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To do an advanced search use the dropdown arrow to the right of the search box.Adjunct Lecturer
Scott Stull
- 607-753-4755 (office)
- Experimental Archaeology: Recreation of ceramics and food, especially of medieval Europe
- Castle Studies: Power relations and the creation of a cultural landscape
Interim Director of Art Gallery
Scott A. Oldfield
- 607-753-4396 (office)
No additional information has been added for this person.
Laboratory Animal Caretaker
Scott M Soprano
Biological Sciences Department
Bowers Hall, Room 240
Email addresses:No email address information has been added for this person.
- 607-753-2715 (department)
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Assistant Professor
Scott Holdredge
- 607-753-4206 (office)
No additional information has been added for this person.
Bus Driver
Scott Thornton
Transportation Services
Service Group, Physical Plant
Email addresses:No email address information has been added for this person.
- 607-753-2129 (department)
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Director of Campus Recreation
Scott Flickinger (he, him, his)
Recreational Sports
Student Life Center
Email addresses:No email address information has been added for this person.
- 607-753-5585 (department)
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Professor
Scott Moranda
- 607-753-2052 (office)
- CV: https://hcommons.org/app/uploads/sites/1000360/bp-attachment-xprofile/Moranda_CV_2024_short.pdf
- Scholarship: I am a historian of Germany and the German-speaking world, focusing on environmental history, the history of tourism, and ethnic/national identity formation. My current book project explores that transatlantic migration of conservation ideas among German-speakers. Subjects under investigation include German-American agricultural journalists and foresters whose promotion of land ethics contributed to the construction of a common German ethnic identity and offered opportunities to challenge Anglo-American cultural hegemony. In addition, travelers and scientific experts from Germany traveled to North America where they often collaborated with the aforementioned German-Americans. Together, their critiques of "Yankee plunder" also linked land ethics to nation building and imperialism in Germany. Even as these cultural exchanges proliferated, German-speaking conservationists, agronomists and foresters contributed to the intentional and unintentional exchange of plants, animals, fungi, and viruses that often disrupted their political and cultural projects.
- Email: scott.moranda@cortland.edu
- Areas of interest: environmental history, Germany, transatlantic migrations, Central Europe (19th and 20th centuries), history of nationalism, Modern Europe
- Teaching: I teach courses such as World Environmental History, German History, The Holocaust, the history of tourism, 19th Century Central and Eastern Europe, and 20th Century Europe
Adjunct Lecturer
Scott C. Pandich
Political Science Department
Old Main, Room 207
Email addresses:No email address information has been added for this person.
- 607-753-4105 (department)
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Maintenance Supervisor 1
Scott Chierchio
- 607-753-2124 (office)
No additional information has been added for this person.