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News by EHN TeamSep 7, 20206:00 amSeptember 11, 2022

Happy Two Years: We’re Expanding the EHN Team

Problems of Place by Julie ReimerSep 4, 202011:00 amSeptember 1, 2020
gentle waves spill onto a pebble beach

Problems of Place: Fluid As The Ocean

Field Notes by Claire PerrottAug 27, 202011:00 amApril 7, 2021
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Rainy day at Parícutin Volcano

The Department of State, Safety, and Archives: Research in a Conflict Zone

“Don’t travel at night, don’t travel by car, and don’t travel out of the city,” the warning of the Department of State repeated over and over in my head as we zipped along the small highway in darkness.

News by Elizabeth HameetemanAug 19, 20202:00 pmSeptember 11, 2022
A row of books on shelf

#FlipTheList: Moving Forward

EHN Blog by Teresa WalchAug 12, 202010:00 amAugust 10, 2020
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Trees and foliage surrounding a dirt road

Ordinary Places: Reflections on Holocaust Topographies

In September 2011, I was residing in Dachau, Germany after embarking upon a yearlong volunteer service with Action Reconciliation Service for Peace at the Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site.

Politics of Nature by Emma C. MoesswildeAug 7, 20209:30 amSeptember 9, 2020
Hayfield

Politics of Nature: Representing Rurality in Environmental History

EHN Blog by Ayushi DhawanJul 31, 202010:00 amJuly 31, 2020
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Oriental Nicety

A Farewell to the Oriental Nicety (1986-2012): Long Gone But Not Forgotten…!

The Oriental Nicety, age 26, left the mortal world amidst huge negative publicity on June 29, 2012, at the Alang shipbreaking yards in India after meeting with an unfortunate fatal accident.

Problems of Place by Rachel GoldlustJul 24, 20203:00 pmJuly 24, 2020
Now Fly

Problems of Place: Dealing with the Impostor Syndrome, Even At Home

Field Notes by Amanda Lewis-Nang'eaJul 21, 20202:00 pmJuly 20, 2020
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Study Abroad: Madagascar’s Cultural and Biological Diversity

It had always been my professional dream to take students on a study abroad program that would be meaningful and impact their outlook on their role in the world.

EHN Blog by Sarah PickmanJul 16, 202010:00 amJuly 17, 2020
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A rocky island in the Svalbard archipelago

“Are There Even People There?” Re-reading Adrian Howkins and Grappling with “Going There”

Howkins, who is a historian of Antarctica, writes of the sense of legitimacy that seems to settle on historians after they visit the places they study, especially if the places they study are little-visited by outsiders in general.

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