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DTSTART:20201101T020000
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UID:3058-48a4ec6b0b752ce083f431b4d74715b3@events.la.psu.edu
DTSTAMP:20260514T213455Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231006T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231006T113000
SUMMARY:HI Faculty Invites: “Writing Ocean History and Publishing with The Willi
	am and Mary Quarterly” with Jack Bouchard
DESCRIPTION:\nJack Bouchard\, Assistant Professor of History at Rutgers 
	University\n\nPre-modern history maintains a terrestrial bias. It is oft
	en preoccupied with events unfolding on land\, saying little about what 
	happened within Earth&rsquo\;s aquatic ecosystems. This terrestrial bias
	 reflects the dearth of historical sources on life under water before th
	e rise of oceanic sciences in the twentieth century. In this workshop\, 
	Professor Jack Bouchard will explain how environmental historians are gr
	adually ameliorating the problem.&nbsp\;Piecing together the fragments o
	f textual and natural archival sources\, he puts forward new interdiscip
	linary methods to span the terrestrial/aquatic divide and to unveil the 
	mysteries of life below water since the sixteenth century\, a world to w
	hich most early modern writers were largely oblivious.\n\nRegistration i
	s required for this workshop. Email&nbsp\;Faisal Husain at fhh102@psu.ed
	u to register.\n\nFor more details: https://events.la.psu.edu/event/hi-f
	aculty-invites_100623/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><b>Jack Bouchar
	d, Assistant Professor of History at Rutgers University</b></p><p>Pre-mo
	dern history maintains a terrestrial bias. It is often preoccupied with 
	events unfolding on land, saying little about what happened within Earth
	&rsquo;s aquatic ecosystems. This terrestrial bias reflects the dearth o
	f historical sources on life under water before the rise of oceanic scie
	nces in the twentieth century. In this workshop, Professor Jack Bouchard
	 will explain how environmental historians are gradually ameliorating th
	e problem.&nbsp;Piecing together the fragments of textual and natural ar
	chival sources, he puts forward new interdisciplinary methods to span th
	e terrestrial/aquatic divide and to unveil the mysteries of life below w
	ater since the sixteenth century, a world to which most early modern wri
	ters were largely oblivious.</p><p>Registration is required for this wor
	kshop. Email&nbsp;Faisal Husain at <a href="mailto:fhh102@psu.edu">fhh10
	2@psu.edu</a> to register.</p><p>For more details: <a href='https://even
	ts.la.psu.edu/event/hi-faculty-invites_100623/'>https://events.la.psu.ed
	u/event/hi-faculty-invites_100623/</a></p></body></html>
LOCATION:102 Ihlseng Cottage
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