Showing posts with label Andrew Wise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Wise. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Regeneration: Jewish Life in Poland




The Elizabeth C. and Peter Tower Gallery at Daemen College will host the American premier of the photography exhibit, Re-generation. Jewish Life in Poland featuring photos of Chuck Fishman. An opening reception for the exhibit will be held on September 12th from 5:00 - 7:00 p.m at the gallery located in the Haberman Gacioch Arts Center at Daemen College (4380 Main Street, Amherst NY).  The exhibit will be on display from September 12 - October 11, 2019.  Regular gallery hours are 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. The exhibit and events surrounding it are free and open to the public

The extensive exhibit documents the rebirth of Jewish life in Poland, featuring photos which span over 40 years beginning in 1975. It provides one of the most comprehensive records of European Jewry of the last 50 years and the enormous impact the 1989 rise of the Third Polish Republic had on the revival of Jewish communities and the revival of the consciousness of history among the wider community in Poland. Once home to the largest Jewish community in  Europe, Germany’s 1939 invasion and Hitler’s Final Solution virtually obliterated the Jewish community and the rich Jewish culture Poland once knew.  Journalist Ruth Ellen Gruber notes that Mr. Fishman set out in the 1970s and 80s to capture the “final chapter” of this storied 1000 year history and has joyfully failed as he is “now chronicling an expanding, multi-faceted and ever-unfolding story - and long may he do so!” 


RELATED EVENTS

A preview documentary, Bogdan’s Journey, about one man’s effort toward healing the wounds of the 1946 Kielce Pogrom, will be shown on Monday, September 9th at 7:00 p.m. at the Maxine and Robert Seller Theater located in the Jewish Community Center, Benderson Family Building, 2640 North Forest Road in Getzville.  

On Friday, September 13th at 1:00 p.m. Daemen’s Wick Alumni Lounge will be the site of a panel discussion with guest panelists Jakub Nowakowski, Executive Director of the Galicia Jewish Museum in Krakow who coordinated the exhibit’s visit to the United States; Dr. Sean Martin, the Associate Curator for Jewish History at Western Reserve Historical Society in Cleveland; and award-winning Buffalo journalist Rich Kellman, who reported on developments in Poland in the 1970s and 1980s.  A screening of the documentary, A Town Called Brzostek, about the restoration of the Jewish Cemetery there, will also be shown during the panel event.  

An additional documentary, The Return, about being young and Jewish in Poland today, will be screened on Tuesday, September 17th at 7:00 p.m. at the Research and Information Commons (RIC) 120 on the Daemen Campus. The exhibition gallery will be open on September 17th until 7:00 pm.

This project is co-financed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland as a part of the “Public Diplomacy 2019” program and is made possible by the Galicia Jewish Museum, and sponsorships from the Visual and Performing Arts Department, the Center for Polish Studies and the History & Political Science Department at Daemen College, the Permanent Chair of Polish Culture at Canisius College, the Buffalo Jewish Community Relations Council, the Jewish Community Center of Greater Buffalo, and the Holocaust Resource Center of Buffalo.

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Women's History Month -- 2019!

The Women's Studies Program at Daemen is proud to announce this year's Women's History Month roster of events, including lectures, films, a poetry reading, and a meet-and-greet poster-making session.

(Scroll down to the Women's History Month poster for full details about each event.)

 
"Liberty" (Frances F. Noyes) presides over this March 31, 1913, suffrage parade in Washington, D.C., as women sought the right to vote. (National Archives)


Lectures: The History and Political Science Department is sponsoring two lectures as part of its History & Politics Event Series:
  • On March 25 (7pm, RIC120), Dr. Alexis Henshaw will speak on "Insurgent Women: Female Combatants in Civil Wars." Dr. Henshaw is a political scientist specializing in international women's issues. She is a professor as well as United Nation consultant. Henshaw's lecture will draw upon her recent book, Insurgent Women, to explore women's involvement in war and peace efforts in several regions: Ukraine, Kurdish groups in the Middle East, and the civil war in Columbia. (For more information, see the event flier or our Facebook event page)
  • On March 20 (7pm, Wick Social Room), Dr. Karolina Krasuska will present a lecture on "Women and the Holocaust." Dr. Krasuska, an Assistant Professor at the University of Warsaw, Poland, is an expert on transnational modernism, gender, queer identity, and Jewishness. In fall 2017, Krasuska taught a class on 20th century European history at Daemen during her visit as part of the faculty exchange program between Daemen and the University of Warsaw's American Studies Center.  Her lecture will draw upon her recent coedited collection, Women and the Holocaust: New Perspectives and Challenges. Dr. Krasuska's lecture is co-sponsored by the Center for Polish Studies.
Films: 
  • On March 6 (7pm, Wick Alumni Lounge), the History & Political Science Department is screening the classic 1959 French film, Hiroshima Mon Amour, timed to coincide with the 60th anniversary of the film's release. Dr. Kevin Telford (Associate Professor of French, Modern Languages Department) will comment and lead a discussion after the movie. 
  • On March 27 (7pm, RIC120), the AAUW Student Organization will air the 2016 (remake) of the movie, Ghostbusters, in which paranormal investigators try to prove that ghosts are real. Students will discuss the film through a feminist lens, focusing on the significance of the all-female cast and reframed story.  
  • on March 28 (4pm, DS336), Dr. Shannon Lupien and other members of the Psychological Sciences Department will present The Tale as part of the Daemen Film Series. The Tale explores the aftermath of the sexual assault of a child--from the perspective of the adult survivor of sexual assault who is coming to terms with what happened to her as a child and who needs to understand the stories she told herself to survive her experiences.  
Poetry Reading:
  • On March 20 (7pm, 3rd floor RIC), the Readings at the RIC poetry series features two female poets from Buffalo: Rachelle Toarmino and Theresa Wyatt
AAUW: Sign-design & Interest Meeting:
  • On March 7 (7pm, RIC Den), members of the AAUW Student Organization will come together to make signs and socialize before the 2019 Buffalo Women's March (scheduled for Sunday, March 10). The club promotes gender equality and action in behalf of women's education and gender pay equity. Make a sign, plan for the March, and learn more about the AAUW and its members. 




Upcoming events: Visit this page for updates on April's events:
  • Dr. Laura Watts, Associate Professor of Art History (Visual and Performing Arts Department) -- will lecture on images of the matria in 19th century Italian paintings (Time/location TBA)
  • On April 17 (Academic Festival) the AAUW Student Organization is holding a World Hijab Day Acknowledgement event--and henna booth. Learn about cultural traditions associated with wearing hijab--why do women wear them, and what do they represent? The club will also sponsor a henna booth. Get a henna tattoo and learn about the cultural significance of henna body ornamentation in different cultures. The event is scheduled to run for several hours, but most visitors will want to stay for 15 to 30 minutes so you can stop by between other events at Academic Festival. (schedule will be posted here)
Read more about this year's Women's History Month events in this story from The Daemen Voice and by visiting the History & Political Science Department's Facebook page.

Questions? Contact Dr. Penny Messinger, Associate Professor of History and Director of Daemen's Women's Studies Program.

Saturday, March 17, 2018

1918-2018: Center for Polish Studies at Daemen College hosts Conference on Polish Independence



"For Your Freedom and Ours:" Polonia and the Struggle for Polish Independence

The Center for Polish Studies -- with financial aid and support from the History & Political Science Department (Daemen College), the Permanent Chair of Polish Culture at Canisius College, and the Society of Friends of Learning in Przemysl, Poland -- will host an academic conference on 21-22 September 2018. The conference will commemorate the 100th anniversary of Polish independence, with a special focus on the Polish diaspora and its role in the creation of a new Polish state in 1918.

The keynote speaker will be award-winning historian Prof. James Pula. Related events will include a tour of the special exhibition on "Camp Kosciuszko: The Polish Army at Niagara Camp, 1917-1919" at the Niagara Historical Society & Museum (Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario), a guided tour of other sites associated with Camp Kosciuszko, and a performance of music by Ignacy Paderewski by the Chopin Singing Society of Buffalo. A volume of select papers will be published by the Society of Friends of Learning in Przemysl.

For full details, see the Call For Papers at H-Net.

Organizers for the conference are Prof. Andrew Wise (Daemen College) and Prof. dr. hab. Tomasz Pudlocki (Jagiellonian University). For more information, please contact Andrew Wise at awise@daemen.edu.

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Updates from Jagiellonian University

Jagiellonian University CEES Winter School Students at Krasiczyn


Studies in Central and Eastern Europe (CEES): Histories, Cultures, and Societies

Prof. Andrew Kier Wise (Professor of History/Chair, Center for Polish Studies at Daemen College) is teaching several courses this semester in an innovative new program at Jagiellonian University's Institute of History. Directed by Prof. dr. hab. Tomasz Pudlocki, the CEES program brings students from around the world to Krakow to study the history of Poland and the broader region. For more information, please click here:http://www.ceestudies.historyczny.uj.edu.pl/start

From 12-16 February, Prof. Wise accompanied Prof. Pudlocki, Ph.D. student Kamil Ruszala, and a dozen CEES students on a Winter School trip filled with site visits, lectures by faculty, and presentations by the students. Sites and cities on the itinerary included: Kolbuszowa, Sandomierz, Baranow Sandomierski, Kazimierz Dolny, Pulawy, Lublin, Zamosc, Belzec, Lancut, Krasiczyn, Przemysl, Sanok, and Tarnow.

Image of Ship Bringing Immigrants to Buffalo inside
Wooden Church at Museum of Folk Culture in Kolbuszowa

CEES Students in Zamosc

Krasiczyn Castle on a Snowy Day

While in Przemysl, Prof. Pudlocki provided a lecture to a joint class of CEES students and students at his alma mater, I Liceum Ogolnoksztalcace im. J. Slowackiego.

CEES Winter School Students with Przemysl High School Students

Prof. Pudlocki's Winter School Lecture at Przemysl High School

Prof. Wise also presented a lecture to these groups of students at the Society of Friends of Learning  in Przemysl (Towarzystwo Przyjaciol Nauk w Przemyslu, or TPN).


Prof. Wise's Winter School Lecture at TPN

Jagiellonian Polonia Institute at Daemen College -- Planned for 2019

In 2019, the Center for Polish Studies will host the "Jagiellonian Polonia Institute at Daemen College." Prof. Tomasz Pudlocki will lead a group of eight students from Jagiellonian University (including students from the CEES program) for a two-week course of study at Daemen College.

For more details about the Jagiellonian Polonia Institute at Daemen College, please contact Prof. Wise at awise@daemen.edu.

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Prof. Andrew Wise Delivers Public Lecture at Kosciuszko Foundation in Washington, D.C.

L-R: Tomasz Pudlocki, Magdalena Baczewska, Janusz Romanski, and Andrew Wise

Polish Cultural Institute and Kosciuszko Foundation,"Between Music and Diplomacy: The Founding Fathers of WWI American-Polish Rapprochement" -- Washington, DC, 2 February 2018

The year 2018 marks the 100th anniversary of the rebirth of the Polish state, and the Center for Polish Studies at Daemen College and its affiliated faculty are actively engaging students and community partners in Buffalo, the US, and Poland in commemorating this event of worldwide significance.

En route to Poland to teach at Jagiellonian University for the spring semester, Prof. Andrew Kier Wise (Professor of History and Chair, Polish Studies Center) joined Prof. dr. hab. Tomasz Pudlocki (Professor of History, Jagiellonian University)  and Dr. Magdalena Baczewska (Director of Music Performance Program, Columbia University) for an evening of programming at the Kosciuszko Foundation in Washington, DC. Prof. Pudlocki is the coordinator in Poland for Daemen's study abroad program, which brings Daemen students to Poland during the summer session. He also was a Fulbright Scholar in Residence at Daemen College in fall 2015.

Entitled "Between Music and Diplomacy: The Founding Fathers of WWI American-Polish Rapprochement," the event featured lectures by Prof. Pudlocki and Prof. Wise and a piano performance by Dr. Baczewska. Prof. Pudlocki provided a cogent and in-depth analysis of the historical events surrounding American-Polish collaboration during World War I.  Prof. Wise focused on the activities in the US and Europe of Buffalo Health Commissioner Dr. Francis Fronczak, who was a close friend of Ignacy Paderewski and a member of the Polish National Committee. An accomplished concert pianist and recording artist, Dr. Baczewska performed on the piano and also provided scholarly commentary about the Paderewski pieces that she selected.

Co-sponsored by the Polish Cultural Institute (New York) and the Kosciuszko Foundation (Washington, DC Center), the event was well-attended by community members, scholars, and representatives from the Polish Embassy. Please click here for one review in the Polish-American press:  https://www.kurierplus.com/2018/02/5365/miedzy-muzyka-i-dyplomacja/. The photo below includes event organizers Magdalena Mazurek (Polish Cultural Institute New York), Barbara Bernhardt (Kosciuszko Foundation, Washington, DC Center), and Anna Domanska (Polish Cultural Institute New York).

L-R: Magdalena Mazurek, Barbara Bernhardt, Prof. Pudlocki, Magdalena Baczewska, Andrew Wise, and Anna Domanska 



Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Welcome Dr. Karolina Krasuska!

Dr. Krasuska

Dr. Karolina Krasuska has joined the faculty of the History & Political Science Department this semester as a Visiting Assistant Professor of History through faculty exchange with the American Studies Center at the University of Warsaw, Poland. She will be at Daemen through early October and is co-teaching our 20th Century European history class (HST206) with Dr. Andrew Wise.

Dr. Krasuska is an expert in cultural studies, gender analysis, and transnational literature. Her teaching portfolio at the University of Warsaw includes classes on cultural studies, masculinities, American Jewishness, and literature.

Dr. Krasuska will give two public lectures during her visit: 
  • Women in the Holocaust on Monday, September 11, 7:00pm at Canisius College Regis Rooms
  • POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews on Tuesday, October 3, 7:00pm at Daemen College Research & Information Commons (RIC), Room 120 (Palisano Room). The POLIN Museum opened in 2014 at the site of the former Warsaw Ghetto. The museum will be familiar to students who have participated in recent Polish Study-Abroad classes led by Dr. Wise.  
Dr. Krasuska's public lectures are part of an extensive series of events marking Buffalo's 2017 Polish Cultural Festival, arranged in collaboration with multiple educational and community organizations (including Daemen College) and publicized through the Permanent Chair of Polish Studies at Canisus College. Four of the events in this series will be hosted by Daemen College:
  • September 14-October 27: Exhibition of Artworks by Polish artist Wieslaw Skibinski at Karamanoukian Gallery, Haberman Gagioch Arts Center, Daemen College. Opening reception on Thursday, September 14, 5:00-7:00 pm. Free and open to the public.
  • September 17: Jedliniok Folk Dance Group of Wroclaw: 3:00pm at the Daemen College Wick Center Social Room. A performance of the Polish academic song and dance ensemble. Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at the door, $10 for students. Tickets are available at the Am-Pol Eagle Offices, 3620 Harlem Rd; call 983-5084 or 681-0813
  • September 19: Raise the Roof--screening at 7:00pm at Daemen's Research and Information Commons (RIC) Room 120 (Palisano Room). This documentary film explores the reconstruction of the roof and bimah of the 18th Century Wooden Synagogue in Gwozdziec (formerly in Poland), by artists Rick and Laura Brown, which is now the center of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. The documentary is by Tari & Cary Wolinsky and is presented courtesy of the National Center for Jewish Film. Copyright Trillium Studios. Find more information at: www.polishsynagogue.com/movietrailer/
  • October 3: Dr. Karolina Krasuska's lecture on POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews--7:00pm at Daemen College Research & Information Commons (RIC), Room 120 (Palisano Room). The POLIN Museum opened in 2014 at the site of the former Warsaw Ghetto.
Join us in welcoming Dr. Krasuska to Daemen College!


Dr. Krasuska's faculty profile from the University of Warsaw:

Karolina Krasuska is Assistant Professor at American Studies Center at the University of Warsaw and also a member of the research group “Gender and Literature” at the Institute for Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences. She holds a PhD in Cultural Studies from European University Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder (2010). She is the author of a book-length study examining modernist literature from a transnational, gender-oriented perspective, published in Polish as Płeć i naród: Trans/lokacje. Maria Komornicka/Piotr Odmieniec Włast, Else Lasker-Schüler, Mina Loy (Warszawa 2012). She is also the Polish translator of Judith Butler’s Gender Trouble (Uwikłani w płeć, Warszawa 2008). Her most recent publication is the collection Women and the Holocaust: New Perspectives and Challenges (Warszawa 2015), which she co-edited with Andrea Petö and Louise Hecht.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

Teaching American Democracy at the American Studies Center - University of Warsaw (ASC-UW)

The Course: American Democracy and Critical Perspectives

Last Fall, I was fortunate enough to be selected as the first faculty member from Daemen College to participate in the exchange program with the American Studies Center of the University of Warsaw (ASC UW). The ASC is one of the largest American Studies departments in Europe offering interdisciplinary B.A., M.A. and postgraduate programs. As one ASC student explains, the “program extends into many areas of research including history, political science, literature studies, cultural studies, and social sciences which gives us a broad perspective on America and allows students to pursue their various interests.”

The American Studies Center (OSA-UW). 
Photo credit: Lisa Parshall
The course was designed to provide a critical view of American democracy with respect to the treatment of minority groups within the United States political system. I chose as our focus, the role of Native Americans and African-Americans—two groups with distinct, yet in some ways parallel experiences, as “the first and the forced” among our citizenry (Leiker, Warren, and Watkins 2007).
Felix Cohen, the foremost scholar on Federal Indian Policy, wrote in 1953: “Like the miner’s canary, the Indian marks the shift from fresh air to poison gas in our political atmosphere; and our treatment of Indians, even more than our treatment of other minorities, reflects the rise and fall in our democratic faith” (390). Cohen’s seminal work included the following observation by Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) director, John Collier:

“What sort of treatment dominant groups give to subject groups- how governments treat minorities– and how big countries treat little countries. This is a subject that comes down the centuries and never was it a more burning subject that in this year (1939). So this is the question: “How has our country treated its oldest and most persistent minority, the Indians. How has it treated them, and how is it treating them now?”
Felix S. Cohen, author of the Federal Handbook of Indian Law
Photo Credit: www.doi.gov/interiormuseum/programs/Felix-Cohen

The displacement of sovereign democratic nations in the founding of our own, and the subsequent treatment of Native Americans under federal policy, stands in stark contrast to American democratic ideals. So too has the treatment of African-Americans and the continued legacy of slavery and segregation presented a paradox for the celebration of American democracy. These brutal histories, and the contemporary realities faced by minority communities, are ongoing “problems” for a democratic political system that is founded upon the logic of equality and the promise of equal protection under law.

The design for the course was already ambitious, covering a blend of historical and contemporary issues impacting Native and African Americans as lens through which to view the effective functioning of the American political system. I had no idea in designing the course that events would conspire to make the spring semester one of the most dynamic times to be teaching a democracy course. The 2016 election and developments of the early Trump Administration provided twists that were both a challenge and an opportunity. Whatever one’s politics, the first few months of the Trump Administration have proven eventful in terms of the daily news cycle; and the functioning of the executive branch has been anything but routine.

Even as we talked about the fundamental elements of what constitutes a democracy, intelligence reports confirmed efforts at external election interference; the investigations of the House and Senate investigatory committees lurched on in fits and starts. Then came the firing of FBI director, James Comey, and Trump’s tweets about the possible existence of tape recorded conversations raised the specter of a brewing crises with shades of Watergate. Former National Intelligence Director, James Clapper, asserted that American institutions were under assault—internally as well as externally. With mounting pressures, an independent counsel was named. The ongoing litigation over Trump’s travel ban sparked more rhetoric challenging the independence and legitimacy of judiciary. The President’s first international trip revealed a United States out of accord with important democratic allies on climate and trade. On his return, Trump announced he was pulling the United States out of the Paris Treaty and there were renewed assertions of executive authority in the aftermath of two international terrorist attacks. In short, the basic foundations and function of our constitutional system of separated powers and checks and balances were on full display. 

The pace of developments germane to minority rights was no less spectacular. A course which started with a historical overview of the loss of Indian sovereignty and territory ended with the administration’s intention to privatize ownership of federal lands. Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first Supreme Court appointee and the first justice in a long while to have substantial experience with Native American legal issues (from his time on the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals), assumed his seat on the Court. Our classroom discussion of the Standing Rock Protests coincided with news of another leak in the newly opened Dakota Access Pipeline. Our discussion of the long history of Civil Rights, concluded recent announcements by Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, that the Department of Justice was rescinding federal investigations of state, local, and tribal authority and proposed budget cuts in the civil rights divisions in the departments of labor and education. And our discussion of voting rights was topped off by the Supreme Court’s condemnation of the North Carolina redistricting efforts for using partisanship as a proxy for race with the surprising key vote of Justice Clarence Thomas.  

All of this was set, of course, within the context of global politics, the rise of national populist movements, and a re-examination of democratic trends. As one of the students noted, “the rise of nationalistic sentiments and populism in global politics,” makes understanding “American democracy’s place in the international arena even more important.” When and how do democracies backslide?  What are the harbingers of democratic dysfunction? 

Reflecting on the timing of the course and the importance of American studies more generally, one of the students writes:

The United States, being one of the hegemons of democracy is an important subject of study. I think it is a very good time to study American Democracy, because of what’s been happening in both Europe and in the United State over the last few years. As more and more people are starting to doubt democratic systems, they are turning towards nationalistic ideas. America exerts huge influence on the rest of the world: politically, economically, culturally. Some would even say that we may be witnessing a moment, when some democratic principles are being questioned or dismantled. People assume that democracy will last forever; however, it is not so simple.


The American Studies Center Sign
Photo Credit: Lisa Parshall

Unique Perspectives on American Democracy

The students at the OSA-American Studies Center are among the best and brightest, and it was a rare treat to teach a class to graduate students who brought a unique perspective on these issues of American Democracy. Impressively, my students were not just well-versed in basic American history and politics, they were avid consumers of American news, which greatly enhanced our discussions and allowed us to incorporate current events in our consideration of democratic processes.  

Each of the students in my class had chosen the elective because of their interest in minority rights in the United States. Their broader research interests, however, were much more varied and included African-American political thought, gender and queer studies, immigration, and international politics. For several students, the consideration of Native Americans’ place in the American Political system was of special interest. “Even though I have been enrolled in an American Studies program for four years now, I had never had a class on Native Americans and my knowledge about them was very limited.”  The absence of courses dedicated to Native American tribal sovereignty and federal Indian policy is common in the curriculum of American colleges and Universities as well. 

The perspective of the course was designed to be a critical one, providing students with “more diverse and nuanced perspectives, instead of an idealized picture” of a “utopian American democracy.” For one student, the class “confirmed my view that American Democracy (just like any other democracy) isn’t perfect and there are flaws, which are often overlooked in school or university curricula.... Thanks to the broadening of my knowledge concerning Native Americans and African Americans position within the American legal system, I was able to more fully understand both the causes and the consequences of contemporary inequalities.”

As importantly, I learned a great deal from the students regarding the state of liberal democracies in Europe and Poland, and of the impact of globalization and economic decline on minority rights. Their own interests sometimes took the course in unexpected, yet no less important directions as we expanded our lens to consider the place of women and the LGBT community in politics. Overall, the interaction of  such differing vantage points helps to “force both students and faculty to step out of their bubble and confront different ideas about America and American Democracy, and greatly contributes to academic development.”

The Exchange Program Between Daemen College and the ASC-UW

The exchange program was made possible through the efforts of Professor Andrew Wise, the Director of Daemen College’s Polish Studies program in collaboration with Dr. Sławomir Józefowicz, the International Mobility Coordinator at the ASC and with the support of ASC director, Dr. Grzegorz Kość.

In Fall 2017, Assistant Professor Dr. Karolina Krasuska will travel to Daemen where she will team-teach a course with Professor Andrew Wise: HST 206, Twentieth Century Europe. For faculty and students in the classroom, the exchange is “an opportunity to learn about the different culture of studying and teaching. Even though both Poland and the United States are considered part of the so-called Western world, there are some, maybe even considerable, differences in the approach to the subject of university studies. This is a chance to see differences in the curricula; the observations may serve as an inspiration as to what could be changed or differently implemented.”

As envisioned, students who take part in the exchange would not necessarily be limited to taking coursework in the ASC (University of Warsaw) or the Department of History and Political Science (Daemen College), but may potentially take classes in other disciplines of their specific academic interest. The respective departments might, in other words, serve as a home-base for students seeking to take coursework at the partner institution, allowing them to partake in the immersive experience which comes from studying abroad. “Above all else, the exchange is a chance to experience living and/or working in a foreign country: an experience that may prove to be essential in one’s future career and life.”


Łazienki Park (Park Łazienkowski) is one of many beautiful greenspaces in Warsaw.
Photo Credit: Lisa Parshall


American students traveling to Poland will discover a safe and comfortable experience.  There is no shortage of places to explore in Warsaw, including beautiful parks, cultural and educational museums, cafes, and clubs.  The Metro system is convenient and easy to navigate. And cities like Krakow and Gdansk are easily accessible by train.  ASC students advise our English-speaking students not to view language as a barrier: in Poland “most young people can speak English at least on a communicative level, so there’s nothing to worry about.”  They also add that “some Americans might have a stereotypical idea of Poland, since we are economically disadvantaged compared to the rest of the European Union,” but note “that we are not in poverty and our cities are comparable to big cities in Europe.”  The important thing is to “keep an open mind,” and “to take the opportunity to try to learn something about the Polish culture.”

Scenes Along the Royal Way in Old Town
Photo Credit: Lisa Parshall
Special thanks to the ASC-UW class for their contributions of thoughts and observations to the blog (and whose quotes are indicated by italics).

Daemen College students who are interested in learning more about the Polish Studies Program and/or the exchange opportunity with the ASC-UW should contact Dr. Andrew Wise, Professor of History, at awise@daemen.edu.  Daemen College’s Global Programs Office can help any answer questions you may have about studying abroad and can help provide logistical support.   




References

The First and the Forced: Essays on the Native American and African American Experience.  Edited by James N. Leiker, Kim Warren, and Barbara Watkins (2007).

The Federal Handbook of Indian Law, Felix S. Cohen (1942).

The Erosion of Indian Rights, Felix S. Cohen (1953).



Tuesday, August 30, 2016

People's Forum on the American Presidency: Oct 1

By Penny Messinger 

Why do Presidencies matter? How should we commemorate presidents? How do historical interpretations shift as new issues and questions change our understanding of public and personal behavior? 

Image created by Gabrielle Sinnott (Daemen, '19)


From 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. on Saturday, October 1, the History & Political Science Department of Daemen College will host an in-depth exploration of these questions, focusing on history and memory, Presidential reputation, and the understanding of past Presidents at "The People's Forum on the American Presidency." As with previous events in our History & Politics events series, the goal of the People's Forum on the American Presidency is to bring together members of campus community and the general public with scholars who have deep knowledge of issues from history and political science. Our "People's Forum on the American Presidency" takes as its model the "People's Forums" held in Buffalo a century ago, which regularly brought together people from all walks of life to discuss matters of public importance and common interest. 


  





This March 1913 story from The Buffalo Courier informed readers about the topics discussed at Buffalo's People's Forum. 

In keeping with the times, discussion centered on political corruption and reform, and such third party movements as the Progressive Party and the Socialist Labor Party.

The “People’s Forum on the American Presidency” is structured as a half-day public forum. Attendees will have the opportunity to engage directly with five nationally prominent scholars to explore the intersection of history and memory, Presidential reputations, and the scholarly and popular understandings of past Presidents. Our experts will provide an overview of the presidency, along with in-depth discussions of four past presidents: Thomas Jefferson, Grover Cleveland, Woodrow Wilson, and Warren G. Harding.

The afternoon forum includes three sessions, and attendees can choose to attend any or all of these. We start at 1:00 with an overview of the presidency and a round-table discussion that features our five Presidential scholars. From 3:00 until 4:00, participants will choose among breakout sessions, each led by a scholar who will focus upon a particular President; this enables members of the public to able to engage directly in Q&A with that scholar about the president of their choice. In the final session, running from 4:15 to 5:15, participants will reassemble for a final group conversation to share insights and observations derived from the earlier sessions. The day will conclude with a book signing by the authors (titles are available for purchase on-site).


Full Schedule:

1:00--1:15:  Introduction and Welcome (Wick Social Room)

1:15--1:45:  Introductory overview by Political Scientist James Campbell on the focal issue of presidential reputations (Q: Why do presidencies matter?)

1:45--2:45:  Roundtable Panel of historians discussing presidents:
        Peter Onuf on Thomas Jefferson
        Charles Lachman on Grover Cleveland
        Phillip Payne on Warren G. Harding
        John Milton Cooper on Woodrow Wilson

3:00--4:00:  Concurrent breakout sessions. Attend a session with the scholar of your choice:
Members of the audience have the opportunity for direct Q&A/discussion in smaller groups with our presidential scholars. Each scholar will have a separate space for this session. (Breakout sessions may pick up on themes we identify but participants will have a significant role in shaping the direction of these sessions.)

4:15--5:15:  People’s Forum on historical memory and the role of the Presidency (Wick Social Room):
Participants reassemble for an open discussion about topics and issues sparked by the opening sessions (overview of presidency and roundtable discussion of individual presidents), along with questions and insights shared from the individual breakout sessions. 

5:15--5:45: Book sale/signing:  Books by our scholars are available for purchase.

** An exhibit of presidential memorabilia created for The People's Forum on the American Presidency by members of The American Political Items Collectors will be on display throughout the event and during the following week. 


The People's Forum on the American Presidency is supported by an Action Grant from the New York State Council for the Humanities, by the Office of Academic Affairs, the Division of Arts & Sciences, and the History & Political Science Department at Daemen College. We also wish to acknowledge our two community partners: the Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural Site (NPS) and the Association for a Buffalo Presidential Center. Additional thanks to members of The American Political Items Collectors for creating an exhibit of presidential memorabilia.


**For more information about this event, contact
Dr. Penny Messinger: pmessing@daemen.edu or
Dr. Andrew Wise: awise@daemen.edu



Key themes and questions:


The daily news is flooded by the controversies swirling around historical issues, symbols, and individuals (for examples, see the links at the end of this blog post). Our speakers will address a number of questions, many of them inspired by this year's lively campaign season, with discussion focusing around four presidents: Jefferson, Cleveland, Wilson, and Harding:

* Q:  How does our understanding of history shape public debate in this presidential election year?

* Q:  How do citizens acknowledge the important role of men such as Thomas Jefferson who founded this nation, while also wrestling with their less than stellar actions in personal and public life?


Renowned as the author of the Declaration of Independence and as the first Secretary of State (in Washington's administration) before being twice elected to the presidency (1801-09), President Thomas Jefferson's personal behavior has been the topic of historical scrutiny. This is most notable with his relationship with Sally Hemings, his enslaved concubine who gave birth to their four children.






Portrait of Thomas Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale, ca. 1805. (Image from U.S. National Archives




 
*Q:  How should communities commemorate or remember Presidents with difficult (and negative) reputations? 





President Grover Cleveland (president 1885-89, 1893-97) was a civic leader from Buffalo and a two-term president, but recent scholarship has highlighted charges of sexual assault against Maria Halpin, who gave birth to a son for whom Cleveland acknowledged paternity.


1892 photo of Grover Cleveland from U.S. Library of Congress, digital ID: cph.3a10549








Evaluating the legacy of President Warren G. Harding (1921-23) is even more difficult. Harding regularly comes in dead last in presidential rankings, thanks to the combination of scandals in his administration and his private life.

 
Photograph of Warren G. Harding from Business Insider: "Ancient US Presidential Sex Scandal Revealed," July 8, 2014.



* Q:  How does the Wilsonian legacy continue to shape public debate about domestic and foreign policies in this presidential election year?





President Woodrow Wilson (1913-21) also has a complex presidential legacy; Wilson’s world vision still guides American foreign policy and international relations, yet his administration also oversaw the segregation of Washington, D.C., and the federal government. 
 

This photograph of Woodrow Wilson accompanied the CNN story: "Erasing Woodrow Wilson's name is not that easy,"

             
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Politicians are flawed vehicles for expressing private virtues, a point that is perhaps more evident when viewed more dispassionately through the lens of time than in the heat of the present moment. Both symbolically and practically, the president represents the United States, and history is a profoundly public endeavor, since it belongs to all of us. Historians and political scientists have much to contribute to public discussions about past and present presidents, memory, and commemoration.

While the presidencies to be discussed during The People's Forum on the American Presidency should be understood through the historical lens of their own time, participants will be interested in the ways that the issues of these past presidencies continue to resonate today. We will also consider how past issues continue to spark public debate.

One area of connection between past and present lies in the 2016 presidential campaign, which has unfolded in unexpected ways with outsider candidates such as Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and businessman Donald Trump injecting energy into the campaign and drawing the interest of many voters. Ironically, Hillary Clinton's insider status as the candidate of choice for Democratic Party leaders overshadowed her groundbreaking role as the first female nominee of a major party. Divisive issues, personalities, and controversies threaten party unity, reflecting current social tensions in ways that evoke concerns of past  generations. While the 2016 election seems like a new event, it is actually very similar to previous elections where popular discontent has disrupted the plans of party regulars. Our five presidential scholars--four historians and one political scientist--will help participants explore the legacies of Thomas Jefferson, Grover Cleveland, Woodrow Wilson, and Warren G. Harding, leaders whose presidencies collectively raise issues of institutional politics and matters of individual character during eras characterized by important social, economic, and political changes:


Thomas Jefferson’s election in the “Revolution of 1800” made him the first president to oversee a transition of power from one political party to another as Jefferson’s Republicans defeated John Adams’s Federalists. This transition followed one of the most bitter campaigns in United States history. Jefferson’s party represented the boisterous frontier states, filled with voters eager to embrace a more democratic form of politics than the Federalists were comfortable with.

The eagle on this 1800 textile holds two banners: "T. JEFFERSON President of the United States of America" and "JOHN ADAMS no more."





Grover Cleveland was elected in 1884 but lost his reelection bid in 1888 by losing the Electoral
College, even as he won the popular vote. He went on to victory in the election of 1892 only to see the economy collapse in the Panic of 1893 as insurgent populists angry over Cleveland’s conservative economic policies overtook the Democratic Party.




In this 1896 political cartoon from Judge, Cleveland is front and center among several politicians already attracted (and destroyed) by the appeal of "Free Silver," the central economic issue of the Populist movement of the 1890s.






Uncle Sam eyes Progressive, Republican, & Democrat candidates in 1912 (LOC)



Woodrow Wilson was a latecomer to politics after an academic career. Following his brief stint as governor of New Jersey, he tossed his hat in the ring and won the Democratic Party nomination in the election of 1912. This election was a high water mark for the Progressive Movement, with voters divided between rival plans to address the social and economic disruption of industrialization, urbanization, and globalization. Wilson won despite the Democratic Party’s minority status because the GOP split between the progressive Teddy Roosevelt and the conservative William Howard Taft.





Peace was a major theme in 1916


With the emergency of WWI in Europe in 1914, Wilson urged neutrality and his 1916 re-election campaign used the slogan, "He kept us out of war."  A year later, the US entry into the war launched an "American century" of increased power and influence in world affairs. Although Wilson's vision shaped the post-war world, both Wilson and the peace treaty were deeply unpopular in the US. A post-war recession was accompanied by continuing racial backlash, nativism, and a "red scare" that targeted political radicals.





● By 1920, World War I had left voters disillusioned with Wilson and with progressivism. The Republican Party failed, however, to unite behind a candidate and so nominated Warren G. Harding of Ohio as a compromise nominee at a contested convention. Harding went on to win a landslide victory that began a political realignment resulting in a decade of conservative Republican rule.


GOP party pin, ca 1940 (credit: Andrew Wise)


Themes from the 1920 campaign of Republican candidate Warren G. Harding (at R) and his running-mate Calvin Coolidge (at L) have reappeared in 2016 Presidential campaign of Donald Trump. (Inaugural artifact from the Library of Congress.)



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  Biographical Profiles of Scholars


Dr. James E. Campbell


James E. Campbell is University at Buffalo Distinguished Professor of Political Science, and a leading analyst of American electoral politics and the presidency. Campbell is the author of a number of studies, among which are Before the Vote: Forecasting American National Elections (2000); The American Campaign: U.S. Presidential Campaigns and the National Vote (second edition, 2008); and the widely anticipated Polarized: Making Sense of A Divided America, scheduled for publication in fall 2016.



John Milton Cooper (Princeton Alumni Weekly, 3-17-2010)

John Milton Cooper is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Senior Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and a leading historian of early twentieth century American politics. He is the author of three widely discussed books on  Woodrow Wilson: The Warrior and the Priest: Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt (1983); Breaking the Heart of the World: Woodrow Wilson and the Fight for the League of Nations (2001); and most recently Woodrow Wilson: A Biography (2009), which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.



Charles Lachman (photo credit: Lisa Berg)
Charles Lachman is Executive Producer of the television news magazine Inside Edition, which has been on the air for over two decades and is consistently one of the top ten rated programs in national syndication. He still finds time to publish studies of history, and is the author of two works about American presidents: The Last Lincolns: The Rise and Fall of a Great American Family (2008); and A Secret Life: The Lies and Scandals of Grover Cleveland (2011).



Peter S. Onuf
A leading Jefferson scholar of recent decades, Peter S. Onuf is Thomas Jefferson Memorial Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Virginia, and a Senior Fellow at Monticello’s International Center for Jefferson Studies. His many publications on Jefferson include: Jefferson’s Empire: The Language of American Nationhood (2001); The Mind of Thomas Jefferson (2007); and with Annette Gordon Reed, “Most Blessed of Patriarchs”: Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the Imagination (2016). He cohosts the weekly public radio program and podcast Backstory with the  American History Guys.



Phillip G. Payne
Phillip Payne is Professor of History at St. Bonaventure University and an expert in early twentieth century American History, particularly issues around the presidency, political history, commemoration and public memory, and political economy. His publications include Dead Last: The Public Memory of Warren G. Harding’s Scandalous Legacy (2009) and Crash! How the Boom and Bust of the 1920s Worked ( 2015). He has also published articles and essays on popular culture, digital and public history.


Acknowledgements: 

This unique event was supported by an Action Grant from the New York State Council for the Humanities, and made possible by additional support from Daemen College's Office of Academic Affairs (student-faculty think-tank grants), by Division of Arts & Sciences, and by the History & Political Science Department at Daemen College.
We also wish to express appreciation for help with publicity to our two community partners: the Theodore Roosevelt (TR) Inaugural National Historic Site (National Park Service), and the Association for a  Buffalo Presidential Center. Additional thanks to members of The American Political Items Collectors for creating an exhibit of presidential memorabilia for our event.


Planning Committee:

Dr. David A Gerber, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University at Buffalo (SUNY);
Dr. Penny Messinger , Associate Professor of History and Chair of History & Political Science Department, Daemen College;
Dr. Phillip G. Payne, Professor of History, St. Bonaventure University;
Dr. Andrew Kier Wise, Professor of History, Daemen College.



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In the news: Recent press coverage about the presidents and issues related to our event:

Thomas Jefferson

Peter Onuf & Annette Gordon-Reed, (The New York Times, April 5, 2016)

  • Scott Jaschik, "Jefferson Is Next Target," Inside Higher Ed. November 23, 2015. This story discusses student-led efforts to remove statues of Thomas Jefferson from the University of Missouri and William & Mary College. The story makes comparisons with similar efforts aimed at removing statues of Woodrow Wilson from Princeton: 
Students comment on Jefferson's legacy (Inside Higher Ed)
"...Once again, students are raising the question of whether men seen as heroes in American history were decidedly unheroic when it came to issues of race -- and black students are demanding that colleges consider the impact of various honors for people whom they do not consider heroes. While Princeton has said it is considering the issue of the Wilson name, which could well remain, the student protest movement has led to widespread discussion of Wilson's record on race, which even fans of his idealistic internationalist vision admit was horrible. Publications such as Vox and Salon are running articles detailing just how bad Wilson was with regard to issues of race -- and giving prominence to a part of the historical record many have never considered...."



Woodrow Wilson
"For a long time, the main legacy of President Woodrow Wilson’s hinged on his progressive domestic policies and his leadership during World War I that reshaped American diplomacy. But more recently, another part of his personal and presidential story—racism—is starting to overshadow those other elements."
Challenging Wilson's legacy at Princeton (NYT 11-29-15)
"Was Woodrow Wilson a key founder of modern liberalism, a visionary whose belief in an activist presidency laid the groundwork for the New Deal and the civil rights legislation of the 1960s?

"Or was he a virulent and unrepentant racist, a man who not only segregated the federal work force but nationalized the Southern view of politics, turning the federal government itself into an instrument of white supremacy for decades to come?"

  • Editorial: "The Case Against Woodrow Wilson at Princeton," The New York Times, Nov. 24, 2015.  The Times Editorial Board endorses efforts by students at Princeton College to highlight Wilson's racist actions as President of the College and as President of the United States. 

 Warren G. Harding
    President Harding (The Atlantic)
  • Russell Berman, "Warren G. Harding's Terrible Tenure," The Atlantic, August 14, 2015. This story discusses the reassessment of Harding's presidency following upon the results of DNA testing that validated claims of the extra-marital affair between Harding and Nan Britton. In addition to the personal scandals, the story highlights other shortcomings of Harding's presidency.    
Nan Britton & daughter Elizabeth (with Harding). (NYT)
"Long before Lucy Mercer, Kay Summersby or Monica Lewinsky, there was Nan Britton, who scandalized a nation with stories of carnal adventures in a White House coat closet and endured a ferocious backlash for publicly claiming that she bore the love child of President Warren G. Harding.

"Now nearly a century later, according to genealogists, new genetic tests confirm for the first time that Ms. Britton’s daughter, Elizabeth Ann Blaesing, was indeed Harding’s biological child. The tests have solved one of the enduring mysteries of presidential history and offer new insights into the secret life of America’s 29th president. At the least, they demonstrate how the march of technology is increasingly rewriting the nation’s history books..."

  Grover Cleveland
  • Angela Serratore, "President Cleveland's Problem Child." The Smithsonian, September 26, 2013. This article recounts details of Cleveland's actions in relation to Maria Halpin, who said that a sexual assault by Grover Cleveland had resulted in her pregnancy and the birth of a son (named Oscar Folsom Cleveland). Cleveland admitted paternity for the child, but later took action to consign Halpin to a Buffalo insane asylum. He was also involved in legal maneuvers that resulted in the loss of her parental rights and her surrendering of the child for adoption.

"Not even a specific allegation of philandering, illicit pregnancy and coverup barred Grover Cleveland from the White House."
Frank Beard's 1884 political cartoon about Cleveland
"...The story filled major newspapers during the summer and autumn of 1884—had Cleveland really taken part in the “seduction and ruination” of such a goodly woman? Was he indeed too much of a libertine to lead the nation? Or was his campaign telling the truth—that Maria Halpin was a harlot looking to cash in on a distant dalliance with the upstanding lawyer running for office on a clean-government ticket?"











Removing Statues
 
Removing statues--and redefining the standards for reputation, memory, and historical significance of "greatness"--occurs around the world:
  • Finlo Rohrer, "When is it right to remove a statue?" BBC News Magazine, December 23, 2015. Popular pressure has led to the removal of statues in many countries. This story highlights efforts aimed Confederate president Jefferson Davis and South Africa's Cecil Rhodes, among others:  
"The problem with statues is that stone or bronze is meant to last forever, but reputations crumble much more easily." Historian Madge Dresser commented: "I think it is a process, rather than the actual removal, starting a debate about collective values. Statues are lightning rods, symbols of the prevailing values of the society. When those values are not shared a debate needs to be started."
 
"He Denied Blacks Citizenship. Now a City is Deciding His Statue's Fate," The New York Times, September 4, 2016. Frederick, Maryland, is debating the future of a statue of Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney, author of the infamous 1857 Dred Scott decision that denied the citizenship of black Americans:
 
"Here in Frederick, the effort to purge Taney from city property has been led since 1998 by Alderwoman Donna Kuzemchak, who says anything that so deeply offends a portion of the citizenry “needs to go.” She almost succeeded in 2009, but the city instead paired the bust with a plaque about Dred Scott and his wife, Harriet."
 
"Willie Mahone [r], a lawyer in Frederick, asked, “Why would we opt to display a symbol of racial hatred on the lawn of City Hall?”Credit Lexey Swall for The New York Times