History

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November 1, 2001

 > Home Page > History
The Louvre Museum in Paris

 

LMU's appeal to students of history

Multicultural City and Outstanding Faculty
The history department is located in Los Angeles, a multicultural city, one of the world’s most diverse metropolitan centers. The faculty members reflect the international diversity of Southern California, with cultural roots in East Asia, North America, the Middle East, Western Europe and Sub-Saharan Africa. They are widely traveled and productive scholars and rank among the most accomplished teachers at the university.

Academic Excellence and Close Contact with Students
Classes are small and include seminars each semester. Faculty members develop close relations with the history majors through research projects, study abroad programs in Bonn, Paris, Rome, London and Oxford, and through participation in history conferences. The department recognizes academic excellence by organizing History Honor Society banquets and History Awards Convocations that recognize outstanding history students.

First-Rate Facilities Overlooking the Pacific Ocean
The department has wonderful facilities in two villages, where faculty members and students can work together, such as a state-of-the-art conference room, computer lab, TA office center, World War studies research room, and a History Honors Society conference room.

In the Spotlight

Dr. Carla Bittel's book by University of North Carolina Press
To order her book, Mary Putnam Jacobi and the Politics of Medicine in Nineteenth-Century America, go to http://uncpress.unc.edu/browse/book_detail?title_id=1583

2009-10 Phi Alpha Theta officials
President: Rachelle Palison; Vice-President: Allie Serrano;
Secretary: Alexis Mendoza; Treasurer: Scott Ferrier

Winner of the 2009 article price
Dr. Amy Woodson-Boulton is the winner of the 2009 Article Prize from the Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies. Her article is entitled: “’Industry without Art is Brutality’: Aesthetic Ideology and Social Practice in Victorian Art Museums,” Journal of British Studies 46 (January 2007): 47-71.


The Louvre Museum