UROP Research Mentor Project Submission Portal: Submission #960

Submission information
Submission Number: 960
Submission ID: 15426
Submission UUID: e7f44909-3484-494a-aaae-55dd45c86e22

Created: Sat, 08/24/2024 - 09:28 AM
Completed: Sat, 08/24/2024 - 09:28 AM
Changed: Mon, 10/21/2024 - 06:37 AM

Remote IP address: 68.57.173.138
Submitted by: Anonymous
Language: English

Is draft: No

Research Mentor Information

Benjamin Dodds
he/him/his
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bdodds@fsu.edu
Faculty
Arts and Sciences
History
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Additional Research Mentor(s)

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Overall Project Details

Spanish bandits
history, Spain, bandits
No
2
History, Spanish but also open to all majors
On FSU Main Campus
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Partially Remote
6
Flexible schedule (Combination of business and outside of business. TBD between student and research mentor.)
The full title of this project is "In the footsteps of bandits: an alternative history of Spain." The idea is to use stories about real and imagined bandits from the Roman period until the present to explain the history of Spain. For example, the Roman conquest of Spain is explored through the story of non-Roman bandits who resisted the conquest. Likewise, the consolidation of General Franco's dictatorship is explored using popular and politicized versions of stories about bandits.
Research will involve the collection of information about bandits in Spain. This will include identifying bandits who operated in different periods, assembling historical information about them as well as fictionalized stories about them and exploring the relationship between that information and the history of the period in which the bandits operated. Many different sources will be used from scholarly articles to novels, movies, images and even records of oral testimony.
Reading knowledge of Spanish is required.
My experience of mentorship has been that it is most effective when it is based on mutual respect. Although I have the benefit of experience, I have always found that mentees have much to teach me. This is because they bring their own different experience, their different perspectives and their own ideas. I believe that mentees work best when given the opportunity not just to gather material but also to analyze and interpret that material, devising their own methods of doing so. Scholarship can be lonely, and so regular contact is very important. Making mistakes is important too - I have made many myself - so both mentor and mentee will learn from mistakes along the way. Overall, I believe that mentoring is a collaborative process in which mentor and mentee learn from each other.
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UROP Program Elements

Yes
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2024
https://cre.fsu.edu/urop-research-mentor-project-submission-portal?token=aIkJDnY7g8bFfOBHBt2ELIurNhZE8ktVVIEbErSHlWc