A conversation with Assistant Professor of History Bryan Kauma.
Under the guidance of Professor Josh Long, students participated in a Texas History class excursion.
Alumna will spend a year studying Mandarin in Taiwan.
Associate history professor is examining England’s first queen regnant.
Meili Criezis ’17 publishes scholarship about extremist rhetoric, terrorist propaganda, and political violence.
Transfer student and Sumners Scholar Emily Gilby ’21 shares her experiences working on political campaigns and as a legislative aide.
Sumners Scholar Breely Peterson’s first job out of college? Working as a deputy press secretary for a congressman in the U.S. House of Representatives.
A story of how Randall Williams ’00, a history major and economics minor, marketed himself during ambiguous times.
Associate Professor of History Jethro Hernández Berrones discusses the history of epidemic and pandemic disease—and how the future might look back on the present.
History and political science double major Meredith Murphy ’16 reflects on the many benefits of a liberal-arts education.
Southwestern faculty reflect on how remote teaching might change how they teach in the classroom when campus life resumes this fall.
SU faculty get creative in retooling their classes while students face the many difficulties of distance learning during the pandemic.
SU faculty reflect on the challenges—and some unexpected rewards—of moving their classes online.
Julia Byrom Whatley ’44 reflects on Southwestern in the World War II era, her military service, and her 30-year teaching career.
Southwestern faculty and students study history through the lens of pop culture.
McNeill will deliver a public lecture on the global ecological impacts of the Industrial Revolution during the 2020 History Colloquium.
Lily Rodriguez ’19 shares how her history major allowed her to succeed in a journalism internship with the Laredo Morning Times.
Lily Rodriguez ’19 conducts archival research while interning at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) in Washington, DC.
Historical thinking helps students see the multifaceted nature of human experience and use it to imagine scenarios for better futures.
Robert Hutchings will visit SU on Thursday, November 14, 2019.
Assistant Professor of History Jethro Hernández Berrones was awarded a 2019 Summer Stipend by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Danyale Kellogg ’19 engaged in multiple internships, from the U.S. House of Representatives to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and studied abroad twice during her college career.
Political science and history double major Teresa Cropper ’20 believes that civic engagement is about “bettering your community through engagement.”
Why a degree in the humanities is just as important as a degree in STEM.
Southwestern students tackle the complexities of political division.
SU’s BC for Change Awards the Georgetown Family YMCA a $3,500 Grant
Dr. Levin will deliver a public lecture—and students and faculty will stage a reading of her new play—during the 2018 History Colloquium.
For advocating for the rights of sexual assault victims, the Southwestern University Alumni Association proudly presents Laura Cordes with the 2016 Distinguished Humanitarian Award.
Historian will use $6000 award to fund research trips and writing this summer.
Four Southwestern students have been selected to receive Hatton W. Sumners Scholarships beginning in fall 2017.
Prestigious internship affords 2016 graduate rare opportunity to work with historical objects.
Sarah Roth (SU Class of 1994) published a book on Gender and Race in Antebellum Popular Culture.
Anne Fenley, a native Texan who majored in history at Southwestern describes herself as cheerful, reliable, quirky and musical. As a student, she was a member of Alpha Delta Pi, Delta Omicron, Student Congress, Chorale and Opera Theatre; she held a job at a law office and an internship at the Williamson County Museum; and says during all of that she “consumed copious amounts of coffee at Cianfrani Coffee Co.”