Program Cover.indd 1
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UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI PRESS
Booth 422 30% Discount: MOAHA18 NABORS
OMAR NELSON
BRADLEY
“In this unique perspective on Reconstruction, the political scientist Forrest Nabors offers new insights on how the Republicans of the Civil War era drew upon their portrayal of the conflict between freedom and slavery as a struggle between republicanism and oligarchy to shape their program of Reconstruction.” —James McPherson, George Henry Davis 1886 Professor of American History, Emeritus, Princeton University, author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era
America’s GI General
STUDIES IN CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRACY Justin B. Dyer and Jeffrey L. Pasley, Series Editors
“This path-breaking, passionately argued study frames Reconstruction rightly for the first time since Reconstruction itself. Returning to what politicians North and South actually said and did, Forrest Nabors shows how the Confederacy masked a regime of oligarchy with such slogans as ‘States’ Rights’ and the ‘positive good’ of slavery. He further shows how Reconstruction aimed to settle the Civil War by restoring the rebel states to the genuine republicanism the founders espoused during the American Revolution and had pledged to honor in the Constitution’s republican Guarantee Clause.” —Will Morrisey, Professor Emeritus of Politics, Hillsdale College, author of SelfGovernment, the American Theme: Presidents of the Founding and Civil War
This book is included in the series Studies in Constitutional Democracy. ISBN 978-0-8262-2135-3
90000
STEVEN L. OSSAD
Front jacket: Detail of Prisoners from the Front, Winslow Homer, 1866, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, oil on canvas, 24 x 38 in. Back jacket: Detail of Our Banner in the Sky, Frederic Edwin Church, 1861, Smithsonian Institute, oil on paper, 7.5 x 11.25 in.
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The Great Task of Reconstruction
“Forrest Nabors has performed a tremendous service. Aided by Aristotelian regime analysis, he uncovers—or recovers—an understanding of ‘the supreme cause’ of the American Civil War. This landmark contribution ought to reshape our understanding of the Civil War, the difficulties and failures of Reconstruction, and the Guarantee Clause of the Constitution. Nabors listens, philosophically, to historical actors, and thereby achieves a fuller understanding of the motive force behind the perversities of racism and white supremacy.”—Diana J. Schaub, Professor of Political Science, Loyola University Maryland; co-editor of What So Proudly We Hail: The American Soul in Story, Speech, and Song
FROM OLIGARCHY TO REPUBLICANISM
Forrest A. Nabors is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Alaska following a career as a high-technology business executive. He lives in Anchorage.
The Great Task of Reconstruction
BUREAUCRACY
“In this vibrantly provocative new book on Civil War and Reconstruction America, Dr. Nabors recaptures an understanding of the history and culture of the American South that is largely unfamiliar to Americans today—and which will likely be disturbing to many—Northerners and Southerners, alike. According to Nabors, the key to understanding the antebellum South and the Civil War is not slavery per se, but the anti-republican ethos that permeated the beliefs, habits, and way of life of the Southern oligarchy and set them at odds with not only Northerners, but middle class, poor, and enslaved Southerners as well. Nabors’s recounting and analysis of the crisis of the American house divided may remind Americans today of the dangers of a nation whose citizens are so radically and exigently divided amongst themselves.”—Colleen A. Sheehan, Professor of Politics and Director of the Matthew J. Ryan Center, Villanova University; author of The Mind of James Madison: The Legacy of Classical Republicanism
in
A MER IC A
“When I picked up Forrest Nabors’s new book and started reading it, I could not put it down. It is a masterpiece—forceful, persuasive, and enlightening in the extreme. It is not only the best book ever written on Reconstruction, it will also transform everyone’s understanding of the character of the Old South, the origins of the Republican Party, the path to secession, and the roots of Jim Crow. It will be the starting point for all future scholarship on these subjects. American history textbooks will have to be rewritten to take into account the lost and largely forgotten world that it illuminates—and scholars will discover just how much we could learn if we were willing to set aside the prejudices of our own time and reconsider past developments from the perspective of Aristotelian political science.”—Paul A. Rahe, Professor of History, Hillsdale College; JOSEPH POSTELL author of Republics Ancient and Modern: Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution
The Administrative State’s Challenge to Constitutional Government
Forrest A. Nabors
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI PRESS Columbia | upress.missouri.edu
FROM OLIGARCHY TO REPUBLICANISM
M ISSOUR I
3/6/17 2:43 PM
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Omar Nelson Bradley
America’s GI General, 1893-1981 Steven L. Ossad American Military Experience $36.95
The Foundation of the CIA
Harry Truman, the Missouri Gang, and the Origins of the Cold War Richard E. Schroeder $24.95
George Washington Carver In His Own Words, Second Edition Edited by Gary R. Kremer $29.95
Dick Cole’s War
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Lloyd Gaines and the Fight to End Segregation
James W. Endersby and William T. Horner Studies in Constitutional Democracy $36.95
8/25/17 12:25 PM
The First Infantry Division and the U.S. Army Transformed
Road to Victory in Desert Storm, 1970-1991 Gregory Fontenot American Military Experience $36.95
The Eric Voegelin Reader
Politics, History, Consciousness Edited by Charles R. Embry and Glenn Hughes $50.00
Bataan Survivor
A POW’s Account of Japanese Captivity in World War II David L. Hardee, Edited by Frank A. Blazich, Jr. $50.00
Truman, Franco’s Spain, and the Cold War Wayne H. Bowen $50.00
The Spanish Foreign Legion in the Spanish Civil War José E. Alvarez $50.00
From Oligarchy to Republicanism The Great Task of Reconstruction Forrest A. Nabors Studies in Constitutional Democracy $45.00
German Propaganda and U.S. Neutrality in World War I Chad R. Fulwider $60.00
The Desperate Diplomat
Saburo Kurusu’s Memoir of the Weeks before Pearl Harbor $35.00
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Challenge of Religion Johannes Morsink $65.00
America’s Sailors in the Great War
Seas, Skies, and Submarines Lisle A. Rose American Military Experience $36.95
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The Administrative State’s Challenge to Constitutional Government Joseph Postell Studies in Constitutional Democracy $45.00
American Mestizos, the Philippines, and the Malleability of Race, 1898-1961 Nicholas Trajano Molnar $50.00
Private Aid, Political Activism
American Medical Relief to Spain and China, 1936-1949 Aelwen D. Wetherby $65.00
Freedom, Inc. and Black Political Empowerment Micah W. Kubic $75.00
The Unknown Travels and Dubious Pursuits of William Clark Jo Ann Trogdon $36.95
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AHA 2018 Ad.indd 1
Cover2.indd 1
8/31/17 8:16 AM
24/10/17 5:49 PM
Program of the
132nd Annual Meeting January 4–7, 2018 Washington, DC
Program Editorial Staff Debbie Ann Doyle, Editor and Meetings Coordinator With assistance from Joe Gardella, Jane Green, and Liz Townsend Please bring your copy of the Program to the annual meeting. Additional copies are $10 each.
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400 A Street SE Washington, DC 20003-3889 202-544-2422 E-mail:
[email protected] Web: www.historians.org AHA Today: blog.historians.org Facebook: www.facebook.com/AHAhistorians Twitter: @AHAHistorians
2017 Elected Officers President: Tyler E. Stovall, University of California, Santa Cruz Past President: Patrick Manning, University of Pittsburgh President-elect: Mary Beth Norton, Cornell University Vice President, Professional Division: Kevin Boyle, Northwestern
University (2020)
Vice President, Research Division: Edmund P. Russell III, Boston
University (2018) Vice President, Teaching Division: Elizabeth Lehfeldt, Cleveland
State University (2019)
2017 Elected Councilors Research Division: David A. Bell, Princeton University (2018)
Becky M. Nicolaides, University of California, Los Angeles and Huntington-USC Institute on California & the West James H. Sweet, University of Wisconsin–Madison (2019) Teaching Division: Jeffrey A. Bowman, Kenyon College (2019)
Carlos A. Contreras, Grossmont College (2020) Brenda J. Santos, Achievement First (2018)
Photo by Joe Gardella
Tyler E. Stovall Distinguished Professor of History Dean of Humanities University of California, Santa Cruz President of the American Historical Association
Professional Division: Debjani Bhattacharyya, Drexel University (2019)
Suzanne Marchand, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge (2020) Valerie Paley, New-York Historical Society (2018)
2017 Appointed Officers Executive Director: James Grossman AHR Editor: Alex Lichtenstein, Indiana University, Bloomington Treasurer: Chris McNickle
Legal Counsel of the Association Eric S. Jackson, Sack Law Firm PC
Parliamentarian of the Association Kenneth F. Ledford, Case Western Reserve University
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Table of Contents
iii
General Information���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 1–6 Hotel Information�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 1 Information for Persons with Disabilities���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 1 Meeting Registration���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 3 Childcare���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 4 Recording Policy���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 4 Tours Organized by the Local Arrangements Committee��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 4 Film Screenings������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 5 AHA Meetings and Events������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 6
Floor Plans of the Marriott Wardman Park, Omni Shoreham Hotel, and Washington Hilton�������������������������������� 7–11 2018 AHA Annual Meeting Program���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 12–87 Thursday, January 4����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 12–23 Early Afternoon Sessions������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 13 Late Afternoon Sessions������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 18 Awards Ceremony���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 23 Plenary Session�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 23
Friday, January 5���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 24–50 Early Morning Sessions�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 24 Late Morning Sessions��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 30 Luncheons��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 36 Early Afternoon Sessions������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 37 Late Afternoon Sessions������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 43 Presidential Address������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 49 Evening Sessions and Events������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 49
Saturday, January 6������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 51–77 Early Morning Sessions�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 51 Late Morning Sessions��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 57 Luncheons��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 63 Early Afternoon Sessions������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 65 Late Afternoon Sessions������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 69 AHA Business Meeting�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 76 Evening Sessions and Events������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 76
Sunday, January 7��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 78–87 Early Morning Sessions�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 78 Late Morning Sessions��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 83
Indexes and Lists��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 88–118 Topical Index����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 88 Affiliated Societies���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 89 Participants Index�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 101 Fifty-Year Members of the AHA���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 112 Map of the Exhibit Hall����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 116 Exhibitors’ Index���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 117 Advertising Index��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 118
Advertising����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� follows page 118
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iv
Presidents of the American Historical Association 1884–85
Andrew Dickson White
1931
Carl Lotus Becker
1974
Lewis Hanke
1885–86
George Bancroft
1932
Herbert Eugene Bolton
1975
Gordon Wright
1886–87
Justin Winsor
1933
Charles A. Beard
1976
Richard B. Morris
1887–88
William Frederick Poole
1934
William E. Dodd
1977
Charles Gibson
Charles Kendall Adams
1935
Michael I. Rostovtzeff
1978
William J. Bouwsma
1890
John Jay
1936
Charles McIlwain
1979
John Hope Franklin
1891
William Wirt Henry
1937
Guy Stanton Ford
1980
David H. Pinkney
1892–93
James Burrill Angell
Bernard Bailyn
Henry Adams
Laurence M. Larson Frederic L. Paxson
1981
1893–94
1938 1939
William Scott Ferguson
1982
Gordon A. Craig
1940
Max Farrand
1983
Philip D. Curtin
1941
James Westfall Thompson
1984
Arthur S. Link
1942
Arthur M. Schlesinger
1985
William H. McNeill
1943
Nellie Neilson
1986
Carl N. Degler
1944
William L. Westermann
1945
Carlton J. H. Hayes
1946
Sidney B. Fay
1947
Thomas J. Wertenbaker
1948
Kenneth Scott Latourette
1949
Conyers Read
1950
Samuel E. Morison
1951
Robert L. Schuyler
1952
James G. Randall
1953
Louis Gottschalk
1954
Merle Curti
1955
Lynn Thorndike
1956
Dexter Perkins
1957
William Langer
1958
Walter Prescott Webb
1959
Allan Nevins
1960
Bernadotte E. Schmitt
1961
Samuel Flagg Bemis
1962
Carl Bridenbaugh
1963
Crane Brinton
1964
Julian P. Boyd
1965
Frederic C. Lane
1966
Roy F. Nichols
1967
Hajo Holborn
1968
John K. Fairbank
1969
C. Vann Woodward
1889
1895
George Frisbie Hoar
1896
Richard Salter Storrs
1897
James Schouler
1898
George Park Fisher
1899
James Ford Rhodes
1900
Edward Eggleston
1901
Charles Francis Adams
1902
Alfred Thayer Mahan
1903
Henry Charles Lea
1904
Goldwin Smith
1905
John Bach McMaster
1906
Simeon E. Baldwin
1907
J. Franklin Jameson
1908
George Burton Adams
1909
Albert Bushnell Hart
1910
Frederick Jackson Turner
1911
William Milligan Sloane
1912
Theodore Roosevelt
1913
William Archibald Dunning
1914
Andrew C. McLaughlin
1915
H. Morse Stephens
1916
George Lincoln Burr
1917
Worthington C. Ford
1918–19 1920
William Roscoe Thayer Edward Channing
1921
Jean Jules Jusserand
1922
Charles H. Haskins
1923
Edward P. Cheyney
1924
Woodrow Wilson
1924–25
Charles M. Andrews
Natalie Zemon Davis Akira Iriye
1989
Louis R. Harlan
1990
David Herlihy
1991
William E. Leuchtenburg
1992
Frederic E. Wakeman Jr.
1993
Louise A. Tilly
1994
Thomas C. Holt
1995
John H. Coatsworth
1996
Caroline Walker Bynum
1997
Joyce Appleby
1998
Joseph C. Miller
1999
Robert C. Darnton
2000
Eric Foner
2001
Wm. Roger Louis
2002
Lynn Hunt
2003
James M. McPherson
2004
Jonathan Spence
2005
James J. Sheehan
2006
Linda K. Kerber
2007
Barbara Weinstein
2008
Gabrielle M. Spiegel
2009
Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
2010
Barbara D. Metcalf
2011
Anthony Grafton
2012
William Cronon
2013
Kenneth Pomeranz
2014
Jan Goldstein
2015
Vicki L. Ruiz
Thomas C. Cochran
2016
Patrick Manning
Lynn White Jr.
2017
Tyler E. Stovall
1926
Dana C. Munro
1970
R. R. Palmer
1927
Henry Osborn Taylor
1928
James H. Breasted
1971
David M. Potter Joseph R. Strayer
1929
James Harvey Robinson
1972
1930
Evarts Boutell Greene
1973
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Planning and Arrangements for the 132nd Annual Meeting American Historical Association Headquarters Staff Kritika Agarwal Associate Editor, Publications
Julia Brookins Special Projects Coordinator
Seth J. Denbo
Program Committee Chair: Antoinette M. Burton
José C. Moya
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Barnard College, Columbia University
Co-chair: Rick Halpern
Craig Perrier
University of Toronto
James H. Carter Saint Joseph’s University
Director of Scholarly Communication and Digital Initiatives
Rita Chin
Debbie Ann Doyle
Purnima Dhavan
Meetings Coordinator
Elizabeth Elliott Program Associate
Joe Gardella Meeting and Executive Assistant
Jane Green Marketing and Public Relations Manager
James Grossman Executive Director
vv
University of Michigan University of Washington
Trevor Getz San Francisco State University
Kristina M. Giannotta
Fairfax County Public Schools
Andrés Tijerina Austin Community College
Kathryn Tomasek Wheaton College (Massachusetts)
David M. Whitford Baylor University
Brian W. Ogilvie University of Massachusetts Amherst
Naval History and Heritage Command
Claire Bond Potter
Toby C. Jones
The New School
Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Scott Harrison
Jennifer L. Morgan
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Program Committee Assistant
New York University
Michelle Hewitt Membership Assistant Manager
Zoe Jackson Editorial Assistant
Matthew Keough Archives and Office Assistant
Stephanie Kingsley
Local Arrangements Committee
Associate Editor, Web Content and Social Media
Allison Miller Editor, Perspectives on History
Betsy Orgodol Senior Accountant
Dylan Ruediger Coordinator, Career Diversity for Historians
Dana L. Schaffer Deputy Director
Pamela Scott-Pinkney Membership Manager
Emily Swafford Manager of Academic Affairs
Liz Townsend Coordinator, Data Administration and Integrity
Jill Wharton Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow
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Co-chair: Edna Greene Medford
Amanda Moniz
Howard University
Co-chair: Aaron B. O’Connell
National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
University of Texas at Austin
Ryan Reft
Sahr Conway-Lanz
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
Frank Smith
Ellen Feingold National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Matthew Gilmore H-DC
John Hessler
African American Civil War Memorial and Museum
Sarah Jones Weicksel Washington, DC
A J Aiséirithe
Library of Congress
Douglass Bicentennial Community
Ka’mal McClarin
Majella Chube Hamilton
Frederick Douglass Home and National Historic Site
Howard University LAC Assistant
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vi
AHA Hours / Session Icons
Name
Location
Hours
Registration
Marriott Wardman Park, Convention Registration Desk
January 4, 11:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m. January 5, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 6, 8:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
Exhibit Hall
Marriott Wardman Park, Exhibit Hall C
January 5, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 6, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 7, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Job Center
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 4
January 4, 12:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 6, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 7, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
AHA Information Desk
Marriott Wardman Park, Convention Registration Desk
January 4, 11:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m. January 5, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 6, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 7, 8:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
AHA Headquarters/Staff Office
Marriott Wardman Park, Convention Registration Desk
January 4, 11:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m. January 5, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 6, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 7, 8:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
Quiet Room
Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219
January 4, 12:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 6, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 7, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
All-Gender Restrooms
All-gender restrooms will be available at the Marriott Wardman Park on the lobby level near the Delaware Suite; at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in the east promenade; and at the Washington Hilton inside Columbia Hall on the terrace level.
Nursing Mothers’ Room
A nursing mothers’ room will be located on the lobby level of the Marriott Wardman Park in Park Tower Room 8228. The Washington Hilton has a nursing mother’s room located on the terrace level; the access code is 9900.
Session Icons These icons identify presidential sessions and film screenings, starting on page 13.
Presidential Session
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Film
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General Information
1
T
he 132nd annual meeting of the Association will be held January 4–7, 2018, in Washington. More than 1,500 scholars will participate in the four-day meeting. In addition, more than 50 specialized societies and organizations have scheduled sessions and luncheons in partnership with the Association. AHA awards and honors will be announced on Thursday, January 4, followed by the plenary session. Tyler Stovall, University of California, Santa Cruz, will deliver the presidential address on Friday, January 5.
at each hotel to assist attendees with information. Buses will pick up and drop off passengers from the Marriott’s 24th Street entrance, the Omni Shoreham’s main entrance on Calvert Street, and the Hilton’s T Street entrance on the terrace level. Hours: Thursday, January 4, 11 a.m.–10 p.m. Friday, January 5, 8 a.m.–9 p.m. Saturday, January 6, 8 a.m.–10 p.m.
Hotel Accommodations
Sunday, January 7, 8:30 a.m.–1 p.m.
The AHA has reserved blocks of rooms at the following hotels, all located in northwest Washington.
Information for Persons with Disabilities
Marriott Wardman Park
Single
Double
$145
$175
Triple Quadruple
$185
$215
2660 Woodley Rd. NW Headquarters Omni Shoreham Hotel
$145
$175
$205
$235
2500 Calvert St. NW
Find general information and resources at wheelchairtravel.org/washington-dc/.
Accommodations for Persons with Disabilities All meeting hotels have accessible lobbies; several have autoslide doors. Thresholds and doormats are in compliance with American with Disabilities Act (ADA) regulations and door-service personnel are available at most properties. Lobbies have marble floors and/or low-pile area carpeting. Elevators connect all levels of each property. Each elevator has a wheelchair-accessible keypad, Braille numerals beside each control button, and audible direction. Restrooms in lobbies and on meeting room floors are wheelchair accessible and have tactile signage.
Please see Hotels and Travel (www.historians.org/annual-meeting/hotelsand-travel) on the AHA website for details.
All hotels have accessible registration desks or provide clipboards to guests to complete registration documentation. All hotels have accessible guest rooms. The number of such rooms at each property is noted in the listing below. Among other amenities, these rooms feature wheelchair-accessible doors, lever door handles, security peepholes, ample room space, grab bars in restrooms, low sinks with insulated pipes, accessible towel racks, and accessible mirrors. The following auxiliary aids are available at most properties: flashing fire alarm, doorbell, and telephone; vibrating alarm clock; closed-caption decoders; Braille signage; and TDD telephones.
Making a Hotel Reservation
Marriott Wardman Park
Attendees should reserve a room through the AHA’s housing service, Experient. Attendees will be able to make reservations online through a link on the AHA website or by calling toll free at 800-967-8852. International registrants may call 847-996-5832. Attendees interested in reserving suites should e-mail AHA@ experient-inc.com for more information about suite types and rates.
All areas of the facility are wheelchair accessible. Electronic doors are located at all main lobby entrances. All elevators are equipped with Braille signage. Additionally, restrooms and drinking fountains are ADA accessible.
Reservation Dates
Guest Rooms: There are 28 ADA rooms with king beds and 3 ADA rooms with 2 double beds distributed throughout the hotel. Some of the rooms available are equipped for hearing access only, with the rest having accommodations for hearing and mobility.
Co-Headquarters Washington Hilton
$145
$175
$205
$235
1919 Connecticut Ave. NW
Reservations can be made by Internet or phone between September 13 and December 12, 2017. The last day to make or change reservations through the housing service is December 12, 2017. After that date, remaining inventory in each hotel’s block will be released and rates are no longer guaranteed. After December 12, all reservations, changes, and cancellations must be made directly with the hotels.
Credit Card Guarantee All reservations must be guaranteed with a major credit card or deposit of one night’s room rate and taxes. Cancellations must be made 72 hours prior to the scheduled arrival date or hotels will charge a cancellation fee of one night’s room and tax.
Parking: There are 10 self-parking spaces inside the garage. The garage height limit is 5’ 10”. Valet parking is also offered at an additional cost. Parking garages are accessible with ramps and elevators.
Meeting Rooms: All rooms and floors of the hotel are accessible. There are stairs in Balcony A and B, but there is a lift for wheelchairs. All other areas are accessible by elevator or ramps. Restaurants: The restaurants are on the lobby level and are accessible.
Omni Shoreham Hotel Parking: The hotel provides valet parking only, with an open-air lot to accommodate oversized vehicles.
Shuttle Bus
Guest rooms: The hotel has 42 ADA rooms (including 1 suite) with roll-in showers or standard tubs with grab bars.
Your registration includes a free shuttle bus that will circulate between the hotels during meeting hours. Buses will depart every twenty minutes. There will be a dispatcher
Meeting Rooms: All rooms and floors of the historic hotel are accessible. There is a ramp to the lobby to the left of the main entrance. There are fully accessible
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General Information
Map of the Area American Historical Association Hotel Map
1 2
3
3
Map Points 1
Washington Mariott Wardman Park 2660 Woodley Rd. NW
2
Omni Shoreham Hotel 2500 Calvert St. NW
3
Washington Hilton 1919 Connecticut Ave. NW
elevators between all meeting rooms and floors. Consult the hotel map for the elevator that serves a particular room. The Regency and Ambassador Ballrooms have an ADA lift. Take the West Promenade elevators to level 1B then access the wheelchair lift to both ballrooms. Hotel employees are available to assist with the wheelchair lift.
Accessible Transportation
Restaurants: Robert’s Restaurant is accessible by elevator; Morsel’s (coffee shop) and marquee Lounge (evening bar) are on the lobby level.
Wheelchair-accessible, ADA compliant taxi vans are available within the Washington metropolitan area. Wheelchair taxis can be ordered on demand within the city and at all three area airports, but advance reservation is recommended.
Other Amenities: The fitness center is accessibly by the West Promenade elevator.
Washington Hilton Parking: The hotel provides valet and self-service parking. The garage height restriction is 6’ 4”. Vehicles over the height limit may park on the front drive, space permitting. Hotel policy prohibits valet staff from operating vehicles with hand-operated gas and breaks. Guest rooms: The hotel has 21 ADA rooms with 2 double beds (15 of which have roll-in showers), 7 ADA rooms with one king bed (1 of which has a roll-in shower), 2 parlors, and 1 suite. Meeting rooms: All meeting rooms can be accessed via elevator. Restaurants: All restaurants are ADA accessible and located on the lobby level. Other amenities: The fitness center can be entered through the terrace level, at the very end of the hallway. The pool, located in the fitness center, has a wheelchair lift.
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The public transportation system in Washington, DC, is fully accessible. Consult the Metro website for a list of escalator and elevator outages (www. wmata.com).
The following companies are authorized to make pick-ups within the District of Columbia: Royal Taxi (202) 398-0500
Yellow Taxi
(202) 544-1213
Scooter rentals are available by contacting ScootAround (888-441-7575, www. scootaround.com).
Service Animals Welcome The American Historical Association is committed to making the annual meeting accessible. Service animals are welcome at all events, sessions, and venues. The ADA protects the right of people with disabilities to be accompanied by trained service animals in public places. Remember, not all disabilities are visible and service animals are not required to wear special
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General Information equipment or tags. Service animals are working and should not be distracted without permission.
Fragrance Please help us to accommodate attendees who are sensitive to fragrances by refraining from wearing scented products.
Sign Interpreting Members with hearing impairment who will need sign-interpreting service at the AHA annual meeting must notify the AHA Headquarters Office and register for the meeting by December 1, 2017. The request should include the sessions they plan to attend. The AHA will, with the assistance of the Registry of Interpreters, secure the services of appropriate interpreters. The AHA will assume the cost for up to nine hours of sign language interpreting service or a maximum of $400 per member, whichever is less. An interpreter may also be provided upon request for the presidential address (Friday, January 5) and the annual business meeting (Saturday, January 6). Assistive listening devices are also available on request. Please contact Debbie Doyle at
[email protected] by December 1, 2017, if you would like to request an interpreter or assistive listening device.
Other Resources US Department of Transportation’s New Horizons: Information for the Air Traveler with a Disability (airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/publications/horizons.htm). Barrier-Free Travels: A Nuts and Bolts Guide for Wheelers and Slow Walkers (barrierfreetravel.net).
Transportation to Washington See historians.org/annual-meeting for complete details about transportation, including discounts for AHA members and attendees.
Airports The nation’s capital is served by three airports. Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA), located in Arlington, Virginia, is the closest airport to DC. Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD) is approximately 30 miles west of Washington and Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI) is 40 miles north of Washington. National Airport is connected to the city by its own Metro stop.
Taxi Service
3 Park-Zoo/Adams Morgan station on the Red Line. The Hilton is four blocks from the Dupont Circle Station on the Red Line. Riders must purchase a rechargeable fare card at any station.
Van Service Super Shuttle offers service from the ground transportation area of the airport to all of the major downtown hotels for $25 per person one way or $40 round trip. See historians.org/annual-meeting to take advantage of a discount for AHA attendees.
Parking All hotels have parking available at rates ranging from $37 to $42 overnight. Find discounts on other nearby lots with SpotHero. See historians.org/annualmeeting for information.
Meeting Registration Take advantage of reduced rates by preregistering for the conference. Make sure your membership is up to date so you can enjoy member pricing at each level. Register online at historians.org/annual-meeting/registration. Advance registration must be completed by midnight on December 15, 2017. After that, onsite rates will apply. Registration materials, including badges, will be distributed at the meeting during registration hours, posted on page vi. Everyone attending the meeting must register. In addition, all US historians presenting at AHA sessions must be AHA members. Admission to the Exhibit Hall and Job Center requires a registration badge.
Refund Policy Advance registrants who are unable to attend the meeting may request a refund of their registration fee. Cancellations and refund requests should be submitted in writing by December 15, 2017. Refunds will be processed less a $20 administrative fee. No refunds will be issued for requests postmarked or e-mailed after December 15, 2017. Refunds will not be given for no-shows. Cancellations and refund requests should be submitted to the American Historical Association, Business Office, 400 A St. SE, Washington, DC 20003 or e-mailed to
[email protected]. Proof of payment—copies of front and back of cancelled check or copy of credit card statement—may also be required.
Quiet Room The AHA will make a Quiet Room available in the Marriott’s Park Tower Room 8219. The room will have free wireless Internet access. Although the room is of particular use to those on the job market, it is also available for all conference attendees as a place to sit for a few minutes of quiet time.
Taxis are readily available at designated exits at the airports.
Arriving by Train Amtrak serves Washington’s Union Station (50 Massachusetts Ave.). The station is on the Metro’s Red line. Metro (www.wmata.com) is the region’s rapid transit system. The Marriott Wardman Park and Omni Shoreham hotels are within a block of the Woodley
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All-Gender Restrooms All-gender restrooms will be available at the Marriott Wardman Park on the lobby level near the Delaware Suite; the Omni Shoreham Hotel in the east promenade; and the Washington Hilton on the terrace level inside Columbia Hall. All are welcome to use the restroom that best fits their identity.
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General Information Member Preregistration
Non-Member After Dec. 15
Preregistration
After Dec. 15
Attendee
$170
$201
$246
$277
Speaker
$170
$201
$170
$201
Student
$80
$94
$122
$136
Unemployed/Underemployed
$72
$86
$120
$134
Retired
$83
$98
$142
$157
K-12 Teacher
$40
$45
$45
$50
Bring your Graduate/ Undergraduate/K-12 student discount
For members only. Member rate plus $10 per student ($20 onsite). Bring as many high school, undergraduate, and pre-candidacy graduate students as you want for only $10 each!
Nursing Mothers’ Room A nursing mothers’ room will be located on the lobby level of the Marriott Wardman Park in Park Tower Room 8228. The Washington Hilton has a nursing mother’s room located on the terrace level; the access code is 9900. The rooms are equipped with comfortable furniture and a private area for nursing mothers.
Childcare Grants to subsidize childcare are available by application. Please visit historians. org/childcaregrants for more information. Formal childcare services will not be provided at the meeting. Attendees should make arrangements directly with a provider prior to arriving in Washington (some options are noted below). The AHA assumes no responsibility with respect to these services and accepts no liabilities related to the services provided. Care.com Sittercity.com
Business Meeting The AHA Council, divisions, and committees will report to the Association at the annual business meeting. Reports are subject to discussion and appropriate motions relating to them. Resolutions on other matters for the business meeting will be handled as follows: (1) resolutions signed by 100 members of the Association will be accepted until November 1, 2017, and (2) must be no more than 300 words in length. Resolutions should be sent to the Executive Director at the AHA headquarters. Only AHA members and others who receive permission from the Council may attend the business meeting. Please confirm in advance that your membership is up to date.
Affiliated Societies The Atrium at the Marriott Wardman Park has been reserved from 11:30 a.m.– 2:30 p.m. on Friday, January 6, for affiliated societies to display materials and to meet with members of the profession.
Recording Policy The AHA and the press occasionally record sessions for use in broadcast and electronic media, and film or photograph public areas at the meeting.
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Registration, attendance, or participation at the meeting constitutes an agreement to the use of the attendee’s image in photographs, video, audio, and electronic communications. Presenters who do not wish for their session to be recorded may opt out by contacting
[email protected]. In order to encourage open debate and allow members to speak as freely as possible, the AHA does not permit audio or video recording of its business meeting. Anyone who wishes to conduct audio or video recording must obtain permission from participants in advance. The AHA is not responsible for unauthorized recording but does reserve the right to revoke registration of anyone who records sessions without appropriate permissions.
Live Tweeting To facilitate virtual conversations arising from the annual meeting, the AHA encourages attendees to live tweet using #AHA18. Participants are encouraged to share their Twitter handles. Speakers presenting material that they do not wish to be live tweeted should make a request to the audience at the beginning of their presentations.
Tours Organized by the Local Arrangements Committee The Local Arrangements Committee has organized 12 tours highlighting the historical resources of Washington, DC. Participants will have a unique opportunity to take these tours with their fellow historians. Preregistration for tours is highly recommended. Tour tickets are nonrefundable and cannot be exchanged. Tour participants must be registered for the AHA meeting. Log in to the Registration Resource Center or call (508) 743-0510 to add tickets to an existing registration. Tour groups will meet in Room 8226 at the Marriott Wardman Park. Tours may travel by bus or Metro. Fares and admission fees are included in the price of the tour unless otherwise specified. The Metro system is accessible. See the tour descriptions for details about the accessibility of each tour site. Accessible buses or alternate transportation for people with disabilities will be available on request. Contact
[email protected] for additional information. Thursday, January 4 12:30–4:00 p.m. Tour 1: The Frederick Douglass Home and National Historic Site (p. 12) 1:00–4:30 p.m. Tour 2: Tour of The Value of Money Exhibition and the National Numismatic Collection at the National Museum of American History (p. 13)
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General Information
5
1:30–4:30 p.m. Tour 3: The Folger Shakespeare Library (p. 18)
Sunday, January 7
2:00–5:00 p.m. Tour 4: Tour of Decatur House Led by the White House Historical Association (p. 18)
10:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Tour 12: Foggy Bottom and the West End (p. 82) 10:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Tour 13: President Lincoln’s Cottage (p. 82)
Friday, January 5 7:00–11:00 a.m. Tour 5: National Museum of African American History and Culture (p. 24)
Film Festival
10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Tour 6: Echoes of the Great War: American Experiences of World War I (p. 29)
Thursday, January 4
10:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Tour 7: Seeing Ancient Mesoamerica: Behind the Scenes of the Kislak Collection of the Archaeology of the Early Americas at the Library of Congress (p. 30)
Friday, January 5
1:00–3:00 p.m. Tour 8: Archiving Taste: A Tour of the Food History Collection at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History (meet at Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, SC Johnson Center) (p. 37)
5:30–7:30 p.m. In Our Son’s Name: A Family Responds to 9/11 (p. 23) 1:00–3:00 p.m. John O’Connor Film Award Winner, Documentary: I Am Not Your Negro (p. 36) 3:30–5:30 p.m. Adios Amor: The Search for Maria Moreno (p. 49) 7:00–10:00 p.m. John O’Connor Film Award Winner, Feature Film: Free State of Jones (p. 50)
2:00–5:30 p.m. Tour 9: Giving in America: The Material Culture of Philanthropy at the National Museum of American History (p. 43)
Saturday, January 6
Saturday, January 6
12:00–2:00 p.m. Through Chinatown’s Eyes: April 1968 (p. 64)
4:00–5:30 p.m. Tour 10: The African American Civil War Memorial and Museum in the Historic U Street Neighborhood (p. 75)
3:30–5:00 p.m. An Outrage (p. 75)
New in 2018! Professional Pathways Marriott Ballroom Salon 2
10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin (p. 56)
6:00–8:00 p.m. Tell Them We Are Rising: The Story of Black Colleges and Universities (p. 76)
Professional Pathways will bring many of the career development opportunities at the 2018 annual meeting into one convenient space. Stop by for panels, workshops, and meet-ups relating to careers within and outside the academy. Featuring • Fifth annual career fair, including Ask an Assistant Professor • Discussion on writing historical fiction • Telling a story through your LinkedIn profile • Funding your dissertation research • Bootcamp on professional job searches • Advice on publication from journal editors • and much more! Professional Pathways will be located in the Marriott Wardman Park’s Marriott Ballroom Salon 2. Additional events will be announced in the fall. Download the free meeting app for more details.
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Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons AHA Meetings Affiliated and Societies Events
American Historical Association Meetings and Events The following is an overview of meetings and events planned by the American Historical Association.
Wednesday, January 3 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. George Washington University. THATCamp (p. 12)
Thursday, January 4 8:30 a.m.–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room. AHA Council Meeting (invitation only) 9:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Getting Started in Digital History Workshop (p. 12) 4:00–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A. Getting the Most Out of the Annual Meeting (p. 22) 4:00–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Undergraduate Orientation to the Meeting (p. 23) 5:00–6:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room. Reception for Graduate Students (p. 23) 5:00–6:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom. Undergraduate Reception (p. 23) 5:30–6:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction. Reception for History Bloggers and Twitterstorians (p. 23) 6:00–7:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom. Welcome Reception (p. 23) 7:00–8:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom. American Historical Association Awards Ceremony (p. 23) 8:00–9:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom. Plenary Session: New Perspectives on Histories of the Slave Trade (p. 23)
Friday, January 5 7:00–8:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room. Journal Editor’s Breakfast (invitation only) 9:00–11:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Federal Agency and Funder Display (p. 29) 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C. K–16 Teaching Workshop: Assignments Charrette (p. 29) 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Affiliated Societies Display (p. 36) 12:00–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2. Thinking Like a Historian at a Think Tank (p. 36) 12:00–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room. Working Luncheon for Directors of Graduate Studies (p. 36) 12:30–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room. American Historical Review: Meet the Editors Reception (p. 36) 1:30–2:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2. Graduate and Early Career Committee Open Forum: Finding Funding in an Era of Uncertainty (p. 37) 2:30–5:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2. Workshop: Preparing for the Nonacademic Job Search (p. 43) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3. American Historical Association Presidential Address (p. 49) 7:00–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1. Reception Hosted by the American Historical Association for 2017 President Tyler Stovall, University of California, Santa Cruz (p. 49)
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7:30–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. LGBTQ Historians’ Reception (p. 50) 8:00–9:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Public Historians’ Reception (p. 50) 8:00–9:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. Reception for Two-Year Faculty (p. 50)
Saturday, January 6 8:00–9:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1. Breakfast Meeting of the AHA Committee on Gender Equity (p. 51) 8:30–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Poster Session #1 (p. 54) 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C. K–16 Educators’ Workshop: Perspectives on World War I: The Everyday and the Global (p. 56) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2. ImaginePhD and Career Diversity: Integrating Self Assessment, Career Exploration, and Planning into History Departments (p. 61) 10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Poster Session #2 (p. 60) 11:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room. AHR Board of Editors Luncheon and Meeting (invitation only) 12:00–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Room. AHA Modern European History Section Luncheon (p. 63) 12:00–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room. Department Chairs’ Luncheon (p. 63) 1:00–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Poster Session #3 (p. 64) 1:00–4:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2. Career Fair (p. 64) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Annual Meeting of Affiliated Society Representatives 3:00–4:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Affiliated Societies Workshop: Membership Recruitment and Retention (p. 69) 3:30–5:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Undergraduate Poster Session (p. 75) 3:45–4:45 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room. Teaching and Learning Networking Opportunity (p. 75) 5:15–6:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3. AHA Business Meeting (AHA Members Only) (p. 75) 6:00–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. Committee on Minority Historians’ Reception (p. 76) 6:30–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. K–12 Reception (p. 77) 7:00–8:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. National History Center Reception (p. 77) 8:30–9:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3. The State and Future of the Humanities in the United States (p. 77)
Sunday, January 7 8:00–9:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium. Farewell Reception (p. 78) 8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room. Council meeting (invitation only)
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PACKAGE ROOM
ESCALATOR TO MAIN LOBBY
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Marriott Wardman Park, Exhibit Level
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Use elevator to Omni Shoreham
8 Floor Plans: Marriott Wardman Park
Marriott Wardman Park, Lobby Level
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Thurgood Marshall Ballroom
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Marriott Wardman Park, Mezzanine Level
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BALCONY B
East Conference Center
Hampton Room
Calvert Room
Telephones
East Registration
Embassy Room
Capitol Room
Parking Lot
ADA Elevator to Blue Room & Parkview Building
To Parkview Rooms Blue Room
Rest Rooms
Front Desk & Reception
Concerge Desk
News Stand Gift Shop
EAST LOBBY
Little Something Gormet ATM
Women’s Lounge President’s Board Room
Governors Board Room
Chairman’s Board Room
Men’s Lounge
East Elevators
Blue Room Prefunction
Terrace
ADA Ramp To Lobby
MAIN ENTRANCE
Telephones
MAIN LOBBY
ADA Elevator to Roberts Restaurant and Palladian Room
Robert’s Restaurant
Veranda
Coat Check
Robert’s Private Dining Room
Marquee Lounge
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Jewelry Store
WEST LOBBY
Men’s Restroom
West Elevators
Forum Room
Senate Room
Men’s Restroom (Lower Level)
West Conference Center
For Access to the Empire Ballroom and Health Club/Outdoor Pool Please use elevators on the West Side of the Hotel and go to level 2B.
For Access to Diplomat ballrooms Please use elevators on the West Side and go to level 1B.
Cabinet Room
Council Room
Business Center
Committee Room
Health Club
ADA Lift to Ambassador and Regency Ball Rooms Level 1B AM BA BAL SSAD LRO OR OM
REG ENC Y BA LLR OO M
Reg enc yG alle ry
Telephones
Women’s Lounge (Lower Level)
Empire Foyer
Empire Room
Bird Cage Walk Executive Room
West Registration
Director’s Room
Stairs
Diplomat Room
Women’s Restroom
Men’s Clothing Store
Palladian Room
Congressional Room
LOWER LEVEL 2B
10 Hotel Floor 10 Floor Plans: Plans: Omni Omni Shoreham Shoreham Hotel Hotel
Omni Shoreham Hotel
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Floor Plans: Washington Hilton
11 Washington Hilton
LOBBY LEVEL
THE COFFEE BEAN & TEA LEAF
HOLMEAD
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THE DISTRICT LINE RESTAURANT
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GIFT SHOP RESTROOM
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12
Thursday, January 4, Tours, Workshops
Program for the 2018 Annual Meeting Theme: “Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism in Global Perspective” Workshop Wednesday, January 3, 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. THATCamp George Washington University THATCamp (The Humanities and Technology Camp) is an open, informal unconference where humanists and technologists of all skill levels come together to learn and build together in sessions proposed on the spot. Go to aha2018.thatcamp.org for more information and registration.
Presented in collaboration with the AHA Teaching Division. Please note that you do not need to pick up your badge before attending the pre-meeting workshop. Chair:
Lawrence G. Charap, College Board
Panel:
Juliana Barr, Duke University Paul R. Deslandes, University of Vermont Rick Warner, Wabash College
Thursday, January 4, 9:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Getting Started in Digital History Workshop Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South
Workshops Thursday, January 4, 8:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in History Session 1 Learning from Evidence: Using Student Work to Understand Their Learning Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C Historians are used to reading texts as evidence to construct accounts of change and continuity over time. But we tend simply to evaluate the work students do for us, rather than draw explicitly on our competencies as historians. In this workshop, participants will read student work together like historians, to uncover not just what students know, but also how they think and what they can do. They will learn simple, but sophisticated, techniques for analyzing and summarizing the work and discuss the concepts and competencies students should learn to make their history education as authentic to our discipline as possible. No charge; because space is limited, free advance registration is required. Please note that you do not need to pick up your badge before attending the pre-meeting workshop. Chair:
Leah Shopkow, Indiana University
Panel:
Flannery Burke, Saint Louis University Peter Burkholder, Fairleigh Dickinson University Lendol G. Calder, Augustana College Joel M. Sipress, University of Wisconsin–Superior Laura M. Westhoff, University of Missouri–St. Louis
Thursday, January 4, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. College Board Symposium on Advanced Placement History Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A The College Board invites interested historians and history educators to an interactive event to learn more about Advanced Placement Program courses in European, United States, and world history. Attendees will have access to higher education faculty and teachers involved in course development to learn how AP curricula and exams are changing to focus on developing students’ ability to think historically, as well as on innovative ways that history teaching comes alive in the AP history classroom. Participants will also discuss how the AP experience helps inspire students to become future history majors.
Program_Book_2018.indd 12
The AHA will run its fifth Getting Started in Digital History workshop immediately prior to the start of the 2018 meeting. More and more of our attendees describe themselves as skilled digital historians, so each session will include a clear skill range that lets beginners get a good handle on digital history and gives returning intermediate attendees the chance to learn new skills in a comfortable, approachable environment. Ten sessions will include collaboration and project management for digital projects, digital storytelling, network analysis, data and text mining, history pedagogy with digital mapping and material culture, and a toolkit for multi-method digital approaches that integrates text analysis, timelines, and mapping. Our plenary lunch session, “Table Talks,” offers attendees the chance to network and chat in an informal setting with fellow attendees and session leaders as they delve into other important issues in digital history. Registration for the workshop can be purchased in advance through the registration form for $45 for AHA members, $10 for student members, $50 for nonmembers, and $20 for student nonmembers. Registration includes a boxed lunch. Please note that you do not need to pick up your badge before attending the pre-meeting workshop. We look forward to seeing you there.
Local Arrangements Committee Tours Thursday, January 4, 12:30–4:00 p.m. Tour 1: The Frederick Douglass Home and National Historic Site Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Ka’mal McClarin, Douglass Home and National Historic Site The curator of the historic site will lead a tour of the Douglass home, Cedar Hill, the last residence (1878–95) of the 19th-century African American leader. Douglass escaped from slavery as a young man and became an unrelenting voice in the struggle for freedom and equality before the Civil War and beyond. The tour will provide insight into Douglass’s active political and warm family life. The spacious estate and its material culture tell many stories: of Douglass the family man, author, orator, and public figure; of Douglass’s interest in literature, games, music, health, learning, and travel; and of the people in Douglass’s life such as Abraham Lincoln, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and John Brown. Please note: Participants will travel by bus. The visitor center is ADA compliant. However, the historic house is at the top of a large hill and the second floor is accessible only by stairs. Limit 15 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
23/10/17 5:32 PM
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions 3.
Tour 2: Tour of The Value of Money Exhibition and the National Numismatic Collection at the National Museum of American History Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Ellen Feingold, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Insitution This curator-led tour will take participants through The Value of Money exhibition and behind the scenes in the National Numismatic Collection—a world-class collection of approximately 1.6 million historic monetary and transactional objects. The Value of Money celebrates the power of using monetary objects to explore history. With objects from every inhabited continent, spanning more than 2,600 years, this exhibition showcases the National Numismatic Collection’s unique strengths, including the geographic and chronological diversity of the collection and the stunning rarities it contains. It examines the origins of money, new monetary technologies, the political and cultural messages money conveys, numismatic art and design, and the practice of collecting money. The Value of Money connects American history to global histories of exchange, cultural interaction and expression, political change, and innovation. Please note: Participants should provide their own fare card for the free tour. The group will travel by Metro; the museum is a 5-minute walk from the Federal Triangle station. The museum is ADA compliant. Limit 30 people. Free advance registration required
Early Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. 1.
Teacher, Historian, Scholar: The Professional Identity of Two-Year Faculty Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1
Chair:
Mark J. Smith, Valencia College
Panel:
Tony Acevedo, Hudson County Community College Elizabeth Bryant, Houston Community College Nathaniel Green, Northern Virginia Community College Paul D’Amboise, Community College of Vermont
2.
Bringing Collaborative Research into Doctoral Training: Field Dispatches from the NEH Next Generation Program and the AHA Mellon Grant Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Organized by the AHA Research Division
Chair:
Edward Balleisen, Duke University
Panel:
Stephen Aron, University of California, Los Angeles Peter Chesney, University of California, Los Angeles Edward Balleisen Ashton Merck, Duke University P. Gabrielle Foreman, University of Delaware Anna Lacy, University of Delaware
Program_Book_2018.indd 13
On the Job: Talking about History Skills with Employers Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Organized by the AHA Teaching Division
Chair:
Debra Humphreys, Lumina Foundation
Papers:
What Employers Tell Us about Their Needs, Faculty Work, and Student Skills Daniel J. McInerney, Utah State University and advisor, AHA Tuning Project
How Web Crawlers Help Shape the Vocabulary of Job Skills Norman L. Jones, Utah State University and Lumina Foundation Degree Qualifications Profile/Tuning Advisory Group Robert G. Sheets, George Washington Institute of Public Policy
Communicating Competencies to Students David J. Trowbridge, Marshall University
Recent History Graduates in the DC Area and Their Experiences in Job Interviews Lauren J. Cohen, Americans for the Arts Matthew Wasniewski, Office of the Historian, United States House of Representatives Samantha Dorsey, Gunston Hall Plantation
Comment: Ron Painter, National Association of Workforce Boards
4.
New Directions in Military History: A Roundtable Discussion on US Military Influence and Infrastructure at Home and Abroad Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Local Arrangements Committee
Chair:
Aaron O’Connell, University of Texas at Austin
Papers:
The Infrastructure of Empire: Great Britain and the United States in Comparative Perspective Katherine C. Epstein, Rutgers University at Camden
The Shanghai Trials: Military Commissions, Torture, and the Surprising Origins of the 1949 Geneva Conventions Michel Paradis, Columbia Law School
The Military and the Welfare State Jennifer Mittelstadt, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
5.
Innovations in Historical Teaching: The History Harvest Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B
Chair:
William G. Thomas III, University of Nebraska
Papers:
The History Harvest: Concept and Practice at the University of Nebraska Patrick Jones, University of Nebraska
The History Harvest Is Step One Rebecca Wingo, Macalester College
The North Texas History Harvest: Using Harvest Methods for Graduate Education Todd Moye, University of North Texas
Comment: Audience
January 4, 2018
Thursday, January 4, 1:00–4:30 p.m.
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23/10/17 5:32 PM
14 6.
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions Public History in Contentious Times: The Crowdsourced Syllabus
Animals and Critiques of Capitalism in Early Antislavery Writings Joshua A. Kercsmar, Unity College
Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction
Race and the Romances of Reunion: African American Animal Advocates in the New South Paula Tarankow, Indiana University
Chair:
Jennifer Evans, Carleton University
Panel:
Nathan Connolly, Johns Hopkins University Jaskiran Dhillon, New School for Social Research Elizabeth D. Heineman, University of Iowa Erika Lee, University of Minnesota
7.
Comment: Brett Mizelle, California State University, Long Beach
11. Black Women and Internationalism in the 20th Century Washington Hilton, Columbia 8
The State and the Archives in the Post-fact Age
Joint session with the African American Intellectual History Society, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History
Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room Chair:
Noa Shaindlinger, North Carolina State University
Papers:
On “Smoking Guns”: The Curious Case of the Israeli State Archives Noa Shaindlinger
Rethinking the Archives: Literature as an Other-Archive Brahim El Guabli, Princeton University
Stealing the Archives and Suspending the State in the 19th-Century Chiapas-Guatemala Borderlands Lean Sweeney, University of New Mexico
Longing for the Archive: Making Meaning out of State Violence in Kurdistan Susan Benson Sokmen, University of Toronto
Comment: Audience
8.
Beyond Nationalism: Globalizing China’s World War II
Chair:
Erik S. McDuffie, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Mary Church Terrell: Race Relations in International Perspective Alison M. Parker, Emory University
Local Organizing through a Global Lens: Muriel Snowden, Boston, and the Pan-African Movement Julie de Chantal, University of Massachusetts Amherst
“What That Meant to Me”: SNCC Women, the 1964 Guinea Trip, and Black Internationalism Julia Erin Wood, Texas A&M University
Comment: Erik S. McDuffie
12. Children’s Health, Corporate America, and Nationalism in the Cold War Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Chair:
Parks M. Coble, University of Nebraska
Chair:
John Swann, US Food and Drug Administration
Papers:
Prelude to the Axis: Chinese Pilgrims on a Japanese-Sponsored Hajj in 1938 Kelly Hammond, University of Arkansas
Papers:
A “Big Business Built for Little Customers,” 1948–73 Cynthia Connolly, University of Pennsylvania
“Down Go the Mean Old Germs!” Creating Antiseptic Havens in Cold War America Alexandra Lord, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Traditionalism and Wartime Education: The New Life Movement, 1934–45 Yiyun Ding, University of York
Political Technology: Air Raid Shelters, Treason, and Transnational Legal Discourses in Wartime China John B. Thompson, Columbia University
Chinese Oil and American Money: Local Economy and International Aid in Chongqing Wankun Li, University of Leeds
Comment: Audience
Comment: Parks M. Coble
9.
13. Unfreedom: A Roundtable—Constructing Race and Class in the Early Modern Atlantic World Washington Hilton, Columbia 5
Writing Global History in Early Modern Europe Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
Chair:
Anthony Grafton, Princeton University
Panel:
Richard Calis, Princeton University Frederic Clark, New York University Surekha Davies, Western Connecticut State University Anton Matytsin, Kenyon College Michael Thomas Tworek, Harvard University
Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Chair:
Justin L. Roberts, Dalhousie University
Panel:
Malick Ghachem, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Jared Ross Hardesty, Western Washington University Allison Madar, California State University, Chico Michelle McKinley, University of Oregon Andrea Catharina Mosterman, University of New Orleans
14. The Digital History of 19th-Century US Religion
10. Animating Human Rights: Animal Histories from Abolition to the Long Civil Rights Movement Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Jon T. Coleman, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
“Vast Good for Righteousness”: Animal Welfare, Human Rights, and the Work of Frederick Rivers Barnwell in Texas, 1914–45 Janet M. Davis, University of Texas at Austin
Program_Book_2018.indd 14
Playing Surgeon: Children’s Toys and Games Involving Surgical Procedures Susan Lederer, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Washington Hilton, Columbia 6 Joint session with the American Society of Church History Chair:
Maria R. Mazzenga, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Faith and Family: Reconstructing the Jesuit Enslaved Community in Southern Maryland, 1717–1838 Sharon Leon, Michigan State University
23/10/17 5:32 PM
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions “An Aversion to Instruction from Book, or Tract, or Bible?” Recovering the Place of Print in Antebellum American Catholicism Kyle B. Roberts, Loyola University Chicago
The Black Church: A Place and Space for 19th-Century Black Political Activism Denise Burgher, University of Delaware
How 19th-Century Americans Quoted Their Bibles Lincoln Mullen, George Mason University
Doing It in Public: Presenting Historical Sources on LGBT History in a Public Exhibition Cornelia King, Library Company of Philadelphia
Comment: James T. Downs, Connecticut College
18. Environmental History in East Africa and the Indian Ocean World Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Jane Hooper, George Mason University
Comment: Maria R. Mazzenga
Papers:
15. Central European History Society President’s Panel: Transnational Encounters on the Soviet Home Front: Central and East European Jewish Refugees in the USSR during the Holocaust
Touring the Islands: 19th-Century American Sailors and the Environment of the Indian Ocean Jane Hooper
Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Joint session with the Central European History Society
Chair:
Atina Grossmann, Cooper Union
Papers:
Saved by Stalin? Polish Jews in the Soviet Second World War Mark Edele, University of Melbourne
“I Became a Nomad in the Land of Nomadic Tribes”: Polish Jewish Refugees in Central Asia during the Shoah Eliyana Adler, Penn State University
New Communities and Fraught Encounters: Jewish Refugees on the Soviet Home Front Natalie Belsky, University of Minnesota Duluth
Comment: John Goldlust, La Trobe University
16. The #NoDAPL and Water Is Life Movements and Historians Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom
Modernizing Malindi: State Capitalism and Fishing on the Coast of East Africa Devin Smart, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Changes in the Land, Changes in the Body: Labor, Nature, and Belonging in Mauritius, 1940s–50s Robert Rouphail, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign PLEA for a “Sick” Lake: Studying, Catching, and Eating Nile Perch on Lake Victoria, 1988–94 John Doyle-Raso, Michigan State University
Comment: Pedro A. Machado, Indiana University
19. Knowledge Production and Economic Life in the Long Gilded Age Washington Hilton, Columbia 10 Chair:
Robert MacDougall, University of Western Ontario
Papers:
Humanizing Capital and Capitalizing Humans: A Gilded Age History Eli Cook, University of Haifa
Drafting Protection for Immaterial Property in the Age of Heavy Industry Liat Spiro, Harvard University
Chair:
Donald L. Fixico, Arizona State University
Papers:
Indigenous Oral Histories in Dallas Inspired by #NoDAPL and Water Is Life Coalition Building Farina King, Northeastern State University
The Historical Backdrop of the Dakota Access Pipeline Protests Michael Lawson, MLL Consulting, LLC
Comment: Richard R. John, Columbia University
The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe: Water, Land, and #NoDAPL Amber Annis, University of Minnesota
20. Fascist Legacies: The Afterlife of Fascism in Italy and Beyond Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C
Comment: Donald L. Fixico
17. Outing the Early American Past: Case Studies from Academic and Public History Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2 Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Richard Godbeer, Virginia Commonwealth University
Papers:
Siamese Twins: The Intimate World of James Buchanan and William Rufus King Thomas J. Balcerski, Eastern Connecticut State University
“Something Came into Our Love”: Harriet Hosmer, Ellen Tucker Emerson, and Female Subjects’ Sexuality in Their Own Words Kate Culkin, Bronx Community College, City University of New York
Program_Book_2018.indd 15
Promises of Love and Money: Occult Forecasting in Early 20thCentury New York City Jamie Pietruska, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Joint session with the Society for Italian Historical Studies Chair:
Pamela L. Ballinger, University of Michigan
Papers:
Borrowing from Mussolini: Nazi Germany’s Colonial Aspirations in the Shadow of Italian Colonialism Patrick Bernhard, Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung
From Empire to International Development: Fascism, Italian Colonialism, and the International Institute of Agriculture Angelo Caglioti, University of California, Berkeley
Resisting Decolonization: Italian Imperialism in the Second World War Eileen Ryan, Temple University
The Fascist Era Strikes Back: Mussolini’s Ministers in Postwar Politics Rhiannon Evangelista, Georgia State University Perimeter College
Comment: Pamela L. Ballinger
January 4, 2018
15
23/10/17 5:32 PM
16
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions
21. Cultural Diplomacy, Science, and Brazil-US Relations, 1930s–50s Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Gilberto Hochman, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
Papers:
War, Science, and Cultural Diplomacy in the Americas: Frank Wilson and Brazilian Cardiology Simone Kropf, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Joel D. Howell, University of Michigan
Good Neighbor Cultural Diplomacy in World War II: The Art of Making Friends Darlene J. Sadlier, Indiana University
On the History of the Relations between Brazilian and American Physics Olival Freire Jr., Universidade Federal da Bahia Indianara Silva, Universidade Federal de Feira de Santana
Cold War, Rockefeller Philanthropy, and Medical Education in Brazil during the 1950s Gilberto Hochman
Comment: Seth Garfield, University of Texas at Austin
22. What Is the African Diaspora in a “Post-racial Society”? The Case of 19th- and 20th-Century Mexico Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Ben Vinson III, George Washington University
Papers:
The Rhetoric and Reality of Race: Representations of African Descendants in 19th-Century Mexican National Discourse Beau Gaitors, Winston-Salem State University
The Geography of Race in 19th-Century Mexico: Capitalism, Culture, and Language John Milstead, Michigan State University
Harlem, Slavery, and Mexico’s Radical Tradition in the 1930s Theodore Cohen, Lindenwood University
Comment: Raymond Craib, Cornell University
23. Final Passages, Part 1: New Perspectives on the IntraAmerican Slave Trading Routes Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Elena Schneider, University of California, Berkeley
Papers:
The Muddle in the Middle Passage: Intra-American Slave Routes of the Early South Atlantic Kara Schultz, Vanderbilt University
From Curaçao to Veracruz: Slavery, Commerce, and Controversy in the 1680s Pablo Miguel Sierra Silva, University of Rochester
The Intra-American Slave Trade to Cuba, 1790–1808 Jorge Felipe, Michigan State University
Comment: Linda M. Rupert, University of North Carolina at Greensboro This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 33.
24. Research and Scholarship in Federal History Jobs Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Ever wonder what kind of work federal historians do? This session provides a unique view into the kinds of research and writing jobs performed by federal historians. Each panelist will provide a detailed discussion of some of their work projects, day to day experiences working as a federal historian, and insights into how working for the federal government impacts the historical research and writing of the scholar. The session will be followed by a workshop on applying for federal jobs. Chair:
Eric William Boyle, US Department of Energy
Panel:
Kristin L. Ahlberg, US Department of State Gregory Bereiter, Naval History and Heritage Command Frank Blazich, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
25. New Research on the Economic Causes and Consequences of Discrimination and Segregation Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Joint session with the Economic History Association Chair:
Hugh Rockoff, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Papers:
A New National Lynching Data Set and New Explanations for Lynching Behavior in the United States, 1684–1983 Lisa D. Cook, University of Michigan
America’s Chinatowns: Immigrant Segregation in the 19th Century Beth Lew-Williams, Princeton University
Do Black Politicians Matter? Trevon Logan, Ohio State University
Segregation, City Size, and Public Health in the United States, 1900–40 John Parman, College of William and Mary
Comment: Audience
26. A People’s Journey: Exploring African American Experiences in a National Museum on a World Stage Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Chair:
Jocelyn Imani, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution
Papers:
Freedom Sounds: Framing the Story of African American Music in a National Museum Kevin Strait, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution
Picturing History: Photography Exhibitions at the National Museum of African American History and Culture Loren Miller, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution Examining Black Narratives through Film: The National Museum of African American History and Culture’s Center for African American Media Arts Jon Goff, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution A Changing America: Exploring Black Power Histories at the National Museum of African American History and Culture Jocelyn Imani
Comment: Audience
Program_Book_2018.indd 16
23/10/17 5:32 PM
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions Papers:
Redeeming Pardos and Pretos: Constructing Race through Devotion to Saint Benedict and Saint Gonçalo Garcia in 18th-Century Brazil Caroline Garriott, Duke University
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–3:00 p.m. American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Session 1 Migrancy and Empire in the 18th Century: A Roundtable Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A Chair:
George Boulukos, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Panel:
Nancy Shoemaker, University of Connecticut at Storrs Adrian Finucane, Florida Atlantic University Nicole M. Wright, University of Colorado Boulder Amy Watson, Yale University Trevor Burnard, University of Melbourne
Conference on Latin American History Session 4 Spatial History in Border Regions of Modern Latin America Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Maria de los Angeles Picone, Emory University
Papers:
Economy and Rebellion between Argentina and Chile, 1850s–60s Kyle E. Harvey, Cornell University
Hunters, Rangers, Cougars, and Jaguars: Human and Nonhuman Territories at the Argentine-Brazilian Border, 1960s–80s Frederico Freitas, North Carolina State University
Crude Geographies and Slippery Borders: Mexican Oil Workers in Texas Sarah Stanford-McIntyre, College of William and Mary
Planes, Trains, Automobiles (and a Canal): Dreaming of Mobility in the Borderlands of Amazonia and the Gran Chaco Benjamin Nobbs-Thiessen, Arizona State University
Comment: Ryan Edwards, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Conference on Latin American History Session 5 Crossing Borders in Latin American History: “Pioneer” Women Historians and Their Stories Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Mieko Nishida, Hartwick College
Papers:
Crossing Borders, Tearing Down Walls Peggy K. Liss, Washington, DC
How a High School Spanish Teacher Became a Historian of the Llanos Orientales of Colombia Jane M. Rausch, University of Massachusetts Amherst
From Historian of 17th-Century Mexico to Cyber Security Expert: A Tale of Two Careers Louisa S. Hoberman, State of Texas Agencies
Comment: Mieko Nishida
Conference on Latin American History Session 6 Kinship, Ethnicity, and the Law in the Iberian World Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Brian P. Owensby, University of Virginia
Program_Book_2018.indd 17
Kinship, Ethnicity, and the Development of Many Indio Categories in Spanish Legal Practice Laurent Corbeil, Carleton University
Illnesses Known and Hidden: Health Status and Slaves’ Legal Agency in 18th-Century Colombia Brandi M. Waters, Yale University
Privilege without Purity? Family Ties across Time, Region, and Race in the Global Spanish Empire Norah L. A. Gharala, Georgian Court University
Comment: Robert C. Schwaller, University of Kansas
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 1 History and Public Policy Centers: A Roundtable Discussion Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
Nick Mueller, The National World War II Museum
Panel:
Brian Balogh, University of Virginia Avi Green, Scholars Strategy Network Rob Havers, George C. Marshall Foundation Dane Kennedy, National History Center of the American Historical Association David N. Myers, University of California, Los Angeles and the Center for Jewish History Jason Steinhauer, Villanova University
Polish American Historical Association Session 1 Roundtable: Teaching Polish and Polish-American History Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Anna Muller, University of Michigan–Dearborn
Papers:
Surveying Polish History Patrice Dabrowski, independent scholar
Poland Is Europe, Poland Is the World Elizabeth Morrow Clark, West Texas A&M University
Red, White, and Gray: Modern Polish History Nathaniel David Wood, University of Kansas
“But My Babcia Says” Michal Janusz Wilczewski, University of Illinois at Chicago
Comment: Audience
Renaissance Society of America Reflecting on Renaissance Refugees and Forced Migrations in the Era of the Muslim Ban Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Chair:
Kaya S¸ahin, Indiana University
Panel:
Sam White, Ohio State University Jesse A. Spohnholz, Washington State University Stephanie M. Cavanaugh, McGill University Nicholas Must, University of Waterloo
January 4, 2018
Early Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
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Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
Local Arrangements Committee Tours
28. Historians Behaving Badly: Intellectual Citizenship, Professional Behavior, and the Public Good Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Professional Division
Thursday, January 4, 1:30–4:30 p.m. Tour 3: The Folger Shakespeare Library Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Library staff The Folger Shakespeare Library holds the world’s largest collection of Shakespeare materials and major collections of Renaissance books, manuscripts, and art. The library building, opened in 1932, is a national historic landmark.
Chair:
Suzanne Lynn Marchand, Louisiana State University
Panel:
Jeremy I. Adelman, Princeton University Thomas Cogswell, University of California, Riverside Lloyd S. Kramer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sarah C. Maza, Northwestern University
29. Digital Projects Lightning Round Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom
Please note: The group will travel by Metro (fare card provided); the library is a 5-minute walk from the Capitol South station. The library is ADA compliant. Limit 50 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
Thursday, January 4, 2:00–5:00 p.m. Tour 4: Tour of Decatur House Led by the White House Historical Association Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Evan Phifer, White House Historical Association Built in 1818, Decatur House has been home to foreign and American dignitaries, secretaries of state, members of Congress, and a vice president, in addition to numerous free and enslaved servants who played a pivotal role in shaping America. Decatur House is one of only a few remaining examples of slave quarters in an urban setting. The White House Historical Association, founded by First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in 1961, is a private non-profit educational organization with a mission to enhance the understanding and appreciation of the Executive Mansion. The David M. Rubenstein National Center for White House History, established in 2010 and located at historic Decatur House, offers programs that enhance the understanding of the Executive Mansion and stimulate a sense of history and pride in our country. Please note: The group will travel by Metro (fare card provided); the house is a 5-minute walk from the Farragut North station. The first and second floor parlors are wheelchair accessible, but the house does include several stairways. Limit 40 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
Late Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. 27. Slavery and the University—Research in Action Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Chair:
Marisa J. Fuentes, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Panel:
Sven Beckert, Harvard University Marcia Chatelain, Georgetown University Kirt von Daacke, University of Virginia Adam Rothman, Georgetown University Deborah Gray White, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Craig Steven Wilder, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Program_Book_2018.indd 18
Organized by the AHA Research Division This lightning round invites historians working on digital projects to share their work in a series of three-minute presentations. With space for approximately 20 participants, this session is an excellent opportunity for scholars to get feedback on projects at any stage of development, hear about other types of projects and methods, and network with other digital historians. We are now accepting abstracts from those looking to participate. To submit an abstract, e-mail Stephanie Kingsley at
[email protected] with the subject “Digital Projects Lightning Round Submission.” Please include an 80-word abstract and the title of your project. Chair:
Stephanie Kingsley, American Historical Association
30. Teaching Queer Themes and Experiences in World History Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2 Organized by the AHA Teaching Division; joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Averill E. Earls, Mercyhurst University
Papers:
Juggling Breadth and Depth: Teaching Queer History in World History Surveys Averill E. Earls
Gender and Sexuality in Our Understanding of the Holocaust W. Jake Newsome, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Minding the Standard: Global Studies, Queer History, and the New York State Regents Exams Rachel Eshenour, West Seneca West Senior High School
Teaching Global Intimacies Howard Chiang, University of California, Davis
Comment: Audience
31. Globalizing Disability History: Contributions from Latin America, the Middle East, South Asia, and East Asia Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Joint session with the Disability History Association Chair:
Susan Burch, Middlebury College
Panel:
Holly Caldwell, Chestnut Hill College Aparna Nair, University of Oklahoma Sara Scalenghe, Loyola University Maryland Wei Yu Wayne Tan, Hope College
23/10/17 5:32 PM
Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
36. Freedom Tactics: Inventing Alternatives to Enslavement and Race in the 18th- and 19th-Century Black Atlantic Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A
Organized by the AHA Committee on Minority Historians Chair:
Lawrence B. Glickman, Cornell University
Chair:
Andrew Zimmerman, George Washington University
Panel:
Adrian Burgos Jr., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Theresa Runstedtler, American University Brenda J. Elsey, Hofstra University
Papers:
Market-Women and the Military: The West Indies Regiments and the Informal Economy in 18th-Century Jamaica Shauna J. Sweeney, College of William and Mary
Racial Capitalism and the 18th-Century Black Atlantic Justin Leroy, University of California, Davis
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2
Desertion and Resistance among Slave Soldiers of the Union Army Jonathan Lande, Brown University
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Comment: James T. Downs, Connecticut College
33. Final Passages, Part 2: New Perspectives on the Intra-American Slave Trading Routes
Chair:
Linda M. Rupert, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Papers:
The Interprovincial Slave Trade from Rio De Janeiro, 1809–33: An Analysis of the IPEA Database Daniel B. Domingues da Silva, Rice University
Trouble the Water: The Baltimore to New Orleans Coastal Slave Trade Jennie Williams, Johns Hopkins University
Final Passages: The Intra-American Slave Trade Database Alex Borucki, University of California, Irvine Gregory E. O’Malley, University of California, Santa Cruz
37. November 11, 1918, in the Middle East Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Chair:
Leonard V. Smith, Oberlin College
Papers:
Prince Faisal’s Message to Syrians at Aleppo, November 11, 1918 Elizabeth Thompson, American University
The End? The Ottoman Day of Armistice Mustafa Aksakal, Georgetown University
Comment: Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University
November 11, 1918, Viewed from Tehran: Iranian Responses to the Armistice Oliver Bast, Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 23.
The Egyptian Armistice: From Autonomy to Independence Aimee Genell, University of Miami
34. Workshop: Federal Jobs Revealed
Comment: Leonard V. Smith
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 This workshop will help graduates get the advantage in applying for federal jobs. It will provide information on federal hiring practices, giving an overview of the federal hiring process, breaking down a federal hiring advertisement, and discussing the most effective means for graduate students to break into the federal system. Workshop leaders include a federal hiring manager and recently hired federal historians. Participants will break into small groups to discuss resumes, interviews, and internships. This workshop is intended to follow the session “Research and Scholarship in Federal History Jobs.” Chair:
Kristina Giannotta, Naval History and Heritage Command
Panel:
Matt Cheser, Naval History and Heritage Command Eric William Boyle, US Department of Energy Julie Prieto, US Army Center of Military History Richard A. Hulver, Naval History and Heritage Command
38. 1960s GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, and Museums) Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room Chair:
Michelle Joan Wilkinson, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution
Papers:
Assembling the Diaspora: Black Arts and International Vision Rachel Rubin, University of Massachusetts Boston
The Messiness of the Past: Archives and the New Social History Thai Jones, Columbia University A Critical Decade: The 1960s and the Tamiment Library Sarah Moazeni, Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University
35. Is This Thing On? How History Podcasts Can, and Should, Change the Discipline
Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Origins of the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Neighborhood Museum Samir Meghelli, Anacostia Community Museum, Smithsonian Institution
Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Andrea Elizabeth Milne, University of California, Irvine
Panel:
Liz Covart, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture Nate DiMeo, Radiotopia Cody J. Foster, University of Kentucky
Comment: Andrea Elizabeth Milne
39. State Ritual and Symbolic Power in Early Modern Eurasia Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Joint session with the World History Association Chair:
Geoffrey Koziol, University of California, Berkeley
Papers:
New Year’s Day Ceremony and the Construction of Political Order in Qing China Macabe Keliher, West Virginia University
Program_Book_2018.indd 19
January 4, 2018
32. Race, Sport, Spectatorship
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Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
Symbol, Ritual, and Dynastic Legitimacy in the Weddings of the First Romanov Tsars Russell Edward Martin, Westminster College
43. “Third World” Anticolonial Nationalism and the Chicana/o Movement
Imperial Performances: Public Circumcisions of Ottoman Princes, 1457–1582 Kaya S¸ahin, Indiana University
Chair:
Felipe Hinojosa, Texas A&M University
Papers:
Prisons, Borders, and the US Third World Left in the 1970s Alan Eladio Gómez, Arizona State University
Grounding Gender and Race Self-Determination in Global Anticolonialism: Tejanas and the Third World in the 1970s Samantha Rodriguez, University of Houston
Comment: Geoffrey Koziol
40. Interactive Approaches to Teaching 20th-Century German History Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Join us for a hands-on, demonstration-based session where presenters will model effective strategies for teaching undergraduates to engage with and analyze primary source materials. Chair:
Lauren Stokes, Northwestern University
Panel:
Scott Harrison, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Julie Ault, University of Utah Adam Blackler, Black Hills State University Jane Freeland, University of Bristol Alexandria Ruble, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Comment: Lauren Stokes
Washington Hilton, Columbia 7
Che in New Mexico: Third World Anticolonial Nationalism, Las Gorras Negras, and the Chicana/o Insurgency, 1969–74 Dennis Aguirre, University of Northern Colorado
44.
The Identity Concept and Its Futures Past. A Roundtable on Gerald Izenberg’s Identity: The Necessity of a Modern Idea Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B
Chair:
Eric W. Oberle, Arizona State University
Panel:
Warren Breckman, University of Pennsylvania Malachi Haim Hacohen, Duke University Samuel Moyn, Yale University Eric W. Oberle
Comment: Gerald N. Izenberg, Washington University in St. Louis
41. Green Places, White Faces: Park Creation and Indigenous Self-Determination in the Global 20th Century Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3
45. Dancing Reformers or Reformed Dancers? Dance, Religion, and Gender in the Reformation Washington Hilton, Columbia 5
Chair:
John R. McNeill, Georgetown University
Papers:
Constructing the Leuser Reserves: Violence, Science, and Indigenous Erasure in Aceh, Indonesia, 1904–30 Matthew Minarchek, Cornell University
Chair:
R. Ward Holder, Saint Anselm College
Papers:
“Cd’a Indian Tribe Wants Heyburn State Park Back”: An Examination of Federal, State, and Indigenous Environmental Conflict Jessica Marie DeWitt, University of Saskatchewan
Love Thy Neighbor and Dance: Dance as an Expression of Neighborly Love in France, 16th and 17th Centuries Marianne A. Robins, Westmont College
Native Life on Native Terms: Wilderness, Oil Development, and Indigenous Self-Determination in the Battle for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Philip Wight, Brandeis University
A Northern Playground: National Park Creation and the Logics of (Dis)Possession in Ontario, 1928–40 Anne Janhunen, University of Saskatchewan
Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies
Unlikely Advocates: The Vicar of Bisley and Other Clerical Defenders of Dancing in 17th-Century England Emily Winerock, University of Pittsburgh
Dance Not Like Herodias, but as David Did: Dance and Gendered Transgression in 16th- and 17th-Century English Sermons Lynneth J. Miller, Baylor University
46. Constitutions and Minority Rights: Case Studies from South Asia Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room
Comment: Audience
Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia
42. Bringing Women and Girls into the Development Discourse: Global Historical Inquiries into Female Work and Value Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C Chair:
Howard Brick, University of Michigan
Papers:
The Nation and Plantation Labor in the 1960s: Women and Economic Development on the Market Periphery Jill Jensen, University of Redlands
Revisiting “Boserup Revisited”: The International Labor Organization and the Construction of Social Knowledge on Rural Women in the Global South Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara
The Girl in Development Discourse Vera Mackie, University of Wollongong
Program_Book_2018.indd 20
Chair:
Vinayak Chaturvedi, University of California, Irvine
Papers:
The Indian Constitution and the Making of Kashmiri Hindus and Muslims Mridu Rai, Presidency University
“Preserving and Improving the Breeds”: Colonial Cow Protection and the Prehistory of a Constitutional Directive Catherine S. Adcock, Washington University in St. Louis The Objectives Resolution and the Enduring Question of Minority Rights in Pakistan Neeti Nair, University of Virginia On the Minority Question: Constituent Assembly Debates on Secularism and National Others in Bangladesh Dina Siddiqi, BRAC University
Comment: Vinayak Chaturvedi
23/10/17 5:32 PM
Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions 47. Beyond Haiti: Race and the Limits of Revolutionary Freedom in France’s Global Empire, 1789–1815
Washington Hilton, Columbia 10
Joint session with the French Colonial Historical Society, the Society for French Historical Studies, and the Western Society for French History
Jean Hébrard, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales
Papers:
Race, Law, and the Colonial Lobby during the Pre-revolution: The Case of Julien Baudelle Miranda Spieler, American University of Paris
Blood Rubber: The Effects of Labor Coercion on Institutions and Coercion in the DRC Sara Lowes, Harvard University
Comment: Martin A. Klein
Free People of Color as Counterrevolutionaries: Power Struggles in Saint-Domingue and the Twists of Racial Thinking in Republican France, 1794–99 Manuel Covo, University of California, Santa Barbara
Chair:
Leah Wright Rigueur, Harvard University
“There Will be a Toussaint Louverture Here among Them”: Race and Rumor in France’s Indian Ocean Colonies in the Era of the Haitian Revolution Nathan Marvin, Johns Hopkins University
Panel:
Seth Cotlar, Willamette University Joshua Lynn, Yale University Michelle M. Nickerson, Loyola University Chicago Benjamin Cooper Waterhouse, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Verification of Freedom and the Fear of Re-enslavement in Martinique and Guadeloupe, 1799–1810 Joseph la Hausse de Lalouvière, Harvard University
Financing the African Colonial State: The Revenue Imperative and Forced Labor Marlous van Waijenburg, University of Michigan
Comment: Malick Ghachem, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
51. Teaching Conservatism in the Age of Trump Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A
52. The Latin American Middle Classes: An Interdisciplinary Approach Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
48. Political Imaginaries at the End of Empire Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C
Chair:
Abel Ricardo Lopez, Western Washington University
Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia
Panel:
Ezequiel Adamovsky, University of Buenos Aires Elizabeth Q. Hutchison, University of New Mexico Abel Ricardo Lopez Sergio Visacovsky, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas Celso Villegas, Kenyon College
Chair:
Alexander Semyonov, National Research University Higher School of Economics Rama Mantena, University of Illinois at Chicago
Panel:
Sergey Glebov, Amherst College and Smith College Manu Goswami, New York University Marina Mogilner, University of Illinois at Chicago Bhavani Raman, University of Toronto Scarborough
49. After War: Recognizing, Representing, and Remembering Veterans in American Society, 1945–2016 Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
Meredith L. Oyen, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Panel:
Andrew T. Darien, Salem State University Elena Friot, University of New Mexico Sarah Myers, Saint Francis University
50. Economic Histories of Forced Labor in Africa: Insights from New Sources and Approaches Washington Hilton, Columbia 6
Late Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. American Conference for Irish Studies Migration and Irish Identity Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4 Chair:
Timothy J. Meagher, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Irish Women, Poor Law Guardians, and the Challenges of StateSponsored Migration Jill C. Bender, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Chair:
Martin A. Klein, University of Toronto
Papers:
A Comparative Advantage in Labor Exports? Liberia, Fernando Po, and the League of Nations Leigh A. Gardner, London School of Economics and Political Science
Program_Book_2018.indd 21
Narrating the Living Conditions and Life Experiences of Toronto’s Irish Poor in the 1850s and 1860s William Jenkins, York University Post-Second World War Migration from Ireland and the Caribbean: A Comparative Perspective Miriam Nyhan Grey, New York University
Comment: Nicholas Wolf, New York University
January 4, 2018
Forced Agriculture after Abolition: Vagrancy Laws in Liberia of the 1960s Cassandra Mark-Thiesen, University of Basel
Chair:
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Thursday, January 4, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
Conference on Latin American History Session 9 Moral Limits: Inequality in Ethics in the Atlantic Human Sciences, 20th Century Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Micah Oelze, Florida International University
Papers:
Ethics and the Rhetoric of Friendship in the Yale Peruvian Expedition Adam W. V. Warren, University of Washington
From Classroom to Confiscation: The Mandate to “Collect Everything” in 1930s Brazilian Ethnography Micah Oelze
Framing Deep Pasts: Atavisms, Retrogressions, and Race Science in the Making of Neuroscientific and Genetic Medicine, c. 1880–1980 Stephen T. Casper, Clarkson University
Comment: Julia E. Rodriguez, University of New Hampshire
Panel:
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 2 Politics, Culture, and Identity in 20th-Century Italy Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A Chair:
Caroline Merithew, University of Dayton
Papers:
“In America è Vietato Essere Brutte”: Advertising American Beauty in the Italian Women’s Magazine Annabella, 1945–65 Jessica Lynne Harris, University of California, Los Angeles
Conference on Latin American History Session 10 Social Control, Violence, and Religion in the Caribbean and Central America
An All-Consuming Nationalism: Winemaking, Consumer Culture, and National Identity in Mussolini’s Italy Brian J. Griffith, University of California, Santa Barbara
Newsreeling the Empire: Fascist Mass Cinematography and the Ethiopian War, 1935–41 Gianmarco Mancosu, University of Warwick
Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Elaine P. Rocha, University of the West Indies at Cave Hill
Papers:
Poor Millie! Violence against Women, Poverty, and Migration in the West Indies Elaine P. Rocha
“The Better Government of Slaves”: Amelioration and the Trials of Planters for Abuse in Jamaica, 1788–1834 Michael Becker, Duke University
Religion, Community, and Politics during Guatemala’s Cold War Bonar Hernández, Iowa State University
Sandinista Ghosts on Two Coasts: State Formation, Memory, and Oral History in Two Nicaraguan Cities, 1979–2015 Shannon James, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Comment: Audience
Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 2 Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Session 2 AHA Committee on Gender Equity Organizations and Collaboration: A Conversation about Women in History Marriott Wardman Park, McKinley Room
Patricia Rosenfield, Rockefeller Archive Center Benjamin J. Soskis, Urban Institute Steven C. Wheatley, American Council of Learned Societies Gregory Witkowski, Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, Indiana University David C. Hammack, Case Western Reserve University Geri Mannion, Carnegie Corporation of New York
Reeducating Italians: The War Department and the Public Debates about Race and Backwardness Surrounding the Employment of Italian Prisoners of War in the United States during WWII Giulio Salvati, New York University
Comment: Caroline Merithew
Toynbee Prize Foundation The Fight for Global Equality Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Darrin M. McMahon, Dartmouth College
Panel:
Kenneth Pomeranz, University of Chicago Vanessa Ogle, University of California, Berkeley Megan Black, London School of Economics and Political Science Anne O’Donnell, New York University
Annual Meeting Orientation Thursday, January 4, 4:00–5:00 p.m.
Presiding: Barbara Molony, Santa Clara University
Getting the Most Out of the Annual Meeting
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 2 Understanding the Past to Plan the Future: Historical Inquiry and Philanthropic Grant-Making
Please join us for an orientation for first-time participants in the annual meeting. Learn how to navigate the annual meeting and get the most out of the professional development opportunities it provides. Participants will have a chance to ask questions informally, suggest ways to improve the meeting, and to meet others attending the annual meeting for the first time.
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3 Chair:
Amanda B. Moniz, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Program_Book_2018.indd 22
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A
Immediately following the session, participants can continue the conversation at the reception for graduate students.
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Thursday, January 4, Evening Events
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Undergraduate Orientation to the Meeting
Chair:
Lisa McGirr, Harvard University
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B
Panel:
Gayla Jamison, Lightfoot Films Julia E. Rodriguez, University of New Hampshire Naureen Shah, Amnesty International USA Jeremy Varon, New School for Social Research
Please join us for an orientation for undergraduates attending the annual meeting. Learn how to navigate the meeting and get the most out of the opportunities it provides. Participants will have a chance to ask questions informally and to meet others attending the annual meeting for the first time.
AHA Reception
Immediately following the session, participants can continue the conversation at a reception for undergraduate students.
AHA Receptions
Thursday, January 4, 6:00–7:00 p.m. Welcome Reception Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom
Thursday, January 4, 5:00–6:00 p.m. Reception for Graduate Students
The AHA invites all attendees to a reception with light refreshments to open the 132nd annual meeting.
Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room
AHA Awards Ceremony
Co-sponsored by Catholic University of America, Georgetown University, and Salisbury University
Undergraduate Reception Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom Co-sponsored by Catholic University of America, George Mason University, George Washington University, Georgetown University, and Salisbury University
Thursday, January 4, 7:00–8:00 p.m. American Historical Association Awards Ceremony Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom Presiding: Mary Beth Norton, Cornell University
Plenary Session
The AHA cordially invites undergraduates to a reception and informal conversation with colleagues and faculty.
Thursday, January 4, 5:30–6:30 p.m.
Thursday, January 4, 8:00–9:30 p.m.
Reception for History Bloggers and Twitterstorians
Plenary Session: New Perspectives on Histories of the Slave Trade
Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction Sponsored by MapStory The AHA cordially invites history bloggers and Twitterstorians to a reception and informal conversation with colleagues.
Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom Chair:
Edward A. Alpers, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers:
“The Coast Swarms with Slave Ships”: Slave Trading and Captives after Abolition Emma Christopher, Monash University and Unshackled Media
Film Festival
Slavery and the Slave Trade in the Western Indian Ocean, c.1770– 1890 Janet J. Ewald, Duke University
Thursday, January 4, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Film Screening: In Our Son’s Name: A Family Responds to 9/11
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A
Gayla Jamison, director (Lightfoot Films, 2015)
Joint session with the Peace History Society In Our Son’s Name is an intimate portrait of Phyllis and Orlando Rodríguez, whose son, Greg, dies in the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. The bereaved parents choose reconciliation and nonviolence over vengeance and begin a transformative journey that both confirms and challenges their convictions. They speak out against war in Iraq and Afghanistan, publicly oppose the death penalty of avowed 9/11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, and befriend his mother. As their search for meaning evolves they speak out against anti-Muslim actions and find peace in working with prison inmates.
Program_Book_2018.indd 23
Beyond the Atlantic Crossing: Reckoning with Captives’ Multi-Staged Journeys through the Slave Trade Gregory E. O’Malley, University of California, Santa Cruz
The Portuguese African Slave Trade and the Making of the Atlantic, 1450–1650 Dale W. Tomich, Binghamton University, State University of New York 16th-Century Slave Routes: Zapes and Magarabomba in the Early Iberian Atlantic David Wheat, Michigan State University
January 4, 2018
The AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee cordially invites graduate students attending the 2018 annual meeting to a reception and informal conversation with colleagues.
23/10/17 5:33 PM
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Friday, January Friday, Jan. 5, 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
Local Arrangements Committee Tour
56. Facilitating Global Historical Research on the Semantic Web: MEDEA (Modeling Semantically Enhanced Digital Edition of Accounts) Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom
Friday, January 5, 7:00–11:00 a.m. Tour 5: National Museum of African American History and Culture Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Museum staff Join us for a tour of the highlights of the museum with a curatorial expert from the museum staff. Please note: A limited number of free tickets will be distributed by lottery. Participants should provide their own fare card for the free tour. The group will travel by Metro; the museum is approximately half a mile from the Smithsonian station. The museum is ADA compliant. Limit: 50. Free tickets will be distributed by lottery
Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Friday, January 5, 8:30–10:00 a.m. 53. United to Combat Racism: UNESCO and the Concept of Race, 1945–65 Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3 Chair:
Patrick Manning, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
UNESCO and the Statements on Race in the Making Perrin Selcer, University of Michigan
South Africa, Race, and UNESCO in Its Early Years Michelle Brattain, Georgia State University
The Sociopolitical Impact of UNESCO’s Race Program Poul Duedahl, Aalborg University
Archives and Sources on UNESCO, Race, and the United States Jens Boel, United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization Archives
Comment: Patrick Manning
54. Tackling the Issue of Enrollments in History Courses, Part 1: Strategies and Ideas from the Frontlines Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Chair:
Cary D. Wintz, Texas Southern University
Panel: Edward E. Andrews, Providence College Kenneth F. Ledford, Case Western Reserve University Timothy J. Schmitz, Wofford College Katrin Schultheiss, George Washington University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 81 and 108.
55. Free Speech on Campus Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
Sanford Unger, Georgetown University
Panel:
Carla Hesse, University of California, Berkeley Jonathan Scott Holloway, Northwestern University Carol Quillen, Davidson College Michael S. Roth, Wesleyan University
Program_Book_2018.indd 24
Chair:
Clifford Anderson, Vanderbilt University
Papers:
Markup for Ancient Japanese Transactions through Engi-Shiki Kiyonori Nagasaki, International Institute for Digital Humanities Naoki Kokaze, University of Tokyo Makoto Goto, National Museum of Japanese History
Reconstructing the Network of Annual Fairs in Medieval Poland Anna Paulina Orlowska, Tadeusz Manteuffel Institute of History, Polish Academy of Sciences
MEDEA Bookkeeping Ontology for Interoperability of Scholarly Editions of Accounts Georg Vogeler, Center for Information Modeling, Graz University
Comment: Kathryn Tomasek, Wheaton College (Massachusetts)
57. The Modern Legacy of Premodern Racial and Ethnic Concepts, Part 1: Ethnicity in Imperial and Nationalist Discourses, Then and Now Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Joint session with the Haskins Society Chair:
Carol Symes, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Barbarians by Profession: Ethnically Defined Law and Collision Rules in the Early Medieval West Stefan Esders, Freie Universität Berlin
Empire and Ethnicity in the Early Medieval West Helmut Reimitz Sr., Princeton University
Genetics, Politics, and Dangerous Essentialism Susanne Hakenbeck, University of Cambridge
Comment: Michael E. Kulikowski, Penn State University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 82 and 111.
58. Teaching History in Independent Schools: A Career for PhDs in History Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Chair:
Tyler Miller, Poly Prep Country Day School
Panel:
Athan Biss, The Baldwin School Katharina Matro, Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart Samuel L. Schaffer, St. Albans School Joel D. Seltzer, Holton-Arms School Steve Steinbach, Sidwell Friends School
59. The Workings of Race and Nationhood in African American, Arab, Chaldean, Chinese, and Jewish Cemeteries in 19th-Century America Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Kirsten L. Fermaglich, Michigan State University
Papers:
Death and Burial among Arab and Chaldean Americans Rosina Hassoun, Saginaw Valley State University
An Ocean Apart: Chinese American Segregated Burials Sue Fawn Chung, University of Nevada at Las Vegas
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m.a.m. Sessions January 5, 8:30–10:00 Sessions Black Burial Rights and Racialized Burial Borders: A Critique of American Identity at the Burial Ground Kami Fletcher, Delaware State University
Jewish Rural Cemeteries and Local Constructions of Citizenship in 19th-Century New York City Allan Amanik, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Comment: Kirsten L. Fermaglich
60. Sex, Gender, Intimacy, and Race and Lingering Questions of Justice in World War II’s Southwest Pacific Theater Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Chair:
Daniel Immerwahr, Northwestern University
Papers:
“Triple V” and the Struggle for Racial Justice: Intimate Encounters between Indigenous Australian Women and American Servicemen on the World War II Homefront Karen Hughes, Swinburne University of Technology
Six Dishonorable Deaths: US Military Executions, Rape, and Silence in World War II’s Southwest Pacific Theater Nancy Shoemaker, University of Connecticut at Storrs
“Not Just a Maid in a White Man’s House”: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women in the Australian Defense Services in WWII Allison Cadzow, Australian National University
Comment: Daniel Immerwahr
61. Cuba in a Revolutionary World, 1940s–60s
63. Family, Household, Community, and the Court: Extending and Defying Domestic Male Authority in Colonial Latin America Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Kathryn Burns, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Papers:
Patria Potestad in Transit: Legal Power and Family Mobility in 16th-Century Peru Jane Mangan, Davidson College
Comment: Sherwin K. Bryant, Northwestern University
64. Animals in the Early Modern Atlantic World Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Joint session with the History of Science Society Chair:
Molly A. Warsh, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
“Little More Room Than a Drawing”: Flattening Animals and Reconstructing Craft Practice in the British Atlantic, 1740–1820 Whitney Barlow Robles, Harvard University
Papers:
From Havana to Belgrade and Back Again: Revolutionary Cuba Joins the Third World Eric Gettig, Georgetown University
Cuba’s Transnational Left-Feminist Networks from Postwar to Cold War Michelle Chase, Pace University
An Island of Antifascism: Cubans and the Transnational Struggle against Caribbean Basin Dictatorships, 1944–58 Aaron Coy Moulton, Stephen F. Austin State University
Horses, Slaves, and Sugar: New England and the 18th-Century Atlantic World Charlotte Carrington-Farmer, Roger Williams University
Indigenous Natural History in the “Aztec Encyclopedia” Iris Montero Sobrevilla, Brown University
Comment: Marcy Norton, University of Pennsylvania
65. The Politics of Domestic Service in Asia and the Americas, 1870–2015 Washington Hilton, Columbia 5 Joint session with the Coordinating Council for Women in History and the Labor and Working Class History Association
Comment: Rebecca Herman
62. Renegadism and Transimperial Alliances in the Early Modern Mediterranean Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction Chair:
Megan Armstrong, McMaster University
Papers:
Cigalazade Yusuf Sinan Pas¸a, Clement VIII, and the Question of Conversion in the Early Modern Mediterranean Eric R. Dursteler, Brigham Young University
On the Fringes of Empire: The Religio-political Scope of Christianity in the Early Modern Caucasus Robert John Clines, Western Carolina University The Other Persian Letters: Marie Petit and Franco-Iranian Diplomacy on the Iranian Frontier, 1704–15 Junko Takeda, Syracuse University
Program_Book_2018.indd 25
There is the Sea, Vast and Spacious: Slavery, Natural History, and Collections of Marine Life in the 18th-Century British Atlantic Christopher Blakley, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Rebecca Herman, University of California, Berkeley
A Fragile Authority: Black Mothers and Domestic Partners in Colonial Minas Gerais Mariana L. Dantas, Ohio University
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Chair:
Lo Extrajudicial: The Space between Court and Casa in the Spanish Empire Bianca Premo, Florida International University
Chair:
Sonya Michel, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
Migrant Women and the Chinese Protectorate: Gender, Labor, and the Politics of Border Control in British Malaya, 1877–1939 Sandy Chang, University of Texas at Austin
The Science of Care: The Domestic Worker Labor Market and the Limits of Reform in Boston, 1880–1940 Cristina V. Groeger, Harvard University
Care Work, Labor Rights, and Domestic Worker Organizing Premilla Nadasen, Barnard College, Columbia University
How States See Household Workers: The Politics of Regulating Domestic Service in 20th-Century Latin America Elizabeth Q. Hutchison, University of New Mexico
January 5, 2018
25
Comment: Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara
23/10/17 5:33 PM
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Friday, January Friday, Jan. 5, 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
66. Mining Unexpected Sources: A Roundtable on External Funding for Historians Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Panelists will introduce seven funding bodies including public agencies, private foundations, and organizations. After brief presentations, panelists will lead a conversation about future plans to help the audience consider how their own work might be an appropriate match. Chair:
Jennifer Serventi, National Endowment for the Humanities
Panel:
Christa Williford, Council on Library and Information Resources Lucy Barber, National Historical Publications and Records Commission and National Archives and Records Administration Rachel Bernard, American Council of Learned Societies Frederick Kronz, National Science Foundation Daniel Reid, Whiting Foundation Jeffrey S. Reznick, US National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health
67. Placing the American Community: Lessons from the Digital Harrisburg Project
69. Historical Thinking and the Survey Course: Sources, Strategies, Assessments, and Best Practices in the United States, Latin America, and World Surveys Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History This session uses the PechaKucha format. Chair:
Oscar Cañedo, Grossmont College
Papers:
On the Voyage to California: Using Literature to Interpret the Gold Rush Oscar Cañedo
Revolution, Oil, NAFTA, and “El Chapo”: A History of USMexico Relations in the 20th and 21st Centuries Carlos Contreras, Grossmont College
Globalizing the Heartland: Bringing a Transnational Focus to Midwestern History in the US Survey Classroom Timothy Dean Draper, Waubonsee Community College
From Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo to Norman Asing: Incorporating the “Pacific World” into the Early US History Survey Amy Godfrey Powers, Waubonsee Community College
Race, Culture, and “Pigmentocracy”: Relating 18th-Century Race to Present Historical Studies in the Classroom Natalye Harpin, Southwestern College; University of California, San Diego; and Grossmont College
Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room The session will include a presentation about demographic data sets and their potential for addressing historical questions, a showcase of GIS data sets for mapping human mobility and community formation, and a demonstration of efforts to automate the process through computer vision. Chair:
John Fea, Messiah College
Papers:
The New Social History after the Digital Turn James B. LaGrand, Messiah College
Mapping the Social Diversity of a Progressive-Era City from 300,000 Names David K. Pettegrew, Messiah College
Visualizing the Mobility of Population in Harrisburg, 1900–30 Albert Sarvis, Harrisburg University of Science and Technology
Computer Vision and Federal Census Data David Owen, Messiah College
Comment: Audience
70. Translating Global Ideas through Confucian Paradigms: Intellectual Exchange across Religious Paradigms and State Boundaries in China Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Chair:
Minghui Hu, University of California, Santa Cruz
Papers:
Ancestral Offering Rites, Catholicism, and Paradigmatic Mediation: Chinese Catholic and Confucian Intellectual Xia Dachang’s Treatises on the Chinese Rites Controversy Chan Man Ning, Hong Kong Baptist University
Comment: Lisa Krissoff Boehm, Bridgewater State University
68. Postslavery Lives around the Caribbean: Social Control, Representation, and the Possibilities of Narration
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Anne Eller, Yale University
Papers:
Black Autobiography and Imperial Disruption in Post-emancipation Jamaica Christienna Fryar, University of Liverpool
Owning Freedom: State Recordkeeping and the Politics of Historical Representation in 19th-Century Haiti Winter Rae Schneider, University of California, Los Angeles “Each Following His Own Destiny”: The Formation of the “African Battalion” in Unification-Era Santo Domingo Andrew Walker, University of Michigan
Comment: Audience
Program_Book_2018.indd 26
The Islamic School of Jingxue: Chinese Muslim Intellectuals and the Study of Islamic Scriptures through Evidentiary Scholarship in Late Imperial China Yiming Shen, Peking University Translating Religion: Evidential Scholarship, Han Learning, and the Production of a Global Concept, 1864–1902 Joshua A. Sooter, New York University
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Chair:
Lessons under the Bridge: Chicano Park as Critical Spatial History Monica Hernandez, Grossmont College
The Cult of Guofu and Revolutionary State-Building in Nationalist China Yue Du, New York University
Comment: Audience
71. Rethinking the State in Ancien Régime France, Then and Now Washington Hilton, Columbia 10 Joint session with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and the Society for French Historical Studies Chair:
Tabetha Ewing, Bard College
Papers:
Crisis of Historical Legitimacy at the Académie des Inscriptions Anton Matytsin, Kenyon College
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m.a.m. Sessions January 5, 8:30–10:00 Sessions
The Contradictory Nature of “Centralization” in the Bourbon Patrimonial State Gail Bossenga, Elizabethtown College
Comment: Martin F. Manalansan IV
75. Spain, Latin America, and the Transatlantic Cold War Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B
Comment: Tabetha Ewing
72. From South to North: Latin America’s Impact on the 19th-Century United States Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Chair:
Caitlin A. Fitz, Northwestern University
Papers:
Securing the Border and Expanding the Empire: How Fears of Slave Revolt and Spanish Subversion Influenced US Diplomacy in the Southwest Borderlands, 1790–1820 Eric Herschthal, Columbia University
To Authorize the Extension of Slavery Where It Has Previously Been Totally Abolished: The Significance of Abolition in Mexico to Sectional Controversy in the United States, 1846–50 Alice Baumgartner, Yale University
Learning from “La Revolución”: The Cuban Ten Years’ War and Debates over International Recognition in the United States, 1868–78 James M. Shinn Jr., Yale University
“I Just Had a Fight with My Girlfriend”: Silent-Era Screen Star Ramón Novarro’s Performance of the Closet Ernesto Chávez, University of Texas at El Paso
“Une Veritable Question d’État”: Controversies over Ceremonial Robes and Corporate Citizenship at the University of Paris Adrian O’Connor, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Ernesto Semán, University of Richmond
Papers:
Defining Cuban Antifascism, 1925–41 Ariel Mae Lambe, University of Connecticut
The Transatlantic Making of Rubén Darío as the Embodiment of Franco’s Hispanidad: Commemorating October 12 in Spain and Nicaragua, 1939–55 Susy Sanchez, independent scholar
Comment: Christy Thornton, Harvard University
76. Nations of the Commonwealth: State Formation and Ethnic Identity in Early Modern Poland-Lithuania Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Joint session with the Central European History Society and the Society for Austrian and Habsburg History
Comment: Gregory Downs, University of California, Davis
73. Ideologies of Industrialization in the Early American Republic
Francoist Spain’s Spiritual Quest and Argentine Authoritarianism during the Cold War Daniel Kressel, Columbia University
Chair:
Howard P. Louthan, University of Minnesota
Washington Hilton, Columbia 6
Papers:
Learned Diversity: Late Medieval and Early 16th-Century Cracow Paul Knoll, University of Southern California
Joint session with the Business History Conference
The Copernicus Paradox: A “Common Sense” Approach to Early Modern Nations Michael Thomas Tworek, Harvard University
Chair:
Merritt Roe Smith, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Papers:
Virtuous Capital: Mechanization and Economic Independence in the Early Republic Katheryn P. Viens, Massachusetts Historical Society and Boston University
Industrial Manifest Destiny? American Manufacturers and Territorial Expansion, 1838–50 Lindsay Schakenbach Regele, Miami University Ohio
Beyond Industrial Policy: Patents, Invention, and Citizenship in the Early Republic Kara W. Swanson, Northeastern University
From Christendom to Europe: Nation, Identity, and Authority in the Jagiellonian Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Habsburg Spanish Empire Krzysztof Odyniec, University of California, Berkeley
Reforming across Divergent Loyalties: The Challenges of Upholding Catholicism in Royal Prussia and Warmia, 1538–48 Bryan Kozik, University of Florida
Comment: David Frick, University of California, Berkeley
Comment: Merritt Roe Smith
77. What It Means to Be a Citizen: Student Veterans in History Classrooms
74. Queer Contortions: New Directions in the History of Race, Sexuality, and the Body
Chair:
Paul Ortiz, University of Florida and United States Army
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2
Panel:
Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History
Steve Arionus, University of Michigan and United States Marine Corps Eladio Benjamin Bobadilla, Duke University and United States Navy Kate Dahlstrand, University of Georgia and United States Army Paul Ortiz
Chair:
Martin F. Manalansan IV, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Discriminating Sex: White Leisure and the Making of the American “Oriental” Amy H. Sueyoshi, San Francisco State University
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West
January 5, 2018
27
“A Shiftless, Undesirable Class”: The Sexual Policing of Miami’s Bahamian Migrant Communities in the Early 20th Century Julio Capó Jr., University of Massachusetts Amherst
Program_Book_2018.indd 27
23/10/17 5:33 PM
28
Friday, January Friday, Jan. 5, 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
78. Projects of Economic Development and Statehood between Empire and Nation: Africa and South Asia, 1945–79 Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom Chair:
Gerold Krozewski, Osaka University, Japan
Panel:
Gopalan Balachandran, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, Switzerland Frank Gerits, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Ichiro Maekawa, Soka University, Tokyo, Japan Admire Mseba, University of the Free State, South Africa Tinashe Nyamunda, University of the Free State, South Africa
Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Friday, January 5, 8:30–10:00 a.m. American Catholic Historical Association Session 1 Catholicism in the 20th-Century American West Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room Chair:
James T. Carroll, Iona College
Papers:
Catholic Expansion in the 20th-Century West: The Cases of California and Texas Steven Avella, Marquette University
Diocesan Priesthood Formation Goes West: Sulpician and Vincentian Contributions to Seminary Education Joseph M. White, independent scholar
Comment: James T. Carroll
American Catholic Historical Association Session 2 American Catholics in 19th-Century Politics Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Christopher Shannon, Christendom College
Papers:
Pope Martin I: Catholics and the Making of the Democratic Party, 1815–41 Jason Kennedy Duncan, Aquinas College
Faithful Citizenship: The Politics of American Catholics in the Civil War Era William B. Kurtz, John L. Nau III Center for Civil War History, University of Virginia
The United States Supreme Court and the Politics of Being Catholic in 19th- and Early 20th-Century America Stephanie A.T. Jacobe, Archives of the Archdiocese of Washington, DC
Comment: Christopher Shannon
American Catholic Historical Association Session 3 Beyond the Convent School: New Perspectives on Education for Girls in Colonial and 19th-Century Mexico and Guatemala Omni Shoreham, Forum Room Chair:
Matthew D. O’Hara, University of California, Santa Cruz
Papers:
To Educate and Evangelize: Laywomen, Clergy, and Late Colonial Girls’ Schools in Guatemala Brianna N. Leavitt-Alcantara, University of Cincinnati
Program_Book_2018.indd 28
Wives, Nuns, or Servants? Colegios in Mexico City from the 16th to the 19th Century Jessica L. Delgado, Princeton University
Bishops, Beaterios, and Girls’ Education: Conflicts between Institutional Identity and Episcopal Policy, 1750–1860 Margaret Chowning, University of California, Berkeley
Comment: Matthew D. O’Hara
Conference on Latin American History Session 16 Rethinking the Legal Profession in the Colonial Andes Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Susan E. Ramirez, Texas Christian University
Papers:
Strategies for Success: A Notary and His Social Network in Colonial Lima, 1569–1619 Miguel León, State University of New York, Oneonta
Justice by Artifacts and Transparencies: Scribes and Their Material Culture in 17th- and 18th-Century Peru and Chile Aude Argouse, Universidad de Chile
Three Andean Cities and Their Representatives in Late 18th-Century Spain Alvaro Caso-Bello, Johns Hopkins University
Provincial Lawyers in Northern 16th-Century Peru Renzo Honores, Instituto Internacional de Derecho y Sociedad
Comment: Susan E. Ramirez
Conference on Latin American History Session 17 Remembering the Eastern Andean Imperial Frontier: Exploration, Consolidation, and Identity in Colonial Spanish Charcas Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Kimberly A. Gauderman, University of New Mexico
Papers:
Before Charcas: The Limits of European Authority in the Diego de Almagro Expedition Danielle Anthony, Ohio State University
Francisco de Vitoria on the Charcas Frontier: The Juridical Basis for the Conquest and Enslavement of “the Chiriguanaes,” 1568–74 Jonathan Scholl, Ransom Everglades School
En Esta Quieta y Pacífica Posesión: Preserving Pardo Community and Autonomy in the Eastern Andes Nathan Weaver Olson, University of Minnesota
Refracted Processes of Ethnogenesis: Identity Formation in the Imperial Borderlands of the Greater Paraguayan River Basin Justin Blaine Blanton, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Comment: Kimberly A. Gauderman
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 3 The End of the Palestine Mandate Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3 Chair:
Leila Fawaz, Tufts University
Papers:
The British Perspective Wm. Roger Louis, University of Texas at Austin
The Arab Perspective John Voll, Georgetown University
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, January 5, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
The US Perspective Douglas J. Little, Clark University
The Zionist Perspective Michael J. Cohen, Bar-Ilan University
29
Society for the History of Technology Session 1 Techno-Fixes Past and Present: Promise and Performance Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4 Chair:
Alan I. Marcus, Mississippi State University
Comment: Bernard M. J. Wasserstein, University of Chicago
Papers:
The Effects of the Green Revolution on Food Deficit Nations R. Douglas Hurt, Purdue University
Polish American Historical Association Session 2 Americans on Poland
“Rational, Progressive, Intelligent, Sanitary, Economical”: Marketing the Community Mausoleum in Progressive America Joy Giguere, Penn State University
Alvin Weinberg’s Promotion of Techno-Fixes in Cold War America Howard Segal, University of Maine
Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Anna Mazurkiewicz, University of Gda´ nsk
Papers:
Rupert Hughes’s Ode to Poland Jill Noel Walker Gonzalez, La Sierra University
US Third Army and the Displaced Persons: The G-5 Reports to the Headquarters, European Theater of Operations, 1945–47 nsk Wojciech Kruczkowski, University of Gda´
The Postwar Mission of Dr. Joseph Tenenbaum to Poland Charles Chotkowski, Piast Institute
Philatelic Iconography of Poland and America John P. Dunn, Valdosta State University
Comment: Audience
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 3 Economic History Association Session 2 Out of the Shadows: Industry and Its Social Ramifications in Northern Italy, 16th–18th Centuries
Comment: Alan I. Marcus
Table Display Friday, January 5, 9:00–11:00 a.m. Federal Agency and Funder Display Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium An opportunity to meet with representatives of grant making organizations and federal agencies.
Workshop
Washington Hilton, Columbia 3 Chair:
Colin Rose, Brock University
Papers:
Consumption and Luxury Goods in the Venetian State, 16th–18th Centuries Salvatore Ciriacono, University of Padua
Work-Discipline and Proto-Factories: Orphanages and the Textile Industry in Early Modern Padua, 17th–18th Centuries Andrea Caracausi, University of Padua
Death Control in the West: New Research on Routine Infanticide in Northern Italy, 16th–18th Centuries Gregory Hanlon, Dalhousie University
Friday, January 5, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. K–16 Teaching Workshop: Assignments Charrette Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C Please join us as we explore the roles that assignments can play in history classes, as well as their connections to both student learning outcomes and assessment. Assignments will be circulated among participants in advance. See historians. org/x30337 for details.
Local Arrangements Committee Tours
Comment: Stefano D’Amico, Texas Technological University
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
James Wald, Hampshire College
Papers:
Literary Periodicals and the Politics of Genre Creation in Restoration Paris Elizabeth Della Zazzera, University of Pennsylvania
Beyond the Woodblock: State Periodicals and Print Innovation in Late Imperial China Emily Mokros, University of California, Berkeley Technological Innovations in US Periodical Printing and the British Printing Trade Reaction, 1875–90 Michael Knies, University of Scranton
Comment: Audience
Friday, January 5, 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Tour 6: Echoes of the Great War: American Experiences of World War I Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leaders: Ryan Reft, Library of Congress and Sahr Conway-Lanz, Library of Congress
January 5, 2018
Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing Session 1 Periodicals and the Shaping of National Identity
Echoes of the Great War: American Experiences of World War I examines the upheaval of world war as Americans confronted it at home and abroad. Drawing on the Library of Congress’s extensive multi-format collections on World War I, the exhibition considers the debates and struggles that surrounded US engagement; explores US military and home front mobilization and the immensity of industrialized warfare; and touches on the war’s effects, as an international peace settlement was negotiated, national borders were redrawn, and soldiers returned to reintegrate into American society. Please note: The group will travel by Metro (fare card provided); the library is a 5-minute walk from the Capitol South station. The library is ADA compliant. Limit 30 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
Program_Book_2018.indd 29
23/10/17 5:33 PM
30
Friday, January 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Friday,5,Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
Friday, January 5, 10:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Tour 7: Seeing Ancient Mesoamerica: Behind the Scenes of the Kislak Collection of the Archaeology of the Early Americas at the Library of Congress Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: John Hessler, Library of Congress This tour will give attendees a behind the scenes look at the storage vaults where the archaeological treasures of the Americas held in the collections of the Library of Congress reside. Participants will experience first-hand the rare and important examples of Maya, Aztec, Taino, Inca, and Wari art and artifacts held by the library and get a look at some of the research taking place on these priceless pieces of cultural heritage. Please note: The group will travel by Metro (fare card provided); the library is a 5-minute walk from the Capitol South station. Limit 25 people. $10
Panel:
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 54 and 108.
82. The Modern Legacy of Premodern Racial and Ethnic Concepts, Part 2: Deciphering Racial Markers, Medieval to Modern Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Chair:
Michael E. Kulikowski, Penn State University
Papers:
Whitish-Brown, Reddish-White, or Medium Color: Race, Slavery, and Complexion in Late Medieval Genoa Hannah Barker, Rhodes College
From Scarification to “Country Marks”: Individual, Ethnic, and Racial Marking in the Early Modern Atlantic Craig Koslofsky, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Friday, January 5, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. 79. Science and Difference in History: Biology, Genetics, and the Politics of Race Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3
Laird Boswell, University of Wisconsin–Madison Elizabeth Faue, Wayne State University Philip Anthony Howard, University of Houston Brian Ogilvie, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Half-Breeds, Mongrels, and Mules: Half-Tibetans at the Intersection of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism, 1900–60 David Atwill, Penn State University
Comment: Hussein Fancy, University of Michigan This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 57 and 111.
83. New Perspectives on Women in the 20th-Century Caribbean World, Part 1: Migrations Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A
Chair:
Evelynn M. Hammonds, Harvard University
Papers:
Big Biology, Infrastructures, Algorithms, and Race: How Genomics Became Imbricated in Representations of Race Joan Fujimura, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Chair:
Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University
Papers:
Amy Denniston and Women’s Progress Work in Interwar Panama Kaysha Corinealdi, Emerson College
Race around the World: Conceiving Human Difference from the Global South Warwick Anderson, University of Sydney
Burial Rights: Death, Family, and Feminist Revival in Haiti, 1925–38 Grace Sanders Johnson, University of Pennsylvania
Dominga de la Cruz Becerril and Trina Padilla de Sanz: “Race” and Class among Nacionalista Women in Late 1920s and 1930s Puerto Rico Gladys M. Jiménez-Muñoz, Binghamton University, State University of New York
The Racial Politics of Genetic Genealogy and the Case of the GU 272 Alondra Nelson, Columbia University and Social Science Research Council
The Persistence of Race Concepts in Biology and Genetics Michael Yudell, Drexel University
80. Should Ethics Training Be Part of Historical Pedagogy? Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Organized by the AHA Professional Division Chair:
Pamela Scully, Emory University
Papers:
An Undergraduate Perspective on Ethics Catherine J. Denial, Knox College
Ethical Dilemmas and the Dean’s Office Catherine Epstein, Amherst College
Ethics and the Public Historian Valerie Paley, New-York Historical Society
Ethics Training and the Graduate Student Jason M. Wolfe, Louisiana State University
81. Tackling the Issue of Enrollments in History Courses, Part 2: Strategies and Ideas from the Frontlines Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Chair:
Edward E. Andrews, Providence College
Program_Book_2018.indd 30
Strategic Solidarities: Cuban Feminist Activism and Racial Politics, 1920s–40s Takkara Brunson, Morgan State University
Comment: Lara E. Putnam, University of Pittsburgh This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 110.
84. Archiving Taste: A Roundtable on Food History at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, SC Johnson Center This session will take place offsite at the SC Johnson Center of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. It will be followed by a tour of the food history collection at the museum. See p. 37 for the tour listing. Chair:
Daniel E. Bender, University of Toronto
Panel:
Daniel E. Bender Paula Johnson, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution Theresa McCulla, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution Irina Mihalache, University of Toronto Jeffrey Pilcher, University of Toronto Steve Velasquez, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions January 5, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
89. Edgy Urban Environmental History: The Ideological Built Environment
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A
Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom
Chair:
Nana Osei-Opare, University of California, Los Angeles
Chair:
Zachary Nowak, Harvard University
Papers:
A Diplomatic Rendezvous: Ghanaian and Soviet Relations, 1957–66 Nana Osei-Opare, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers:
Revolutionary Children; or, What Can a Failed Mozambican Ballerina Tell Us about International Socialism? Elizabeth Banks, New York University
Where Trains Stop: Promiscuous Stations and the Railway Panopticon Zachary Nowak
United in Blood: Cuban Influence in the Ethiopian Empire, 1969–78 Beatrice Tychsen Wayne, New York University
Negotiating East Germany: Angolan Student Migration during the Cold War, 1976–90 Marcia Schenck, Humboldt State University
Blowin’ in the Dust: The Ephemeral Urban History of Black Rock City Kerry Rohrmeier, San José State University
The Rise of Ranchurbia: Visualizing Landscapes of a New West Scott Hinton, University of Nevada at Reno
“They Wanted Indians Out of Sight”: Native Segregation and the Urban Environment in Rapid City Stephen R. Hausmann, Temple University
Comment: Elizabeth Schmidt, Loyola University Maryland
Comment: Audience
86. Collaboration for Career Diversity: Locating Expertise at the Institutional and National Levels
90. Early Modern Prisoners of War as Laborers Washington Hilton, Columbia 9
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Chair:
Derek Attig, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Panel:
Annie Maxfield, Career Center, University of California, Los Angeles Amy Pszczolkowski, Princeton University Emily A Prifogle, Princeton University Anthony Grafton, Princeton University Mearah Quinn-Brauner, Northwestern University Derek Attig Bernadette So, New York University
Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association and the North American Conference on British Studies Chair:
Margaret E. Newell, Ohio State University
Papers:
The Categories of Bondage: Indian Women in the Conquest of 16th-Century São Vicente, Brazil Elisa Frühauf Garcia, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Scottish and Dutch Prisoners of War in the English Fen Drainage Project, 1651–53 Sonia Tycko, Harvard University
87. Colonial Archives and Publications: Digital Native American History Is/as Transformative Use Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Joint session with the Association for Computers and the Humanities Chair:
Joseph Genetin-Pilawa, George Mason University
Papers:
Mining the ICC: Macroanalysis of the Indian Claims Commission Decisions Peter Carr Jones, George Mason University
Digitally Analyzing the Uneven Ground: Language Borrowing among Indian Treaties Joshua Catalano, George Mason University
Through the Digital Looking-Glass: Digital Humanities and “Vast Early America” Bryan Rindfleisch, Marquette University
Comment: Jennifer E. Guiliano, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
Privatizing Prisoner Management: The British Garrison of Fort Ticonderoga in American Captivity, 1775–77 T. Cole Jones, Purdue University
Comment: Audience
91. Race and Empire in Global Music History, 1500–1800 Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Chair:
Olivia Bloechl, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Race in the Raga? Musical Reflections on Tribal Peoples in Early Modern India Richard Williams, SOAS, University of London
Echoes of the Haitian Revolution: Entangled Soundscapes in Jefferson’s World Bonnie Gordon, University of Virginia
Mozart and the Moravians: A Transatlantic History Sarah Eyerly, Florida State University
Comment: Gabriel Solis, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
January 5, 2018
85. Reconceptualizing the African Experience with the Socialist Bloc
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88. Digital Humanities and Pedagogy: Three History Projects in the Classroom Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom Chair: Panel:
Michael J. Kramer, Northwestern University Melissa Borja, College of Staten Island, City University of New York Esther Cyna, Teachers College, Columbia University Scott Saul, University of California, Berkeley
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Friday, January 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Friday,5,Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
92. Banditry, Ethnicity, and Violence in Modern China Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction Joint session with the Historical Society for Twentieth-Century China Chair:
James Millward, Georgetown University
Papers:
A Dead Priest: Violence and the Multilingual State in the ChinaVietnam Borderlands Bradley Camp Davis, Eastern Connecticut State University
Bandits, Rock Fights, and Dan Boat People in the Pearl River Delta Robert Antony, Guangzhou University
Bandit or Hero: The Tale of Lu Dingkun on the Yunnan Frontier John Herman, Virginia Commonwealth University
Comment: Tobie Meyer-Fong, Johns Hopkins University
93. Women and the Construction of Racial Identity in Global Dutch Communities of the 17th and 18th Centuries Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Joint session with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies This panel was made possible by the generous support of the Consulate General of the Netherlands in New York, Dutch Culture USA, and the New Netherland Institute Chair:
Dennis Maika, New Netherland Institute
Papers:
“That She Shall Be Forever Banished from This Country”: Women, Alcohol, and Elite Enforcement of Native-Dutch Social Distance in New Netherland Erin Kramer, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Asian Wives and the Emergence of Race in Early Modern Batavia Deborah Hamer, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
“Good Enough to Suckle the Child”: Partus Sequitur Ventrem and the 1783 New Jersey Case of the Negro Philip Nicole Maskiell, University of South Carolina
The Lost Cause in California: The Continental Struggle against Reconstruction Kevin Waite, Durham University
Young People’s Experiences of Reconstruction and the Legacies of the Civil War Ben Davidson, New York University
Comment: Sarah Cornell, University of Massachusetts Amherst
96. Reimagining Philadelphia’s Labor History: How Including Trolleymen, Black Wobblies, Flappers, and Trashmen Turned the Historiography on Its Head Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Chair:
Walter M. Licht, University of Pennsylvania
Panel:
Sharon McConnell-Sidorick, independent scholar Francis Ryan, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey James Wolfinger, DePaul University
97. The Distinctly Human? Rethinking Actor, Agency, and Individual Consciousness in History Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Chair:
Konstantin Dierks, Indiana University
Papers:
The Agency Dilemma: From Revisionist Accommodations to a Theory of Agency Anna Krylova, Duke University
The First Whistleblower? Acting on Conscience in 18th-Century France Jay M. Smith, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Actor-Networks and the Possible Ends of Human Historical Agency David Gary Shaw, Wesleyan University
Comment: Manu Goswami, New York University
98. Optics: Race, Religion, and Technology in East Asian Photography, 1868–1949 Washington Hilton, Columbia 10 Chair:
Paul D. Barclay, Lafayette College
Comment: Wim Klooster, Clark University
Papers:
94. Beyond Grants: Strategies for Becoming Involved in NEH-Funded Projects
Reproducing Alterity: Photography, Illustration, and the Maintenance of Ainu Stereotypes in Meiji and Taisho Japan Christina Spiker, St. Catherine University
Picture Postcards of Imperial Japan’s Peoples and Places, 1903–45 Paul D. Barclay
David Weinstein, National Endowment for the Humanities Meg Ferris McReynolds, National Endowment for the Humanities
Reframing China: Kodak and the Growth of Amateur Photography, 1920–45 Matthew Combs, University of California, Irvine
Julia Huston Nguyen, National Endowment for the Humanities Daniel Sack, National Endowment for the Humanities Jennifer Serventi, National Endowment for the Humanities Joel Wurl, National Endowment for the Humanities
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B Chairs: Panel:
95. The National Reach of Reconstruction and “Lost Cause” Mythology in the Civil War Era
Comment: Audience
99. Trans-imperial Habsburg Dynamics in the Long 18th Century Washington Hilton, Columbia 6
Washington Hilton, Columbia 5 Chair:
Aaron Astor, Maryville College
Papers:
North of Reconstruction: Black Yankees Confront the 13th Amendment Marcy S. Sacks, Albion College
Joint session with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Chair:
Pernille Roege, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
“Allying with Heretics”: An Entangled History of Spain and England from European and Transatlantic Perspectives, 1665–80 Silvia Z. Mitchell, Purdue University
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Framing Chaos: Contingency, Community, and American Missionary Visual Practices in Wartime China Joseph W. Ho, University of Michigan
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, January 5, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions Unfulfilled Empire: Habsburg Global Ambitions in the 18th Century Madalina Valeria Veres, Temple University
Outsourcing an Empire? Habsburg Colonialism and Discourses of Difference in 18th-Century Hungary William O’Reilly, University of Cambridge
Comment: Rita Krueger, Temple University
Chair:
Nicholas Syrett, University of Kansas
Panel:
John Jeffery Auer, Nevada LGBT Archives Katie Batza, University of Kansas Susan Ferentinos, public history consultant Jeffrey A. “Free” Harris, historic preservation consultant
104. Commentary, Not Punditry: Historians, Politics, and the Media Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West
100. New Histories of State Surveillance Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Chair:
Antoinette Burton, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Big Brother Where Art Thou: The Telephone Tap and the Invention of the American Surveillance State, 1965–78 Brian Hochman, Georgetown University
Chair:
James Grossman, American Historical Association
Panel:
Nicole Hemmer, University of Virginia Heather Richardson, Boston College Moshik Temkin, Harvard University Ibram X. Kendi, American University
Black Deportees and the Surveillance State: Migration Control, Race, and Institutional Tracking in the Early 20th Century Emily Pope-Obeida, Harvard University
Intimate Secretes: Stasi Observation of Gay and Lesbian Activism in the GDR Recorded in the Stasi File of Eduard “Eddy” Stapel, 1982–89 Scott Harrison, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Comment: Claire Potter, The New School
101. Texas Art as American History: Regional Paradigm or National Archetype? Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Chair:
Mark Thistlethwaite, Texas Christian University
Papers:
Not Multicultural in Theory but Multicultural in Reality: Texas Art to 1876 Kenneth Hafertepe, Baylor University
The Texas Scene Is the American Scene Francine Carraro, Midwestern State University
He Pointed Them North: Frank Reaugh and the Creation of the Texas Cowboy as Culture Bearer Michael R. Grauer, West Texas A&M University
Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Friday, January 5, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 1 Transgressive Marijuana: Cultivating, Performing, and Regulating the Cannabis Culture in the 20th Century Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2 Chair:
Emily Dufton, George Washington University
Papers:
Agency of Drug Users after the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 Bob Beach, State University of New York, University at Albany
Demarcating Ritual and Transgressive Intoxication: Magic Mushrooms, Marijuana, and Tourism in Huautla de Jimenez David Korostyshevsky, University of Minnesota
Transgressive Marijuana Cultivation in the 1980s and the Movement It Created Bradley Bourgerdi, Tarrant County College
Dynamics of the Stepping-Stone Theory in Devising Public Policies in the War on Drugs Seth Blumenthal, Boston University
Comment: Mark Thistlethwaite
102. Race and Membership in Germany Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Joint session with the Central European History Society Chair:
Paul R. Spickard, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers:
Liberty and Justice for All? German Women and African American Men during Germany’s Hunger Years Anne Brixius, University of Illinois at Chicago
Which Religion Shaped European and German Culture? Constructing the Oriental Other in Contemporary Germany Joseph Loe-Sterphone, University of California, Santa Barbara
“My Skin Has an Accent”: Immigrants’ Children as Germans and Not Paul R. Spickard
Comment: Rita Chin, University of Michigan
103. The National Park Service’s LGBTQ America Theme Study: A Roundtable Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2
Comment: Emily Dufton
American Catholic Historical Association Session 4 The Suffering Body: Transhistorical Explorations of Redemptive and Communicative Suffering Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room Chair:
Karen Park, St. Norbert College
Papers:
Mystical Suffering in Medieval Beguine Lives and Encounters Patricia Z. Beckman, St. Olaf College
Bodies on Fire: Self-Immolation, Communicative Suffering, and the Limits of Sacramental Imagination Jack Downey, La Salle University
January 5, 2018
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The “Victim Soul” in American Political Theater: War Widow Carryn Owens as a Suffering Saint Karen Park
Comment: Paula M. Kane, University of Pittsburgh
Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and the National Council on Public History
Program_Book_2018.indd 33
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Friday, January 5, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
American Catholic Historical Association Session 5 The Catholic Charismatic Renewal: Origins and Transmission of a Transnational Movement Omni Shoreham, Forum Room Chair:
Paul Kollman, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
The Origins of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in the United States: The Experience at the University of Notre Dame and the Reaction of the Ecclesiastical Authority Valentina Ciciliot, University of Notre Dame and Ca’ Foscari University of Venice
Transmitting and Receiving Renewal: The Catholic Charismatic Renewal in Uganda, 1973–79 Alison Fitchett Climenhaga, University of Notre Dame
The Global Expansion of Catholic Charismatic Renewal: The Case of Australasia in the Early 1970s John Maiden, Open University
Comment: Paul Kollman
American Catholic Historical Association Session 6 Negotiating Catholicism and Anti-Catholicism in the 19th-Century United States Omni Shoreham, Executive Room
The Yang Naiwu Case in Shanghai Newspapers: Discourses on Legal Reforms during the Self-Strengthening Movement Guolin Yi, Arkansas Tech University
Women Writers and the Resistance Discourse in Prewar Shanghai, 1931–37 Dewen Zhang, Randolph-Macon College
Comment: Tao Wang
Conference on Latin American History Session 18 The Abolitionist Movement in Brazil: New Approaches Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South Chair:
Seymour Drescher, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
The Role of Afro-Brazilian Mobilization in Rio de Janeiro’s Abolitionist Movement Jeffrey D. Needell, University of Florida
Flowers, Ballots, and Bullets: The Brazilian Abolitionist Movement Angela Alonso, University of São Paulo
“Slavery Is Not an Issue of Concern in the Press”: An Early Brazilian Adaptation of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and the Literary Turn in the Slavery Debates Celso Castilho, Vanderbilt University
Comment: Seymour Drescher
Chair:
James O’Toole, Boston College
Papers:
“Why Is Catholicity so Generally Hated by Protestants?” Two Years of Defense and Dialogue in the Pittsburgh Catholic Emily Davis, Loyola University Chicago
Conference on Latin American History Session 19 The Cacicas of Colonial Latin America
Bishop John Timon, Sisters of Charity Hospital, and the Cholera Epidemic of 1849 Dennis Castillo, Christ the King Seminary
Chairs:
Margarita R. Ochoa, Loyola Marymount University Sara Guengarich, Texas Technological University
Papers:
The Cacicas of Teotihuacan: Early Colonial Changes to Local Rule Bradley T. Benton, North Dakota State University
Papers, Property, and Posterity: The Estate Records of Nahua Noblewomen in Coyoacan and Xochimilco, New Spain Richard Conway, Montclair State University
The Cacicas of Mexico City: Indigenous Leadership under Bourbon Rule Margarita R. Ochoa
“Por los Derechos de Su Persona y Sangre”: Cacicas in Colonial Peru Sara Guengarich
Comment: James O’Toole
Central European History Society Session 4 Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 1: A Discussion of Karen Hagemann’s Revisiting Prussia’s Wars against Napoleon Washington Hilton, Columbia 1 Chair:
Suzanne Lynn Marchand, Louisiana State University
Panel:
Katherine Aaslestad, West Virginia University James M. Brophy, University of Delaware Jean H. Quataert, Binghamton University, State University of New York Alan Forrest, University of York
Comment: Karen Hagemann, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chinese Historians in the United States Session 1 Legal Reforms, Philosophy, and Women in the Media in China during the Late Qing and Early Republican Period Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room C Chair:
Tao Wang, Iowa State University
Papers:
The Spread of Kant and Hegel’s Philosophy in 1920s–30s China: Newspaper, Traveling Theory, and China’s Media Milieu in the Early 20th Century Dandan Chen, State University of New York at Farmingdale
Program_Book_2018.indd 34
Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A
Comment: David T. Garrett, Reed College
Conference on Latin American History Session 20 Public Health and Education in the Andes and Caribbean Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Ana María Otero-Cleves, Universidad de los Andes
Papers:
“An Amiable and Familiar Affair”: Selling Pills, Toiletries, and Foreign Medicines to the Colombian Market, 1860–1920 Ana María Otero-Cleves
“Los Dibujos de Psicópatas”: Honorio Delgado and the Reception of Psychoanalysis in Lima, Peru, 1915–40 Cameron Lothrop Johnson, University of California, Davis Yo Sí Puedo’s Prologue: Reconsidering Narratives of the Cuban Literacy Campaign of 1961 Ann E. Halbert-Brooks, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Comment: Audience
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, January 5, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A
Polish American Historical Association Session 3 National and Ethnic Identity Construction in Transatlantic Context Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Neal Pease, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Race, Nation, and Self-Determination in Poland and Germany, 1918–39: The Case of Danzig Jesse Kauffman, Eastern Michigan University
Chair:
Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Papers:
Panel:
Julie Gallagher, Penn State University Brandywine Rickie Solinger, independent scholar Grey Osterud, independent scholar Lashonda Mims, Towson University Pamela J. Stewart, Arizona State University
Goldberg Center for Excellence in Teaching Session 1 Teaching the Cold War Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Chair:
David J. Staley, Ohio State University
Papers:
Teaching Popular Culture and the Cold War Laura A. Belmonte, Oklahoma State University
Teaching Nuclear Issues and the Cold War Hiroshi Kitamura, College of William and Mary
Teaching Fear and Anxiety in Reagan’s Cold War America Molly M. Wood, Wittenberg University
Teaching the Origins of the Cold War Jessica B. Elkind, San Francisco State University
Teaching Decolonization and the Cold War Ryan Irwin, State University of New York, University at Albany
Comment: Audience
International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in History Session 2 Deliberative Decision Making in the History Classroom: The Place of Civics Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B Chair:
Flannery Burke, Saint Louis University
Speaker:
Mary Jo Festle, Elon University
Comment: Audience
From “Low Polish” to “Proud Kashubian”: The Case Study of David Shulist Aleksandra Kurowska-Susdorf, University of Gda´nsk
Comment: Audience
Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Session 3 John F. Richards Prize Roundtable Discussion of Nayanjot Lahiri’s Ashoka in Ancient India (2016 Richards Prize Winner) Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Chair:
Neilesh Bose, University of Victoria
Panel:
Uthara Suvrathan, Bard Graduate Center Aparna Kapadia, Williams College John D. Rogers, American Institute of Sri Lankan Studies
Comment: Nayanjot Lahiri, Ashoka University
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 4 Religion, State and Cultural Practices, and the Racialization of the Nation in Italy from Fascism to the Republic Washington Hilton, Columbia 3 Chair:
Silvana Patriarca, Fordham University
Papers:
Catholicism, Ethno-Nationalism, and the Making of War Culture in Fascist Italy Robert A. Ventresca, King’s University College at Western University Nicholas Virtue, King’s University College at Western University
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3 Chair:
Richard Price, University of Maryland, College Park
Panel:
Andrew Thompson, University of Exeter Linda Colley, Princeton University Andrew Blick, King’s College London Anna K. Clark, University of Minnesota Douglas M. Peers, University of Waterloo
Program_Book_2018.indd 35
Becoming Polish: Growing Nationalism of Polish Migrants in the United States, 1870–1940 Pien Versteegh, Avans University of Applied Sciences
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 4 What Does Brexit Mean for British History?
Comment: Richard Price
The Uncertainty of Empire: Polish, American, and PolishAmerican Responses to the Austrian Pavilion at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Claire Orenduff-Bartos, Santa Fe College
Within and Outside the Nation: Former Colonial Subjects in Postwar Italy Valeria Deplano, University of Cagliari
January 5, 2018
Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 4 Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Session 3 Dismantling Boundaries: Women’s Historians and the Transformation of History
35
Beauty That Matters: White Gaze and Black Female Bodies in the Italian Cinema of the 1970s Gaia Giuliani, University of Coimbra
Comment: Silvana Patriarca
23/10/17 5:33 PM
36
Friday, January 5, Luncheons and a.m. Other Events Friday, Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 Sessions
Society for the History of Technology Session 2 The History of AI and Its Discontents, Part 1 Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4
Speaker:
The Magic of Concepts: Thinking History and China in the World Rebecca E. Karl, New York University
Chair:
Colin Garvey, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Tickets ($55 or $25 for graduate students) should be purchased through the AHA’s registration process.
Papers:
Pluralizing Logics: The Binaries and Discontents of Knowledge Representation Lindsay Poirier, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Conference on Latin American History Luncheon
Learning from AI Winter: The History of AI and Its Discontents in South Korea Youjung Shin, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
The Evolution of AI Risk in America, 1956–96 Colin Garvey
Comment: Scott Knowles, Drexel University
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1 Tickets ($50 or $25 for students) should be purchased through the AHA’s registration process. CLAH members only.
Working Luncheon for Directors of Graduate Studies Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room
Table Display
This working lunch will be an opportunity for Directors of Graduate Studies to share experiences, discuss common issues, and receive encouragement from their colleagues. Topics will include teaching preparation and working more closely with your institution’s career center.
Friday, January 5, 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m.
Tickets are $30 for members and $40 for nonmembers. Tickets can be purchased in advance through the registration form or at the meeting at the onsite registration counters.
Affiliated Societies Display Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium
Reception
An opportunity to meet with members of the AHA’s affiliated societies, review materials, and talk with officers.
Friday, January 5, 12:30–1:30 p.m.
Midday Session of the AHA Program Committee Friday, January 5, 12:00–1:30 p.m.
Thinking Like a Historian at a Think Tank Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Organized by the AHA Professional Division
Chair:
Brian Balogh, University of Virginia
Panel:
Ted R. Bromund, The Heritage Foundation Philip Eric Wolgin, Center for American Progress Stephanie Young, RAND Corporation
American Historical Review: Meet the Editors Reception Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room What do you want from the flagship journal of the American Historical Association? The editors and staff of the AHR invite members to attend an informal, open session to express their views on the journal. We are prepared to offer advice on how members might best prepare articles for submission and tell them what they should expect from the review process. Most importantly, we are eager to hear what you have to say. Refreshments will be served.
Film Festival Friday, January 5, 1:00–3:00 p.m.
Luncheons
John O’Connor Film Award Winner, Documentary: I Am Not Your Negro Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A
Friday, January 5, 12:00–1:30 p.m. Conference on Asian History Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Luncheon Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room Presiding: Stefan Tanaka, University of California, San Diego John R. Pincince, Loyola University Chicago
Program_Book_2018.indd 36
Raoul Peck, director; Rémi Grellety and Hébert Peck, producers (Velvet Film, 2016) This Oscar-nominated documentary, narrated by Samuel L. Jackson, is a stunning and eloquent portrayal of the life and words of African American writer James Baldwin, whose critique of American society in the 1970s remains relevant to the racial injustices of today. A moderator will introduce the film and lead a discussion afterward.
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, Jan. 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions Early Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee
Local Arrangements Committee Tour Friday, January 5, 1:00–3:00 p.m. Tour 8: Archiving Taste: A Tour of the Food History Collection at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, SC Johnson Center Tour leaders: Paula Johnson, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution; Ashley Rose Young, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution; and Robert Horton, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution This curator-led tour accompanies session 84, “Archiving Taste: A Roundtable on Food History at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.” After a break during which participants may purchase lunch at the museum café, the group will convene for a tour of the NMAH Archives Center’s food history collections and the exhibition, FOOD: Transforming the American Table. The tour will conclude with a cooking demonstration led by historian Ashley Rose Young in the museum’s new professional kitchen on the Coulter performance plaza. Please note: Attendees will travel on their own and meet at the museum, outside SC Johnson Center. The museum is a 5-minute walk from the Federal Triangle Metro station. Limit 30 people. Free advance registration required
Open Forum Friday, January 5, 1:30–2:30 p.m.
Graduate and Early Career Committee Open Forum: Finding Funding in an Era of Uncertainty
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Friday, January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. 105. The Legacy of Thomas C. Holt’s The Problem of Freedom: 25-Year Retrospect Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3 Chair:
Laurent M. Dubois, Duke University
Panel:
Anthony Bogues, Brown University Natasha J. Lightfoot, Columbia University Hannah Rosen, College of William and Mary Gary Wilder, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York Comment: Thomas C. Holt, University of Chicago
106. Historians for Mental Health: An Open Discussion Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Organized by the AHA Professional Division Chair:
Kevin Boyle, Northwestern University
107. Digital Drop-In Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room Organized by the AHA Research Division Have questions about how to use digital tools in your teaching or research? Have a question about a digital tool? Have an idea for a digital project, but not sure where to start? Just keep getting stuck on a digital issue? Stop by the Digital Drop-in Session to talk with one of a group of knowledgeable digital historians. They will be available during this time to talk one-on-one in a relaxed way about a range of digital scholarship tools and methodologies including overall project creation and management, digital pedagogy, social media, video/ audio editing, GIS/Mapping, Zotero, Omeka, website creation, Wordpress, visualizations, and network analysis. Chair:
Jeffrey W. McClurken, University of Mary Washington
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2
Workshop Friday, January 5, 1:30–2:30 p.m. Historians Writing Historical Fiction: A Discussion Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Creating fictional portrayals of the past is an effective means of engaging the public with history, and historians have the training to do it. But writing fiction also differs from writing non-fiction in important ways. Join Laura Kamoie, a New York Times bestselling historical fiction author and former tenured professor, for a discussion about applying historical training to writing fiction and the craft, market, and business of historical fiction.
108. Tackling the Issue of Enrollments in History Courses, Part 3: Strategies and Ideas from the Frontlines Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Chair:
Elizabeth A. Lehfeldt, Cleveland State University and vice president, AHA Teaching Division
Panel:
Carlos Alberto Contreras, Grossmont College Andrew Goss, Augusta University Randi J. Storch, State University of New York at Cortland Cary D. Wintz, Texas Southern University
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 54 and 81.
January 5, 2018
The AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee invites graduate students and early career professionals to a forum to discuss issues of common interest.
Presiding: Laura Kamoie, author
Program_Book_2018.indd 37
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Friday, January 1:30–3:00 p.m. Friday, Jan. 3,5,8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
109. Doors of Hope: Histories and Memories of Black Transnationalism in Indian Territory, Canada, and West Africa Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Organized by the AHA Committee on Minority Historians
112. Cutting a New Pattern, Part 1: Uniformed Women in the Great War Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, SC Johnson Center This session will take place offsite at the SC Johnson Center of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.
Chair:
Celia E. Naylor, Barnard College, Columbia University
Chair:
Barton C. Hacker, Smithsonian Institution
Papers:
Papers:
“The Mecca for the Negro, Native, and Indian”: Racial Formation in the “All-Black” Town of Boley, Indian Territory Melissa Stuckey, Elizabeth City State University
Fashioning and Performing Martial Femininities: Military Uniforms, Modernity, and Gender Identities in the British Women’s Corps, 1914–20 Krisztina Robert, University of Roehampton
Notes from an Exodusters Archive Deanna Bowen, Goddard College
“Things to be Forgotten”: Reflections on African American Family History, Memory, and Migration Kendra Field, Tufts University
Professionalism, Patriotism, and Purity of Purpose: Symbolism and Identity in First World War Nurses’ Uniforms Christine Hallett, University of Manchester
Women in War in Belgium: Uniformed or Not? Ilse Bogaerts, Royal Musuem of the Army and Military History
Comment: Audience
Italian Women in Uniform during World War I Allison Scardino Belzer, Armstrong State University
110. New Perspectives on Women in the 20th-Century Caribbean World, Part 2: Subject-Making within National Contexts
Comment: Audience
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Chairs:
Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University Takkara Brunson, Morgan State University
Papers:
Governing Respectability: Placing the Sexual Morality of British Caribbean Female Migrant Domestic Workers within Colonial Curaçao Rose Mary Allen, University of Curaçao
Organizing for Social Services: Puerto Rican Women and the Migration Division in New York, 1948–70 Emma Amador, Brown University
Travel Sickness: Pan-Africanism, Medicine, and Misogynoir in Caribbean Harlem W. Chris Johnson, University of Toronto
More Than Auxiliary: Caribbean Women and Social Organizations in the Interwar Period Tyesha Maddox, Fordham University
Comment: Tiffany Ruby Patterson-Myers, Vanderbilt University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 83.
111. The Modern Legacy of Premodern Racial and Ethnic Concepts, Part 3: Racial Sciences, Old and New Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Joint session with the Medieval Academy of America Chair:
David Atwill, Penn State University
Papers:
Albertus’s “Pygmies” Felipe Fernández-Armesto, University of Notre Dame
Alfred-Louis Delattre and the Quest for Christian Martyrs: The Politics of Christian Archaeology in the Late 19th Century Bonnie Effros, University of Liverpool and University of Florida
Genomics and Identity in History and in Historical Analysis: Can Genetics “Tell Us Who We Really Are”? Patrick Geary, Institute for Advanced Study
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 136.
113. Drawing Boundaries of Belonging: Race, Ethnicity, National Affiliation, and Alienation in US-Mexico Borderlands in the 19th and 20th Centuries Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Chair:
Linda Noel, Morgan State University
Papers:
Mexican by Any Other Name: The Hispano Homeland Debate and the Racial Currents of Hispanidad John Nieto-Phillips, Indiana University
Disenfranchising Arizonenses: Citizenship and Defining the Body Politic in the Early 20th-Century US-Mexico Borderlands John Bezis-Selfa, Wheaton College
“Such Strange and Incoherent Elements”: Early Mexican Immigration Policy and the Challenge of National Consolidation in the Borderlands, 1824–33 Sarah Rodriguez, University of Arkansas
Comment: Katherine A. Benton-Cohen, Georgetown University
114. Custodial Care: Histories of Dentention in the Name of the State Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Chair:
Antoinette Burton, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
“The War and the Rights of Humanity”: Refugee Camps as Sites of Surveillance, Discipline, and Containment in the War of the Rebellion Thavolia Glymph, Duke University
Empire’s Double Edge: Coercion and Care in British Imperial Camps, 1876–1903 Aidan Forth, Loyola University Chicago
Humane Detention: Care and Displacement at the End of Empire Jordanna Bailkin, University of Washington
Comment: Nayan Shah, University of Southern California
Comment: Daniel L. Smail, Harvard University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 57 and 82.
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Friday, January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions
Washington Hilton, Columbia 10
Chair:
Tarik Sabry, Communication and Media Research Institute, University of Westminster
Papers:
The Politics of Images: Cartoons in the Late Ottoman Empire Ekin Enacar, University of Chicago
Kabul Cosmopolitan: Radio Afghanistan and the Politics of Popular Culture, 1960–79 Mejgan Massoumi, Stanford University
Vulgarizing Sounds: Tapes, Taste, and the End of High Culture in Modern Egypt Andrew Simon, Dartmouth College
The VHS Medium in 1980s Revolutionary Iran: A Window onto the World Outside Nahid Siamdoust, New York University
“They Have Never Told You the Truth”: Radio Propaganda to the Middle East and the Fight for Historical Legitimacy in the 1940s Margaret E. Peacock, University of Alabama
Children and Uncle Ho: Ho Chi Minh and His Image as a Propaganda Tool to Fasten New Generations to the Party and the State Olga Dror, Texas A&M University
Comment: Mark Kramer
119. Comics and History: New Historical Research Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom Chair:
Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University
Papers:
Resisting Revanchism—Comics and the Limits of the Archive of Civil Rights Jonathan Gray, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
116. Negotiating Power in 18th-Century South Asia
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia
“Positive” Propaganda: Socialist Realism and the Affect Gap in 1930s Uzbekistan Claire Roosien, University of Chicago
Don’t Fear the Gutter: Platforms, Formats, and Comics in Postwar and Postmodern Japan Andrea Horbinski, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Abhishek Kaicker, University of California, Berkeley
Papers:
Intimate Servants and Political Power: Tracking Two Eunuch Lives in the Late Mughal World Emma Kalb, University of Chicago
“The Butcher of Hindustan”: Ahmad Shah Abdali in 18th-Century Punjab Neelam Khoja, Harvard University
“Nominally” the Boss: The Rise and Fall of Carol Ferris in Silver Age Green Lantern Comics Lisa Jackson, University of California, Santa Cruz
Visualizing the Past Ari Kelman, University of California, Davis
The Politics of Warren Hastings’ Scholarly Patronage Joshua Ehrlich, Harvard University
Comment: Audience
117. Online Media and Collaborative Learning Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Chair:
Molly A. Warsh, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Collaborative Writing with Google Docs Frederik Vermote, California State University, Fresno
Experiencing World History in the Classroom: Videos, Music, and Podcasts Madalina Valeria Veres, Temple University
Online Teaching Tools: A Crash Course in Collaborative Learning Ethan Hawkley, Wesley College
Engaging Students in the Survey Course: Practical Tips for Incorporating Online Resources in the Classroom Ken Mondschein, American International College
Comment: Audience
118. Selling the State: Propaganda and the Construction of Public Legitimacy in the Postcolonial World Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Chair:
Mark Kramer, Harvard University
Papers:
Selling Empire: Colonial Propaganda and Global Politics in the Era of Decolonization Jessica Pearson, Macalester College
Program_Book_2018.indd 39
120. Ethnicity, Religion, and Nationalism in China’s Changing Positions during the Cold War Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Joint session with the Historical Society for Twentieth-Century China Chair:
Xiaofei Kang, George Washington University
Papers:
Cold War, Socialist Revolution, and Ethnic Minorities at the Guangxi-Northeastern Vietnam Border, 1954–65 Qingfei Yin, George Washington University
Reassessing the Failure of China’s Ethnic and Religious Policy in the Late 1950s Steven Pieragastini, Boston College The Shifts in China’s Interpretation of and Policy toward the ArabIsraeli Conflict, 1949–92 Gangzheng She, Brandeis University Taming Contested Memories: Interpretation and Commemoration of Ethnic Korean History in Modern China Anran Wang, Cornell University
January 5, 2018
115. Everyday Technologies: Toward a History of Mass Media in the Middle East
39
Comment: Xiaofei Kang
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40
Friday, January 1:30–3:00 p.m. Friday, Jan. 3,5,8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
121. The Missing Piece: Catholic Faith and the Making of Working-Class Consciousness
124. Listening to the Archives: Researching Radio History around the World
Washington Hilton, Columbia 5 Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Chair:
Leslie W. Tentler, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Lived Catholicism and Working-Class Consciousness: The Case of Grace Holmes Carlson, 1906–92 Donna Truglio Haverty-Stacke, Hunter College, City University of New York
“We Had Two Religions at My House—the Catholic Church and the USWA”: Polish American Catholic Workers and Union Consciousness at Wheeling Steel in the 1930s and 1940s William Hal Gorby, West Virginia University
Under the Shield of Saint Michael: Catholics, Cops, and the Urban Crisis Matthew Pehl, Augustana University
Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Chair:
Josh Shepperd, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Traveling Sounds, Caribbean Archives, and the Challenges of Listening for History Alejandra M. Bronfman, State University of New York, University at Albany
Reconstructing and Preserving Latin America’s Radio History Christine Ehrick, University of Louisville
Listening to the World: Reconstructing Audience Experiences of International Broadcasting, 1927–39 Simon J. Potter, University of Bristol
Partnering Institutions: BBC Arabic and Palestine Broadcasting Service Cooperation Andrea L. Stanton, University of Denver
Comment: Leslie W. Tentler
Comment: Christopher Sterling, George Washington University
122. The Emergence of Racial Modernities in the Global South
125. Globalizing Russia’s Imperial Turn: Perspectives from Kritika and Ab Imperio
Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction Joint session with the History of Science Society Chair:
Warwick Anderson, University of Sydney
Papers:
The Chilean Exception: Racial Homogeneity, Mestizaje, and Nationalism Sarah Walsh, University of Lisbon
Stranded on a Strange Shore: Moments in the Formation of Racial Subjectivity in the Pacific Miranda Johnson, University of Sydney
Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Alexander Semyonov, National Research University Higher School of Economics
Panel:
Michael David-Fox, Georgetown University Ilya Gerasimov, Ab Imperio Willard Sunderland, University of Cincinnati
126. Words That Shape the World: Historians, Teachers, and Partnerships for LGBT History Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2
The Blondes of Aituha and Other Stories: The Racialization of Indigenous Traditions in Colonial East Timor Ricardo Roque, University of Lisbon
Objectivity, Race, and Cold War Social Science: Race Relations in World Perspective Sebastián Gil-Riaño, University of Pennsylvania
Comment: Warwick Anderson
123. Reconsidering American Response(s) to the Holocaust Washington Hilton, Columbia 6
Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University
Panel:
Stacie Brensilver Berman, New York University David Duffield, University of Colorado Denver Daniel Hurewitz, Hunter College, City University of New York Rachel Reinhard, University of California, Berkeley Wendy Rouse, San José State University
Chair:
Daniel Greene, Northwestern University
127. Returning the Landscape of Slavery to Presidential Plantations
Papers:
Race, Refuge, and Rescue: US Immigration Policy Reconsidered Barry Trachtenberg, Wake Forest University
Chair:
Douglas Bradburn, George Washington’s Mount Vernon
“Suffer Little Children”: Rememorializing Child Rescue Ronald Coleman, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Panel:
Sara Bon-Harper, James Monroe’s Highland Elizabeth Chew, James Madison’s Montpelier Gary Sandling, Thomas Jefferson Foundation
Myths of American Indifference: The St. Louis, Anne Frank, and the War Refugee Board Rebecca Erbelding, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Comment: Douglas Bradburn
Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom
128. What Will They Do Today? Five Ideas for Doing History with Students Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Chair:
Lendol G. Calder, Augustana College
Papers:
The End Is in the Beginning: What Students Need to Do the First Week of a Course Lendol G. Calder
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Friday, January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions
41
History by the Numbers: Some Basic Quantitative Approaches to Teaching History Peter Burkholder, Fairleigh Dickinson University
American Catholic Historical Association Session 8 Sex, Marriage, and Family in Catholic Europe
Pushing the Boundaries While Easing the Boring: How to Assess Higher-Ordered Thinking in a US History Survey John C. Savagian, Alverno College
Chair:
Robert Shaffern, University of Scranton
Papers:
Be the Historian You Want to See in the World: Building a Historian Persona Flannery Burke, Saint Louis University
I Fall to Pieces: Leprosy, Marriage, and Rights in Medieval Canon Law Brandon Parlopiano, Loyola University Maryland
Indulgences and the World’s Oldest Profession Robert Shaffern
Italian Catholics Confront Divorce, 1954–74 Roy Domenico, Society for Italian Historical Studies
Comment: Audience
129. The Culture Wars of the Texas K–12 Schoolbooks
Anatomy, Anima, and Imago Dei in Early Modern Discussions of Adam and Eve Tricia Ross, Duke University
“Do One Thing Every Day That Scares You”: Historiography and Active Learning Assignments in the Introductory History Classroom Sarah Elizabeth Shurts, Bergen Community College
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Chair:
Emilio Zamora, University of Texas at Austin
Papers:
Speaking Truth to Power: The Role of Chicana/o Historians Carlos Kevin Blanton, Texas A&M University
The AHA and Advocacy within the Recent Texas Textbook Fight Trinidad Gonzales, South Texas College
The Politics of Distortion in Texas K–12 History Dan Quinn, Texas Freedom Network
Omni Shoreham, Forum Room
Comment: Audience
American Catholic Historical Association Session 9 The Holy See, American Catholics, and the Emerging of New Global Challenges after the First World War Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Charles R. Gallagher, SJ, Boston College
Papers:
The Holy See’s First Transnational Mobilization against the Left: Papal Anti-Anarchism Measures, 1881–1927 Charles R. Gallagher, SJ
Early Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
The Holy See, American Catholics, and the Anti-Protestant Campaigns in Latin America during the Early 1920s Paolo Zanini, University of Milan
Friday, January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 2 Drugs in the Classroom: What Should We Tell Students about Alcohol, Tobacco, Drugs, and Addictive Digital Technologies in History—and in Their Own Lives? Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2 Chair: Panel:
American Catholic Historical Association Session 7 Martyrdom, Sanctity, and Death in Medieval Europe Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room Chair:
Jennifer Paxton, Catholic University of America
Papers:
The Convenient Martyrdom of St. Boniface Michael J. Wehrman, Frostburg State University
Law and Sanctity in the Cults of 13th-Century Siena Shane MacDonald, Catholic University of America
Comment: Adrian Ciani, University of Toronto
Central European History Society Session 5 Jewish Masculinities in the Shadow of the Holocaust Washington Hilton, Columbia 1
Scott C. Martin, Bowling Green State University Roderick Phillips, Carleton University Frederick H. Smith, College of William and Mary Norman Smith, University of Guelph Lucas Richert, University of Strathclyde Miriam Kingsberg Kadia, University of Colorado Boulder Kyle A. Bridge, University of Florida
The United States, the Holy See, and the League of Nations in the Postwar International Scenario Liliosa Azara, Roma Tre University
Chair:
Jennifer Evans, Carleton University
Papers:
Doubly Non-absent: The Jewish Male Body during the Holocaust Bjorn Krondorfer, Northern Arizona University
“We Jews Are Also Men and Not Cowards”: Jewish Frontkämpfer and the Masculine Habitus Michael J. Geheran, Clark University
Multiple “Yekkish” Masculinities: A Transnational Comparison between Canada and Palestine after 1933 Patrick Farges, Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle
January 5, 2018
Comment: Thomas Kuehne, Clark University
The Medieval Priest at the Sickbed Thomas M. Izbicki, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Comment: Jennifer Paxton
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Friday, January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions
Central European History Society Session 6 Continuities in Post-Nazi Society Washington Hilton, Columbia 2
Papers:
Distinctive and Connecting Identifications: Regionality, In-migration, Emigration Dirk Hoerder, Arizona State University
The “German Moment” of 1918 Jennifer Jenkins, University of Toronto
Performing “Germanness”: Laughter and Violence in National Socialism Martina Kessel, University of Bielefeld
Chair:
Jeffrey C. Herf, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
Liberalism and German Nationalism in Post-Nazi Carinthia Robert Knight, Loughborough University
Justice for Whom? The SS between Prosecution and Reintegration in Post-Nazi Society Rafael Kropiunigg, University of Cambridge
Public Security after the Nazis: Police Culture in Postwar Vienna Lindsay Katherine MacNeill, American University
Rebuilding and Renewing Viennese Jewish Identity after the Holocaust Elizabeth Anthony, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Session 6 Surveillance, Identity, and Homosexualities in the 20thCentury United States Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Emily K. Hobson, University of Nevada at Reno
Papers:
The Thin Red Line between Privacy and Secrecy: Criminal Sodomy, Homosexuality, and the Cold War in El Paso, Texas Jecoa Ross, University of Texas at El Paso
From the Kinsey Scale to Homosexualities: Studies of Same Sex Desiring Persons at the Institute for Sex Research, 1955–81 Hallimeda E. Allinson, Indiana University
Sexual Health Surveillance: Homosexuality Investigations and HIV/AIDS in the US Military, 1981–93 Natalie Shibley, University of Pennsylvania
Comment: Emily K. Hobson
Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 5 Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Session 4 Experiencing War: Refugees, Alliances, and Fighters Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A
“Germanness” in the Ghetto: German-Polish Police in Lodz/ Litzmannstadt, 1940–44 Winson W. Chu, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Comment: Hanno Balz, Johns Hopkins University
Labor and Working Class History Association Session 5 Race, Gender, and Prison Labor in the Era of Mass Incarceration Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Chair:
Julie Greene, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
Working for a Nickel or Nothing: Black Women and Prison Labor in the Era(s) of Mass Incarceration Talitha LeFlouria, University of Virginia
Comments: Heather Thompson, University of Michigan Mary Ellen Curtin, American University
MARHO: The Radical Historians’ Organization Beyond Police: Lessons from History Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Amy Chazkel, Queens College and The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Panel:
Amy Chazkel Ilana Feldman, George Washington University Monica Kim, New York University A. Naomi Paik, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Micol Seigel, Indiana University
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 5 Association for Documentary Editing Documenting the History of the First Federal Congress
Chair:
Barbara Molony, Santa Clara University
Papers:
Winston Churchill, British-Chinese Relations, and the Influence of America, 1930–45 Mark Crowley, Wuhan University
Chair:
Cokie Roberts, ABC News
The Religious Imperative to Do Good: Refugees in Britain in the 1930s Sandra Trudgen Dawson, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Papers:
Writing the First Congress Fergus Bordewich, independent scholar
Giving Voice to the Presidential Title Controversy of 1789 Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon, First Federal Congress Project
Experiencing the Eastern Front Nupur Chaudhuri, Texas Southern University
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North
Comments: Kenneth R. Bowling, George Washington University Charlene Bangs Bickford, George Washington University William diGiacomantonio, US Capitol Historical Society
Comment: Barbara Molony
German Historical Institute Inside/Outside: Defining, Ascribing, and Communicating “Germanness” in Different Contexts, Spaces, and Times Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Polish American Historical Association Session 4 Race and Ethnicity on the Battlefields of the Civil War Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Christian Keller, United States Army War College
Papers:
The “Springtime of Nations” Comes to America James Pula, Purdue University Northwest
David Lazar, German Historical Institute
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Friday, January 5, 1:30–3:00 p.m. and 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions 43 The Shadow of Slavery and Racial Discrimination in the Experience of African American Soldiers Joseph P. Reidy, Howard University
“Brothers in Arms” or “Beastly Set of Men”: Poles on the US Colored Troops during the Civil War Piotr Derengowski, University of Gda nsk ´
American Abolitionists and Poland Graham Russell Gao Hodges, Colgate University
Comment: Audience
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 5 Love, Sex, and Honor in the Italian South Washington Hilton, Columbia 3 Chair:
Steven Hughes, Loyola University Maryland
Papers:
Infanticide and Emigration: Honor and the Women Who Remained Behind Victoria Calabrese, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
The Honor of the Southern Woman: Il Mezzogiorno, 1945 to the Present Antonella Vitale, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Masculinities: Honor and Sexual Status in Homosexual Sex Work Cirus Rinaldi, University of Palermo
Comment: Steven Hughes
Society of Automotive Historians Automobility and Political Identity in a Neoliberal Age Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4 Chair:
Kathleen Franz, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Papers:
Populist Politics and Automobility: Policy Activist Michael Parkhurst and the Use of Film to Advance Neoliberal Ideology James Todd Uhlman, University of Dayton
Automobiles, Global Warming, and the Triumph of Liberal Individualism: A Bright Future for Automotive Historians Tom McCarthy, United States Naval Academy
Driving the Neoliberal Surround Cotten Seiler, Dickinson College
Comment: Kathleen Franz
Local Arrangements Committee Tour Friday, January 5, 2:00–5:30 p.m. Tour 9: Giving in America: The Material Culture of Philanthropy at the National Museum of American History Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Amanda Moniz, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Launched in 2015, the philanthropy initiative is a long-term project to collect, research, document, and display materials relating to the history and impact of American giving, broadly defined—from gifts of time and expertise to social activism and funding. An annual program, The Power of Giving: Philanthropy’s Impact on American Life, and new exhibition, Giving in America, explore the collaborative power of giving in all forms and at all levels across a wide spectrum of issues and movements. Annual themes focus on specific areas of giving—this year’s focus is sustainability and the environment—and are designed to help visitors make connections between historic and contemporary giving and each individual’s part in future solutions. During the visit, we will tour the new Giving in America exhibit, discuss the philanthropy collecting plan, and discuss material culture approaches to studying the history of philanthropy. Please note: The group will travel by Metro (fare card provided); the museum is a 5-minute walk from the Federal Triangle station. The museum is ADA compliant. Limit 20 people. $10
Workshop Friday, January 5, 2:30–5:30 p.m. Workshop: Preparing for the Nonacademic Job Search Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Join us for a three-hour workshop designed to help graduate students and postdocs learn more about searching for a job outside academia. The presentation will detail how nonacademic employers look at people with PhD training, what students can do to prepare to enter the job market, and the mechanics of the nonacademic job search. By the end of the workshop, attendees should be able to conduct a nonacademic job search, should they ever want or need to. The session is suitable for students and postdocs at any stage of their work. Speaker:
Anne K. Krook, Practical Workplace Advice
Late Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. 130. Immigration and Transnationalism in the Modern Era Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3 Chair:
Donna R. Gabaccia, University of Toronto
Papers:
Migration and the Limits of Transnationalism Nancy L. Green, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales
Transnational Dimensions of American Xenophobia Erika Lee, University of Minnesota
Externalization and Its Limits: The Concentric Rings around the United States David FitzGerald, University of California, San Diego
Transnational or Transcultural? Migrant Decision Making Dirk Hoerder, University of Bremen
January 5, 2018
The National Museum of American History’s philanthropy initiative invites historians interested in American philanthropy and humanitarianism, broadly conceived, to join Amanda Moniz, the David M. Rubenstein Curator of Philanthropy, for a tour and conversation at the museum.
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Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
131. Dissertation Lightning Round Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Organized by the AHA Research Division This experimental session will feature three-minute presentations by historians describing their dissertation research. People interested in being panelists should contact
[email protected] to register, and audience members will be invited to join the lightning round during the session. Chair:
Chair:
Barton C. Hacker, Smithsonian Institution
Papers:
Dutch Nurses and World War I: From Militarisation to Pacifism Leo van Bergen, Netherlands Institute for Military History
The “Greatest Mother” in Uniform: How American Red Cross Nurses and Volunteers Shaped America’s Great War Marian Moser Jones, University of Maryland, College Park
132. How Can We Make Historical Perspective More Central to Active Citizenship?
Call to Colors: United States Military Women in the Great War Margaret Simmons Vining, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Seth Denbo, American Historical Association
Preparedness, Relief, and Welfare: Civilian American Women in Uniform Barton C. Hacker
Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom
Organized by the AHA Teaching Division
Comment: Audience
Chair:
John Bezis-Selfa, Wheaton College
Panel:
Jon C. Grinspan, Division of Political History, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution Patricia Nelson Limerick, Center of the American West, University of Colorado, and Colorado State Historian Brenda J. Santos, Achievement First Jessica Choppin Roney, Temple University
134. 1968 Mexico City Olympics Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Organized by the AHA Committee on Minority Historians; joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
To Be Determined
Panel:
Eric Zolov, State University of New York at Stony Brook Jurgen Buchenau, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Amy Bass, College of New Rochelle
135. Primary Sources and the Historical Profession in the Age of Text Search, Part 1: Historical Research and Analysis in the Digital Age Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 112.
137. A Soul as Vast as the World: African Americans, Decolonization, and Third World Radicalism Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Chair:
Penny Von Eschen, Cornell University
Papers:
Cold War Black Internationalism and the Translation of African Culture Merve Fejzula, Cambridge University
No Sellout in ’64: Black Nationalism, Western Marxism, and the Contested Third World Politics of the Freedom Now Party Benjamin Feldman, Georgetown University
Contesting the Colonial Analogy: Violence, Pluralism, and Political Economy in US Black Politics, 1965–73 Sam Klug, Harvard University
Southern Solidarity: The Southern Left and Internationalism, 1960–90 Robert Greene II, University of South Carolina
138. Department Chairs and Fundraising Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1
Chair:
Ruth Mostern, University of Pittsburgh
Chair:
Stephen Aron, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers:
Historians, Archivists, and Librarians: The Challenges, Opportunities, and Necessities for Collaboration Martin Halbert, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Panel:
Jacqueline Jones, University of Texas at Austin Claudio Saunt, University of Georgia James H. Sweet, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Academic Research Is Now Almost Always Digital Eileen Clancy, City University of New York
Reproducing Privilege in the Collaboration for Digital Primary Sources for Historical Research Jennifer E. Guiliano, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
What Do We Want Digital History to Look Like Now? Alison Langmead, University of Pittsburgh
139. Ways of Seeing, Shaping, and Documenting Subjects under Postcolonial Conflicts Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
P. Michael Rattanasengchanh, Ohio University
Papers:
Performance-Based Shape Shifters: Underground Resistance Theater in Argentina during the Cold War Katherine Kelaidis, National Hellenic Museum
Comment: Audience
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 162, 186, 239 and 302.
136. Cutting a New Pattern, Part 2: Uniformed Women in the Great War Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, SC Johnson Center This session will take place offsite at the SC Johnson Center of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.
Program_Book_2018.indd 44
When Photos Lie to You: Visual Depictions of Needs-Based Aid among the Displaced in Postcolonial Vietnam. Jennifer Way, University of North Texas Murder, Museums, and Memory Holes: Cold War Public History in Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, and Phnom Penh Michael G. Vann, California State University, Sacramento
Comment: Mustafah Dhada, California State University, Bakersfield
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions Chair:
Andrew Israel Ross, University of Southern Mississippi
Papers:
Chair:
Rosemarie Zagarri, George Mason University
A City of “Familiar Strangers”: Spaces of Legibility, Surveillance, and Queer Pleasure in Late Imperial St. Petersburg Olga Petri, University of Cambridge
Papers:
Criminality and Conscience in the First Wave of American Abolition Anthony Di Lorenzo, Lapidus Center
Embodying Indecency: Policing Acts and Identities in 19th-Century Paris Andrew Israel Ross
Knabenliebe: Youth Protection and the Decriminalization of Male Homosexuality in Weimar Germany Javier Samper Vendrell, Grinnell College
Washington Hilton, Columbia 7
Criminal Servitude, Authority, and Morality in the AngloAmerican World Nicole Dressler, Northern Illinois University
Deviance, Race, and Childhood in Early Criminal Justice Reform Crystal Webster, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Comment: Manisha Sinha, University of Connecticut at Storrs
141. Conscripted Citizens: Hegemony, Race, and Nationalism in Latin American Armies Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B Chair:
Peter F. Guardino, Indiana University
Papers:
The Porfirian Mexican Military and National Hegemony Stephen Neufeld, California State University, Fullerton
Learning to Be a Citizen: Literacy Campaigns in the Argentine Army, 1910–30 Nicolas Sillitti, Indiana University
What Difference Did a Revolution Make? Conscription in the MNR’s Bolivia, 1952–58 Elizabeth Shesko, Oakland University
“Our Archaic System”: Attempts to Reform the Military Justice System in Argentina, 1905–35 Jonathan D. Ablard, Ithaca College
Comment: Hendrik Kraay, University of Calgary
142. Resistant and Receptive, Insiders and Outsiders: Native Peoples and the Making of Early Modern Indigenous Sovereignty, Colonial Subjects, and Slaves Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Comment: Charles J. Upchurch, Florida State University
144. Race, Class, and Nation Building in the Euro-American World: Connections and Comparisons between the United States, Ireland, Southern Italy, and Russia, 1815–1900 Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Peter Kolchin, University of Delaware
Papers:
Irish Migrants, Antebellum American Slavery, and Southern Nationalism Cathal Smith, National University of Ireland, Galway
Louisiana’s Anti-Confederate Slaves versus Basilicata’s Anti-Italian Peasants: Race, Class, and Nation in Comparative Perspective, 1862–65 Enrico Dal Lago, National University of Ireland, Galway
Russian Serfdom and American Slavery in Popular Fiction, 1870–1900 Amanda Bellows, New-York Historical Society
Comment: Andrew Zimmerman, George Washington University
145. Comparing the Governance of Racial, Ethnic, and Religious Plurality in the Dutch Global Empire, 1600–1800 Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Chair:
Titas Chakraborty, Oberlin College
Papers:
Administrating “Enslavebility”: Data Project Courts of Justice Matthias Van Rossum, International Institute for Social History
Managing Diversity: Supervising Functions in Managing Colonial Workplaces Ulbe Bosma, International Institute for Social History
Ruling Overseas: Connected Practices of Governance and Law Karwan Fatah-Black, Leiden University Comparing Governance of Diversity in the Dutch, English, and Portuguese Empires Catia Antunes, Leiden University
Chair:
M. Kittiya Lee, California State University, Los Angeles
Papers:
Bounding Iroquoia: Early Modern Cartography and Indigenous Nationhood Scott Manning Stevens, Syracuse University
Tupi or Not Tupi? The Indian Par Excellence in Early Modern Eastern South America M. Kittiya Lee
The Making of the Indigenous Subject and Colonial Ideology in Rio de la Plata and Canada Dot Tuer, OCAD University
Indigenous Slavery from Out on the Edge Nancy E. van Deusen, Queen’s University
Comment: Audience
143. Queer in Public: Urban Space and Same-Sex Cultures in Europe, 1850–1930 Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2 Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History
Program_Book_2018.indd 45
Comment: Audience
146. In Their Own Words: Global Understandings of Modern Womanhood in the Mid-20th-Century Women’s Press Washington Hilton, Columbia 6 Chair:
Kim Gallon, Purdue University
Papers:
A View from the Sidelines: Black Women Sportswriters in the Interwar Era Amira Rose Davis, Penn State University
Global Respectability in the Emerging Women’s Press of 1940s Algeria Sara Rahnama, Johns Hopkins University
“In Africa, in Days Gone By…”: Gender, Intellectualism, and the Philosophizing of Cameroonian History Jacqueline-Bethel Tchouta Mougoue, Baylor University
January 5, 2018
140. Bondage, Criminality, and the Humanitarian Impulse in the Long 18th Century
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Comment: Kim Gallon
23/10/17 5:33 PM
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Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
147. Guests and Outsiders: Nativism, Integration, and the Politics of Migration in Europe since 1945 Washington Hilton, Columbia 5
Papers:
Chair:
Rita Chin, University of Michigan
Papers:
Can a Turk Be Gay? Gay Activism and the Politics of Migration, 1969–81 Christopher Ewing, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Progressive Nativism? Mobilizing Secularism, Gender, and Sexuality against Muslims in Postwar Europe Aitana Guia, California State University, Fullerton
Social Science and Single Mothers: Decolonizing the Dutch Welfare State, 1970s–90s Chelsea Schields, Elizabethtown College
Comment: Todd Shepard, Johns Hopkins University
148. Connections and Their Consequences: Cuba, West Africa, and Spain Resisting and Adapting to Change
“Us” and “Them” in Credit’s Classroom: Training the First Wave of US International Bankers in the Early 20th Century Mary Bridges, Vanderbilt University “More Discrimination Is Necessary”: Race, Risk, and Investment in the 1920s Daniel Platt, Brown University
“From Washington Boulevard to Easy Street”: State Lotteries and Black Social Mobility in the 1980s Jonathan Cohen, University of Virginia
Comment: Amy C. Offner
151. The Global South in the Modern Pacific World: Asian and Latin American Connections Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Chair:
Symbol Lai, University of Washington
Papers:
Rebel Coolies, Citizen Warriors, and Sworn Brothers: The Chinese Loyalty Oath and Alliance with Chile in the War of the Pacific Heidi Tinsman, University of California, Irvine
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
A South American Pacific: Maritime Workers and Radical Solidarity in Peru and Chile Joshua Savala, Cornell University
Chair:
Luis Martinez-Fernandez, University of Central Florida
Papers:
The Foundation of Slave-Trading Networks between Cuba and Upper Guinea, 1808–20 Jorge Felipe Gonzalez, Michigan State University
“The Blood of Thousands”: Fighting Disease on Factories and Barracoons in the Illegal Slave Trade, 1820–67 Manuel Barcia, University of Leeds
Comment: Raymond Craib, Cornell University
The Human Consequences of the Illegal Slave Trade in Western Cuba, 1835–50 William C. Van Norman, James Madison University
Spain in West Africa after the Transatlantic Slave Trade, 1860s–90s Adriana Chira, Emory University
Southern Encounters: Ethnic Nationalism and Okinawa Military Migration to Latin America Symbol Lai
152. Public History and Public Memory: Talking about Slavery at Presidential Plantations Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
Jennifer Morgan, New York University
Comment: Matt D. Childs, University of South Carolina
Panel:
Christian Cotz, James Madison’s Montpelier Brandon Dillard, Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello Nancy Stetz, James Monroe’s Highland
149. Mapping Black Mobilities and Identities in the Long 19th Century
153. Apartheid’s Legacy: Reflections 70 Years after the National Party’s Rise to Power in South Africa
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West
Chair:
Jessica Johnson, Johns Hopkins University
Chair:
Rick Halpern, University of Toronto
Papers:
Women of African Descent and Their Global Quest for Financial Security and Respectability Katrina Anderson, University of Delaware
Papers:
Apartheid’s Wages of Whiteness Alex Lichtenstein, Indiana University
Labor, Kinship, and the 19th-Century Worlds of Asa Valentine Joan L. Bryant, Syracuse University
Radicalization and the Politics of the African National Congress in South Africa’s Liberation Struggle Khumisho Moguerane, University of Johannesburg
“We Have a Country There”: US Diplomacy and Black Travel in Africa, 1877–1900 Jeannette Eileen Jones, University of Nebraska
Apartheid and Anti-Apartheid in the 1960s and 1970s Saul Dubow, Cambridge University
Losing Laroche: The Story of the Titanic’s Only Black Passenger Kellie Carter Jackson, Hunter College, City University of New York
154. Teaching the Master Narrative: American History Textbooks in the 20th Century
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3
Comment: Audience
150. Race, Risk, and Capitalism in the 20th-Century United States Washington Hilton, Columbia 10 Chair:
Chair:
James Buss, Salisbury University
Papers:
How Texas Discovered Columbus: The Columbia Legacy in Texas Textbooks, 1919–2017 Michael Horton, University of Miami
Amy C. Offner, University of Pennsylvania
Program_Book_2018.indd 46
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
Constructing an American Mythology: The Boston Tea Party in High School Textbooks Michael Kneisel, Kent State University
Suffering in Silence: The Voice and Representation of Slaves in 1950s American History Textbooks Lindsey Bauman, Bowling Green State University
Comment: Kyle Ward, Minnesota State University, Mankato
47
Jewish-Catholic Relations in the United States: Transnationalism, American Jews, and Catholic Politics in the 1930s Nina Valbousquet, Center for Jewish History and New York University
Sacred Ground: The Vatican, American Catholics, and the Struggle for Palestine Adrian Ciani, St. Augustine’s Seminary of Toronto
Comment: Paolo Zanini, University of Milan
Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Chair:
Craig Perrier, Fairfax County Public Schools and Northeastern University
Panel:
Nai-Ching Wang, Virginia Tech David Cline, San Diego State University David Hicks, Virginia Tech Kurt Luther, Virginia Tech Kelly McPherson, Kipps Elementary School Craig Perrier Paul Quigley, Virginia Tech
American Catholic Historical Association Session 11 Encountering Modernity: Catholic Social Thought in the 20th-Century United States Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Richard Gribble, CSC, Stonehill College
Papers:
The Church and the Suburbs: Andrew Greeley and the American Catholic Response to Suburbia Stephen M. Koeth, CSC, Columbia University
The Laity Empowered, the Church Militant: Quadragesimo Anno and Dorothy Day as the Foundation for an American Reconstruction of the Social Order Paul Lubienecki, Christ the King Seminary
Late Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 3 Anti-Drug Activism in America and China during the 1950s and Beyond: Grassroots and Government Strategies Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2
Comment: Richard Gribble, CSC
Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Defining El Campo: Rural Identity and the Creation of Modern Spain Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B Chair:
Clinton D. Young, University of Arkansas at Monticello
Papers:
Disease and Local Identity Construction in Early 19th-Century Spain Charles Nicholas Saenz, Adams State University
Chair:
Norman Smith, University of Guelph
Wine and Plagues in 19th-Century Rural Spain Karl J. Trybus, Limestone College
Papers:
Sacrifice and the Limits of Citizenship: China’s Anti-Drug Campaigns of the 1950’s Thomas Chan, University of California, San Diego
Constructing a Rurality: Valencia, 1750–1920 Julia Hudson-Richards, Penn State University Altoona
Ibérico: Cured Meats and Discourses of Rurality in Late 20thCentury Marketing of the Global Gastronomic “Brand Spain” Alejandro J. Gomez-del-Moral, University of Southern Mississippi at Gulf Coast
“An Experiment in Human Slavage”: Utopian Politics and Recovery Counterculture in Postwar Los Angeles, 1958–65 Jordan Mylet, University of California, San Diego
Where Did All the Radicals Go? Examing the Evolution of AntiDrug Activism in the South Bronx, 1965–85 Noel Wolf, Randolph College
Comment: Norman Smith
American Catholic Historical Association Session 10 Catholic Attitudes toward Protestantism and Judaism between the Two World Wars: American Context, Transnational Organizations, and Vatican Politics Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room Chair:
Charles R. Gallagher, SJ, Boston College
Papers:
A Protestant Threat? The Holy See and the YMCA in the 1920s: American and Global Dimensions Marie Levant, Foundation for Religious Sciences, Bologna
Program_Book_2018.indd 47
Comment: Clinton D. Young
Central European History Society Session 7 Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 2: The National, the Transnational, and the Global in 19th-Century European History
January 5, 2018
155. The Design, Development, and Implementation of Funded Transdisciplinary Digital History Projects: Illustrative Cases of K–16 Collaboration in Action
Washington Hilton, Columbia 2 Chair:
Simone Lässig, German Historical Institute
Panel:
Jonathan Sperber, University of Missouri–Columbia Pieter M. Judson, European University Institute Lora Wildenthal, Rice University Dirk Bonker, Duke University
Comment: Roger Chickering, Georgetown University
23/10/17 5:33 PM
48
Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
Conference on Faith and History Session 1 Roundtable Discussion: The Bible in American Cultural and Political History Washington Hilton, Columbia 3 Chair:
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 6 Remembering Marilyn Young, Activist Historian: A Memorial Panel Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3
John Fea, Messiah College
Comments: Daniel Dreisbach, American University James Byrd, Vanderbilt University Amy Easton-Flake, Brigham Young University Emerson Powery, Messiah College
Conference on Latin American History Session 25 Envisioning the Nation: Mexico and the World, 1900–50
Chair:
Mark Philip Bradley, University of Chicago
Panel: Comment:
Sophia W. Quinn-Judge, Temple University Petra Goedde, Temple University Lien-Hang Nguyen, Columbia University David Hunt, University of Massachusetts Boston Mary Nolan, New York University Wm. Roger Louis, University of Texas at Austin
Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Barry Carr, La Trobe University
Papers:
Advertising Modern Mexico: Beer, Race, and Economic Development in Mid-20th-Century Mexico Susan Gauss, University of Massachusetts Boston
Diego Rivera’s Trotskyist Sojourn John Lear, University of Puget Sound
Trotsky in Mexico: Artists United, Artists Divided, 1930–40 Stephanie J. Smith, Ohio State University
Alternative Visions: Official Masculine Mexicanidad vs. Unofficial Feminine Ambiente in Mexican Nation-Building, 1925–45 Ryan Jones, State University of New York, College at Geneseo
Comment: Barry Carr
Conference on Latin American History Session 26 Scandalous Behavior in Colonial Latin America: Agency, Crime, and Punishment in Criminal and Inquisition Files Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Martha Few, Penn State University
Papers:
Scribal Seductions: Streetwalkers and Nightwatchman in 1790s Mexico City Nicole von Germeten, Oregon State University
Toleration without Tolerance: Negotiating Illicit Sex in Bourbon Quito Chad T. Black, University of Tennessee at Knoxville
Defining Boundaries of Communal Behavior: Unruly Women in 18th-Century Mexico Elizabeth Gonzalez Jimenez, University of Miami
Conference on Latin American History Session 27 Piracy, Imperial Expansion, and the Making of the Modern World: New Perspectives from the Atlantic and Beyond Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South
Polish American Historical Association Session 5 Ethnic Political Mobilization Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Iwona Korga, Józef Piłsudski Institute of America
Papers:
Call to Fight for Independence Recorded in the Artworks of Polish Artists Living and Working in the United States ´ Anna Rudek- Smiechowska, Polish Institute of World Art Studies
Military Mobilization Movements in Exile: From the Hungarian Legion to the Löveszek Movement, 1942–70 Katalin Kádár Lynn, Eötvös Loránd University
Sixty-Eight Publishers: A Czechoslovak Exile Publishing House in Toronto Francis D. Raška, Charles University
Migrants Mobilizing for the Homeland: The Relation between Political Activism in Poland and the United States in the 1980s Mary Patrice Erdmans, Case Western Reserve University
Comment: Audience
Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing Session 2 Business History Conference Session 2 Peddling Print in 19th-Century America: Subscription Publishing as a Business Model Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Jessica K. Burch, University of Utah
Papers:
Subscribers, Lithographers, and “Chiefs”: Reading Mckenney and Hall’s History of the Indian Tribes of North America in the Plantation South, 1836–44 Julia Grummitt, Princeton University
Agency Revisited: Business, Class, and Gender in the 19th-Century Agency Economy Natalie Marine-Street, Stanford University
Chair:
Jesse Cromwell, University of Mississippi
Papers:
St. Augustine’s Paradox: The Rhetoric of Piracy in Critiques of Anglophone Encroachment in Spanish Territories, 1700–1900 Mark G. Hanna, University of California, San Diego
An Underappreciated Working-Class Vector of Early Modern Globalization: Sailors’ and Maritime Predators’ Information Highways Fabio López Lázaro, University of Hawai’i at Manoa
Fighting Moros, Forging Empire: Catholic Anti-piracy in Spain’s Asian Empire, 1749–62 Kristie Patricia Flannery, University of Texas at Austin
Comment: Jessica K. Burch
Agents, Fraudsters, Subscribers, and Borrowers: Buying and Selling Godey’s Lady’s Book, 1830s–70s Amy Sopcak-Joseph, University of Connecticut at Storrs The Marketplace of Ideas: The Business of Knowing in 19thCentury America Travis E. Ross, Beinecke Library, Yale University
Comment: Jesse Cromwell
Program_Book_2018.indd 48
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Friday, January 5, Presidential Address and Evening Sessions 49
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4 Chair:
Colin Garvey, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Papers:
The Unreasonable Success of Intelligent Tutoring Systems Shreeharsh Kelkar, University of California, Berkeley
“Alphago Shock” and AI’s Effect on Korean Society Mi-seon Maeng, Seoul National University
Upper Level Ontologies: The Contested Languages of Artificial Intelligence Andrew Iliadis, Temple University
Comment: Lindsay Poirier, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Film Festival Friday, January 5, 3:30–5:30 p.m.
Film Screening: Adios Amor: The Search for Maria Moreno Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Laurie Coyle, director (2017)
In Adios Amor, the discovery of forgotten photographs prompts the search for an unsung heroine—Maria Moreno, a migrant mother who sacrificed everything but her twelve kids in the passionate pursuit of justice for farmworkers. Years before Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta launched the UFW, Maria picked up the only weapon she had—her voice—and became an outspoken leader in an era when women were relegated to the background. The first farm worker woman in America to be hired as a union organizer, Maria took her crusade all the way to the nation’s capital, and yet her story was lost to history. Jeff Hardwick, National Endowment for the Humanities, will introduce the film and will be joined for a discussion afterward by Laurie Coyle, director; Vicki Ruiz, University of California, Irvine; Karen Kenton, National Endowment for the Humanities; Ernest Lowe, photographer and radio producer; and Mary Wallace, Walter Reuther Library, Wayne State University.
Evening Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Friday, January 5, 5:30–7:00 p.m. Conference on Latin American History Session 29 Caribbean Studies Committee Meeting: Flight, Migration, and Borders in the Caribbean from Carib Expansion to 21st-Century Diasporas Marriott Wardman Park, Taft Room Chair:
Nicole Maskiell, University of South Carolina
Panel:
Linda M. Rupert, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Jeppe Mulich, London School of Economics and Political Science Matt D. Childs, University of South Carolina Monique Bedasse, Washington University in St. Louis
Conference on Latin American History Session 30 Central American Studies Committee Meeting: The Problem of Modernity in Central America Marriott Wardman Park, Taylor Room Chair:
Panel:
Jim R. Handy, University of Saskatchewan Kevin P. Coleman, University of Toronto Michael Kirkpatrick, Memorial University Alejandra Boza Villarreal, Universidad de Costa Rica Michel Gobat, University of Pittsburgh Barbara Weinstein, New York University
Conference on Latin American History Session 31 Colonial Studies Committee Meeting: Beyond the Archival Divide: A Roundtable on Methods, Perspectives, and Experiences from Colonial Latin American Archives Marriott Wardman Park, Truman Room Chair:
Ryan Kashanipour, Northern Arizona University
Panel:
Chelsea Berry, Georgetown University Alex Borucki, University of California, Irvine Mackenzie Anne Cooley, Stanford University Martha Few, Penn State University Jay Harrison, Hood College Alex Hidalgo, Texas Christian University
Conference on Latin American History Session 32 Teaching and Teaching Materials Committee Meeting: The Changing Narrative Arc of History: Workshopping Assignments That Link History to the Present Marriott Wardman Park, Tyler Room Chair:
Elena Albarrán, Miami University Ohio
Panel:
Stephen E. Lewis, California State University, Chico Robert Francis Alegre, University of New England
Comment: John Schwaller, State University of New York, University at Albany
AHA Presidential Address Friday, January 5, 5:30–7:00 p.m. American Historical Association Presidential Address Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3
Presidential Address: White Freedom and the Lady of Liberty Tyler Stovall, University of California, Santa Cruz
AHA Reception
January 5, 2018
Society for the History of Technology Session 3 The History of AI and Its Discontents, Part 2
Friday, January 5, 7:00–8:30 p.m. Reception hosted by the American Historical Association for 2017 president Tyler Stovall, University of California, Santa Cruz Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1 Sponsored by HISTORY®
Julie Gibbings, University of Manitoba
Program_Book_2018.indd 49
23/10/17 5:33 PM
50
Friday, January 5, Evening Sessions and Events Film Festival
Indigenous Beverage, Mainstay of the Gaucho Diet, and Hip Social Activity: Yerba Mate, a Racialized Commodity in Argentina Julia Sarreal, Arizona State University
Friday, January 5, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
John O’Connor Film Award Winner, Feature Film: Free State of Jones
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Gary Ross, director (Bluegrass Films, 2016) Free State of Jones tells the true story of Newton Knight’s transformative journey from Confederate soldier to leader of a group of white and black Mississippians who band together to form the Free State of Jones— counties in Mississippi that declared themselves independent from the Confederacy. Gary Ross, director and Laura E. Nym Mayhall, Catholic University of America will introduce the film and lead a discussion afterward.
Comment: Jennifer Adair, Fairfield University
Conference on Latin American History Session 35 Gran Colombia Studies Committee Meeting: New Directions on Politics and Society in Pre- and Post-Gran Colombia: From the Public Sphere to Caribbean Tourism Marriott Wardman Park, Truman Room Chair:
Sharika D. Crawford, US Naval Academy
Papers:
Literacy, Rumors, and the Public Sphere in Venezuela during the Age of Revolutions Cristina Soriano, Villanova University
Evening Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
Friday, January 5, 7:15–8:45 p.m. Conference on Latin American History Session 33 Brazilian Studies Committee Meeting: Social Movements: Approaches, Debates, and Memory Marriott Wardman Park, Taft Room Chair:
Celso Castilho, Vanderbilt University
Papers:
Reparations for Slavery and the Slave Trade in Brazil from a Transnational and Comparative Perspective Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University
The Transnational History of Brazilian Feminism Katherine Marino, Ohio State University
Remembering 1798: Nationalist Memory and Social Movements in Bahia, Brazil Gregory Childs, Brandeis University
Comment: Angela Alonso, University of São Paulo
Conference on Latin American History Session 34 Chile-Río de la Plata Studies Committee Meeting: The Crafting and Molding of Race in a “White” Nation Marriott Wardman Park, Taylor Room Chair:
Erika Edwards, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Papers:
Forgotten Figures: Indigenous Contributions to Nation-State Formation in the Río de la Plata Christine Mathias, King’s College London
Savage Royalism: Chilean Depictions of Mapuche, Spaniards, and Women during the Wars of Independence Sarah C. Chambers, University of Minnesota Race and Nation in 20th-Century Argentina: Past, Present, and Future Research Directions Eduardo D. Elena, University of Miami
Program_Book_2018.indd 50
Between the Lof and the Libertadores: The Mapuche and Chilean Independence Jesse Zarley, University of Maryland, College Park
French Geodesic Science, the Liberal Revolution, and Indigenous Resistance in Ecuador: The Shuyu Incident Ernesto Capello, Macalester College
Christian Missions in the Borderlands: New Perspectives from Tierradentro, Colombia, 1900–50 Alejandra Boza, University of Costa Rica
Roots and Routes: Panama’s Role in the History of Caribbean Tourism Blake Scott, University of Texas at Austin Comment: Nancy P. Appelbaum, Binghamton University, State University of New York
AHA Receptions Friday, January 5, 7:30–8:30 p.m. LGBTQ Historians’ Reception Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Sponsored by Gale The AHA Committee on LGBTQ Status in the Profession and three AHA affiliates—the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians; the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History; and the Coordinating Council for Women in History—cordially invite you to join them for a reception and informal conversation with colleagues.
Friday, January 5, 8:00–9:00 p.m. Public Historians’ Reception Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Sponsored by the Lepage Center for History in the Public Interest The AHA cordially invites public historians and anyone with an interest in public history to join them for informal conversation with colleagues.
Reception for Two-Year Faculty Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A The AHA cordially invites faculty teaching at two-year and community colleges to a reception and informal conversation with colleagues.
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
Saturday, January 6, 8:00–9:30 a.m.
Margaret E. DeLacy, H-Scholar Kevin Norris, ProQuest Bernard F. Reilly, Center for Research Libraries Virginia Steel, University of California, Los Angeles
159. Teaching Capitalism Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom
Breakfast Meeting of the AHA Committee on Gender Equity Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1
Organized by the AHA Teaching Division; joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association
Sponsored by the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians This annual networking breakfast provides an exciting and unique opportunity to meet scholars across generations working in all fields. This year it has a new name, reflecting the new name of the committee (formerly the Committee on Women Historians). We warmly invite anyone with an interest in gender history to this year’s breakfast. Continental breakfast is open to all; tickets are $35 for members, $50 for nonmembers, $15 for student members, and $35 for student nonmembers. Tickets can be purchased in advance through the registration form or at the meeting at the onsite registration counters. Preregistration is urged; a very limited number of tickets will be available at the meeting.
Chair:
Shennette Garrett-Scott, University of Mississippi
Panel:
Rosanne Currarino, Queen’s University John Enyeart, Bucknell University James Livingston, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Julia Ott, The New School Gavin Wright, Stanford University
160. Contemporary Afro-Latin American Feminisms Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Organized by the AHA Committee on Minority Historians
AHA members may bring a student nonmember to the breakfast at the student member rate. Contact
[email protected] for details.
Chair:
Devyn Spence Benson, Davidson College
Presiding: Katrin Schultheiss, George Washington University
Panel:
Guadalupe García, Tulane University Asia Leeds, Spelman College
Speaker: Address:
Nwando Achebe, Michigan State University Journey into Being: Africanist, Gender and Oral Historian
Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. 156. After Brexit: Europe Today in Historical Perspective Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3 Chair:
Herrick Chapman, New York University
Panel:
Holly Case, Brown University Deborah A. Cohen, Northwestern University Arthur Goldhammer, Harvard University Mary Nolan, New York University
161. Fifty Years after 1968: Research on the Global 1960s, Part 1: “1968” as a Local/Global Event Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
Fabio Lanza, University of Arizona
Panel:
Stephanie Boyle, New York City College of Technology, City University of New York Andrew Ivaska, Concordia University Ibram X. Kendi, American University Fabio Lanza William Marotti, University of California, Los Angeles
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 187, 213, 241, 263 and 290.
162. Primary Sources and the Historical Profession in the Age of Text Search, Part 2: Documentary Editions, Databases, and the Future of Digital History: Advancing Field-Driven Historical Infrastructure in the Digital Age Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom
157. A Q & A with Journal Editors Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2
Chair:
R. Darrell Meadows, National Historical Publications and Records Commission
Papers:
Ripple Effects: The Freedmen and Southern Society Project and the Field of African American History Leslie S. Rowland, University of Maryland, College Park
Organized by the AHA Professional Division Chair:
Kevin Boyle, Northwestern University
Panel:
Brooke L. Blower, Boston University and Modern American History Leon Fink, University of Illinois at Chicago and Labor: Studies in Working-Class History Ben Vinson III, George Washington University and The Americas
158. Democratizing Research Access: Overcoming Exclusion from Well-Resourced University Research Libraries Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Research Division Chair:
Becky Nicolaides, University of California, Los Angeles and Huntington-USC Institute on California & the West
Panel:
Tula Connell, Solidarity Center and National Coalition of Independent Scholars
Program_Book_2018.indd 51
January 6, 2018
AHA Committee on Gender Equity Breakfast Meeting
51
The Papers of Martin Luther King Jr.: Illuminating and Preserving King’s Legacy Tenisha Armstrong, Martin Luther King Jr. Papers Project, Stanford University
From CD-ROMs to Big Data and VR: A Quarter-Century of Improvement? David Eltis, Emory University
Starting from Scratch: Learning to Think Digitally Joan Neuberger, University of Texas at Austin
Comment: Audience This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 135, 186, 239 and 302.
23/10/17 5:33 PM
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Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
163. Queering the Museum: New Directions in Curating LGBTQ History and Art Exhibitions
167. Insects Histories: Contested Boundaries in HumanInsect Interfaces, 1700s–1950s
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Tara Burk, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Panel:
Gonzalo Casals, Leslie-Lohman Museum for Gay and Lesbian Art Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University Jeanne Vaccaro, University of California, Davis Stephen Vider, Bryn Mawr College
Comment: Tara Burk
Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Chair:
Frederico Freitas, North Carolina State University
Papers:
Circumscribing China with Insects: Rendering Sinophone Natural Sciences Irrelevant in James G. Needham’s Dragonflies of China (1930) Daniel Burton-Rose, North Carolina State University
Chair:
Heather E. Streets-Salter, Northeastern University
Panel:
Jon Middaugh, Naval History and Heritage Command Ricardo A. Herrera, School of Advanced Military Studies, United States Army Command and General Staff College Jessie Kratz, National Archives and Records Administration Edward Lengel, White House Historical Association
165. Transatlantic Perspectives on Law and Illiberalism, 1907–49
Comment: Nancy J. Jacobs, Brown University
168. Free People of Color and Childhood in the US South Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Chair:
Mary Niall Mitchell, University of New Orleans
Papers:
The Struggles of Apprenticeship and Poverty: Free Children of Color and Their Families in Early North Carolina Warren Milteer Jr., University of South Carolina
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A
Joint session with the American Society for Legal History and the Central European History Society
Chair:
Mary L. Dudziak, Emory University
Papers: From “Rechtsleben” to “Lebensrecht”: On Life’s Victory over Law in the Pages of the Archive for Legal and Economic Philosophy, 1907–33 Katharina Isabel Schmidt, Princeton University
The Antiparliamentary Origins of Modern Presidentialism: Losing Faith in Representative Assemblies in the Interwar Atlantic Noah A. Rosenblum, Columbia University
Between Evangelical Theology and the Liberal Rule of Law: The Confessing Church and the Origins of German Protestant Constitutionalism, 1933–49 Brandon Bloch, Harvard University
Emplacing Nature: Human Territoriality and Leaf-Cutting Ants in Preindustrial Brazil Diogo de Carvalho Cabral, Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics
164. Why History Matters: Practical Impacts of Historians’ Work Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
Locusts Made Simple: Holding Humans Responsible for Insect Behavior in China in the 18th and 19th Centuries David Bello, Washington and Lee University
A Bequest in the Time of Cholera: Epidemics, Education, and Free Orphans of Color in Antebellum New Orleans Elizabeth Neidenbach, National Park Service Agents of Change: Education and Creole Children of Color in PostCivil War New Orleans Mishio Yamanaka, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Comment: LaKisha Simmons, University of Michigan
169. Digital Colonial Latin America: Experiments in Research, Teaching, and Narrative Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Alida Metcalf, Rice University
Comment: Udi Greenberg, Dartmouth College
Panel:
Jeffrey Erbig, University of California, Santa Cruz Jane Mangan, Davidson College Bianca Premo, Florida International University Yanna P. Yannakakis, Emory University
166. Life on the Streets: Regulating Space and Sociability in Early Modern Italy
170. Crossing Borders in Eurasia: 18th-Century Contacts between the Russian Empire and Its Neighbors
Washington Hilton, Columbia 12 Joint session with the Society for Italian Historical Studies
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Chair:
James Millward, Georgetown University Pork-Eating Muslims and Agile Swimmers: Qing Views of the Russians and the Emergence of a Borderland Culture, 1720–1800 Gregory Afinogenov, Georgetown University
Chair:
Bernard D. Cooperman, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
Papers:
Gambling and Male Sociability in the Streets of Early Modern Rome John M. Hunt, Utah Valley University
“Dishonest Words, Noises, and Extraordinary Shouting”: Mapping Sound in Early Modern Florence Julia Rombough, University of Toronto
Work, Play, and Violence in the Streets of Early Modern Bologna Colin Rose, Brock University
Comment: Audience
Program_Book_2018.indd 52
A Clash of Cultures or Different Temperaments: Othering in RussoOttoman Diplomatic Contacts in the 18th Century Mariya Amelicheva, Georgetown University Russian Passports to Persian Merchants: Subject Status in the Caspian, 1738–82 Kevin Gledhill, Yale University
Comment: Willard Sunderland, University of Cincinnati
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
Washington Hilton, Columbia 9
Papers:
Drug Smuggling, the Singularity, and Automated Borders Andrae Marak, Governors State University
Infrastructures of Desire: Transport Mobilities and Immobilities in the Mexican Drug Trade during the 20th Century Michael Kirkland Bess, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
Chair:
Erik S. McDuffie, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
The Liberation of the Negro Nation: The Negro Question and World Revolution Charisse Burden-Stelly, Carleton College
The Negro Question in Cuba Frances Peace Sullivan, Simmons College
Tricontinental Solidarity during the Cold War Sandy Isabel Placido, Harvard University
To Think and Operate as “Third World”: Puerto Rico, Palestine, and the Politics of Resistance Sara Awartani, George Washington University
Comment: Erik S. McDuffie
172. Collaborative Teaching, Writing, and Research in Medieval and Early Modern Women’s History
Infrastructure, Regional Development, and Internal Displacement in Mexico Ariana Angeles Garcia, Centro de Investigación y Docencia in Mexico
Trains, Planes, Automobiles: Transnational Drug Distribution Networks in the Americas Elaine Carey
Comment: Audience
175. The Environmental Axis of Identity Formation: Race, Labor, and Landscape in the Americas, 19th and 20th Centuries Washington Hilton, Columbia 10
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B
Joint session with the Agricultural History Society and the Conference on Latin American History
Joint session with the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Chair:
Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Chair:
Mart Stewart, Western Washington University
Papers:
Teaching the Medieval and Early Modern History of China and Iran Sholeh Quinn, University of California, Merced Ruth Mostern, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
A Waterborne Frontier: Survival, Mobility, and Power on the Hydroscapes of Colonial Brazil, 1750–1835 Mary Hicks, Amherst College
Digging through the Archives Together: Collaborative Research in Medieval Gender and Jewish History Dana Wessell Lightfoot, University of Northern British Columbia Alexandra Guerson, University of Toronto
Two Heads Are Better Than One: Collaborative Writing in Early Modern Women’s History Allyson M. Poska, University of Mary Washington Susan D. Amussen, University of California, Merced
173. Religious Nationalism in Flux
“Black in the Flogging Tree”: Landscape Change and Racial Identities in Amazonia, 1850–2005 Oscar De la Torre, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Erosion and Erasure: Race and Landscape in South Carolina’s Cotton-to-Pine Transition James Giesen, Mississippi State University
How Brazil’s 1970s–80s Biofuel Program Turned Rural Workers into a Cold Lunch Thomas D. Rogers, Emory University
Washington Hilton, Columbia 7
Comment: Mart Stewart
Joint session with the American Society of Church History
176. Race, Identity, and the Movement of Ideas and Information in the Wider French Atlantic World
Chair:
Julia G. Young, Catholic University of America
Papers:
From Fascism to Liberation Theology: Catholic Nationalism in Peru, 1930–80 Matthew Peter Casey, University of California, Davis
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Joint session with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, the French Colonial Historical Society, and the Society for French Historical Studies
When Boundaries Are Relative(s): Conversion, Intermarriage, and the Amorphous Boundaries of the Zionist Movement Anne Perez, University of California, Davis
Chair:
Sue Peabody, Washington State University Vancouver
Towards a Global Ummah and Indonesia’s Contentious Nationalism James Edmonds, Arizona State University
Papers:
Race, Identity, and Imperial Communications: Slave Couriers and the Postal System in the French Atlantic World, 1794–1802 Francesco Morriello, Harvard University
Comment: Julia G. Young
174. The Logistics of Drug Trafficking in the Americas: Mobility, Space, Nation, and Race
Before Race Mattered: Ethnic Prejudice in the French Empire, 1635–1767 Mélanie Lamotte, University of Cambridge Black Auxiliaries beyond Saint-Domingue: Critiques of the French Nation in the Revolutionary Atlantic Charlton W. Yingling, University of Louisville
Washington Hilton, Columbia 8
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Comment: Sue Peabody
Chair:
January 6, 2018
171. Race, Nation, Continent, World: Liberation Struggles and Solidarity Modes
53
Elaine Carey, Purdue University Northwest
Program_Book_2018.indd 53
23/10/17 5:33 PM
54
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
177. Creating Popular Narratives: A Roundtable with Journalists Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom
Chair:
Renisa Mawani, University of British Columbia
Papers:
Swamps and Maritime Piracy: Environmental Law in the Straits of Malacca Nurfadzilah Yahaya, National University of Singapore
Chair:
Rebecca Kaplan, Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
Panel:
Richard Bernstein, freelance journalist Tomas van Houtryve, VII Photo Marvin Kalb, Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Daniella Zalcman, freelance photojournalist
178. Total War and the Genesis of Industrial-Scale Recycling Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Joint session with the Central European History Society
An Ocean Deep: Labor, Capital, and the Pearling Networks of the Indian Ocean Pedro A. Machado, Indiana University
Tropical Heiresses: Property, Tragedy, and Gender in the Francophone Indian Ocean Laurie Wood, Florida State University
Soaking Ecologies: Swamps, Law, and the East India Company in Bengal Debjani Bhattacharyya, Drexel University
Chair:
Anne Kristina Berg, University of Michigan
Comment: Renisa Mawani
Papers:
Skimming off the Fat: Industrial-Scale Recycling in Nazi-Occupied Europe Anne Kristina Berg
181. Remembering the Dead: Slavery and Mortality through Visual Culture, a Comparative Perspective
Toward a Zero Waste Economy: Scope and Impact of the Nazi “Recycling Regime” Heike Weber, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Chair:
Erik R. Seeman, State University of New York at Buffalo
Papers:
The Rose Hall Plantation: The Legend of the White Witch and the (Ghost) Site/Sightings of Slavery in Jamaica Celia E. Naylor, Barnard College, Columbia University
Recycling in War and Peace: Continuities and Discontinuities of Recycling Practices from the 1930s until the 1960s in Britain and West Germany Roman Köster, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Mobilizing Metal for Total War: The Paradoxical Role of Jewish Scrap Metal Traders Chad B. Denton, Yonsei University
Comment: Audience
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2
Eunuchs in Life, Death, and Freak Shows: The Visuality of Race and Gender in Iran, 1860–1900 Beeta Baghoolizadeh, University of Pennsylvania
What the Seligmans Saw: Funerary Rites and Slave Rights in Sudan Katie Hickerson, University of Pennsylvania
Reframing the Colonial Dead: Resistance in Photographs of the Philippine-American War, 1899–1913 Elizabeth Bryer, University of Toronto
179. Alt-Histories and Facts: Neo-Fascist and White Nationalist Historical Revisionism in the 21st Century Washington Hilton, Columbia 11 Chair:
Louie Dean Valencia-García, Texas State University
Papers:
We Want Our Country Back: Land, Sea, and National History in the Far-Right Greek Imaginary David Idol, University of California, San Diego
Comment: Joseph C. Miller, University of Virginia
Poster Session
Between Past and Present: Allied Sexual Violence as a “Usable Past” in Contemporary Italy Stephanie DePaola, Fordham University
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium
From Hiroshima to Dresden: Recasting National Histories of Wartime Suffering A.K.M. Skarpelis, New York University
The Alternative Historiography of the Alt-Right A.J. Bauer, Ursinus College
Alt-ered Histories: Building a Far-Right Movement in the Digital Age Louie Dean Valencia-García
Comment: Lauri Tähtinen, Harvard University and Academy of Finland
180. Amphibious Spaces: Colonial Legal Engagements with Watery Environments
Poster Session #1
The Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the posters on display and engage in considered dialogue and engaging interaction with the presenters. The following presenters will be available to discuss their posters between 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, January 6. 1. 2.
Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction
3.
Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia
Program_Book_2018.indd 54
“We Didn’t Know We Were Making History”: The UAW Women’s Auxiliaries in Great Depression Era Detroit Tiffany Baugh-Helton, Binghamton University, State University of New York This Is What a Feminist Looks Like! Photography and American Feminism, 1968–87 Meaghan Beadle, University of Virginia Tibetan Buddhist Monastics and the Problem of Itinerancy in Indian Citizenship Laws, 1940s–60s Swati Chawla, University of Virginia
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions 4.
Baking Powder Wars: Global Baking, American Style Linda Civitello, independent scholar
5.
Ma’i Ma Ka ’Oihana Mauli Ola: Understanding the Ancient Hawaiian Health System and Indigenous Perceptions of Disease through a Sociocultural History Kealoha Fox, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai’i at Manoa
Catholics in America and Germany, 1870–1914: Empire and National Identity Thomas J. Renna, Saginaw Valley State University
Making a Migrant Ministry in Michigan, 1950–64 Deborah E. Kanter, Albion College
Comment: Dennis Castillo
6.
DC 1968 Marya McQuirter, independent scholar
7.
“How Could I Not Love You?” American Women and US-Chinese Detente Kazushi Minami, University of Texas at Austin
8.
Forgotten: The Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918 Srijita Pal, New York University
9.
Black Pageants and Public Health in the Era of Jim Crow Carrie Streeter, University of California, San Diego
10.
Gendered Power: Hydroelectric and Nuclear Energy Transitions in the Tennessee River Valley Rachel Lanier Taylor, University of Washington
55
American Catholic Historical Association Session 14 Catholic Education and Religious Identity in the Midto Late 20th-Century United States Omni Shoreham, Forum Room Papers:
Catholic College Students and the American Catholic Church: Young Christian Students and the National Federation of Catholic College Students Helen Ciernick, Mount Marty College Paul Murray, Siena College A Model for an Alternate High School: Sr. Mary Pacis as a Case Study of Catholic Educational Innovation in the 1960s and 70s Barbara Shousha, University of Nebraska
Comment: Audience
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. American Catholic Historical Association Session 12 American Catholic Sexual Revolutions Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Monica Mercado, Colgate University
Papers:
The Cultural Margin of Faith: Ingrid Bergman, Anna Magnani, and Alternative Portraits of Catholic Women in Postwar Film Anthony Smith, University of Dayton
Sex, Catholic Style: The Sexual Revolution, Women’s Liberation, and Marriage Magazine, 1960–75 Mary Henold, Roanoke College
The Spiritual Side of the Gay Rights Struggle: The Case of Dignity/New York Thomas F. Rzeznik, Seton Hall University
Comment: Monica Mercado
American Catholic Historical Association Session 13 Catholics, Migration, and National Identity in the 20th-Century United States Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room Chair:
Dennis Castillo, Christ the King Seminary
Papers:
Immigrant Aid Agencies in the United States and Europe on the Eve of World War II Mary Brown, Marymount Manhattan College and Center for Migration Studies
Program_Book_2018.indd 55
Central European History Society Session 10 Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 3: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in 19th-Century Central European History Washington Hilton, Jefferson East Chair:
Pieter M. Judson, European University Institute
Panel:
Deborah Hertz, University of California, San Diego Simone Lässig, German Historical Institute Karen Hagemann, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Kira Thurman, University of Michigan
Comment: Lora Wildenthal, Rice University
January 6, 2018
Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
Chinese Historians in the United States Session 2 Security, Trade, and Nationalism—Perception/ Misperception and US-China Relations Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B Chair:
Danke Li, Fairfield University
Papers:
Francis Knight and Niuzhuang: Treaty Ports and Sino-American Relations in the Early and Mid-19th Century Shuhua Fan, University of Scranton
More Than a Tacit Alliance: Trade, Soft Power, and US-Chinese Rapprochement Reconsidered Mao Lin, Georgia Southern University Meeting the China Threat: The Bandung Conference and US Policy toward Asian Nationalism Tao Wang, Iowa State University
Comment: Xiansheng Tian, Metropolitan State University of Denver
23/10/17 5:33 PM
56
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sessions
Conference on Latin American History Session 39 Transnational Mexico: Shifting Subjecthood in the Global 1960s and 1970s
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 7 Religion and Authority in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Part 1: The Challenge of Sanctity
Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A
Washington Hilton, Lincoln East
Chair:
Ernesto Capello, Macalester College
Chair:
Daniel Bornstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers:
Carlos Fuentes, Richard Goodwin, and the Alliance for Progress Debate That Never Happened Eric Zolov, State University of New York at Stony Brook
Papers:
Teuzo of Florence, Urban Hermit Kathryn L. Jasper, Illinois State University
Materializing the Spiritual Core: Italo-Greek Hagiography and the Construction of Sainthood Kalina Yamboliev, University of California, Santa Barbara
From the Unbelievable to the Impossible: The 1971 World Championships of Women’s Football Brenda J. Elsey, Hofstra University
Urban Geographies of Transnational Activism: Solidarity with Chile in Cold War Mexico City Jessica Stites Mor, University of British Columbia
Liberators or Dissidents? Barbados I, Anthropologists, and Indigenous Rights María L.O. Muñoz, Susquehanna University
False Sanctity and Discipleship in Early Modern Italy: Women and Their Claims to Spiritual Authority Mary Andino, Washington University in St. Louis
Comment: Carol Lansing, University of California, Santa Barbara
Workshop
Comment: Barry Carr, La Trobe University
Conference on Latin American History Session 40 The Global, the Local, the Diasporic, and the In-Between: Puerto Rican History through Different Lenses Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Blanca G. Silvestrini, University of Connecticut at Storrs
Papers:
To Join the Concert of Advanced Nations: The Global Aspirations of Puerto Rico’s Obreros Ilustrados, 1897–1915 Jorell Meléndez-Badillo, University of Connecticut at Storrs
The Street Children of Puerto Rico, 1940–65 Solsiree del Moral, Amherst College
“Little Things Are Big”: Jesus Colon, Race, and the Transnational Ghosts of the Puerto Rican Left Carlos Alamo-Pastrana, Vassar College
White, Black, Brown: Racial Formation in the Puerto Rican Diaspora, 1950–80 Michael Staudenmaier, Aurora University
Comment: Eileen J. Findlay, American University
Polish American Historical Association Session 6 Daily Lives in the Polish American Communities Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Mary Patrice Erdmans, Case Western Reserve University
Papers:
Difficult Beginnings in a New Land: Social and Ethnic Relations in the Americas in the Memoirs of Polish Immigrants Marcin Szerle, independent scholar
Memories of Immigration: Rearticulation of Ethnoreligious Identity in the South Texas Polish Community Sarah Moxy Moczygemba, University of Florida Stills in the Hills: Moonshine Memories from Canada’s First Polish Community Joshua Blank, independent scholar
Saturday, January 6, 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. K–16 Educators’ Workshop: Perspectives on World War I: The Everyday and the Global Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C Sponsored by the College Board Organized with the Society for Military History, the United States World War I Centennial Commission, and the Library of Congress How does the narrative of World War I change with a focus on ordinary people who fought and suffered in it? How does the story differ across global perspectives? This interactive workshop will begin with a keynote by Leila Fawaz, Tufts University, on research from her recent book on the Middle East during and after World War I. This will be followed by a primary source analysis workshop, drawing on documents from the Library of Congress representing global perspectives on the experience of World War I. No charge; because space is limited, free advance registration is required.
Film Festival Saturday, January 6, 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Film Screening: Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Bennett Singer and Nancy Kates, producers and directors (2013) Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History The film illuminates the life and work of Bayard Rustin (1912–87), a civil rights activist who dared to live as an openly gay man during the fiercely homophobic 1940s, 50s, and 60s. Filmmaker Bennett Singer and Kevin Mumford, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, will introduce the film and lead a discussion afterward.
The Holler House: Beer, Bowling, and Bras on Milwaukee’s Polish South Side Neal Pease, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Comment: Audience
Program_Book_2018.indd 56
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
182. Anxious Masculinities in the Age of Empire
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3 Chair:
Tracey Rizzo, University of North Carolina at Asheville
Papers:
Sex and the Colonial City: Mapping Masculinity, Whiteness, and Desire in French Hanoi Michael G. Vann, California State University, Sacramento
Thin and Wistful: James Fugate and the Logic of White Male Frailty in the American Colonial Philippines, 1900–38 Karen Miller, LaGuardia Community College, City University of New York
“Relations Are Not Good”: Gender, Colonialism, and the AngloAmerican Encounter in Wartime India Andrew Muldoon, Metropolitan State University of Denver
Comment: Antoinette Burton, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
184. “Five Slides in Five Minutes” Session for Early Career Scholars Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Research Division This session will be primarily geared toward early career scholars, and will be a lightning round open to all attendees to present their research in a short format. The session will accommodate approximately 15 presentations and will be allocated on a first come/first served basis. Participants will present their research with five slides in five minutes. The session will provide a great opportunity for early career scholars to practice presenting their research to other historians as well as nonspecialists. People interested in participating should contact
[email protected]. Chair:
James H. Sweet, University of Wisconsin–Madison
185. How Working with Teachers Impacted My Work: Historians Reflect on the Value of Education Outreach
Rethinking Accessibility: Developing, Editing, and Publishing Digital Editions Jennifer E. Stertzer, Center for Digital Editing and The Washington Papers, University of Virginia Experimenting with Sentiment Analysis and User Interfaces on the Digital Austin Papers Andrew J. Torget, University of North Texas
Title to Be Determined Joseph C. Wicentowski, Office of the Historian, US Department of State
Integrating and Preserving Digital Texts and Images Paul Israel
Comment: Audience This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 135, 162, 239 and 302.
187. Fifty Years after 1968: Research on the Global 1960s, Part 2: The “Violence Question” in Global 1960s Protest Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Chair:
Eric Zolov, State University of New York at Stony Brook
Papers:
Policing “Violence” in the Aftermath of Japan’s 1968 Takemasa Ando, Musashi University
Counterculture, Anarchism, and the Question of Political Violence in Allende’s Chile Patrick Barr-Melej, Ohio University
Gender Trouble in Guatemalan Student Movement Memories Heather A. Vrana, Southern Connecticut State University
Robert Williams in China: From a Promoter for Armed Revolution to a Nonviolence Activist, 1963–69 Hongshan Li, Kent State University
Comment: Eric Zolov This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 161, 213, 241, 263 and 290.
188. The Prize? Energy, Security, and Expertise Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B
Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction
Chair:
Osamah F. Khalil, Syracuse University
Organized by the AHA Teaching Division
Papers:
The Experts’ Apocalypse: Peak Oil and Phantasm on the Road to the Middle East Roger Stern, University of Tulsa
Chair:
Andy Mink, National Humanities Center
Panel:
Luis Martinez-Fernandez, University of Central Florida Joshua Reid, University of Washington Andrew Jackson O’Shaughnessy, Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies, Monticello
186. Primary Sources and the Historical Profession in the Age of Text Search, Part 3: Digital Texts and the Future of Digital History: Challenges, Opportunities, and Experimentation in Digital Documentary Editing Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Chair:
Paul Israel, Thomas Edison Papers, Rutgers University
Papers:
Challenges and Opportunities for Sustaining Digital Editions Ben William Brumfield, Brumfield Labs
Program_Book_2018.indd 57
Continental Shelf Expansion: The US Interior Department’s Quest for Oil, 1945–69 Megan Black, London School of Economics and Political Science
January 6, 2018
Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Program Committee
57
Oil Sovereignty, American Foreign Policy, and the 1968 Coup in Iraq Brandon Wolfe-Hunnicutt, California State University, Stanislaus The Uses of Energy Independence Victor Robert McFarland, University of Missouri
Comment: Osamah F. Khalil
23/10/17 5:33 PM
58
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
189. Memory and Mimesis: Legacies of War, Violence, and Occupation in Decolonizing Europe
Papers:
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
Joint session with the French Colonial Historical Society and the Society for French Historical Studies
Chair:
Darcie S. Fontaine, University of South Florida
Papers:
Decolonizing Violence in Indonesia, 1945–49: Death Trains, Liberators, and (Dutch) Nazis Jennifer L. Foray, Purdue University
“Concentration Camps” in French Algeria? Political Internment and the Perils of Memory, 1954–62 Emma Kuby, Northern Illinois University
The Gaullist Memorial at Mont-Valérien: Army, Empire, and Faith Philip G. Nord, Princeton University
Comment: Darcie S. Fontaine
190. The Kerner Report at 50: Riots, Policing, and Liberalism in Crisis Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
Patricia A. Sullivan, University of South Carolina
Panel:
Daniel Geary, Trinity College, Dublin Elizabeth Hinton, Harvard University Robert Shellow, Bethesda, Maryland Julian Zelizer, Princeton University and CNN
191. Thinking with Objects: New Directions in Social and Cultural History
Recording Studios on Tour: Victor’s Expeditions through Latin America, 1905–28 Sergio Ospina-Romero, Cornell University Spinning Race: African American Music and the Transatlantic Record Industry Celeste Day Moore, Hamilton College
Born in the USA (Made in the GDR): Anglo-American Music in a Communist Record Market Sven Kube, Florida International University
Comment: David Suisman
194. New Approaches to Transnational Anarchism in the 20th Century Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Chair:
Tom Goyens, Salisbury University
Papers:
A Spanish Dreyfus Affair: The Anarchist Human Rights Campaign to Save Francisco Ferrer Mark Bray, Dartmouth College
The Biggest Little School in the World: Liming Advanced Middle School (Liming Gaozhong, 1928–34) and Anarchist Education in East Asia Dongyoun Hwang, Soka University of America
Anarchist Responses to the Rise of the Welfare State Andrew Cornell, Williams College
Comment: Ariel Mae Lambe, University of Connecticut
195. Eating, Body Shapes, and the Making and Unmaking of Race and National Belonging in 20th-Century America and Europe Washington Hilton, Columbia 10
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Alice L. Conklin, Ohio State University
Chair:
Jürgen Martschukat, University of Erfurt
Papers:
Recycling and the Ontology of the Object in Late Medieval Europe Daniel L. Smail, Harvard University
Papers:
The Calorie and the Making and Unmaking of Racial Bodies Nina Mackert, University of Erfurt
Human-Object Relations and the Invention of the Noble Savage Surekha Davies, Western Connecticut State University
The Fat American in European Eyes: Feeding, Fattening, and Animality Christopher E. Forth, University of Kansas
Death of the Object; or, The “Inherent Corruption” of a Peruvian Mummy and the Microhistory of Things Christopher H. Heaney, Penn State University
Fat Shaming as Race Shaming Psyche Williams-Forson, University of Maryland, College Park
Chair:
Comment: Bonnie Effros, University of Liverpool and University of Florida
Comment: Paula-Irene Villa, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich
196. Historicizing the Queerly Feminine in Canadian and US LGBTQ Communities
192. Emotions, Technology, and the American Self
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West
Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Arwen Mohun, University of Delaware
Panel:
Jim Block, DePaul University Gary Cross, Penn State University Susan J. Matt, Weber State University Luke O. Fernandez, Weber State University David Nye, University of Southern Denmark
193. Records and Revolutions: The Music Industry as an Agent of Change Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Chair:
David Suisman, University of Delaware
Program_Book_2018.indd 58
Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Amanda H. Littauer, Northern Illinois University
Papers:
Forgotten Histories: Recuperating Queer Femme Identities through Life Writing Laura Brightwell, York University
Have an Erotic Day: Producing Sex-Positive Feminism at the Lusty Lady Theater Jayne Swift, University of Minnesota Transnational Effeminacies: Femmephobia, Gay Effeminacies, and the Biopolitics of Gay Imperialism Adam Davies, University of Toronto
23/10/17 5:33 PM
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions Feminine Aesthetics and Identities in Women’s Neo-Pagan Spiritual Communities on the American West Coast Jenna Danchuk, York University
200. Oliver Cromwell Cox’s Race, Class, and Caste after 70 Years: Categories of Analysis and the Transnational Turn Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2
Comment: Audience
197. New Perspectives on the Ethnohistory of the Spanish Borderlands Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair:
Elizabeth Esch, University of Kansas
Papers:
Social Formation and Political Identity in the Neo-Liberal Age Gyanendra Pandey, Emory University
Reading Cox with Ambedkar: Untouchability’s Place in the Debate over Race and Caste Jon Soske, McGill University
Chair:
Mark G. Hanna, University of California, San Diego
Papers:
War and Reducción in Colonial Mexico’s Chichimecatlalli, 1590–1610 Dana Velasco Murillo, University of California, San Diego
Christian or Family Symbols? The Drawings on the Ceiling of Las Trampas Chapel, New Mexico Danna Alexandra Levin-Rojo, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Azcapotzalco
The Pine Nut Trade in 17th-Century Mexico Tatiana Seijas, Penn State University
The Nahuas and New Mexico Travis Jeffres, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Caste, Class, Hinduism, and Hindutva: Engaging Cox to Understand Modi’s India Radhika Desai, University of Manitoba The Materiality of Social Stratification: Caste, Class, and Housing in Bombay Juned Shaikh, University of California, Santa Cruz
Generalizing Caste: Activist and Scholarly Challenges to the Geographic Specificity of Caste Purvi Mehta, Colorado College
Comment: Leslie S. Offutt, Vassar College
201. Fighting against the War on Poverty
198. Prescribing Race? Rethinking the History of Medicine
Chair:
Marc Simon Rodriguez, Portland State University
Papers:
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3
Chair:
Richard M. Mizelle, University of Houston
Papers:
Race and the Medicalization of Intersex in 20th-Century America Sandra Eder, University of California, Berkeley
Fracturing the Antipoverty Coalition: Race, Religion, and Opposition to the War on Poverty Robert A. Bauman, Washington State University Tri-Cities
Fighting the War on Poverty in Mississippi Emma Folwell, Newman University
“A Eugenic Endeavor”: African American Physicians and the Medicalization of the Negro Problem, 1900–40 Ayah Nuriddin, Johns Hopkins University
From Berea to Junaluska: Challenges to the Appalachian War on Poverty Tom Kiffmeyer, Morehead State University
Making Child Abuse White: Parents Anonymous and Child Abuse Policy in the 1970s Mical Raz, University of Pennsylvania
Comment: Marc Simon Rodriguez
“Smaller Lung Capacity of the Colored Race”: The Debate on Asthma and Hay Fever Susceptibility, 1874–1922 Ijeoma Kola, Columbia University
Comment: Audience
199. High vs. Low: A Roundtable Discussion of High Modernism and Low Modernism in the History of Agrarian Development
202. Water and Urban Power in 20th-Century Latin America Washington Hilton, Columbia 12 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Mikael Wolfe, Stanford University
Papers:
A New El Dorado: Watering a Transborder Boom Town, 1920–40 Hillar Schwertner, Georgetown University
Irrigating the Revolution: The Politics of Water in Bolivia’s National Revolution, 1952–64 Sarah Hines, University of Maine at Machias
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B
Joint session with the Agricultural History Society
Chair:
Sterling Evans, University of Oklahoma
Panel:
James C. Scott, Yale University Jess Gilbert, University of Wisconsin–Madison Deborah Fitzgerald, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Tore Olsson, University of Tennessee at Knoxville
Program_Book_2018.indd 59
January 6, 2018
59
From Guarapiranga to Billings: Changes in São Paulo’s Urban Water Supply, 1940–60 Douglas McRae, Georgetown University Waste and Water: The Bogotá River in the History of the 20th Century Stefania Gallini, Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Comment: Mark Healey, University of Connecticut at Storrs
23/10/17 5:33 PM
60
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
203. From the Crises of the European Mind to the Age of Extremes Washington Hilton, Columbia 11
206. Rethinking the Family in Early America Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Chair:
Lisa H. Wilson, Connecticut College
Chair:
Dane K. Kennedy, George Washington University and National History Center
Papers:
Papers:
Ethnic and National(ist) Visions in the 18th Century Matthew D’Auria, University of East Anglia
“Prayerless Mother! Spare, Oh Spare Your Child”: Missionaries, Heathens, and the Maternal Ideal in the Early American Republic Cassandra Nicole Berman, Brandeis University
Nationalism and National Identity during the First World War in Global and Imperial Perspective Jan Vermeiren, University of East Anglia
Nationalism, Ethnic Cleansing, and Genocide Omer Bartov, Brown University
Comparative Perspectives on Patriotism under Occupation in the Second World War Aviel I. Roshwald, Georgetown University
Comment: Lisa H. Wilson
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Joint session with the French Colonial Historical Society, the Society for French Historical Studies, and the Western Society for French History
Slavery, Family, and Intimacy on New England Smallholdings Gloria Whiting, University of Wisconsin–Madison
207. Teaching with Material Culture and Historic Sites Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom
Comment: Cathie Carmichael, University of East Anglia
204. Webs of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism in the French Empire
“Above the Age of 21 Years”: Age, Dependency, and Parental Assertions of Control in the Early Republic Holly White, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
Chair:
Scott Casper, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Panel:
Zara Anishanslin, University of Delaware Daniel Gifford, George Mason University Cassandra A. Good, Marymount University Whitney Martinko, Villanova University
Poster Session
Chair:
Jennifer Sessions, University of Iowa
Papers:
From Chad to Libya to Paris: Colonial Violence and the Rise of Fascism in France Caroline Jane Campbell, University of North Dakota
Infinite Indenture: 19th-Century Chinese Coolie Labor across Empires Molly Giblin, Dominican University
Claiming Family Benefits across Borders: Race and Algerian Migrants in Post-World War II Morocco Margaret Cook Andersen, University of Tennessee at Knoxville
The Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the posters on display and engage in considered dialogue and engaging interaction with the presenters. The following presenters will be available to discuss their posters between 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, January 6.
Famine, Nutrition, and Race in the French Empire Yan Slobodkin, Stanford University
1.
Network Mapping: French Print in Exile Hilary E. Gordon, Claremont Graduate University
Comment: Audience
2.
205. Historical GIS: Topics in the 19th Century
The Highlandization of Scotland, 1688–1783: War, Ethnicity, and the French Connection Richard Lockton, Indiana University
Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m.
Poster Session #2 Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium
3.
The Pneuma Network: Charting the Global Pentecostal Press in the Early 20th Century Lindsey Maxwell, Florida International University
Chair:
Alida C. Metcalf, Rice University
Papers:
Risks in Representing a West African City: Mapping 19th-Century Lagos Ademide J. Adelusi-Adeluyi, University of California, Riverside
Where “There Remain No Slaves”: Historical GIS and Emancipation in the United States Scott Nesbit, University of Georgia
Mapping the General Strike: The Political and Economic Impact of African American Self-Emancipation under Reconstruction John Clegg, New York University
Popular Song across the World in World War I: Beyond the Question of Morale John Mullen, University of Rouen
6.
Racism, Progressivism, and the Age of Reform in the Classroom Peter A. Porter, Seton Hall University
7.
Akwesasne, a Nation Divided by More Than the St. Lawrence River Ernest Rugenstein IV, Hudson Valley Community College
Mapping Disease, Race, and Class in New Orleans, 1877–1915: The Effects of Mortality Terrains on Socioeconomic Development S. Wright Kennedy, Rice University
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4.
5.
Big Questions, Many Answers: A Thematic, Document-Based Approach to Teaching US History Rosalie Metro, University of Missouri
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Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
9.
10.
National History Day Senior Individual Exhibit Winner: The Safekeepers of History: A Monumental Stand for Cultural Preservation during the Second World War Hannah Scott, Odessa, Missouri
American Catholic Historical Association Session 16 Varieties of Catholic Missionary Efforts in Asia from the 18th through the 20th Century
Major Powell Turns 150: A Sesquicentennial Interdisciplinary Reassessment of the Expeditions of John Wesley Powell between 1867–75 Raymond Sumner, Colorado State University and American Military University
Papers:
20th-Century Missions in Deaf Asian Culture Marlana Portolano, Towson Univeristy
Nguyen-Catholic Alliance in the Late 18th and Early 19th Century Lan Ngo, Catholic University of America
Descent Thinking: Pedigrees, Genes, and Aesthetic Ideals in German and American Eugenics, 1890–1940 Amir Teicher, Tel Aviv University
Comment: Audience
Workshop
Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room
American Catholic Historical Association Session 17 Catholic Images, Narratives, and Identities in Early Modern Europe Omni Shoreham, Forum Room Papers:
Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
ImaginePhD and Career Diversity: Integrating Self Assessment, Career Exploration, and Planning into History Departments Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2
Launched in fall 2017, ImaginePhD is a free and confidential career exploration and planning tool for humanities and social science PhDs. Powered by the Graduate Career Consortium, and created by more than 80 PhD career and professional development leaders across the United States and Canada, this platform provides a unique opportunity for PhDs to assess their skills, interests, and values; map those onto career paths; and create an individual development plan that supports degree completion and professional/personal development. Please join Annie Maxfield, ImaginePhD project design and development lead and user experience chair, for this interactive training session to learn how to use this tool in your department and integrate it into career diversity initiatives. To make the most of this session, please bring a laptop or iPad. Chair:
Annie Maxfield, Career Center, University of California, Los Angeles
Exile and Honey: The Eschatological Message of Casiodoro De Reina’s Biblia Del Oso Juan-Fernando Leon, Wheaton College
“Rito Greco, Lingua Dalmatica”: Greek Catholic Ruthenians in Early Modern Rome Anatole Upart, University of Chicago
Comment: Audience
Association of Ancient Historians Reconsidering the World of the Ancient Greeks and Romans Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A Chair:
Rachael B. Goldman, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Papers:
Searching for the Araxes River in Herodotus, Strabo, and Callisthenes Christopher M. Kegerreis, University of California, Santa Barbara
Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. American Catholic Historical Association Session 15 Catholicism, American Identity, and Foreign Relations in the 20th Century Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Mary Brown, Marymount Manhattan College and Center for Migration Studies
Papers:
Religious Freedom and the Catholic Church: A Fruit of Americanization? Rafal Milerski, Ludwig-Maximilian University
An American in Rome: Henry Cabot Lodge’s Service as US Ambassador to the Vatican, 1970–74 Sean Brennan, University of Scranton
Comment: Mary Brown
A Martyr for His Season, and Thus All Seasons: Henry Walpole, SJ; Richard Verstegan; and the Elizabethan Catholic Martyr Discourse Jeanne-Michelle Datiles, Catholic University of America
January 6, 2018
8.
61
Finding Ancient Immigrant Lives Ryan R. Abrecht, University of San Diego
“Dude, Where’s My Slave?” Roman Slavery at Night Jason Linn, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
“No Barbarian Dared to Break His Proper Bounds”: Fleeting Roman Power and the Pursuit of Glory in Late Antiquity Nikolaus Leo Overtoom, University of New Mexico
Central European History Society Session 11 Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 4: A Neglected Era: The Long 19th Century in Central European History Washington Hilton, Jefferson East Chair:
James M. Brophy, University of Delaware
Panel:
Roger Chickering, Georgetown University Suzanne Lynn Marchand, Louisiana State University Jonathan Sperber, University of Missouri–Columbia Anthony Steinhoff, Université du Québec à Montréal
Comment: Helmut W. Smith, Vanderbilt University
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Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions
Chinese Historians in the United States Session 3 Corruption and Anticorruption in Modern China Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B Chair:
Xiansheng Tian, Metropolitan State University of Denver
Papers:
Anticorruption in the Late Qing Dynasty, 1840–1912 Qiang Fang, University of Minnesota Duluth
Wartime Corruption and Financial Coordination in the Late Qing Dynasty, 1851–1908 Zenghe Liu, Jinan University
Accountability, Supervision, and Penalty: Yuan Shikai as a Watchdog in Managing Government Officials Patrick Fuliang Shan, Grand Valley State University
Anticorruption Policy and Corruption Tolerance: The Lost Political Battle and the Fate of the GMD in the Chinese Civil War, 1946–49 Xiaobing Li, University of Central Oklahoma
Comment: Danke Li, Fairfield University
Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Session 10 Visibility and Viability: Queer Communities of Color in 20th-Century American History Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Kevin J. Mumford, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Legacy and Legitimacy: Race, Sexuality, and the Cowboy in 20th-Century American History Rebecca Scofield, University of Idaho
“Don’t Look at Me!” Reframing the Lens of Black Queer Life and Sociality Terrance Wooten, Washington University in St. Louis
We’ve Had Anuff: Black Gay and Lesbian Antipoverty Activism during the HIV/AIDS Crisis in Atlanta, 1985–96 Andrew Pope, Harvard University
Comment: Kevin J. Mumford
Conference on Faith and History Session 2 Roundtable Discussion: Writing Women’s Religious Biography Washington Hilton, Lincoln West Chair:
Heather Hartung Vacek, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary
Comments: Kristin Kobes Du Mez, Calvin College David Holland, Harvard Divinity School Nancy Koester, independent scholar Matthew Avery Sutton, Washington State University
Conference on Latin American History Session 43 Slavery and Gradual Emancipation in the Americas
Comment: David N. Gellman, DePauw University
Conference on Latin American History Session 44 Implementing Authoritarianism: Overlooked Sectors under Latin America’s Cold War Regimes Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
David M. K. Sheinin, Trent University
Papers:
Outcast Officers: Political Persecution in the Brazilian Armed Forces in the Wake of the Military Coup, 1964–66 Marilia Correa, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Erika Edwards, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Papers:
The Problem of Prejudice: Confronting Slavery’s Bulwark in Early United States Emancipation Paul J. Polgar, University of Mississippi
Liberta by Trade? Entanglements of Inheritance, Kinship, and Unfree Labor in Gradual Abolition Buenos Aires, 1820s–30s Paulina Laura Alberto, University of Michigan
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Politicization, Repression, and National Health: The Brazilian Military Regime and the Medical Sector, 1964–85 Eyal Weinberg, University of Texas at Austin
No Longer a Laughing Matter: The Police, the Public, and the Tupamaros during the Uruguayan Dictatorship Lindsey Churchill, University of Central Oklahoma
Excited State: How the Nuclear Sector Disciplined the Argentine Military Government, 1976–83 David M. K. Sheinin
Comment: Heidi Tinsman, University of California, Irvine
Conference on Latin American History Session 45 The Politics of the Apolitical in Latin America: Nation, Youth, and Community, 1960–90 Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Lillian Guerra, University of Florida
Papers:
“My Body Is My Patria”: Dancing Community and Nationhood in the 1960s Cuban Diaspora Elizabeth Schwall, Northwestern University
“As Fair and as Objective as Possible”: Choosing Mexican Candidates for US Scholarships in the 1970s–80s Rachel Newman, Columbia University
Home Alone in Pinochet’s Chile: Memories of Adolescence under Authoritarianism Marian E. Schlotterbeck, University of California, Davis
The Politics of the Welfare State and Adoptions in Civil War Era Guatemala Rachel Nolan, New York University
Comment: Lillian Guerra
Goldberg Center for Excellence in Teaching Session 2 History and the Future Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2 Chair:
David J. Staley, Ohio State University
Papers:
“Why” and “Whither”: The Challenges of Teaching the Future in a History Department David Hochfelder, State University of New York, University at Albany
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South Chair:
Abolitionist and Anti-Abolitionist Publics in Gradual Emancipation Colombia Yesenia Barragan, Dartmouth College
Scenarios of the Future Peter Bishop, Teach the Future
Teaching the Future of Technology David J. Staley
Comment: Audience
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Saturday, January 6, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions, Luncheons 63
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3 Chair:
Clara Altman, Federal Judicial History Office, Federal Judicial Center
Panel:
Daniel Holt, Senate Historical Office Stephen Patrick Randolph, US Department of State Jeffrey S. Reznick, US National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health John Swann, US Food and Drug Administration
Polish American Historical Association Session 7 Female Friendships: Emotions, Experiences, Memory, and Narratives Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Anna D. Jaroszynska-Kirchmann, ´ Eastern Connecticut State University
Papers:
Friends from Nowolipki: Female Friendship among Working-Class Women in Warsaw, 1905–35 Alicja Kusiak-Brownstein, University of Notre Dame
Female Friendship in Homosocial Context: Sociological and Historical Perspective Anna Muller, University of Michigan–Dearborn
Between Friends and Enemies: Women’s Same Gender Relationships in Recent Polish American Fiction Graz˙yna Kozaczka, Cazenovia College
Cloud Beauties and Flower Sisters: The Role of Female Friendship in the Emerging Identity of Chinese-American Women Patrycja Kordel, University of Gda´ nsk
Comment: Audience
Panel:
Tickets ($40) should be purchased through the AHA’s registration process.
Saturday, January 6, 12:00–1:30 p.m. Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Luncheon Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Presiding: Peter L. Hahn, Ohio State University Speaker:
Washington Hilton, Lincoln East Chair:
Daniel Bornstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers:
The Day the Emperor Became Podestà: Power and Authority in a 14th-Century Italian Commune Luca Roberto Foti, Washington University in St. Louis
Roman Baroni, Religion, and Power in Late Medieval Italy Emily Graham, Oklahoma State University
The Other Fall of Rome: Piety and Governance in the Late 14th Century James A. Palmer, Florida State University
Comment: Maureen C. Miller, University of California, Berkeley
Luncheons
Bernath Lecture: “Pax Americana: Sketches for an Undiplomatic History” Daniel Sargent, University of California, Berkeley
SHAFR will award the Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize, the Stuart L. Bernath Dissertation Research Grant, the W. Stull Holt Dissertation Fellowship, the Michael J. Hogan Foreign Language Fellowship, the Lawrence Gelfand-Armin RappaportWalter LaFeber Dissertation Fellowship, the Samuel Flagg Bemis Dissertation Research Grants, and the William Appleman Williams Junior Faculty Research Grants. Tickets ($35 or $25 for students) should be purchased through the AHA’s registration process.
Saturday, January 6, 12:00–1:30 p.m. AHA Modern European History Section Luncheon Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Room Presiding: Deborah A. Cohen, Northwestern University and section chair Speaker:
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 8 Religion and Authority in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Part 2: Rome and the Papal State
Patrick Fridenson, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Shennette M. Garrett-Scott, University of Mississippi Lindsay Schakenbach Regele, Miami University Ohio Philip Scranton, Rutgers University at Camden Mark R. Wilson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Tiffany Gill, University of Delaware
The Great Chernobyl Acceleration: How Writing European History has Changed in the Age of the Anthropocene Kate Brown, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
The luncheon is open to all. Tickets are $35 for AHA members and $45 for nonmembers and can be purchased in advance through the registration form or at the meeting at the onsite registration counters. Individuals who only want to hear the speech are invited to arrive at 12:45 p.m.
Saturday, January 6, 12:00–1:30 p.m.
January 6, 2018
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 7 Federal Government Historians and the Public
Department Chairs’ Luncheon Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room Organized by the AHA’s Institutional Membership Program and the AHA Professional Division Department chairs are invited to share experiences, discuss common issues, and receive encouragement from their colleagues. Incoming, current and former chairs are welcome to attend. Tickets are $30 for members and $60 for nonmembers. Tickets can be purchased in advance through the registration form or at the meeting at the onsite registration counters.
Saturday, January 6, 12:00–1:30 p.m. Business History Conference Luncheon: Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism: Perspectives from Business History Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room
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Saturday, January 6, Luncheons and Other Events
Saturday, January 6, 12:00–2:00 p.m. American Catholic Historical Association Presidential Luncheon Omni Shoreham, Ambassador Ballroom
3. 4.
Film Festival
5.
Saturday, January 6, 12:00–2:00 p.m.
6.
Film Screening: Through Chinatown’s Eyes: April 1968
Bridging the Historical Thinking Gap: High School History Teachers and Their Methods, Communities, and Identities Marla Doughty, University of Portland Seeing the Realities of the Landscape: Mapping the Industry of the Antebellum Gulf South Michael Frawley, University of Texas of the Permian Basin Co-opting the Border: The Dream of African American Integration via Baja California Laura Hooton, University of California, Santa Barbara
Suffrage, Scholars, and Sentinels: University Women in the 19th Amendment Campaign Kelly Marino, Binghamton University, State University of New York
The civil disturbances and street violence after the assassination of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. had a profound impact on all of Washington, DC. It had no less an impact on DC’s Chinatown, which found itself caught between the black and white struggle.
8.
Empire on the Ice Sheet: Operation Deep Freeze and Richard Evelyn Byrd Hillary Sebeny, Florida State University
9.
Visualizing Race and Gender in Historic Site Interpretation Rebecca K. Shrum, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
Ting-Yi Oie, 1882 Foundation, will moderate a discussion with filmmakers Penny Lee and Lisa Mao; Ted Gong, 1882 Federation; and Samir Meghelli, Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, about the film and its related curriculum.
10.
Historical Inquiry as Library Staff Development Kimberly Windham, Windham Consulting Pamela Monroe, Florida A&M University Alvin Lee, Florida A&M University
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Penny Lee and Lisa Mao, directors (2015)
7.
The Geography of Privilege: The History of the National Mall and Its Excluded Stories Katherine (Katie) Crawford-Lackey, Middle Tennessee State University
Luncheon
AHA Career Fair
Saturday, January 6, 12:15–1:30 p.m.
Saturday, January 6, 1:00–4:00 p.m.
Coordinating Council for Women in History Annual Awards Luncheon of the CCWH
Career Fair
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Presiding: Barbara Molony, Santa Clara University Speaker:
The Promise of Patriarchy Ula Taylor, University of California, Berkeley
Tickets ($35 or $10 for students) should be purchased through the AHA’s registration process.
Poster Session Saturday, January 6, 1:00–3:00 p.m.
Poster Session #3 Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium
The Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the posters on display and engage in considered dialogue and engaging interaction with the presenters. The following presenters will be available to discuss their posters between 1:00 and 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, January 6. 1. 2.
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Sponsored by the AHA’s Career Diversity for Historians initiative The AHA will hold its fifth Career Fair during the 2018 annual meeting. The Career Fair introduces job candidates and students to historians working in a wide variety of careers. Advisers will be available for informational interviews and informal conversations to share their experiences about how to transition from history studies to careers within and beyond the professoriate. Last year, advisers came from business, academic administration, universities, independent schools, community colleges, historical societies, government, and publishing. All AHA annual meeting attendees are invited to participate; contact Dylan Ruediger at
[email protected] for more information.
Ask an Assistant Professor Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 What is a professor job actually like? This informal event, held in conjunction with the Career Fair, provides graduate students and others interested in academic careers the chance to speak freely with faculty from a wide variety of institutions about their work as teachers, administrators, and scholars. All AHA annual meeting attendees are invited to participate; contact Dylan Ruediger at
[email protected] for more information.
Refining Rookwood: Shirayamadani and Sympathetic Appropriation in Cincinnati, 1887–1915 Christa Adams, Cuyahoga Community College Rediscovering Native North America: “Forgotten” Settlements and 18th-Century Cartography Chad Anderson, Hartwick College
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Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions Early Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. 208. Thinking Race and Race Thinking around the “Francophone” Black Atlantic Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1 Joint session with the French Colonial Historical Society and the Western Society for French History Chair:
Alice L. Conklin, Ohio State University
Panel:
Jennifer Anne Boittin, Penn State University Christopher M. Church, University of Nevada at Reno Minayo Anne Nasiali, University of California, Los Angeles Sarah Zimmerman, Western Washington University
65
assigned character. Unlike in regular classes, no written work is required, but participants should make short speeches, in character, advocating the goals and beliefs of their assigned character. After a short break, the workshop will be followed by a session discussing the limits and possibilities of embodied performance as a teaching tool for this particular subject and more generally as a method for delivering historical content and complexity in the undergraduate classroom. No charge; because space is limited, free advance registration is required by December 15. Chair:
Mark D. Higbee, Eastern Michigan University
Game Leaders:
Clare Crowston, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Priscilla A. Dowden-White, University of Missouri–St. Louis Sean Taylor, Minnesota State University Moorhead
213. Fifty Years after 1968: Research on the Global 1960s, Part 3: Third Worldism in the Global 1960s
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Professional Division
Chair:
Andrew Ivaska, Concordia University
Papers:
How to Fit into the Third World? New Left Culture and Politics in 1960s Argentina Valeria Manzano, Universidad de San Martín
Chair:
Kevin Boyle, Northwestern University
Panel:
Susan Ferber, Oxford University Press Steven A. Forman, W.W. Norton and Company Timothy Mennel, University of Chicago Press
210. New Perspectives on Female Bondage: Reproduction, Medicine, and the Archives of Slavery in the Atlantic World Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2
In Between the First and the Third World: Japanese Perception of Third Worldism in the Global Sixties Kei Takata, University of Duisburg-Essen
Third-Worldism and 1968 in the Former French Empire Burleigh Hendrickson, Boston College
War in the Postwar: West Germany and Japan Protest the War in Indochina Alexander Finn Macartney, Georgetown University
Chair:
Sasha Turner, Quinnipiac University
Comment: Andrew Ivaska
Panel:
Sarah L. Franklin, University of North Alabama Marisa J. Fuentes, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Deirdre Cooper Owens, Queens College, City University of New York Lisa Ze Winters, Wayne State University
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 161, 187, 241, 263 and 290.
211. The Struggle to Commemorate Reconstruction in National Parks Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chairs:
Gregory P. Downs, University of California, Davis Kate Masur, Northwestern University
Panel:
Michael A. Allen, National Park Service Bruce Babbitt, Department of the Interior Eric Foner, Columbia University Thavolia Glymph, Duke University Billy Keyserling, Beaufort, South Carolina
212. Reacting to the Past Workshop, Part 1: The Frederick Douglass Reacting to the Past Game: A Participatory Pedagogy for College Classrooms on Slavery and Abolitionism Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom In this workshop, participants will play a condensed version of the Reacting to the Past game, Frederick Douglass, Slavery, and the Constitution: 1845. Participants will be assigned distinct, unique roles, like students in an actual class playing the game over several weeks, but this workshop is highly condensed. As in all reacting games, each person will seek to advance the victory objectives of their
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214. Displaying the Nation: Visions of Past and Future in Modern Japan Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Panelists will each present a 10-minute argument structured on automatically advancing slides. Chairs:
Jessamyn Abel, Penn State University Ran Zwigenberg, Penn State University
Papers:
Citadels of Modernity: Exhibiting Castles in Imperial Japan Oleg Benesch, University of York
Peace for Our Time? The 1937 Nagoya Pan-Pacific Peace Exhibition Nathan Hopson, Nagoya University
Hiroshima Tourism and the Long Shadow of Militarism in Postwar Japan Ran Zwigenberg
Rickshaws and Rockets: Exhibiting Japan at the 1964 World’s Fair Jessamyn Abel
Transforming the Nation: A Critique of the Olympic Games in 21st-Century Japan Robin Kietlinski, LaGuardia Community College, City University of New York
January 6, 2018
Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room
209. A Q & A with Publishers
Comment: Audience
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Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions
215. New Directions in Trans History: A Roundtable
219. Sexual Violence in Historical Context
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Howard Chiang, University of California, Davis
Panel:
Jesse Bayker, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Emily E. Skidmore, Texas Tech University C. Riley Snorton, Cornell University Elias Vitulli, Mount Holyoke College
216. Rethinking Territories: Oceans, Islands, and Geopolitics in Antarctica, the Caribbean, and the Pacific Washington Hilton, Columbia 7
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Chair:
Kathryn Tomasek, Wheaton College (Masachusetts)
Papers:
Sexual Coercion, Religion, and Slavery in Later Medieval Europe Elizabeth Casteen, Binghamton University, State University of New York
The (In)Visibility of Sexual Violence in the Archives of Slavery Stephanie Jones-Rogers, University of California, Berkeley
The Politics of Rape in Colonial South Africa Elizabeth Thornberry, Johns Hopkins University
220. Navigating Identity and Community in the Gray Zones of Empire
Chair:
John Soluri, Carnegie Mellon University
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B
Papers:
Building Empires on the Backs of Whales: 19th-Century Japanese Whaling and Territorial Expansion Jakobina Arch, Whitman College
Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair:
Scott C. Levi, Ohio State University
The Contested Maritime Mosquitia: Nicaragua, Great Britain, and the Caribbean Turtle Fishery, 1894–1905 Sharika D. Crawford, US Naval Academy
Papers:
Ethné at the Limits: Collectivities and Change in the ChinaSoutheast Asia Borderlands Bradley Camp Davis, Eastern Connecticut State University
Creating and Recreating Community in the Gray Zones of Empires Purnima Dhavan, University of Washington
Unnamed Identity Systems at the Margins of Empire Rian Thum, Loyola University New Orleans
The Geology in Geopolitics: Archipelagic Studies and Subterranean Territorial Claims in Argentine and Chilean Antarctica Ryan C. Edwards, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Comment: Audience
217. Women’s Agency and Activism of Women Historians in Texas History Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Chair:
Amy Porter, Texas A&M University–San Antonio
Papers:
Transnational Advocate: Jovita Idar and the Quest to Redeem La Raza Gabriela Gonzalez, University of Texas at San Antonio
Agency and Activism of Women of Color in Texas Dwonna Goldstone, Austin Peay State University
Texas History and the Pan-American Child: The SpanishLanguage Textbooks of Jovita González Philis Barragán Goetz, Texas A&M University–San Antonio
Comment: Cynthia E. Orozco, Eastern New Mexico University, Ruidoso
218. Anatomy and the Construction of Identity
Chair:
Philippa Levine, University of Texas at Austin
Papers:
Imagining an Imperial Future: Partition Planning in British Mandate Palestine Penny Sinanoglou, Wake Forest University
Unintended Consequences: Imperial Federalism, Colonial SelfGovernment, and the Convoluted Histories of Britain’s Partition Arie Dubnov, George Washington University
Political Arguments with a Margin of Error: A Minority Report Vazira F.-Y. Zamindar, Brown University
Rejecting Partition: The Imported Lessons of Palestine’s Binational Zionists Adi Gordon, Amherst College
Joint session with the History of Science Society
Comment: Audience
Papers:
Joseph Banks and the Skull Trade Anita Guerrini, Oregon State University
American Fossils: Exhibiting Nature and Nation in New York’s Great Dinosaur Hall Alison Laurence, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A
Karen A. Rader, Virginia Commonwealth University
221. “Divide et Impera” or Prologue to Decolonization? New Perspectives on 20th-Century Partition Politics
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Chair:
Comment: Scott C. Levi
The Anatomy of Antisemitism: Jews, Cadavers, and the Politics of Medical Discourse in East Central Europe Natalia Aleksiun, Touro College, Graduate School of Jewish Studies
222. Historical Perspectives on Sovereignty in the Americas Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Karin A. Rosemblatt, University of Maryland, College Park
Panel:
Seth Garfield, University of Texas at Austin Rebecca Herman, University of California, Berkeley Katherine Marino, Ohio State University Christy Thornton, Harvard University
Comment: Karen A. Rader
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Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions 223. Teaching Hidden History: Learning by Developing Digital Modules
227. Competing Visions of Reform: Early Modern Conceptions of Christian Reform
Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom
Washington Hilton, Columbia 10
Joint session with the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media
Joint session with the American Society of Church History
Chair:
Jeffrey W. McClurken, University of Mary Washington
Chair:
Ronald K. Rittgers, Valparaiso University
Panel:
Stephen Barr, Eastern Senior High School Kelly Schrum, George Mason University Nate Sleeter, George Mason University Amy Swan, George Mason University Ilsa Tinkelman, George C. Marshall High School
Papers:
Erasmus’s Vision of Reform Greta G. Kroeker, University of Waterloo
Luther’s Vision of Reform David Whitford, Baylor University
Calvin’s Vision of Reform R. Ward Holder, Saint Anselm College
224. State Building and Transnational Indian Policies in the Americas, 1940–80
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Comment: Ronald K. Rittgers
Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Marc Becker, Truman State University
Papers:
National Defense and the “Indian Problem”: Examining US Involvement in the Inter-American Indian Institute, 1940–55 Raquel Escobar, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Redefining the “Indian Question”: Transnational Indigenismo in Guatemala, 1940–60 Sarah Foss, Indiana University
Unanticipated Indigenista Legacies: Bilingual Teachers and the Rise of Dissident Trade Unionism in Southern Mexico, 1975–80 Alan Shane Dillingham, Spring Hill College Comment: Stephen E. Lewis, California State University, Chico
228. Revolutionaries, Refugees, and Smugglers: New Directions in Inter-American Exchanges during the Age of Revolution Washington Hilton, Columbia 11 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
José Juan Pérez Meléndez, University of California, Davis
Papers:
Inter-American Connections: Commercial Strategies in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions, 1790–1822 Fabricio Prado, College of William and Mary
Emiliano Mundrucu and the Sinews of Inter-American Abolitionism Caitlin A. Fitz, Northwestern University
225. Writing History for the General Reader: A Roundtable with Grantees in the NEH Public Scholar Program Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2 Chair:
Daniel Sack, National Endowment for the Humanities
Panel:
David Courtwright, University of North Florida Jeremy D. Popkin, University of Kentucky Linda Przybyszewski, University of Notre Dame
226. Race and Nation (or Not?) in the Premodern Mediterranean Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A We will ensure a lively and dynamic discussion/debate by combining a roundtable format with longer pre-circulated versions of the papers. This session is organized by the Mediterranean Seminar (www.mediterraneanseminar.org), an international forum with over 1,200 associates worldwide. Chair:
Andrew Devereux, Loyola Marymount University
Papers:
The Sicilian Vespers: Was There a Sicilian Nationalism in the Late Middle Ages? Francesco Paolo Tocco, University of Messina
Plural Identities in the Medieval Mediterranean: The Crown of Aragon’s Nation-Building Process, 13th and 14th Centuries Leonardo Francalanci, University of Notre Dame “E Tanti Son Li Zenoesi - e per Lo Mundo Si Destexi...”: The Importance of Hometown Identity in the Medieval Mediterranean World. Nikki Malain, independent scholar Christians Becoming Jews in Muslim Lands: Jewish Perceptions of Race, Nation, and Communal Boundaries in the Late Medieval Mediterranean Jonathan S. Ray, Georgetown University
Shackles of Royalty: Monarchies, Republics, and Free Trade in the Age of Revolution Tyson Reeder, University of Virginia
Comment: Jane Landers, Vanderbilt University
229. Transnational Christianity and Ethnic Identity: The International Missionary Council Encounters Indigenous Christians in Central America, China, and Africa Washington Hilton, Columbia 12 Chair:
Dana L. Robert, Boston University
Panel:
Andrew E. Barnes, Arizona State University Stephen Dove, Centre College Paul Grant, University of Wisconsin–Madison Amy O’Keefe, University of California, San Diego
January 6, 2018
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Comment: Dana L. Robert
230. Arguing with Digital History: A Roundtable on Using Digital History to Make Arguments for Academic Audiences Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction This roundtable will discuss a precirculated white paper on general principles for integrating digital tools and methods with the arguments and historical interpretations at the core of academic history. Participants—drawn from the group of historians that draft the white paper—will be announced in the fall. Chairs:
Stephen Robertson, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media Lincoln Mullen, George Mason University
Comment: Audience
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Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Sessions
231. Over There and Back Here: Community History through the Diversity of the Veteran Experience in Florida
Early Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B Chair:
Bryce Carpenter, US Department of Veterans Affairs, National Cemetery Administration
Papers:
World War I through Florida Veterans Amelia H. Lyons, University of Central Florida
Veterans and Florida Society: During War and Afterwards Barbara A. Gannon, University of Central Florida
Veterans History for Floridians: A Practicum in Public History Research and Programming Scot A. French, University of Central Florida
The Narrative of Commemoration: Historical Preservation at Veterans Cemeteries Caroline Cheong, University of Central Florida
Comment: Audience
232. Filtering the Frontier: Migrants and Refugees at the Border in the Arab Middle East Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Chair:
Shira N. Robinson, George Washington University
Papers:
Passports for Refugees: Algerians in Palestine in the 1890s Michael Talbot, University of Greenwich
Muslim Bans Past: Immobilizing Ottoman Migrants in Wartime America, 1917–20 Stacy Fahrenthold, California State University, Stanislaus
Illicit Border-Crossings in Mandate Palestine: Undermining and Transforming Categories of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality through Subversive Movement Lauren Banko, University of Manchester
Nationalities of Nomads and Locusts in the Jazira, 1920–40 Samuel Dolbee, New York University
Comment: Shira N. Robinson
Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:30 p.m. 233. Trading Secrets of the Craft: A Macro Examination of Oral Histories Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom In this roundtable, federal historians and educators take a broad view of lessons learned in oral history programs. The panelists share their successes and challenges seeking input and experiences from the attendees. This roundtable will be followed by the Oral History Jukebox workshop, which examines oral history lessons learned from a micro-level. Chair:
Kristina Giannotta, Naval History and Heritage Command
Panel:
Joel C. Christenson, Office of Secretary of Defense Kristina Giannotta Megan Harris, Veterans History Project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress Jessie Kratz, National Archives and Records Administration Patrick Nugent, Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College
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Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. American Society for Legal History Session 2 The Law Matters Even in Mexico: New Perspectives on 20th-Century Legal History Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B Chair:
Edward Beatty, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
Forced Military Recruitment and Legal Strategies of Resistance at the Turn of the 20th Century Timothy MacDowell James, University of South Carolina Beaufort
Selling Mexico: Tourism, Law, and the Pullman Sleeping Car Company, 1920–41 Chantel Rodriguez, University of Maryland, College Park
National Water Control and Supply Sustainability in Postrevolutionary Mexico, 1920–46 Peter Reich, Whittier Law School
Comment: Audience
Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Session 12 From Hidden History to Public History: Challenges in Representing Same-Sex Desire in Film, Theater, and Literature Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Catherine Clinton, University of Texas at San Antonio
Panel:
Gary Ferguson, University of Virginia Leigh Fondakowski, Naropa University, New Orleans Center for Creative Arts and Tectonic Theater Project Gilles Herrada, independent scholar Bennett Singer, Question Why Films
Conference on Latin American History Session 49 Writing Colombian History after the 2016 Accord: Questions and Methods Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South Chair:
Joshua M. Rosenthal, Western Connecticut State University
Panel:
Yesenia Barragan, Dartmouth College Herbert Tico Braun, University of Virginia Robert A. Karl, Princeton University Mary Roldán, Hunter College, City University of New York
Conference on Latin American History Session 50 New Perspectives on Puerto Rican Nationalism Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Antonio Sotomayor, University of Chicago
Panel:
Margaret M. Power, Illinois Institute of Technology Michael Staudenmaier, Aurora University Mónica Jiménez, University of Texas at Austin Antonio Sotomayor
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Saturday, January 6, 1:30–3:00 p.m. and 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions Conference on Latin American History Session 51 Tradition, Suspicion, and Inquisition: Catholic Anxieties of Portuguese Converso, Chino, and Nahua Heterodoxy in 17th-Century New Spain Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Ana Schaposchnik, DePaul University
Papers:
The Politics behind the 1640s Trials Leading to the Gran Auto De Fé in 1649: Heterodoxy or Political Persecution? Rafaela Acevedo-Field, Whitworth University
Evading the Inquisition and Feasting the Ancestors in the Colonial Spanish Philippines Matthew J. Furlong, University of Arizona
Papers:
Bar Brawls: Clergy, Their Superiors, and Tavern-Keeping in the Later Middle Ages Roisin A. Cossar, University of Manitoba A Hierarchy of Shrines: Creating an Ecclesiastical Model for New Religious Movements, 1400–60 Bianca Lopez, Southern Methodist University
“Wicked Books, Full of Lies, Trickery, and Heresy”: Pietro Paolo Vergerio’s Attack on Marian Devotional Books and the Struggle for Religious Authority in Early Modern Italy David M. D’Andrea, Oklahoma State University
Comment: Daniel Bornstein
Workshop
Oninomauhtiaya (I Was Afraid): Hernando Ruiz De Alarcón’s Campaign against Nahua Healing and Ritual Knowledge, 1612–29 Edward Anthony Polanco, University of Arizona
Comment: Ana Schaposchnik
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 8 The Possibilities and Pitfalls of Big History (AKA Big History Meets the History of Science): A Roundtable Discussion
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Saturday, January 6, 3:00–4:30 p.m. Affiliated Societies Workshop: Membership Recruitment and Retention Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A Speakers: Jane Green, American Historical Association; Roger Horowitz, Business History Conference; Ann Moyer, Renaissance Society of America
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3 Roger Launius, National Air and Space Museum James Rodger Fleming, Colby College
Panel:
Elena Aronova, University of California, Santa Barbara Ruth Morgan, Monash University Arnout H.C. Van Der Meer, Colby College
Polish American Historical Association Session 8 Polish Immigrants in the United States since the 1970s Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Karolina Łukasiewicz, New York University
Papers:
Not All in the Family: American Polonia in the Decade of the 1970s Anna D. Jaroszy´nska-Kirchmann, Eastern Connecticut State University
Between Now and Then: Contemporary Processes of European Migration to the United States Anna Fi´n, Pedagogical University of Kraków
Seeing Greenpoint Change: Polish Americans and Gentrification in Brooklyn Jerome Krase, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Polish Greenpoint and New York City: Gentrification, Ethnoracial Relations, and Immigrant Labor Market at the Turn of the 21st Century Anna Sosnowska, University of Warsaw
Comment: Audience
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 9 Religion and Authority in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Part 3: Devotion and Discipline
Late Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. 234. Black Europe in Sound: African Diasporic Contributions to Art Music in Europe Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1 Chair:
Allison Blakely, Boston University
Papers:
Race, Cafés-Concerts, and the Improbable Career of Edmond Dédé Sally McKee, University of California, Davis
Being Black and Performing German Identity: Black Concert Singers and the German Lied in Interwar Europe Kira Thurman, University of Michigan
January 6, 2018
Chairs:
Variations on Blackness: Black Concert Music in Early 20th-Century Britain Marc Matera, University of California, Santa Cruz
Comment: Allison Blakely
235. Building a Professional Profile on LinkedIn Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 RSVP requested, but not required: https://goo.gl/forms/V1nbStuZHRLhA8z83 Chair:
Susan Martin, University of Maryland
Washington Hilton, Lincoln East Chair:
Daniel Bornstein, Washington University in St. Louis
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Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
236. History from below in 3D: Digital Approaches to the History of Carceral Institutions Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Organized by the AHA Research Division
Designing a Digital Archive for Access and Inquiry Brad Fogo, San Francisco State University
Designing a Primary Source-Based Teaching Tool for Educators Stephanie Greenhut, National Archives and Records Administration Classrooms, Clinics, and Civil War Governors: Public History’s Role in Graduate Training Patrick Lewis, Kentucky Historical Society
Chair:
Seth Denbo, American Historical Association
Papers:
The Cornice and the Arcade: Re-viewing an 18th-Century Institution through Virtual 3-D Reconstruction Susannah R. Ottaway, Carleton College Austin Mason, Boston College
The History of Crime in Three Dimensions Tim Hitchcock, University of Sussex
Building Bentham’s Panopticon Zoe Alker, University of Liverpool
237. “Walls, Borders, and Boundaries in World History”: A Panel Discussion with the Contributors to the AHR Conversation
Comment: Audience This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 135, 162, 186 and 302.
240. World Heritage and the New Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
William J. Pencek, Heurich House Museum and US/ICOMOS
Panel:
Glenn T. Eskew, Georgia State University Brent Leggs, National Trust for Historic Preservation and University of Maryland School of Architecture Stephen A. Morris, National Park Service Office of International Affairs Patricia A. Sullivan, University of South Carolina
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Research Division Chair:
Robert A. Schneider, American Historical Review
Panel:
Suzanne Akbari, University of Toronto Tamar Herzog, Harvard University Carl H. Nightingale, State University of New York at Buffalo William Rankin, Yale University Keren Weitzberg, University of Pennsylvania
238. New Directions in American Military History: Race and Gender in the 20th-Century US Military
241. Fifty Years after 1968: Research on the Global 1960s, Part 4: Black Power in the World in the Global 1960s Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Joint session with the African American Intellectual History Society Chair:
Premilla Nadasen, Barnard College, Columbia University
Papers:
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A
Long Live African Women Wherever They Are! Black Women, PanAfricanism, and Black Power’s Global Reach Ashley Farmer, Boston University
Organized by the AHA Local Arrangements Committee
Translating Black Power in Postcolonial Accra David Romine, Duke University
Chair:
Eugenia C. Kiesling, United States Military Academy
Papers:
The Jeep Girl Crisis: Sexual Fear and Racism in Wartime China Zach Fredman, John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding, Dartmouth College
Challenging the Empires from Within: Black Power and the Japanese Anti-Vietnam War Movement Naoko Koda, Kindai University
Melanesia’s Mau-Maus? Black Power in Papua New Guinea Quito Swan, Howard University
The Politics of Racial Integration in the Cold War US Marine Corps Cameron McCoy, Brigham Young University
War as Masculine Action Eugenia C. Kiesling
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 161, 187, 213, 263 and 290.
239. Primary Sources and the Historical Profession in the Age of Text Search, Part 4: Primary Sources in the Classroom and Beyond: Digital Tools and Emerging Practices Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Chair:
Maria Marable-Bunch, National Archives and Records Administration
Papers:
Accounting for History, in the Classroom and Beyond Kathryn Tomasek, Wheaton College (Massachusetts)
Dealing with Digital Overload: Teaching with Primary Sources in an Age of Databases, Digitization, and Abundance John Rosinbum, BASIS Tucson North Charter School
Building Digital Rubrics for Infinite Literacies Jessica Johnson, Johns Hopkins University
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Comment: Premilla Nadasen
242. Reacting to the Past Workshop, Part 2: A Discussion of Frederick Douglass, Slavery, Abolitionism, and the Constitution: 1845 Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom This session follows session 212, the Reacting to the Past workshop using the Frederick Douglass game. Panelists, who will have attended that session and watched the game unfold in real time, will reflect on the limits and possibilities of embodied performance as a teaching tool for this particular subject and more generally as a method for delivering historical content and complexity in the undergraduate classroom. Chair:
Myra B. Young Armstead, Bard College
Panel:
David W. Blight, Yale University Patrick J. Rael, Bowdoin College Manisha Sinha, University of Connecticut at Storrs
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Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions 247. Talking about the (Bourgeois) Revolution
Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3
Washington Hilton, Columbia 7
Chair:
Joe Schmidt, New York City Department of Education
Chair:
Alexander Anievas, University of Connecticut at Storrs
Papers:
March and the “Nine Word Problem” Andrew Aydin, congressional aide, US Congress
Teaching Scale and Historical Empathy through Graphic Histories Joe Schmidt, New York City Department of Education Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University
Panel:
Tithi Bhattacharya, Purdue University Geoff Eley, University of Michigan Sandra Halperin, Royal Holloway, University of London Andrew Zimmerman, George Washington University
Comics and Global Competence Kim Young, Weston High School
244. C.L.R. James’s Black Jacobins 80 Years On: The Haitian Revolution and Its Reverberations Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1 Chair:
Melanie J. Newton, University of Toronto
Papers:
C.L.R. James and the Future of the Haitian Revolution Laurent M. Dubois, Duke University
Beyond the Black Jacobins: Reconsidering 19th-Century Haitian Historians Marlene L. Daut, University of Virginia
The First Haitian Intellectuals and the Construction of the National Historical Period, 1801–43 Délide Joseph, Campus Henry Christophe of Limonade, State University of Haiti
The African Revolution: C.L.R. James’s Black Jacobins and the Haitian Revolution Christina Mobley, University of Virginia
Comment: Audience
245. Identity and Belonging in Premodern Imperial Discourses: A Roundtable Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair:
David A. M. Spafford, University of Pennsylvania
Panel:
Manan Ahmed Asif, Columbia University Christopher Atwood, University of Pennsylvania Miranda Brown, University of Michigan Ian Moyer, University of Michigan Teresa Shawcross, Princeton University
246. The Material Politics of Revolution and Government Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Maurie McInnis, University of Texas at Austin
Papers:
The Revolutionary Landscape: Creating the Conditions for Revolution in the American South and Constructing Citizenship in Its Aftermath Erin Holmes, University of South Carolina
The President’s Office: How George Washington and Thomas Jefferson Used Private Space to Shape the Cabinet Lindsay Chervinsky, Center for Presidential History at Southern Methodist University Artifacts and Anecdotes: The Role of Antiquarian Culture in Constructing National Identity in Antebellum America Amy Henderson, independent art historian and museum consultant
248. DNA, Ancient and Modern: Genomic and Historical Analysis of Lombard and British Populations Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Chair:
Nükhet Varlik, Rutgers University at Newark
Papers:
Modern DNA and the Peopling of the British Isles Walter Bodmer, Oxford University
Paleogenomics and the Migration of Lombards Krishna Veeramah, State University of New York at Stony Brook
Comment: Nükhet Varlik Nicola Di Cosmo, Institute for Advanced Study
249. Starving Women’s Bodies Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians and the Coordinating Council for Women in History Chair:
Mark Crowley, University of Wuhan
Papers:
Identity, Trauma, and Iconography: German Women’s War Art, 1914–24 Janice Miller, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
You Are What You Eat: The Gendered Politics of Francoist Nutrition Suzanne Dunai, University of California, San Diego
Liberation: Nursing the Starved Body and Understanding Sexual Identity Patricia Chappine, Drew University
Comment: Sandra Trudgen Dawson, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
250. Assessing the State from the Peripheries: The Construction of Governance in 19th-Century Latin America Washington Hilton, Columbia 10
January 6, 2018
243. Comics in the History Classroom: A Workshop
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Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chairs:
Carlos Dimas, Albright College Casey M. Lurtz, Johns Hopkins University
Papers:
“The Peruvian Revolution”: History and Memory of Túpac Amaru in the Construction of a National Discourse: A View from Cuzco, 1837–39 Cecilia Méndez, University of California, Santa Barbara
Standardizing the Brazilian Nation in the 19th Century Anne G. Hanley, Northern Illinois University
Building the State from the Outside: The 1868 Cholera Epidemic and Health Networks in Northwestern Argentina Carlos Dimas
Breaking Codes: Local Enactment of Civil and Commercial Codes in Mexico Casey M. Lurtz
Comment: Robert H. Holden, Old Dominion University
Comment: Adam Erby, Mount Vernon
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Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
251. Race and Nation: A Case Study of Taking Scholarship to the Public Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room The presenters first acquaint historians with their highly successful experimental collaboration. The second half of the session challenges members of the audience to conceptualize similar collaborations in which their scholarship can mobilize students to publicize their research findings. Chair:
Martha Hodes, New York University
Papers:
The Scholarship That Informed the Student Quest: Lincoln, Californio Miners, and Tejano Students David Hayes-Bautista, University of California, Los Angeles
The Student Quest and the Media Blitz Teresa Van Hoy, St. Mary’s University
Taking the Scholarship and the Student Quest to the Public David McKenzie, Ford’s Theatre
255. Order beyond Borders Washington Hilton, Columbia 12 Chair:
Cemil Aydin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Papers:
Diaspora, Culture, or Territory: The Idea of India in the 21st Century Nisha Mary Mathew, National University of Singapore
Sultans and Messiahs in the Frontiers of Turkish Regionalism Serkan Yolocan, National University of Singapore
Jihad between Taipei and Mecca: A Liberating Force for Racialized “Ethnic Minority” Hyeju Janice Jeong, Duke University
Informal but Legal: Military-Labor Networks in the Arabian Sea Ameem Lutfi, Habib University
256. Global Abolition: Britain, Africa, and America, 1780s–1840s Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
Comment: Audience
252. Raising the Nation: Youth, Nationalism, and StateBuilding in the 20th Century
Chair:
Jeffrey Kerr-Ritchie, Howard University
Papers:
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3
Beilby Porteus: Bishop of London and Abolitionist in the Late 18th to Early 19th Century Katharine Griffin, Florida International University
Joint session with the Society for the History of Children and Youth
Rethinking Abolition Strategies in West Africa in the Early 18th Century Daniel Olisa Iweze, University of Benin “You’re Fired!” The Dismissal of Abolitionist Minister Samuel Joseph May, 1820–42 Megan Scallan Melvin, Florida International University
Chair:
Paula S. Fass, University of California, Berkeley
Papers:
Molding and Modeling Italianità: Teaching National Identity in Italy’s South Tyrol, 1923–34 Eden Knudsen McLean, Auburn University
“Only Your White-Faced, Sunken-Chested, Curved-Backed Little Christians”: Immigration, Race, and the Nationalization of the Child Labor Problem in the United States, 1904–16 Julia Bowes, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Comment: Dee E. Andrews, California State University, East Bay
The Menace of Youth: Colonial Hegemony and Contestation during the Swadeshi Movement in Bengal Sudipa Topdar, Illinois State University
The Calculus of Child Welfare in the “Lone Island” Margaret Tillman, Purdue University
Comment: Ellen R. Boucher, Amherst College
253. Diaspora Intellectuals between Late Colonialism and the Early Cold War, 1880s–1960s Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C Chair:
Joseph Lawson, Newcastle University
Panel:
Joshua Freeman, Harvard University Jinny Prais, Columbia University Shirley Ye, University of Birmingham
254. Infrastructures and Events in Global History Washington Hilton, Columbia 11
257. Teaching LGBT History with Digital Humanities Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Stephen Vider, Bryn Mawr College
Panel:
Lauren Anderson, independent scholar Lauren Gutterman, University of Texas at Austin Amanda H. Littauer, Northern Illinois University Elizabeth Reis, Macaulay Honors College, City University of New York
258. Populism, Nationalism, and Global Nativist Movements in the Long 20th Century Washington Hilton, Columbia 8 Chair:
David C. Atkinson, Purdue University
Papers:
Nativism Reconsidered: Chinese Rice Networks, Commercial Crisis, and Cosmopolitics in Colonial Saigon, 1918–23 Anh Sy Huy Le, Michigan State University
Chair:
Selim Karlitekin, Columbia University
Papers:
Capital, Letter, Empire: The Alphabet Event in Global History Ulug Kuzuoglu, Columbia University
Go West, Young Muslim: Frontier Nation-Building and the Infrastructures of Chinese Muslim Identity Construction, 1927–49 John Tseh-han Chen, Columbia University
Vernacular Caliphate: Khilafat Movement and the Politics of Islamic Sovereignty across the Globe Selim Karlitekin
“Our Brothers, the Berbers”: Amazighité, Arab Identity, and the Moroccan Nationalist Movement, 1930–56 Adrienne Tyrey, Michigan State University Colonists or Immigrants? Imperialist Themes in American Eugenics in the Early 20th Century Jason J. McDonald, Truman State University Racial Mixing in a Racial Regime: Japanese Nativism during and after the Pacific War William Puck Brecher, Washington State University
Comment: David C. Atkinson
Comment: Meltem Toksoz, Brown University
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Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions 259. Native American History: New Perspectives, New Approaches, New Frontiers
Late Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Roxanne A. Dunbar-Ortiz, California State University, East Bay
Papers:
What Lies Beneath: The Alliance of Indians and Socialists in Early 20th-Century Oklahoma Jace Weaver, University of Georgia
Rethinking Race through the Alaska Example: Pseudo-speciation, Dehumanization, and Erasure Jordan Craddick, University of Washington
The Yup’ik Country: Imperialism and the Invention of the Bering Strait Simon Sun, Harvard University
Comment: Roxanne A. Dunbar-Ortiz
Workshop Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Oral History Jukebox Omni Shoreham, Palladian Ballroom The Oral History Jukebox is an open, informal exchange where oral historians of all experience levels and backgrounds come together to listen and learn. This workshop will turn an open ear to the granularity of oral history recordings, searching the medium for key insights into the field. Interested participants are asked to submit a 1–2 minute excerpt from an oral history interview that they find particularly fascinating or instructive, and to briefly explain what this particular moment has taught them about their approach to oral history—whether that be an insight into interview technique, processing, archiving, crowdsourcing, or program management. Submit the information at historians.org/jukebox. The workshop will open with a lightning round of audio-clip presentations that illustrate a diverse range of lessons learned and teachable moments. Participants will then break into smaller groups to consider additional excerpts and contemplations. The session will conclude with reflections on where the Oral History Jukebox can go next, as we think through ethical considerations for crowdsourcing an online repository of interview excerpts and self-reflections created for and by oral historians. No charge. Because space is limited, free advance registration is required. Chairs:
Patrick Nugent, Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College Erica Fugger, Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College Kristina Giannotta, Naval History and Heritage Command
Jessie Kratz, National Archives and Records Administration Additional Facilitators/ Joel C. Christenson, Office of Secretary of Defense Collaborators: Megan Harris, Veterans History Project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress
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Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. American Catholic Historical Association Session 18 Urban Catholic Parish Life in the United States: Tales from Two Cities Omni Shoreham, Executive Room Chair:
Timothy J. Meagher, Catholic University of America
Papers:
An Urban Benedictine Parish Responds to the Times: St. Mary’s, Newark, NJ Augustin Curley, OSB, Newark Abbey
Constant and Variable: Chicago’s Experimental 1962 Parish Jennifer Callaghan, Northwestern University
Comment: Timothy J. Meagher
American Catholic Historical Association Session 19 Saints and Miracles in Early Modern/Modern Europe and Colonial America Omni Shoreham, Forum Room Papers:
Contested Bodies: Relic Veneration in Counter-Reformation Bavaria Carole Baker, Duke University
Padre Pio: Catholicism, Miracles, and Re-Enchantment in a Disenchanted World Rosario Forlenza, New York University
Excavating the Infirm: Miracle Stories as Disability History Mary Corley Dunn, Saint Louis University
Comment: Audience
American Catholic Historical Association Session 20 Faith, Doubt, and Religious Transformation in Modern Europe Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room Papers:
Julie Billiart, the Sisters of Notre Dame De Namur, and the Crisis in the Diocese of Ghent, 1811–15 Mary F. Hayes, Trinity University
From Arthur O’Leary to John England: The Intellectual Influence of an Irish Capuchin Friar on the First Bishop of Charleston, South Carolina Brian Cudahy, University of South Carolina
Faith and Doubt in the French Clergy—Letters to Renan Thomas A. Kselman, University of Notre Dame
January 6, 2018
Chair:
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Comment: Audience
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Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Sessions
Central European History Society Session 12 Monumental Deviations: Public Monuments, Audience Engagement, and Alternative Scripts of Memoralization in Central Europe, 1890–1990 Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B Chair:
Alexander Rehding, Harvard University
Papers:
The Motif of the Levitating Head: Reconfigurations of Genius, c. 1900 Emmelyn Butterfield-Rosen, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute
Conference on Latin American History Session 54 Encountering Women in Development in 20th-Century Bolivia Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Laura Gotkowitz, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Women Loan Makers in Early 20th-Century Bolivia: Capital, Gender, and Ethnicity in the Liberal Marketplace of La Paz Nancy Egan, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Struggle, Failure, and Delusions of Grandeur: Lortzing, Virchow, and Fontane as Avatars of Berlin, 1906–10 Eva Giloi, Rutgers University at Newark
Hearing Echoes: Reception History and the Musical Memorial Jeremy Eichler, Harvard University
The Monument Culture of the Federal Republic: An Inverted Mirror of Old Germany? Helmut W. Smith, Vanderbilt University
Central European History Society Session 13 Antisemitism and Racism: Sources, Similarities, and Differences Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2 Chair:
Anson G. Rabinbach, Princeton University
Papers:
Nazi Antisemitism in Comparative Perspective before and during the Holocaust Jeffrey C. Herf, University of Maryland, College Park
Catholics on the Barricades: Poland, France, and “Revolution,” 1939–56 Piotr H. Kosicki, University of Maryland, College Park
The American Influence on Nazi Race Law James Whitman, Yale University
Fear and Loathing: Ethnic German Attitudes to the Slavs of Southeast Europe in the Light of Nazi Anti-Slavism, AntiCommunism, and Anti-Semitism Mirna Zakic, Ohio University
Developing Women, Developing the Nation: Public Health and Human Capital in Postrevolutionary Bolivia Nicole Pacino, University of Alabama in Huntsville
(Un)Cooperative Labor? Women’s Work, Cooperatives, and the Foundations of Austerity in Bolivia Elena McGrath, University of Virginia
Inca Princesses with Tanned Skin: Constructing the New Bolivian Entrepreneurs Molly Geidel, University of Manchester
Comment: Audience
Conference on Latin American History Session 55 Left Development Projects Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South Chair:
Fernanda Lima Rabelo, University College Cork
Papers:
Debt, Development, and Human Rights: The North-South Dialogue in Latin America, 1974–82 Michael Franczak, Boston College
Good Neighbors, Family, or Business Partners in a Time of War? An Analysis of Good Neighbor Diplomacy through Short Films Produced by the Office of the Coordinator of the Inter-American Affairs in the 1940s Fernanda Lima Rabelo
Making Better Neighbors: Serafino Romualdi’s Quest for Transnational Anti-Fascist Networks in South America during World War II Pedro M. Cameselle, Western Washington University
From 1960s Indigenism to 1970s Marxist Leninism: Argentina’s Frente Indoamericano Revolucianrio Popular and Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo Jennifer L. Schaefer, Washington State University
Comment: Susannah Heschel, Dartmouth College
Conference on Latin American History Session 53 The Early Modern Iberian Empires in Global Perspective Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A
Comment: Audience
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 9 Executive Orders and Presidential Power since FDR
Chair:
Alejandro Cañeque, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
The Networks of Patronage in the Global Spanish Empire Adolfo Polo y La Borda, University of Tübingen
How Global Was Early Modern Iberian Imperium? Alexander Ponsen, University of Pennsylvania
The Spanish Monarchy in an Age of Commercial Globalization, 1765–96 Fidel J. Tavárez, University of Chicago
Imperial Cohesion and Ethnic Difference: Basques in the Early Modern Spanish Atlantic Emma Otheguy, New York University
Comment: Frances L. Ramos, University of South Florida
Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4 Chair:
Nicole R. Hemmer, University of Virginia
Papers:
Reconsidering EO 11246: Executive Orders and Enforcement of Civil Rights since LBJ Mary Ellen Curtin, American University
Military Land Withdrawals and the President’s “So-Called Inherent Authority to Do Many Things in the Public Interest” Brandon Davis, University of British Columbia Executive Orders in Wartime: Civil Liberties and Executive Power from Truman to Trump Matt Dallek, George Washington University
Comment: John Lawrence, University of California, Washington Center
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Saturday, January 6, Sessions and Events Polish American Historical Association Session 9 Polish Immigrants in Greenpoint, Brooklyn: Exploring the Transformations of a Polish Ethnic Enclave Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Jerome Krase, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Papers:
Greenpoint, Brooklyn Then and Now: A View from the Street Judith DeSena, St. John’s University
“Living Is Simply Different Here”: The American Dream in Greenpoint Ewa D´zurak, College of Staten Island, City University of New York
Aging in an Ethnic Enclave: Barriers and Opportunities for Older Polish Migrants in Greenpoint Karolina Łukasiewicz, New York University Marta Pawlaczek, New York University
Tadeusz Chabrowski and Greenpoint: The History of Polish Neighborhood Seen through the Biography of Its Prominent Resident Izabela Barry, College of Staten Island, City University of New York Ewa Maliga, College of Staten Island, City University of New York
Comment: Audience
Film Festival
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Local Arrangements Committee Tour Saturday, January 6, 4:00–5:30 p.m. Tour 10: The African American Civil War Memorial and Museum in the Historic U Street Neighborhood Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Frank Smith, African American Civil War Memorial and Museum Founder and executive director Frank Smith will lead a tour of the memorial and museum, situating them in the historic black U Street neighborhood. The neighborhood was once known as DC’s “Black Broadway” and is home of the famous Ben’s Chili Bowl. The memorial and museum are unique in being dedicated to the black men who fought for the Union in the Civil War, whose names are inscribed on the memorial. Exhibits explore the service of black men and their family members in support of the Union cause, in the context of the struggle against slavery as well as of black military service before and after the Civil War. The tour will conclude with reflections on the future of the changing neighborhood in a gentrifying DC and on the future expansion of the museum into the Grimké school next door (named for Archibald Grimké). Please note: Participants will travel by bus to and from the museum. The museum is ADA compliant. Limit 50 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Film Screening: An Outrage Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A
This documentary about lynching in the American South was filmed on location at lynching sites in six states.
Saturday, January 6, 5:30–7:00 p.m.
The screening will be followed by a conversation with Yohura Williams, Fairfield University; filmmakers Lance Warren and Hannah Ayres; and a high school teacher who has used the film in class.
George C. Marshall Foundation George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History
Poster Session
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1 Presiding: Rob Havers, George C. Marshall Foundation Jennifer D. Keene, Chapman University Speaker:
Saturday, January 6, 3:30–5:30 p.m.
January 6, 2018
Marshall Lecture
Hannah Ayres and Lance Warren, directors (Field Studio, 2017)
The Armistice of 1918: A Study in Defeat and Victory Isabel V. Hull, Cornell University
A reception will follow beginning at 7:00 p.m. in Delaware Suite B.
Undergraduate Poster Session Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium The Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the posters on display and engage in considered dialogue and engaging interaction with presenters. Participants will be announced online.
Workshop
AHA Business Meeting (AHA Members Only) Saturday, January 6, 5:15–6:30 p.m. AHA Business Meeting (AHA Members Only) Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3
Saturday, January 6, 3:45–4:45 p.m. Teaching and Learning Networking Opportunity Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room This is just an hour, a space, and an open invitation. We’re hoping that this event will help those who are interested in teaching and learning to find each other, build strong professional networks, and advance the cause of teaching and learning issues among the larger community of historians.
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The agenda for the AHA business meeting will be posted online prior to the meeting. Only AHA members may attend the business meeting. Please confirm in advance that your AHA membership is up to date. Presiding: Tyler Stovall, University of California, Santa Cruz
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Saturday, January 6, Evening Sessions and Events
Saturday, January 6, 6:00–7:00 p.m.
Conference on Latin American History Session 58 Borderlands and Frontier Studies Committee Meeting: Borderlands and Border-Crossing Histories on Land and at Sea
Committee on Minority Historians’ Reception
Chair:
Samuel Truett, University of New Mexico
Panel:
Andrés Resendez, University of California, Davis Lara E. Putnam, University of Pittsburgh Kelly Lytle Hernandez, University of California, Los Angeles Alice Baumgartner, Yale University Judy Bieber, University of New Mexico Kristin Wintersteen, University of Houston
AHA Reception
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Sponsored by CUNY Graduate Center Office of Educational Opportunity and Diversity The Committee on Minority Historians cordially invites minority scholars, graduate students, and others attending the 2018 annual meeting to a reception. Please join the committee in a discussion of life in the profession.
Evening Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
Marriott Wardman Park, Truman Room
Conference on Latin American History Session 59 Mexican Studies Committee Meeting: How Atlantic/ Pacific Is Ethnohistory? Marriott Wardman Park, Tyler Room Chair:
Dana Velasco Murillo, University of California, San Diego
Saturday, January 6, 6:00–7:30 p.m.
Papers:
Inserting Native Peoples in the Atlantic/Pacific Narrative Dana Velasco Murillo
Conference on Latin American History Session 56 Atlantic World Studies Committee Meeting
Negros e Indios: The Intersection of Ethnohistory and Atlantic History Robert C. Schwaller, University of Kansas
Marriott Wardman Park, Taft Room
The Californias: Rethinking Indigenous Trade Networks along the Pacific Coast Tatiana Seijas, Penn State University
Chair:
David Wheat, Michigan State University
Papers:
The Dutch in the Atlantic: The View from the Rio de la Plata, 1648–78 David Freeman, University of Missouri–Kansas City
“He Seemed Like a Slave”: Kidnapping and Labor Coercion in the Early 17th-Century Caribbean Casey Schmitt, College of William and Mary
Old World Roots, New World Shoots: A Transatlantic Understanding of Indigenous Religion in Colonial Mexico Mark Z. Christensen, Assumption College
Facing the Atlantic: Autonomous Indians in Colonial Brazil Heather Flynn Roller, Colgate University
The Atlantic and Colonial Mexico City Margarita R. Ochoa, Loyola Marymount University
Je Brûle Ma Nation: Royalism and Rayanos in the Borderlands of Hispaniola Jesús Ruiz, Tulane University
Atlantic Mayas: Yucatan in Transatlantic Perspective Mark Lentz, Utah Valley University
Comment: Audience
Conference on Latin American History Session 57 Andean Studies Committee Meeting: The Andes and the Pacific World Marriott Wardman Park, Taylor Room Chair:
Tamara J. Walker, University of Toronto
Panel:
Sherwin K. Bryant, Northwestern University Rachel O’Toole, University of California, Irvine Tamara J. Walker, University of Toronto
Film Festival Saturday, January 6, 6:00–8:00 p.m. Film Screening: Tell Them We Are Rising: The Story of Black Colleges and Universities Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Stanley Nelson, director (Firelight Films, 2017) The first feature-length documentary to chronicle the comprehensive history of historically black colleges and universities and the pivotal role they have played in American history, culture, and national identity. The filmmakers have created a digital storytelling project, #HBCURising Yearbook, which they will discuss alongside the film screening. After the screening members of the audience will have the option to contribute their stories to the project. Filmmaker Stanley Nelson and an additional moderator will introduce the film and lead a discussion afterward.
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Saturday, January 6, Evening Sessions and Events AHA Receptions
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Plenary Session
Saturday, January 6, 6:30–7:30 p.m.
Saturday, January 6, 8:30–9:30 p.m.
K–12 Reception
The State and Future of the Humanities in the United States
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A
Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 3
Sponsored by HISTORY®
Chair:
Earl Lewis, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
The AHA cordially invites K–12 educators to a reception to network with colleagues and share ideas with members of the Teaching Division and AHA staff.
Speaker:
William D. Adams, former chair, National Endowment for the Humanities
Saturday, January 6, 7:00–8:00 p.m. National History Center of the American Historical Association Reception
Grants for
AHA members
January 6, 2018
Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A
The AHA is pleased to support the study and exploration of history through our annual research grants program. Learn more at historians.org/grants. The deadline for all research grant applications is February 15.
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Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Sessions AHA Reception
Sunday, January 7, 8:00–9:30 a.m.
Panel:
Local and National Partnerships Grace Cordial, Beaufort County Library District Collection Rodell Lawrence, Penn Center, Inc. Turkiya Lowe, National Park Service
Local History in Action Page Putnam Miller, public historian and Reconstruction monuments consultant
Farewell Reception Marriott Wardman Park, Atrium Sponsored by The New School Stop by for coffee and light pastries to learn about all that Chicago has to offer. Chicago is the host city for the AHA’s 133rd annual meeting on January 3–6, 2019.
Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. 260. Geneticism, Nation, and Jewish Identity Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1
Developing and Implementing the Reconstruction Interpretive Plan Deloris Pringle, project and resource developer
Interpreting Reconstruction for Diverse Audiences Melissa Stuckey, Elizabeth City State University
K-12 Curriculum Building for Reconstruction History Lemuel Watson, University of South Carolina
Comment: Audience
263. Fifty Years after 1968: Research on the Global 1960s, Part 5: Mass Higher Education in the Global 1960s: Inclusions/Exclusions Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Chair:
Ibram X. Kendi, University of Florida
Papers:
Toward a Black University: Student Activists at Howard University in the Black Power Era Jocelyn Imani, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution
Chair:
Nathaniel Deutsch, University of California, Santa Cruz
Papers:
How, When, and Why Did Jews Become Semites and Blacks Hamites? Benjamin Braude, Boston College
Race, “Nation,” and Identity among the Portuguese Jews Miriam Bodian, University of Texas at Austin
From the Jewish Merchants of Oran to Indigènes Israélites: Emancipation and Exclusion in Colonial Algeria Joshua S. Schreier, Vassar College
Geneticism and the Ongoing Search for Jewish Identity Mitchell Hart, University of Florida
261. “What Do Public History Employers Want?” A Report from the National Council on Public History Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Organized by the AHA Professional Division; joint session with the National Council on Public History Chair: Panel:
David Glassberg, University of Massachusetts Amherst Kathleen Franz, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution Allison Marsh, University of South Carolina Stephanie Rowe, National Council on Public History
262. Reconstructing Reconstruction: Interpreting the Epic Story of Reconstruction in Beaufort County, South Carolina and Nationwide Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Organized by the AHA Committee on Minority Historians Chair:
Joshua Brown, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
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Being Black and Ivy: Student Organizing and Activism in the Ivy League, 1945–68 Stefan M. Bradley, Saint Louis University
Beyond the Barricades: The Possibilities and Pitfalls of the Campus-Based New Left in Japan Chelsea Szendi Schieder, Meiji University
African Independence with French Diplomas? The 1968 Dakar Student Strike and the Question of Sovereignty Matthew Swagler, Columbia University
Comment: Ibram X. Kendi This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 161, 187, 213, 241 and 290.
264. Grassroots Activism in 20th-Century Asia: Lessons from Russia, China, and North Vietnam Washington Hilton, Columbia 9 Chair:
Nan Kim, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Papers:
Siberia, Space, and Ssylka: Visualizing Exile in Late Imperial Russia Mark Moll, Indiana University
Student Activism as Contentious Politics: Repertoire of Collective Actions at Beijing University, 1957 Yidi Wu, St. Mary’s College
Crossing Communist Borders: The Impacts of Global Protests and Liberalization Movements on North Vietnam Alex-Thai Vo, Cornell University
Comment: Robert Culp, Bard College
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Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Sessions Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2
Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History
269. Experimenting with New Dramatic Histories
Chair:
Leisa D. Meyer, College of William and Mary
Papers:
Oral History and Lesbian Subjects Kelly Anderson, Smith College
What’s Her/Story? History and Living Herstory Amy Washburn, Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York
Teaching and Archiving Lesbian Histories and Subjects Bonnie Morris, University of California, Berkeley
Kelly Moore, Loyola University Chicago Sigrid Schmalzer, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Chair:
Ada Ferrer, New York University
Papers:
Black Léonore of Aquitaine Lorelle Semley, College of the Holy Cross
History, Fiction, and the Space in Between: Writing Histories of the Self Martha S. Jones, Johns Hopkins University
Narrating Histories of Wealth and Poverty in America’s Second Gilded Age Andrew W. Kahrl, University of Virginia
Comment: Audience
266. The US Military as an Economic Institution since World War II
Comment: Martha Hodes, New York University
Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Chair:
Katherine C. Epstein, Rutgers University at Camden
Papers:
After the Deluge: The Aircraft Industry, the Cold War, and the Making of Rustbelt Politics Michael A. Brenes, Yale University
Pursuing the Gender of Motivation in New England Weapons Production, 1953–62 Lisa Furchtgott, Yale University
Financial Management in the Cold War US Military A.J. Murphy, Columbia University
Who Chose the Weapons? Congress versus the US Military, 1950s–80s Mark R. Wilson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
270. Freedom’s Frontier: The State of the African American West in 20th- and 21st-Century History Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Chairs:
Herbert Ruffin II, Syracuse University Dwayne Mack, Berea College
Panel:
Albert S. Broussard, Texas A&M University Jeanelle Hope, University of California, Davis Dwayne Mack Herbert Ruffin II Kathryn Takara, University of Hawai’i at Manoa
271. Diplomacy in Action: Diplomatic Simulations in the Classroom Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Joint session with the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media
Comment: Audience
267. Race, Place, and Nation in the Early Modern World: A Pedagogical Roundtable Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Joint session with the Society for Reformation Research and the World History Association Chairs:
Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Kathryn M. Brammall, Truman State University
Panel:
Omar H. Ali, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Juliana Barr, Duke University Gary G. Gibbs, Roanoke College A. Katie Harris, University of California, Davis Charles H. Parker, Saint Louis University
268. Reevaluating Science for the People: New Directions in Teaching and Scholarship Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room Chair:
Alondra Nelson, Columbia University and Social Science Research Council
Panel:
Alyssa Botelho, Harvard University Sarah Bridger, California Polytechnic State University Daniel Chard, University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Chair:
Gwendolyn K. White, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media
Panel:
Kevin Briscoe, Loudoun County Public Schools Lauren Fischer, US Diplomacy Center Alison Mann, US Diplomacy Center Heba el Shazli, George Mason University
January 7, 2018
265. Teaching and Archiving Lesbian Histories and Subjects
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272. Teaching Race as an Integral Part of European History: A Roundtable Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction Joint session with the Western Society for French History Chair:
Lauren Stokes, Northwestern University
Panel:
Tiffany N. Florvil, University of New Mexico Lydia Lindsey, North Carolina Central University Emily Marker, Rutgers University at Camden Kennetta Hammond Perry, East Carolina University Meredith Roman, State University of New York, College at Brockport Carlton Wilson, North Carolina Central University
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Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Sessions
273. The Body Politic: Health, Disease, and Political Imagination in the Antebellum United States Washington Hilton, Columbia 10 Chair:
Joyce E. Chaplin, Harvard University
Papers:
Port of Liberty, Port of Pestilence: Yellow Fever in the Imagination and Development of an American New Orleans, 1793–1813 Paul Michael Warden, University of California, Santa Barbara
On Apples and Anarchy: Diet and Politics at Fruitlands Kathryn R. Falvo, Penn State University
From Embodied Republicanism to Empowered Bodies: Physiology and Political Thought in the Antebellum North Jonathan D. Riddle, University of Notre Dame
Comment: Sari Altschuler, Northeastern University
274. Black Economic Internationalism in the 20th Century
The Paperwork of Empires in the French and British Atlantic Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, University of Missouri
The Spirit of Conquest and the Spanish Commercial Empire Fidel J. Tavárez, University of Chicago
Comment: Pernille Roege, University of Pittsburgh
277. Resurrecting Clio: Teaching against the Textbook, Engaging the Historian’s Sensibility Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Chair:
Patrick Timmons, El Paso Community College
Papers:
Django in the Classroom: Quentin Tarantino’s Intervention in the Discussion about Slavery and Its Aftermath; or, How to Span the Divide between US History 1 and 2 Patrick Timmons
Chair:
Brenna Wynn Greer, Wellesley College
Papers:
Black Messiah: Reverend Albert B. Cleage, the Shrine of the Black Madonna, and the Capitalization of Diaspora Adam Ewing, Virginia Commonwealth University
African American Business Abroad: John Hervey Wheeler, Diplomacy, and Global Civil Rights, 1959–69 Brandon Kyron Winford, University of Tennessee at Knoxville
The Business of Black Internationalism: Opportunities Industrialization Centers International (OICI) and American Capitalism in Africa, 1969–80 Jessica Ann Levy, Johns Hopkins University
Comment: Robert Trent Vinson, College of William and Mary
275. Caribbean Circulations: Race, Nation, and Citizenship in Cuba, 1890–1980 Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Michele Reid-Vazquez, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
William George Emanuel and the Politics of Belonging in the Atlantic World Philip Janzen, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Black Missions in Cuba: Tracing Diaspora and Nation through Biography and Religious History Christina Cecelia Davidson, Duke University
“On Not Becoming Cuban”: “African” Immigrants in Early 20thCentury Cuba Dalia A. Muller, State University of New York at Buffalo
Race, Coercive Complicity, and Political Nobodies in the Cuban Revolution, 1971–81 Lillian Guerra, University of Florida
Comment: Michele Reid-Vazquez
276. Forging Empires, Creating Colonies: The Practical and Intellectual Toolkit of Atlantic Empires Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Chair:
Gabriel Paquette, Johns Hopkins University
Papers:
Hints and Blueprints: Paperwork and Political Economy between Empires William Brown, Miami University Ohio
Master of All They Survey? Historiography and Research Methods as “Content” in High School History Ryan Carey, Packer Collegiate Institute Sarah Strauss, Packer Collegiate Institute
Comment: Rick Halpern, University of Toronto
278. Thinking with, through, and against Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities: The Legacies of a Major Historical Paradigm Washington Hilton, Columbia 11 Chair:
Fabio López Lázaro, University of Hawai’i
Panel:
Emine Yes¸im Bedlek, Bingöl University Joy Damousi, University of Melbourne Wojtek Jezierski, University of Gothenburg
279. Curricular Innovation for Transforming Enrollment Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Chair:
Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University
Papers:
History Is Not a Box—You Can’t Think Outside It Anne Kristina Berg, University of Michigan
Raining Enrollments in History Courses Edward R. Dickinson, University of California, Davis
An Updated History Curriculum: If We Build It, Will They Come? R. Scott Moore, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Class, Classes, and Classes of Classes: Where Do History Students Come from, and Where Do They Want to Go? Andrew B. Arnold, Kutztown University
280. Making International Law in Africa and Asia, 1850–1900 Washington Hilton, Columbia 12 Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair:
Jonathan Chappell, New York University Shanghai
Papers:
International Law and the Politics of Neutrality in the SinoFrench War, 1884–85 Jonathan Chappell
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It’s Based on a True Story, Every Module, Every Week: Teaching World Civ since 1500 through Popular Culture Analysis Kristina Boylan, State University of New York Polytechnic Institute
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C
Manufacturing Diplomacy: Preprinted Treaties in the “Scramble” for Africa Steve Harris, San Francisco State University
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Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Sessions
An Emperor on Trial: Colonialism and International Law in 19th-Century India Mithi Mukherjee, University of Colorado Boulder
Law of Nations Theory and the Native Sovereignty Debates: The Mysore Restoration Zak Leonard, University of Chicago
Comment: Audience
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Anti-Tocqueville Counterpoints: The Brazilian Empire Ponders Population Controls in the United States José Juan Pérez Meléndez, University of California, Davis
The Yankees and the Fazendeiros: The Role of American Technology and Applied Sciences in the Process of Slave Emancipation in São Paulo, Brazil Roberto Saba, University of Pennsylvania
Comment: Peter M. Beattie
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B
284. Matters of State, Matters of Dispute: Collecting and Display in 19th- and 20th-Century Mexico Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
Chair:
Rashauna Johnson, Dartmouth College
Papers:
Making a Middle Class: African American Women and the Emergence of the Liberian Nation Marie Stango, California State University, Bakersfield
Chair:
Susan Deans-Smith, University of Texas at Austin
Papers:
In Word and Image: The Promise of Haitian Culture and Politics in 19th-Century Philadelphia Aston Gonzalez, Salisbury University
Antiquities: Paper Collections and the Making of Mexico’s Ancient Past Miruna Achim, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana
Leaving for Lands Unknown: The 1820s African American Emigration to Haiti Sara Fanning, Texas Woman’s University
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History
Bones: Pelvises, Skulls, and Measurement Remains at the National Museum Laura Cházaro, Cinvestav
Animals, Plants, and Ruins: Colonial Articulations of the Museo Nacional de México Frida Gorbach, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana
Comment: Audience
282. Roundtable: Teaching and Learning Historical Skills through a Crowdsourced Women’s History Project
Mannequins, Dancers, and Relics: Differentiation and Racism in the Ethnographic Exhibition Halls of the Museo Nacional de Antropología of Mexico Mario Rufer, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana
Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Joint session with the New England Historical Association Chair:
Laura R. Prieto, Simmons College
Papers:
The Suffragist Biography Project and Our Pedagogical Goals Laura R. Prieto
Networking as a Research Skill Anna Faherty, Simmons College
The Promise and Peril of Collaboration Lily-Gre Hitchen, Saint Anselm College
“I Still Have Questions”: The Limits of the Historical Record Sarah Hummel, Saint Anselm College
Graduate Experience Working with Undergraduates Flannery LaGrua, Simmons College
Writing Women Back into History Kathleen Melendy, Simmons College
Recruitment, Retention, and Filling the Seats Beth Salerno, Saint Anselm College
Comment: Beth Salerno
283. Nation-Making beyond Slavery: The United States and the Transformation of 19th-Century Brazil
Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Conference on Latin American History Session 63 Urbanization, Mobility, and Modernization in the 20th Century Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Catalina Muñoz, Universidad de los Andes
Papers:
Memory and the Contentious Politics of Urban Development in Bogotá, Colombia Catalina Muñoz
For a More Just City: The Santiago Metro in Allende’s Chile Andra Brosy Chastain, Yale University
Manliness and Mestizo Nationalism in the Forging of a CharroMexican State Relationship, 1920–50 Angélica Castillo Reyna, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Peter M. Beattie, Michigan State University
Papers:
Progressive Wests in 19th-Century Brazil and the US: Tavares Bastos’s O Vale do Amazonas and Powell’s Report on the Lands of the Arid Region Teresa Cribelli, University of Alabama
January 7, 2018
281. Eyes on Different Shores: Early African American Immigration and Identity Formation
Self-Service Modernity: Shopping Practices and Cultural Politics in Cold War Medellín William Demarest, State University of New York at Stony Brook
Comment: Audience
Hemispheric Connections: The American Civil War and Afro-Brazilian Geopolitical Imagination Isadora Moura Mota, University of Miami
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Sunday, January 7, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Sessions
Conference on Latin American History Session 64 Slavery and Emancipation Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South
Papers:
The Figure of the Native American in East-Central European Literature Katarzyna Jerzak, Pomeranian University in Słupsk The Poet Maurice Kenny in Prague Derek Maus, State University of New York, College at Potsdam Korczak Ziółkowski’s Crazy Horse Memorial as a Phantasmagoria Paweł Kozłowski, Pomeranian University in Słupsk
Chair:
Luis Martinez-Fernandez, University of Central Florida
Papers:
Slavery, Race, Nation, and Prison-Building in Postcolonial Brazil Martine Jean, University of South Carolina
Comment: Audience
Caring Slaves and Precarious Masters: Codependence, Generational Contracts, and Inheritance in 19th-Century Brazil Henrique Espada Lima, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
Slaves’ Inheritance Nilce Wicks, University of California, Los Angeles
Deceivingly Sweet: Sugar, Slavery, and Slave Resistance in Early Colonial Cuba Luis Martinez-Fernandez
Comment: Audience
Local Arrangements Committee Tours Sunday, January 7, 10:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Tour 12: Foggy Bottom and the West End Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Matthew Gilmore, H-DC
Conference on Latin American History Session 65 Conquest, Communal Rights, and Population in Colonial Latin America Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Juan José Ponce-Vázquez, University of Alabama
Papers:
Interethnic Conflict and Negotiation in Colonial Gobernación of Popayán in the 16th Century Lauri Uusitalo, University of Tampere
To Save the Island or to Ruin It: Revisiting the Depopulation of Hispaniola, 1605 Juan José Ponce-Vázquez
The Indian Letrados, the Cabildo, and the Defense of Communal Lands at the Sunset of Colonialism in the Andes Alcira Dueñas, Ohio State University
Categories and Constructions of Race in 18th-Century Oaxaca, 1750–1800 Sabrina Smith, University of California, Los Angeles
Comment: Audience
National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 10 Nationalism: Notions and Practices Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East Chair:
Jerry Muller, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Race and National Identity Cathie Carmichael, University of East Anglia
Citizenship and Nationalism Montserrat Guibernau, University of Cambridge
Understanding the Historical Relationship between Tourism and Nationalism Eric G.E. Zuelow, University of New England
Comment: Matthew D’Auria, University of East Anglia
Polish American Historical Association Session 10 The Wish to Be a Red Indian: The Native American Dream in East-Central Europe
Matthew Gilmore will lead an exploration of the lesser-known aspects of Foggy Bottom and the West End—a neighborhood that has witnessed, participated in, and reflects Washington, DC’s unique history. The tour will illustrate the neighborhood’s shift from an industrial and residential area to an institutional and entertainment destination. Participants will travel from the Washington’s first circle (The Circle) to the last remaining early industrial site in the city, along part of the avenue, then through the historic district and alley dwellings, and finally to the transformed Foggy Bottom of the Kennedy Center and Watergate. Additional stops include St. Mary’s Church, Columbia Plaza, the United States Institute of Peace, Braddock Rock, and more. Please note: This walking tour involves walking a total of 2 miles over moderate terrain. Participants will travel to and from the start of the walking tour by bus. Limit 20 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
Sunday, January 7, 10:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Tour 13: President Lincoln’s Cottage Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8226 Tour leader: Museum staff President Lincoln’s Cottage is a historic site and museum located in the Petworth neighborhood of northwest Washington, DC. President Lincoln’s Cottage first opened to the public in February 2008, after an eight-year capital restoration project under the auspices of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It is the only place the public can experience the history of Abraham Lincoln’s public and private life, where he lived and worked for over a quarter of his presidency. While in residence at the cottage, Lincoln visited with wounded soldiers; spent time with self-emancipated men, women, and children; and developed the Emancipation Proclamation. The human cost of the Civil War surrounded him, undoubtedly impacting his thinking, and strengthened his resolve to challenge the status quo. We use Lincoln’s example to inspire visitors to take their own path to greatness, and preserve this place as an authentic, tangible connection to the past and a beacon of hope for all who take up Lincoln’s unfinished work. Please note: Participants will travel by bus to and from the site. The site is ADA compliant. Limit 20 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers
Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Graz˙yna Kozaczka, Cazenovia College
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Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Sessions
Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. 285. Race in Transnational Perspective: Racial Difference across Time and Space Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1 Chair:
Robin D. G. Kelley, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers:
Miscegenation in the Medieval European Imagination Lynn Ramey, Vanderbilt University
Words of Color in Other Languages: Constructing and Confronting Race in the Vocabularies of the Nile Valley and the Late Ottoman Empire Eve M. Troutt Powell, University of Pennsylvania
Before the Human: Africans, Sovereigns, and Slaves Herman Bennett, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Comment: Robin D. G. Kelley
286. How Can I Be a Historian in This Job Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2 Chair:
Dylan Ruediger, American Historical Association
Panel:
Sarah Manekin, Abell Foundation Veronica Tiller, Tiller Research Sarah Jo Peterson, 23 Urban Strategies Christopher J. Bright, House Armed Services Committee Amanda Herbert, Folger Shakespeare Library
287. Mixed Method Digital History Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction
289. Private Funding in the Humanities Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 1 Chair:
Karin Wulf, College of William and Mary
Panel:
Sid Lapidus, New York Eugene M. Tobin, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Jennifer Brier, University of Illinois at Chicago
290. Fifty Years after 1968: Research on the Global 1960s, Part 6: The Other Sixties: Cold War Conservatism and the New Right Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room Chair:
Alan Shane Dillingham, Spring Hill College
Papers:
Monks and Revolutionaries: Right-Wing Youth in Mexico and Argentina during the 1960s Luis Herran Avila, Carleton College
Reimagined Middle-Aged Men: Japanese Salaryman Masculinities in Conservative Weekly Magazines in the 1960s Samuel J. Timinsky, University of Wisconsin–Madison
From Berlin to Saigon and Back: The Transnational Imagination of West German Center-Right Activists Anna von der Goltz, Georgetown University
Comment: Alan Shane Dillingham This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 161, 187, 213, 241 and 263.
291. Iconoclasm and Public History: From Hatshepsut and the Calvinists to Robert E. Lee and ISIS Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North Chair:
John O. Voll, Georgetown University
Papers:
The Confederate Commemorative Landscape: Its Establishment, Revisions, and Future W. Fitzhugh Brundage, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Organized by the AHA Research Division Chair:
Rebecca Wingo, Macalester College
Papers:
A Digital History of the Sister/Outsiders of US Women’s Activism Michelle Moravec, Rosemont College
“We Have This Space Problem”: Quantifying Kissinger Micki Kaufman, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Calvin’s Unmarked Grave: Marking Ground beyond the Sacred and Profane Michelle Chaplin Sanchez, Harvard Divinity School
Modeling Memories of Conflict: Understanding Memory and Space in Medieval Biography Using Corpus Linguistics and Network Analysis Kalani Craig, Indiana University
ISIS, Monuments, and History David J. Wasserstein, Vanderbilt University
288. Incorporating Queer History into African History Survey Courses: A Roundtable
The Destruction of Art and Memory in Ancient Egypt: The Case of Hatshepsut’s Monuments Ann Macy Roth, New York University
292. Rethinking “Race” in the Spanish Atlantic: Shaping Imperial Laws and Defining Categories of Difference, Belonging, Royal Vassalage, and Religious Lineage Washington Hilton, Columbia 9
Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West Organized by the AHA Teaching Division; joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Chair:
Sarah E. Watkins, Ohio State University
Panel:
Elliot James, University of Minnesota, Morris Stephan F. Miescher, University of California, Santa Barbara Sarah E. Watkins
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Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Program Committee
83
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
José Carlos de la Puente, Texas State University
Papers:
Mestizos, Moriscos, and the 16th-Century Dialogue around Christian Subjecthood in the Spanish Empire Max Deardorff, Max Planck Institute for European Legal History
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Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Sessions
Loyal Royal Vassals: Black Vecinos and the Castilian Crown in the Early Hispanic Atlantic Chloe Ireton, University of Texas at Austin
Old Christian Moriscos in Early Modern Castile Stephanie M. Cavanaugh, McGill University
Subjecthood on Trial in Colonial Spanish America Robert C. Schwaller, University of Kansas
297. Fake News, Then and Now Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B Chair:
Marcus L. Daniel, University of Hawai’i at Manoa
Papers:
Pondering Truth and Public Opinion in a Representative Republic Katlyn Carter, University of Michigan
“This Plagariasm Was Falsely Sold”: Lies, Libels, and Copies in the Late 18th Century Nora Slonimsky, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York and McNeil Center for Early American Studies at the University of Pennsylvania
Comment: Audience
293. Race, Loyalty, and Allegiance in the Colonial British Caribbean: A Roundtable Washington Hilton, Columbia 10 Chair:
Christopher L. Brown, Columbia University
Panel:
Maria Alessandra Bollettino, Framingham State University Matthew Dziennik, United States Naval Academy Brooke Nicole Newman, Virginia Commonwealth University Dana Rabin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
294. The Cost of Empire: Compensatory Justice in the United States Washington Hilton, Columbia 11
“They Were Seen by Our Vessel to Throw Their Slaves Overboard”: Antislavery Myth and Death in the Middle Passage Ben Wright, University of Texas at Dallas
Comment: Robert Parkinson, Binghamton University, State University of New York
298. Infrastructures of the “American Century”: Technology, Mobility, and Materiality in Post-World War II US History Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room Chair:
Jenifer Van Vleck, Smithsonian Institution
Chair:
Justin Leroy, University of California, Davis
Papers:
Papers:
Neoliberal Regimes of Knowledge: The 1980s and 1990s Phenomenon of Establishing Universities within the Corporation Martin Collins, Smithsonian Institution
The Unredressed and the Unforgiven: American Atomic Bomb Survivors and the Politics of Reparations in the Cold War Pacific Michael Jin, University of Illinois at Chicago
Indian Trust Funds and Compensatory Justice: A Long View Emilie Connolly, New York University
Founding Air Jamaica: Postcolonial Aspirations for, and American Resistance to, Freedom of the Skies Phil Tiemeyer, Kansas State University
The Specter of Compensation: Mexican Claims against the US Government, 1868–1941 Allison Powers Useche, Columbia University
The Mechanics of Service Betsy Beasley, Institute for Advanced Study
Comment: Justin Leroy
295. An Unholy Alliance: Historical, Counterfactual, and Scientific Reflections on the Relations between Race and Genetics Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room Chair:
Emma Kowal, Deakin University
Papers:
Racial Thought and Mendelian Genetics in Germany and the United States, 1900–50 Amir Teicher, Tel Aviv University
Race without Genes: From the 19th Century to Postgenomics Maurizio Meloni, University of Sheffield
The “Realness” of Race in the Age of Precision Emma Kowal
Comment: Snait Gissis, Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Ideas, Tel Aviv University
296. The Black Nation, Mobility, and the Colored Conventions Movement in the Digital Age
Comment: Jenifer Van Vleck
299. Creando Cubanos: Cuban Educational Systems in the 19th and 20th Centuries Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Louis A. Pérez, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Papers:
Constructing the Citizen: The Public Uses of History and Civics in Cuban Schools, 1899–1920 Yoel Cordoví Núñez, Instituto de Historia de Cuba
Race, Gender, and Socially Appropriate Education in USOccupied Cuba Bonnie A. Lucero, Tulane University
School Segregation in 19th-Century Cuba Raquel Alicia Otheguy, Quinnipiac University
The “Liberal Moment” of the Revolution Early Educational Reforms in Revolutionary Cuba Rainer Schultz, Harvard University
Comment: Andrew J. Kirkendall, Texas A&M University
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A Chair:
Carla Peterson, University of Maryland, College Park
Panel:
Samantha DeVera, University of California, San Diego Sharla M. Fett, Occidental College Anna Lacy, University of Delaware Selena Ronshaye Sanderfer, Western Kentucky University
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Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Sessions Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C Chair:
304. Global Crisis and International Organization in the Americas Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B
A J Aiséirithe, Frederick Douglass Bicentennial Community
Panel:
Kenneth Morris Jr., Frederick Douglass Family Initiatives Tara Morrison, Frederick Douglass National Historic Site Hélène Quanquin, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Frank Smith, African American Civil War Memorial and Museum Comment: David W. Blight, Yale University
Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Patrick William Kelly, Northwestern University
Papers:
An Inter-American New Deal? The Global Depression and Latin American Economic Diplomacy Teresa Davis, Princeton University
301. Muslims in America: Denaturalizing ChristianCentered Narratives of American History
Shaking the Invisible Hand: Oil Nationalization and Mexico’s “United Front” before the Cold War Gregory Malandrucco, University of Ontario Institute of Technology and Trent University
Washington Hilton, Columbia 7 Chair:
Patrick Manning, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
African Muslims in the Americas Michael A. Gomez, New York University
Reframing the Conversation on African American Muslims Aminah Beverly Al-Deen, DePaul University
Building Muslim Publics in the United States, 1900–60 Sally Howell, University of Michigan–Dearborn
Comment: Patrick William Kelly
American Muslims and “the New World Order” Kambiz GhaneaBassiri, Reed College
305. Policing Black Radicalism
Comment: Audience
302. Primary Sources and the Historical Profession in the Age of Text Search, Part 5: Theory and Method in the Digital Age Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom Chair:
Anne Kelly Knowles, University of Maine
Papers:
Mapping the Invisible Intermediaries: Historians’ Craft and Digital Search Lara E. Putnam, University of Pittsburgh
Rethinking Social Science under Digital Conditions Jason Rhody, Social Science Research Council
Source Criticism and Digitized Visual Culture: Tales from Digital Islamic Art History Hussein Keshani, University of British Columbia Okanagan
Working Together for “The Redemption of Mankind”: Mexico, the Americas, and the World in the Postwar Moment Ashley Black, Stony Brook University Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, El Bogotazo, and the Development of the Organization of American States, 1946–48 Stefano Tijerina, University of Maine
Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B Chair:
Shannon King, College of Wooster
Papers:
Preventing Future Misconduct: The Public Disorder Intelligence Division, Surveillance, and the Containment of Anti-police Abuse Movements in 1970s Los Angeles Max Felker-Kantor, DePauw University
Rumors of a Cult: Black Radicalism, Violence, and Policing in 1970s San Francisco Christine Lamberson, Angelo State University
Making an American Tragedy: MOVE, the Philadelphia Police, and the Politics of Urban Law Enforcement Timothy J. Lombardo, University of South Alabama
306. Race and Immigration in the Era of Decolonization Washington Hilton, Columbia 12 Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies Chair:
Anne Spry Rush, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
Youth, Race, and Immigration Control in 1960s Britain Radhika Natarajan, Reed College
Comment: Audience
This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 135, 162, 186 and 239.
Citizenship at the Border: Stowaways, State Power, and the Making of Immigration Policy Kennetta Hammond Perry, East Carolina University
Too Much Information: Transparency, Metadata, and Search in the Age of Web Archives Ian Milligan, University of Waterloo
303. Teaching Slavery Comprehensively and Conscientiously Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2 Chair:
K. Allison Wickens, George Washington’s Mount Vernon
Panel:
Kristin Gallas, Interpreting Slavery K. Allison Wickens Shannon M. Lubold, Owings Mills High School
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300. Frederick Douglass at 200: His Legacy in Our Time
85
The Demographic Defense of the White Nation: Entwined Histories of Race and Immigration in South Africa and the United Kingdom in the 1960s and 1970s Jean Smith, King’s College London
Comment: Anne Spry Rush
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Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Sessions
307. Digitizing Military History: New Frontiers in Race, Gender, Urban Studies, and Education
Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B Joint session with the Society for Military History Chair:
Clifford J. Rogers, United States Military Academy
Panel:
Amanda Boczar, University of South Florida John Fahey, United States Military Academy Cameron McCoy, Brigham Young University
308. Internationalizing the Teaching of US History Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3 Chair: Panel:
Craig Perrier, Fairfax County Public Schools and Northeastern University Charles Cavaliere, Oxford University Press Robert C. McGreevey, The College of New Jersey Christopher T. Fisher, The College of New Jersey
309. Rethinking the Left in 20th-Century Latin America Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair:
Kevin Young, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Papers:
Common Ground: Caciques, Artisans, and Radical Intellectuals and the 1927 Chayanta Rebellion Forrest Hylton, Northwestern University
Indigenous Movements in the Eye of the Hurricane Marc Becker, Truman State University
“For the Dignification of Women”: Cuba and the 1959 Congress of Latin American Women in Santiago de Chile Michelle Chase, Pace University
“Agents of Disruption and Social Dissolution”: Oppositional Activism in Guerrero, Mexico O’Neill Blacker-Hanson, University of New Mexico
Mayas in Revolution Betsy O. Konefal, College of William and Mary
We Struggled for a Common Good: Urban-Rural Alliances on the Salvadoran Left, 1970–80 Kevin Young
Comment: Margaret M. Power, Illinois Institute of Technology
310. Empire, Race, and Sovereignty in Hawai’i: From Kingdom to Statehood Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C
Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Conference on Latin American History Session 70 Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Historical Perspectives on Contemporary Paradiplomacy: The International Venturing of Subnational Governments in the Caribbean with Focus on Puerto Rico’s Experience Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A Chair:
Abraham F. Lowenthal, University of Southern California
Papers:
Puerto Rico’s Paradiplomacy at the End of the 20th Century: Between Pragmatism and Identity Showcasing Raymond Laureano-Ortiz, Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Puerto Rico y el Caribe
Conference on Latin American History Session 71 Creating and Imagining a Unified Spanish Empire in the Early 18th Century: Views from the American Viceroyalties Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B Chair:
Fabricio Prado, College of William and Mary
Papers:
News, War, and a Contested Succession: Official and Extra-Official Sources of Information in New Spain, 1701–14 Frances L. Ramos, University of South Florida
E Wehe Ae: Telephone Technology in Kal a¯kaua’s Hawai’i Hi’ilei Julia Hobart, Northwestern University
Historical Narratives, the “Dying Race,” and US Colonialism in Hawai’i, 1880–1920 Tom Smith, University of Cambridge
The “Picture Window of the Pacific”: Hawai’i Statehood and Global Decolonization Sarah Miller-Davenport, University of Sheffield
Comments with Personal Insights into Paradiplomacy in the US and French Caribbean Jean Yves Lacascade, independent scholar
Papers:
Comments with Personal Paradiplomatic Insights into Puerto Rico’s Caribbean Development Program in the ’90s David E. Lewis, Manchester Trade
Warfare State in the Pacific: Hawai’i and Martial Law during the Second World War Daniel Immerwahr, Northwestern University
Comments with Personal Insights into Puerto Rican Paradiplomacy in the UN Circuit Julio A. Ortiz Luquis, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Julia Irwin, University of South Florida
De Puerto Rico para el Mundo: Preparing for the Quincentenary Celebrations, 1985–92 Joanna Marie Camacho Escobar, Miami University Ohio
Chair:
Puerto Rican Paradiplomacy during the New Deal: The Information and Research Division of the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration Geoff Burrows, independent scholar
Militarizing the Empire: The 18th-Century Spanish Convict Labor System in the Circum-Caribbean Jesse Cromwell, University of Mississippi
Circulation of Popular Normative Literature in Spanish America, c. 1650–1750 Otto Danwerth, Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte A Witches’ Sabbath, Gossip, and Transatlantic Communications in New Granada, c. 1715 Francisco A. Eissa-Barroso, University of Manchester
Comment: Christoph Rosenmüller, Middle Tennessee State University
Comment: Julia Irwin
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Sunday, January 7, 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Sessions Polish American Historical Association Session 11 New Books on the Transnational Political Activism of Poles: From World War II to the Fall of Communism
87
Midday Session of the AHA Program Committee
Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom Chair:
Katalin Kádár Lynn, Eötvös Loránd University
Sunday, January 7, 12:30–4:00 p.m.
Papers:
Catholics on the Barricades: Poland, France, and “Revolution,” 1939–56 Piotr H. Kosicki, University of Maryland, College Park
Third Europe: Polish Federalist Thought in the United States, 1940s–70s Sławomir Łukasiewicz, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin and IPN
Political Exiles from East Central Europe in American Cold War Politics, 1948–54 Anna Mazurkiewicz, University of Gda´nsk
Comments: A. Ross Johnson, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Hoover Institution Michael C. Kimmage, Catholic University of America
Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 10 Political Catholicism and Christian Democracy in Modern Italy Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South
Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A Joint session with the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media The session will begin at the meeting hotel, where participants will be introduced to the history, goals, and lessons learned during the Under standing Sacrifice project, including examples of teacher research and interdisciplinary lesson plans. The group will then take Metro to tour the National WWII Memorial with Dr. Hamner to experience the power of teaching with place firsthand, and to explore the concepts of war, memory, and memorialization. Those who tour the memorial should plan to return to the hotel by about 4 p.m. Chair:
Jennifer L. Rosenfeld, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media
Papers:
Understanding Sacrifice: An Interdisciplinary Approach Bryce Carpenter, US Department of Veterans Affairs, National Cemetery Administration Carved in Stone: Teaching World War II through Monuments and Memorials Christopher Heald Hamner, George Mason University
Chair:
Roy Domenico, University of Scranton
Papers:
Christian Democracy and the Sacralization of Politics in Republican Italy Paolo Acanfora, Istituto don Luigi Sturzo
Catholics and the Constitutions: A Comparison between J.C. Murray and Giuseppe Dossetti in Postwar Catholicism Massimo Faggioli, Villanova University
“We Leave You Our Deaths, Give Them Their Meaning”: The Mission of the American Battle Monuments Commission Timothy Nosal, American Battle Monuments Commission
Rethinking Christian Democracy: Transcendence as Transformation—Italian Politics, 1930–50 Bjørn Thomassen, Roskilde University Rosario Forlenza, New York University
Fallen Heroes: Bringing the Story of Wartime into the Classroom Lynne O’Hara, National History Day
Comment: Audience
January 7, 2018
Understanding Sacrifice: A Lens for Studying World War II through Art, Science, Literature, and History
Italy’s Odd Couple: Alcide De Gasperi, Pietro Nenni, and the Founding of the Italian Republic Steven F. White, Mount Saint Mary’s University
Comment: Audience
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88
Topical Index
Numbers are session numbers. This index was compiled from keywords selected by session organizers when they submitted proposals. It is intended as a guide rather than a comprehensive list. African American 10, 11, 25, 26, 137, 149, 162, 190, 201, 212, 262, 270, 274, 281, 296, 305 African Diaspora 22, 23, 33, 36, 68, 109, 148, 149, 160, 181, 208, 241, 253, 269, 270, 272, 274, 275
Family 63, 206, 229
Political 6, 46, 51, 71, 100, 116, 190, 246, 273, 304, 305
Feminism 196, 217, 219
Political Economy 42, 139, 178, 200, 250, 294
Film/Media/Photography 98
Exhibition(s) 139, 214
Food and Foodways 84, 195, 273
Popular Culture/Mass Culture 115, 118, 119, 124, 193, 243, 277
Agrarian/Rural 175, 199
Foreign Policy 147, 186, 188
Post Colonial 46, 221
Archives 7, 38, 68, 84, 88, 94, 124, 135, 239, 265
Gender 45, 63, 84, 93, 102, 119, 126, 143, 146, 147, 160, 166, 172, 182, 196, 215, 217, 219, 238, 257, 281
Print Culture/History of the Book 119, 146, 243, 297
Arts 38, 119, 243 Asian American 25 Atlantic World 13, 23, 33, 64, 75, 90, 148, 176, 208, 228, 244, 269, 276, 293 Borderlands 113, 170, 197, 216, 220, 232, 251 Capitalism 19, 36, 73, 150, 159, 192, 200, 266, 274, 298 Catholicism 121 Chicano(a)/Latino(a) 113, 129 Childhood and Youth 168, 252
Global 8, 9, 62, 78, 91, 122, 125, 142, 167, 229, 254, 271 Historical Organization(s) 66 Historiography/Historical Theory and Method 5, 56, 71, 96, 97, 115, 119, 129, 135, 154, 172, 191, 199, 217, 230, 247, 277, 302 Iberian World 63, 75, 169, 292 Identity 44, 111, 120, 191
Christianity 45, 229
Immigration 59, 74, 84, 102, 110, 114, 123, 147, 272, 306
Citizenship/National Identity/Nationalism 8, 12, 20, 22, 59, 73, 83, 95, 98, 113, 132, 141, 170, 173, 224, 228, 251, 258, 275, 299
Imperialism 20, 57, 116, 180, 188, 189, 204, 221, 276, 280
Civil War 95 Class 13, 52, 96, 121, 200, 247, 309 Cold War 12, 61, 75, 85, 137, 187, 266, 290 Colonialism 20, 37, 41, 93, 137, 142, 171, 176, 180, 197, 213, 221, 276, 280, 294
Sexuality 17, 143, 147, 163, 215, 219, 288
Jewish 15, 123
Slavery 10, 23, 33, 50, 68, 82, 90, 105, 145, 148, 181, 219, 244, 256, 283, 303
Job Market 58, 86
Local 231, 250, 300
Labor 50, 65, 90, 96, 121, 140, 151, 153
Maritime 216 Material Culture 26, 112, 136, 163, 191, 246, 284
Digital 14, 56, 67, 87, 88, 117, 135, 149, 155, 162, 169, 186, 205, 223, 230, 239, 257, 279, 296, 302, 307
Medicine/Disease/Public Health 21, 114, 198, 273, 295
Diplomatic/International 37, 85, 99, 170, 188, 214, 254, 271, 280, 298, 304
Memory Studies 179, 189
Emotions/Senses 192 Empire 39, 47, 48, 62, 64, 78, 99, 105, 125, 145, 182, 216, 220, 221, 245, 294, 299, 306, 310
Religion 14, 70, 173, 227
Intellectual 9, 44, 70, 71, 165, 190, 253, 264
Cultural 9, 21, 45, 51, 129, 140, 141, 214, 243, 281
Education 126, 154, 168, 263, 271, 299, 307
Race and Ethnicity 10, 13, 22, 36, 47, 53, 57, 59, 60, 74, 76, 82, 83, 91, 93, 95, 105, 110, 119, 140, 144, 145, 150, 153, 168, 175, 176, 179, 195, 198, 200, 201, 208, 218, 220, 226, 238, 244, 267, 269, 272, 275, 292, 295, 306, 309, 310
Science 21, 64, 198, 218, 268, 295
Legal 46, 72, 165, 180
Economic/Business 50, 150, 186, 193
Quantitative Methods 205
Indigenous 16, 41, 60, 122, 142, 224
Crime and Violence 92, 114, 174, 305
Disability 31
Publishing 225, 230
Revolution 47, 61, 194, 244, 246, 309
LGBTQ 17, 30, 74, 103, 126, 143, 147, 163, 196, 215, 257, 265, 288
Diasporas 114, 147, 171, 253
Public 17, 35, 66, 94, 132, 211, 225, 262, 296, 300
Indian Ocean World 255
Comparative 39, 69, 122, 124, 144, 161, 167, 171, 172, 187, 213, 226, 241, 252, 258, 263, 290, 292
Demography 67
Profession 24, 34, 35, 40, 58, 66, 86, 94, 129, 138, 164, 177, 225, 279, 302
Mediterranean World 62, 226, 232
Social 100, 166 Social Movement 43, 161, 187, 194, 201, 241, 256, 263, 264, 290 Teaching 1, 3, 30, 35, 40, 51, 54, 58, 69, 77, 81, 88, 108, 117, 128, 129, 132, 138, 154, 155, 185, 212, 223, 233, 239, 243, 277, 279, 282, 288, 303 Technology 73, 98, 100, 115, 117, 118, 192, 298 Transnational 11, 15, 61, 72, 85, 144, 151, 153, 162, 165, 178, 193, 195, 200, 220, 224, 228, 232, 247, 254, 264, 283, 308
Military 49, 141, 182, 238, 266, 307
Urban 67, 84, 89, 166, 202, 270
Modernity 44, 146, 199
Visual Materials 69, 119, 181
Museums 26, 38, 207, 218, 251
War 77, 178, 249
Music 91
Women 11, 65, 83, 84, 110, 112, 136, 219, 249, 265, 282
Nationalism 48, 57, 78, 82, 173, 179, 203, 244, 250, 252, 267, 283, 301
World War I 112, 136, 203, 231
Native American 87, 259
World War II 8, 15, 60, 123, 203, 231
Environmental 16, 18, 41, 89, 167, 175, 202
Pacific World 151
Ethnohistory 16, 87, 102, 116, 197, 245
Peace and Conflict 49
World/Global 30, 39, 48, 70, 99, 118, 125, 194, 258, 267
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Affiliated Societies
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The following is an overview of sessions and events planned by the American Historical Association’s affiliated societies. Sessions identified as joint with the AHA were accepted by the AHA Program Committee.
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 4. The Suffering Body: Transhistorical Explorations of Redemptive and Communicative Suffering (p. 33)
African American Intellectual History Society
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Forum Room. Session 5. The Catholic Charismatic Renewal: Origins and Transmission of a Transnational Movement (p. 34)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Black Women and Internationalism in the 20th Century (p. 14)
Saturday, January 6 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Black Power in the World in the Global 1960s (p. 70)
Agricultural History Society Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 1, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American History. The Environmental Axis of Identity Formation: Race, Labor, and Landscape in the Americas, 19th and 20th Centuries (p. 53) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B. Session 2, joint with the AHA. High vs. Low: A Roundtable Discussion of High Modernism and Low Modernism in the History of Agrarian Development (p. 59)
Alcohol and Drugs History Society Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2. Session 1. Transgressive Marijuana: Cultivating, Performing, and Regulating the Cannabis Culture in the 20th Century (p. 33) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2. Session 2. Drugs in the Classroom: What Should We Tell Students about Alcohol, Tobacco, Drugs, and Addictive Digital Technologies in History—and in Their Own Lives? (p. 41) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2. Session 3. Anti-Drug Activism in America and China during the 1950s and Beyond: Grassroots and Government Strategies (p. 47)
American Catholic Historical Association Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Council Room. Executive Council Meeting
Friday, January 5
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 6. Negotiating Catholicism and Anti-Catholicism in the 19th-Century United States (p. 34) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 7. Martyrdom, Sanctity, and Death in Medieval Europe (p. 41) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Forum Room. Session 8. Sex, Marriage, and Family in Catholic Europe (p. 41) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 9. The Holy See, American Catholics, and the Emerging of New Global Challenges after the First World War (p. 41) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 10. Catholic Attitudes toward Protestantism and Judaism between the Two World Wars: American Context, Transnational Organizations, and Vatican Politics (p. 47) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 11. Encountering Modernity: Catholic Social Thought in the 20th-Century United States (p. 47) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. General Meeting
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 12. American Catholic Sexual Revolutions (p. 55) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 13. Catholics, Migration, and National Identity in the 20th-Century United States (p. 55) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Forum Room. Session 14. Catholic Education and Religious Identity in the Mid- to Late 20th-Century United States (p. 55) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 15. Catholicism, American Identity, and Foreign Relations in the 20th Century (p. 61) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 16. Varieties of Catholic Missionary Efforts in Asia from the 18th through the 20th Century (p. 61) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Forum Room. Session 17. Catholic Images, Narratives, and Identities in Early Modern Europe (p. 61)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 1. Catholicism in the 20th-Century American West (p. 28)
12:00–2:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Ambassador Ballroom. Presidential Luncheon (p. 64)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 2. American Catholics in 19th-Century Politics (p. 28)
3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Session 18. Urban Catholic Parish Life in the United States: Tales from Two Cities (p. 73)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Forum Room. Session 3. Beyond the Convent School: New Perspectives on Education for Girls in Colonial and 19th-Century Mexico and Guatemala (p. 28)
3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Forum Room. Session 19. Saints and Miracles in Early Modern/Modern Europe and Colonial America (p. 73)
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Thursday, January 4
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Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons Affiliated Societies
3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Cabinet Room. Session 20. Faith, Doubt, and Religious Transformation in Modern Europe (p. 73) 5:30–6:15 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Executive Room. Liturgy
American Conference for Irish Studies Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4. Migration and Irish Identity (p. 21)
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Session 1. Migrancy and Empire in the 18th Century: A Roundtable (p. 17)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Society for French Historical Studies. Rethinking the State in Ancien Régime France, Then and Now (p. 26) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Women and the Construction of Racial Identity in Global Dutch Communities of the 17th and 18th Centuries (p. 32) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 6. Session 4, joint with the AHA. Trans-imperial Habsburg Dynamics in the Long 18th Century (p. 32)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3. Session 5, joint with the AHA, the French Colonial Historical Society, and the Society for French Historical Studies. Race, Identity, and the Movement of Ideas and Information in the Wider French Atlantic World (p. 53)
American Society for Legal History Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session 1, joint with the AHA and the Central European History Society. Transatlantic Perspectives on Law and Illiberalism, 1907–49 (p. 52) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B. Session 2. The Law Matters Even in Mexico: New Perspectives on 20th-Century Legal History (p. 68)
American Society of Church History Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 6. Session 1, joint with the AHA. The Digital History of 19th-Century US Religion (p. 14)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 7. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Religious Nationalism in Flux (p. 53) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Competing Visions of Reform: Early Modern Conceptions of Christian Reform (p. 67)
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Association for Computers and the Humanities Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room. Session, joint with the AHA. Colonial Archives and Publications: Digital Native American History Is/as Transformative Use (p. 31)
Association for Documentary Editing Friday, January 5 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North. Session, joint with the National History Center of the American Historical Association. Documenting the History of the First Federal Congress (p. 42)
Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Friday, January 5 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B. Defining El Campo: Rural Identity and the Creation of Modern Spain (p. 47)
Association of Ancient Historians Saturday, January 6 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Reconsidering the World of the Ancient Greeks and Romans (p. 61)
Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the African American Intellectual History Society, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Black Women and Internationalism in the 20th Century (p. 14) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, McKinley Room. Session 2, joint with the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Organizations and Collaboration: A Conversation about Women in History (p. 22)
Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Session 3, joint with the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Dismantling Boundaries: Women’s Historians and the Transformation of History (p. 35) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Session 4, joint with the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Experiencing War: Refugees, Alliances, and Fighters (p. 42) 7:30–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. LGBTQ Historians’ Reception, joint with the AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History
Saturday, January 6 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. Session 5, joint with the AHA and the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Starving Women’s Bodies (p. 71)
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Affiliated Societies
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 6. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Ideologies of Industrialization in the Early American Republic (p. 27) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 2, joint with the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing. Peddling Print in 19th-Century America: Subscription Publishing as a Business Model (p. 48)
Saturday, January 6 12:00–1:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room. Luncheon: Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism: Perspectives from Business History (p. 63)
Central European History Society Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Central European History Society President’s Panel: Transnational Encounters on the Soviet Home Front: Central and East European Jewish Refugees in the USSR during the Holocaust (p. 15)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Society for Austrian and Habsburg History. Nations of the Commonwealth: State Formation and Ethnic Identity in Early Modern Poland-Lithuania (p. 27) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Race and Membership in Germany (p. 33) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 1. Session 4. Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 1: A Discussion of Karen Hagemann’s Revisiting Prussia’s Wars against Napoleon (p. 34) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 1. Session 5. Jewish Masculinities in the Shadow of the Holocaust (p. 41) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 2. Session 6. Continuities in Post-Nazi Society (p. 42) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 2. Session 7. Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 2: The National, the Transnational, and the Global in 19th-Century European History (p. 47)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session 8, joint with the AHA and the American Society for Legal History. Transatlantic Perspectives on Law and Illiberalism, 1907–49 (p. 52)
12:00–2:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Coats Room. Board Meeting 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B. Session 12. Monumental Deviations: Public Monuments, Audience Engagement, and Alternative Scripts of Memoralization in Central Europe, 1890–1990 (p. 74) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 13. Antisemitism and Racism: Sources, Similarities, and Differences (p. 74) 5:00–6:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room C. Business Meeting 6:00–8:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room. Reception
Chinese Historians in the United States Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room C. Session 1. Legal Reforms, Philosophy, and Women in the Media in China during the Late Qing and Early Republican Period (p. 34)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B. Session 2. Security, Trade, and Nationalism—Perception/Misperception and US-China Relations (p. 55) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B. Session 3. Corruption and Anticorruption in Modern China (p. 62) 7:00–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, McKinley Room. Membership Meeting
College Board Thursday, January 4 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Symposium on Advanced Placement History (p. 12)
Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Outing the Early American Past: Case Studies from Academic and Public History (p. 15) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Teaching Queer Themes and Experiences in World History (p. 18)
Friday, January 5
8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C. Session 9, joint with the AHA. Total War and the Genesis of Industrial-Scale Recycling (p. 54)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Queer Contortions: New Directions in the History of Race, Sexuality, and the Body (p. 27)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Jefferson East. Session 10. Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 3: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in 19th-Century Central European History (p. 55)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 4, joint with the AHA and the National Council on Public History. The National Park Service’s LGBTQ America Theme Study: A Roundtable (p. 33)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Jefferson East. Session 11. Rewriting 19th-Century Central European History, Part 4: A Neglected Era: The Long 19th Century in Central European History (p. 61)
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Business History Conference
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12:30–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Room. Members’ Meeting
23/10/17 5:34 PM
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Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons Affiliated Societies
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 5, joint with the AHA. Words That Shape the World: Historians, Teachers, and Partnerships for LGBT History (p. 40) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 6. Surveillance, Identity, and Homosexualities in the 20thCentury United States (p. 42) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 7, joint with the AHA. Queer in Public: Urban Space and Same-Sex Cultures in Europe, 1850–1930 (p. 45) 7:30–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. LGBTQ Historians’ Reception, joint with the AHA, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West. Session 8, joint with the AHA. Queering the Museum: New Directions in Curating LGBTQ History and Art Exhibitions (p. 52) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West. Session 9, joint with the AHA. Historicizing the Queerly Feminine in Canadian and US LGBTQ Communities (p. 58) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 10. Visibility and Viability: Queer Communities of Color in 20th-Century American History (p. 62) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West. Session 11, joint with the AHA. New Directions in Trans History: A Roundtable (p. 66) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 12. From Hidden History to Public History: Challenges in Representing Same-Sex Desire in Film, Theater, and Literature (p. 68) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 13, joint with the AHA. Teaching LGBT History with Digital Humanities (p. 72)
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 14, joint with the AHA. Teaching and Archiving Lesbian Histories and Subjects (p. 79) 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall West. Session 15, joint with the AHA. Incorporating Queer History into African History Survey Courses: A Roundtable (p. 83)
Conference of Historical Journals Saturday, January 6 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216. Business Meeting
Conference on Asian History Friday, January 5 12:00–1:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room. Luncheon (p. 36)
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Conference on Faith and History Friday, January 5 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 3. Session 1. Roundtable Discussion: The Bible in American Cultural and Political History (p. 48)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Jefferson West. Breakfast Reception 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Lincoln West. Session 2. Roundtable Discussion: Writing Women’s Religious Biography (p. 62)
Conference on Latin American History Thursday, January 4 12:30–5:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Registration A. Information Table 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Cultural Diplomacy, Science, and Brazil-US Relations, 1930s–50s (p. 16) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B. Session 2, joint with the AHA. What Is the African Diaspora in a “Post-racial Society”? The Case of 19th- and 20th-Century Mexico (p. 16) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2. Session 3, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on the Intra-American Slave Trading Routes (p. 16) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 4. Spatial History in Border Regions of Modern Latin America (p. 17) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 5. Crossing Borders in Latin American History: “Pioneer” Women Historians and Their Stories (p. 17) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 6. Kinship, Ethnicity, and the Law in the Iberian World (p. 17) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2. Session 7, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on the Intra-American Slave Trading Routes (p. 19) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 8, joint with the AHA. The Latin American Middle Classes: An Interdisciplinary Approach (p. 21) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 9. Moral Limits: Inequality in Ethics in the Atlantic Human Sciences, 20th Century (p. 22) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 10. Social Control, Violence, and Religion in the Caribbean and Central America (p. 22) 6:00–8:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216. General Committee Meeting
Friday, January 5 8:00–11:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Registration A. Information Table
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Affiliated Societies
8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 12, joint with the AHA. Family, Household, Community, and the Court: Extending and Defying Domestic Male Authority in Colonial Latin America (p. 25) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. Session 13, joint with the AHA. Postslavery Lives around the Caribbean: Social Control, Representation, and the Possibilities of Narration (p. 26) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. Session 14, joint with the AHA. Historical Thinking and the Survey Course: Sources, Strategies, Assessments, and Best Practices in the United States, Latin America, and World Surveys (p. 26) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B. Session 15, joint with the AHA. Spain, Latin America, and the Transatlantic Cold War (p. 27) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 16. Rethinking the Legal Profession in the Colonial Andes (p. 28) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 17. Remembering the Eastern Andean Imperial Frontier: Exploration, Consolidation, and Identity in Colonial Spanish Charcas (p. 28) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 18. The Abolitionist Movement in Brazil: New Approaches (p. 34) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 19. The Cacicas of Colonial Latin America (p. 34) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 20. Public Health and Education in the Andes and Caribbean (p. 34) 12:00–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1. Luncheon (p. 36) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session 21, joint with the AHA. Ways of Seeing, Shaping, and Documenting Subjects under Postcolonial Conflicts (p. 44)
3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 27. Piracy, Imperial Expansion, and the Making of the Modern World: New Perspectives from the Atlantic and Beyond (p. 48) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Taft Room. Session 29. Caribbean Studies Committee Meeting: Flight, Migration, and Borders in the Caribbean from Carib Expansion to 21st-Century Diasporas (p. 49) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Taylor Room. Session 30. Central American Studies Committee Meeting: The Problem of Modernity in Central America (p. 49) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Truman Room. Session 31. Colonial Studies Committee Meeting: Beyond the Archival Divide: A Roundtable on Methods, Perspectives, and Experiences from Colonial Latin American Archives (p. 49) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Tyler Room. Session 32. Teaching and Teaching Materials Committee Meeting: The Changing Narrative Arc of History: Workshopping Assignments That Link History to the Present (p. 49) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216. The Americas Editorial Board Meeting 7:15–8:45 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Taft Room. Session 33. Brazilian Studies Committee Meeting: Social Movements: Approaches, Debates, and Memory (p. 50) 7:15–8:45 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Taylor Room. Session 34. Chile-Río de la Plata Studies Committee Meeting: The Crafting and Molding of Race in a “White” Nation (p. 50) 7:15–8:45 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Truman Room. Session 35. Gran Colombia Studies Committee Meeting: New Directions on Politics and Society in Pre- and Post-Gran Colombia: From the Public Sphere to Caribbean Tourism (p. 50)
Saturday, January 6 8:00–11:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Registration A. Information Table
3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C. Session 22, joint with the AHA. 1968 Mexico City Olympics (p. 44)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Hampton Room. Session 36, joint with the AHA. Digital Colonial Latin America: Experiments in Research, Teaching, and Narrative (p. 52)
3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B. Session 23, joint with the AHA. Resistant and Receptive, Insiders and Outsiders: Native Peoples and the Making of Early Modern Indigenous Sovereignty, Colonial Subjects, and Slaves (p. 45)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 37, joint with the AHA. The Logistics of Drug Trafficking in the Americas: Mobility, Space, Nation, and Race (p. 53)
3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. Session 24, joint with the AHA. Connections and Their Consequences: Cuba, West Africa, and Spain Resisting and Adapting to Change (p. 46) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 25. Envisioning the Nation: Mexico and the World, 1900–50 (p. 48) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 26. Scandalous Behavior in Colonial Latin America: Agency, Crime, and Punishment in Criminal and Inquisition Files (p. 48)
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8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B. Session 11, joint with the AHA. Cuba in a Revolutionary World, 1940s–60s (p. 25)
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8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 38, joint with the AHA and the Agricultural History Society. The Environmental Axis of Identity Formation: Race, Labor, and Landscape in the Americas, 19th and 20th Centuries (p. 53) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 39. Transnational Mexico: Shifting Subjecthood in the Global 1960s and 1970s (p. 56) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 40. The Global, the Local, the Diasporic, and the In-Between: Puerto Rican History through Different Lenses (p. 56)
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Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons Affiliated Societies
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 41, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on the Ethnohistory of the Spanish Borderlands (p. 59)
6:00–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Tyler Room. Session 59. Mexican Studies Committee Meeting: How Atlantic/Pacific Is Ethnohistory? (p. 76)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 12. Session 42, joint with the AHA. Water and Urban Power in 20th-Century Latin America (p. 59)
6:00–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216. Hispanic American Historical Review Editorial Board Meeting
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 43. Slavery and Gradual Emancipation in the Americas (p. 62)
7:30–9:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Cocktail Reception
Sunday, January 7
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 44. Implementing Authoritarianism: Overlooked Sectors under Latin America’s Cold War Regimes (p. 62)
9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C. Session 60, joint with the AHA. Caribbean Circulations: Race, Nation, and Citizenship in Cuba, 1890–1980 (p. 80)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 45. The Politics of the Apolitical in Latin America: Nation, Youth, and Community, 1960–90 (p. 62)
9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. Session 61, joint with the AHA. Nation-Making beyond Slavery: The United States and the Transformation of 19th-Century Brazil (p. 81)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 46, joint with the AHA. Historical Perspectives on Sovereignty in the Americas (p. 66)
9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B. Session 62, joint with the AHA. Matters of State, Matters of Dispute: Collecting and Display in 19th- and 20th-Century Mexico (p. 81)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 9. Session 47, joint with the AHA. State Building and Transnational Indian Policies in the Americas, 1940–80 (p. 67) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 11. Session 48, joint with the AHA. Revolutionaries, Refugees, and Smugglers: New Directions in Inter-American Exchanges during the Age of Revolution (p. 67)
9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 63. Urbanization, Mobility, and Modernization in the 20th Century (p. 81) 9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 64. Slavery and Emancipation (p. 82)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 49. Writing Colombian History after the 2016 Accord: Questions and Methods (p. 68)
9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 65. Conquest, Communal Rights, and Population in Colonial Latin America (p. 82)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 50. New Perspectives on Puerto Rican Nationalism (p. 68)
11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 9. Session 66, joint with the AHA. Rethinking “Race” in the Spanish Atlantic: Shaping Imperial Laws and Defining Categories of Difference, Belonging, Royal Vassalage, and Religious Lineage (p. 83)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 51. Tradition, Suspicion, and Inquisition: Catholic Anxieties of Portuguese Converso, Chino, and Nahua Heterodoxy in 17th-Century New Spain (p. 69) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 52, joint with the AHA. Assessing the State from the Peripheries: The Construction of Governance in 19th-Century Latin America (p. 71) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 53. The Early Modern Iberian Empires in Global Perspective (p. 74) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 54. Encountering Women in Development in 20th-Century Bolivia (p. 74) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 55. Left Development Projects (p. 74) 6:00–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Taft Room. Session 56. Atlantic World Studies Committee Meeting (p. 76) 6:00–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Taylor Room. Session 57. Andean Studies Committee Meeting: The Andes and the Pacific World (p. 76) 6:00–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Truman Room. Session 58. Borderlands and Frontier Studies Committee Meeting: Borderlands and Border-Crossing Histories on Land and at Sea (p. 76)
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11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session 67, joint with the AHA. Creando Cubanos: Cuban Educational Systems in the 19th and 20th Centuries (p. 84) 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B. Session 68, joint with the AHA. Global Crisis and International Organization in the Americas (p. 85) 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. Session 69, joint with the AHA. Rethinking the Left in 20th-Century Latin America (p. 86) 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session 70, joint with the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. Historical Perspectives on Contemporary Paradiplomacy: The International Venturing of Subnational Governments in the Caribbean with Focus on Puerto Rico’s Experience (p. 86) 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Session 71. Creating and Imagining a Unified Spanish Empire in the Early 18th Century: Views from the American Viceroyalties (p. 86)
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Affiliated Societies
95
Coordinating Council for Women in History
French Colonial Historical Society
Thursday, January 4
Thursday, January 4
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, McKinley Room. Annual Business Meeting 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, McKinley Room. Session 2, joint with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. Organizations and Collaboration: A Conversation about Women in History (p. 22)
Friday, January 5
3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the Society for French Historical Studies, and the Western Society for French History. Beyond Haiti: Race and the Limits of Revolutionary Freedom in France’s Global Empire, 1789–1815 (p. 21)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3. Session 2, joint with the AHA, the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, and the Society for French Historical Studies. Race, Identity, and the Movement of Ideas and Information in the Wider French Atlantic World (p. 53)
8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 5. Session 3, joint with the AHA and the Labor and Working Class History Association. The Politics of Domestic Service in Asia and the Americas, 1870–2015 (p. 25)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B. Session 3, joint with the AHA and the Society for French Historical Studies. Memory and Mimesis: Legacies of War, Violence, and Occupation in Decolonizing Europe (p. 58)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Session 4, joint with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. Dismantling Boundaries: Women’s Historians and the Transformation of History (p. 35)
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 4, joint with the AHA, the Society for French Historical Studies, and the Western Society for French History. Webs of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism in the French Empire (p. 60)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Session 5, joint with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. Experiencing War: Refugees, Alliances, and Fighters (p. 42)
1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1. Session 5, joint with the AHA and the Western Society for French History. Thinking Race and Race Thinking around the “Francophone” Black Atlantic (p. 65)
7:30–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. LGBTQ Historians’ Reception, joint with the AHA, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, and the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History
Saturday, January 6 12:15–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B. Annual Awards Luncheon (p. 64) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite A. Session 6, joint with the AHA and the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. Starving Women’s Bodies (p. 71)
Disability History Association Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session, joint with the AHA. Globalizing Disability History: Contributions from Latin America, the Middle East, South Asia, and East Asia (p. 18)
Economic History Association Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 7. Session 1, joint with the AHA. New Research on the Economic Causes and Consequences of Discrimination and Segregation (p. 16)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 3. Session 2, joint with the Society for Italian Historical Studies. Out of the Shadows: Industry and Its Social Ramifications in Northern Italy, 16th–18th Centuries (p. 29)
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Affiliates
1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the African American Intellectual History Society, and the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. Black Women and Internationalism in the 20th Century (p. 14)
German Historical Institute Friday, January 5 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room B. Inside/Outside: Defining, Ascribing, and Communicating “Germanness” in Different Contexts, Spaces, and Times (p. 42)
Goldberg Center for Excellence in Teaching Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 1. Teaching the Cold War (p. 35)
Saturday, January 6 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 2. Session 2. History and the Future (p. 62)
Haskins Society Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 7. Session, joint with the AHA. Ethnicity in Imperial and Nationalist Discourses, Then and Now (p. 24)
Historical Society for Twentieth-Century China Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Banditry, Ethnicity, and Violence in Modern China (p. 32)
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96 96
Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons Affiliated Societies
1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 8. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Ethnicity, Religion, and Nationalism in China’s Changing Positions during the Cold War (p. 39)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Empire Ballroom. Session 7, joint with the AHA. Teaching Capitalism (p. 51)
History of Science Society
MARHO: The Radical Historians’ Organization
Friday, January 5
Friday, January 5
8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Animals in the Early Modern Atlantic World (p. 25) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction. Session 2, joint with the AHA. The Emergence of Racial Modernities in the Global South (p. 40)
Saturday, January 6 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Anatomy and the Construction of Identity (p. 66)
International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in History Thursday, January 4 8:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C. Session 1. Learning from Evidence: Using Student Work to Understand Their Learning (p. 12)
Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room B. Session 2. Deliberative Decision Making in the History Classroom: The Place of Civics (p. 35)
Labor and Working Class History Association Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 5. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Unfreedom: A Roundtable—Constructing Race and Class in the Early Modern Atlantic World (p. 14)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 5. Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Coordinating Council for Women in History. The Politics of Domestic Service in Asia and the Americas, 1870–2015 (p. 25) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 9. Session 3, joint with the AHA and the North American Conference on British Studies. Early Modern Prisoners of War as Laborers (p. 31) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite B. Session 4, joint with the AHA. Reimagining Philadelphia’s Labor History: How Including Trolleymen, Black Wobblies, Flappers, and Trashmen Turned the Historiography on Its Head (p. 32) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 5. Session 5, joint with the AHA. The Missing Piece: Catholic Faith and the Making of Working-Class Consciousness (p. 40) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Session 6. Race, Gender, and Prison Labor in the Era of Mass Incarceration (p. 42)
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1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Beyond Police: Lessons from History (p. 42)
Medieval Academy of America Friday, January 5 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 7. Session, joint with the AHA. Racial Sciences, Old and New (p. 38)
National Coalition for History Friday, January 5 12:15–2:15 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, McKinley Room. Board Meeting
National Council on Public History Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 1, joint with the AHA and the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History. The National Park Service’s LGBTQ America Theme Study: A Roundtable (p. 33)
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 2. Session 2, joint with the AHA. “What Do Public History Employers Want?” A Report from the National Council on Public History (p. 78)
National Endowment for the Humanities Thursday, January 4 2:00–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Foyer. Information Table
Friday, January 5 8:00–8:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Foyer. Information Table 1:00–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Foyer. Information Table
Saturday, January 6 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Foyer. Information Table
Sunday, January 7 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Foyer. Information Table
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Affiliated Societies
Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North. Session 1. History and Public Policy Centers: A Roundtable Discussion (p. 17) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session 2. Understanding the Past to Plan the Future: Historical Inquiry and Philanthropic Grant-Making (p. 22)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session 3. The End of the Palestine Mandate (p. 28) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session 4. What Does Brexit Mean for British History? (p. 35) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall North. Session 5, joint with the Association for Documentary Editing. Documenting the History of the First Federal Congress (p. 42) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session 6. Remembering Marilyn Young, Activist Historian: A Memorial Panel (p. 48)
Saturday, January 6 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session 7. Federal Government Historians and the Public (p. 63) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session 8. The Possibilities and Pitfalls of Big History (AKA Big History Meets the History of Science): A Roundtable Discussion (p. 69) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4. Session 9. Executive Orders and Presidential Power since FDR (p. 74) 7:00–8:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite A. Reception
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 10. Nationalism: Notions and Practices (p. 82)
New England Historical Association Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room. Session, joint with the AHA. Roundtable: Teaching and Learning Historical Skills through a Crowdsourced Women’s History Project (p. 81)
North American Conference on British Studies Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 5. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Dancing Reformers or Reformed Dancers? Dance, Religion, and Gender in the Reformation (p. 20)
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Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 9. Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Labor and Working Class History Association. Early Modern Prisoners of War as Laborers (p. 31)
Saturday, January 6 6:00–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Room. Reception
Sunday, January 7 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 12. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Race and Immigration in the Era of Decolonization (p. 85)
Peace History Society Thursday, January 4 5:30–7:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A. Session, joint with the AHA. In Our Son’s Name: A Family Responds to 9/11 (p. 23)
Polish American Historical Association
Affiliates
National History Center of the American Historical Association
97
Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 1. Roundtable: Teaching Polish and Polish-American History (p. 17) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Chairman’s Boardroom. Board Meeting
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 2. Americans on Poland (p. 29) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 3. National and Ethnic Identity Construction in Transatlantic Context (p. 35) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 4. Race and Ethnicity on the Battlefields of the Civil War (p. 42) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 5. Ethnic Political Mobilization (p. 48)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 6. Daily Lives in the Polish American Communities (p. 56) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 7. Female Friendships: Emotions, Experiences, Memory, and Narratives (p. 63) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 8. Polish Immigrants in the United States since the 1970s (p. 69) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 9. Polish Immigrants in Greenpoint, Brooklyn: Exploring the Transformations of a Polish Ethnic Enclave (p. 75)
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98 98
Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons Affiliated Societies
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 10. The Wish to Be a Red Indian: The Native American Dream in EastCentral Europe (p. 82) 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Governor’s Boardroom. Session 11. New Books on the Transnational Political Activism of Poles: From World War II to the Fall of Communism (p. 87)
Renaissance Society of America Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C. Reflecting on Renaissance Refugees and Forced Migrations in the Era of the Muslim Ban (p. 17)
Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media Saturday, January 6 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Diplomat Ballroom. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Teaching Hidden History: Learning by Developing Digital Modules (p. 67)
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Diplomacy in Action: Diplomatic Simulations in the Classroom (p. 79) 12:30–4:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room A. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Understanding Sacrifice: A Lens for Studying World War II through Art, Science, Literature, and History (p. 87)
Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Constitutions and Minority Rights: Case Studies from South Asia (p. 20) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia Suite C. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Political Imaginaries at the End of Empire (p. 21)
Friday, January 5 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Calvert Room. Session 3. John F. Richards Prize Roundtable Discussion of Nayanjot Lahiri’s Ashoka in Ancient India (2016 Richards Prize Winner) (p. 35) 12:00–1:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Embassy Room. Luncheon (p. 36) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session 4, joint with the AHA. Negotiating Power in 18th-Century South Asia (p. 39)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction. Session 5, joint with the AHA. Amphibious Spaces: Colonial Legal Engagements with Watery Environments (p. 54) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 2. Session 6, joint with the AHA. Oliver Cromwell Cox’s Race, Class, and Caste after 70 Years: Categories of Analysis and the Transnational Turn (p. 59)
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1:30–3:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session 7, joint with the AHA. Navigating Identity and Community in the Gray Zones of Empire (p. 66) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session 8, joint with the AHA. Identity and Belonging in Premodern Imperial Discourses: A Roundtable (p. 71)
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 12. Session 9, joint with the AHA. Making International Law in Africa and Asia, 1850– 1900 (p. 80)
Society for Austrian and Habsburg History Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session, joint with the AHA and the Central European History Society. Nations of the Commonwealth: State Formation and Ethnic Identity in Early Modern Poland-Lithuania (p. 27)
Society for French Historical Studies Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the French Colonial Historical Society, and the Western Society for French History. Beyond Haiti: Race and the Limits of Revolutionary Freedom in France’s Global Empire, 1789–1815 (p. 21)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 2, joint with the AHA and the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. Rethinking the State in Ancien Régime France, Then and Now (p. 26)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3. Session 3, joint with the AHA, the American Society for EighteenthCentury Studies, and the French Colonial Historical Society. Race, Identity, and the Movement of Ideas and Information in the Wider French Atlantic World (p. 53) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite B. Session 4, joint with the AHA and the French Colonial Historical Society. Memory and Mimesis: Legacies of War, Violence, and Occupation in Decolonizing Europe (p. 58) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 5, joint with the AHA, the French Colonial Historical Society, and the Western Society for French History. Webs of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism in the French Empire (p. 60)
Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Friday, January 5 8:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Room. Council Meeting 7:00–8:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Room. Reception (cash bar)
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Affiliated Societies 12:00–1:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite A. Luncheon (p. 63)
Sunday, January 7 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Madison Room A. Session, joint with the Conference on Latin American History. Historical Perspectives on Contemporary Paradiplomacy: The International Venturing of Subnational Governments in the Caribbean with Focus on Puerto Rico’s Experience (p. 86)
Society for History Education Friday, January 5 7:30–9:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Chairman’s Boardroom. National Advisory Board Meeting
Society for Italian Historical Studies Thursday, January 4 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland Suite C. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Fascist Legacies: The Afterlife of Fascism in Italy and Beyond (p. 15) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room A. Session 2. Politics, Culture, and Identity in 20th-Century Italy (p. 22)
Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 3. Session 3, joint with the Economic History Association. Out of the Shadows: Industry and Its Social Ramifications in Northern Italy, 16th–18th Centuries (p. 29) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 3. Session 4. Religion, State and Cultural Practices, and the Racialization of the Nation in Italy from Fascism to the Republic (p. 35) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 3. Session 5. Love, Sex, and Honor in the Italian South (p. 43)
Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 12. Session 6, joint with the AHA. Life on the Streets: Regulating Space and Sociability in Early Modern Italy (p. 52) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Washington Hilton, Lincoln East. Session 7. Religion and Authority in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Part 1: The Challenge of Sanctity (p. 56) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Lincoln East. Session 8. Religion and Authority in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Part 2: Rome and the Papal State (p. 63) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Lincoln East. Session 9. Religion and Authority in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Part 3: Devotion and Discipline (p. 69) 6:00–6:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson Room C. Business Meeting 6:30–7:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Room. Social Hour
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Sunday, January 7 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall South. Session 10. Political Catholicism and Christian Democracy in Modern Italy (p. 87)
Society for Military History Saturday, January 6 7:00–8:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B. George C. Marshall Lecture Reception, joint with the George C. Marshall Foundation
Sunday, January 7 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session, joint with the AHA. Digitizing Military History: New Frontiers in Race, Gender, Urban Studies, and Education (p. 86)
Society for Reformation Research Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3. Session, joint with the AHA and the World History Association. Race, Place, and Nation in the Early Modern World: A Pedagogical Roundtable (p. 79)
Affiliates
Saturday, January 6
99
Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 1. Periodicals and the Shaping of National Identity (p. 29) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. Session 2, joint with the Business History Conference. Peddling Print in 19th-Century America: Subscription Publishing as a Business Model (p. 48)
Society for the History of Children and Youth Saturday, January 6 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 3. Session, joint with the AHA. Raising the Nation: Youth, Nationalism, and State-Building in the 20th Century (p. 72)
Society for the History of Technology Friday, January 5 8:30–10:00 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4. Session 1. Techno-Fixes Past and Present: Promise and Performance (p. 29) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4. Session 2. The History of AI and Its Discontents, Part 1 (p. 36) 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4. Session 3. The History of AI and Its Discontents, Part 2 (p. 49)
Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Saturday, January 6 8:30–10:00 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Congressional Room B. Session, joint with the AHA. Collaborative Teaching, Writing, and Research in Medieval and Early Modern Women’s History (p. 53)
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100 100
Joint and Sponsored Sessions / Session Icons Affiliated Societies
Society of Automotive Historians Friday, January 5 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 4. Automobility and Political Identity in a Neoliberal Age (p. 43)
The George C. Marshall Foundation Saturday, January 6 5:30–7:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1. George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History (p. 75) 7:00–8:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware Suite B. George C. Marshall Lecture Reception, joint with the Society for Military History
Toynbee Prize Foundation Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Thurgood Marshall East. The Fight for Global Equality (p. 22)
Western Society for French History Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 10. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the French Colonial Historical Society, and the Society for French Historical Studies. Beyond Haiti: Race and the Limits of Revolutionary Freedom in France’s Global Empire, 1789–1815 (p. 21)
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Saturday, January 6 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Roosevelt Room 1. Session 2, joint with the AHA, the French Colonial Historical Society, and the Society for French Historical Studies. Webs of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism in the French Empire (p. 60) 1:30–3:00 p.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom, Salon 1. Session 3, joint with the AHA and the French Colonial Historical Society. Thinking Race and Race Thinking around the “Francophone” Black Atlantic (p. 65)
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Omni Shoreham, Blue Room Prefunction. Session 4, joint with the AHA. Teaching Race as an Integral Part of European History: A Roundtable (p. 79)
World History Association Thursday, January 4 3:30–5:00 p.m. Washington Hilton, Columbia 9. Session 1, joint with the AHA. State Ritual and Symbolic Power in Early Modern Eurasia (p. 19)
Sunday, January 7 9:00–10:30 a.m. Marriott Wardman Park, Washington Room 3. Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Society for Reformation Research. Race, Place, and Nation in the Early Modern World: A Pedagogical Roundtable (p. 79)
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Participants Index
101
Anderson, Kelly, p. 79
Balogh, Brian, p. 17, p. 36
Benton-Cohen, Katherine A., p. 38
Anderson, Lauren, p. 72
Balz, Hanno, p. 42
Bereiter, Gregory, p. 16
Aaslestad, Katherine, p. 34
Anderson, Warwick, p. 30, p. 40
Banko, Lauren, p. 68
Berg, Anne Kristina, p. 54, p. 80
Abel, Jessamyn, p. 65
Andino, Mary, p. 56
Banks, Elizabeth, p. 31
Berman, Cassandra Nicole, p. 60
Ablard, Jonathan D., p. 45
Ando, Takemasa, p. 57
Barber, Lucy, p. 26
Berman, Stacie Brensilver, p. 40
Abrecht, Ryan R., p. 61
Andrews, Dee E., p. 72
Barcia, Manuel, p. 46
Bernard, Rachel, p. 26
Acanfora, Paolo, p. 87
Andrews, Edward E., p. 24, p. 30
Barclay, Paul D., p. 32
Bernhard, Patrick, p. 15
Acevedo, Tony, p. 13
Angeles Garcia, Ariana, p. 53
Barker, Hannah, p. 30
Bernstein, Richard, p. 54
Acevedo-Field, Rafaela, p. 69
Anievas, Alexander, p. 71
Barlow Robles, Whitney, p. 25
Berry, Chelsea, p. 49
Achebe, Nwando, p. 51
Anishanslin, Zara, p. 60
Barnes, Andrew E., p. 67
Bess, Michael Kirkland, p. 53
Achim, Miruna, p. 81
Annis, Amber, p. 15
Barr, Juliana, p. 12, p. 79
Bezis-Selfa, John, p. 38, p. 44
Adair, Jennifer, p. 50
Anthony, Danielle, p. 28
Barr, Stephen, p. 67
Bhattacharya, Tithi, p. 71
Adamovsky, Ezequiel, p. 21
Anthony, Elizabeth, p. 42
Barragan, Yesenia, p. 62, p. 68
Bhattacharyya, Debjani, p. 54
Adams, Christa, p. 64
Antony, Robert, p. 32
Barragán Goetz, Philis, p. 66
Bickford, Charlene Bangs, p. 42
Adams, William D., p. 77
Antunes, Catia, p. 45
Barr-Melej, Patrick, p. 57
Bieber, Judy, p. 76
Adcock, Catherine S., p. 20
Appelbaum, Nancy P., p. 50
Barry, Izabela, p. 75
Bishop, Peter, p. 62
Adelman, Jeremy I., p. 18
Araujo, Ana Lucia, p. 19, p. 50
Bartoloni-Tuazon, Kathleen, p. 42
Biss, Athan, p. 24
Adelusi-Adeluyi, Ademide J., p. 60
Arch, Jakobina, p. 66
Bartov, Omer, p. 60
Black, Ashley, p. 85
Argouse, Aude, p. 28
Bass, Amy, p. 44
Black, Chad T., p. 48
Arionus, Steve, p. 27
Bast, Oliver, p. 19
Black, Megan, p. 22, p. 57
Armstead, Myra B. Young, p. 70
Batza, Katie, p. 33
Blacker-Hanson, O’Neill, p. 86
Armstrong, Megan, p. 25
Bauer, A.J., p. 54
Blackler, Adam, p. 20
Armstrong, Tenisha, p. 51
Baugh-Helton, Tiffany, p. 54
Blakely, Allison, p. 69
Arnold, Andrew B., p. 80
Bauman, Lindsey, p. 47
Blakley, Christopher, p. 25
Aron, Stephen, p. 13, p. 44
Bauman, Robert A., p. 59
Blank, Joshua, p. 56
Aronova, Elena, p. 69
Baumgartner, Alice, p. 27, p. 76
Blanton, Carlos Kevin, p. 41
Astor, Aaron, p. 32
Bayker, Jesse, p. 66
Blanton, Justin Blaine, p. 28
Atkinson, David C., p. 72
Beach, Bob, p. 33
Blazich, Frank, p. 16
Attig, Derek, p. 31
Beadle, Meaghan, p. 54
Blick, Andrew, p. 35
Atwill, David, p. 30, p. 38
Beasley, Betsy, p. 84
Blight, David W., p. 70, p. 85
Atwood, Christopher, p. 71
Beattie, Peter M., p. 81
Bloch, Brandon, p. 52
Auer, John Jeffery, p. 33
Beatty, Edward, p. 68
Block, Jim, p. 58
Ault, Julie, p. 20
Becker, Marc, p. 67, p. 86
Bloechl, Olivia, p. 31
Avella, Steven, p. 28
Becker, Michael, p. 22
Blower, Brooke L., p. 51
Awartani, Sara, p. 53
Beckert, Sven, p. 18
Blumenthal, Seth, p. 33
Aydin, Andrew, p. 71
Beckman, Patricia Z., p. 33
Bobadilla, Eladio Benjamin, p. 27
Aydin, Cemil, p. 72
Bedasse, Monique, p. 49
Boczar, Amanda, p. 86
Ayres, Hannah, p. 75
Bedlek, Emine Yes¸im, p. 80
Bodian, Miriam, p. 78
Azara, Liliosa, p. 41
Bello, David, p. 52
Bodmer, Walter, p. 71
Bellows, Amanda, p. 45
Boehm, Lisa Krissoff, p. 26 Boel, Jens, p. 24
Adler, Eliyana, p. 15 Afinogenov, Gregory, p. 52 Aguirre, Dennis, p. 20 Ahlberg, Kristin L., p. 16 Ahmed Asif, Manan, p. 71 Aiséirithe, A J, p. 85 Akbari, Suzanne, p. 70 Aksakal, Mustafa, p. 19 Alamo-Pastrana, Carlos, p. 56 Albarrán, Elena, p. 49 Alberto, Paulina Laura, p. 62 Al-Deen, Aminah Beverly, p. 85 Alegre, Robert Francis, p. 49 Aleksiun, Natalia, p. 66 Ali, Omar H., p. 79 Alker, Zoe, p. 70 Allen, Michael A., p. 65 Allen, Rose Mary, p. 38 Allinson, Hallimeda E., p. 42 Alonso, Angela, p. 34, p. 50 Alpers, Edward A., p. 23 Altman, Clara, p. 63
Participants Index
Aa
Altschuler, Sari, p. 80
Bb
Belmonte, Laura A., p. 35
Amador, Emma, p. 38
Belsky, Natalie, p. 15
Bogaerts, Ilse, p. 38
Babbitt, Bruce, p. 65
Amanik, Allan, p. 25
Belzer, Allison Scardino, p. 38
Bogues, Anthony, p. 37
Baghoolizadeh, Beeta, p. 54
Amelicheva, Mariya, p. 52
Bender, Daniel E., p. 30
Boittin, Jennifer Anne, p. 65
Bailkin, Jordanna, p. 38
Amussen, Susan D., p. 53
Bender, Jill C., p. 21
Baker, Carole, p. 73
Andersen, Margaret Cook, p. 60
Benesch, Oleg, p. 65
Bollettino, Maria Alessandra, p. 84
Balachandran, Gopalan, p. 28
Bennett, Herman, p. 83
Bon-Harper, Sara, p. 40
Anderson, Chad, p. 64
Balcerski, Thomas J., p. 15
Benson, Devyn Spence, p. 51
Bonker, Dirk, p. 47
Anderson, Clifford, p. 24
Balleisen, Edward, p. 13
Benson Sokmen, Susan, p. 14
Bordewich, Fergus, p. 42
Anderson, Katrina, p. 46
Ballinger, Pamela L., p. 15
Benton, Bradley T., p. 34
Boris, Eileen, p. 20, p. 25
Program_Book_2018.indd 101
23/10/17 5:34 PM
102
Participants Index
Borja, Melissa, p. 31
Brown, Kate, p. 63
Caracausi, Andrea, p. 29
Chervinsky, Lindsay, p. 71
Bornstein, Daniel, p. 56, p. 63, p. 69
Brown, Mary, p. 55, p. 61
Carey, Elaine, p. 53
Cheser, Matt, p. 19
Brown, Miranda, p. 71
Carey, Ryan, p. 80
Chesney, Peter, p. 13
Borucki, Alex, p. 19, p. 49
Brown, William, p. 80
Carmichael, Cathie, p. 60, p. 82
Chew, Elizabeth, p. 40
Bose, Neilesh, p. 35
Brumfield, Ben William, p. 57
Carpenter, Bryce, p. 68, p. 87
Chiang, Howard, p. 18, p. 66
Bosma, Ulbe, p. 45
Brundage, W. Fitzhugh, p. 83
Carr, Barry, p. 48, p. 56
Chickering, Roger, p. 47, p. 61
Bossenga, Gail, p. 27
Brunson, Takkara, p. 30
Carraro, Francine, p. 33
Childs, Gregory, p. 50
Boswell, Laird, p. 30
Bryant, Elizabeth, p. 13
Childs, Matt D., p. 46, p. 49
Botelho, Alyssa, p. 79
Bryant, Joan L., p. 46
Carrington-Farmer, Charlotte, p. 25
Boucher, Ellen R., p. 72
Bryant, Sherwin K., p. 25, p. 76
Carroll, James T., p. 28
Chira, Adriana, p. 46
Boulukos, George, p. 17
Bryer, Elizabeth, p. 54
Carter, Katlyn, p. 84
Chotkowski, Charles, p. 29
Bourgerdi, Bradley, p. 33
Buchenau, Jurgen, p. 44
Carter Jackson, Kellie, p. 46
Chowning, Margaret, p. 28
Bowen, Deanna, p. 38
Burch, Jessica K., p. 48
Casals, Gonzalo, p. 52
Christensen, Mark Z., p. 76
Bowes, Julia, p. 72
Burch, Susan, p. 18
Case, Holly, p. 51
Christenson, Joel C., p. 68
Bowling, Kenneth R., p. 42
Burden-Stelly, Charisse, p. 53
Casey, Matthew Peter, p. 53
Christopher, Emma, p. 23
Boylan, Kristina, p. 80
Burgher, Denise, p. 15
Caso-Bello, Alvaro, p. 28
Chu, Winson W., p. 42
Boyle, Eric William, p. 16, p. 19
Burgos, Adrian, Jr., p. 19
Casper, Scott, p. 60
Chung, Sue Fawn, p. 24
Boyle, Kevin, p. 37, p. 51, p. 65
Burk, Tara, p. 52
Casper, Stephen T., p. 22
Church, Christopher M., p. 65
Burke, Flannery, p. 12, p. 35, p. 41
Casteen, Elizabeth, p. 66
Churchill, Lindsey, p. 62
Castilho, Celso, p. 34, p. 50
Ciani, Adrian, p. 41, p. 47
Burkholder, Peter, p. 12, p. 41
Castillo, Dennis, p. 34, p. 55
Bradburn, Douglas, p. 40
Ciciliot, Valentina, p. 34
Burnard, Trevor, p. 17
Castillo Reyna, Angélica, p. 81
Bradley, Mark Philip, p. 48
Ciernick, Helen, p. 55
Burns, Kathryn, p. 25
Catalano, Joshua, p. 31
Bradley, Stefan M., p. 78
Ciriacono, Salvatore, p. 29
Burrows, Geoff, p. 86
Cavaliere, Charles, p. 86
Brammall, Kathryn M., p. 79
Civitello, Linda, p. 55
Brattain, Michelle, p. 24
Burton, Antoinette, p. 33, p. 38, p. 57
Cavanaugh, Stephanie M., p. 17, p. 84
Clancy, Eileen, p. 44
Braude, Benjamin, p. 78
Burton-Rose, Daniel, p. 52
Chakraborty, Titas, p. 45
Braun, Herbert Tico, p. 68
Buss, James, p. 46
Chambers, Sarah C., p. 50
Bray, Mark, p. 58
Chan Man Ning, p. 26
Brecher, William Puck, p. 72
Butterfield-Rosen, Emmelyn, p. 74
Breckman, Warren, p. 20
Byrd, James, p. 48
Chang, Sandy, p. 25
Climenhaga, Alison Fitchett, p. 34
Chaplin, Joyce E., p. 80
Cline, David, p. 47
Chapman, Herrick, p. 51
Clines, Robert John, p. 25
Chappell, Jonathan, p. 80
Clinton, Catherine, p. 68
Chappine, Patricia, p. 71
Coble, Parks M., p. 14
Charap, Lawrence G., p. 12
Cogswell, Thomas, p. 18
Chard, Daniel, p. 79
Cohen, Deborah A., p. 51, p. 63
Chase, Michelle, p. 25, p. 86
Cohen, Jonathan, p. 46
Chastain, Andra Brosy, p. 81
Cohen, Lauren J., p. 13
Chatelain, Marcia, p. 18
Cohen, Michael J., p. 29
Chaturvedi, Vinayak, p. 20
Cohen, Theodore, p. 16
Chaudhuri, Nupur, p. 42
Coleman, Jon T., p. 14
Chávez, Ernesto, p. 27
Coleman, Kevin P., p. 49
Chawla, Swati, p. 54
Coleman, Ronald, p. 40
Cházaro, Laura, p. 81
Colley, Linda, p. 35
Chazkel, Amy, p. 42
Collins, Martin, p. 84
Chen, Dandan, p. 34
Combs, Matthew, p. 32
Chen, John Tseh-han, p. 72
Conklin, Alice L., p. 58, p. 65
Cheong, Caroline, p. 68
Connell, Tula, p. 51
Boyle, Stephanie, p. 51 Boza Villarreal, Alejandra, p. 49, p. 50
Brenes, Michael A., p. 79 Brennan, Sean, p. 61 Brick, Howard, p. 20 Bridge, Kyle A., p. 41 Bridger, Sarah, p. 79 Bridges, Mary, p. 46 Brier, Jennifer, p. 83 Bright, Christopher J., p. 83 Brightwell, Laura, p. 58 Briscoe, Kevin, p. 79 Brixius, Anne, p. 33 Bromund, Ted R., p. 36 Bronfman, Alejandra M., p. 40 Brooks, Stephanie Kingsley, p. 18 Brophy, James M., p. 34, p. 61 Broussard, Albert S., p. 79 Brown, Christopher L., p. 84 Brown, Joshua, p. 78
Program_Book_2018.indd 102
Cc Cabral, Diogo de Carvalho, p. 52 Cadzow, Allison, p. 25 Caglioti, Angelo, p. 15 Calabrese, Victoria, p. 43 Calder, Lendol G., p. 12, p. 40 Caldwell, Holly, p. 18 Calis, Richard, p. 14 Callaghan, Jennifer, p. 73 Camacho Escobar, Joanna Marie, p. 86 Cameselle, Pedro M., p. 74 Campbell, Caroline Jane, p. 60 Cañedo, Oscar, p. 26 Cañeque, Alejandro, p. 74 Capello, Ernesto, p. 50, p. 56 Capó, Julio, Jr., p. 27
Chan, Thomas, p. 47
Chin, Rita, p. 33, p. 46
Clark, Anna K., p. 35 Clark, Elizabeth Morrow, p. 17 Clark, Frederic, p. 14 Clegg, John, p. 60
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Participants Index
103
Connolly, Cynthia, p. 14
Dallek, Matt, p. 74
Devereux, Andrew, p. 67
Dursteler, Eric R., p. 25
Connolly, Emilie, p. 84
D’Amboise, Paul, p. 13
DeWitt, Jessica Marie, p. 20
Dziennik, Matthew, p. 84
Connolly, Nathan, p. 14
D’Amico, Stefano, p. 29
Dhada, Mustafah, p. 44
D´zurak, Ewa, p. 75
Contreras, Carlos Alberto, p. 37
Damousi, Joy, p. 80
Dhavan, Purnima, p. 66
Contreras, Carlos, p. 26
Danchuk, Jenna, p. 59
Dhillon, Jaskiran, p. 14
Conway, Richard, p. 34
D’Andrea, David M., p. 69
Dickinson, Edward R., p. 80
Conway-Lanz, Sahr, p. 29
Daniel, Marcus L., p. 84
Di Cosmo, Nicola, p. 71
Earls, Averill E., p. 18
Cook, Eli, p. 15
Dantas, Mariana L., p. 25
Dierks, Konstantin, p. 32
Easton-Flake, Amy, p. 48
Cook, Lisa D., p. 16
Danwerth, Otto, p. 86
Di Giacomantonio, William, p. 42
Edele, Mark, p. 15
Cooley, Mackenzie Anne, p. 49
Darien, Andrew T., p. 21
Dillard, Brandon, p. 46
Eder, Sandra, p. 59
Cooperman, Bernard D., p. 52
Datiles, Jeanne-Michelle, p. 61
Edmonds, James, p. 53
Corbeil, Laurent, p. 17
D’Auria, Matthew, p. 60, p. 82
Dillingham, Alan Shane, p. 67, p. 83
Cordial, Grace, p. 78
Daut, Marlene L., p. 71
Di Lorenzo, Anthony, p. 45
Edwards, Ryan C., p. 17, p. 66
Cordoví Núñez, Yoel, p. 84
David-Fox, Michael, p. 40
Dimas, Carlos, p. 71
Effros, Bonnie, p. 38, p. 58
Corinealdi, Kaysha, p. 30
Davidson, Ben, p. 32
DiMeo, Nate, p. 19
Egan, Nancy, p. 74
Cornell, Andrew, p. 58
Ding, Yiyun, p. 14
Ehrick, Christine, p. 40
Cornell, Sarah, p. 32
Davidson, Christina Cecelia, p. 80
Dolbee, Samuel, p. 68
Ehrlich, Joshua, p. 39
Correa, Marilia, p. 62
Davies, Adam, p. 58
Domenico, Roy, p. 41, p. 87
Eichler, Jeremy, p. 74
Cossar, Roisin A., p. 69
Davies, Surekha, p. 14, p. 58
Eissa-Barroso, Francisco A., p. 86
Cotlar, Seth, p. 21
Davis, Amira Rose, p. 45
Domingues da Silva, Daniel B., p. 19
Cotz, Christian, p. 46
Davis, Bradley Camp, p. 32, p. 66
Dorsey, Samantha, p. 13
Eley, Geoff, p. 71
Courtwright, David, p. 67
Davis, Brandon, p. 74
Doughty, Marla, p. 64
El Guabli, Brahim, p. 14
Covart, Liz, p. 19
Davis, Emily, p. 34
Dove, Stephen, p. 67
Elkind, Jessica B., p. 35
Covo, Manuel, p. 21
Davis, Janet M., p. 14
Dowden-White, Priscilla A., p. 65
Eller, Anne, p. 26
Coyle, Laurie, p. 49
Davis, Teresa, p. 85
Downey, Jack, p. 33
Elsey, Brenda J., p. 19, p. 56
Craddick, Jordan, p. 73
Dawson, Sandra Trudgen, p. 42, p. 71
Downs, Gregory P., p. 27, p. 65
El Shazli, Heba, p. 79
Downs, James T., p. 15, p. 19
Eltis, David, p. 51
Day Moore, Celeste, p. 58
Doyle-Raso, John, p. 15
Enacar, Ekin, p. 39
Deans-Smith, Susan, p. 81
Draper, Timothy Dean, p. 26
Enyeart, John, p. 51
De Chantal, Julie, p. 14
Dreisbach, Daniel, p. 48
Epstein, Catherine, p. 30
Deardorff, Max, p. 83
Drescher, Seymour, p. 34
Cribelli, Teresa, p. 81
DeLacy, Margaret E., p. 51
Dressler, Nicole, p. 45
Epstein, Katherine C., p. 13, p. 79
Cromwell, Jesse, p. 48, p. 86
De la Puente, José Carlos, p. 83
Dror, Olga, p. 39
Erbelding, Rebecca, p. 40
Cross, Gary, p. 58
De la Torre, Oscar, p. 53
Du, Yue, p. 26
Erbig, Jeffrey, p. 52
Crowley, Mark, p. 42, p. 71
Delgado, Jessica L., p. 28
Dubnov, Arie, p. 66
Erby, Adam, p. 71
Crowston, Clare, p. 65
Della Zazzera, Elizabeth, p. 29
Dubois, Laurent M., p. 37, p. 71
Cudahy, Brian, p. 73
Del Moral, Solsiree, p. 56
Dubow, Saul, p. 46
Erdmans, Mary Patrice, p. 48, p. 56
Culkin, Kate, p. 15
Demarest, William, p. 81
Dudziak, Mary L., p. 52
Esch, Elizabeth, p. 59
Culp, Robert, p. 78
Denbo, Seth, p. 44, p. 70
Duedahl, Poul, p. 24
Escobar, Raquel, p. 67
Curley, Augustin, p. 73
Denial, Catherine J., p. 30
Dueñas, Alcira, p. 82
Esders, Stefan, p. 24
Currarino, Rosanne, p. 51
Denton, Chad B., p. 54
Duffield, David, p. 40
Eshenour, Rachel, p. 18
Curtin, Mary Ellen, p. 42, p. 74
DePaola, Stephanie, p. 54
Dufton, Emily, p. 33
Eskew, Glenn T., p. 70
Cyna, Esther, p. 31
Deplano, Valeria, p. 35
Du Mez, Kristin Kobes, p. 62
Espada Lima, Henrique, p. 82
Derengowski, Piotr, p. 43
Dunai, Suzanne, p. 71
Evangelista, Rhiannon, p. 15
Dd
Desai, Radhika, p. 59
Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne A., p. 73
Evans, Jennifer, p. 14, p. 41
DeSena, Judith, p. 75
Duncan, Jason Kennedy, p. 28
Evans, Sterling, p. 59
Dabrowski, Patrice, p. 17
Deslandes, Paul R., p. 12
Duncan, Natanya, p. 30, p. 38
Ewald, Janet J., p. 23
Dahlstrand, Kate, p. 27
Deutsch, Nathaniel, p. 78
Dunn, John P., p. 29
Ewing, Adam, p. 80
Dal Lago, Enrico, p. 45
DeVera, Samantha, p. 84
Dunn, Mary Corley, p. 73
Ewing, Christopher, p. 46
Craib, Raymond, p. 16, p. 46 Craig, Kalani, p. 83 Crawford, Sharika D., p. 50, p. 66 Crawford-Lackey, Katherine (Katie), p. 64
Program_Book_2018.indd 103
Ee
Elena, Eduardo D., p. 50
Participants Index
Edwards, Erika, p. 50, p. 62
23/10/17 5:34 PM
104
Participants Index
Ewing, Tabetha, p. 26, p. 27
Fleming, James Rodger, p. 69
Gallini, Stefania, p. 59
Goff, Jon, p. 16
Eyerly, Sarah, p. 31
Fletcher, Kami, p. 25
Gallon, Kim, p. 45
Goldhammer, Arthur, p. 51
Florvil, Tiffany N., p. 79
Gannon, Barbara A., p. 68
Goldlust, John, p. 15
Ff
Fogo, Brad, p. 70
García, Guadalupe, p. 51
Goldman, Rachael B., p. 61
Folwell, Emma, p. 59
Gardner, Leigh A., p. 21
Goldstone, Dwonna, p. 66
Faggioli, Massimo, p. 87
Fondakowski, Leigh, p. 68
Garfield, Seth, p. 16, p. 66
Gómez, Alan Eladio, p. 20
Faherty, Anna, p. 81
Foner, Eric, p. 65
Garrett, David T., p. 34
Gomez, Michael A., p. 85
Fahey, John, p. 86
Fontaine, Darcie S., p. 58
Fahrenthold, Stacy, p. 68
Foray, Jennifer L., p. 58
Garrett-Scott, Shennette M., p. 51, p. 63
Gomez-del-Moral, Alejandro J., p. 47
Falvo, Kathryn R., p. 80
Foreman, P. Gabrielle, p. 13
Garriott, Caroline, p. 17
Gonzales, Trinidad, p. 41
Fan, Shuhua, p. 55
Forlenza, Rosario, p. 73, p. 87
Garvey, Colin, p. 36, p. 49
Gonzalez, Aston, p. 81
Fancy, Hussein, p. 30
Forman, Steven A., p. 65
Gauderman, Kimberly A., p. 28
Gonzalez, Gabriela, p. 66
Fang, Qiang, p. 62
Forrest, Alan, p. 34
Gauss, Susan, p. 48
Gonzalez, Jill Noel Walker, p. 29 Gonzalez, Jorge Felipe, p. 46
Fanning, Sara, p. 81
Forth, Aidan, p. 38
Geary, Daniel, p. 58w
Farges, Patrick, p. 41
Forth, Christopher E., p. 58
Geary, Patrick, p. 38
Farmer, Ashley, p. 70
Foss, Sarah, p. 67
Geheran, Michael J., p. 41
Gonzalez Jimenez, Elizabeth, p. 48
Fass, Paula S., p. 72
Foster, Cody J., p. 19
Geidel, Molly, p. 74
Good, Cassandra A., p. 60
Fatah-Black, Karwan, p. 45
Foti, Luca Roberto, p. 63
Gellman, David N., p. 62
Gorbach, Frida, p. 81
Faue, Elizabeth, p. 30
Fox, Kealoha, p. 55
Genell, Aimee, p. 19
Gorby, William Hal, p. 40
Fawaz, Leila, p. 28, p. 56
Francalanci, Leonardo, p. 67
Genetin-Pilawa, Joseph, p. 31
Gordon, Adi, p. 66
Fea, John, p. 26, p. 48
Franczak, Michael, p. 74
Gerasimov, Ilya, p. 40
Gordon, Bonnie, p. 31
Feingold, Ellen, p. 13
Franklin, Sarah L., p. 65
Gerits, Frank, p. 28
Gordon, Hilary E., p. 60
Fejzula, Merve, p. 44
Franz, Kathleen, p. 43, p. 78
Gettig, Eric, p. 25
Goss, Andrew, p. 37
Feldman, Benjamin, p. 44
Frawley, Michael, p. 64
Getz, Trevor, p. 39, p. 71, p. 80
Goswami, Manu, p. 21, p. 32
Feldman, Ilana, p. 42
Fredman, Zach, p. 70
Ghachem, Malick, p. 14, p. 21
Gotkowitz, Laura, p. 74
Felipe, Jorge, p. 16
Freeland, Jane, p. 20
GhaneaBassiri, Kambiz, p. 85
Goto, Makoto, p. 24
Felker-Kantor, Max, p. 85
Freeman, David, p. 76
Gharala, Norah L. A., p. 17
Goyens, Tom, p. 58
Ferber, Susan, p. 65
Freeman, Joshua, p. 72
Giannotta, Kristina, p. 19, p. 68
Grafton, Anthony, p. 14, p. 31
Ferentinos, Susan, p. 33
Freire, Olival, Jr., p. 16
Gibbings, Julie, p. 49
Graham, Emily, p. 63
Ferguson, Gary, p. 68
Freitas, Frederico, p. 17, p. 52
Gibbs, Gary G., p. 79
Grant, Paul, p. 67
Fermaglich, Kirsten L., p. 24
French, Scot A., p. 68
Giblin, Molly, p. 60
Grauer, Michael R., p. 33
Fernandez, Luke O., p. 58
Frick, David, p. 27
Giesen, James, p. 53
Gray, Jonathan, p. 39
Fernández-Armesto, Felipe, p. 38
Fridenson, Patrick, p. 63
Gifford, Daniel, p. 60
Green, Avi, p. 17
Ferrer, Ada, p. 79
Friot, Elena, p. 21
Giguere, Joy, p. 29
Green, Nancy L., p. 43
Festle, Mary Jo, p. 35
Frühauf Garcia, Elisa, p. 31
Gilbert, Jess, p. 59
Green, Nathaniel, p. 13
Fett, Sharla M., p. 84
Fryar, Christienna, p. 26
Gill, Tiffany, p. 63
Greenberg, Udi, p. 52
Few, Martha, p. 48, p. 49
Fuentes, Marisa J., p. 18, p. 65
Gilmore, Matthew, p. 82
Greene, Daniel, p. 40
Field, Kendra, p. 38
Fugger, Erica, p. 73
Giloi, Eva, p. 74
Greene, Julie, p. 42
Fi n´ , Anna, p. 69
Fujimura, Joan, p. 30
Gil-Riaño, Sebastián, p. 40
Greene, Robert, II, p. 44
Findlay, Eileen J., p. 56
Furchtgott, Lisa, p. 79
Gissis, Snait, p. 84
Greenhut, Stephanie, p. 70
Fink, Leon, p. 51
Furlong, Matthew J., p. 69
Giuliani, Gaia, p. 35
Greer, Brenna Wynn, p. 80
Glassberg, David, p. 78
Gribble, Richard, p. 47
Glebov, Sergey, p. 21
Griffin, Katharine, p. 72
Fisher, Christopher T., p. 86
Gg
Gledhill, Kevin, p. 52
Griffith, Brian J., p. 22
Fitz, Caitlin A., p. 27, p. 67
Gabaccia, Donna R., p. 43
Glickman, Lawrence B., p. 19
Grinspan, Jon C., p. 44
FitzGerald, David, p. 43
Gaitors, Beau, p. 16
Glymph, Thavolia, p. 38, p. 65
Groeger, Cristina V., p. 25
Fitzgerald, Deborah, p. 59
Gallagher, Charles R., p. 41, p. 47
Gobat, Michel, p. 49
Grossman, James, p. 33
Fixico, Donald L., p. 15
Gallagher, Julie, p. 35
Godbeer, Richard, p. 15
Grossmann, Atina, p. 15
Flannery, Kristie Patricia, p. 48
Gallas, Kristin, p. 85
Goedde, Petra, p. 48
Grummitt, Julia, p. 48
Finucane, Adrian, p. 17 Fischer, Lauren, p. 79
Program_Book_2018.indd 104
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Participants Index Hoerder, Dirk, p. 42, p. 43
Izbicki, Thomas M., p. 41
Guengarich, Sara, p. 34
Haverty-Stacke, Donna Truglio, p. 40
Holden, Robert H., p. 71
Izenberg, Gerald N., p. 20
Guerra, Lillian, p. 62, p. 80
Hawkley, Ethan, p. 39
Holder, R. Ward, p. 20, p. 67
Guerrini, Anita, p. 66
Hayes, Mary F., p. 73
Holland, David, p. 62
Guerson, Alexandra, p. 53
Hayes-Bautista, David, p. 72
Holloway, Jonathan Scott, p. 24
Guia, Aitana, p. 46
Healey, Mark, p. 59
Holmes, Erin, p. 71
Jackson, Lisa, p. 39
Guibernau, Montserrat, p. 82
Heaney, Christopher H., p. 58
Holt, Daniel, p. 63
Jacobe, Stephanie A.T., p. 28
Guiliano, Jennifer E., p. 31, p. 44
Hébrard, Jean, p. 21
Holt, Thomas C., p. 37
Jacobs, Nancy J., p. 52
Heineman, Elizabeth D., p. 14
Honores, Renzo, p. 28
James, Elliot, p. 83
Gutterman, Lauren, p. 72
Hemmer, Nicole, p. 33
Hooper, Jane, p. 15
James, Shannon, p. 22
Hemmer, Nicole R., p. 74
Hooton, Laura, p. 64
Henderson, Amy, p. 71
Hope, Jeanelle, p. 79
James, Timothy MacDowell, p. 68
Hendrickson, Burleigh, p. 65
Hacker, Barton C., p. 38, p. 44
Hopson, Nathan, p. 65
Henold, Mary, p. 55
Hacohen, Malachi Haim, p. 20
Horbinski, Andrea, p. 39
Herbert, Amanda, p. 83
Hafertepe, Kenneth, p. 33
Horton, Michael, p. 46
Herf, Jeffrey C., p. 42, p. 74
Hagemann, Karen, p. 34, p. 55
Horton, Robert, p. 37
Herman, John, p. 32
Hahn, Peter L., p. 63
Howard, Philip Anthony, p. 30
Herman, Rebecca, p. 25, p. 66
Hakenbeck, Susanne, p. 24
Howell, Joel D., p. 16
Hernández, Bonar, p. 22
Halbert, Martin, p. 44
Howell, Sally, p. 85
Hernandez, Monica, p. 26
Halbert-Brooks, Ann E., p. 34
Hu, Minghui, p. 26
Herrada, Gilles, p. 68
Hallett, Christine, p. 38
Hudson-Richards, Julia, p. 47
Herran Avila, Luis, p. 83
Halperin, Sandra, p. 71
Hughes, Karen, p. 25
Herrera, Ricardo A., p. 52
Halpern, Rick, p. 46, p. 80
Hughes, Steven, p. 43
Herschthal, Eric, p. 27
Hamer, Deborah, p. 32
Hull, Isabel V., p. 75
Hertz, Deborah, p. 55
Hammack, David C., p. 22
Hulver, Richard A., p. 19
Herzog, Tamar, p. 70
Hammond, Kelly, p. 14
Hummel, Sarah, p. 81
Heschel, Susannah, p. 74
Hammonds, Evelynn M., p. 30
Humphreys, Debra, p. 13
Hesse, Carla, p. 24
Hamner, Christopher Heald, p. 87
Hunt, David, p. 48
Hessler, John, p. 30
Hunt, John M., p. 52
Hickerson, Katie, p. 54
Hurewitz, Daniel, p. 40
Hicks, David, p. 47
Hurt, R. Douglas, p. 29
Hicks, Mary, p. 53 Hidalgo, Alex, p. 49
Hutchison, Elizabeth Q., p. 21, p. 25
Higbee, Mark D., p. 65
Hwang, Dongyoun, p. 58
Hines, Sarah, p. 59
Hylton, Forrest, p. 86
Hh
Handy, Jim R., p. 49 Hanley, Anne G., p. 71 Hanlon, Gregory, p. 29 Hanna, Mark G., p. 48, p. 59 Hardesty, Jared Ross, p. 14 Hardwick, Jeff, p. 49 Harpin, Natalye, p. 26 Harris, A. Katie, p. 79 Harris, Jeffrey A. “Free”, p. 33 Harris, Jessica Lynne, p. 22 Harris, Megan, p. 68 Harris, Steve, p. 80 Harrison, Jay, p. 49 Harrison, Scott, p. 20, p. 33 Hart, Mitchell, p. 78 Harvey, Kyle E., p. 17 Hassoun, Rosina, p. 24 Hausmann, Stephen R., p. 31 Havers, Rob, p. 17, p. 75
Program_Book_2018.indd 105
Hinojosa, Felipe, p. 20
Jj
Jamison, Gayla, p. 23 Janhunen, Anne, p. 20 Janzen, Philip, p. 80 Jaroszy´nska-Kirchmann, Anna D., p. 63, p. 69 Jasper, Kathryn L., p. 56 Jean, Martine, p. 82 Jeffres, Travis, p. 59 Jenkins, Jennifer, p. 42 Jenkins, William, p. 21 Jensen, Jill, p. 20 Jeong, Hyeju Janice, p. 72 Jerzak, Katarzyna, p. 82 Jezierski, Wojtek, p. 80 Jiménez, Mónica, p. 68 Jiménez-Muñoz, Gladys M., p. 30 Jin, Michael, p. 84 John, Richard R., p. 15 Johnson, A. Ross, p. 87 Johnson, Jessica, p. 46, p. 70 Johnson, Miranda, p. 40 Johnson, Paula, p. 30, p. 37 Johnson, Rashauna, p. 81 Johnson, W. Chris, p. 38
Ii
Jones, Jacqueline, p. 44
Hitchcock, Tim, p. 70
Idol, David, p. 54
Jones, Marian Moser, p. 44
Hitchen, Lily-Gre, p. 81
Iliadis, Andrew, p. 49
Jones, Martha S., p. 79
Ho, Joseph W., p. 32
Imani, Jocelyn, p. 16, p. 78
Jones, Norman L., p. 13
Hobart, Hi’ilei Julia, p. 86
Immerwahr, Daniel, p. 25, p. 86
Jones, Patrick, p. 13
Ireton, Chloe, p. 84
Jones, Ryan, p. 48
Irwin, Julia, p. 86
Jones, T. Cole, p. 31
Irwin, Ryan, p. 35
Jones, Thai, p. 19
Israel, Paul, p. 57
Jones-Rogers, Stephanie, p. 66
Ivaska, Andrew, p. 51, p. 65
Joseph, Délide, p. 71
Iweze, Daniel Olisa, p. 72
Judson, Pieter M., p. 47, p. 55
Hinton, Elizabeth, p. 58 Hinton, Scott, p. 31
Hoberman, Louisa S., p. 17 Hobson, Emily K., p. 42 Hochfelder, David, p. 62 Hochman, Brian, p. 33 Hochman, Gilberto, p. 16 Hodes, Martha, p. 72, p. 79 Hodges, Graham Russell Gao, p. 43
Participants Index
Guardino, Peter F., p. 45
105
Jones, Jeannette Eileen, p. 46
Jones, Peter Carr, p. 31
23/10/17 5:34 PM
106
Participants Index
Kk
Kirkendall, Andrew J., p. 84
Kselman, Thomas A., p. 73
Lee, Penny, p. 64
Kirkpatrick, Michael, p. 49
Kube, Sven, p. 58
Leeds, Asia, p. 51
Kadia, Miriam Kingsberg, p. 41
Kitamura, Hiroshi, p. 35
Kuby, Emma, p. 58
LeFlouria, Talitha, p. 42
Kahrl, Andrew W., p. 79
Klein, Martin A., p. 21
Kuehne, Thomas, p. 41
Leggs, Brent, p. 70
Kaicker, Abhishek, p. 39
Klooster, Wim, p. 32 Klug, Sam, p. 44
Kulikowski, Michael E., p. 24, p. 30
Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., p. 37
Kalb, Emma, p. 39
Kurowska-Susdorf, Aleksandra, p. 35
Lentz, Mark, p. 76
Kalb, Marvin, p. 54
Kneisel, Michael, p. 47
Kamoie, Laura, p. 37
Knies, Michael, p. 29
Kurtz, William B., p. 28
Lengel, Edward, p. 52 Leon, Juan-Fernando, p. 61
Kane, Paula M., p. 33
Knight, Robert, p. 42
Kang, Xiaofei, p. 39
Knoll, Paul, p. 27
Kanter, Deborah E., p. 55
Knowles, Anne Kelly, p. 85
Kapadia, Aparna, p. 35
Knowles, Scott, p. 36
Kaplan, Rebecca, p. 54
Koda, Naoko, p. 70
Karl, Rebecca E., p. 36
Koester, Nancy, p. 62
Karl, Robert A., p. 68
Koeth, Stephen M., p. 47
Karlitekin, Selim, p. 72
Kokaze, Naoki, p. 24
Kashanipour, Ryan, p. 49
Kola, Ijeoma, p. 59
Kauffman, Jesse, p. 35
Kolchin, Peter, p. 45
Kaufman, Micki, p. 83
Kollman, Paul, p. 34
Keene, Jennifer D., p. 75
La Hausse de Lalouvière, Joseph, p. 21
Konefal, Betsy O., p. 86
Kegerreis, Christopher M., p. 61
Lahiri, Nayanjot, p. 35
Kordel, Patrycja, p. 63
Kelaidis, Katherine, p. 44
Lai, Symbol, p. 46
Korga, Iwona, p. 48
Keliher, Macabe, p. 19
Lambe, Ariel Mae, p. 27, p. 58
Korostyshevsky, David, p. 33
Kelkar, Shreeharsh, p. 49
Lamberson, Christine, p. 85
Kosicki, Piotr H., p. 74, p. 87
Keller, Christian, p. 42
Lamotte, Mélanie, p. 53
Koslofsky, Craig, p. 30
Kelley, Robin D. G., p. 83
Lande, Jonathan, p. 19
Köster, Roman, p. 54
Kelly, Patrick William, p. 85
Landers, Jane, p. 67
Kowal, Emma, p. 84
Kelman, Ari, p. 39
Langmead, Alison, p. 44
Kozaczka, Graz˙yna, p. 63, p. 82
Kendi, Ibram X., p. 33, p. 51, p. 78
Lansing, Carol, p. 56
Kozik, Bryan, p. 27
Lanza, Fabio, p. 51
Koziol, Geoffrey, p. 19
Lapidus, Sid, p. 83
Kozłowski, Paweł, p. 82
Lässig, Simone, p. 47, p. 55
Kraay, Hendrik, p. 45
Launius, Roger, p. 69
Kramer, Erin, p. 32
Laura R. Prieto p. 81
Kramer, Lloyd S., p. 18
Laureano-Ortiz, Raymond, p. 86
Kramer, Mark, p. 39
Laurence, Alison, p. 66
Kramer, Michael J., p. 31
Lawrence, John, p. 74
Krase, Jerome, p. 69, p. 75
Lawrence, Rodell, p. 78
Kratz, Jessie, p. 52, p. 68
Lawson, Joseph, p. 72
Kressel, Daniel, p. 27
Lawson, Michael, p. 15
Kroeker, Greta G., p. 67
Lazar, David, p. 42
Krondorfer, Bjorn, p. 41
Le, Anh Sy Huy, p. 72
Kronz, Frederick, p. 26
Lear, John, p. 48
Krook, Anne K., p. 43 Kropf, Simone, p. 16
Leavitt-Alcantara, Brianna N., p. 28
Kropiunigg, Rafael, p. 42
Lederer, Susan, p. 14
Lombardo, Timothy J., p. 85
Krozewski, Gerold, p. 28
Ledford, Kenneth F., p. 24
Lopez, Abel Ricardo, p. 21
Kruczkowski, Wojciech, p. 29
Lee, Alvin, p. 64
Lopez, Bianca, p. 69
Krueger, Rita, p. 33
Lee, Erika, p. 14, p. 43
López Lázaro, Fabio, p. 48, p. 80
Krylova, Anna, p. 32
Lee, M. Kittiya, p. 45
Lord, Alexandra, p. 14
Kennedy, Dane K., p. 17, p. 60 Kennedy, S. Wright, p. 60 Kenton, Karen, p. 49 Kercsmar, Joshua A., p. 14 Kerr-Ritchie, Jeffrey, p. 72 Keshani, Hussein, p. 85 Kessel, Martina, p. 42 Keyserling, Billy, p. 65 Khalil, Osamah F., p. 57 Khoja, Neelam, p. 39 Kiesling, Eugenia C., p. 70 Kietlinski, Robin, p. 65 Kiffmeyer, Tom, p. 59 Kim, Monica, p. 42 Kim, Nan, p. 78 Kimmage, Michael C., p. 87 King, Cornelia, p. 15 King, Farina, p. 15 King, Shannon, p. 85
Program_Book_2018.indd 106
Kusiak-Brownstein, Alicja, p. 63 Kuzuoglu, Ulug, p. 72
Ll Lacascade, Jean Yves, p. 86 Lacy, Anna, p. 13, p. 84 LaGrand, James B., p. 26 LaGrua, Flannery, p. 81
Leon, Sharon, p. 14 Leonard, Zak, p. 81 Leroy, Justin, p. 19, p. 84 Levant, Marie, p. 47 Levi, Scott C., p. 66 Levine, Philippa, p. 66 Levin-Rojo, Danna Alexandra, p. 59 Levy, Jessica Ann, p. 80 Lewis, David E., p. 86 Lewis, Earl, p. 77 Lewis, Patrick, p. 70 Lewis, Stephen E., p. 49, p. 67 Lew-Williams, Beth, p. 16 León, Miguel, p. 28 Li, Danke, p. 55, p. 62 Li, Hongshan, p. 57 Li, Wankun, p. 14 Li, Xiaobing, p. 62 Licht, Walter M., p. 32 Lichtenstein, Alex, p. 46 Lightfoot, Dana Wessell, p. 53 Lightfoot, Natasha J., p. 37 Lima Rabelo, Fernanda, p. 74 Limerick, Patricia Nelson, p. 44 Lin, Mao, p. 55 Lindsey, Lydia, p. 79 Linn, Jason, p. 61 Liss, Peggy K., p. 17 Littauer, Amanda H., p. 58, p. 72 Little, Douglas J., p. 29 Liu, Zenghe, p. 62 Livingston, James, p. 51 Lockton, Richard, p. 60 Loe-Sterphone, Joseph, p. 33 Logan, Trevon, p. 16
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107
Lothrop Johnson, Cameron, p. 34
Mao, Lisa, p. 64
McGirr, Lisa, p. 23
Milteer, Warren, Jr., p. 52
Louis, Wm. Roger, p. 28, p. 48
Marable-Bunch, Maria, p. 70
McGrath, Elena, p. 74
Mims, Lashonda, p. 35
Louthan, Howard P., p. 27
Marak, Andrae, p. 53
McGreevey, Robert C., p. 86
Minami, Kazushi, p. 55
Lowe, Ernest, p. 49
McInerney, Daniel J., p. 13
Minarchek, Matthew, p. 20
Lowe, Turkiya, p. 78
Marchand, Suzanne Lynn, p. 18, p. 34, p. 61
McInnis, Maurie, p. 71
Mink, Andy, p. 57
Lowenthal, Abraham F., p. 86
Marcus, Alan I., p. 29
McKee, Sally, p. 69
Mitchell, Mary Niall, p. 52
Lowes, Sara, p. 21
Marine-Street, Natalie, p. 48
McKenzie, David, p. 72
Mitchell, Silvia Z., p. 32
Lubienecki, Paul, p. 47
Marino, Katherine, p. 50, p. 66
McKinley, Michelle, p. 14
Mittelstadt, Jennifer, p. 13
Lubold, Shannon M., p. 85
Marino, Kelly, p. 64
McLean, Eden Knudsen, p. 72
Mizelle, Brett, p. 14
Lucero, Bonnie A., p. 84
Marker, Emily, p. 79
McMahon, Darrin M., p. 22
Mizelle, Richard M., p. 59
Łukasiewicz, Karolina, p. 69, 75
Mark-Thiesen, Cassandra, p. 21
McNeill, John R., p. 20
Moazeni, Sarah, p. 19
Łukasiewicz, Sławomir, p. 87
Marotti, William, p. 51
McPherson, Kelly, p. 47
Mobley, Christina, p. 71
Lurtz, Casey M., p. 71
Marsh, Allison, p. 78
McQuirter, Marya, p. 55
Moczygemba, Sarah Moxy, p. 56
Lutfi, Ameem, p. 72
Martin, Russell Edward, p. 20
McRae, Douglas, p. 59
Mogilner, Marina, p. 21
Luther, Kurt, p. 47
Martin, Scott C., p. 41
McReynolds, Meg Ferris, p. 32
Moguerane, Khumisho, p. 46
Lynn, Joshua, p. 21
Martin, Susan, p. 69
Meadows, R. Darrell, p. 51
Mohun, Arwen, p. 58
Lynn, Katalin Kádár, p. 48, p. 87
Martinez-Fernandez, Luis, p. 46, p. 57, p. 82
Meagher, Timothy J., p. 21, p. 73
Mokros, Emily, p. 29
Meghelli, Samir, p. 19, p. 64
Moll, Mark, p. 78
Mehta, Purvi, p. 59 Melendy, Kathleen, p. 81
Molony, Barbara, p. 22, p. 42, p. 64
Meloni, Maurizio, p. 84
Mondschein, Ken, p. 39
Meléndez-Badillo, Jorell, p. 56
Moniz, Amanda B., p. 22, p. 43
Méndez, Cecilia, p. 71
Monroe, Pamela, p. 64
Mennel, Timothy, p. 65
Montero Sobrevilla, Iris, p. 25
Mercado, Monica, p. 55
Moore, Kelly, p. 79
Merck, Ashton, p. 13
Moore, R. Scott, p. 80
Merithew, Caroline, p. 22
Moravec, Michelle, p. 83
Metcalf, Alida C., p. 52, p. 60
Morgan, Jennifer, p. 46
Metro, Rosalie, p. 60
Morgan, Ruth, p. 69
Meyer, Leisa D., p. 79
Morriello, Francesco, p. 53
Meyer-Fong, Tobie, p. 32
Morris, Bonnie, p. 79
Michel, Sonya, p. 25
Morris, Kenneth, Jr., p. 85
Middaugh, Jon, p. 52
Morris, Stephen A., p. 70
Miescher, Stephan F., p. 83
Morrison, Tara, p. 85
Mihalache, Irina, p. 30
Mosterman, Andrea Catharina, p. 14
Lyons, Amelia H., p. 68 Lytle Hernandez, Kelly, p. 76
Martinko, Whitney, p. 60 Martschukat, Jürgen, p. 58
Mm
Marvin, Nathan, p. 21
Macartney, Alexander Finn, p. 65
Mason, Austin, p. 70
MacDonald, Shane, p. 41
Masur, Kate, p. 65
MacDougall, Robert, p. 15
Matera, Marc, p. 69
Machado, Pedro A., p. 15, p. 54
Mathew, Nisha Mary, p. 72
Mack, Dwayne, p. 79
Mathias, Christine, p. 50
Mackert, Nina, p. 58
Matro, Katharina, p. 24
Mackie, Vera, p. 20
Matt, Susan J., p. 58
MacNeill, Lindsay Katherine, p. 42
Matytsin, Anton, p. 14, p. 26
Madar, Allison, p. 14
Mawani, Renisa, p. 54
Maddox, Tyesha, p. 38
Maxfield, Annie, p. 31, p. 61
Maekawa, Ichiro, p. 28
Maxwell, Lindsey, p. 60
Maeng, Mi-seon, p. 49
Mayhall, Laura E. Nym, p. 50
Maiden, John, p. 34
Maza, Sarah C., p. 18
Maika, Dennis, p. 32
Mazurkiewicz, Anna, p. 29, p. 87
Malain, Nikki, p. 67
Mazzenga, Maria R., p. 14, p. 15
Malandrucco, Gregory, p. 85
McCarthy, Tom, p. 43
Maliga, Ewa, p. 75
McClarin, Ka’mal, p. 12
Manalansan, Martin F., IV, p. 27
McClurken, Jeffrey W., p. 37, p. 67
Mancosu, Gianmarco, p. 22 Manekin, Sarah, p. 83
Maskiell, Nicole, p. 32, p. 49 Massoumi, Mejgan, p. 39
Maus, Derek, p. 82
Milerski, Rafal, p. 61 Miller, Janice, p. 71 Miller, Joseph C., p. 54 Miller, Karen, p. 57 Miller, Loren, p. 16 Miller, Lynneth J., p. 20 Miller, Maureen C., p. 63 Miller, Page Putnam, p. 78
Mangan, Jane, p. 25, p. 52
McConnell-Sidorick, Sharon, p. 32
Mann, Alison, p. 79
McCoy, Cameron, p. 70, p. 86
Miller-Davenport, Sarah, p. 86
Manning, Patrick, p. 24, p. 85
McCulla, Theresa, p. 30
Milligan, Ian, p. 85
Mannion, Geri, p. 22
McDonald, Jason J., p. 72
Millward, James, p. 32, p. 52
Mantena, Rama, p. 21
McDuffie, Erik S., p. 14, p. 53
Milne, Andrea Elizabeth, p. 19
Manzano, Valeria, p. 65
McFarland, Victor Robert, p. 57
Milstead, John, p. 16
Program_Book_2018.indd 107
Miller, Tyler, p. 24
Participants Index
Participants Index
Mostern, Ruth, p. 44, p. 53 Mota, Isadora Moura, p. 81 Mougoue, Jacqueline-Bethel Tchouta, p. 45 Moulton, Aaron Coy, p. 25 Moye, Todd, p. 13 Moyer, Ian, p. 71 Moyn, Samuel, p. 20 Mseba, Admire, p. 28 Mueller, Nick, p. 17 Mukherjee, Mithi, p. 81 Muldoon, Andrew, p. 57 Mulich, Jeppe, p. 49 Mullen, John, p. 60
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108
Participants Index
Mullen, Lincoln, p. 15, p. 68
Norton, Marcy, p. 25
Owen, David, p. 26
Pietruska, Jamie, p. 15
Muller, Anna, p. 17, p. 63
Norton, Mary Beth, p. 23
Owens, Deirdre Cooper, p. 65
Pilcher, Jeffrey, p. 30
Muller, Dalia A., p. 80
Nosal, Timothy, p. 87
Owensby, Brian P., p. 17
Pincince, John R., p. 36
Muller, Jerry, p. 82
Nowak, Zachary, p. 31
Oyen, Meredith L., p. 21
Placido, Sandy Isabel, p. 53
Mumford, Kevin J., p. 56, p. 62
Nugent, Patrick, p. 68, p. 73
Muñoz, Catalina, p. 81
Nuriddin, Ayah, p. 59
Muñoz, María L.O., p. 56
Nyamunda, Tinashe, p. 28
Murphy, A. J., p. 79
Platt, Daniel, p. 46
Pp
Poirier, Lindsay, p. 36, p. 49
Nye, David, p. 58
Pacino, Nicole, p. 74
Polgar, Paul J., p. 62
Nyhan Grey, Miriam, p. 21
Paik, A. Naomi, p. 42
Polo y La Borda, Adolfo, p. 74
Must, Nicholas, p. 17
Painter, Ron, p. 13
Pomeranz, Kenneth, p. 22
Myers, David N., p. 17
Oo
Pal, Srijita, p. 55
Ponce-Vázquez, Juan José, p. 82
Paley, Valerie, p. 30
Ponsen, Alexander, p. 74
Oberle, Eric W., p. 20
Palmer, James A., p. 63
Pope, Andrew, p. 62
Ochoa, Margarita R., p. 34, p. 76
Pandey, Gyanendra, p. 59
Pope-Obeida, Emily, p. 33
Nn
O’Connell, Aaron, p. 13
Paquette, Gabriel, p. 80
Popkin, Jeremy D., p. 67
O’Connor, Adrian, p. 27
Paradis, Michel, p. 13
Porter, Amy, p. 66
Nadasen, Premilla, p. 25, p. 70
O’Donnell, Anne, p. 22
Park, Karen, p. 33
Porter, Peter A., p. 60
Nagasaki, Kiyonori, p. 24
Odyniec, Krzysztof, p. 27
Parker, Alison M., p. 14
Portolano, Marlana, p. 61
Nair, Aparna, p. 18
Oelze, Micah, p. 22
Parker, Charles H., p. 79
Poska, Allyson M., p. 53
Nair, Neeti, p. 20
Offner, Amy C., p. 46
Parkinson, Robert, p. 84
Potter, Claire, p. 33
Nasiali, Minayo Anne, p. 65
Offutt, Leslie S., p. 59
Parlopiano, Brandon, p. 41
Potter, Simon J., p. 40
Natarajan, Radhika, p. 85
Ogilvie, Brian, p. 30
Parman, John, p. 16
Naylor, Celia E., p. 38, p. 54
Ogle, Vanessa, p. 22
Patriarca, Silvana, p. 35
Power, Margaret M., p. 68, p. 86
Needell, Jeffrey D., p. 34
O’Hara, Lynne, p. 87
Powers, Amy Godfrey, p. 26
Neidenbach, Elizabeth, p. 52
O’Hara, Matthew D., p. 28
Patterson-Myers, Tiffany Ruby, p. 38
Nelson, Alondra, p. 30, p. 79
Oie, Ting-Yi, p. 64
Pawlaczek, Marta, p. 75
Prado, Fabricio, p. 67, p. 86
Nelson, Stanley, p. 76
O’Keefe, Amy, p. 67
Paxton, Jennifer, p. 41
Prais, Jinny, p. 72
Nesbit, Scott, p. 60
Olsson, Tore, p. 59
Peabody, Sue, p. 53
Premo, Bianca, p. 25, p. 52
Neuberger, Joan, p. 51
Peacock, Margaret E., p. 39
Price, Richard, p. 35
Neufeld, Stephen, p. 45
O’Malley, Gregory E., p. 19, p. 23
Pearson, Jessica, p. 39
Prieto, Julie, p. 19
Newell, Margaret E., p. 31
O’Reilly, William, p. 33
Pease, Neal, p. 35, p. 56
Prieto, Laura R., p. 81
Newman, Brooke Nicole, p. 84
Orenduff-Bartos, Claire, p. 35
Peers, Douglas M., p. 35
Prifogle, Emily A., p. 31
Newman, Rachel, p. 62
Orlowska, Anna Paulina, p. 24
Pehl, Matthew, p. 40
Pringle, Deloris, p. 78
Newsome, W. Jake, p. 18
Orozco, Cynthia E., p. 66
Pencek, William J., p. 70
Przybyszewski, Linda, p. 67
Newton, Melanie J., p. 71
Ortiz, Paul, p. 27
Perez, Anne, p. 53
Pszczolkowski, Amy, p. 31
Ngo, Lan, p. 61
Ortiz Luquis, Julio A., p. 86
Pérez, Louis A., p. 84
Pula, James, p. 42
Nguyen, Julia Huston, p. 32
Osei-Opare, Nana, p. 31
Nguyen, Lien-Hang, p. 48
O’Shaughnessy, Andrew Jackson, p. 57
Pérez Meléndez, José Juan, p. 67, p. 81
Putnam, Lara E., p. 30, p. 76, p. 85
Murray, Paul, p. 55
Myers, Sarah, p. 21 Mylet, Jordan, p. 47
Nickerson, Michelle M., p. 21 Nicolaides, Becky, p. 51 Nieto-Phillips, John, p. 38 Nightingale, Carl H., p. 70 Nishida, Mieko, p. 17 Nobbs-Thiessen, Benjamin, p. 17 Noel, Linda, p. 38 Nolan, Mary, p. 48, p. 51 Nolan, Rachel, p. 62 Nord, Philip G., p. 58 Norris, Kevin, p. 51
Program_Book_2018.indd 108
Ospina-Romero, Sergio, p. 58
Polanco, Edward Anthony, p. 69
Powery, Emerson, p. 48
Perrier, Craig, p. 47, p. 86
Osterud, Grey, p. 35
Perry, Kennetta Hammond, p. 79, p. 85
Qq
Otero-Cleves, Ana María, p. 34
Peterson, Carla, p. 84
Quanquin, Hélène, p. 85
Otheguy, Emma, p. 74
Peterson, Sarah Jo, p. 83
Quataert, Jean H., p. 34
Otheguy, Raquel Alicia, p. 84
Petri, Olga, p. 45
Quigley, Paul, p. 47
O’Toole, James, p. 34
Pettegrew, David K., p. 26
Quillen, Carol, p. 24
O’Toole, Rachel, p. 76
Phifer, Evan, p. 18
Quinn, Dan, p. 41
Ott, Julia, p. 51
Phillips, Roderick, p. 41
Quinn, Sholeh, p. 53
Ottaway, Susannah R., p. 70
Picone, Maria de los Angeles, p. 17
Quinn-Brauner, Mearah, p. 31
Overtoom, Nikolaus Leo, p. 61
Pieragastini, Steven, p. 39
Quinn-Judge, Sophia W., p. 48
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Participants Index
109
Rr
Robertson, Stephen, p. 67
Ruediger, Dylan, p. 83
Schmalzer, Sigrid, p. 79
Robins, Marianne A., p. 20
Rufer, Mario, p. 81
Schmidt, Elizabeth, p. 31
Rabin, Dana, p. 84
Robinson, Shira N., p. 68
Ruffin, Herbert, II p. 79
Schmidt, Joe, p. 71
Rabinbach, Anson G., p. 74
Rocha, Elaine P., p. 22
Rugenstein, Ernest, IV, p. 60
Schmidt, Katharina Isabel, p. 52
Rader, Karen A., p. 66
Rockoff, Hugh, p. 16
Ruiz, Jesús, p. 76
Schmitt, Casey, p. 76
Rael, Patrick J., p. 70
Rodriguez, Chantel, p. 68
Ruiz, Vicki L., p. 49
Schmitz, Timothy J., p. 24
Rahnama, Sara, p. 45
Rodriguez, Julia E., p. 22, p. 23
Runstedtler, Theresa, p. 19
Schneider, Elena, p. 16
Rai, Mridu, p. 20
Rodriguez, Marc Simon, p. 59
Schneider, Robert A., p. 70
Raman, Bhavani, p. 21
Rodriguez, Samantha, p. 20
Rupert, Linda M., p. 16, p. 19, p. 49
Ramey, Lynn, p. 83
Rodriguez, Sarah, p. 38
Rush, Anne Spry, p. 85
Scholl, Jonathan, p. 28
Ramirez, Susan E., p. 28
Roege, Pernille, p. 32, p. 80
Ryan, Eileen, p. 15
Schreier, Joshua S., p. 78
Ramos, Frances L., p. 74, p. 86
Rogers, Clifford J., p. 86
Ryan, Francis, p. 32
Schrum, Kelly, p. 67
Randolph, Stephen Patrick, p. 63
Rogers, John D., p. 35
Rzeznik, Thomas F., p. 55
Schultheiss, Katrin, p. 24, p. 51
Raška, Francis D., p. 48 Rattanasengchanh, P. Michael, p. 44 Rausch, Jane M., p. 17 Ray, Jonathan S., p. 67 Raz, Mical, p. 59 Reeder, Tyson, p. 67 Reft, Ryan, p. 29 Rehding, Alexander, p. 74 Reich, Peter, p. 68 Reichardt, Alyssa Zuercher, p. 80 Reid, Daniel, p. 26 Reid, Joshua, p. 57 Reid-Vazquez, Michele, p. 80 Reidy, Joseph P., p. 43 Reilly, Bernard F., p. 51 Reimitz, Helmut, Sr., p. 24 Reinhard, Rachel, p. 40 Reis, Elizabeth, p. 72 Renna, Thomas J., p. 55 Resendez, Andrés, p. 76 Reznick, Jeffrey S., p. 26, p. 63 Rhody, Jason, p. 85 Richardson, Heather, p. 33 Richert, Lucas, p. 41 Riddle, Jonathan D., p. 80 Rinaldi, Cirus, p. 43 Rindfleisch, Bryan, p. 31 Rittgers, Ronald K., p. 67 Rizzo, Tracey, p. 57 Robert, Dana L., p. 67 Robert, Krisztina, p. 38 Roberts, Cokie, p. 42 Roberts, Justin L., p. 14 Roberts, Kyle B., p. 15
Program_Book_2018.indd 109
Rogers, Thomas D., p. 53 Rohrmeier, Kerry, p. 31 Roldán, Mary, p. 68 Roller, Heather Flynn, p. 76 Roman, Meredith, p. 79 Rombough, Julia, p. 52 Romesburg, Don, p. 40, p. 52 Romine, David, p. 70 Roney, Jessica Choppin, p. 44 Roosien, Claire, p. 39 Roque, Ricardo, p. 40 Rose, Colin, p. 29, p. 52 Rosemblatt, Karin A., p. 66 Rosen, Hannah, p. 37 Rosenblum, Noah A., p. 52 Rosenfeld, Jennifer L., p. 87 Rosenfield, Patricia, p. 22 Rosenmüller, Christoph, p. 86 Rosenthal, Joshua M., p. 68 Roshwald, Aviel I., p. 60 Rosinbum, John, p. 70 Ross, Andrew Israel, p. 45 Ross, Gary, p. 50 Ross, Jecoa, p. 42 Ross, Travis E., p. 48 Ross, Tricia, p. 41 Roth, Ann Macy, p. 83 Roth, Michael S., p. 24 Rothman, Adam, p. 18 Rouphail, Robert, p. 15 Rouse, Wendy, p. 40 Rowe, Stephanie, p. 78 Rowland, Leslie S., p. 51 Rubin, Rachel, p. 19 Ruble, Alexandria, p. 20 ´ Rudek-Smiechowska, Anna, p. 48
Ss Saba, Roberto, p. 81 Sabry, Tarik, p. 39
Schultz, Kara, p. 16 Schultz, Rainer, p. 84 Schwall, Elizabeth, p. 62 Schwaller, John, p. 49
Sack, Daniel, p. 32, p. 67
Schwaller, Robert C., p. 17, p. 76, p. 84
Sacks, Marcy S., p. 32
Schwertner, Hillar, p. 59
Sadlier, Darlene J., p. 16
Scofield, Rebecca, p. 62
Saenz, Charles Nicholas, p. 47
Scott, Blake, p. 50
S¸ahin, Kaya, p. 17
Scott, Hannah, p. 61
Salerno, Beth, p. 81
Scott, James C., p. 59
Salvati, Giulio, p. 22
Scranton, Philip, p. 63
Samper Vendrell, Javier, p. 45
Scully, Pamela, p. 30
Sanchez, Michelle Chaplin, p. 83
Sebeny, Hillary, p. 64
Sanchez, Susy, p. 27
Seeman, Erik R., p. 54
Sanderfer, Selena Ronshaye, p. 84
Segal, Howard, p. 29
Sanders Johnson, Grace, p. 30
Seigel, Micol, p. 42
Sandling, Gary, p. 40
Seijas, Tatiana, p. 59, p. 76
Santos, Brenda J., p. 44
Seiler, Cotten, p. 43
Sargent, Daniel, p. 63
Selcer, Perrin, p. 24
Sarreal, Julia, p. 50
Seltzer, Joel D., p. 24
Sarvis, Albert, p. 26
Semán, Ernesto, p. 27
Saul, Scott, p. 31
Semley, Lorelle, p. 79
Saunt, Claudio, p. 44
Semyonov, Alexander, p. 21, p. 40
Savagian, John C., p. 41 Savala, Joshua, p. 46 Scalenghe, Sara, p. 18
Serventi, Jennifer, p. 26, p. 32, p. 60
Scallan Melvin, Megan, p. 72
Sessions, Jennifer, p. 60
Schaefer, Jennifer L., p. 74
Shaffern, Robert, p. 41
Schaffer, Samuel L., p. 24
Shah, Naureen, p. 23
Schakenbach Regele, Lindsay, p. 27, p. 63
Shah, Nayan, p. 38
Schaposchnik, Ana, p. 69
Shaindlinger, Noa, p. 14
Schenck, Marcia, p. 31
Shan, Patrick Fuliang, p. 62
Schieder, Chelsea Szendi, p. 78
Shannon, Christopher, p. 28
Schields, Chelsea, p. 46
Shaw, David Gary, p. 32
Schlotterbeck, Marian E., p. 62
Shawcross, Teresa, p. 71
Participants Index
Rankin, William, p. 70
Schneider, Winter Rae, p. 26
Shaikh, Juned, p. 59
23/10/17 5:34 PM
110
Participants Index
She, Gangzheng, p. 39
Snorton, C. Riley, p. 66
Sumner, Raymond, p. 61
Tiller, Veronica, p. 83
Sheets, Robert G., p. 13
So, Bernadette, p. 31
Sun, Simon, p. 73
Tillman, Margaret, p. 72
Sheinin, David M. K., p. 62
Solinger, Rickie, p. 35
Sunderland, Willard, p. 40, p. 52
Timinsky, Samuel J., p. 83
Shellow, Robert, p. 58
Solis, Gabriel, p. 31
Sutton, Matthew Avery, p. 62
Timmons, Patrick, p. 80
Shen, Yiming, p. 26
Soluri, John, p. 66
Suvrathan, Uthara, p. 35
Tinkelman, Ilsa, p. 67
Shepard, Todd, p. 46
Sooter, Joshua A., p. 26
Swagler, Matthew, p. 78
Tinsman, Heidi, p. 46, p. 62
Shepperd, Josh, p. 40
Sopcak-Joseph, Amy, p. 48
Swan, Amy, p. 67
Tobin, Eugene M., p. 83
Shesko, Elizabeth, p. 45
Soriano, Cristina, p. 50
Swan, Quito, p. 70
Tocco, Francesco Paolo, p. 67
Shibley, Natalie, p. 42
Soske, Jon, p. 59
Swann, John, p. 14 , p. 63
Toksoz, Meltem, p. 72
Shin, Youjung, p. 36
Soskis, Benjamin J., p. 22
Swanson, Kara W., p. 27
Shinn, James M., Jr., p. 27
Sosnowska, Anna, p. 69
Sweeney, Lean, p. 14
Tomasek, Kathryn, p. 24, p. 66, p. 70
Shoemaker, Nancy, p. 17, p. 25
Sotomayor, Antonio, p. 68
Sweeney, Shauna J., p. 19
Tomich, Dale W., p. 23
Shopkow, Leah, p. 12
Spafford, David A. M., p. 71
Sweet, James H., p. 44, p. 57
Topdar, Sudipa, p. 72
Shousha, Barbara, p. 55
Sperber, Jonathan, p. 47, p. 61
Swift, Jayne, p. 58
Torget, Andrew J., p. 57
Shrum, Rebecca K., p. 64
Spickard, Paul R., p. 33
Symes, Carol, p. 24
Trachtenberg, Barry, p. 40
Shurts, Sarah Elizabeth, p. 41
Spieler, Miranda, p. 21
Syrett, Nicholas, p. 33
Troutt Powell, Eve M., p. 83
Siamdoust, Nahid, p. 39
Spiker, Christina, p. 32
Szerle, Marcin, p. 56
Trowbridge, David J., p. 13
Siddiqi, Dina, p. 20
Spiro, Liat, p. 15
Sierra Silva, Pablo Miguel, p. 16
Spohnholz, Jesse A., p. 17
Sillitti, Nicolas, p. 45
Staley, David J., p. 35, p. 62
Truett, Samuel, p. 76
Tt
Trybus, Karl J., p. 47
Stanford-McIntyre, Sarah, p. 17
Tähtinen, Lauri, p. 54
Turner, Sasha, p. 65
Silvestrini, Blanca G., p. 56
Stango, Marie, p. 81
Takara, Kathryn, p. 79
Simmons, LaKisha, p. 52
Stanton, Andrea L., p. 40
Takata, Kei, p. 65
Tworek, Michael Thomas, p. 14, p. 27
Simon, Andrew, p. 39
Takeda, Junko, p. 25
Tycko, Sonia, p. 31
Sinanoglou, Penny, p. 66
Staudenmaier, Michael, p. 56, p. 68
Talbot, Michael, p. 68
Tyrey, Adrienne, p. 72
Singer, Bennett, p. 56, p. 68
Steel, Virginia, p. 51
Tan, Wei Yu Wayne, p. 18
Sinha, Manisha, p. 45, p. 70
Steinbach, Steve, p. 24
Tanaka, Stefan, p. 36
Sipress, Joel M., p. 12
Steinhauer, Jason, p. 17
Tarankow, Paula, p. 14
Skarpelis, A.K.M., p. 54
Steinhoff, Anthony, p. 61
Tavárez, Fidel J., p. 74, p. 80
Skidmore, Emily E., p. 66
Sterling, Christopher, p. 40
Taylor, Rachel Lanier, p. 55
Sleeter, Nate, p. 67
Stern, Roger, p. 57
Taylor, Sean, p. 65
Slobodkin, Yan, p. 60
Stertzer, Jennifer E., p. 57
Taylor, Ula, p. 64
Slonimsky, Nora, p. 84
Stetz, Nancy, p. 46
Teicher, Amir, p. 61, p. 84
Smail, Daniel L., p. 38, p. 58
Stevens, Scott Manning, p. 45
Temkin, Moshik, p. 33
Smart, Devin, p. 15
Stewart, Mart, p. 53
Tentler, Leslie W., p. 40
Smith, Anthony, p. 55
Stewart, Pamela J., p. 35
Thistlethwaite, Mark, p. 33
Smith, Cathal, p. 45
Stites Mor, Jessica, p. 56
Thomas, William G., III, p. 13
Smith, Frank, p. 75, p. 85
Stokes, Lauren, p. 20, p. 79
Thomassen, Bjørn, p. 87
Smith, Frederick H., p. 41
Storch, Randi J., p. 37
Thompson, Andrew, p. 35
Smith, Helmut W., p. 61, p. 74
Stovall, Tyler, p. 49, p. 75
Thompson, Elizabeth, p. 19
Smith, Jay M., p. 32
Strait, Kevin, p. 16
Thompson, Heather, p. 42
Valencia-García, Louie Dean, p. 54
Smith, Jean, p. 85
Strauss, Sarah, p. 80
Thompson, John B., p. 14
Van Bergen, Leo, p. 44
Smith, Leonard V., p. 19
Streeter, Carrie, p. 55
Thornberry, Elizabeth, p. 66
Smith, Mark J., p. 13
Streets-Salter, Heather E., p. 52
Thornton, Christy, p. 27, p. 66
Van Der Meer, Arnout H.C., p. 69
Smith, Merritt Roe, p. 27
Stuckey, Melissa, p. 38, p. 78
Thum, Rian, p. 66
Van Deusen, Nancy E., p. 45
Smith, Norman, p. 41, p. 47
Sueyoshi, Amy H., p. 27
Thurman, Kira, p. 55, p. 69
Van Houtryve, Tomas, p. 54
Smith, Sabrina, p. 82
Suisman, David, p. 58
Tian, Xiansheng, p. 55, p. 62
Van Hoy, Teresa, p. 72
Smith, Stephanie J., p. 48
Sullivan, Frances Peace, p. 53
Tiemeyer, Phil, p. 84
Vann, Michael G., p. 44, p. 57
Smith, Tom, p. 86
Sullivan, Patricia A., p. 58, p. 70
Tijerina, Stefano, p. 85
Van Norman, William C., p. 46
Silva, Indianara, p. 16
Program_Book_2018.indd 110
Tuer, Dot, p. 45
Uu Uhlman, James Todd, p. 43 Unger, Sanford, p. 24 Upart, Anatole, p. 61 Upchurch, Charles J., p. 45 Useche, Allison Powers, p. 84 Uusitalo, Lauri, p. 82
Vv Vaccaro, Jeanne, p. 52 Vacek, Heather Hartung, p. 62 Valbousquet, Nina, p. 47
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Participants Index
111
Van Rossum, Matthias, p. 45
Wang, Anran, p. 39
Wicentowski, Joseph C., p. 57
Wright, Nicole M., p. 17
Van Vleck, Jenifer, p. 84
Wang, Nai-Ching, p. 47
Wickens, K. Allison, p. 85
Wright Rigueur, Leah, p. 21
Van Waijenburg, Marlous, p. 21
Wang, Tao, p. 34, p. 55
Wicks, Nilce, p. 82
Wu, Yidi, p. 78
Varlik, Nükhet, p. 71
Ward, Kyle, p. 47
Wulf, Karin, p. 83
Varon, Jeremy, p. 23
Warden, Paul Michael, p. 80
Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E., p. 53, p. 79
Veeramah, Krishna, p. 71
Warner, Rick, p. 12
Wight, Philip, p. 20
Velasco Murillo, Dana, p. 59, p. 76
Warren, Adam W. V., p. 22
Wilczewski, Michal Janusz, p. 17
Velasquez, Steve, p. 30
Warren, Lance, p. 75
Wildenthal, Lora, p. 47, p. 55
Ventresca, Robert A., p. 35
Warsh, Molly A., p. 25, p. 39
Wilder, Craig Steven, p. 18
Yahaya, Nurfadzilah, p. 54
Washburn, Amy, p. 79
Wilder, Gary, p. 37
Yamanaka, Mishio, p. 52
Yy
Wasniewski, Matthew, p. 13
Wilkinson, Michelle Joan, p. 19
Yamboliev, Kalina, p. 56
Vermeiren, Jan, p. 60
Wasserstein, Bernard M. J., p. 29
Williams, Jennie, p. 19
Yannakakis, Yanna P., p. 52
Vermote, Frederik, p. 39
Wasserstein, David J., p. 83
Williams, Richard, p. 31
Ye, Shirley, p. 72
Versteegh, Pien, p. 35
Waterhouse, Benjamin Cooper, p. 21
Williams, Yohura, p. 75
Yi, Guolin, p. 34
Vider, Stephen, p. 52, p. 72
Williams-Forson, Psyche, p. 58
Yin, Qingfei, p. 39
Viens, Katheryn P., p. 27
Waters, Brandi M., p. 17
Williford, Christa, p. 26
Yingling, Charlton W., p. 53
Villa, Paula-Irene, p. 58
Watkins, Sarah E., p. 83
Wilson, Carlton, p. 79
Yolocan, Serkan, p. 72
Villegas, Celso, p. 21
Watson, Amy, p. 17
Wilson, Lisa H., p. 60
Young, Ashley Rose, p. 37
Vining, Margaret Simmons, p. 44
Watson, Lemuel, p. 78
Wilson, Mark R., p. 63, p. 79
Young, Clinton D., p. 47
Vinson, Ben, III, p. 16, p. 51
Way, Jennifer, p. 44
Windham, Kimberly, p. 64
Young, Julia G., p. 53
Vinson, Robert Trent, p. 80
Wayne, Beatrice Tychsen, p. 31
Winerock, Emily, p. 20
Young, Kevin, p. 86
Virtue, Nicholas, p. 35
Weaver, Jace, p. 73
Winford, Brandon Kyron, p. 80
Young, Kim, p. 71
Visacovsky, Sergio, p. 21
Weaver Olson, Nathan, p. 28
Wingo, Rebecca, p. 13, p. 83
Young, Stephanie, p. 36
Vitale, Antonella, p. 43
Weber, Heike, p. 54
Winslow, Barbara, p. 35
Yudell, Michael, p. 30
Vitulli, Elias, p. 66
Webster, Crystal, p. 45
Winters, Lisa Ze, p. 65
Vo, Alex-Thai, p. 78
Wehrman, Michael J., p. 41
Wintersteen, Kristin, p. 76
Vogeler, Georg, p. 24
Weinberg, Eyal, p. 62
Wintz, Cary D., p. 24, p. 37
Voll, John O., p. 28, p. 83
Weinstein, Barbara, p. 49
Witkowski, Gregory, p. 22
Zagarri, Rosemarie, p. 45
Von Daacke, Kirt, p. 18
Weinstein, David, p. 32
Wolf, Nicholas, p. 21
Zakic, Mirna, p. 74
Von der Goltz, Anna, p. 83
Weitzberg, Keren, p. 70
Wolf, Noel, p. 47
Zalcman, Daniella, p. 54
Von Eschen, Penny, p. 44
Westhoff, Laura M., p. 12
Wolfe, Jason M., p. 30
Zamindar, Vazira F.-Y., p. 66
Von Germeten, Nicole, p. 48
Wheat, David, p. 23, p. 76
Wolfe, Mikael, p. 59
Zamora, Emilio, p. 41
Vrana, Heather A., p. 57
Wheatley, Steven C., p. 22
Wolfe-Hunnicutt, Brandon, p. 57
Zanini, Paolo, p. 41, p. 47
White, Deborah Gray, p. 18
Wolfinger, James, p. 32
Zarley, Jesse, p. 50
Ww
White, Gwendolyn K., p. 79
Wolgin, Philip Eric, p. 36
Zelizer, Julian, p. 58
White, Holly, p. 60
Wood, Julia Erin, p. 14
Zhang, Dewen, p. 34
Waite, Kevin, p. 32
White, Joseph M., p. 28
Wood, Laurie, p. 54
Wald, James, p. 29
White, Sam, p. 17
Wood, Molly M., p. 35
Zimmerman, Andrew, p. 19, p. 45, p. 71
Walker, Andrew, p. 26
White, Steven F., p. 87
Wood, Nathaniel David, p. 17
Walker, Tamara J., p. 76
Whitford, David, p. 67
Wooten, Terrance, p. 62
Wallace, Mary, p. 49
Whiting, Gloria, p. 60
Wright, Ben, p. 84
Walsh, Sarah, p. 40
Whitman, James, p. 74
Wright, Gavin, p. 51
Program_Book_2018.indd 111
Participants Index
Veres, Madalina Valeria, p. 33, p. 39
Wurl, Joel, p. 32
Zz
Zimmerman, Sarah, p. 65 Zolov, Eric, p. 44, p. 56, p. 57 Zuelow, Eric G.E., p. 82 Zwigenberg, Ran, p. 65
23/10/17 5:34 PM
Fifty-Year Members of the AHA
112
The following members of the AHA completed their 50th year of continuous membership in the Association during 2017. The list also includes members who have already achieved this honor. Mary D. Abu-Shumays
Elizabeth A. R. Brown
Earlene Craver
Norman B. Ferris
Carol A. Adamson
Blaine A. Brownell
Don M. Cregier
Paula S. Fichtner
Donald H. Akenson
W. Elliot Brownlee
Daniel W. Crofts
Carole K. Fink
Martin Albaum
Nicholas C. Burckel
W. H. Cumberland
J. K. Folmar
Lee N. Allen
Rand Burnette
E. Randolph Daniel
Eric Foner
Sharon Z. Alter
Philip M. Burno
Pete Daniel
John Douglas Forbes
Howard L. Applegate
Peter M. Buzanski
Roger Daniels
George B. Forgie
Walter L. Arnstein
Rolfe G. Buzzell
Gerald A. Danzer
Robert Forster
Abraham Ascher
John C. Cairns
Natalie Z. Davis
Stephen Foster
John Wendell Bailey Jr.
Daniel F. Calhoun
Thomas H. Davis III
Daniel M. Fox
Bernard Bailyn
Daniel H. Calhoun
Istvan Deak
Richard C. Frey Jr.
Deborah F. Baird
Daniel F. Callahan
Helen Delpar
Richard M. Fried
Jay W. Baird
Richard L. Camp
Joseph A. Devine Jr.
Frank A. Friedman
Keith M. Baker
Charles F. Carroll
Virginio F. DeVita
James Friguglietti
James M. Banner, Jr.
Francis M. Carroll
Charles B. Dew
Patrick J. Furlong
Roderick J. Barman
Rosemary F. Carroll
Samuel E. Dicks
Mary O. Furner
Redmond J. Barnett
Charles D. Cashdollar
Duane Norman Diedrich
James P. Gaffey
Samuel H. Baron
James Caskey
Leonard Dinnerstein
Robert Garfield
Michael C. Batinski
Richard T. Chang
James J. Divita
Bruce M. Garver
Daniel A. Baugh
Lena L. Charney
John M. Dobson
Donna Broderick Gavac
John J. Baughman
Philander D. Chase
Robert C. Donaldson
Marianne B. Geiger
Ross W. Beales
Min-sun Chen
John Patrick Donnelly, SJ
Richard A. Gerber
Seymour Becker
Robert W. Cherny
Ara Dostourian
Larry R. Gerlach
Kurt Beermann
Roger P. Chickering
George A. Drake
Robert J. Gibbons
William Beik
Stanley Chodorow
Seymour Drescher
John R. Gillis
Norman Robert Bennett
J. R. Christianson
Katherine Fischer Drew
Lenore M. Glanz
Walter L. Berg
Clifford E. Clark
Jack R. Dukes
J. Philip Gleason
Kathleen Bergan Schmidt
Linda L. Clark
A. Hunter Dupree
Arthur E. Goldschmidt
Martin E. Berger
Malcolm C. Clark
Michael H. Ebner
Luis E. Gonzalez-Vales
Winfred E. Bernhard
Errol M. Clauss
Owen Dudley Edwards
Philip Manning Goodwin
Albert J. Beveridge III
Nicholas R. Clifford
Carol Jean Ehlers
Bertram M. Gordon
Richard F. Beyerl
Charles E. Coate
Sydney Eisen
Leonard A. Gordon
Russell K. Bishop
Marcia L. Colish
Saul Engelbourg
Margaret W. Gosfield
Thomas N. Bisson
Frank F. Conlon
Carroll L. Engelhardt
Henry F. Graff
Robert A. Blackey
Giles Constable
Iris H. Engstrand
Richard Graham
Bradford B. Blaine
Robert T. Coolidge
Elizabeth York Enstam
Jack P. Greene
Andrew Blane
F. Alan Coombs
Donald B. Epstein
Raymond Grew
N. Jo Tice Bloom
Ronald E. Coons
Joyce Duncan Falk
Kenneth J. Grieb
Stuart M. Blumin
Sandi E. Cooper
Stanley L. Falk
Patricia K. Grimsted
Charles M. Brand
Frank J. Coppa
Ena L. Farley
Warren Grover
Christopher N. Breiseth
Roger W. Corley
Ronald L. Feinman
Samuel Haber
Renate Bridenthal
Edith B. Couturier
David Felix
Arthur Haberman
Roger D. Bridges
Theodore Rawson Crane
Robert H. Ferrell
Barton C. Hacker
Program_Book_2018.indd 112
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Fifty-Year Members of the AHA
113
Wm. Kent Hackmann
Konrad H. Jarausch
Patricia-Ann Lee
Ronald E. Mickel
Daryl M. Hafter
Jerome Jareb
Andrew Lees
Robert L. Middlekauff
Edwin C. Hall
L. C. Jennings
Melvyn P. Leffler
David B. Miller
Paul G. Halpern
Raymond J. Jirran
Jesse Lemisch
Mary Emily Miller
Alonzo L. Hamby
Harold B. Johnson Jr.
David Levin
Norma Taylor Mitchell
James N. Hantula
Herbert A. Johnson
Vernon L. Lidtke
John Modell
Craig R. Hanyan
James E. Johnson
Helen Liebel-Weckowicz
Robert J. Moore
David E. Harrell
Arnita A. Jones
Jonathan J. Liebowitz
Regina Morantz-Sanchez
Susan M. Hartmann
Dorothy V. Jones
David L. Lightner
Rex D. Morrell
Laurence M. Hauptman
K Paul Jones
Robert D. Linder
Karl F. Morrison
Steven C. Hause
Philip D. Jordan
James E. Lindsay
George Moutafis
T.R.H. Havens
Jacob Judd
John E. Little
Armin E. Mruck
Ellis W. Hawley
Frank A. Kafker
Lester K. Little
John H. Mugar
Albert A. Hayden
William Peter Kaldis
Leon F. Litwack
James M. Muldoon
Jo N. Hays
William Kamman
Janet Loengard
John M. Murrin
Beverly A. Heckart
Lawrence S. Kaplan
Peter J. Loewenberg
Edward John Muzik
Leopold Hedbavny Jr.
John P. Karras
Charles A. Lofgren
Alfred F. Myers
Dorothy O. Helly
Stanley N. Katz
John V. Lombardi
Duane P. Myers
Paul C. Helmreich
Thomas H. Kean
Joseph O. Losos
Henry Vivian Nelles
John B. Hench
Thomas M. Keefe
Joseph L. Love Jr.
Otto M. Nelson
James E. Hendrickson
Kenneth W. Keller
Richard Lowitt
Charles E. Neu
Melinda Meek Hennessey
Thomas M. Kemnitz
William C. Lubenow
Donald L. Niewyk
James N. J. Henwood
Philip W. Kendall
Myriam D. Maayan
Emiliana P. Noether
Charles J. Herber
Joseph Frederick Kenkel
Richard S. Macha
Mary Beth Norton
Charles W. Herman
Alice Kessler-Harris
Maeva Marcus
Walter Nugent
Gerald H. Herman
Warren F. Kimball
James Kirby Martin
Ronald L. Numbers
Andrew C. Hess
Margaret L. King
Donald J. Mattheisen
Charles H. O’Brien
Gad J. Heuman
Richard S. Kirkendall
Allen J. Matusow
Patrick G. O’Brien
John Hillje
Glenn J. Kist
Joseph M. McCarthy
Ynez V. O’Neill
Gertrude Himmelfarb
Jacques Paul Klein
Charles H. McCormick
Karen Offen
Paul E. Hoffman
Paul W. Knoll
Kathleen E. McCrone
Arnold A. Offner
Richard C. Hoffmann
Richard H. Kohn
John J. McCusker
John L. Offner
Paul S. Holbo
Paul A. Koistinen
Gerald W. McFarland
Keith W. Olson
David A. Hollinger
Arno W. F. Kolz
Lyle A. McGeoch
Eugenia M. Palmegiano
Frank X. J. Homer
Gerard M. Koot
Roderick E. McGrew
Michael F. Palo
Daniel Horowitz
Axel Kornfuehrer
William F. McHugh
Nicholas G. Papp
John R. Howe
Walter F. LaFeber
Allan S. McLellon
Hong-Kyu Park
Stanley R. Howe
Daniel Lane
David O. McNeil
J. Norman Parmer
Richard M. Hunt
Roger Lane
John W. McNulty
Robert D. Parmet
Robert Edgar Hunter
Vincent A. Lapomarda
James M. McPherson
Peter Pastor
Alfred F. Hurley
Alphonse F. LaPorta
Neville K. Meaney
Robert B. Patterson
Frank C. Huyette Jr.
Catherine Grollman Lauritsen
John A. Mears
William Brown Patterson
Georg G. Iggers
Dimitri D. Lazo
W. Knox Mellon Jr.
Justus F. Paul
Akira Iriye
John L. LeBrun
Michael A. Meyer
Samuel C. Pearson
Travis Beal Jacobs
Richard A. Lebrun
Joel D. Meyerson
Kenneth J. Pennington
William Jannen Jr.
Maurice D. Lee Jr.
Norton H. Mezvinsky
Loren E. Pennington
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114 Fifty-Year Members of the AHA Fifty-Year Members of the AHA 114 Robert C. Perkins
Edward G. Ruestow
Winton U. Solberg
Robert W. Venables
Ann M. Pescatello
Frederick H. Russell
George W. Spencer
Maris A. Vinovskis
Jon A. Peterson
James D. Ryan
Gabrielle M. Spiegel
Peter L. Viscusi
Richard V. Pierard
David Warren Sabean
Kurt R. Spillman
Clarence E. Walker
John F. Piper Jr.
Salvatore Saladino
Thomas J. Spinner
Andrew Wallace
Philip Pitruzzello
Roland Sarti
Alan B. Spitzer
Harry M. Walsh
Edward J. Pluth
Edward L. Schapsmeier
Keith L. Sprunger
Ronald G. Walters
Emil Polak
Harry N. Scheiber
Peter D. L. Stansky
Churchill E. Ward
Stafford R. Poole, CM
Paul H. Scherer
James Stasevich Jr.
Kenneth O. Waterman
James F. Powers
Albert John Schmidt
Bruce M. Stave
John C. B. Webster
G. Robina Quale-Leach
Hans R. Schmidt
Samuel N. Stayer
Paul B. Wehn
Robert E. Quigley
Gerald Michael Schnabel
Peter N. Stearns
Gerhard L. Weinberg
Theodore K. Rabb
Ann Imlah Schneider
R. Vladimir Steffel
Sydney S. Weinberg
Alexander Rabinowitch
William C. Schrader III
Harry H. Stein
Dora B. Weiner
Hugh A. Ragsdale
Paul W. Schroeder
Stanley J. Stein
J. Walter Weingart
Edgar Frank Raines Jr.
Anne Jacobson Schutte
Lester D. Stephens
James J. Weingartner
Barbara N. Ramusack
Lois G. Schwoerer
Frances Glazer Sternberg
R. William Weisberger
Edward Ranson
Paul S. Seaver
E. J. Stolns
Harold J. Weiss Jr.
A. Compton Reeves
Walter A. Sedelow
Kenneth R. Stow
Albert A. Wetherell
Donald M. Reid
Howard P. Segal
Charles L. Sullivan
Robert H. Whealey
John P. Reid
Gustav L. Seligmann Jr.
Zoe A. Swecker
Dan S. White
John T. Reilly
Alexander E. Selikoff
Samuel A. Syme Jr.
Michael N. Wibel
Alan J. Reinerman
Calvin F. Senning
Jackson Taylor
Nicholas Wickenden
Dennis P. Reinhartz
William H. Sewell
John A. Tedeschi
Larry D. Wilcox
Earl A. Reitan
Edward S. Shapiro
Spero T. Thomaidis
Mira Wilkins
C. Thomas Rezner
Emmett A. Shea
Donald E. Thomas Jr.
Bernard D. Williams
R. Arnold Ricks
James J. Sheehan
Janet M. Thompson
Allan M. Winkler
Alfred J. Rieber
Merrill F. Sherr
Paul S. Thompson
Herbert C. Winnik
David R. Ringrose
Jerome Shindelman
Brian Tierney
Gordon S. Wood
Moses Rischin
Barbara Sicherman
David M. Tiffany
Phyllis Bannan Woodworth
Robert C. Ritchie
Paul Siff
Robert L. Tree
Lyle J. Woodyatt
Phyllis B. Roberts
Paul L. Silver
Robert F. Trisco
Marcia Wright
Raymond H. Robinson
George H. Skau
Melvin J. Tucker
Edith P. Young
Robert A. Rockaway
Kathryn Kish Sklar
Joseph S. Tulchin
Mary E. Young
Carole R. Rogel
Michael S. Smith
Graydon A. Tunstall Jr.
Tsing Yuan
Elliot A. Rosen
Theodore L. Smith
Milton I. Vanger
Robert L. Zangrando
William G. Rosenberg
Frank J. Smolar Jr.
J. Daniel Vann III
Ruth Zerner
Dorothy Ross
Reba N. Soffer
Josefina Zoraida Vazquez
Russ Zguta
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AHA Awards Know a great historian who deserves to be recognized? Every year the AHA honors distinguished historical work with dozens of awards and prizes for books, articles, teaching, mentoring, public history, digital history, and more.
Nominations are due May 15. Learn more about past winners, how to submit a nomination, and how you can support prize endowments at historians.org/prizes.
Program_Book_2018.indd 115
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116
Map of the Exhibit Hall
Ask this exhibitor about special offers for AHA members
Marriott Wardman Park, Exhibit Hall C
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Exhibitors Index Organization
117 Booth Number
Organization
Booth Number
Adam Matthew
421
Penguin Random House - Penguin Group
322
American Historical Association
315
Penguin Random House - Random House
320
Association Book Exhibit
338
Penn State University Press
108
Basic Books
228
Berghahn Books
413
Polity (see Wiley)
523
Bloomsbury
225
Princeton University Press
332
Brill
129
Project MUSE (The John Hopkins University Press)
310
Cambridge University Press
219
ProQuest
229
Catholic University of America Press
517
Readex
333
Center for Research Libraries
237
Routledge/Taylor & Francis
408
Columbia University Press
131
Rowman & Littlefield
407
Conference of Historical Journals
513
Schlager Group Inc., Milestone Documents
510
Cornell University Press
127
Simon & Schuster
516
Department of Veterans Affairs NCA
534
Sixteenth Century Journal Book Review Office
533
Duke University Press
202
East View Information Services
528
Smithsonian Books
512
Edinburgh University Press
529
Stanford University Press
537
Feminist Studies
329
SUNY Press
304
Fordham University Press
311
The Concord Review, Inc.
504
Gale, Cengage Learning
210
The HistoryMakers
428
George Washington’s Mount Vernon
511
The MIT Press
526
German Historical Institute
405
University of Arkansas Press
522
Hackett Publishing Co.
417
University of California Press
430
HarperCollins Publishers
111
University of Chicago Press
425
Harvard University Press
525
University of Georgia Press
505
I.B.Tauris
415
Ingram Content Group
532
University of Illinois Press
206
Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown Univ.
305
University of Massachusetts Press
518
Interfolio
301
University of Missouri Press
422
Israel Institute
300
University of Nebraska Press
306
Johns Hopkins University Press
312
University of New Mexico Press
524
JSTOR
233
University of North Carolina Press
209
Lexington Books
404
University of Pennsylvania Press
313
Louisiana State University Press (LSU)
205
University of Pittsburgh Press
433
Macmillan Learning/Bedford/St. Martin’s
325
University of Texas Press
412
Macmillan Publishers
319
University of Toronto Press
323
MapStory
411
University of Toronto Press
204
McGill-Queen’s University Press
420
New York University Press
110
University of Virginia Press
514
Ohio University Press
108
University of Washington Press
434
Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
207
University of Wisconsin Press
234
Oneworld Publications
307
University Press of Kansas
309
Oxford University Press
220
W. W. Norton & Company
123
Palgrave Macmillan
424
Wiley
519
Penguin Random House - Knopf Doubleday
324
Yale University Press
124
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Advertisers Index Adam Matthew American Historical Association
118 15 1, 57, Cover 3
Oneworld Publications
65
Oxford University Press
22-23 24-25
Basic Books
53
Penguin Academic
Berghahn Books
49
Penguin Random House
67
Brill
45
Penn State University Press
14
Cambridge University Press
41
Princeton University Press
Cambridge University Press Journals
87
Routledge (Taylor & Francis)
College Board
87
Rowman & Littlefield
Columbia University Press
37
Simon & Schuster
34-36 84 68-69 70
Cornell University Press
16-17
Stanford University Press
Duke University Press
10-13
SUNY Press
71 72
26-27
Emily Rose
82
Temple University Press
Fordham University Press
54
University of California Press
Gale, a Cengage Company
86
University of California, San Diego
George Washington’s Mount Vernon
63
University of Georgia Press
Hackett Publishing Company
55
University of Massachusetts Press 72
HarperCollins Publishers
56
University of Missouri Press
Harvard University Press
2-5
University of Nebraska
74-75 73 28-29
Cover 2 85
HISTORY®
88
University of Nebraska Press
30-31
Indiana University Press
58
University of North Carolina Press
38-40
Johns Hopkins University Press
18-19
University of Notre Dame
83
Knopf Doubleday Academic Services
20-21
University of Pennsylvania
6-9
Lepage Center for History in the Public Interest
86
University of Texas Press
LSU Press
59
University of Toronto
76
University of Virginia Press
77
Macmillan Learning
80-81, Cover 4
32-33
Macmillan Publishing
60
University of Washington Press
78
McGill-Queen’s University Press
61
University of Wisconsin Press
79
MIT Press
62
University Press of Kansas
42-44
NYU Press
64
W.W. Norton & Company
46-48
Omohundro Institute
66
Yale University Press
50-52
Program_Book_2018.indd 118
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Advertising1(a)
Call for Proposals for the 133rd Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association The AHA’s annual meeting is the largest yearly gathering of historians in the United States. All historians are welcome and encouraged to submit proposals. The AHA also invites historically focused proposals from colleagues in related disciplines and from AHA affiliated societies. The Program Committee will consider all proposals that advance the study, teaching, and public presentation of history. The Association seeks submissions on the histories of all places, periods, people, and topics; on the uses of diverse sources and methods, including digital history; and on theory and the uses of history itself in a wide variety of venues. We invite proposals for sessions in a variety of formats and encourage lively interaction among presenters and with the audience. Session Proposals Sessions last for 90 minutes. Most sessions will be limited to four speakers plus a chair. The Program Committee will accept proposals for complete sessions only. We encourage organizers to build panels that bring together diverse perspectives.
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China at War Triumph and Tragedy in the Emergence of the New China
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6(a)Advertising
New Series: America in the Nineteenth Century Series Editors Brian DeLay, Steven Hahn, and Amy Dru Stanley
Luxurious Citizens
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Property and Dispossession Natives, Empires and Land in Early Modern North America Allan Greer Studies in North American Indian History
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In a vast and all-embracing study of Africa, from the origins of humankind to the present day, John Iliffe refocuses its history on the peopling of an environmentally hostile continent. Africans have been pioneers struggling against disease and nature, but during the past century their inherited culture has interacted with medical progress to produce the most rapid population growth the world has ever seen. This new edition incorporates genetic and linguistic findings throwing light on early African history, summarises research that has transformed study of the Atlantic slave trade, and examines the consequences of a rapidly growing youthful population, the hopeful but uncertain democratisation and economic recovery of the early twenty-first century, the containment of the AIDS epidemic, and the turmoil within Islam that has produced the Arab Spring. Africans: The History of a Continent is thus a single story binding living Africans to their earliest human ancestors. John Iliffe was Professor of African History at the University of Cambridge and is a Fellow of St John’s College. He is the author of several books on Africa, including A Modern History of Tanganyika (Cambridge University Press, 1979) and The African Poor: A History (Cambridge University Press, 1988), which was awarded the Herskovits Prize of the African Studies Association of the United States.
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The UC San Diego Division of Arts and Humani�es and the Department of History are proud to celebrate the accomplishments of the La�n American History group for a new hire, major publica�ons and awards, and to invite poten�al Ph.D. students to apply to our na�onally ranked graduate program.
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The Champlain Society has echoed the voices of some of Canada’s most eloquent citizens for over one hundred years. Through its books and Digital Collection, The Champlain Society makes the adventures, explorations, discoveries, and opinions that have shaped Canada available to all who have an interest in the country’s past. champlainsociety.utpjournals.press Publications of the Champlain Society, 2018 Volume: “Life and Death by the Frozen Sea”: The York Fort Journals of Hudson’s Bay Company Governor James Knight, 1714–1717. Fall 2018.
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Homesteading the Plains unsettles longstanding homesteading myth and history alike. Provocative and illuminating, it offers new data, technologies, and questions to open new historical terrain. —Elizabeth Jameson University of Calgary
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Please Join Us! The College Board is excited to welcome history professionals to the American Historical Association Annual Meeting.
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A HISTORY OF WORLD SOCIETIES Eleventh Edition Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Patricia Buckley Ebrey University of Washington Roger B. Beck Eastern Illinois University Jerry Dávila University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign Clare Haru Crowston University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign John P. McKay University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign SEPTEMBER 2017 (©2018)
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