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UC History Blog

Department of History at the University of Cincinnati

The "Catholicism in Latin America Film Festival" brings together students, faculty, and administrators to consider the profound relationship between the Catholic Church and Latin American society, politics, and culture. A part of the University's celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month, the three films in the series will raise awareness of the religious foundations of Latin American culture and the continuing relevance of Catholicism in the drama of Latin American history.

Dates and times:

Monday, September 16th, 12:00-3:00 PM: "The Mission." This unforgettable 1986 drama addresses the savage enslavement of the South American Guaraní people by the Spanish and Portuguese crowns and the Guaraní's defense by Jesuit missionaries.  It won a Palm d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival and an Academy Award for best cinematography.  In 2007, the Church Times elected "The Mission" number one on its list of the top fifty religious films of all time.  The film stars Robert De Niro, Jeremy Irons, and a young Liam Neeson.


Tuesday, September 24th, 12:00-3:00 PM: "For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada."  Released in 2012, this film relates one of the most significant events of modern Mexican history: the Cristero Revolt of Catholic Christians against the anti-religious government of Plutarco Elias Calles.  Fought between 1926-1929, the revolt characterized the religious-secular tensions of the modern world, leaving some 90,000 dead on both sides and devastating the institutional presence of the Catholic Church in Mexico.  It stars Andy Garcia as General Enrique Gorostieta, the leader of the Catholic militias.



Wednesday, October 9th, 12:00-3:00 PM: "Romero."  This acclaimed 1989 film depicts the ministry of Archbishop Oscar Romero (d. 1980), who devoted the resources of his church to the poor in their desperate struggle against the repression and death squads of El Salvador's violent military regime.  Starring Raul Julia as Romero, the film drew attention to the disastrous ten-year civil war in El Salvador and to the martyrdom of Catholic priests and laity in defense of social justice.

All films will take place in TUC 417. Join UC in celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month and enjoy three great movies!
Wrote by UC History Department
Prof. Nikki Taylor



Professor Nikki Taylor of the History Department of the University of Cincinnati will be giving two talks this week.

Prof. Taylor will give College Hill's inaugural Ambassador Jesse Dwight Locker Lecture on Friday, July 26th at 7:30, in the auditorium of the College Hill Fundamental Academy at 1625 Cedar Avenue. For more information, please see the attached press release. Dr. Taylor will construct a picture of the early Black community in Cincinnati which developed from vulnerability in the 1820's to political self-respect and self-determination.


Dr. Taylor will also be speaking at the Sunday morning service at First Unitarian Church (corner of Linton St. and Reading Rd) in Avondale at 10 am. She will talk about her new book: "America's First Black Socialist: The Radical Life of Peter H. Clark." Clark was an abolitionist, political activist, writer, publisher, and founder and principal of the first Cincinnati public school for African Americans. He was also the first African American member of First Unitarian Church (1868) and research on Clark done by a long-time member contributed to Dr. Taylor's work.
Wrote by UC History Department

Mae Ngai

Mae Ngai, Lung Family Professor of Asian American Studies and Professor of History at Columbia University, is the History Department's Taft Departmental Lecturer for the 2013-14 academic year. Her visit is being co-sponsored by the Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights in the College of Law. Her talks will take place on Wednesday and Thursday afternoons 17-18 October 2013. Time and place to be announced. 

Professor Ngai is the author of award winning Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America (2004) and The Lucky Ones: One Family and the Extraordinary Invention of Chinese America (2010). Her current work about which she will speak when she visits, titled Yellow and Gold: The Chinese Mining Diaspora, 1848-1908, is a study of Chinese gold miners and racial politics in nineteenth century California, the British colony of Victoria in Australia, and the South African Transvaal. Before becoming a historian, she was a labor union organizer and educator in New York City, working for District 65-UAW and the Consortium for Worker Education. 
Wrote by UC History Department
First-year doctoral student Alyssa McClanahan has been awarded the fifth annual Roger Daniels Summer Fellowship.  McClanahan will continue her research of anti-nuclear feminists in the 1980s, exploring an online archive from the Seneca Women’s Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice (http://peacecampherstory.blogspot.com/). Featuring countless oral interviews, photographs, songs and stories, this source details how anti-nuclear feminists lived at this peace camp near Seneca Falls, New York, beginning in 1981. Protesting the deployment of Cruise and Pershing II missiles from the nearby Seneca Army Depot to Europe, the camp, set up a mile-and-a-half from the depot, organized numerous anti-missile rallies and acts of civil disobedience at its gates.  The Daniels Fellowship provides $1,500 to support McClanahan’s research over the summer.
Alyssa McClanahan

Wrote by UC History Department


UC History Professor Kate Sorrels will give a paper titled “Revolutionary Pacifism and European Unity” at the Council for European Studies conference in Amsterdam from June 25-27. Sorrels’ research focuses on modern European cultural and intellectual history, specifically Austrian Jewish internationalism and the history of the idea of Europe.

Wrote by UC History Department


The Department of History announced the Zane L. Miller prizes for this year’s best graduate papers at the spring awards ceremony.  First Prize, which comes with a $500 award, went to first-year doctoral student Alyssa McClanahan.  Her paper, “‘Take the Toys from the Boys!’ Anti-Nuclear Feminism and the Women’s Liberation Movement,” offers a fascinating glimpse into the struggles among feminist groups.  Taking the anti-nuclear feminists as her lens, McClanahan concludes, “Movements like anti-nuclear feminism were the main heirs to women’s liberation of the late 1960s and 1970s.”  While her careful analysis lays bare how the diverse feminist presuppositions and agendas got in the way of a unified movement, her  insightful conclusion suggests that lack of homogeneity does not equal dysfunctionality, but rather connotes a vibrant, stimulating, and ongoing feminist discourse.
Second Prize, with a $250 award, went to first-year doctoral student Nathan McGee.  His “‘Renfro Valley Is Your Community Too’: A Modern Vision of the Past at Renfro Valley, 1937-1950” offers an intriguing examination of the rich material on the emerging radio culture and radio host John Lair.  McGee shows the powerful draw of Lair’s juxtaposition of the fleetingness of the city with the timelessness of the country. But McGee also demonstrates the tensions underlying Lair’s broadcast of “good, old, American values” associated with hardworking American farmers through a thoroughly modern medium, the radio.
Third Prize, and its $125 award, went to David Weyhe, who earned his Master’s degree this spring. His beautifully written paper, “‘Wasnatürlichist, kannnichtunmoralischsein’: Magnus Hirschfeld, Cosmopolitan Right, and the World League for Sexual Reform 1921-1935,” takes us into the world of the interwar period and its initiatives regarding sexual reforms.  Weyhe’s careful study of sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld and the series of international congresses on sexual reform demonstrates the extent to which Hirschfeld’s scientific, cosmopolitan, pan-humanist ideas shaped the contents and conduct of the congresses. 
Wrote by UC History Department


At the end of Spring semester 2013, the Department of History presented History PhD candidate Matthew Stanley with the inaugural John K. Alexander Graduate Teaching Award.  Stanley, who defended his dissertation in April, taught two courses for the department in 2012-2013: an undergraduate research seminar focused on race in America and a freshman seminar on the Civil War in American memory.  In nominating Stanley for the award, his doctoral adviser, Professor Christopher Phillips, praised Stanley as a wonderfully effective teacher, noting in particular his impressive talent for “asking thoughtful questions that evoke good responses.”

PhD Candidate Matthew Stanley
This new teaching award honors the distinguished career of John K. Alexander, who joined the Department of History in 1969 and taught UC students for 43 years before retiring as Professor Emeritus in 2012.  Over his long career, Dr. Alexander was an extraordinarily devoted and gifted teacher whose American history lectures inspired literally thousands of undergraduates, while also offering graduate seminars that guided dozens of Masters and PhD students toward their own successful teaching careers. 

The Graduate Studies Committee identified Stanley as an especially suitable recipient of the award because of his dedication to teaching and to the pedagogical mission of the department, which very much mirrors that showed by Dr. Alexander during his many years of teaching in our halls.  Going forward, the department plans to make this award on an annual basis.  Those interested in supporting this new award honoring Dr. Alexander’s commitment to excellence in history education can contact Chris Eden at the A&S Office of Development(513.556.0912 or Christopher.Eden@uc.edu).
Wrote by UC History Department
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