腦瞳憫

腦瞳憫

Aaron Hyams

Visiting Assistant Professor

Hyams 17Education

Ph.D., History, Marquette University, 2016

M.A., History, University of Montana, 2011

B.A., History and Anthropology, Marquette University, 2009

Biography

Dr. Hyams is a visiting assistant professor of history at 腦瞳憫. He teaches undergraduate courses on Indigenous North Americans, the American South, and U.S. - Spanish/Mexican Borderlands. A historian of race, law, and the American West, his research and teaching place nineteenth and twentieth-century American debates about race and citizenship against the  backdrop of conflict and contact with indigenous nations that Americans alternatively feared, colonized, or failed to understand. 

He is currently preparing a manuscript out of his dissertation, "Long Journeys to a Middle Ground" that examines reforms to Indian Administration in the Northwest United States during the 1920s and '30s, as part of a broader attempt to reconcile the long-standing cultural, social, and legal incompatibility of Indian Country's fluidity and the American administrative state's rigidity. Dr. Hyams completed a Bachelor of Arts in history and anthropology from Marquette University in 2009. He completed a Master of Arts focused in American Environmental History from the University of Montana in 2011, and received a Ph.D. in American History from Marquette University in 2016. 

Courses

Undergraduate:

HIST 3392 - American Indian History

HIST 3396 - The American South

HIST 3398 - Texas and the Southwest