache” Nor “Illness:” The False Narrative Of Syphilis And Its Origin In Europe, Michael W. Horton

HIST 4800 Early America in the Atlantic World (Herndon)

In this paper I argue that the master narrative of the origin of syphilis in Europe, known as the Columbian Theory does not hold up to historical review since it does not contain enough concrete evidence for we as historians to be comfortable with as the master narrative. To form my argument I use the writings of Girolamo Fracastoro, an Italian physician known for coining the term “syphilis,” as the basis when I review the journal of Christopher Columbus. I review his journal, which chronicles the first voyage to the Americas, to see if there is any connection between the …


New World Propaganda: Pigafetta's Journal, World Maps, And New European Ideologies, 1525-1556, Megan Sympson May 2014

New World Propaganda: Pigafetta's Journal, World Maps, And New European Ideologies, 1525-1556, Megan Sympson

HIST 4800 Early America in the Atlantic World (Herndon)

Once Europeans discovered the New World, cartographers of the time began to map the Americas based on either their own experiences or accounts of others who visited the new land. These maps did not simply serve as navigational tools, but also were used as decorative objects containing elements of propaganda intended to shape opinions of the New World in the Old. In this paper, I examine Antonio Pigafetta’s journal, documenting the voyage of Magellen in 1519-22, and the world maps created after his journal was published. Six world maps by Diogo Ribeiro, Jean Rotz, Guillaume Brouscon, Sebastian Cabot, Pierre Desceliers, …


Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2014, Sandra L. Faulkner Apr 2014

Women's, Gender, And Sexuality Studies Newsletter Spring 2014, Sandra L. Faulkner

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Decoration Day In The Mountains: Traditions Of Cemetery Decoration In The Southern Appalachians, Jack Santino Jan 2014

Decoration Day In The Mountains: Traditions Of Cemetery Decoration In The Southern Appalachians, Jack Santino

Popular Culture Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


"Maupassant And The Illusion Of Reality" In Rethinking The Real. Fiction, Art, And Theatre In The Time Of Emile Zola, Jennifer Wolter Jan 2014

"Maupassant And The Illusion Of Reality" In Rethinking The Real. Fiction, Art, And Theatre In The Time Of Emile Zola, Jennifer Wolter

French Faculty Publications

Maupassant et l’illusion de la réalité

Plusieurs influences sont décelables dans l’œuvre de Maupassant -- du naturalisme au fantastique, avec parfois des traits romantiques, classiques, même décadents, et plus importante encore, l’influence de Flaubert. Au début de sa carrière, Maupassant s’allie au naturalisme de Zola, comme le montre sa participation au groupe de Médan et sa nouvelle, ‘Boule de suif’. Mais il ne fait guère de distinction entre réalisme et naturalisme, parlant plutôt des “écoles de la vraisemblance”. Les chroniques de Maupassant présentent l’essentiel de sa philosophie littéraire, et son essai “Le Roman” révèle le noyau de son esthétique: “J’en …


Eng 3140: Fall 2013 Post-Colonial Literature: Course Description, Khani Begum Jan 2014

Eng 3140: Fall 2013 Post-Colonial Literature: Course Description, Khani Begum

Student Projects from Dr. Begum's Literature and Film Courses

A course description for Dr. Khani Begum's ENG 3140 Post-Colonial Literature course.


Eng 3140: The Post-Colonial Nature Of Disney: The Ruining Of A Childhood, Madilyn Herrholtz, Alicia Wodarski, Sarah Stamm, Ashley Shelton, Kelsey Montgomery Jan 2014

Eng 3140: The Post-Colonial Nature Of Disney: The Ruining Of A Childhood, Madilyn Herrholtz, Alicia Wodarski, Sarah Stamm, Ashley Shelton, Kelsey Montgomery

Student Projects from Dr. Begum's Literature and Film Courses

"Savages, savages!" scream the English colonizers at the Native Americans in the Disney film, Pocahontas. This quote exemplifies the postcolonial tensions that are present in several of Disney's movies. However, the characters in Disney movies tend to be romanticized. Thus, we judged that Disney's children's characters were the perfect basis for our Post-Colonial video. The princesses we chose to look at were Ariel (and Ursula), Jasmine, Pocahontas, Cinderella, and Rapunzel (with focus on Mother Gothel). Each of these princesses had their own cultures and were oppressed by a colonizer, either literally or figuratively. Yet, the classic Disney movies glossed over …


Eng 3140: The Colonization Of The Ipthins, Milan Bows, Michael Gercak, Thomas Hoffman, Allyson Parker Jan 2014

Eng 3140: The Colonization Of The Ipthins, Milan Bows, Michael Gercak, Thomas Hoffman, Allyson Parker

Student Projects from Dr. Begum's Literature and Film Courses

Over the course of the semester, we have read many texts that would have been useful one way or another in our film project. We selected five texts to help us develop the plot of our film: Zahra 's Paradise, Toward the African Revolution, Tulip in the Desert, Pyongyang, and Maskarade from Mixed Company. Combining the themes of these works with the traditional hopeful tones of classic Doctor Who episodes, we were able to blend them all together into one believable-though fictitious-universe. When the Doctor arrives to the planet the Humans have colonized, he instantly realizes that something is a …


Hist 4800 Course Syllabus, Spring 2014, Ruth Wallis Herndon Jan 2014

Hist 4800 Course Syllabus, Spring 2014, Ruth Wallis Herndon

HIST 4800 Early America in the Atlantic World (Herndon)

This is the course syllabus for HIST 4800.1001, Spring 2014. Students wrote papers that followed the guidelines presented in this syllabus.


“I Am Not Afraid Of The Gallows” : The Public Executions Of Six Pirates In Puritan New England, Mary Bogart Dec 2013

“I Am Not Afraid Of The Gallows” : The Public Executions Of Six Pirates In Puritan New England, Mary Bogart

HIST 4800 Boston (Herndon)

This research analyzes the trial and execution of six men accused of piracy, robbery, and murder in 1704, as it relates to the objectives of Puritan leaders. The entire trial and execution process was held in public for anyone to bare witness. Puritan magistrates oversaw the process while recording both in some detail to be later published to the public. I breakdown and critically analyze the story each of the three publications tells to further assess the motives of the Puritans of this era.

Through the analysis of the 1700s publications and previous research conduct by historians Masur, Cohen, Bosco, …