The History of History
The History of History at Dartmouth
Lecture Gallery
Student Projects
TIMELINE: A History of Protests at Dartmouth
The History of History at Dartmouth
Lecture Gallery
Student Projects
TIMELINE: A History of Protests at Dartmouth
Lecture Gallery
Past Lectures
Carson Hallway Poster Gallery
May 2015. Erika Monahan. Toppling Kuchum.
April 2013. Angus Lockyer. Golf Clubbing in Modern Japan and Beyond.
May 2015. Harold Holzer. Why Lincoln Matters.
May 2012. Eric Rauchway. Growth is Better Than Austerity.
April 2012. Rosemarie Zagarri. A Tale of Two Empires: British India and the Early American Republic.
February 2012. Louis Masur. Liberty is a Slow Fruit: Reconsidering the Emancipation Proclamation.
May 2011. Shailaja Paik. To Reshape and Reorganize Our Lives: Dalit Womens Education
February 2011. Judy Richardson. Hands on the Freedom Plow.
February 2011. James Kloppenberg. Reading Obama: Dreams, Hope and the American Political Tradition.
2010. Nina Kushner: Unkept Women: Elite Prostitution in Eighteenth Century Paris.
November 2010. Adam Smith. Visions of Order: Conservatism in Nineteenth Century US Politics.
May 2010. Sumathi Ramaswamy. A Historian Among the Goddess of India.
October 2009. Leonard Smith, Frederick B. Artz Professor of History, Oberlin College. “Paris 1919: Rethinking Sovereignty at the Peace Conference.”
November 2007. Benjamin Elman, Professor of History and East Asian Studies. Princeton University. “Culture and Science in an East Asian Context, 1650-1800.”
October 2010. Richard Wightman Fox, Professor of History, University of Southern California. “Jesus in America: A Cultural Incarnation.”
November 2004. Martha Howell, Miriam Champion Professor of History, Colombia University. “The Dangers of Dress in Western Europe, 1300-1700.”
November 2001. Jay Winter, Yale University. “Shell shock, Memory and Identity in the First World War.”
November 1999. Richard Minear, Professor of History, University of Massachusetts Amherst. “Dr. Seuss Goes to War: The World War II Editorial Cartoons of Theodor Seuss Geisel.”
February 2018. Lillian Guerra, Waldo W. Neikirk Professor, Department of History, University of Florida. “Feeling like Fidel: Memory, History and Legacies of Fidelista, Communism in Cuba.”
November 2011. Sarah Igo. Associate Professor of History, Vanderbilt University. “Discovering the Surveillance Society in the Sixties.”