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A new video tells an old story, tracing the UWindsor history department from its founding to the present.
A new video tells an old story, tracing the UWindsor history department from its founding to the present.
UWindsor history professor Guy Lazure feels a little like Indiana Jones after his discovery of a catalogue of a sixteenth-century library.
Donations will help to fund a digital archive documenting the histories of local flappers.
Historian Michael Roberto will discuss the 1920s and ’30s rise of fascism in the United States in a free public talk March 25 at the SoCA Armouries.
Humanities Week promises events every day, March 25 to 29.
History students will present a digital archive they created exploring “the Modern Girl” in Windsor and surroundings, 1920s-1930s.
A reading Feb. 27 will launch history professor Guillaume Teasdale’s book on the French founders of Windsor-Detroit.
The next event in the Science on Tap series offers the public a chance to hear from professors participating in the WEDigHistory project.
A team of UWindsor filmmakers have created a historical documentary that will air Sunday, Jan. 27, on CBC Television.
Steven Palmer will deliver his free public lecture “Miracles in Modern Medicine c. 1967: the Film that Made Thousands Faint,” on Thursday, Jan. 17.