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Honors Projects

SOAR Project

Honors Projects

History students have actively participated in the Honors Program at Â鶹ÊÓƵֱ²¥. The Honors Program offers students of proven ability in their senior year the opportunity to pursue a year-long research project under the personal guidance of a faculty member whose own research is in that same area. Honors study in history is invaluable preparation for graduate and professional studies.

Recent Honors Projects:

  • Practices of Masculinity in Germany, 1918-1934
  • A Paleopathological Analysis of the Effects of Urbanization and Industrialization on Public Health in Medieval and Post-Medieval England (1100-1900)
  • Red Scare Fear: The Hollywood Ten and the 1947 House Un-American Activities Committee Investigation 
  • Violence, Memory, and Women in the Civil Rights Movement
  • The Early Revolutionaries of the Lehigh Valley, 1774-1777: The Committee and the Association
  • The Cultural Impact of Failing Lehigh Valley Railroads, mid-1950's to April 1, 1976
  • The Religion of the Founding Fathers
  • The Episcopal Controversy and the Struggle for Religious Freedom
  • Faith and Feminism: Mormon Involvement in Equal Rights Politics, 1977-1982
  • Family Violence in Ancient Near Eastern and Greek Mythology
  • 153rd Pennsylvania in the Civil War
  • Irrationality in Plurinationality: Conflicting Claims of Interculturality in Modern Ecuadorian Society
  • We Have Come Father Abraham In Lieu of a Draft: The History of the 153rd Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment During the Civil War, 1862-1863
  • The Irish Brigade in the American Civil War
  • Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend: Women's Baseball in the Twentieth Century
  • Patrons and Playwrights: Patronage in Tudor-Stuart England
  • The Edge of Belief: Exploring Apparitions in the Witchcraft Debate of Early Modern Britain
  • Beyond Motherhood: The Women's Movement and the Shift in Women's Legal Status in the United States, 1945-1986