History Career Day explores liberal arts career options beyond the classroom
“What are you going to do with that?” is a question many parents and relatives ask potential history majors.
“What are you going to do with that?” is a question many parents and relatives ask potential history majors.
A new semester-long education abroad program, Liberal Arts and Community Engagement, will give students the opportunity to immerse themselves in a new culture, lifestyle, and community at the CSU Todos Santos Center in Baja California Sur.
What can a historian do in response to life-threatening flooding like we’ve seen in Northern Colorado? Quite a lot it turns out. By documenting the communication, cooperation, and activity of disaster responders, historians capture the knowledge and information-sharing process that is so crucial to future response and recovery.
Hongyan Xiang joined the history department in 2014 and teaches courses about Modern China, Japan, and East Asia. Her research studies are currently French Catholic missionaries in modern and early modern China.
While students are embracing a new chapter in their lives, many College of Liberal Arts departments and programs are welcoming change as well with new department chairs and program directors.
A new documentary film, Theo’s Choice/Le Choix de Theo, by assistant professor Thomas Cauvin takes viewers into French immersion classrooms of southwest Louisiana and explores the complex history of French in the Cajun culture.
The College of Liberal Arts celebrates the outstanding achievement of our faculty and staff for 2017-2018.
Anita Guerrini, professor of humanities and history at Oregon State University, will be speaking at Colorado State University this month as part of the 53rd annual Furniss Lectures.
Immigration is one of the most emotional and divisive issues in contemporary politics. But what relationship does immigration have with the American West, and what can an improved knowledge of the complicated history behind immigration bring to current public discourse?
Robert Gudmestad loved history from an early age, especially the Civil War. After a short career as a U.S. Immigration special agent, Gudmestad returned to school to pursue a career as a teacher and southern U.S. historian.