Activities
The minor in Women’s and Gender Studies introduces students to the theories, methods, and issues of the field of women’s studies, and considers the critical role gender plays in contemporary life. The minor provides an interdisciplinary perspective to students’ education by combining the scholarly traditions of many fields of knowledge in new and productive ways. To learn how a Women’s and Gender Studies minor can support and enhance your major, see the program webpage: http://www.une.edu/cas/womens/. If you have questions or are interested in a Women’s and Gender Studies minor, contact Professor DeWolfe at edewolfe@une.edu.
This monograph series is devoted to the study of American communal societies past and present, including the Shakers, Harmonists, Oneida Community, Amana, House of David, and others. The publications are peer-reviewed, scholarly works including new scholarship in the field as well as critical editions of important historical works. For inquiries or manuscript submissions, contact Dr. DeWolfe at edewolfe@une.edu.
Maine History Online, a project of the Maine Historical Society, will introduce people to key topics, themes, and events in Maine history. This major new section of Maine Memory Network is being developed in close partnership with a prestigious group of scholars, and will draw extensively on the 15,000+ primary source materials—historical images, documents, and objects—that have been contributed to Maine Memory by 180 organizations across Maine. Maine History Online will be organized through three richly illustrated, interconnected sections that will provide multiple ways to access and engage Maine history: (1) A Chronological Approach To Maine History; (2) Themes in Maine History; and (3) Critical Approaches to History. Dr. De Wolfe is the lead scholar of section three, Critical Approaches to History, which explores how historians think about, analyze, and interpret historical materials. Maine History Online is being developed with the support of the National Endowment of the Humanities and will be online in Fall 2009.
|