Robert Ingram Strozier Lecture Series
About the Collection
Begun in 1982 by Armstrong State College’s Department of Languages, Literature and Dramatic Arts, the lecture series soon expanded to include faculty from other departments and continues to the present. Each spring a committee selects 8-10 lectures from proposals submitted by faculty across campus. Aimed at both the campus and wider community, many lecturers present a popular take on an academic specialty—such as a Criminal Justice professor on “Use of Deadly Force” (1987) or a lecture on Irish literature for St. Patrick ’s Day or a mathematician’s answer to “Does it pay to play the lottery?” Others are more personal such as when Dr. Evelyn Dandy answered the question, “What is it like to be the only one?” (1989.) And some draw on faculty members’ outside interests, such as historian Robert Patterson’s “Baseball as Metaphor.” In 1996 the series was named after Robert Ingram Strozier, alumnus and long serving member of Armstrong’s English faculty who spearheaded the creation of the series and was a lively contributor. A selection of historic Strozier Faculty Lectures have been digitized and are available in streaming and downloadable video as part of Lane Library's Special Collections in Georgia Southern Commons.
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Lectures from 2011
Not Your Father's Medicare: The Future of the Social Safety Net for Older Adults and the Disabled, Joey Crosby and Rod McAdams
Some Thoughts, Reflections and Cautions Regarding Mind/Brain-Based Instruction, Linda Ann McCall and Joyce Bergin
Western Students Meet Eastern Medicine, Helen Taggart and Sara Plaspohl
Illegitimate Mothers from the Bible to the Mommy Blog: Narrative Constructions, Virtual Surveillance and the Reality of Separate Spheres, Beth Howells and Teresa Winterhalter
Lectures from 2009
Kindled Kin: Burning and Burying Children in Ancient Mediterranean Religions., Jason Tatlock
Micro-financing and U.S. Illegal Immigration Dilemma: Merging the Interests of Public Policy and Private Enterprise, Kathleen M. Burke
Human Extinction Fantasies, Hans-Georg Erney
Mechanisms of Spatial Orientation and Navigation: Similarity in Real and Virtual Environments., Bradley R. Sturz
The TV Diet: Toxic Food Choices Endorsed on TV., Michael Mink
Lectures from 2008
Entertaining the Mind: A Medieval Cure for Melancholy?, Dorothée Mertz-Weigel
Biocatalysis: Making Drugs with Little Bugs., Brent Feske and Scott C. Mateer
Interpreting the North End, Learotha Williams and Barbara Fertig
Breakout, Before You Get Bumrushed!: Migration, Community Building, and Self- Defense in the Black American West, 1898-1968, Kalenda C. Eaton
Vulnerable Populations: Exploring a Family Perspective of Grief, Marilyn O'Mallon
Georgia on my Mathematical Mind, Jane T. Barnard
The Japanese in Brazil: 1908-2008, Jose De Arimateia Da Cruz
Heavenly Genes: Eugenic Motherhood and the Rebirth of a Nation, Jane V. Rago
Studio Physics: Moving Towards Student-Centered Instructions, Donna Mullenax
Lectures from 2007
Copyrights, Portraits, and Pope: Marketing Poetry in Early Eighteenth-century England, David R. Wheeler
Abridging the Freedom of Speech: Political Correctness and the Rise of a New Social McCarthyism in Americah, Tony R. Morris
Middle School Teachers Share Suggestions for Improving Preparation of Novice Teachers, Brenda E. Logan
Soups or Sparks: The Battle Over Neuronal Communication, David A. Lake
Lectures from 2006
Kazakhstan: Land in the Middle, Patrick Thomas
Lectures from 2005
Risking Who One Is: Feminism and Public Spaces, Teresa Winterhalter
The Legacy of Duke Ellington, Randall Reese