Have a history or geography project you are interested in having published with The Santa Angela Review? The Call for Submissions for our 2025 volume is now open!
https://t.co/ZQtvcAluha
The print version of Volume 3 is ready! Some contributors have already picked up their copies, and some print copies are on their way in the mail!
Wondering about how you can submit something for the next volume? Watch this space!
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! Last but not least, we would like to highlight a special contribution to the journal. Dr. Arnoldo De León has kindly let us publish his reflections on his long career in the ASU history department, which is now named in his honor.
https://t.co/fvzfpqwl2q
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! In this special essay, Eunice Tibay, ASU History alumna, reflects on public history her graduate school experience University College Cork in Ireland in Museum Studies and her road to becoming the Archivist and Librarian at Fort Concho!
https://t.co/dDJHxkW43s
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! The journal is excited to publish its first lesson plan! Whether you are a current teacher, future teacher, or just want to learn more about the life of a Texas cattle driver, check out Allies Battles-Lancaster's excellent lesson plan.
https://t.co/vpbaVWvlg1
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! Curious about spies and intelligence during the American Civil War? Amanda Nowicki considers some notable spies such as Confederate Rose O'Neal Greenhow and strategies such as intercepting telegraph communications.
Learn more here:
https://t.co/lCA27j3VbQ
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! From whaling to oil, Andrew Milam surveys the various forms of Arctic resource extraction and their connection to recent discussions of sustainability and environmental impact.
https://t.co/notnQeJVF6
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! In Deborah Renee Orr's "The King Ranch: Legacy of Labor," discover the fascinating history behind the largest ranch in the United States, including Kineños ("King's men), the Tejano vaqueros who worked the ranch.
https://t.co/fP7iWfjCZL
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT! Alexia Perez deftly explores the history of the disinfection plant of El Paso, built in 1917, bringing light to the intersection of border crossings, hygiene, and discrimination.
Read more about it here:
https://t.co/CNN0c62q1Y
ARTICLE SPOTLIGHT!
In his article, "The Murder Act of 1752: The Culture of Dying and Its Relationship to Scientific Inquiry," Mars Peacock sheds light on the question of why the public has been so afraid of the relationship between science and the corpse.
https://t.co/wRAR4AkmgB
Shout out to our Volume 3 student editors: Amanda Nowicki, a recent graduate in Security Studies and current English grad student in Georgia; Kaci Wainscott, a senior History major; and Alex Paulson, a recent graduate in History. Their contributions made this volume possible! 🐏
Volume 3 of The Santa Angela Review is out! Check out our website to see all the great historical work ASU students have been producing. And watch this space--we'll be highlighting individual contributions in the coming days and weeks.
https://t.co/9OC8n0TAGW
The deadline for submissions to volume 3 of the journal is this Friday! We would love to see more submissions and welcome a variety of formats and history and geography topics.
Thanks to the Dorsey B. Hardeman Endowed Chair we have been able to print physical copies of volumes 1 and 2 of the journal! 📚
Authors and editors have been contacted regarding their copies.
Last but not least, we want to spotlight Alex Paulson's astute review of Tim Lehman's Up the Trail, which follows the rise and fall of the cattle industry and details the hardships faced by cowboys on cattle drives.
https://t.co/AeGSc98Foo
Camille Huffman created the beautiful painting gracing the journal's cover. But did you know it's a reflection on the discrepancy between the use of women as icons of liberty and the lived experiences of women in revolutionary France? Read about it here:
https://t.co/LOhCvgQPGI
ASU History alumnus and former journal editor, Price Tarbet, reflects on his inspiring experience traveling to Kyrgyzstan on a Critical Language Scholarship during Summer 2022 to study Russian.
Read about it here:
https://t.co/ZhKLIGeLkr