![]() But what does it mean? Is post-truth synonymous with lying? Where did post-truth come from? And does saying that we are in a post-truth era mean that no one cares about truth anymore? Some have defined post-truth as the idea that “objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.” I’ll discuss this and how it fits into the political context of seeing post-truth as a precursor to authoritarian rule. The phenomenon of “post-truth” rocketed to public attention in November 2016, when it was named “word of the year” by the Oxford Dictionaries. What does it mean to be ‘Post Truth’? co-sponsored with the Global Studies Program He is the author of four books and several articles on public policymaking in the United States and specifically on policies related to employment, public assistance, taxes, trade, telecommunications, LGBTQ rights, and abortion. He served as Department Chair from 2005-16. Gary Mucciaroni is a Professor in the Department of Political Science and Director of the Master of Public Policy Program at Temple University. came up with dramatically different answers to the labor question that I label “voluntarist,” “statist,” and “legalist.” Exploring the paths these nations took and those they rejected, this project illuminates how and why they developed divergent industrial relations regimes. Despite many similarities, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the U.K and the U.S. The labor question involved both social justice (how workers would be treated as a class) and social order (how class conflict could be managed). Starting in the mid-19th Century, elites and reformers often alluded to “the labor question,” which was rooted in the system of wage labor that produced contending classes of employers and employees as industrialization unfolded. Her own graduate internship introduced her to the work of public humanities.Īnswers to the Labor Question: The Origins of Industrial Relations Regimes in the Anglophone World, 1880-1945 She has served as the faculty internship advisor for graduate and undergraduate students at Temple. Hilary Iris Lowe is an assistant professor in the History Department. Since then Joy has interned and worked at historical societies, libraries, and museums including the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History, Mote Marine Aquarium’s Arthur Vining Davis Library, and the Tampa Baseball Museum. Joy Feagan obtained her first internship by cold-calling her local historical society to ask if they’d like some extra help. In this role, he has overseen interns from a wide variety of backgrounds, who have worked in development, communications, education, curatorial, and other roles at the organization. Jonathan Burton is the Executive Director of the Philadelphia Society for the Preservation of Landmarks. Humanities Internships for Graduate Students - A ConversationĬould internships be the first step for careers and research in the public humanities? What kinds of internships exist? What are employers looking for? How do your skills apply in the workplace? How do you get an internship?Īn experienced graduate intern, internship supervisor, and faculty opened up about how they got their internships, what their experiences were, and how they benefited from the experience. “The Mysterious and Endangered Reality of Femininity: New Womanhood in Vienna, 1890-1930” “Private Platforms, Public Demands: Tech CEOs as Locus of Popular Critique” “Militante Mannsbilder: Alternative Masculinities in Men’s Groups of the Autonomen” Patricia Melzer (Department of German & Department of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies) ![]() ![]() ![]() “Embodying Time: Pedagogies of Rhythm in 19th Century American Culture” “Spectral Waters: Diasporic Women’s Writing from Hispaniola” “Becoming Modern, Becoming Brazilian: Japanese Brazilian Abstract Artists” Mariola Alvarez (Department of Art History) “Sunshine Patriots: Family and Divided Loyalties in the American Revolution” ![]()
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