![]() Winners of the 2016 USC Libraries Research Award Paper: “Debates and Questions for Studying Black Murals: The Case of Noni Olabisi’s ‘To Protect and Serve’ (1996)”.Paper: “Hidden Follies: The Lost Labor Behind Arthur Freed’s Unmade MGM Musicals”.Paper: “La Ventana a la Cultura: El Papel del Idioma en la Educación Primaria”.Majors: Communication and Political Science.Paper: “Global Evolution: How Globalization shaped the National Basketball Association into an International Power”.Majors: International Relations, East Asian Languages and Cultures.Paper: “China's Regional Identity Crises: Exploring Identity in Xinjiang and Taiwan's Relations with Beijing”.Paper: “The News from Nowhere: William Morris's Icelandic Landscapes”.Paper: “Whose War is it Anyway? Examining Decision-Making in the Construction of U.S.-Afghan Policy During the Carter Administration”.Winners of the 2017 USC Libraries Research Award Paper: "Weapon of Coercion: How North Carolina Eugenicists Utilized Propaganda to Enforce Sterilization".Paper: "Witchcraft as a Vehicle of Resolution during the Jacobean Era".Paper: "Marching to What End" The Death Marches and the Final Solution".Paper: "Collaboration or Resistance? Prisoner Physicians in Concentration Camps".Paper: “To Tame a Savage Land: Photographs, Documentaries, a nd Travelogues as Colonial Texts in the New Hebrides (1860s-1920s).” Winners of the 2018 USC Libraries Research Award “Coming Out” on the Global Stage: Queer Theory and International Human Rights LawĬlass: POIR 648: International Human Rights Law and Policy, Spring 2019, Professor Alison Dundes Renteln Paper: Decolonial Expressions in Barrio Film of 1970s East Los AngelesĬlass: CTCS 677: Colonialism, Cinema and Culture”, Spring 2019, Professor Priya Jaikumar The Dissemination of Information by Women as Resistance to the Third Reich Paper: The US-Russia BMD Confrontation: A study of American Perception of Russian Rhetoric on US BMD and the Implications for Future Arms ControlĬlass: IR (International Relations)494 Honors Thesis Seminar, Fall 2019, Professor Jacques Hymans Paper: The Hand That Signed the Paper: Treaty Breaking and Native American Legal Resistance to GenocideĬlass: HIST 446: Resistance to Genocide, Fall 2019, Professor Wolf Gruner Second prize: Ryan Nhu, a senior majoring in Creative Writing Law, History, and Culture, for "Violent Affect(ions), Queer Desires,” written for Viet Thanh Nguyen’s class English 504: Theories of Race, Class, and Gender Third prize: Bridgett Purcell, a senior majoring in French and Communication, for “Of Myths and (Wo)men: The International Implications of the Enlightenment in “Voltaire to Jeanne Antoinette Pompadour-1750 August 20,” written for French 370: Equality and Difference around the Enlightenment, taught by Natania Meekerįirst prize: Judy Zhou, a first-year PhD student in Biokinesiology and a recent Doctor of Physical Therapy graduate, for “Infant reaching in the first year of life: a scoping review of typical development and examples of atypical development" Third prize: Annie Li, a freshman majoring in Business Administration and Accounting, for “It's Not Just the Devil That Wears Prada,” written for Deborah Sims’ Writing 150 class Second prize: Edward Mack, majoring in international relations, for “Of Millets and Murder: A Discourse on the Ottoman Genocides, From Cause to Effect,” written for International Relations 437: Comparative Genocide, taught by Patrick James Second prize: Morgan Harler, a senior majoring in political science, for “Social Identity Theory Skews 27 Emotions Study: An Investigation of Political Polarization and Emotions,” an experimental honors thesis in political science You must create a Library Print account in order to print or copy on one of the Xerox multifunction printers.First prize: Christopher Aranda, a junior majoring in history, for “Mickey’s Army: Frontierland in the Creation of the American Western Myth,” written for History 457: The American West, taught by Alice Baumgartnerįirst prize: Sophie Hammond, a senior majoring in history and English, for the history honors thesis, “‘The Moral Regeneration of Civilized Humanity’: Bourgeois Women’s Movements in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna,” advised by Paul Lernerįirst prize: Ryan Nhu, a senior majoring in Creative Writing Law, History, and Culture, for “Compromising: On Richard Aoki, Midcentury Radicalism, and the Limits of Solidarity,” written as an independent research project in History for Professor Alice Echols To facilitate research, each library is also equipped with the latest Xerox multifunction printers capable of copying and scanning and emailing documents. USC Libraries provides a variety of printing options: wireless internet access USC Network access from Libraries Desktop/Lab work stations from your mobile device and from all library information kiosk terminals. ![]()
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