Trump Archives - Clement and Linda McGillicuddy Humanities Center /mhc/tag/trump/ 91±¬ÁĎ Mon, 15 Nov 2021 18:34:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 Reaching Readers /mhc/event/reaching-readers/ /mhc/event/reaching-readers/#respond Thu, 02 Dec 2021 20:00:00 +0000 /mhc/?post_type=tribe_events&p=7056 Understanding how best to make a topic, subject or theme relevant to non-specialized audiences is a skill that takes years to master. This roundtable event brings three nationally recognized University […]

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Understanding how best to make a topic, subject or theme relevant to non-specialized audiences is a skill that takes years to master. This roundtable event brings three nationally recognized 91±¬ÁĎ scholars together to discuss the process of planning, researching, and composing their new books, and how they were able to gain the interest of the publishers who eventually supported and published their projects. The event will take place on December 2, 2021, at 3 p.m. ET in Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium in Barrows Hall, and .Ěý

Professor of Political Science Amy Fried’s new (co-authored) book, titled At War with Government: How Conservatives Weaponized Distrust from Goldwater to Trump, was published by Columbia University Press, Professor of English Margo Lukens’s new (co-authored) book, titled “Still They Remember Me” Penobscot Transformer Tales, Volume 1, was published by University of Massachusetts Press, and Professor Emeritus of Sociology Kyriacos Markides’s new book, titled The Accidental Immigrant: A Quest for Spirit in a Skeptical Age, was published by Hamilton Books. All three books appeared this year (2021), and all three authors employed tools drawn from the humanities – historical inquiry, thoughtful reflection, and understandings of perspective and connection – to develop their ideas and complete their projects.

The event is part of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s 2021-2022 Annual Symposium: “Humanities: Impact in Real Life.” 

 

PARTICIPANT BIOGRAPHIES:

Amy Fried is John Mitchell Nickerson Professor of Political Science at the 91±¬ÁĎ. She is the author of Muffled Echoes: Oliver North and the Politics of Public Opinion (Columbia, 1997) and Pathways to Polling: Crisis, Cooperation, and the Making of Public Opinion ProfessionsĚý(2012).

 is a scholar of Native American literature who has long collaborated with the Penobscot nation.Ěý She is a Professor of English at the 91±¬ÁĎ, and the former Director of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center.

Kyriacos Markides, Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the 91±¬ÁĎ, has written several books on Christian mysticism for academic publishers including Yale University Press, and trade publishers like Doubleday.

 

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/mhc/event/reaching-readers/feed/ 0 December 2, 2021 @ 3:00 pm December 2, 2021 @ 4:00 pm Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium
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Four Students Selected to Join McGillicuddy Humanities Center as Fellows in Fall 2021 /mhc/2021/04/26/four-students-selected-to-join-mcgillicuddy-humanities-center-as-fellows-in-fall-2021/ /mhc/2021/04/26/four-students-selected-to-join-mcgillicuddy-humanities-center-as-fellows-in-fall-2021/#respond Mon, 26 Apr 2021 20:25:05 +0000 /mhc/?p=6877 This fall the McGillicuddy Humanities Center (MHC) will welcome four new undergraduate research fellows for the academic year: Luke Miller, Sabrina Paetow, Stephanie Tillotson, and Heather Webb. This new cohort will join existing fellows Delaney Burns, Elizabeth Dalton, Grace Royle and Haley Santerre. Incoming fellow Luke Miller, a history major from Tewksbury, Massachusetts, will spend […]

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This fall the McGillicuddy Humanities Center (MHC) will welcome four new undergraduate research fellows for the academic year: Luke Miller, Sabrina Paetow, Stephanie Tillotson, and Heather Webb. This new cohort will join existing fellows Delaney Burns, Elizabeth Dalton, Grace Royle and Haley Santerre.

Incoming fellow Luke Miller, a history major from Tewksbury, Massachusetts, will spend the next academic year exploring, “How Government Policy Affects the Homeless Population In Maine: From Vietnam to Today.” Miller will study state and local policies and data on homelessness, and conduct interviews within the homeless population and those who serve them, to better understand how needs could be better addressed. While comparing data and policies from across the state, his research will focus on Bangor in particular. Miller will be advised by Dr. Brian Pitman from the Department of Sociology.

Sabrina Paetow, a Sociology major from Topsham, Maine, will spend her fellowship analyzing “Rhetoric in the Age of Trump: Presidential Discourse on the COVID-19 Pandemic,” which is tied to her Honors thesis of the same title. Paetow, who will be advised by Dr. Amy Fried from the Department of Political Science, hopes to understand how this particular public health crisis has been framed across the pandemic, and how Trump’s rhetoric affected public perception and discourse on the topic.

Also joining the new cohort will be Stephanie Tillotson from Cumberland Foreside, Maine, who is majoring in Spanish with a minor in Legal Studies. Tillotson is the first student from the Department of Modern Languages and Classics to be awarded a McGillicuddy Humanities Center Fellowship. For her proposed project, “Making Foreign Language Education Accessible through Spanish Animation,” she aims to create a plan and prototype for a mini series of animated, Spanish learning videos featuring the adventures of a dog named Moxie, inspired by her own dog. Tillotson’s research will be advised by Dr. Katie Quick from the Honors College.

Lastly, nursing student Heather Webb of Bangor, Maine, will be writing a series of interconnected personal reflective essays titled, “When Teacher Becomes Pupil: Writing My Way Through Career Transition.” Webb, who worked as an English teacher for many years, is making a career transition into the field of nursing. Her essays will explore the nature of teaching and learning through her experiences going back to school in an unfamiliar field. Nilda Cravens, MSN, RN, will be advising the project. Webb is the first nontraditional student, and first Nursing student, to be awarded a MHC student fellowship.

The MHC funds a rotating cohort of eight undergraduate fellows, providing $4,000 each per semester for two semesters to complete the research or creative projects of their choosing.Ěý In addition to honing their research skills and building their academic networks, fellows serve as humanities ambassadors to their peers, the campus, and beyond. Many past MHC Fellows have stayed on at 91±¬ÁĎ for graduate school.

Students interested in becoming a McGillicuddy Humanities Center undergraduate fellow have two deadlines to apply annually, on March 17 and October 17. Research and creative work of all types across the humanities will be considered, from academic papers and art gallery shows, to community workshops or films. More information, including application instructions, proposal guidelines, and a rubric, are all available at umaine.edu/mhc/research/for-students/undergraduate-fellowship/ or by contacting the MHC’s Humanities Specialist Karen Sieber at karen.sieber@maine.edu.

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