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Shepherding Sisters: Mentoring Within Residence Halls
Shepherding Sisters is a ministry which seeks to connect upperclassmen with lowerclassmen within all-female residence halls in a mentoring relationship. In order for spiritual formation and spiritual friendship to take place in all-female residence halls, upperclassmen will be trained and equipped in order to shepherd their sisters in Christ
Dover Castle
The project explores the history, cultural impact, and symbolism of Dover Castle. The poster is constructed and painted to mimic the front facia of the castle\u27s great tower and features a gatefold revealing the interior of the tower as well as a bullet-pointed summary of the information supplied by the paper.
Course: ENG 412, Medieval Literature (Dr. Aaron Housholder)https://pillars.taylor.edu/medieval-lit-spring2024/1010/thumbnail.jp
The Wars of the Roses
The poster\u27s center panel features the title as well as a detailed battle scene depicting the two families Lancaster and York fighting for possession of the English crown. The Wars of the Roses were named after the crests of the two families fighting for the throne, the flowers can be seen under the genealogy on the right panel. The right panel also features the Tudor rose, the ultimate and maybe slightly unsatisfying victor of the wars. The genealogy traces the inheritance of the crown. The right panel summarizes the events during the wars. The accompanying paper delves deeper into the events and people this historical event revolved around.
Course: ENG 412, Medieval Literature (Dr. Aaron Housholder)https://pillars.taylor.edu/medieval-lit-spring2024/1003/thumbnail.jp
Bicycling during the 1890s: The Unlikely Means of Women’s Social Reform
The paper focuses on the women’s bicycling movement in the US during the 1890s. More specifically, it argues that bicycling and the movement that developed behind it was used by upper and upper-middle class white women to create social changes that furthered their independence from certain societal expectations
Hear & Believe: Epistemic Humility and the Limits of Human Reason
There are few more hotly debated questions in philosophy than the capacity of human reason as it relates to knowing God. Both Immanuel Kant and G.W.F. Hegel dedicated a significant portion of their work to precisely this question. These thinkers, however, did not seek to understand the capabilities and limits of human reason from a distinctly Christian perspective. Their work, while containing real insights, has serious, problematic implications for Christian thinkers, making it imperative to chart a path toward a robustly Christian, Biblically-anchored, conception of reason
Quanah Parker in a Plains Indian Village
https://pillars.taylor.edu/borenartgallery/1191/thumbnail.jp