We are combining our accounts! Faculty and Grad Student updates will now be only featured @BaylorHistory 🐻Make sure to follow us for all the latest Baylor History news!
#baylor#newface#summerupdates
Three faculty members and three doctoral students from @Baylor_AandS have received 2024 grant awards from Louisville Institute.
See winners ℹ️ -> ow.ly/Eke750S11Ak
Missed #OAH24? No worries! Catch panels and interviews this Saturday, May 18, starting at 3:30 pm ET on C-SPAN 2. Don’t miss this chance to catch up on fascinating historical discussions! 📺 First up is Missionary Diplomacy in the 19th Century. Watch 👉 ow.ly/htL650RJ0Ac
Thrilled for @BUHistory (proudly my home department) to support (with @ionauniversity) the important @SHEARites DEI Fellows and graduate student mentorship initiatives at #SHEAR2023.
LAST CALL: Know of a Baylor graduate who's gone above & beyond?
Nominate them for the 2023-24 Baylor Alumni Awards! 🐻🏅
The submission deadline is August 1:
bit.ly/3yvOhOD
Yesterday, Kamala Harris equalled John C. Calhoun's 191-year-old record for breaking tie votes in the Senate (31).
@TIME interviewed me for this piece on their very different historical contexts.
time.com/6294599/kamala-harr…
ICYMI, I'm grateful to have had the opportunity to review Beth Moore's *All My Knotted-Up Life.* It's important reading for understanding American evangelicalism, and women's experience in it, both bad and good. currentpub.com/2023/07/27/re…
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin is coming to Baylor!
The "Team of Rivals" author is the featured speaker at this year's Beall-Russell Lecture in the Humanities.
Details: bit.ly/3QckczE
🎉Congratulations to Emmanuella Amoh who has received the 2023 College of Liberal Arts Distinguished Dissertation Award for her dissertation: “Re-Imagining Blackness: African Americans, Ghanaians, and Postwar Pan-Africanism, 1950-1975.” 🎉
Emmanuella Amoh (Ph.D., 2023), received the 2023 @PurdueLibArts Distinguished Dissertation Award for her dissertation: “Re-Imagining Blackness: African Americans, Ghanaians, and Postwar Pan-Africanism, 1950-1975”. Congratulations, Dr. Amoh!