It's nice to receive awards. It's also nice to get a book published. Getting both done around the same time is especially nice, and possibly conducive to getting a big head. While he has not gotten the latter, thankfully, the department's own Dr. John Kvach recently accomplished the former two.
Last November, Dr. Kvach's book De Bow's Review: The Antebellum Vision of a New South was published by The University Press of Kentucky. The book, which is based on Dr. Kvach's dissertation, looks at the magazine of J.D.B De Bow, a nineteenth century southerner who was influential in helping form the idea of the "New South" even before the beginning of the Civil War. More information about his book can be found here: http://www.uah.edu/news/people/7091-uah-professor-s-book-gives-historic-precedent-for-importance-of-compromise#.UwyzB-NdXkt
Earlier this month, he was awarded the Historic Preservation Award and the Historic Preservation Medal by the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution. More information about his thoughts on the awards and his work in earning them can be found here: http://www.uah.edu/news/people/7233-uah-history-professor-earns-prestigious-dar-award-and-medal#.Uwyx0-NdXkt
We are very pleased for our colleague's success. Congratulations Dr. Kvach!
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Friday, February 21, 2014
Jesse Thomas, History Alumnus, studying in Vladivostok, Russia
History degrees can take you places. That is the case with Jesse Thomas. A graduate of UAH with his degree in History, he is currently studying international relations at Far Eastern Federal University (FEFU) in Vladivostok, Russia. Congratulations, Jesse!
Since Jesse has been there, he has been pretty busy. He writes, "I recently participated in a United Nations-sponsored round-table discussion about economic development in the Asia-Pacific region that included delegates from the US, Canada, Russia, Brazil, South Africa, Italy, Japan, South Korea, and Mexico. As one of 6 graduate students in International Relations, I was invited to participate, as it was organized by one of my professors." He thought it was a wonderful experience. He is also working with the Model United Nations of the Russian Far East (MUNRFE). Concerning this, he writes, "I am one of the six members selected to represent our organization at the Model UN conference in New York at the end of March, and our delegation also has received an invitation to meet with World Bank representatives in Washington D.C. during our trip. I am excited for this opportunity."
Jesse has also spoken to young students, and even undergraduate students at FEFU. To the first group of students, who ranged from 10-12 years old and who are learning English, he explained how Halloween is celebrated in the United States, and also explained some about Alabama. For the college students, which numbered over 100, he lectured on "social and humanitarian problems in Guatemala, and the causes of these problems."
It appears Jesse is having a wonderful time in Vladivostok. We hope you have a great time over there. Be well!
Since Jesse has been there, he has been pretty busy. He writes, "I recently participated in a United Nations-sponsored round-table discussion about economic development in the Asia-Pacific region that included delegates from the US, Canada, Russia, Brazil, South Africa, Italy, Japan, South Korea, and Mexico. As one of 6 graduate students in International Relations, I was invited to participate, as it was organized by one of my professors." He thought it was a wonderful experience. He is also working with the Model United Nations of the Russian Far East (MUNRFE). Concerning this, he writes, "I am one of the six members selected to represent our organization at the Model UN conference in New York at the end of March, and our delegation also has received an invitation to meet with World Bank representatives in Washington D.C. during our trip. I am excited for this opportunity."
Jesse has also spoken to young students, and even undergraduate students at FEFU. To the first group of students, who ranged from 10-12 years old and who are learning English, he explained how Halloween is celebrated in the United States, and also explained some about Alabama. For the college students, which numbered over 100, he lectured on "social and humanitarian problems in Guatemala, and the causes of these problems."
It appears Jesse is having a wonderful time in Vladivostok. We hope you have a great time over there. Be well!
Monday, February 03, 2014
Interview with Professor Emeritus, Dr. Richard Gerberding
Dr. Richard Gerberding, a professor in the Department of History at UAH, retired last year after twenty-nine years of teaching. The good professor emeritus is still alive and kicking, and even teaching Latin up in Oregon. Some retirement! Dr. Gerberding answered the following questions later last year and provided some wonderful memories and advice. Thanks for everything, Dr. G.!
One of your greatest legacies is your creation and sponsorship of The
Society for Ancient Languages. Why did you decide to begin the Society?
I didn't. It was the students at the time who did, under the leadership of Ken Swaim. They came to me and asked if I would lead an informal reading group in the evenings so that they could move beyond the rather disjointed readings in Wheelock to real and coherent Latin texts. The Society grew naturally out of that reading group.
What do you think is the ultimate aim of an education in history, and in education itself?
Those are huge questions, and I cannot pretend to answer them. I have thought about them a lot and continue to do so, but have only come up with guides, thoughts, and partial answers. As you know, I differentiate strongly between education and training. Education is the matter of the undergraduate, training that of the graduate student or someone attending a tech/vocational school. The undergraduate studies history, the graduate history student is in training to become a historian. So education has to do with the student, perhaps even more than the discipline he/she chooses. Otium cum dignitate is high on my list of education's most important purposes. Politics is another - helping the young become critically aware and developing their sense of social responsibility so that they live larger than their own little patch. All of this has to do with humanitas - refinement -, the attempt to polish and hone the talents and breaks we are given and raise them to a level beyond the selfish.
While you taught history, you also taught Latin. Indeed, language is a passion for you. What is the significance of studying language, especially in tandem with history?
There are two reasons for studying languages as an academic exercise; I leave the practical ones to the business school. 1) It is fun. 2) Nothing more quickly and more fundamentally teaches you a different way of thinking than to try it in a language not your own. Both these reasons are important to people studying history.
While it is cliché to ask, what are some of your best memories from your time at UAH?
Why did you decide to pursue a graduate and doctoral
degree in history, as opposed to continuing your studies in psychology?
The reason had more
to do with Psychology than history. The more I studied psychology, the
more I realized that it was, in its modern academic form, an empty science
- more or less jargonized common sense. I wanted to learn about human
nature, and it was pretty obvious, even to a 23 year-old punk, that
history was the far better teacher of that.
I didn't. It was the students at the time who did, under the leadership of Ken Swaim. They came to me and asked if I would lead an informal reading group in the evenings so that they could move beyond the rather disjointed readings in Wheelock to real and coherent Latin texts. The Society grew naturally out of that reading group.
What do you think is the ultimate aim of an education in history, and in education itself?
Those are huge questions, and I cannot pretend to answer them. I have thought about them a lot and continue to do so, but have only come up with guides, thoughts, and partial answers. As you know, I differentiate strongly between education and training. Education is the matter of the undergraduate, training that of the graduate student or someone attending a tech/vocational school. The undergraduate studies history, the graduate history student is in training to become a historian. So education has to do with the student, perhaps even more than the discipline he/she chooses. Otium cum dignitate is high on my list of education's most important purposes. Politics is another - helping the young become critically aware and developing their sense of social responsibility so that they live larger than their own little patch. All of this has to do with humanitas - refinement -, the attempt to polish and hone the talents and breaks we are given and raise them to a level beyond the selfish.
While you taught history, you also taught Latin. Indeed, language is a passion for you. What is the significance of studying language, especially in tandem with history?
There are two reasons for studying languages as an academic exercise; I leave the practical ones to the business school. 1) It is fun. 2) Nothing more quickly and more fundamentally teaches you a different way of thinking than to try it in a language not your own. Both these reasons are important to people studying history.
While it is cliché to ask, what are some of your best memories from your time at UAH?
It is not a cliché: one of the great things
about being old is that you have a lot of memories. My professional life
was largely that of a teacher, and so my best memories are not of UAH [...] but of its students. One vignette that
continues to give me pleasure happened years ago at a Convivium. Our
distinguished speaker that year was Julia Gaisser, professor of classics at
Bryn Mawr, most years rated as America 's
best undergraduate institution. After dinner, she said to me privately, “You know,
Dick, I am jealous of you.”
“Huh?” I
responded, “How could you, coming from Bryn Mawr and being such a famous
scholar possibly be jealous of me?”
“It's
your students,” she said. “They are hungry for learning. My students are much
less passionate about it. By the time I get them they have seen it all,
have been to Europe twice, and never really
develop academic passions. Your students do.” Whatta memory. She said it far
better than I ever could.
You
are currently teaching Latin in Oregon
now that you have retired, if only from UAH. What other plans do you have for
your post-teaching life?
I have no plans. I am enjoying my current
adventure in the Pacific Northwest , but it is
not part of a plan. A wise friend of mine, retired now about six years, said, “Make
no important decisions about your retired life until you have been retired
at least two years.” I think that is good advice.
Is there any advice you would like to give to
university students?
Advice to the young?
You have heard this sermon many times. The advice I
would give to young undergraduates, and did give to them for decades, is the
same that my father gave to me as I walked down the front steps of our house
setting off for college on a Greyhound bus. “Look around and then follow
your academic passions.” And I, like most all-knowing youth with sensible
and wise parents, didn't. At least not at first. Practical considerations, such
as future employment prospects or even a sense of social
responsibility, should take a decided backseat to what cranks your tractor when
deciding what to study. This includes the obvious caveat that the subjects
you choose should be ones of intellectual and academic value. Basketball-arena
concession-stand management should not enter the field no matter what your
passion for basketball. Take good professors for your General
Education Requirements and treat these courses as exploratory - find out what
which ones make the heart beat faster. Then go. Worry about jobs and the
world later; if you get yourself educated first, you will be in a far
better position to tackle the practical things later. Ipse dixi.
Photo Courtesies:
1: Gerberding in Office: The Society for Ancient Languages
2: Gerberding, Students, and Hotel Staff in Rome: Cameron Umphrey
3: Gerberding clearing out Office: UAH Department of History
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