Showing 151 - 200 of 5840 Items

Bowdoin College Catalogue (1960-1961)

Date: 1961-01-01

Access: Open access

Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 338


Bowdoin College Catalogue (2005-2006)

Date: 2006-01-01

Access: Open access



Bowdoin College Catalogue (1974-1975)

Date: 1975-01-01

Access: Open access

Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 394


Miniature of High Resolution Molecular Analysis of the Hedgehog Pathway in Tooth Development
High Resolution Molecular Analysis of the Hedgehog Pathway in Tooth Development
This record is embargoed.
    • Embargo End Date: 2026-05-20

    Date: 2021-01-01

    Creator: Claire Christine Havig

    Access: Embargoed



      Bowdoin College Catalogue (1956-1957)

      Date: 1957-01-01

      Access: Open access

      Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 322


      Bowdoin College Catalogue (1955-1956)

      Date: 1956-01-01

      Access: Open access

      Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 318


      Bowdoin College Catalogue (1977-1978)

      Date: 1978-01-01

      Access: Open access



      Miniature of Motives Underlying China’s Foreign Aid Allocation
      Motives Underlying China’s Foreign Aid Allocation
      Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

          Date: 2021-01-01

          Creator: Cecilia Markmann

          Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1979-1980)

            Date: 1980-01-01

            Access: Open access



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1971-1972)

            Date: 1972-01-01

            Access: Open access

            Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 382


            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1834 Apr)

            Date: 1834-04-01

            Access: Open access



            It’s #PrisonAbolition Until the Bad Guys Show Up: Conflicting Discourses on Twitter about Carceral Networks in 2020

            Date: 2021-01-01

            Creator: Tam Phan

            Access: Open access

            “Twitter Revolutions” in Iran, Tunisia, Egypt, and Moldova illustrate social media’s capacity to mobilize citizens in uprooting systems of injustice. As non-democratic regimes, these “Twitter Revolutions” offer insight into how Twitter’s microblogging, hashtags, and global user connections help broker relations between activists hoping to challenge the government. However, this thesis focuses on the democratic regime of the US and how Twitter plays a role in aiding the prison abolition movement in their effort to dismantle carceral networks that inflict racial and political violence on Black, Brown, Indigenous, and People of Color. The thesis outlines how, under the US’ classification as a democracy, the US utilizes infrastructural power to coerce American citizens into accepting carceral networks of violence as essential institutions to maintain civil society. The following sections explain the abolitionist movement’s history of attempting to dismantle the discrete formal and informal institutions of political violence, and includes the complicating development of liberal-progressive reformism that attempts to co-opt the goals of the abolition movement. The thesis focuses on the Twitter hashtag #PrisonAbolition in 2020 to explore how American Twitter users perceive the US carceral state and the prison abolition movement. The research concludes that #PrisonAbolition does not currently possess the capacity to evolve into the social mobilization seen in the “Twitter Revolutions” of non-democratic regimes because the US’ infrastructural power effectively engrained into the minds of Americans that prisons protect civil society. However, the tweets still show a promising development as American Twitter users become more engaged in abolitionist conversations.



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1859)

            Date: 1859-01-01

            Access: Open access



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1844 Fall Term)

            Date: 1844-01-01

            Access: Open access



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1851 Spring Term)

            Date: 1851-01-01

            Access: Open access



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1854 Spring Term)

            Date: 1854-01-01

            Access: Open access



            Bowdoin College Catalogue (1862 Fall Term)

            Date: 1862-01-01

            Access: Open access



            Miniature of Predicting Anionic Pharmaceutical Sorption to Soils Using Probe Compounds
            Predicting Anionic Pharmaceutical Sorption to Soils Using Probe Compounds
            Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

                Date: 2022-01-01

                Creator: Francesca Ann Cawley

                Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                  Miniature of The Photocatalytic Degradation of Ibuprofen and Three Beta-Blockers using BiOCl: An Investigation into the Mechanisms Responsible for Photocatalytic Activity
                  The Photocatalytic Degradation of Ibuprofen and Three Beta-Blockers using BiOCl: An Investigation into the Mechanisms Responsible for Photocatalytic Activity
                  Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                  • Restriction End Date: 2027-06-01

                    Date: 2022-01-01

                    Creator: Jeffrey Charles Price

                    Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                      Urban Pastures: A Computational Approach to Identify the Barriers of Segregation

                      Date: 2022-01-01

                      Creator: Noah Gans

                      Access: Open access

                      Urban Sociology is concerned with identifying the relationship between the built environment and the organization of residents. In recent years, computational methods have offered new techniques to measure segregation, including using road networks to measure marginalized communities' institutional and social isolation. This paper contributes to existing computational and urban inequality scholarship by exploring how the ease of mobility along city roads determines community barriers in Atlanta, GA. I use graph partitioning to separate Atlanta’s road network into isolated chunks of intersections and residential roads, which I call urban pastures. Urban pastures are social communities contained to residential road networks because movement outside of a pasture requires the need to use larger roads. Urban pastures fences citizens into homogenous communities. The urban pastures of atlanta have little (


                      Bowdoin College Catalogues, Course Guides, and Academic Handbooks

                      The Bowdoin College Catalogue is the official publication that describes entrance and degree requirements, course offerings, scholarships, student awards and prizes, and sanctioned student organizations. The Catalogue, which also lists the names of faculty and College officers and, until the late 1960s, the names and residences of students, is an essential resource for researching the curricular history of the College and biographies of Bowdoin students and faculty. For those years when the Medical School of Maine was administered by Bowdoin College (1820-1921), the Bowdoin College Catalogue was typically published jointly with that of the medical school.

                      In the 2010-2011 academic year, the Catalogue became primarily an online publication available via the College website; a pared down print version was also produced in parallel with the online Catalogue. From 2015-2019, the Academic Handbook: Policies and Procedures and Course Guide were published in place of the Catalogue. Starting in 2019, the College Catalogue and Academic Handbook was published online. The current version is available on the College website.



                      Miniature of Metabolic Glycan Labeling in Bacteria Using Rare Azido L-sugars
                      Metabolic Glycan Labeling in Bacteria Using Rare Azido L-sugars
                      Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                      • Restriction End Date: 2027-06-01

                        Date: 2022-01-01

                        Creator: Phuong Luong

                        Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                          Bowdoin College Catalogue (1837-1838)

                          Date: 1838-01-01

                          Access: Open access



                          Bowdoin College Catalogue (1813)

                          Date: 1813-01-01

                          Access: Open access



                          Bowdoin College Catalogue (1850 Spring Term)

                          Date: 1850-01-01

                          Access: Open access



                          Re-envisioning the Tropics: Nick Joaquin's Philippine Gothic

                          Date: 2022-01-01

                          Creator: Ella Marie Jaman

                          Access: Open access

                          This paper examines selected stories from Filipino author, Nick Joaquin, through a gothic lens. Drawing from recent development in Gothic studies, I work within a tropical gothic and postcolonial gothic framework to suggest a localized "Philippine gothic" represented within Nick Joaquin's work. Stories examined include the novel "The Woman Who Had Two Navels," as well as the short stories "Summer Solstice, Mass of St. Sylvestre," and "The Order of Melkizedek."


                          Miniature of Role of the Dopamine Subtype 1 Receptor (D<sub>1</sub>R) Modulation of the I<sub>h</sub> Current in Rhythmic Spinal Mammalian Motor Networks
                          Role of the Dopamine Subtype 1 Receptor (D1R) Modulation of the Ih Current in Rhythmic Spinal Mammalian Motor Networks
                          Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                          • Restriction End Date: 2025-06-01

                            Date: 2022-01-01

                            Creator: Grace Soeun Lee

                            Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                              Miniature of Enhancer usage variation assessed via chromatin-conformation within and among three species of <i>Drosophila</i>
                              Enhancer usage variation assessed via chromatin-conformation within and among three species of Drosophila
                              This record is embargoed.
                                • Embargo End Date: 2027-05-19

                                Date: 2022-01-01

                                Creator: Maia B. Granoski

                                Access: Embargoed



                                  The Current Hunt for Nitric Oxide's Effects on the Homarus americanus Cardiac Ganglion

                                  Date: 2022-01-01

                                  Creator: Joanna Lin

                                  Access: Open access

                                  The crustacean heartbeat is produced and modulated by the cardiac ganglion (CG), a central pattern generator. In the American lobster, Homarus americanus, the CG consists of 4 small premotor cells (SCs) that electrically and chemically synapse onto 5 large motor cells (LCs). Rhythmic driver potentials in the SCs generate bursting in the LCs, which elicit downstream cardiac muscle contractions that are essential for physiological functions. Endogenous neuromodulators mediate changes in the CG to meet homeostatic demands caused by environmental stressors. Nitric oxide (NO), a gaseous neuromodulator, inhibits the lobster CG. Heart contractions release NO, which directly decreases the CG burst frequency and indirectly decreases the heartbeat amplitude, to mediate negative feedback. I investigated NO’s inhibitory effects on the CG to further understand the mechanisms underlying intrinsic feedback. Using extracellular recordings, I examined NO modulation of the SCs and LCs when coupled in the intact circuit and when firing independently in the ligatured preparation. Using two-electrode voltage clamp, I additionally analyzed the modulation of channel kinetics. Based on previous studies, I hypothesized that NO decreases the burst frequency of the LCs and SCs by modulating conductance properties of the voltage-gated A-type potassium current (IA). My data showed that NO decreased the burst frequency in the LCs and the burst duration in the SCs in a state-dependent manner. Furthermore, NO increased the IA inactivation time constant to decrease the LCs’ burst frequency. Thus, NO mediated inhibitory effects on cardiac output by differentially targeting both cell types and altering the IA current kinetics.


                                  Bowdoin College Catalogue (1825)

                                  Date: 1825-01-01

                                  Access: Open access



                                  Miniature of Determining the influence of proximal Zeste binding sites and promoters on rates of transvection
                                  Determining the influence of proximal Zeste binding sites and promoters on rates of transvection
                                  This record is embargoed.
                                    • Embargo End Date: 2026-05-17

                                    Date: 2023-01-01

                                    Creator: Molly Henderson

                                    Access: Embargoed



                                      Bowdoin College Course Guide (2015-2016)

                                      Date: 2015-01-01

                                      Access: Open access



                                      Miniature of Modulation of ionic currents by nitric oxide negative feedback in the lobster cardiac ganglion
                                      Modulation of ionic currents by nitric oxide negative feedback in the lobster cardiac ganglion
                                      Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                                      • Restriction End Date: 2026-06-01

                                        Date: 2021-01-01

                                        Creator: Emily Renee King

                                        Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                          Education Amid Stabilization: The Varied Effects of Military Intervention on Public Schooling in Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso

                                          Date: 2021-01-01

                                          Creator: Arjun S. Mehta

                                          Access: Open access

                                          At the intersection of international relations, comparative politics, and war consequence studies, this paper seeks to evaluate the effects of supportive foreign military intervention on education provision in three neighboring Central Sahel countries: Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso. In the wake of a Tuareg insurgency and a 2012 coup d’état in Mali, the proliferation of jihadist violence in the tri-border Liptako-Gourma region has been met by a proliferation of foreign interveners. Does stabilization— the form of intervention in the Central Sahel— improve education provision, as measured by diminishing jihadist attacks on schools and school closures due to violence? This paper hypothesizes that where there is a larger scale of intervention, there is more security— and thus an environment more conducive to education provision. Although insecurity in the three Central Sahel countries has shared origins, each country has a distinct scale of intervention. In placing Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso on a spectrum of stabilization (from largest- to smallest-scale), this paper conducts a comparative test to determine how intervention affects education provision. Qualitative and quantitative data analyses reveal that, while a larger scale of intervention (in Mali) guarantees neither better security nor more favorable education provision, the absence of intervention (in Burkina Faso) facilitates unfavorable security and education outcomes. This paper concludes that destabilizing security-centric conceptions of stabilization may lead to more lasting peace and more accessible education in the Central Sahel and beyond.


                                          On the Dirichlet L-functions and the L-functions of Cusp Forms

                                          Date: 2021-01-01

                                          Creator: Nawapan Wattanawanichkul

                                          Access: Open access

                                          The main objects of our study are L-functions, which are meromorphic functions on the complex plane that analytically continue from the series of the form \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{a_n}{n^s}, where {a_n} is a sequence of complex numbers. In particular, we are interested in two families of L-functions: ''The Dirichlet L-functions" and ''the L-functions of cusp forms." The former refers to the L-functions whose a_n's are determined by Dirichlet characters, whereas cusp forms determine the latter. We begin our study with the celebrated Riemann zeta function, the simplest Dirichlet L-function, and discuss some of its well-known properties: the Euler product, analytic continuation, functional equation, Riemann hypothesis, and Euler's formula for its critical values. Then, we generalize our exploration to the Dirichlet L-functions and point out some analogous properties to those of the Riemann zeta function. Moreover, we present our original work on computing the critical values of the Dirichlet L-function associated with the primitive character mod 4, or what is known as the Dirichlet beta function. Lastly, we establish some knowledge of the theory of modular forms and cusp forms, which are nicely-behaved modular forms, and discuss some properties of the L-functions of cusp forms.


                                          Bowdoin College Catalogue (1835 Oct)

                                          Date: 1835-10-01

                                          Access: Open access



                                          Plant-mediated interactions within the milkweed insect community

                                          Date: 2021-01-01

                                          Creator: Katie J. Galletta

                                          Access: Open access

                                          Induced defenses following herbivore damage can modify a plant’s chemical or physical characteristics and alter the plant’s interactions with subsequent herbivores. Common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) provides an excellent system with which to study plant response-mediated interactions given its small but highly specialized herbivorous insect community and its ability to increase toxic cardenolide concentrations and latex production throughout its tissues upon attack. I conducted observational field surveys quantifying leaf damage to examine whether the indirect plant-mediated interactions amongst the milkweed herbivore community as demonstrated in other studies also occur in situ, as well as how foliar herbivory impacts insect flower visitation on A. syriaca. I found that four-eyed milkweed beetle (Tetraopes tetrophthalmus) damage had a negative effect on subsequent monarch (Danaus plexippus) larvae and swamp milkweed leaf beetle (Labidomera clivicollis) damage. I also found that monarchs laid more eggs on milkweed with no herbivore damage. Additionally, I observed a negative relationship between A. syriaca foliar herbivory and flower visitation, which has not been previously demonstrated but illustrates the various potential costs of herbivory to plant fitness. My work’s focus on observing the effects of natural herbivore damage offers insight as to how plant-mediated interactions operate among the milkweed insect community in situ. Furthermore, this study demonstrates how plant responses to herbivory in general can modulate ecological relationships between species that do not directly interact with each other.


                                          A Comparative Perspective on Colonial Influence in the Effectiveness of Foreign Aid in South Korea and Algeria

                                          Date: 2021-01-01

                                          Creator: Viv Daniel

                                          Access: Open access

                                          South Korea and Algeria are both formerly colonized nations with a history of dependence on foreign aid. Their former colonizers, Japan and France respectively, collaborated closely throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries. However, despite colonial linkages and similarities in early developmental trajectories, South Korea has grown into a donating member of the OECD and one of the world’s largest economies, while Algeria continues to struggle both economically and politically. This paper engages existing literature on postcolonial development and foreign aid by arguing that the attitudes towards colonization and the motivations for undertaking it on the part of colonial powers can have as large an impact on the success of foreign aid as the endogenous circumstances of the states receiving such aid.


                                          Miniature of Experiments in Gender: A Comparative Analysis on the Literary Representation of Women in Medicine and Science during the Weimar Republic
                                          Experiments in Gender: A Comparative Analysis on the Literary Representation of Women in Medicine and Science during the Weimar Republic
                                          Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

                                              Date: 2021-01-01

                                              Creator: Rachel Bercovitch

                                              Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                Characterization and Quantification of AST-C Peptides in Homarus americanus Using Mass Spectrometry

                                                Date: 2015-05-01

                                                Creator: Amanda Howard

                                                Access: Open access

                                                Neuropeptides are small signaling molecules found throughout the nervous system that influence animal behavior. Using the American lobster, Homarus americanus, as a model system, this research focused on an allatostatin type-C (AST-C) peptide, pQIRYHQCYFNPISCF (disulfide bond between underlined cysteine residues), and a structurally similar crustacean peptide, SYWKQCAFNAVSCFamide. These neuropeptides influence cardiac muscle contraction patterns and stomatogastric nervous system activity in the lobster. To understand their roles, this study sought to develop a method to quantify peptides in the pericardial organ (PO) and other crustacean tissues. Overall analysis involved microdissection to isolate tissues, tissue extraction, extract purification and concentration, and analysis by chip-based nano-electrospray ionization-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (nanoESI-LC-MS). In the present study, pQIRYHQCYFNPISCF was identified in the PO. To quantify target peptides, internal standards were tested as recovery and calibration references. However, experiments with pQIRYHQCYFNPISCF and other peptides showed evidence of adsorptive losses during sample preparation and analysis, with improvements in recovery resulting from the use of isopropanol-prewashed polypropylene vials. Preliminary results also suggested that introducing polyethylene glycol (PEG) in solution reduced adsorptive losses for hydrophobic peptides, but may have compromised hydrophilic peptide detection. Future directions include characterizing other sources of analyte loss and developing techniques to recover these signals. Since both target peptides as detected in the lobster are post-translationally modified, other directions include identifying modified and unmodified forms of these peptides in H. americanus. Ultimately, quantifying AST-C peptides and viii identifying their modified and unmodified forms will help explain how neuropeptides regulate behavior within the lobster and more complex systems.


                                                Bowdoin College Catalogue (1809)

                                                Date: 1809-01-01

                                                Access: Open access



                                                Miniature of Modern Love and Marriage:  The Problems and Insights of Rousseau, Beauvoir, and Plato
                                                Modern Love and Marriage: The Problems and Insights of Rousseau, Beauvoir, and Plato
                                                Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                                                • Restriction End Date: 2025-06-01

                                                  Date: 2022-01-01

                                                  Creator: Isabella Angel

                                                  Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                    Transforming the Humane: Human/Animal Relationships in Marlen Haushofer’s Die Wand and Franz Kafka’s Die Verwandlung

                                                    Date: 2022-01-01

                                                    Creator: Joosep R. Vorno

                                                    Access: Open access

                                                    In this project, I investigate Franz Kafka’s Die Verwandlung (1915) and Marlen Haushofer’s Die Wand (1963) through a magic realist interpretive strategy. I identify how, as a result of a mysterious opening premise, the two texts accomplish a human/animal transformation in the protagonists. While the transformations differ in several aspects, even at times being direct opposites, the way in which the characters navigate their new nonhuman selves poses many important questions about care and humaneness, the human condition, and social and familial structures. By drawing on discussions of magic realism – from its roots in Weimar German art criticism, its contemporary features in literature, and the inherently subversive nature of the narrative mode – I discuss how the lens of magic realism becomes a helpful tool in recognizing, exploring, and appreciating the human/animal transformations as a defamiliarization of the familiar.


                                                    Divinity School: A Novel

                                                    Date: 2022-01-01

                                                    Creator: Ella Marie Schmidt

                                                    Access: Open access

                                                    I wrote Divinity School, an Honors Project for the Department of English, under the auspices of my project advisor, Professor Anthony Walton, and my readers, Professors Marilyn Reizbaum, Ann Kibbie, and Aaron Kitch. Divinity School is a novel whose conflicts are religious, generational, and familial. Set mostly in Hoboken, New Jersey with vignettes in Manhattan, Vienna, the west coast of Ireland, and an anonymous New England college town, it is the story of one family and the open secrets that keep them apart. Hal Macpherson is a Divinity School professor uged into premature retirement by allegations of misconduct; his wife, Annie Price, is a withdrawn would-be actress. They are parents to Amelia Macpherson, a woman in her twenties who rejects her father’s righteous claims of innocence and her mother’s exhausted but unwavering devotion to him. This project is concerned with sex and pedagogy, youth, want-it-all politcs, parenthood, getting old, Protestantism, and domestic life. Using third-person free indirect style, I traverse the public-private planes of literature. As an undergraduate at Bowdoin College, I have enjoyed the privilege of a great English education in literature, creative writing, and independent work. Divinity School is the culmination of these studies.


                                                    The experience of crunch in the video games industry amongst current and aspiring developers

                                                    Date: 2022-01-01

                                                    Creator: Radu Ioan Stochita

                                                    Access: Open access

                                                    The video games industry relies on crunch - overworking the developers, usually towards the end of the project in order to meet a required deadline. In this paper, I analyze the different relationships that aspiring and current game developers have with the games industry and how they position themselves when it comes to crunch. Passion is a major component of people's desire to join the games' industry, later being used to justify one's need of staying overtime: "Since I am passionate about video games, it did not feel like work at all." Other aspiring or current developers are more skeptical when it comes to crunch and are developing secondary plans, either to quit the industry, join labor unions or push for better working conditions.


                                                    An Alternative Perspective on Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs): Underpricing in the “No Target" Phase

                                                    Date: 2023-01-01

                                                    Creator: Anna G Constantine

                                                    Access: Open access

                                                    Special Purpose Acquisition Companies marked a restructuring of the often-fraudulent 1980s blank check company, an entity gathering funds to merge or acquire another business entity. Based on the Special Purpose Acquisition Company structure, “the stock price should be greater than or equal to the pro-rata trust value, discounted from the SPAC’s expiration date, at all times prior to the shareholder vote date.” In this study, I research the “no target” phase of the Special Purpose Acquisition Company’s lifecycle to evaluate whether there is a difference between their trust value and their market capitalization. Based on previous research, we know that there is a discount to trust value prior to 2009; however, I postulate the decoupling of the SPAC merger approval vote and the vote for investors to redeem may eliminate this discount. Using a first difference regression to establish the premium to the average trust value of 1,057 Special Purpose Acquisition Companies traded between 2005 and 2022, we find that both the period before 2010 and after 2010 trades at a negative premium, or discount. Because the decoupling of the merger vote and the redemption vote did not eliminate the negative premium to trust value, I postulate that the structure of SPAC redemptions, modeled as a call option with decaying time value, may be responsible for this mispricing. I also draw opportunities for future research to investigate if the embedding of a call option into the SPAC redemption structure discourages shareholders from desiring merger outcomes early in the SPAC lifecycle.


                                                    Student Activism and Malaysian Politics, 1955-74: Revising the History of the Malay Language Society (PBMUM)

                                                    Date: 2023-01-01

                                                    Creator: Song Eraou

                                                    Access: Open access

                                                    In the literature on student activism in Malaysia, the years from 1967 to 1974 are emphasized as vibrant years—students organized large-scale demonstrations, regularly asserted their opinions in the political arena, and even participated in electoral politics. This period was followed, however, with the imposition of strict laws in 1975 limiting freedom of speech and expression. Such laws were part of the broader containment policy pursued by the state after the May 13, 1969, racial riots, which allowed the state to stifle any form of political dissidence to ensure peace between different ethnic groups. One particularly active organization in this period was the Malay Language Society (PBMUM) of the University of Malaya. While PBMUM began with a dream of using language as a mode to foster national unity, after the riots it would be remembered as a race-based organization oriented toward Malays. This thesis offers a historical analysis and reinterpretation of the PBMUM, characterizing it as a platform for students at the University of Malaya to meet, discuss, and mobilize around the most important issues concerning Malaysian society. Importantly, members exhibited a continued devotion towards changing the fate of the rakyat (the people). In revising the history of PBMUM, this thesis also offers a deeper understanding of the Malaysian political landscape in the ‘60s and ‘70s, focusing on political discussions around nation-building in the lead up to the May 13 riots and its aftermath.


                                                    Liberty and Its Legacy An Analysis of Freedom and Liberty in American Political Rhetoric

                                                    Date: 2023-01-01

                                                    Creator: Ryan S. Kovarovics

                                                    Access: Open access

                                                    The concept of freedom has always been central to the American identity, but its meaning has never been agreed on by all and has long been the subject of debate. An abridged explanation of the evolution of liberty’s meaning in political thought and American history is presented in the first chapter of this project. It demonstrates the long-standing importance of individual freedom in America and highlights some historical moments when liberty has come into conflict with other societal values. When used in American political rhetoric today, “freedom” and “liberty” typically take on a “negative” meaning that is focused mostly on individual freedom from government intervention. This is especially clear with regard to issues each party claims to “own” in the context of freedom, including abortion for the Democrats and the covid-19 pandemic response for the Republicans. To verify this partisan ownership of freedom and compare how each party uses freedom in political rhetoric, an empirical analysis was conducted of the uses of “freedom” and “liberty” in candidate tweets and campaign ads from the 2022 midterm elections. The analysis found some support for partisan ownership of freedom rhetoric surrounding these and other issues, but the most interesting finding was that Democrats and Republicans invoked “freedom” and “liberty” in their rhetoric at virtually identical rates. This shows that neither party can lay an exclusive claim to be the “party of freedom.”


                                                    Miniature of Identifying crustacean neuropeptides and precursor-related peptides by LC/MS: An investigation of strategies for extraction and orthogonal separations
                                                    Identifying crustacean neuropeptides and precursor-related peptides by LC/MS: An investigation of strategies for extraction and orthogonal separations
                                                    Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                                                    • Restriction End Date: 2028-06-01

                                                      Date: 2023-01-01

                                                      Creator: Emily Grace Herndon

                                                      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community