American Trust for the British Library Lecture featuring the work of T.J. Desch-Obi 

Monday, February 5 from 4:00-7:00. Newman Conference Center Room 750.

Dr. TJ Desch-Obi will discuss his collection of books from Colombian masters in the Afro-Colombian martial art of Grima, some of which date back to the time of slavery in that country. 

The Endangered Archive Program at the British Library is now home to these books, and the program will feature a video with a representative of the EA Program, as well as the Baruch Library’s Dr. Jessica Wagner-Webster, who will give some context about archives in general. This event is open to the entire Baruch community as well as the general public. Members of the American Trust for the British Library are especially welcome.

April 20 talk by Dr. Martina T. Nguyen

Join us for a presentation by our very own Dr. Martina T. Nguyen, who will discuss her recent book On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. The talk will take place on Thursday, April 20, 2023, at 12:30 PM, in NVC 12-150.

Front cover of Dr. Martina T. Nguyen's book "On Our Own Strength"

The Self-Reliant Literary Group (Tự Lực Văn Đoàn) was the most influential intellectual movement in interwar French-occupied Vietnam. The Group’s far-reaching work included applied design, urban reform, fashion, literature, journalism, and cartoons through which they advanced an idea of cosmopolitan nationalism and Vietnamese autonomy that sought a nonviolent middle path between colonialism and anticolonial struggle. This form of cosmopolitan nationalism, Dr. Nguyen argues, proved tremendously popular and profoundly shaped local politics, influencing even rival groups like the newly revived Indochinese Communist Party. 

Tons of great history courses for fall

The History Department has just released its Fall 2023 course catalog. Want to travel across the globe or back in time? You can do it all in this department!

Seen around town…

Ever wonder who writes the Museum of the City of New York’s “On This Day” history facts for the city’s network of LinkNYC kiosks? One of the people responsible is the History Department’s very own Prof. Katie Uva. Look for her contributions around town–and right around the college, as this picture shows!

A photo of a LinkNYC kiosk near Baruch, with a "On This Day" history fact.

What inspired our newest faculty member to study history, and why students should explore the past too

In this video, Dr. Alex Manevitz talks about how he became interested in history, the fields in which he works, and his research on Seneca Village, the African American settlement that New York City removed to build Central Park. He also makes a very compelling argument for why students should study history. Dr. Manevitz joined the department in 2022.

Recent talk by Dr. Zaky

On October 25, Professor Asaad Zaky (Sadat City University), a Fall 2022 visiting researcher at Baruch, gave a talk titled “The Diplomacy of Antiquities: Evidence from Tutankhamun Exhibition 1972 in London.”

Prof. Asaad Zaky speaks to a group of students.
Prof. Asaad Zaky speaking to students who attended his October 25 lecture.

Congratulations to Prof. Briana Jackson!

Congratulations to Briana Jackson, an instructor in the History Department. She has just accepted a two-year fellowship with the American Research Center in Cairo.

March 3: A teach-in on the Ukraine crisis

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has plunged Europe into interstate war for the first time since World War II and threatens massive economic, political, and military fallout. Are you confused about the historical origins and proximate causes of the conflict? Do you worry about the humanitarian and social ramifications of the conflict? Are you perplexed about the motives of the Russian and Ukrainian governments, the role played by the United States, NATO, and the European Union in the conflict, or the ramifications for the global political and economic order?

If so, then please join Professors Jed Abrahamian, Thomas Heinrich, and Andrew Sloin of the History Department for a teach-in on the Ukrainian Crisis. We will offer some analysis of the historical and contemporary origins of the war and guide an open conversation with all interested members of the Baruch Community.

What: Ukraine Crisis Teach-In
When: Thursday, March 3, 2022, 12:30-2:00 PM
Where: Baruch College, Vertical Campus, 3-150

Congratulations to Prof. Johanna Fernandez and Prof. Vince DiGirolamo!

Prof. Johanna Fernandez recently won the prestigious Organization of American Historians’ Turner award for her 2020 book The Young Lords: A Radical History.  She also received the OAH’s Liberty Legacy Foundation Award.

2020 OAH Turner Prize winner Prof. Vincent DiGirolamo has received another accolade for Crying the News: A History of America’s Newsboys: the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era’s Vincent P. DeSantis Award. He will give a talk for SHGAPE on May 12. Register here.

Congratulations to Profs. Fernandez and DiGirolamo!

Baruch College History Department International Friedman Symposium on Friday, April 23: Defense Economics, Business, and Industrial Mobilization in the United States and Britain  

Panelists:

  • Prof. Gillian Brunet, Wesleyan University, author of “Stimulus on the Home Front: The State-Level Effects of WWII Spending.”
  • Prof. Thomas Heinrich, Baruch College, author of Warship Builders: An Industrial History of U.S. Naval Shipbuilding, 1922-1945.
  • Prof. Christopher Miller, Glasgow University, UK, author of Planning and Profits: British Naval Armaments Manufacture and the Military Industrial Complex, 1918-1941.
  • Prof. Mark Wilson, University of North Carolina Charlotte, author of Destructive Creation American Business and the Winning of World War II.

For Zoom information, please contact [email protected]