Humanities

UW-Green Bay

Author: Cliff Ganyard (page 5 of 5)

Faculty Profile: Caroline Boswell

Caroline Boswell is a faculty member in Humanistic Studies and History.  We thought you might like to know a little more about your professor and colleague, so we asked her a few questions about herself.

Where did you go to college?

I went to UW-Madison for undergrad.  Although I received my advanced degrees from Brown University, in my heart I will always be a Badger.

Who was your favorite professor and why?

My favorite professor at UW-Madison was Lee Wandel.  Not only did she introduce me to historiography and early modern witchcraft (fascinating!), but also she taught us all that professors are first and foremost regular people.

You have a PhD in what field?

History – early modern British history, to be exact.

What do you research?

I research intersections between the politics of everyday life—social interactions, squabbles or ordinary power struggles—and larger political and social crises. My forthcoming book, Disaffection and Everyday Life in Interregnum England, explores such issues in England when, after having executed King Charles I, England became a Commonwealth and then a Protectorate under Oliver Cromwell (1650s). Using a series of case studies, I argue that the factional discourses and shifting power relations produced by civil war and revolution complicated traditional patterns of social interaction. Men and women who discussed unwelcome taxes by the market stall, griped over policies at the alehouse, and were pointedly silent before state pageants expressed their disaffection through acts of protest that threatened to provoke new divisions or redefine old conflicts. Grassroots agitation–from disaffected mutters to ritualistic violence against officials–formed an integral part of the broad political culture that shaped debates over governance during one of the most volatile decades in British history.

I am also increasingly engaged with the scholarship of teaching and learning. As many of my students may attest, I’m invested in digital pedagogies that enhance learning and promote student expression through a variety of rich media. Next semester students in my Foundations of Western Culture II course will contribute to a new online, open access resource for future students of European history. I hope to assess this project as a tool that fosters community and student engagement within large humanities courses.

What courses do you teach?

I teach a wide-variety of courses that touch on my interests and areas of expertise. Besides Foundations of Western Culture II, I teach our Humanistic Studies course the Age of Reason and Introduction to the Digital and Public Humanities, which I recently instructed with the amazing and awe-inspiring Chuck Rybak. In history I teach courses on the French and Haitian Revolutions, Drinking and Politics in the British Atlantic World, British History 1500-1700, and Crime and Mentalities in Early Modern Europe. I always have an eye on new courses, and I am very excited to teach our new Humanistic Studies course, HUM STUD 100 “Living the Humanities.” Three of us will team-teach this course, which is designed to introduce students to the humanities as a way of study. By grappling with one of humanity’s problems our students will explore various ways in which the strengths and values that are unique to the humanities can best prepare students for their future. Each section has a topic, and next year we plan to offer “Everybody Eats,” which will consider the culture, politics and ethics of eating.

How would you describe your teaching style?

Evolving. I’m always open to experimenting with new and innovative methods of teaching and I love playing with the ever expanding number of digital tools. Though I often teach large classes, I include a series of student-centered activities—debates, role-playing, and team-based assignments—to engage students directly in the learning process. I prefer problem-based approaches to learning that allow me to take students on an intellectual exploration of enduring historical questions or important trends in European society and culture. Recently I’ve been researching the “maker” movement and authentic learning, and as a result more and more of my courses have assignments that ask students to produce a resource that is designed to assist future learners, teachers, and/or members of the public.

What do you like to do for fun (hobbies)?

I love to explore sights unseen whether in my backyard or abroad. My academic research on drinking habits is matched by a love of beer, so I enjoy visiting breweries across the US when traveling. When I need a distraction I watch sports and when I need comfort I read murder mysteries.

If we looked at your playlist what would we find?

You should ask Prof. Gabriel Saxton-Ruiz, who, in his “spare” time, functions as my personal DJ. I tend to listen to albums, and I have toyed with the idea of teaching a course structured by The Kinks’ Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire). What do you think?

Kept and Dreamless

The Green Bay Film Society will present the next International Film of the semester on Wednesday, September 17th at 7:00 pm in the auditorium of the Neville Public Museum

Kept and Dreamless
Argentina, 2005

During Argentina’s economic crisis of the 90’s, nine year-old Eugenia and her mother, Florencia, live a seemingly colorful life surrounded by eclectic neighbors and an offbeat collection of family. But for Eugenia, who must deal with her mother’s dysfunctional and drug-addled lifestyle, life is anything but pleasant in this darkly inspiring story of expectation, acceptance and nontraditional family, led by standout performances from director Vera Fogwill and young actress Lucia Snieg.

All are welcome to attend.

More information on the Green bay Film Society may be found here.

On Natural Law

The first Great Books Discussion will be held next Tuesday, September 9, at 6:30 p.m. on the lower level of the Brown Count Library (Central Branch – 515 Pine St., Downtown Green Bay).

Professor Derek Jeffreys will lead a discussion of Thomas Aquinas’ “On Natural Law”.  Why read a medieval theologian in the 21st Century?  Professor Jeffrey’s suggests that Aquinas raises questions that are still relevant today, such as, is there another law beyond man-made law, and that his work provides a basis for considering such topics as faith, love, and war.

Aquinas’ essay is available online at http://www.newadvent.org/summa/2094.htm.

New Course: Great Works

Professor Coury is offering a special opportunity for Humanistic Studies majors (and minors if they like) to meet one of the requirements for the Humanistic Studies Major.  The requirement is to take either Hum Stud 350: Interdisciplinary Study of Great Works or Hum Stud 351: Interdisciplinary Themes in the Humanities, neither of which is offered very often, unfortunately.  Professor Coury has offered to direct an Independent Study (Hum Stud 498) that will meet the same requirements of Hum Stud 350.

The basic requirement of this opportunity is to attend and participate in the Great Books Discussion Group held once each month at the Brown County Library.  The list of books being discussed this semester and the individuals leading the discussion of those books is available here.

If you are interested, you should contact Professor Coury to work out the details of the Independent Study.  But, you need to do so immediately; the first discussion, with Professor Derek Jeffreys on Thomas Aquinas, will be held Tuesday, September 9.

Opera Jawa – Wednesday, September 3rd

The Green Bay Film Society will present the first International Film of the semester on Wednesday, September 3rd at 7:00 pm in the auditorium of the Neville Public Museum

Opera Jawa
Indonesia, 2006

Filmed in the lush forest and on pristine beaches of Java, director Garin Nugroho’s deeply imagistic and dazzling visual narrative is based on “The Abduction of Sita” from the Hindu epic, Ramayana.  Setyo and Siti live a peaceful life as husband and wife, selling earthenware in their village. But when Setyo is called away on business, a flirtatious butcher, Ludiro takes advantage of Siti’s loneliness to seduce her. Tempted by song and dance, Siti initially refuses his advances but acquiesces in a moment of weakness, setting the stage for an epic battle between two men.

More information on the Green bay Film Society may be found here.

New Book by Ganyard

Artur Mahraun and the Young German Order: An Alternative to National Socialism in Weimar Political Culture
by Clifton Greer Ganyard

Professor Ganyard’s book is the first monograph to devote itself to the ideology of the Young German Order, a right-wing nationalist organization during Germany’s Weimar Republic.  It affords a closer examination of the role ideas played in the development of Weimar political culture as charted through the ideological clash of the Young German Order and Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party.

International Film Series

The Green Bay Film Society, a non-profit community group dedicated to bringing international and independent films to N.E. Wisconsin, in conjunction with the Neville Public Museum of Brown County, the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, and St. Norbert College, sponsors the Green Bay International Film Series.  The following films are being screened during the fall semester, 2008:

September 3rd
Opera Jawa (Indonesia, 2006)

September 17th
Kept and Dreamless (Argentina 2005)

October 1st
The Kite (Lebanon, 2003)

October 11th
Special Event: Peter and the Wolf, featuring the music of Sergei Prokofiev
Part of the Neville Public Museum’s “Arts & Animals” exhibit.
Showing begins at 11:00 a.m.

October 15th
Luxury Car (China, 2006)

November 5th
Au Hasard Balthazar (France 1966)

November 19th
American Carnival (U.S.A., 2007)

December 3rd
Pezheads (U.S.A., 2005)

December 17th
Mother of Mine (Germany, 2005)

All films are free and open to the public but suggested for mature audiences.  Students, faculty, and community members are encouraged to attend.

Films begin at 7:00 p.m. in the auditorium of the Neville Public Museum.

More information on the Green Bay Film Society may be found here.

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