Department of History
Strickland Visiting Scholar Program
Upcoming Strickland Visiting Scholar

Dr. Janet Polasky
“The Call to Liberty: Echoes Heard Around the Atlantic World”
March 23, 7:00PM in the BAS State Farm Room on MTSU Campus (S102)
The event will be livestreamed on True Blue TV
“The Call to Liberty: Echoes Heard Around the Atlantic World”
Calls to revolution echoed over four continents and countless islands in the decades following the American War for Independence. Revolutionaries on at least four continents denounced despotic rule and proclaimed their freedom. They were convinced that anything was possible as empires on both sides of the ocean unraveled and monarchs were toppled. At the end of Common Sense, Thomas Paine notably asserts, “We have it in our power to begin the world again.”
Historian Dr. Janet Polasky leads an exploration of this time, when the possibility of insurrection loomed on plantations carved out of Caribbean islands by enslaved labor, in the novels of Dutch housewives raising their children on manuals inspired by John Locke, and among the slave-trolling entrepreneurs of West Africa.
What ideas traveled outward from the American Revolution to inspire the foundations of republics across the seas? Did they together change the world as they knew it? Do we still share the ideals that echoed across the Atlantic 250 years ago?
Dr. Janet Polasky is professor emerita of History at the University of New Hampshire and the author of six books, most recently Asylum between Nations: Refugees in a Revolutionary Era (2023) and Revolutions without Borders: The Call to Liberty in the Atlantic World (2015). She has won the Belgian Royal Academy’s Prize in Arts and Letters, the Pierlot Prize in Contemporary History, and the University Press of New England Book Prize, and was a finalist for the Washington Prize. The Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the American Council of Learned Societies have supported her research. Dr. Polasky is currently writing two books, one global: Revolutionary Women: A Transnational History, and the other local: Evolution of a Progressive Institution: A Church Built of Granite.
About the Strickland Visiting Scholar Program
The Strickland Visiting Scholar Program, created out of the Roscoe L. Strickland Jr. Endowment, gives students the opportunity to meet scholars with diverse historical backgrounds. Distinguished scholars visit MTSU’s campus for two weeks. During that time, they instruct classes, give public lectures, and offer brown bag talks. These lectures and discussions are opportunities for the visiting scholars to present their own research and areas of expertise to the MTSU community.

Roscoe and Lucy Strickland
Roscoe L. Strickland Jr. joined the faculty of Middle Tennessee State University in 1949. He was one of the founding members of the University’s History Department in 1963. During the department’s first year, Professor Strickland also established the M.A. and M.A.T. degrees in History. In 1966, he was elected as the first President of the Faculty Senate, and was a charter member of the Pi Sigma chapter of Pi Alpha Theta in 1970. Dr. Strickland left MTSU in 1972 to become President of Southern Seminary Junior College in Virginia. It was after his death in 1997 that his wife Lucy Strickland established the Roscoe L. Strickland Jr. Endowment for advancing the study of history.
Mrs. Strickland, a one-time faculty member of MTSU herself, was a great supporter of the program and attended many lectures by the Strickland scholars. She was also the first President of the Murfreesboro League of Women Voters. Mrs. Strickland pursued law at the Law School of Washington & Lee University and graduated in 1976. When she and Dr. Strickland moved back to North Carolina, she opened her own law practice. In 1988, the two moved back to Murfreesboro. Mrs. Strickland continued and finished her law career with Kidwell, South & Beasley and served on the MTSU Foundation from 1996 to 2002 as both a Trustee and Member. She passed away in 2008, and the family created a scholarship fund for the music department in her honor.
Spring 2025 Strickland Visiting Scholar
“The Drug Wars in Colombia: An American History” On March 5, 2025, Dr. Lina Britto spoke on the argument that elevating the drug wars to the forefront of U.S.-Colombian relations and enacting state policies to carry out its agenda contributed to the reinstatement of U.S. hegemony in Latin America and the Caribbean at different critical moments. Lina Britto is a journalist and historian of modern Latin America and the Caribbean. She is an associate professor in the Department of History, and affiliated faculty in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and the Latin American and Caribbean Studies program, LACS, at Northwestern University. Her research situates the emergence and consolidation of illegal drug smuggling networks in Colombia and the Caribbean in the context of a growing articulation between the region and the United States during the Cold War.
Fall 2023 Strickland Visiting Scholar
“The War Over History or the War Over Democracy? Making Sense of Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine” On October 9th, 2023, Dr. Serhy Yekelchyk gave his talk, “The War Over History or the War Over Democracy? Making Sense of Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine”. Dr. Yekelchyk was born and educated in Ukraine when it was part of the Soviet Union. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Alberta. He is the author of eight books on modern Ukrainian history, Stalinism, and Russo-Ukrainian relations. His monograph Stalin’s Citizens: Everyday Politics in the Wake of Total War (Oxford University Press, 2014) was the recipient of the Best Book Award from the American Association for Ukrainian Studies, and its Ukrainian translation in 2019 received a special diploma of the Lviv Book Forum. A professor of History and Slavic Studies at the University of Victoria, Yekelchyk is current president of the Canadian Association for Ukrainian Studies.
Spring 2023 Strickland Visiting Scholar
“Inclusive Approaches to Historic Preservation: Gender, Race, Sexuality and Ability” On March 30, 2023, Dr. Gail Dubrow discussed her thirty years teaching and practicing in the field of historic preservation and public history. As a graduate student, Dr. Dubrow was one of the first to integrate new scholarship in women’s history into the identification and interpretation of historic places. She was also among the first to document places significant in Asian American heritage in Washington State. In recent years, she has addressed LGBTQ heritage and places significant in the history of people with disabilities.
Fall 2022 Strickland Visiting Scholar
“No Common Ground: Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice”
On October 3, 2022, Dr. Karen Cox spoke about of the efforts to raise, preserve, protest, and remove Confederate monuments, depicted what these statues meant to those who erected them and how a movement arose to force a reckoning. She lucidly showed the forces that drove white Southerners to construct beacons of white supremacy, as well as the ways that anti-monument sentiment, largely stifled during the Jim Crow era, returned with the civil rights movement and gathered momentum in the decades after the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Spring 2022 Strickland Visiting Scholar
“Children and War: Race, Rights, and Rescue”
On March 31, 2022, Dr. Sabrina Thomas, an Associate Professor and the David A. Moore Chair of American History at Wabash College, spoke to the MTSU campus about her research specializing in US Foreign Policy with a transnational focus on the intersections of race, gender, nation and war through the legacies of children born from international conflict. She is the author of Scars of War: The Politics of Paternity and Responsibility for the Amerasians of Vietnam, (University of Nebraska Press, 2021) which has been nominated for the Bancroft Book Prize.
Fall 2021 Strickland Visiting Scholar
Xenophobia in America: How We Got Here and What’s At Stake”
On November 2, 2021, MTSU welcomed Dr. Erika Lee, one of the nation’s leading immigration and Asian American historians as she drew from her new book, America for Americans: A History of Xenophobia in the United States, to force us to confront this history and to explain how xenophobia works, why it has endured, and how it threatens America.*
*This lecture was not recorded by request
Spring 2021 Strickland Visiting Scholars
Dr. Norkunas led conversations with Mr. Rolf Diamont, Mr. Bill Gwaltney, and Dr. Dwight Pitcaithley, Dr. Maria Franklin, Dr. Kendra Field and Dr. Nedra Lee. These leading thinkers as reflected on the challenges and nuances of presenting history with and for diverse publics; the intersections of memory, history and the silencing of Black and indigenous pasts; race, slavery, and the Civil War in American memory; and the role of the National Park Service in understanding the past. Moderated by Bradley Wright.
Click here to watch the recording on the role of National Park Service.
Click here to watch the recording on race, gender, indigeneity, and the meaning of narrative in excavated pasts.
Fall 2020 Strickland Visiting Scholar
Dr. Hammonds, Chair, Department of the History of Science, Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science, Professor of African and African American Studies, gave a public webinar, “Confronting COVID-19: Medicine, History, and Public Health” on October 22. In this lecture, Dr. Hammonds shared her current research on the historical factors that have led to the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on African American communities in the United States. Click here to watch the recording.
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