Angel Nugroho and Joanne Lee, two undergraduate students from Cornell’s Humanities Scholars Program, sit down with Paul Fleming to discuss the fraught legacy of Goldwin Smith, Cornell’s first academic star. Through collaborative archival research, Angel and Joanne share their unique perspectives on Goldwin Smith’s misogyny against the backdrop of women’s burgeoning access to public, academic, and legal spaces in the Victorian Finger Lakes region.
History wrapped up in song: “Singing Freedom” with Tsitsi Jaji, Lucy Fitz Gibbon, and Ed Baptist
Rural Poetics: Part 3 with Tim Earley
Tweets of the Un-Mastered Class: Exploring the Freedom on the Move Database with Edward Baptist
Rural Poetics: Part 2 with Nancy Bereano
Rural Poetics: Part 1 with Nikki Wallschlaeger
Crafting Belief from Medieval Dreamscapes to Thai Buddhist Temples with Adin Lears and Anthony Irwin.
Shutting off the Gaslight with Kate Manne
Sartorial Self-Fashioning and the Legacies of Enslavement with Kimberly Kay Lamm
Shaping Emotions in Late Ancient Christianity with Georgia Frank
Indigenous Dispossession and the Founding of Cornell: Part 2 with Michael Witgen
Indigenous Dispossession and the Founding of Cornell: Part 1 with Jon Parmenter
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