Opportunity for Summer Backpacking Trip

BACKPACKING WITH A PURPOSE: 2019 APPLICATIONS NOW OPEN!

Discover the wider world and connect with change makers making a positive and lasting impact in their communities. Operation Groundswell is a non-profit organization that facilitates deeply immersive, educational, and volunteer experiences around the world. We dig into social justice issues while working in solidarity with local activists, non-profits, and communities. We want you to join us in our mission to create a more equitable, just, and sustainable world through travel. Apply by November 23rd! Financial assistance is available for all students on five- and six-week programs. 

 START YOUR JOURNEY AT

WWW.OPERATIONGROUNDSWELL.COM

Can’t travel in the summer? Operation Groundswell travels all year long!

Annual SDA Tamale Night, Tuesday 5:30pm!

This Tuesday night, Nov 6th, is our Annual History SDAs’ Tamale night, 5:30 p.m., in Leighton 204, the History lounge. Anyone who would like to know more about becoming a History major or minor and all current History majors and minors are welcome to come and enjoy tamales and other delights!

OCS Economics and European Studies in Cambridge with Pizza, Thursday, November 8th, 6 pm in Leighton 236

Applications are open for the Summer 2019 Cambridge OCS program! 

Come to meet participants in last year’s program on Thursday, November 8th, at 6 pm in  Leighton 236 for Pizza & Drinks!

About the Program:

The Economics and European Studies Program in Cambridge takes its participants from Brussels to Cambridge and Manchester via the battlefields of Flanders. The courses that are part of the program will examine Britain’s relationship to Europe and the European Union and the development of the British post-war economy. We will also read famous political economists, visit battlefields and memorial sites of the Great War and monuments of the Industrial Revolution. We are hoping to attract students interested in Economics, Political Science, Political Economy, History, and European Studies, but students of all disciplines are encouraged to apply. The program is open to rising sophomores, juniors and seniors.

Program components:

ECON 221: Contemporary British Economy (6 credits, fulfills requirement for the Economics Major)

This course focuses on the theoretical and policy debates in British economics since the 1930s and the development of the structure of the British economy and institutions during that period.

EUST 290: Studying Britain in Europe: from Great War to Brexit (2 credits, European Studies). The guided readings will prepare you for the trip over the during the Winter and Spring term prior to departure.

EUST 231: Britain in Europe: Brexit and its Aftermath  (4 credits, fulfills requirements for European Studies and Political Science)

This course will introduce students to the institutions of the European Union and of Britain through reading, discussion and on-site visits in Brussels and London. The institutions of European Union grew out of settlements between its original member states (without Britain) and in response to specific problems–the legacy of the world wars and of economic crises. It is with their fears of war and with their shared interpretations of the causes of war and crises that we must begin in order to understand Britain’s awkward tenure as a member of the EU.

EUST 232: The Great War in Poetry, History and Memory (3 credits, European Studies)

The memory of World War I looms large in the European Project. While memory of the conflict has done much to unite European elites around the idea of shared governance, it also continues to divide historians and the general public. Beginning with a tour of the battlefields of the Somme we will be reading some of the literature written by “trench poets” like Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon and Robert Graves alongside visits to the Imperial War museum in Manchester and to Orchard House in Grantchester, immortalized in Rupert Brook’s poem.

EUST 233: Capitalism and Crisis – Political Economy from Marx to Hayek (3 credits, fulfills requirements for European Studies and Political Science/Political Economy)

Britain was at the forefront of the Industrial Revolution during the eighteenth and nineteenth century. That rapid economic growth unleashed by free competition brought with it the constant threat of crisis was an insight developed by Marx and later Keynes. Britain was home to capitalism’s cheerleaders as well as to its most important critics. Its economic dominance was accompanied by a tradition of tolerance, of open public discussion and free academic enquiry that made London and Cambridge attractive to students of political economy from Europe and across the world. Readings from the most important representatives will be supplemented by visits to industrial sites and museums in Manchester.

Students participating in the program will be required to take a leave of absence during winter term of the 2019-20 year. In the past participants have used this opportunity to do internships in the US and abroad, furthered their knowledge of other languages among other exciting things.

Faculty Director: Paul Petzschmann

Prerequisites: Econ 110 and 111

For further information see the program website https://apps.carleton.edu/curricular/ocs/cambridge/2019/

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact OCS (Leighton 119, ocs@carleton.edu507-222-4332) or the faculty director, Paul Petzschmann, ppetzsch@carleton.edu

Winter Course Offering: Hist 216 History Beyond the Walls

What kind of country turns a president’s teeth into jewelry? Must we dismember to remember? America has always struggled with how to publicize the past; in this course we’ll cover the theory and the practice of that struggle, with a focus on museums (Enola Gay: yes or no?), collections (from skulls to placemats), and monuments (both celebrated and contested). And the 19th Amendment turns 100 in 2020, so for civic engagement we’ll go beyond Carleton’s walls and work with the League of Women Voters on how to commemorate the event.

Hist 216. MW 9:50-11:00, F 9:40-10:40 am, Lei 236. 6 credits.

SDA Office Hours

Hello History Enthusiasts!
Have questions/concerns about History courses? Considering a History major/minor? Or just wanna hang out with us? As registration starts tonight, stop by History SDA office hours and we would love to chat with you!
  • Monday (today) 7-8 pm @ 4th Libe East Wing (close to where Bill North usually sits)
  • Tuesday 12-1 pm @ History lounge
  • Tuesday 7.30-8.30 pm  @ 4th Libe East Wing (same spot)

PhD Program in History at CUNY Graduate Center

The History Department at the CUNY Graduate Center would like to invite undergraduate students to consider pursuing a Ph.D. at the City University of New York.  In addition to its eight distinguished central-line faculty members, the department features more than 60 professors from nine different colleges in the CUNY system, enabling them to offer broad coverage in American, European, Latin American, and Middle Eastern history. The Graduate Center is located in the heart of Manhattan, blocks away from the New York Public Library, and belongs to a consortium that enables students to take classes at Columbia, NYU, and other New York-area universities. We also offer very competitive fellowship packages to all incoming students, with additional opportunities for adjunct teaching. We strongly encourage students to contact faculty members who work in the area they’re interested in to see if CUNY is right for them. For more information on the program, including a list of faculty and recent courses taught, please visit their website: www.gc.cuny.edu/history.

Apocalypse & Imperialism: Racism, Colonialism & the Making of the US

“Apocalypse and Imperialism: Racism, Settler Colonialism and the Making of the United States”–A Conversation with Dr. Gerald Horne

Wednesday, October 17th, 2018
3:30 – 4:30 pm / Leighton 305

Leading scholar of African American history, Dr. Gerald Horne, discusses the Making of the United States with AFST Professor Charisse Burden-Stelly.

Sponsored by Africana Studies and the Class of ’57 Visiting Scholars for Interdisciplinary Studies at Carleton College gift fund

Carleton Connects: David Kelliher ’86 on Public Policy and the Past on October 16, 12pm-1pm

Join Carleton Connects as we host David Kelliher ’86, Director of Govt. Relations and Public Policy at the Minnesota Historical Society on October 16, 2018 from 12:00pm-1:00pm

David Kelliher '86, Dir. of Govt. Relations and Public Policy at MN Historical Society David Kelliher ’86 will discuss the intersection of Minnesota history and public policy through the work of the Minnesota Historical Society, featuring the state’s 2008 Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment.  In its first decade, the “Legacy Amendment” has funded nearly 2,300 historical and cultural grants worth nearly $50 million. Learn how Kelliher worked with a diverse coalition to bring about one of the state’s most far-reaching pieces of legislation.

Please click the link below to register for this event.

About the Speaker

A Carleton history major, David is the Director of Government Relations and Public Policy for the Minnesota Historical Society, which promotes the history of the state through education and preservation.

Register for this webinar

Sponsored by Carleton Connects. Contact: Christopher Brunelle, x5690

October 18: Fall Phi Beta Kappa Lecture – Prof William Chester Jordan

Carleton’s Fall term 2018 Phi Beta Kappa lecture is:
The Lorn Land: A Winter’s Tale, an exploration of the peasant experience of winter in the Middle Ages, to be presented by Professor William Chester Jordan, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History, Princeton University, Carleton’s Fall Term Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, on Thursday, October 18th, Gould Library Athenaeum, 7:00 pm
Refreshments will be served.
Free and open to the public – everyone is welcome!

October 8: Meet Melanie O’Brien,’99,Natl Native American Graves Protection grants

Interested in History, Public History and Policy, Historic Preservation, Museum Studies, Natural History, American Studies, Native American Religion and Studies?

You are invited to meet and talk with Melanie O’Brien, Carleton History ’99, Manager of the National Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA).

Melanie is responsible for carrying out the administrative responsibilities under NAGPRA on behalf of the Secretary of the Interior. She serves as the Designated Federal Officer to the NAGPRA Review Committee and is the awarding officer for NAGPRA grants. Throughout her career, Melanie has specialized in Federal-Indian law and policy, applying her master’s degree in public history from Loyola University Chicago to the work of the Federal government.

DATE:  Monday, Oct 8, 2018
TIME:  3:00-4:30 pm
LOCATION:  Carleton Alumni Guest House Library

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED!