Pflaum Lecture Series
Our departmental lecture series, begun during the 1971-72 academic year, is named in honor of John C. Pflaum (1904-1975), a member of the history faculty from 1946 to 1972. Thanks to the generosity of his former students and colleagues, each spring a distinguished scholar is invited to campus to speak on a significant issue in history.
ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app John C. Pflaum
John C. Pflaum (1904-1975) was a professor of history with special interests in the Civil War, the European origins of the First World War, and early Carlisle. He held the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching in recognition of his popularity with students during his Dickinson tenure which began in 1946. He received his master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania where he also taught for three years after spending six years on the faculty of Temple University. During his lifetime, he was a most voracious reader–especially a devourer of history, memoirs, biography, and prose literature. Above all, John Pflaum was a born teacher who inspired fanatical devotion in several generations of Dickinsonians. His teaching placed an emphasis upon precision and fact and evidenced love of conventional art and literature. His enthusiasm and dedication are best described in his own words, “The sheer pleasure of teaching, the fun I’ve had in the average class--this is what I remember more than anything else. My heart is in the lecture room. It’s almost a shame to take the money.”
2024 Pflaum Lecture
Prof. Annette Joseph-Gabriel, John Spencer Bassett Associate Professor of Romance Studies and Associate Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies at Duke University, presented the 2024 Pflaum Lecture on April 23, 2024. Her talk, "The Other Toussaints: Atlantic Genealogies of Black Girlhood in the 19th Century," shared Prof. Joseph-Gabriel's new research on slavery, childhood, and kinship through an analysis of the Toussaint family story as told by its youngest member, Euphémie Toussaint. Born free in New York in 1814 to a formerly enslaved family from Haiti, Euphémie was a musician with a penchant for writing witty letters. The 456 letters she wrote to her uncle, the wealthy hairdresser and philanthropist Pierre Toussaint, form an alternative archive that recounts the remarkable story of one family's survival through slavery and revolution. Dr. Joseph-Gabriel’s work pays homage to a Black girl's role as both faithful biographer and chronicler of Black life in the 19th century, and as an author whose imaginative world of dream and play can offer us new modes of recounting enslaved people's stories.
Click here for a full list of previous years' Pflaum Lecturers - names of lecturers and titles of lectures
Bell Lecture Series
This lecture series, begun in Fall 2010, honors Whitfield Bell, Jr., class of 1935, author and pioneer in historical editing. Bell was the Boyd Lee Spahr Chair of American History. Each fall, in October or November, the current History Majors Committee invites a faculty member in the Dickinson History Department to present a public lecture on a subject of their choice related to their research. Below is a list of the Bell lectures that have been delivered to date.
Bell Lectures, Fall 2010 - present
2010 - "Joan of Arc and Napoleon in French Public Memory," Prof. Regina Sweeney
2011 - "Indians, Empires, and Violence in the Northeast North America, 1600-1763," Prof. Chris Bilodeau
2012 - "Eleventh-Century France to Twentieth-Century Hollywood: An Unusual Journey," Prof. Stephen Weinberger
2013 - "Alexander the Great in Late Medieval and Early Modern Persian Historiography: How the world conquerer and his trusty sidekick, Aristotle, toured Iran and accidentally founded a city that became the center of the world," Prof. Derek Mancini-Lander
2014 - "Stalin's Niños: Raising Spanish Civil War Refugees in the Soviet Union, 1937-1951," Prof. Karl Qualls
2015 - "Their Side of the Story: Black Women's Workplace Resistances in Civil Rights Era Milwaukee," Prof. Crystal Moten
2016 - "Sustenance, Poison, and Cure: The Role of Food in Caring for the Sick in Early Modern Japan," Prof. W. Evan Young
2017 - "Apocalypse 1979: Prelude to the Siege of Mecca," Prof. David Commins
2018 - "Black Power and the Myth of White Ejection," Prof. Say Burgin
2019 - "Cross Cultural Encounters: Botanical Knowledge and Scientific Networks in Nineteenth-Century Angola," Prof. Jeremy Ball
2020-21 - Cancelled Due to Covid-19
2022 - "Lincoln’s Secession Crisis, and Ours," Prof. Matthew Pinsker
2023 - "The Search for Order: English, French, and Indian Responses to Everyday Frontier Violence in the Gulf of Maine, 1620-1670," Prof. Christopher Bilodeau
2024 - "Leaving Home, Longing for Home: Nostalgia and the Migrant Experience," Prof. Marcelo Borges