Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 11 of 11

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Swinging Bridge - December 11, 2008, Alison Stratton Dec 2008

Swinging Bridge - December 11, 2008, Alison Stratton

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - November 20, 2008, Alison Stratton Nov 2008

Swinging Bridge - November 20, 2008, Alison Stratton

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - November 6, 2008, Alison Stratton Nov 2008

Swinging Bridge - November 6, 2008, Alison Stratton

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - October 23, 2008, Alison Stratton Oct 2008

Swinging Bridge - October 23, 2008, Alison Stratton

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - October 7, 2008, Alison Stratton Oct 2008

Swinging Bridge - October 7, 2008, Alison Stratton

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - May 7, 2008, Erin Schubert May 2008

Swinging Bridge - May 7, 2008, Erin Schubert

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - April 16, 2008, Erin Schubert Apr 2008

Swinging Bridge - April 16, 2008, Erin Schubert

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - April 2, 2008, Erin Schubert Apr 2008

Swinging Bridge - April 2, 2008, Erin Schubert

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - February 27, 2008, Erin Schubert Feb 2008

Swinging Bridge - February 27, 2008, Erin Schubert

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Swinging Bridge - February 13, 2008, Erin Schubert Feb 2008

Swinging Bridge - February 13, 2008, Erin Schubert

Student Newspapers & Magazines

No abstract provided.


Naming A Place Nicodemus, Rosamond C. Rodman Jan 2008

Naming A Place Nicodemus, Rosamond C. Rodman

Great Plains Quarterly

Nicodemus, one of the first all-black settlements in Kansas, and the sole remaining western town founded by and for African Americans at the end of Reconstruction, has received a good deal of scholarly attention. Yet one basic matter about it remains unclear: how the town came by its unusual name. Most scholars now think that the name of the town derives from a legendary slave rather than the biblical character.

This essay challenges that consensus, contending the name Nicodemus indeed refers to the biblical character, and in doing so exemplifies the way that the dominated disguise their speech, making it …