Laura Bland, Tony Cunningham, and Caroline Hornburg, the College of Arts and Letters 3MT Finalists.
Two psychology Ph.D. students and one History of Philosophy and Science graduate program student were named finalists in the College of Arts and Letters Three Minute Thesis preliminary competition from a pool of seven competitors.
Laura Bland (history and philosophy of science), Tony Cunningham (psychology), and Caroline Hornburg (psychology) advanced to the finals of the competition, hosted by The Graduate School, where they will go up against finalists from the College of Engineering and the College of Science.
Graduate students presented on a variety of stimulating and compelling research topics. Maria Ulrickson (history) began the evening with a powerful evocation of injustice in colonial Spanish Santo Domingo, and its contributions to a modern conception of race and overtly racist categories of crime. Nicholas Bonneau (history) recounted in somber detail the death toll in disease-ravaged, pre-revolutionary Rowley, Mass., where in one year more than 188 children died of a throat distemper epidemic. Courtney Smotherman (Ph.D. in Literature program) explored the ways that we write about Italian history when we have no “Italy” to speak of, engaging questions of how writers constructed modern ideas of nation and nationhood. Joel Duncan (English) began his presentation by reciting lines from Walt Whitman’s seminal long poem Leaves of Grass before uncovering the surprising links between nature and industrialization in American poetry.
The judges were Mark Schurr, associate dean for the social sciences and research; Michael Desch, professor of political science and director of Notre Dame International Security Center; and the Graduate School’s Sarah Baechle, assistant program director for professional development.
“One of the most interesting—and impressive—facets of the competition was the way that the at-times very different humanities and social science disciplinary fields represented by the Arts and Letters competitors demonstrated (and underscored) the breadth and variability in their research," Baechle said, "even as they all engaged the big questions: the nature of emotion, of religion, of knowledge, and art.”
Cunningham, Bland, and Hornburg will next present their research during the 3MT Finals on March 16.
More about the College of Engineering Prelims.
Finalists
Name | Department | Presentation Title | Advisor | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Laura Bland | History and Philosophy of Science | Unfriendly Skies: God, Science, and the Great Comet | Prof. Robert Goulding | |
Tony Cunningham | Psychology | Sleep On It: The Role of Sleep in Processing Emotional Events | Prof. Jessica Payne | |
Caroline Hornburg | Psychology | Optimizing Problem Format to Facilitate Children’s Understanding of Math Equivalence | Prof. Nicole McNeil |
Other Competitors
Name | Department | Presentation Title | Advisor | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nicholas Bonneau | History | Unspeakable Loss, Distempered Awakenings: North America’s Invisible Throat Distemper Epidemic of 1735–1765 | Prof. Christopher Hamlin | |
Joel Duncan | English | The Song in the Machine | Prof. Stephen Fredman and Prof. Laura Dassow Walls | |
Courtney Smotherman | PhD in Literature Program | Balancing Peninsular and Provincial Historiography in the Age of the Italian Wars, 1494–1559 | Prof. Margaret Meserve | |
Maria Ulrickson | History | Criminalization of Free Black Labor in Spanish Santo Domingo, 1768–1813 | Prof. Karen Graubart |
Originally published at graduateschool.nd.edu.