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Cover2.indd 1 19/10/20 9:42 PM 2021 Annual Meeting Program

Program Editorial Staff

Debbie Ann Doyle, Editor and Meetings Manager

With assistance from Victor Medina Del Toro, Liz Townsend, and Laura Ansley

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 1 26/10/20 8:59 PM 400 A Street SE Washington, DC 20003-3889 202-544-2422 E-mail: aha@.org Web: www.historians.org Perspectives: historians.org/perspectives Facebook: facebook.com/AHAhistorians : @AHAHistorians

2020 Elected Officers President: , University of Miami Past President: John R. McNeill, Georgetown University President-elect: Jacqueline Jones, University of Texas at Austin Vice President, Professional Division: Rita Chin, (2023) Vice President, Research Division: Sophia Rosenfeld, University of (2021) Vice President, Teaching Division: Laura McEnaney, Whittier College (2022) 2020 Elected Councilors Research Division: Melissa Bokovoy, University of New Mexico (2021) Christopher R. Boyer, Northern Arizona University (2022) Sara Georgini, Historical Society (2023) Teaching Division: Craig Perrier, Fairfax County Public Schools Mary Lindemann (2021) Professor of Alexandra Hui, Mississippi State University (2022) University of Miami Shannon Bontrager, Highlands College (2023) President of the American Historical Association Professional Division: Mary Elliott, Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture (2021) Nerina Rustomji, St. John’s University (2022) Reginald K. Ellis, Florida A&M University (2023) At Large: Sarah Mellors, Missouri State University (2021) 2020 Appointed Officers Executive Director: James Grossman AHR Editor: Alex Lichtenstein, Indiana University, Bloomington Treasurer: William F. Wechsler Legal Counsel of the Association Alison M. Dreizen, Esq. Carter Ledyard & Milburn LLP Parliamentarian of the Association Kenneth F. Ledford, Case Western Reserve University

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 2 26/10/20 8:59 PM Table of Contents iii

General Information �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 1

Virtual AHA ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������1 2021 AHA Annual Meeting Program ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 2–54

Presidential Address ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������2 Plenary Sessions ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������2 Sessions of the AHA Program Committee ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������2 Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������46

Indexes and Lists ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 55–77 Topical Index �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������55 Affiliated Societies ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������56 Participants Index ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������63 Fifty-Year Members of the AHA ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������73 Exhibitors Index ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������76 Advertisers Index �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������77 Advertising �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� follows page 77

Session Icons

This icon identifies presidential sessions starting on page 2.

Presidential Session

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 3 26/10/20 8:59 PM iv Presidents of the American Historical Association

1884–85 1932 1976 Richard B. Morris 1885–86 1933 Charles A. Beard 1977 Charles Gibson 1886–87 1934 William E. Dodd 1978 William J. Bouwsma 1887–88 1935 Michael I. Rostovtzeff 1979 1889 1936 Charles McIlwain 1980 David H. Pinkney 1890 1937 1981 1891 1938 Laurence M. Larson 1982 Gordon A. Craig Frederic L. Paxson 1892–93 1983 Philip D. Curtin 1939 William Scott Ferguson 1893–94 1984 Arthur S. Link 1940 1895 1985 William H. McNeill 1941 1896 1986 Carl N. Degler 1942 Arthur M. Schlesinger 1897 1987 1943 1898 1988 1944 William L. Westermann 1899 1989 Louis R. Harlan 1945 Carlton J. H. Hayes 1900 1990 1946 Sidney B. Fay 1901 Charles Francis Adams 1991 William E. Leuchtenburg 1947 Thomas J. Wertenbaker 1902 1992 Frederic E. Wakeman Jr. 1948 1903 1993 Louise A. Tilly 1949 1904 1994 Thomas C. Holt 1950 Samuel E. Morison 1905 John Bach McMaster 1995 John H. Coatsworth 1951 Robert L. Schuyler 1906 Simeon E. Baldwin 1996 1952 James G. Randall 1907 J. Franklin Jameson 1997 1953 Louis Gottschalk 1908 1998 Joseph C. Miller 1954 1909 1999 Robert C. Darnton 1955 1910 2000 1956 1911 2001 Wm. Roger Louis 1957 William Langer 1912 2002 1958 1913 William Archibald Dunning 2003 James M. McPherson 1959 1914 Andrew C. McLaughlin 2004 1960 Bernadotte E. Schmitt 1915 H. Morse Stephens 2005 James J. Sheehan 1961 1916 2006 Linda K. Kerber 1962 1917 Worthington C. Ford 2007 Barbara Weinstein 1963 1918–19 2008 Gabrielle M. Spiegel 1964 Julian P. Boyd 1920 2009 1965 Frederic C. Lane 1921 2010 Barbara D. Metcalf 1966 Roy F. Nichols 1922 Charles H. Haskins 2011 1967 1923 Edward P. Cheyney 2012 1968 John K. Fairbank 1924 2013 1969 C. Vann Woodward 1924–25 Charles M. Andrews 2014 Jan Goldstein 1970 R. R. Palmer 1926 Dana C. Munro 1971 David M. Potter 2015 Vicki L. Ruiz 1927 Joseph R. Strayer 2016 Patrick Manning 1928 James H. Breasted 1972 Thomas C. Cochran 2017 Tyler E. Stovall 1929 1973 Lynn White Jr. 2018 1930 1974 2019 John R. McNeill 1931 Carl Lotus Becker 1975 Gordon Wright 2020 Mary Lindemann

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 4 26/10/20 8:59 PM Planning and Arrangements for the 2021 Annual Meeting v

American Historical Association Program Committee Headquarters Staff Laura Ansley Chair: Jared Poley Laura E. Matthew Managing Editor Georgia State University Marquette University Ashley E. Bowen Co-chair: Lisa M. Brady Ritika Prasad Editor, Perspectives on History Boise State University University of at Charlotte Julia Brookins Yigit Akin Gautham Rao Special Projects Coordinator Tulane University American University Megan Connor Robert K. Batchelor Program Associate Bob Weinberg Georgia Southern University, Statesboro Debbie Ann Doyle Monique Bedasse Meetings Manager Mark Ravina Washington University in St. Louis Maureen Elgersman Lee University of Texas at Austin Researcher Keisha N. Blain 2022 chair University of Pittsburgh Gabriella Folsom Margaret Salazar-Porzio Communications and Marketing Assistant Cristobal A. Borges National Museum of American History James Grossman North Seattle College 2022 co-chair Executive Director Cary C. Collins Kole Dawson Erica Heinsen-Roach Tahoma Senior High School Boise State University Researcher Emily Greenwald Program Committee assistant Michelle Hewitt Historical Research Associates, Inc. Kailey McAlpin Assistant Membership Manager Carina L. Johnson Georgia State University Matthew Keough Pitzer College Program Committee assistant Archives and Facilities Administrator Alexandra Levy Web and Social Media Coordinator Suzanna Marie Litrel Researcher Karen Lou Editorial Assistant Victor Medina Del Toro Meetings and Executive Assistant Betsy Orgodol Accounting Manager Melanie A. Peinado Researcher and Career Diversity Fellow Marketus Presswood Researcher Dylan Ruediger Coordinator, Career Diversity for Historians and Institutional Research Dana L. Schaffer Deputy Director Pamela Scott-Pinkney Membership Manager Hope Shannon Researcher Emily Swafford Director of Academic and Professional Affairs Liz Townsend Manager, Data Administration and Integrity Sarah Jones Weicksel Director of Research and Publications Jeremy C. Young Communications and Marketing Manager

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 5 26/10/20 8:59 PM DON’T MISS OUR VIRTUAL AHA WEB CONTENT

• AHA Colloquium (includes content from the canceled 2021 annual meeting) • History Behind the Headlines • Online Teaching Forum • Virtual Career Development • National History Center Congressional Briefings • Washington History Seminar • Virtual Exhibit Hall

& more

historians.org/VirtualAHA

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 6 26/10/20 8:59 PM General Information 1

he Association planned to hold its 135th annual meeting January 7–10, • History Behind the Headlines: Webinars featuring prominent historians 2021, in Seattle, Washington. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it discussing the behind current events and the importance of Twill be impossible to meet in Seattle as originally planned. The best history and historical thinking to public policy and culture. available information from public health authorities and medical experts • AHA Online Teaching Forum: Virtual events designed to help historians suggests that the global health crisis will not be sufficiently resolved by January. plan for teaching in online and hybrid environments. With regret, the Association has concluded that canceling the face-to-face meeting is necessary to maintain the health and safety of our members, our • Virtual Career Development: Professional development webinars and work­­ staff, and the public. shops emphasizing career exploration and skill development for graduate We do not make this decision lightly, as we know how important the annual students and early-career historians. meeting is to the discipline. Members rely on the opportunity to meet in • Virtual Seminars for Department Chairs: Virtual seminars designed person to build professional relationships, share their scholarship, and engage to support department chairs through the transitions and uncertainties in professional development. While we will not be able to connect in person, resulting from COVID-19. Webinars will be small group discussions the AHA staff is preparing a variety of web-based programming over 2020–21 (capped at 10 participants) and facilitated by an experienced depart­­ to continue to bring together our communities of historians to further advance ment chair. our mission. This PDF program documents all sessions accepted by the 2021 Program • National History Center Congressional Briefings: Virtual, nonpartisan Committee and the affiliated societies. Anyone who was expecting to deliver a briefings by leading historians on past events and policies that shape the issues prepared presentation will have the opportunity to post written remarks on the facing Congress today. AHA website. Canceled conference presentations should be included on CVs and • Washington History Seminar: Aims to facilitate understanding of listed as “accepted for the 2021 AHA annual meeting.” contemporary affairs in light of historical knowledge from a variety of perspectives. A joint venture of the National History Center of the AHA Land Acknowledgment and the History and Public Policy Program of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. The American Historical Association acknowledges that this year we would have met on the historic and contemporary lands of the Duwamish, Suquamish, and Muckleshoot nations and other Coast Salish peoples who call the waters and Virtual Exhibit Hall coastline of the Salish Sea home. The AHA Virtual Exhibit Hall launches on October 1 and will be available online through June 2021. The Virtual Exhibit Hall provides an opportunity Virtual AHA to learn about the latest historical scholarship, take advantage of publisher discounts, and network with editors and press staff. If you normally look Virtual AHA is a series of online opportunities to bring together forward to the exhibits at the annual meeting, the Virtual Exhibit Hall offers a communities of historians, build professional relationships, discuss similar experience from the comfort of your home. Best of all, no name badge is scholarship, and engage in professional and career development. A necessary: the Virtual Exhibit Hall is free and open to the public. Check it out service to our members as they navigate the current emergency, Virtual at historians.org/ExhibitHall. AHA provides a forum for discussing common issues, building research networks, and broadening and maintaining our professional community in dire circumstances. It also provides resources for online teaching and other Code of Professional Conduct professional and career development. We are creating a variety of content The AHA is committed to creating and maintaining a harassment-free to help historians connect, while helping us learn more about what our environment for all participants in the Association’s activities, regardless members want and need. of their actual or perceived sex, , gender expression, gender Virtual AHA will run through June 2021. Virtual AHA incorporates the identity, , marital status, race, ethnicity, nationality, AHA Colloquium, our name for content drawn from the canceled 2021 ability, socio­­­­economic status, veteran status, age, or . All members annual meeting. It also includes an online teaching forum, career development and participants, including employers, contractors, vendors, volunteers, and workshops, a series of History Behind the Headlines webinars, National History guests, are expected to engage in consensual and respectful behavior and to Center programming, and more. These programs are free and AHA membership preserve AHA’s standard of professionalism at all times. The policy pertains to is not required to register. Many of the webinars will be available for later viewing all venues where officially sanctioned AHA conferences, meetings, and other on the AHA’s YouTube Channel. activities occur. See historians.org/VirtualAHA for details. Details, including procedures for addressing violations of the statement, are posted at historians.org/conduct. Programming Content Streams • AHA Colloquium: Bringing together communities of historians who ordinarily meet face-to-face at our annual meeting through web-based programming.

Program Book 2021_FM.indd 1 26/10/20 8:59 PM 2 Program Committee Sessions

Program for the 2021 Annual Meeting

William Max Nelson, University of Scarborough AHA Presidential Address Corinna A. Treitel, Washington University in St. Louis John H. Zammito, Rice University American Historical Association Presidential Address 5. New Archive Studies Slow History Mary Lindemann, University of Miami Chair: Randolph C. Head, University of , Riverside All historians realize how much COVID-19 has interfered with our scholarship and teaching. Everything has slowed down, from preparing for classes, to doing Papers: Introduction: Archival Histories and Archival Critiques research, to completing the simplest tasks of everyday life. Yet in the upheaval Randolph C. Head, University of California, Riverside we are currently experiencing, and as we struggle to remain productive, perhaps Information Technologies and the Government of Sicily we should also seize the opportunity to think more deeply about the “doing” of in the Later Middle Ages history and to isolate what really matters in research, writing, and instruction. Alessandro Silvestri, Institución Milá y Fontanals (CSIC) Scholars in other disciplines have been doing so for several years, and some Trans-Imperial Archives: Conceptualizing Archival Practices and have even issued manifestos like the one advocating for “slow science.” Should Practitioners across Early Modern Sovereign Spaces we follow their lead? “Is going slow good for historians as well?” E. Natalie Rothman, University of Toronto The presidential address will be available on the AHA’s YouTube channel in Culling East Asian Archives in the Past for the Future: early January 2021. Space, Process, and the Dreams of the Devin Fitzgerald, University of California, Los Angeles Plenary Sessions Comment: Randolph C. Head, University of California, Riverside

1. Plenary: Erasing History 6. New Chair: Daniel L. Riches, University of Alabama at Chair: Annette Gordon-Reed, Tuscaloosa Panel: Daniel Immerwahr, Northwestern University Panel: Indravati Félicité, Université de Laura E. Matthew, Marquette University Nicola Di Cosmo, Institute for Advanced Study Philip G. Nord, David C. Engerman, Yiching Wu, University of Toronto Nana Osei-Opare, Fordham University 2. Late Breaking Plenary 7. New Histories of This plenary session will offer a historical perspective on the 2020 election. Chair: Margaret Lavinia Anderson, University of Participants will be announced in December. California, Berkeley Papers: Christianity in 17th- and 20th-Century Sessions of the AHA Program Committee during Two Political and Social Crises Ronnie Po-chia Hsia, Penn State University 3. Business History Today Letters and Literature in Times of Crisis Helmut W. Smith, Vanderbilt University Chair: Philip B. Scranton, -Camden 17th-Century Crisis as a Historiographic Concept: Papers: Business History, Theory, and Globalization Its Usefulness for the New History of Christianity Kenneth J. Lipartito, Florida International University Douglas Hugh Shantz, University of Calgary Rethinking Chinese Economic Life and Business History Comment: Ute Lotz-Heumann, University of Arizona Philip Thai, Northeastern University Economic Life and the Margins of Business History 8. New Military History, Part I Alexia Yates, University of Manchester Chair: Michael Neiberg, US Army War College Histories of Business in Africa: Lessons from Ghana Bianca Murillo, California State University, Dominguez Hills Papers: To Be Determined Robert M. Citino, National WWII Museum Comment: Audience The Environmental History of War and the War of American Independence: Separate Fields That Could 4. Enlightenment Vitalism: A Panel in Honor Enrich Each Other of Peter Hanns Reill David C. Hsiung, Juniata College Chair: Keith M. Baker, Sites of War: New Military History and the Panel: David G. Blackbourn, Vanderbilt University Lesley J. Gordon, University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa Lorraine J. Daston, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Comment: Michael Neiberg, US Army War College

Program Book 2021.indd 2 26/10/20 8:58 PM Program Committee Sessions 3

9. New Military History, Part II Necropolis: Temporalities of Urban Ruination Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Tryntje Helfferich, at Lima Catastrophe Time, Limit Situations, and Madness at Rwanda’s Panel: Mary E. Ailes, University of , Kearney Congolese Border Kelly DeVries, Loyola University Nancy Rose Hunt, University of Florida Karen Hagemann, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Timing the Everyday in Times of the 30 Years’ War Nathan S. Rosenstein, Ohio State University Helmut Puff, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor David J. Silbey, 15. Beyond the Horizon of Career Diversity: Sustaining 10. Occupation/Education Professional Development for Humanities PhDs Chair: Robert Barnett, Organized by the AHA Professional Division Panel: Robert Barnett, Columbia University Chair: Purnima Dhavan, , Seattle Adey Almohsen, University of Krista Goff, University of Miami Panel: Rachel Arteaga, Simpson Center for the Humanities, Mary A. Renda, Mount Holyoke College University of Washington Alyssa Mt. Pleasant, State University of New York, Antoinette M. Burton, University of Illinois at Urbana- University at Buffalo Champaign Dylan Ruediger, American Historical Association 11. Rethinking Disenchantment 16. The Purpose of a History PhD Chair: Jared Poley, Georgia State University Organized by the AHA Professional Division Papers: Everyday Enchantment: Popular Magical Belief and Practice in Modern Europe Chair: Adam Kosto, Columbia University Jason Philip Coy, College of Charleston Panel: Rita C-K Chin, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Mana in the Making: Supernaturalism and Social Kathleen M. Hilliard, State University Authority at the Turn of the 20th Century Alison K. Frazier, University of Texas at Austin Randall Styers, University of North Carolina at Adam R. Seipp, Texas A&M University Chapel Hill Enchantment, Eternal and Ubiquitous 17. Seminars on Chronological Age as a Category of Monica Black, University of Tennessee at Knoxville Historical Analysis, Part 1: Age and Empire Comment: Michael D. Bailey, Iowa State University Organized by the AHA Research Division The American Historical Association is soliciting scholars who are currently 12. Tanzania, 60 Years since Independence pursuing research that engages age as a category of analysis. Linked with the recent roundtable on chronological age in the American Historical Review Chair: Michelle Moyd, Indiana University (April 2020), we invite participants for three seminars that will explore age Panel: Andrew M. Ivaska, Concordia University as a category of analysis. Each seminar will have a different theme—consent, Chambi Chachage, Princeton University empire, and gender—and will be led by two scholars whose work appears Lessie B. Tate, Prairie View A&M University in the roundtable and who specialize on that topic. The two conveners Seth Markle, Trinity College of the seminars (and editors of the roundtable)—Corinne T. Field and Azaria Mbughunu, Lane College Nicholas L. Syrett—will select approximately 12 to 16 participants, with an eye toward including graduate students and early career scholars. Those 13. The New Western History, 40 Years On accepted will attend all three seminars, with three or four having short pieces workshopped in each of the three seminars. Details will be posted at Chair: Lynn M. Hudson, University of Illinois at Chicago historians.org/Virtual AHA. Panel: Anne Hyde, University of Oklahoma We expect that all participants will have read the AHR roundtable by the Patricia Nelson Limerick, University of time of the seminar and will also be prepared to offer feedback on fellow Colorado Boulder participants’ work. Louis S. Warren, University of California, Davis Joshua L. Reid, University of Washington, Seattle Facilitators: Corrie Decker, University of California, Davis Bianca Premo, Florida International University 14. Thinking Catastrophe Times This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 18 and 19. Chair: Helmut Puff, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Papers: Catastrophe in Classical Political Economy: Revisiting Famines in Colonial and Ireland in the Long 19th Century Manu Goswami, 2021

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18. Seminars on Chronological Age as a Category of 21. Community Colleges and the Gateways Experience Historical Analysis, Part 2: Age and Consent Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Organized by the AHA Research Division Chair: Theresa R. Jach, Houston Community College Northwest The American Historical Association is soliciting scholars who are currently Papers: Active Learning Assignments for the History Gateways Initiative pursuing research that engages age as a category of analysis. Linked with the Sarah Elizabeth Shurts, Bergen Community College recent roundtable on chronological age in the American Historical Review (April 2020), we invite participants for three seminars that will explore age Engaging Students through Local History and Interactive Exhibits as a category of analysis. Each seminar will have a different theme—consent, Shawna Williams, Houston Community College empire, and gender—and will be led by two scholars whose work appears Closing Achievement Gaps at Community Colleges in the roundtable and who specialize on that topic. The two conveners Amy Godfrey Powers, Waubonsee Community College of the seminars (and editors of the roundtable)—Corinne T. Field and Nicholas L. Syrett—will select approximately 12 to 16 participants, with Fostering Belonging: Auto-Ethnographies and Community Oral Histories Samantha Rodriguez, Houston Community College an eye toward including graduate students and early career scholars. Those accepted will attend all three seminars, with three or four having short “We Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Exams”: Using Research and pieces workshopped in each of the three seminars. Details will be posted at Discussion to Measure Student Success historians.org/Virtual AHA. J. Kent McGaughy, Houston Community College Northwest We expect that all participants will have read the AHR roundtable by the Material Culture as a Bridge to Understanding History time of the seminar and will also be prepared to offer feedback on fellow Theresa R. Jach, Houston Community College Northwest participants’ work. Comment: Audience Facilitators: Ishita Pande, Queens University Nicholas L. Syrett, University of 22. Don’t Panic! The Futures of History from the Liberal This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 17 and 19. Arts College Perspective: Workshop Organized by the AHA Teaching Division 19. Seminars on Chronological Age as a Category of Historical Analysis, Part 3: Age and Gender Chair: Edward D. Cohn, Grinnell College Organized by the AHA Research Division Panel: Joshua Colin Birk, Smith College Jenny Huangfu Day, Skidmore College The American Historical Association is soliciting scholars who are currently Tomas F. Summers Sandoval Jr., Pomona College pursuing research that engages age as a category of analysis. Linked with the Leslie S. Offutt, recent roundtable on chronological age in the American Historical Review Anthony Donaldson Jr., The University of the South (April 2020), we invite participants for three seminars that will explore age as a category of analysis. Each seminar will have a different theme—consent, 23. Don’t Panic! The Futures of History from the Liberal empire, and gender—and will be led by two scholars whose work appears in the roundtable and who specialize on that topic. The two conveners Arts College Perspective: Roundtable of the seminars (and editors of the roundtable)—Corinne T. Field and Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Nicholas L. Syrett—will select approximately 12 to 16 participants, with Chair: Ernesto B. Capello, Macalester College an eye toward including graduate students and early career scholars. Those accepted will attend all three seminars, with three or four having short Panel: Edward D. Cohn, Grinnell College pieces workshopped in each of the three seminars. Details will be posted at Jordana Dym, Skidmore College historians.org/Virtual AHA. Jakub J. Kabala, Davidson College Tamika Yolanda Nunley, We expect that all participants will have read the AHR roundtable by the time of the seminar and will also be prepared to offer feedback on fellow participants’ work. 24. Don’t Panic! The Futures of History from the Liberal Arts College Perspective: Social Hour Facilitators: Corinne T. Field, Ashwini Tambe, University of Maryland Organized by the AHA Teaching Division This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 17 and 18. An informal social hour, during which participants and interested parties have the opportunity to talk further about the issues raised in the sessions 20. Regional Archives and the Proposed Closing of the and discuss how liberal arts history faculty can continue to be in conversation Seattle NARA Branch about issues of concern both pedagogical and institutional. Organized by the AHA Research Division 25. Fine-Tuning Program Outcomes: A Curriculum- Chair: Katrina L. Jagodinsky, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Mapping Workshop Panel: Feliks Banel, Washington State Historical Society Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Andrew H. Fisher, College of William and Mary Gabriel Galanda, attorney Chair: John C. Savagian, Alverno College Trish Hackett Nicola, genealogist and public historian Panel: Norman L. Jones, Utah State University Nancy L. Quam-Wickham, California State University, Long Beach Sarah Elizabeth Shurts, Bergen Community College Charles Ford, Norfolk State University Comment: John C. Savagian, Alverno College

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26. History for the 21st Century: Progress, Problems, 31. International Students’ Experiences in Graduate Programs and Plans Organized by the AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Discussants: Trishula Rachna Patel, Georgetown University Chair: Trevor Getz, State University Shuko Tamao, State University of New York, University at Buffalo Panel: Steve Harris, San Francisco State University Manoel Rendeiro Neto, University of California, Davis Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University Pablo Martinez Coronado, University of Texas at El Paso Suzanne Marchand, Louisiana State University Comment: Laura McEnaney, Whittier College 32. Transitions to Graduate School Suzanne Marchand, Louisiana State University Organized by the AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee 27. Shifting How History Is Taught—A Dialogue to Inspire Chair: Sarah Mellors, Missouri State University Instructional Innovation in Secondary and Higher Panel: Stephanie Wong, Education Oya Atkas, University of Washington, Seattle Spencer Abbe, Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Megan Weiss, Discussants: Scale Switching in World History Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University 33. What Do Academic Search Committees Really Want? Public Engagement in the History Classroom Organized by the AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee Jennifer Hart, Wayne State University Chair: Samuel Keeley, Leibniz Institute of European History Using Visible Thinking Strategies in History Classes Craig Perrier, Fairfax County Public Schools Panel: Christopher R. Boyer, University of Illinois at Chicago Isadora A. Helfgott, University of Supporting Students’ Document Analysis Joseph Bangura, Kalamazoo College Joseph P. Sebestyen III, Hampton Township School District 34. A Century of American Drug Use: Psychoactive 28. Writing Teaching Statements: A Workshop for Drugs among Native Americans, Hippies, and the Instructors Working Poor Organized by the AHA Teaching Division Chair: Timothy Cole Hale, Georgia State University A strong teaching statement, which is important for historians in academic Papers: “Better Citizens”: Peyote Use and the Fight over Native American careers, can be difficult to write. Participants will learn the basics of an effective US Citizenship, c. 1918 statement and offer feedback to each other to help convey the “how” and Lila M. Teeters, University of New Hampshire, Durham “why” of their teaching, as well as their specific contexts and challenges. This Modern Treat, Makes Life Complete: Cannabis, Intoxication, Chairs: Laura M. Westhoff, University of Missouri–St. Louis and the Agency of the Working Poor in American Cities, 1920–60 Laura McEnaney, Whittier College Bob Beach, State University of New York, University at Albany Facilitator: Peter J. Burkholder, Fairleigh Dickinson University, Florham From LSD to Opioids: The Long Reach of the 1960s Hip Drug Culture John Moretta, Houston Community College 29. GECC Open Forum: Shifting to Online Instruction: Online Pedagogy for Graduate Student Instructors and Drug (M)use: Drugs as a Means of Inspiration from 19th-Century Early Career Historians Europe to 1960s America Timothy Cole Hale, Georgia State University Organized by the AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee Comment: Audience Facilitators: Dylan Ruediger, American Historical Association Kate Kelsey Staples, West Virginia University 35. A Militarized Frontier: Race, Mobility, and Military Service in the North American Borderlands, 30. How to Make the Most of a Postdoc 1700s– Organized by the AHA Graduate and Early Career Committee Chair: Christina Marie Villarreal, University of Texas at Austin Chair: Lindsey Martin, Northwestern University Papers: Military Demographics and Desertion across the Texas-Louisiana Panel: Beth Healey, Northwestern University Borderlands, 1714–1803 Courtney Lynne Wiersema, Christina Marie Villarreal, University of Texas at Austin Camilo Lund-Montano, University of California, Berkeley Travis E. Ross, Yale University Cathy Williams, African American Freedwomen, and the Military in the Antebellum and Reconstruction Borderlands Klein Hernandez, Bowdoin College

The Martial Race of the US West 2021 Ryan W. Booth, Washington State University, Comment: Carina L. Johnson, Pitzer College

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36. A View from the Edge: Nondominant Communities 39. Afterlives in Nature: Conceptualizing Death and and “Minoritization” in the Global South Revival in Environmental Epics Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of Joint session with the History of Science Society South Asia Chair: Erika Lorraine Milam, Princeton University Chair: Laura Robson, Portland State University Papers: Animals, Moral Innocence, and Geologic Agency in Early Papers: Ottoman-Baghdadi and the Discourse of Equal Rights Modern Europe Annie Greene, Skidmore College Lydia Barnett, Northwestern University Managing Social Difference via Animal Flesh: The “Aligarh Dying to Know: How Long-Term Ecological Projects Movement” and the Question of Halal (Lawful) Animal Come to Untimely Ends Slaughtering in South Asia, 1858–93 Erika Lorraine Milam, Princeton University Roy Bar Sadeh, Columbia University Catastrophic Thinking in Science and Culture: Mobilizing Sonic Pasts: Muslim Identity, , and the Geo-Eschatology and the Anthropocene Reformulation of Musical Knowledge in Colonial North India, David Sepkoski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 1885–1930 The Fluent Sculpture of Time Gianni Sievers, University of Pennsylvania Sophia Roosth, writer From Millets to Minorities: Grappling with Global Rights Comment: Audience Discourses in the Age of Liberal Imperialism Joshua Donovan, Columbia University Comment: Audience 40. American Empire on the Pacific:Whaling, Railroad Construction, Militarism, and International Activism across the 19th and 20th Centuries 37. Adding, Maintaining, and Excluding: Regulating Population in the Early Republic Chair: Moon-Ho Jung, University of Washington, Seattle Papers: Chair: Michael Alan Schoeppner, University of Maine, Farmington “Our Whaling Fleet Whitens the Pacific Ocean with Its Canvas”: American Whalers, the Hawaiian Islands, and the ’ Papers: Constructing American Citizenship in the Revolutionary Expansion to the Pacific, 1820–43 War Period Graeme Mack, University of California, San Diego Anna Law, College, City University of New York Natives and Aliens: Chamorro Land Dispossession, Revolution Revises Naturalization: , Haiti, and the Filipino Alien Labor, and the Building of an American Military Naturalization Act of 1795 Empire in the Pacific Cody Nager, Graduate Center of the City University Kristin Oberiano, Harvard University of New York Transnational Women’s Education and Pacific Reform “Remaining in the Commonwealth Contrary to Law”: Enforcing in the Age of Asian Exclusion Residency Restrictions against Freed Persons of Color in Early Courtney Sato, Harvard University Virginia Sheri A. Huerta, “Medical Comforts”: , Coolies, and the Panama Railroad Company in the Age of Emancipation To “Establish a Natural Boundary” and Conduct a “Reciprocally Alastair Su, Stanford University Beneficial” Trade: Removal and Economic Interaction on the Comment: Moon-Ho Jung, University of Washington, Seattle Western Frontier after the Louisiana Purchase Rebekah M. K. Mergenthal, Pacific utheranL University Comment: Audience 41. American Religion and the Global Cold War: Appropriation, Legitimation, and Resistance 38. Affective Internationalism: Inserting Emotion into Chair: Andrew Preston, Histories of International Governance Papers: Aspirin for Appendicitis: Anabaptists and Cold War Development Francis Bonenfant-Juwong, Pace University Chair: Susan J. Matt, Weber State University Muslim Missionaries, the Lausanne Movement, and the Birth of Papers: “Hate Will Destroy the Earth Should Europe Not Federate”: Evangelical Multiculturalism, 1974–89 European Federalists’ Attempt to Create an Inclusive Emotional Ian Van Dyke, University of Notre Dame Community and a Model for Global Citizenship Rebecca Shriver, Missouri Southern State University Comment: Anna Fett, University of Notre Dame Emotions as Realist Goals at the and Beyond Ilaria Scaglia, Aston University 42. An Industrial Slave Society: Race, Class, and Gender in Searching for “Sisters”: Arab Women’s Efforts to Forge a Global, Antebellum Southern Industry Anticolonial Sisterhood, 1920–50 Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Nova Robinson, Seattle University Chair: John Majewski, University of California, Santa Barbara Fear and Anxiety at the RAND Corporation in the American Century Papers: Thomas Jefferson, the Virginia State Penitentiary, and the Daniel M. Bessner, University of Washington, Seattle Competition for Nails in Early National Virginia Alexandra Garrett, University of Virginia Comment: Susan J. Matt, Weber State University

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Dreams of Industrial Utopias: Leading Manufacturers of the Deep South, Panel: Jason Harshman, Division of Education Programs, National Their Mill Towns, and Social Reform during the Antebellum Era Endowment for the Humanities Francis Curran, West Virginia University Daniel Sack, Division of Research Programs, National Endowment for the Humanities A Crisis of : Poor Whites, Sectionalism, and the Joshua Sternfeld, independent scholar Creation of an Industrial South Jeffrey Glossner, University of Mississippi 47. Between : Aftermaths of the “End” of the “Alabama Victorious”: The Winter Iron Works, Slavery, and Asia-Pacific arW Sectional Identity, 1848–60 Griffin Jones, Princeton niversityU Chair: Kenneth Pyle, University of Washington, Seattle Comment: John Majewski, University of California, Santa Barbara Papers: The Significance of the Japanese Emperor’s “Surrender” Broadcast in Northeast Asia Mark E. Caprio, , College of Intercultural 43. Anti-State Power: Anarchism, Communal Life, and Communication Radical in the Early 20th Century Emperor Hirohito and the Peace Constitution of Japan Chair: Steven J. Hirsch, Washington University in St. Louis Noriko Kawamura, Washington State University Papers: Radical Utopianism and Communal Life in and between East John Rabe’s War Diaries and the Commemoration of the Asia, Africa, and the , 1900–50 Massacre in China and Japan Robert Kramm, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Torsten Weber, German Institute for Japanese Studies DIJ Translocal Anarchist Communities: Multiethnic and Comment: Kenneth J. Ruoff, Portland State University Multinational Movements in the Port Cities of Havana, Cuba, and Panama City, Panama in the Early 1900s Kirwin Ray Shaffer, Penn State University, Berks 48. Beyond Conflict: Archive and Ethics in the Chair: Alissa Walter, Seattle Pacific University Creating “New Men” in Everyday Life: “New Villages” in China and the Cultural Politics of Accumulation Panel: Gokh Alshaif, University of California, Santa Barbara Qian Zhu, Duke Kunshan University Arbella Bet-Shlimon, University of Washington, Seattle Nova Robinson, Seattle University Katrina Yeaw, University of Arkansas at Little Rock 44. Artificial Intelligence and Its Implications for the Present and Future of Historical Research 49. Beyond Manels: Gender, Race, and Ethnicity Chair: R. Darrell Meadows, independent scholar and National in History Publishing Historical Publications and Records Commission Chair: Sasha Turner, Panel: Meredith Broussard, Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute of Papers: Gender and Race in Book Publishing: Contracts, Blurbs, Ads, New York University Citations, and More Matthew Jones, Columbia University , Durham University Joshua Sternfeld, independent scholar Lauren Tilton, University of Richmond Race and History Publishing in the UK Jonathan Saha, University of Leeds 45. Authority, Class, and Space in Early American Gender and Diversity in Journal Publishing Legal Culture Petra Goedde, Chair: Gabriel J. Loiacono, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh The Second Book: Identifying and Working to Overcome Barriers Emily Conroy-Krutz, Michigan State University Papers: Walking and Watching: Movement and Authority in Occupied Comment: Michael J. McGandy, Nicole Breault, University of at Storrs “I Am Not a Judge of the Law”: Contesting Legal Knowledge and 50. Beyond Paper: Interdisciplinary Methods in Native Authority in the Local Courts of 18th-Century New York American History Sung Yup Kim, Seoul National University Chair: Evan Haefeli, Texas A&M University “Authorized to Challenge”: Poor Law Officials and Policing Papers: A Triptych in the Round: Exploring East Texas’s Archives with in Early Republic Cities Pictures and Words Kristin O’Brassill-Kulfan, Rutgers, The State University Carla Gerona, Georgia Institute of Technology of New Jersey “Negative Results”: Expansions and Limitations of Constructing Authority: The Culture of Early Republic Sheriffs Interdisciplinarity in Studying Native Enslavement Chad Holmes, West Virginia University Carolyn Arena, University Comment: Audience Natchez Winter Stories: An Oral History of Diaspora and Survival Noel E. Smyth, University of California, Santa Cruz 2021 46. Awards and Beyond: Strategies for Becoming Involved When Oral Traditions Collide: Delaware and Iroquois Accounts of in NEH-Funded Projects the “Delaware as Women” Chair: Jennifer Serventi, Office of Digital Humanities, National Evan Haefeli, Texas A&M University Endowment for the Humanities Comment: Audience

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51. Biography, Family, and Microhistory in Europe’s Indian Performing the Feminine in Quattrocento Florence Ocean Empires, 1750–1918 Carole Collier Frick, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies “It Seemed They Had Taken My Heart from My Body”: Women and the Society for French Historical Studies and Gendered Understandings of the Heart in , 1550–1650 Chair: Sue Peabody, Washington State University Vancouver Jacqueline Holler, University of Northern British Columbia Papers: It’s All about the Benjamins: Slavery and Servitude in Britain’s Comment: Audience Indian Ocean Empire, 1792–1834 Jessica Hanser, University of British Columbia 55. Building Modernization: Urban Megaprojects in 20th- “To Bourbon, My Native Place”: The Global Peregrinations of a Century America French Indian Ocean Family Nathan Elliot Marvin, University of Arkansas at Little Rock Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Families Mobilized for Empire: Multigeneration Military Service Chair: Jessica Mack, George Mason University in the British Empire to 1918 Papers: Movin’ on up to Modernity: Condominiums and Social Taylor Soja, University of Washington, Seattle Transformation in Midcentury Medellín, Colombia Comment: Sue Peabody, Washington State University Vancouver William J. Demarest, State University of New York at Stony Brook Shaping a New Society: The Politics behind Housing in Recife, 52. Black Intellectual Traditions Brazil, 1940–86 Yuri Kieling Gama, University of Massachusetts Amherst Joint session with the African American Intellectual History Society Building the Lettered City: Planning and Construction in Ciudad Chair: Mia Bay, University of Pennsylvania Universitaria, 1950–54 Papers: Black Women, Translating Experience, and Afro-Asian Solidarity Jessica Mack, George Mason University Making, 1936–39 To Fixate Men to the Land: A Steelworks and the Urban History Shaun Armstead, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey of Amazonia The Theology and Politics of the Black Unitarian Universalist Adrian Lerner Patrón, Yale University Caucus Comment: Constanza Castro Benavides, Universidad de los Andes Christopher Alain Cameron, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 56. Built-in Segregation in the Modern City: Los Angeles, Black Conservative Dissent Mexico City, and São Paulo La TaSha Levy, University of Washington, Seattle Organized with the Global Urban History Project Afropessimism, Afrofuturism, and the Deep Genealogies of Contemporary Black Thought Chair: Katherine Zubovich, State University of New York, University Guy Emerson Mount, Auburn University at Buffalo Comment: Mia Bay, University of Pennsylvania Papers: Water for White People: LA’s Infrastructure and the Archaeology of Inequality, 1880–1920 Jan E. Hansen, Humboldt University, Berlin 53. Bodies and Structures: Deep-Mapping Modern East Asian History Urban in Mid-20th-Century Mexico City Emilio de Antuñano, Trinity University Chairs: Kate McDonald, University of California, Santa Barbara David Richard Ambaras, North Carolina State University Visions of the Modern and Progressive City in Post-World War II São Paulo Papers: Imperial Japan Up in the Air Marcio Siwi, Towson University Sakura Christmas, Bowdoin College Comment: Audience Bodies, Society, and the Smallpox Vaccine in Echizen Province Maren Annika Ehlers, University of North Carolina at 57. Career Paths in Industry for History PhDs Charlotte Chair: Kalani Craig, Indiana University Treacherous Waters: The Coastal Opium Trade in 1830s Fujian Peter Dewitt Thilly, University of Mississippi Panel: Andrea Horbinski, Netflix Adrienne Kates, Facebook Comment: John Corrigan, Florida State University Andrew Keating, Splunk Paul Dingman, Wiley 54. Bodies, Hearts, and Hands: Recovering Gender in the Lives and Labor of Early Modern Women Joint session with the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Chair: Amy M. Froide, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Papers: Women Wielding Needles: Embroidery as a Vehicle to Examine the Lives of Women in Tudor England Erin Harvey Moody, University of Glasgow Christy Gordon Baty, University of Nebraska, Kearney

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58. Caring for Money: How Intimate Workers Employed Whiter Pastures: Asian Immigrants and the Entrenchment of Creative Strategies to Resist the Undervaluation of Residential Segregation in Post-Jim Crow Era Houston Their Labor, 1900–2020 Uzma Quraishi, Sam Houston State University Comment: Audience Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians and the Labor and Working Class History Association Chair: Annelise Orleck, 62. Childhood, Lineage, and Papers: Nestled Inside of a Women’s Institution: Nannie Helen Burroughs’ Joint session with the American Society for Legal History and the Historic and Extensive Labor Organizing Project Conference on Latin American History Danielle Phillips-Cunningham, Texas Woman’s University Chair: Michelle McKinley, University of Oregon Worthy Wages in the Emerald City: Seattle and the Daycare Panel: José Argueta Funes, Princeton University Worker Movement of the 1990s Hendrik A. Hartog, Princeton University Justine Modica, Stanford University Judith Schachter, Carnegie Mellon University Sexualized Work: Representation and the Struggle for Rights Yanna P. Yannakakis, Emory University Ariella Rotramel, Connecticut College Comment: Annelise Orleck, Dartmouth College 63. China in the Global Cold War: Diplomacy in the Socialist World 59. Central European History Society Presidential Panel: Chair: Rebecca E. Karl, New York University Between the Local, the Imperial, and the Global: Papers: Cold War Counter-Publics and the Ghosts of Pan-Asianism: The Central Europe after 1918 Japanese Matsuyama Ballet’s 1958 White Haired Girl Tour in China Joint session with the Central European History Society Emily Wilcox, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Chair: Pieter M. Judson, European University Institute The Imaginative and Global Dimensions of Chinese Propaganda Panel: Deborah Rachel Coen, Yale University within the Strait Crises of 1954 and 1958 Emily Greble, Vanderbilt University Andrew Kuech, The New School Natasha Wheatley, Princeton University The Revolution after the Revolution: Building Chinese Tara Zahra, University of Chicago in the Hearts of Lao and Cambodian Radicals Nicholas Zeller, University of Wisconsin-Madison 60. Challenging Slavery in the 19th-Century Americas Socialist China’s Third World Odyssey: A Perspective on China’s Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Engagement with Africa, 1960s–70s Ye Liu, New York, New York Chair: Elena Schneider, University of California, Berkeley Comment: Audience Papers: Independence and Abolition in Tierra Firme, 1810–20: War, Slavery, and Republicanism Marcela Echeverri, Yale University 64. Cold War History: Toward a New Paradigm? “Unequalled by Anything in My Country”: Black Latin Americans Chair: Lorenz Lüthi, McGill University in Boston’s Antislavery Struggle Panel: Carole K. Fink, Ohio State University Lloyd Belton, University of Leeds Lorenz Lüthi, McGill University Mexico City and the Circulation of Antislavery Texts: The Press, Sergey Radchenko, Cardiff University Atlantic Slavery, and Literary Exchange in the 1840s O. Arne Westad, Yale University Celso T. Castilho, Vanderbilt University Barbara Zanchetta, King’s College London Play, Posturas, and Policing: Slaves and Entrudo in 19th-Century Brazil 65. Cold War : Muslim Actors and Oppositional Hendrik Kraay, University of Calgary Politics beyond a Bipolar World Comment: Elena Schneider, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Robert D. Crews, Stanford University Papers: Between the Global Islamic Revival and Tri-Faith America: The 61. Charting the Past: Maps as Evidence, Argument, Muslim Students Association during the Cold War and Narrative, 1600–2020 Justine Howe, Case Western Reserve University Chair: Uzma Quraishi, Sam Houston State University Muslim Women and the Transnational Feminist Movement during the Late Cold War Papers: A New Map of Old Lagos: Mapping Race, Place, and Kelly J. Shannon, Florida Atlantic University Representation in 1880s Lagos Ademide Adelusi-Adeluyi, University of California, Riverside Afghan Islamists, the Cold War, and the (Re)Construction of Nation and State Mapping the Center of the World: Constantinople in the Early Elisabeth Leake, University of Leeds

Modern Ottoman Geographical and Imperial Consciousness 2021 Pinar Emiralioglu, Sam Houston State University Cold War Mosque: Cold War Internationalism, and the Nationalist Governments’ Overtures to Postcolonial Muslim States Mapping the History of Rio de Janeiro: Maps, Plans, and Views Kelly Hammond, University of Arkansas at Fayetteville in imagineRio Alida C. Metcalf, Rice University

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66. Cold War Migrants: Violence, Ideology, and A City on a Hill: Israel’s “Judaization of the Galilee” Policy Displacement in Asian Revolutions, 1945–79 Leena Dallasheh, Humboldt State University Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History Saving Settlers, Forsaking Citizens: The Legacies of Land Reform of South Asia in Decolonizing Kenya Kara Moskowitz, University of Missouri–St. Louis Chair: Odd Arne Westad, Yale University Comment: Joel Beinin, Stanford University Papers: The Itinerant Lives of Afghan Radicals, 1964–79 Sabauon Nasseri, Stanford University 70. Conflicting Missions: Missionary Clashes with US oreignF North Korean Refugees and Cold War Nationalism in US- Policy in the Majority World during the Cold War Occupied Korea, 1945–50 Yumi Moon, Stanford University Chair: David A. Hollinger, University of California, Berkeley People’s Turn toward Benevolence: Cold War, State Narrative, and Papers: The Failure of US Development in Chimbote, : How Cold the Forced Migration of Dachen Islanders from Coastal Zhejiang War Care Work Changed Catholic Sisters, 1967–83 to Taiwan Jillian Plummer, Sacred Heart University Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang, University of Missouri “To Protect the Flock”: Why American Evangelical Missionaries to Exile and Political Mobilization in the Vietnam War, 1954–64 Vietnam’s Central Highlands Supported, Opposed, and Suggested Phi-Vân Nguyen, Université de Saint-Boniface New US Policies during the Vietnam War Thomas William Seat II, Princeton Theological Seminary Comment: Odd Arne Westad, Yale University Between Acquiescence and Apathy: US Missionaries, Washington, 67. Colonial Conflict and Encounters with Indigenous and Brazil’s Military Dictatorship in the 1960s and 1970s Healing Knowledge in the Americas, 1521–1900 Markus Schoof, Ohio State University Competing Transnational Networks: Nicaragua’s Somoza Chair: Martin A. Nesvig, University of Miami versus US Missionaries in the Fight over US Foreign Policy and Papers: Making Unsanctioned Healers out of 16th-Century Nahua Titiçih Catholicism Edward Anthony Polanco, Virginia Tech Theresa Keeley, University of Louisville “Sickness Put Away”: Peyotism as Insurgent Healing on the Kiowa, Comment: Matthew Avery Sutton, Washington State University Comanche, and Apache Reservation, 1888–1918 Jessica Joyce Hauger, 71. Conflicts of Conscience: Diplomacy on the Eve ofWar, Ecosystem Knowledge: Native Southerners, Medicinal Information, 1934–41 and Interaction with Euromericans before 1850 Jewel Parker, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Chair: Gaynor Johnson, University of Kent The Medical Dimension in the Encounter between Mapuches and Papers: The Fear of Erasure: Anglo–Austrian Diplomatic Networks, Anglican Missionaries in 19th-Century Southern Chile 1934–38 Cristian Perucci Gonzalez, Universidad de la Frontera Timothy J. Schmalz, Sidney Sussex College, University of Cambridge Comment: Martin A. Nesvig, University of Miami Cultural Intervention in the Spanish Civil War: A Comparative 68. Colonial Reform in South and Southeast Asia: Analysis of Nazi and Fascist Propaganda Abroad, 1936–39 Mercedes Peñalba-Sotorrío, Manchester Metropolitan Interrogating Meaning and Myth University Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Promises Made, Pledges Broken: The 1938 Anglo–Irish Treaty Chair: Faisal Iqbal Chaudhry, University of Dayton Negotiations and Chamberlain’s Appeasement Policy Karen K. Garner, State University of New York, Empire State Papers: Pirate Polities and Reform in Colonial Southeast Asia College Jennifer Gaynor, State University of New York, University at Buffalo Good Neighbors? Cultural Diplomacy and Interwar Latin America, 1936–41 Morality Plays: Scripting Reform in Colonial Burma James J. Fortuna, University of St. Andrews Penny Edwards, University of California, Berkeley Comment: James J. Fortuna, University of St. Andrews Fanning the “Farce”: Social Reform Councils in Late-Colonial Northwest India Brian , University of Pennsylvania 72. Confronting Histories of Environmental Racism and Comment: Faisal Iqbal Chaudhry, University of Dayton (In)Justice in the United States and Beyond Chair: Mary E. Mendoza, Penn State University 69. Comparative Setter Colonialisms Panel: Mary E. Mendoza, Penn State University Chair: Joel Beinin, Stanford University Kathryn T. Morse, Middlebury College Lydia R. Otero, University of Arizona Papers: Using Settler Colonialism to Reframe US History David Pellow, University of California, Santa Barbara Jeff Ostler, University of Oregon Traci Brynne Voyles, Loyola Marymount University Invoking the Mediterranean to Disavow Settler Colonialism, 1914–62 Muriam Davis, University of California, Santa Cruz

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73. Connecting the World? Global Air Travel between 77. Countercurrents of Expertise: Race, Community, and Decolonization and the Cold War Development in the Late British Empire Chair: Kris Alexanderson, University of the Pacific Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies Papers: Decolonizing the Sky: The Politics of Air Travel at the End of Chair: Jordanna Bailkin, University of Washington, Seattle Empire Papers: Rural Reconstruction in Jamaica: Social and Agricultural Jessica L. Pearson, Macalester College Planning, 1937–49 Hearts and Minds and Hard Currency: The Cold War Rivalry and José Andrés Fernández Montes de Oca, University of Business Partnership of Aeroflot and Pan Am Pittsburgh Steven E. Harris, University of Mary Washington Making the Local Colonial: Community Development between the Cinema Networks of the Air: Pan-African and Third Worldist Caribbean and Britain Routes through Dakar and Tashkent Radhika Natarajan, Reed College Elena Razlogova, Concordia University “Plural Societies” and “Dark Strangers”: The Colonial Origins of Comment: Eric G. E. Zuelow, University of the Study of Race Relations in Britain Marc Matera, University of California, Santa Cruz 74. Conservation in the Era of the Ecosystem Concept: Comment: Aaron M. Windel, Conflict and Consonance between Environmental Visions Chair: John Doyle-Raso, Michigan State University 78. Course Redesign for the Introductory History Course Papers: The Construction of a Sentinel Species: Louis Guillette and Lake Chair: Emily Swafford, American Historical Association Apopka’s Alligators Papers: in the Introductory History Survey Mark Barrow, Virginia Tech Sarah Elizabeth Shurts, Bergen Community College “Mr. Crane, the Faithful Husband”: Ugandans Rethinking “Fun” and the Introductory US History Course Wetland Conservation since 1980 Sara Rzeszutek, Saint Francis College John Doyle-Raso, Michigan State University Moving beyond Testing From Economic Resource to Ecosystem Engineer: Changing J. Kent McGaughy, Houston Community College Northwest Understandings of Oysters and Beavers in Chesapeake Bay Restoration Michael L. Lewis, Salisbury University History Lab in the World History Survey: Best Practices Elizabeth Hyde, Kean University Comment: E. Elena Songster, Saint Mary’s College of California Jonathan Mercantini, Kean University Comment: Daniel J. McInerney, Utah State University 75. Consuming Desires: Sex and Drink as Commodities of Empire in South and Southeast Asia 79. Meeting the Challenges of the Two-Year Faculty Classroom, Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Part 1: Creative Assignments for Engaging Students and the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair: Martha E. Kinney, Suffolk County Community College, State Chair: Erica Wald, Goldsmiths University University of New York Papers: Interrogating “Pariah Arrack”: Local Distillation Methods and Panel: Anna Fay Booker, Whatcom Community College Colonial Medical Knowledge in Early 19th-Century Calcutta Michelle Iden, County College of Morris Sarbajit Mitra, School of Oriental and African Studies, Christine Johnston, Western Washington University Martha E. Kinney, Suffolk County Community College, State “I Was Drunk at the Time, Sir”: Sex, Society, and Alcohol in University of New York Colonial India, 1860–1900 This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 197 and 211. Zoya Sameen, University of Chicago Intimate Itinerancy: Sex, Work, and Brothel Economies in 80. Cultural Imagination of US–China Relations Colonial Malaya, 1890–1940 Chair: Jian Chen, New York University Sandy F. Chang, University of Texas at Austin Papers: Comment: Erica Wald, Goldsmiths University Thanksgiving Cartoons and US–China Relations, 1868–82 James Z. Gao, University of Maryland, College Park Imagining Red China: Black America’s Search for Comrades across 76. LGBTQ+ Public History, Part 1: Conversations Coast- the Pacific, 1959–71 to-Coast Xi Wang, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Soo Yong (1903–84): Representing Transpacific Chinese Transgender History Womanhood in Hollywood Chair: Laura A. Belmonte, Virginia Tech Yunxiang Gao, Ryerson University

Panel: Laura J. Arata, Oklahoma State University Kukan, a Lost Oscar-Winning Documentary Film and the Image 2021 Angus Henderson, independent scholar Memory of the Sino–US Relations, 1937–45 Sabrina Mittermeier, independent scholar Danke Li, Fairfield University This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 217. Comment: Guoqi Xu, University of Hong Kong

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81. Revisiting the Bargain of Collaboration in Colonial and Disease and Displacement: The 1915 Mexico City Typhus Epidemic Post-Colonial Africa, Part 1: Custom, Bargaining, and Ryan M. Alexander, State University of New York at Plattsburgh Law—African Intermediaries, European Collaborators, Burning Down the (Big) House: The 2001 Fire at La Casona and the Molding of Colonial Authority and Popular Resistance to Land Conservation Displacement in Costa Rica Chair: Joel Cabrita, Stanford University Joseph Umberto Lenti, Eastern Washington University Papers: The Persistence of the Customary: French and Zawi Comment: Jason H. Dormady, Central Washington University Reformism of Islamic Law in the Colonial Encounter in Mauritania, 1900–30 Abbass Braham, University of Arizona 85. Digital History, Part 1: Digital World History: Tools for Collaboration and Pedagogy Women and Property in West Central Africa: Teresa de Jesus and Her Quest for Land Rights, 1850–70 Chair: Ruth Mostern, University of Pittsburgh Mariana P. Candido, University of Notre Dame Panel: Robert Kinnaird Batchelor Jr., Georgia Southern University Collaborators across Apartheid’s Artscape: History, Memory, and Javier Cha, Seoul National University Cross-Racial Artistic Partnership Karl Grossner, University of Pittsburgh Vusumuzi R. Kumalo, Nelson Mandela University Susan Grunewald, University of Pittsburgh Chiara Palladino, Furman University Visualizing Imperial Landscapes: Frontiers of Imagination in the Mapping of Eastern Africa This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 203. Julie MacArthur, University of Toronto Comment: Audience 86. Diplomacy by Design: Cultural Politics and the International Expositions of the Late Interwar Period, This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 174. 1933–39 82. Death at the Intersection: Selling, Investigating, and Joint session with the Society for Historians of American Foreign Processing Death in 19th- and 20th-Century America Relations Chair: Nicholas Cull, University of Southern California Chair: Vicki Daniel, Case Western Reserve University Papers: Island: US Artistic Imperial Visions for the Pacific at the Papers: Mourning Edition: The Spiritualist Marketing Strategy to Combat 1939–40 Golden Gate International Exposition “Bad Death” in the Banner of Light Lisa Schrenk, University of Arizona Lisa Caitlin Highsmith, Kansas State University The Paris International Exposition of 1937 in Local and Global Not as Simple as Disease: Coroners’ Verdicts of Natural Deaths Sarah E. Lirley McCune, Columbia College Perspective James J. Fortuna, University of St. Andrews Preservation in Disaster: The Corpse and the State in Early at New York’s World of Tomorrow, 1939: Looks Back 20th-Century Disaster Flavia Marcello, Swinburne University of Technology Vicki Daniel, Case Western Reserve University Comment: Audience The Remains of War: Questions of Authority, Expertise, and Ownership in US Army Identification Efforts of World War II Aelwen Wetherby, SNA International 87. Disabling 19th- and 20th-Century Latin American Comment: Audience Historical Narratives Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History and the 83. Decolonizing the World History Survey: Recent Disability History Association Practices and Projects Chair: David Carey Jr., Loyola University Maryland Joint session with the World History Association Papers: Going Crazy in Latin America: Mental Illness in Guatemala and Chair: Laura J. Mitchell, University of California, Irvine Ecuador, 1900–50 David Carey Jr., Loyola University Maryland Panel: Jorge Bayona, University of Washington, Seattle Los Espíritus No Comen: Locura Mauricio Borrero, Saint John’s University , Law, and the Burden of Proof Bram Hubbell, Friends Seminary from the 1880s to 1944 Heather Vrana, University of Florida Daniel Kotin, Washington State University Vancouver Hysteria, Reproduction, and the Gendered Capacity for Reason in 84. Desplazamiento: Case Studies of Displacement and 1870s Mexico Response in 20th-Century Latin America Elizabeth O’Brien, Johns Hopkins University Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Silicosis, Disability, and Occupational Health in Revolutionary Mexico Chair: Blair D. Woodard, University of Portland Rocio Gomez, Virginia Commonwealth University Papers: A Cloud of Uncertainty: The 1911 of the Chamizal Comment: Sara Scalenghe, Loyola University Maryland and Displacement Amelia M. Kiddle, University of Calgary

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88. Disrupting Class: Critical Pedagogies and Latinx and 92. Empire, Law, and Revolution in Madras: Situating Latin American Studies in K–16 History Classrooms South India in the Indian Ocean and British Imperial Chair: Enrique Ochoa, California State University, Los Angeles Worlds, 1750–1900 Papers: “Poetry, like Bread, Is for Everyone”: Critical Uses of Poetry, Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies Teatro, and Testimonios to Teach the History of Central America and the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia and the Caribbean Chair: Sudipta Sen, University of California, Davis Enrique Ochoa, California State University, Los Angeles Papers: Everyday Interimperial State Making in Madras, 1750–1800 Interrupting the Silence: Combating Salvadoreñx and Central Tiraana Bains, Yale University American Historical Erasure in Secondary History Courses through Fitna Sustainable Practices and the Language of Revolution in South India, Cindy Mata, UCLA History-Geography Project 1780–1800 Ayal Amer, University of California, Irvine Pedagogies of Love and Justicia: Counter-Story Testimonios, Youth Activism, and K–12 Schools in Los Angeles At the Edge of Empire’s Law: Islamic Legal Practitioners in 19th- Lani Cupchoy, California State University, Los Angeles Century South India Saumyashree Ghosh, Princeton University Challenging the Hegemonic Narrative through the Comment: Sudipta Sen, University of California, Davis Creation of a Culturally Relevant Curriculum for the High School History Classroom Ana Orozco, Lynwood High School 93. Empire’s Children: Childhood, Colonialism, and Comment: Audience Violence in Latin American History Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History 89. Doing Environmental History: Lessons from East Asia Chair: Jeremy Ravi Mumford, Brown University Chair: Shen Hou, Renmin University of China Papers: “The School Is Absolutely without Discipline”: Race, Empire, and Panel: Mu Cao, Tianjin Normal University Child Criminality in Early 20th-Century Cuba Chihyung Jeon, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Daniel Arturo Rodriguez, Brown University Technology The Advisability of Return: Child Welfare Policy and Migration in Satoshi Murayama, Kagawa University Puerto Rican History, 1940–70 Fei Sheng, Sun Yat-sen University Emma Balbina Amador, University of Connecticut at Storrs 90. “Don’t Be Uneasy My Children, I Expect to Have Child Sexuality, Sexual Abuse, and the Historiography of You”: New Directions in the Study of Kinship and Childhood: A Case Study from Cuzco Jeremy Ravi Mumford, Brown University Emancipation Comment: Bianca Premo, Florida International University Chair: Arlisha Norwood, Baruch College, City University of New York 94. Engendering the History of Latin American Capitalism: Papers: “The Judgement of the Stranger, the Fatherless, and the Widow” Stanley Maxson, University of Maryland, College Park Women and Men in Brazilian and Cuban Commodity Export Regions, 1880–1960 If She Was, I Would Know It Arlisha Norwood, Baruch College, City University Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History of New York Chair: Eileen J. Findlay, American University Family Strategies and Political Lives of Formerly Enslaved Papers: A “Grapiuna Nation”? Sergipano Migration and the Formation of Women in Haitian Santo Domingo a Regional Identity: Brazil’s Cacao Region, 1870–1920 Andrew Walker, Mary Ann Mahony, Central Connecticut State University Maria Cecilia Ulrickson, Catholic University Sugar Workers, Planters, Industrialists, and Their Wives in São “Respected When Practicable”: Black Mothers during the Paulo, 1880–1950 US Civil War Gillian A. McGillivray, York University, Glendon Jessica Wicks-Allen, University of Maryland, College Park The Rural Workers Union in Campos Dos Goytacazes and Gender Comment: Audience Relations in the Sugar Economy, 1938–64 Leonardo Soares dos Santos, Universidade Federal Fluminense 91. Earth, Wind, Fire, and Water: Environmental Extremes “Tasks Typical of Her Sex”: Women’s Work and Household and Natural Disasters in World History Economic Strategies in the Early 20th-Century Cuban Sugar Chair: Gretchen A. Heefner, Northeastern University Industry Marc C. McLeod, Seattle University Panel: Alvita Akiboh, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Lisa Pinley Covert, College of Charleston Comment: Jerry Dávila, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Daniel Immerwahr, Northwestern University 2021 Julia F. Irwin, University of South Florida, Tampa

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95. Intellectuals, Categories, and Geographical 98. Fifty Years of Bangladesh: Tracing Law, Literature, Frameworks: New Directions in Latin American and Liberty in Transition History, Part 1: Exchanges Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History South Asia Chair: Ian Merkel, University of Miami Chair: Tariq Omar Ali, Georgetown University Papers: Brazilian Essayists and French Social Scientists: The Power of Papers: Bangladesh Approaching 50: A Reappraisal of Its Founding Categories History Ian Merkel, University of Miami Cynthia Farid, University of Wisconsin Law School Deep Networks: Histories and Pre-Histories of Pharmaceutical The Zamindar in a Peasants Utopia: Land Reforms in East Research in the Pakistan Matt O’Hara, University of California, Santa Cruz Manav Kapur, Princeton University Racial Storytelling: New Directions in the Intellectual History of Language as a Parliamentary Question in East Pakistan; or, the Race in Latin America Nature of Bangladeshi Linguistic Nationalism Paulina Laura Alberto, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Ahona Panda, University of Chicago A Necessary Struggle: Embodying Revolution in West Indian Comment: Tariq Omar Ali, Georgetown University Performance Amanda Reid, Stanford University 99. Fighting for Aid, Not War: New Directions in US Comment: Dain E. Borges, University of Chicago Domestic Politics and Foreign Relations during the Cold War This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 114. Joint session with the Society for Historians of American Foreign 96. Face the Pacific: Empire and Religious Histories Relations Joint session with the American Society of Church History Chair: Thomas W. Zeiler, University of Colorado Boulder Chair: Alison Collis Greene, Emory University Papers: Beyond Mrs. Education: Edith Green’s Opposition to the Vietnam War Papers: Saving Bodies and Saving Souls: Medical Missionaries and the Chris Foss, Washington State University, Vancouver Empire of American Religious Humanitarianism Melissa May Borja, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor The Global City and the Global South: Chicago and Southern Africa, 1960–90 “Outward Signs of Inward Grace”: The Making of Korean Zeb Larson, Ohio State University Protestant Rites Hajin Jun, University of Washington, Seattle Eleanor Lansing’s Cold Wars in Divided and Berlin: The Dulles Family Diplomatic Legacy Revisited, 1945–61 War, Race, and US Evangelicalism: Billy Graham’s Christmas in Victoria Phillips, London School of Economics Korea, 1952 Helen Kim, Emory University The Congressional Black Caucus and the Politics of Foreign Aid Lauren F. Turek, Trinity University In Defense of Japanese Immigrants and Japanese Empire: Rethinking Liberal American Protestant Missionaries Comment: Audience in the Age of American Exclusion Chris Suh, Emory University 100. New Directions and Perspectives on African Military Comment: Audience History, Part 1: Fighting for Empire: African Soldiers and the Colonial Experience 97. Family Capitalism: Family Business Empires around Chair: Richard McGaha, Seattle University the Globe and the Shaping of the Early Modern Papers: , Murder, and Mayhem in Britain’s West African Colonial Economy Army, 1860–1960 Chair: Stephanie Leitzel, Harvard University Timothy Stapleton, University of Calgary Papers: An Early Modern Armenian Family Firm of Gem Merchants: Mobilization of African Soldiers in Portuguese Colonies: Protecting Business Practices and Social Capital the Vestiges of Maritime Empire in the Postwar World Sona Tajiryan, University of California, Los Angeles Akiyo Aminaka, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization Brothers in Business: The Corsini Enterprise in London and the International Alum Monopoly, 1575–92 Fighting for a Different Heart and Mind: Muslim Soldiers in the Stephanie Leitzel, Harvard University First Indochina War Andrew Bellisari, Fulbright University Vietnam What Was a Merchant House in Early Modern Japan? The Case of the Nakai Genzaemon, 1734–1870 Agents of Colonialism: Tirailleurs Sénégalais and Tirailleurs John D’Amico, Yale University Haoussas in the Second Franco-Dahomean War, 1892–94 Sarah Davis Westwood, Universitat de Lleida Comment: Thomas Max Safley, niversityU of Pennsylvania Comment: Roy Doron, Winston-Salem State University This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 172, 248, 264, 284, and 295.

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101. Finding and Promoting Gender and Race in Military 105. From Silos to Bridges: Understanding Our Fellow Archives History Teachers, from Middle School to College Chair: Catherine Clinton, University of Texas at San Antonio Chair: Gigi A. Peterson, State University of New York, College at Cortland Panel: William A. Taylor, Angelo State University Christine Cook, Wayne State University Papers: History Labs Jeremy P. Maxwell, US Army Command and General Staff Daniel Diaz, University of California, Los Angeles College Middle School Teacher Seeks Meaningful Professional Development Brenda Moore, State University of New York, University at Relationships Buffalo Caitlin Goodwin, McGraw Junior-Senior High School and Ford’s Theatre National Oratory Fellows Program 102. Finding the Voices of the Enslaved Education 101 for University Historians Chair: Lolita Buckner Inniss, Southern Methodist University Dedman Gigi A. Peterson, State University of New York, College School of Law at Cortland Papers: Built by William: Slavery and the University of Alabama Bridging the K–16 Continuum: Creating Spaces for Classroom Hilary Green, University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa Teachers and University Instructors to Explore Shared Problems of The Syphaxes: Using Family History to Teach Concepts about Practice Slavery and Freedom Rachel B. Reinhard, University of California, Berkeley Stephen Hammond, independent scholar Comment: Audience At the Intersection of New York Avenue and 18th Street: Exploring Contexts of Slavery at the Octagon House in Washington, DC 106. Fugitivity Julianna Jackson, DC Historic Preservation Office Chair: Stephanie E. Smallwood, University of Washington, Seattle Robbery at the : The Story of Mary Murphy Panel: Stephen Best, University of California, Berkeley Matthew Ryan Costello, White House Historical Association Kellie Carter Jackson, Viola Franziska Müller, Utrecht University 103. Food Nations and National Styles: The Production and Matthew Pinsker, Dickinson College Politics of Global Brands during World War II and the Edward B. Rugemer, Yale University Stephanie E. Smallwood, University of Washington, Seattle Cold War Chair: Lynn M. Thomas, University of Washington, Seattle 107. Future Directions in Research and Training for Papers: Marketing the American War-drobe: The Fashion Industry and the Digital History Promotion of “American Style” during World War II Joint session with the Association for Computers and the Einav Rabinovitch-Fox, Case Western Reserve University Humanities From Tea to the Colombo Plan: Branding Ceylon during the Chair: Jennifer E. Guiliano, Indiana University–Purdue University Cold War Indianapolis Erika Rappaport, University of California, Santa Barbara Panel: Zoe Genevieve Leblanc, Princeton University Heineken, Guinness, and the Triumph of Import Beers after Sharon Leon, Michigan State University World War II Ian Milligan, University of Waterloo Jeffrey M. Pilcher, University of Toronto Scarborough Lara E. Putnam, University of Pittsburgh Comment: Lynn M. Thomas, University of Washington, Seattle 108. Gay Liberation, Solidarity, and Identities across the 104. From Mao to Market: New Data, Methods, and Americas, 1940–2000 Perspectives on China’s Economic Transformation, Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, 1969–89 and Transgender History and the Conference on Latin American Chair: Denise Y. Ho, Yale University History Papers: The Entrepreneurial Transformation of Socialist China Chair: Emily K. Hobson, University of Nevada at Reno Adam K. Frost, Harvard University Papers: Lost in Translation: Mariquitas, Locas, and Gays To Serve the Tourists Is to Serve the People: From Chairman Mao’s Javier Fernández Galeano, Brown University Revolutionary Diplomatic Line to Mass-Market Tourism Liberation across Borders: The Crafting of Transnational Gavin Healy, Columbia University Communities through the North American Gay Press Origins of the Xiaokang Society: Household Economy, Popular Juan Carlos Mezo González, University of Toronto Sentiments, and Ideological Shifts in , 1969–80 The Stonewall Riots Commemorations in Latin America Yanjie Huang, Columbia University Felipe César Camilo Caro Romero, Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt

The Revival of Business and Management Education in 1980s 2021 China Comment: Emily K. Hobson, University of Nevada at Reno Peter Evan Hamilton, Trinity College Dublin Comment: Denise Y. Ho, Yale University

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109. Gender, Culture, and Power in 20th-Century El 112. Gendered Constellations of European Culture and Salvador Politics, 1944–89 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Joint session with the Central European History Society Chair: Erik K. Ching, Furman University Chair: Natasha Wheatley, Princeton University Papers: The Imperative of Developmentalist Natalism: Endemic Goiter Papers: The Republic of (Female) Letters and El Salvador’s Battle against Cretinismo John Duke Raimo, New York University Heather Vrana, University of Florida “With a Scope as Wide as Possible”: How Violence against Women Gender in the Bedroom, Streets, and Courts of El Salvador, Became a European Problem 1910–60 Lotte Houwink ten Cate, Columbia University Aldo Vladimir Garcia-Guevara, Worcester State University Editorializing Black Internationalism: Christiane Yandé “Buscamos un Hombre (¡y una Mujer!) Nuevo”: Negotiating Diop, Claudia Jones, and Activist Publishing in the Period of Gendered Norms in Salvadoran Community Organizing, Decolonization 1968–2001 Sarah C. Dunstan, Queen Mary University of London Stephanie M. Huezo, Fordham University Comment: Audience Our Word Is Fire: Writers and Revolution at La Pájara Pinta, El Salvador, 1966–75 113. Gendered Pursuits of Freedom Roger Atwood, Georgetown University Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Comment: Audience and the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Reena N. Goldthree, Princeton University 110. Gender, Race, and Popular Culture: Examining Power Papers: “Their Heads Were Remarkably Shaved”: Gendered Dynamics and through a Media Lens African Retentions in Times of Rebellion in Antigua and Jamaica, Chair: Susan Harewood, University of Washington, Bothell 1735–60 Sherri Cummings, Brown University Papers: Modern Youth in Dramatic Conflict: Benjamin Barr Lindsey and the Construction of Protection and Delinquency in the Motion Freedom in the Flesh: Smallpox Inoculation and Embodied Picture Industry, 1931–43 Kinship in the 18th-Century Caribbean Robin C. Henry, Wichita State University Elise A. Mitchell, New York University Critiquing the “Spook”: Gender, Black Power, and “Walking the Streets at Night”: Gender, Public Protest, and the “Blaxploitation” Media Politics of Emancipation in Barbados, 1820–34 Dawn Rae Flood, University of Regina Kristina Ann Williams, Duke University Intersectional Stereotypes, Anna Nicole Smith, and the Cultural Life of Neoliberalism 114. Intellectuals, Categories, and Geographical Brian Donovan, Frameworks: New Directions in Latin American Comment: Susan Harewood, University of Washington Bothell History, Part 2: Geographies Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History 111. Gender, Sexuality, Activism: On the Politics and Chair: Pablo Palomino, Oxford College of Emory University Possibilities of the Archive Papers: The Elusive South: Internationalist Ideas in the River Plate, Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and 1870–1910 Transgender History Teresa E. Davis, Emory University Chair: Kevin P. Murphy, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Latin America versus “Global South”: Development and Other Intellectual Battles Papers: Letter as Archive: Constituent Letter Writing and the Pornography Margarita Fajardo, Sarah Lawrence College Debates of the 1970s Quinn Michael Anex-Ries, University of Southern California Mapping the Geo-Cultural Categories of “Latin America” in US Academia Representations of Intimacy and Trauma in the Lesbian Mother’s Pablo Palomino, Oxford College of Emory University Archive, 1970–90 Julia Brown-Bernstein, University of Southern California “Development” Science in Latin America: Rethinking Hybrid Seeds and 20th-Century Agro-Technology Community, Identity, (Self)Representation: Brown Beret Gabriela Soto Laveaga, Harvard University Leadership and the Making of the East Los Angeles Archive Cassandra Flores-Montaño, University of Southern California Comment: Christy Thornton, Johns Hopkins University We Must End Tolerance Here: Miguel Aroche Parra, Media This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 95. Homophobia, and Archiving Intolerance in the 1980s Mexican Left Robert Franco, Washington University in St. Louis Comment: Ryan Lee Cartwright, University of California, Davis

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115. Global Visions of Freedom: A Roundtable Discussion The Politics of Inconvenient Graves and Irwin Hospital (Delayed) on Radical Black Internationalism in 1930s New Delhi Kelsey Utne, Cornell University Joint session with the African American Intellectual History Society The Islamic Built Environment in Hyderabad: The Labor of Tomb Chair: Russell John Rickford, Cornell University Preservation and Reconstruction in Colonial-Era India Panel: Keisha N. Blain, University of Pittsburgh Amanda Lanzillo, Princeton University Ashley D. Farmer, University of Texas at Austin Amritsar’s Partition Museum: Memorialization through Christopher M. Tinson, Saint Louis University Intergenerational Memory Kennetta Hammond Perry, De Montfort University Deborah Nixon, University of Technology Sydney Comment: Audience 116. Grace and Place: North American Protestant Communities in Local Ecologies during the 20th Century 120. Healing the New World: Hospitals and Colonial Public Health in the Spanish Empire Chair: Alison Collis Greene, Emory University Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Papers: “In These Days of Need and Want and Natural Unrest”: Protestant Communities in Crisis and the Oklahoma Dust Bowl Chair: Christina Ramos, Washington University in St. Louis Randall Stephens, University of Oslo Papers: Hospitality for Indians: Colonial Hospitals and the “Indian “High Adventure and Deep Purpose”: Camp Hanover, Virginia, Question” in the Spanish Empire and the Transformation of Outdoor Ministries, 1956–89 Christina Ramos, Washington University in St. Louis Christopher Anderson, University of Illinois at Chicago “Pues Los Que Hay en México Son Para Españoles o Para Los Canadian Mennonite Agronomists Return from the Global South Indios”: An Afro-Mexican Confraternity’s Thwarted Effort to Royden K. Loewen, University of Winnipeg Build a Hospital, 1568–72 Miguel Valerio, Washington University in St. Louis Building Bridges of Communication in the Face of Environmental Opposition: How Effective Strategies Grew Support to Fight The Charity of Performance and the Performance of Charity: Climate Change within the Conservative Evangelical Community, Theaters, Hospitals, and Poor Relief in Colonial Latin America 1990–2000 Rachael I. Ball, University of Alaska Anchorage Neall Pogue, University of Texas at Dallas A Tale of Two Hospitals: The Case of the Spanish Philippines Francis Galasi, Johns Hopkins University 117. Guatemala 1954 as Historical Fantasy: A Discussion of Comment: Audience Mario Vargas Llosa’s Tiempos Recios Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History and the 121. Health Policies, Political Power, and Regime Change in Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations 20th-Century Latin America Discussants: Edgar Esquit, Universidad de San Carlos Rodrigo Fuentes, College of the Holy Cross Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Stephen Streeter, McMaster University Chair: Eyal Weinberg, Florida Atlantic University Irma Alicia Velásquez Nimatuj, Stanford University Papers: Migration, Public Health, and Exclusion: The Control of Chinese Kirsten A. Weld, Harvard University Immigrants in Peru, 1900–10 Patricia Palma, Universidad de Tarapacá 118. Harnessing the Power of Energy History: A Roundtable Discussion The Paradox of Healthcare under Authoritarian Populism: Tuberculosis, Batista, and Cuba, 1936–58 Chair: Ian J. Miller, Harvard University Kelly L. Urban, University of South Alabama Panel: Julie Cohn, University of Houston Political Change and Intimate Life in Urban Bolivia: Connections Ian J. Miller, Harvard University and Disjunctures Tyler Priest, University of Iowa Natalie Kimball, College of Staten Island, City University of Sarah Robey, State University New York German Vergara, Georgia Institute of Technology To Challenge a Regime: Healthcare Reforms and the Transition to Democracy in Brazil, 1975–88 119. Hazardous Heritages, Conflicted Commemorations: Eyal Weinberg, Florida Atlantic University Memorializing Death and Loss in Modern South Asia Comment: Gabriela Soto Laveaga, Harvard University Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair: Kelsey Utne, Cornell University Papers: Death at the End of Empire: The Use of British Imperial

Cemeteries as a Foundation of British-Indian Postcolonial 2021 Relations David A. Johnson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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122. Hindutva and Historiography: Narrating South Asian 126. Histories of Resistance, Histories of Survivance, Pasts in the US Academy Hidden Text: Indigenous Responses to Colonialism Chair: Anand A. Yang, University of Washington, Seattle Chair: Carina L. Johnson, Pitzer College Panel: Ananya Chakravarti, Georgetown University Panel: Sara Guengerich, Texas Tech University Vinayak Chaturvedi, University of California, Irvine Katrina L. Jagodinsky, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Hafsa Kanjwal, Lafayette College Benjamin Madley, University of California, Los Angeles Audrey Truschke, Rutgers University-Newark Ishita Pande, Queen’s University Natale Zappia, California State University, Northridge 123. Historical Analogies in Soviet and Russian Political Discourse 127. Histories of the Brain: Science and the Self in Modern France Chair: Jeremi Suri, University of Texas at Austin Joint session with the Society for French Historical Studies Papers: ’s Joan(s) of Arc of : Women Soldiers as Saviors Chair: Nima Bassiri, Duke University of the Nation Papers: What’s the Matter with Materialism? The Problem of Spirit in Laurie Stoff, Arizona State University French Neurology Defending Sevastopol: Multiple Functions of the Port City in Larry Sommer McGrath, consultant, Facebook Russian Cinema, 1911–2015 The Archetypal Brain: Brains, Case Studies, and Selves in Fin-de- Adrienne Harris, Baylor University Siècle France An Irresistible Parallel: Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan and the Zachary Levine, Columbia University Lens of Vietnam The Brain as a Theory of History: From Equipotentiality to Jonathan Brunstedt, Texas A&M University Neuroplasticity Comment: Sharon A. Kowalsky, Texas A&M University-Commerce Isabel Gabel, University of Pennsylvania Comment: Nima Bassiri, Duke University 124. Historicizing the 1980s in Black Radical Histories Chair: Benjamin Talton, Temple University 128. History and Historians in Response to COVID-19: Containing Contagion Papers: Resurgent Black Power in the Age of Reaction: The Organizational Roots of the Rainbow Rebellion Chair: Keith A. Wailoo, Princeton University George Derek Musgrove, University of Maryland, Baltimore Panel: Keith A. Wailoo, Princeton University County Bob H. Reinhardt, Boise State University The Grenada Revolution and 1980s Caribbean Radicalism George Joseph Dehner, Wichita State University Laurie Lambert, Fordham University Elena Conis, University of California, Berkeley Yanzhong Huang, Seton Hall University The Afterlife of Radicalism: , Black Power, and Africa in the Age of Reagan Benjamin Talton, Temple University 129. History and Historians in Response to COVID-19: Infection and Inequality Birthing Liberation: Dr. Helen O. Dickens and Health Activism in Chair: Evelynn M. Hammonds, Harvard University Ameenah Shakir, Florida A&M University Panel: Evelynn M. Hammonds, Harvard University Comment: Audience Samuel Kelton Roberts Jr., Columbia University Alan Kraut, American University Maria John, University of Massachusetts Boston 125. Histories of Absence after Ethnic Cleansing and Michael Spencer, University of Washington, Seattle Genocide Joint session with the Central European History Society 130. History and Historians in Response to COVID-19: Chair: Liora R. Halperin, University of Washington, Seattle Plagues Past and Present Papers: “No Holding onto Indianism”: Euro-American Art at Carlisle Chair: Peter Baldwin, University of California, Los Angeles Indian Industrial School Panel: Peter Baldwin, University of California, Los Angeles Marinella Lentis, independent scholar Mariola Espinosa, University of Iowa “Jaffa My Love”: Identities in Flux and Spatial Expropriation in a Gregg Mitman, University of Wisconsin-Madison Palestinian City Ruth Rogaski, Vanderbilt University Noa Tova Shaindlinger, College of the Holy Cross Rohan Deb Roy, University of Reading Bureaucratic Modernism at the Venice Biennale: Jewish Absence and Post-Nazi European Identity 131. History at the Online Mega-University Frances Anne Tanzer, Clark University Chair: Seth Bartee, Guilford Technical Community College In the Presence of Absence: “Christian-Jewish Dialogue” in West Panel: Robert V. Denning, Southern New Hampshire University after the Holocaust Damon W. Freeman, University of Maryland, Global Campus Brandon Bloch, Harvard University Christopher J. Kline, Western Governors University Comment: Liora R. Halperin, University of Washington, Seattle Abigail Pfeiffer, Western Governors University

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132. History Gateways: What I’m Doing Differently in My 137. How Podcasts Can Power Your Research, Teaching, History Introductory Course and Career Chair: Daniel J. McInerney, Utah State University Chair: Jason Lustig, University of Texas at Austin Panel: John Bezis-Selfa, Wheaton College, Massachusetts Panel: Kacey Calahane, University of California, Irvine Reginald K. Ellis, Florida A&M University Liz Covart, Omohundro Institute of Early American History Julia M. Gossard, Utah State University and Culture David J. Trowbridge, Marshall University Jessica Millward, University of California, Irvine Tanya Ott, University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa 133. History of Costume in Interdisciplinary and Comment: Jason Lustig, University of Texas at Austin Multidisciplinary Contexts Chair: Damayanthie Eluwawalage, Delaware State University 138. Humanistic Career Conversations: Tools for Mentors Papers: History of Costume: The Consumption and Governance of Attire This workshop will provide faculty with a conceptual framework and concrete in the Mid-Atlantic Region of the US, 1600–1900 tools to enable effective and engaging career mentoring of graduate students, Damayanthie Eluwawalage, Delaware State University undergraduate students, and colleagues. Dance, Diagrams, and Dress Informed by Nature: Changes in Workshop Leaders: Derek Attig, University of Illinois at Movement and Attire in France over the Long 18th Century Urbana-Champaign Tamara Caulkins, Douglas Honors College, Central Mearah Quinn-Brauner, Emory University Washington University Clothing Restrictions: Gender and Control in the 139. I Gain, You Lose, They Win: Tales of Successes and Mental Hospital Failures in International Solidarity Movements in Cold Christopher M. Rudeen, Harvard University War Latin America Oriental Fashion in the Tropics: The “Harem Skirt,” the Female Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Body, and Moral Panics in (1911) Antonio Hernández Matos, University of Puerto Rico–Río Chair: Jessica Stites Mor, University of British Columbia Piedras Campus Papers: It’s Play, but It’s Work: Labor History of Football and Solidarity in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay 134. History PhDs in the World of Entrepreneurship Brenda Elsey, Hofstra University Chair: Edward J. Balleisen, Duke University Water over Gold: International Solidarity in El Salvador’s Anti- Panel: Elizabeth Brake, Venture for America Mining Campaign Heather Lee Miller, Historical Research Associates, Inc. Jacey Anderson, Montana State University-Bozeman Jacqueline Olich, RTI International Anti-Imperialism and Hemispheric Consciousness in - Michael Thomas Tworek, Harvard University -Latin America Solidarity Networks from the 1970s to the 1980s 135. How East-Central Europe Changed: The István Geneviève Dorais, Université du Québec à Montréal Deák School of History Diplomatic Attacks on Solidarity: The Political Effects of the Joint session with the Central European History Society Tricontinental Conference in Havana, 1966 Fernando Camacho Padilla, Universidad Autonóma de Madrid Chair: Dominique K. Reill, University of Miami Comment: Audience Panel: Pieter M. Judson, European University Institute Rebekah Klein-Pejsova, Purdue University Robert Nemes, Colgate University 140. Identity, Place, and Belonging: The Micro-Impact of Daniel L. Unowsky, University of Memphis 20th-Century Global Migrations Comment: Dominique K. Reill, University of Miami Chair: Mary Elizabeth Dillard, Sarah Lawrence College Papers: “I Was Like, Okayyyyyyy”: Educational Achievements and Family 136. The What and How of Teaching History, Part 1: How Struggles of 20th-Century Nigerian Immigrants to Houston, Texas History Is Best Taught: Content and Pedagogical Mary Elizabeth Dillard, Sarah Lawrence College Approaches The Swedish Visa: Migration of Holocaust Survivors to in Chair: Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University the Immediate Aftermath of the Second World War, 1945–47 Lisa Payne Ossian, Des Moines Area Community College Panel: Olivia Garrison, Kern High School District Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University Frigidly Misplaced Migrations: The Somali Bantu in Maine Beth Slutsky, University of California, Davis C. Cymone Fourshey, Bucknell University This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 318. Comment: Audience 2021

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141. Identity, Sexuality, and Medical Triumphalism: 144. Incarcerated Scholars, Research Universities, and New Perspectives on Local and Global Venereal and Epistemic Privilege Treponemal Disease Campaigns in the 20th Century Chair: Michelle C. Daniel (Jones), New York University Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Panel: Anastazia Schmid, Indiana University–Purdue University Transgender History Indianapolis Chair: Monica H. Green, independent scholar Molly Whitted, Prison History Project Nicole Hayes, Prison History Project Papers: “I Told Him That There Had Been No Girl”: Examining an Allegation of Same-Sex Gonorrhea Transmission in 1930s British Columbia 145. Indigeneity and Patrimony in Modern Mexico Richard A. McKay, University of Cambridge Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Soviet Anti-Syphilis Campaigns in the USSR’s Inner Asian Chair: Adam W. V. Warren, University of Washington, Seattle Borderlands during the 1920s and 1930s: A Transnational Papers: Hiding a History of Destruction: The Making of Archaeological Perspective Vsevolod Bashkuev, Institute for Mongolian, Buddhist, and Patrimony in Modern Mexico Christina M. Bueno, Northeastern Illinois University Tibetan Studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences Indigenous Patrimony and Nation-Building in Porfirian Tlaxcala, Mexico Minority Sexuality and Socialist Nation Building: Anti-Syphilis Jaclyn Ann Sumner, Presbyterian College Campaigns on the Inner Asian Frontiers of China, 1949–64 Xiaoshun Zeng, University of Washington, Seattle “Nuestro Pequeño Patrimonio”: Totonac Lands and Mexican Pyramids in El Tajín Treponemal Disease and the Question of “Cross-Immunity”: Sam Holley-Kline, Florida State University Evidence from the WHO’s Yaws Eradication Campaign, 1952–64 Elliott Bowen, Nazarbayev University Archaeology, Development Priorities, and the Renarrativization of Guanajuato’s Indigenous Past Lisa Pinley Covert, College of Charleston 142. Images in the Archive: The Merits and Challenges of Using Photographs in Historical Research 146. Indigenous Adaptation as a Means of Cultural Chair: Cally Waite, Columbia University Persistence in the Midst of European Imperialism and Papers: Photographs during 20th-Century Occupations of the Dominican Settler Colonialism Republic and Puerto Rico Alexa Rodríguez, Columbia University Chair: Jennifer Denetdale, University of New Mexico Reading The Queen of Manzanar and Other Photographs from the Papers: The Three Lives of Chief Duwali: Cherokee Migration and the World War II Japanese American Internment Experience Ascendancy of Settler Colonialism in the Early 19th-Century Elena Tajima Creef, Wellesley College Trans-Mississippi West Austin Stewart, Lehigh University The Interplay of Image and Text in the Dominican Magazine Fémina, 1922–39 Joseph Brant, John Norton, and the Writing of Mohawk History as Sandy Plácido, Queens College, City University of New York a Means of Countering the Settler Colonial Narrative Aaron Luedtke, Michigan State University Reading Photographs of “Tropical Morals” in the From Bison to Cattle: Transformative Economies of the 18th- Eva Payne, University of Mississippi Century Apache Jenni Tifft-Ochoa, University of California, Davis Comment: Cally Waite, Columbia University Paiute Resilience at Fort McDermit, Nevada, 1865–89 Thierry Veyrié, Indiana University 143. Imagining the 20th Century through Visual Culture: Comment: Jennifer Denetdale, University of New Mexico Media, Legacy, and the Historical Narrative Chair: Sydney Heifler, Ohio State University 147. Infrastructure and Modernity Papers: Visualizing Medical Transport: The Myth and Reality of First Chair: Peter S. Soppelsa, University of Oklahoma World War Ambulance Journeys Srijita Pal, University of Southern California Papers: Infrastructure and : The Spatial Arrangements of Fascist Africa Envisioning Suffrage: The Visual Culture of the New York State Andrew Denning, University of Kansas Campaign, 1910–17 Jordyn May, Fordham University Infrastructure and Business: Connectivity and Complementarity in Greater China’s Transportation Network Visualizing Female Independence: Romance Comic Books and the Elisabeth Köll, University of Notre Dame Dangers of “Women’s Lib” Sydney Heifler, Ohio State University Infrastructure and Health: How Communications Made Diseases Comment: Audience Global Heidi Tworek, University of British Columbia Comment: Audience

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148. Innovative Approaches to Engaging Our Community Intergroup Relations as International Relations? Internationalizing College History Students: A Discussion the “Domestic” Intergroup Educational Youth Programming of the National Conference of Christians and Jews Chair: Oscar R. Canedo, Grossmont College Anna Fett, University of Notre Dame Panel: Oscar R. Canedo, Grossmont College Comment: Jennifer Hillman Helgren, University of the Pacific Natalye Joann Harpin, University of California, San Diego Monica Hernandez, San Diego City College 153. Interrogating the Archive: Documentation, 149. Insurgency and Daily Life in Peru, 1980–92 Transcription, and Translation in the Inquisition Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Charles F. Walker, University of California, Davis Chair: Yanna P. Yannakakis, Emory University Papers: The Shining Path and Peasants: Everyday Life in the Guerrilla Panel: Erica Feild, New York University Retreat Zone Anderson Hagler, Duke University Renzo Aroni, University of California, Davis Mayer Juni, Brown University Zeb Tortorici, New York University Terror, Resignation, and Exhilaration: Daily Life in Ayacucho during the Rise of Shining Path, 1979–85 Charles F. Walker, University of California, Davis 154. Interventions in the Lives of Mothers: Capturing the History of Reproduction Lima Nights: Blackouts, Curfews, and Urban Life during Peru’s Shining Path Period Chair: Sasha Turner, Johns Hopkins University Willie L. Hiatt, Long Island University Post Panel: Nicole Bourbonnais, Graduate Institute of International and People Power: The National Popular Assembly in a Time of Development Studies Violence Isabel Córdova, Nazareth College Tamara D. N. Feinstein, St. Lawrence University Cassia Roth, University of Georgia Ogechukwu Ezekwem Williams, Creighton University Comment: Rachel Nolan, Boston University 155. Inverting Metanarratives of Modernization and Rural/ 150. Integrating Environmental History into the Poor “Backwardness” in Latin America Curriculum: A Roundtable Discussion Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Christopher R. Boyer, University of Illinois at Chicago Chair: Marixa A. Lasso, Panama Ministry of Culture Panel: Michelle K. Berry, University of Arizona Papers: From Celebrated to Subversive: Competing Modernities in Ixcán, Darren F. Speece, Sidwell Friends School Guatemala Emily L. Wakild, Boise State University Sarah Foss, Oklahoma State University Marsha Weisiger, University of Oregon Inverting Metanarratives about Western Health Practices in the 151. Intergenerational Memory and the Erasure of Colonial Maya Highlands Susan R. Fitzpatrick Behrens, California State University, Violence in the US Far West: Popular Killings and Northridge Public Perceptions Leading the Way: Urban Neighbors Modernize, Sanitize, and Chair: Benjamin Madley, University of California, Los Angeles Subsidize the State in Mexico Papers: “Nits Breed Lice &c”: History and the Erasure of Settler–Soldier Christina M. Jimenez, University of Colorado Colorado Springs Cultures of Extermination in the Pacific Northwest Comment: Marixa A. Lasso, Panama Ministry of Culture Marc Carpenter, University of Oregon

Memories of Racial Violence in the Pacific Northwest 156. Islam and the Revolutionary Age: Rights and Politics Lisa Blee, Wake Forest University beyond the Euro-Atlantic A Forgotten Genocide? Settler Colonial Killing of the Western Chair: Ian Coller, University of California, Irvine Apaches and Yavapais in Arizona Janne Lahti, University of Helsinki Papers: Islam and the American Revolutionary Experiment: Religious Freedom, Citizenship, and Slavery Comment: Audience Denise A. Spellberg, University of Texas at Austin Waves across the South: The Age of Revolutions from the Indian 152. International Domestication: 20th-Century American and Pacific Oceans Childrearing Practices through Global Encounters Sujit Sivasundaram, University of Cambridge Chair: Jennifer Hillman Helgren, University of the Pacific Orphans, Debt, and Property: Islamic Moral Economy in the Papers: The Politics of Play in Afro-Christian Missions Ottoman Age of Revolutions Briana Royster, New York University Ali Yaycioglu, Stanford University 2021 “Missionary-Citizenship”: Family, Nation, and Globe in American Muslims and Citizens: Islam and Rights in the Evangelical Childhood, 1945–68 Ian Coller, University of California, Irvine Lauren Hamblen, University of Notre Dame Comment: Audience

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157. Italy in the World, the World in Italy: Modern Italian “A Parent’s Crime”: Legalities of Race and Gender in Oregon Culture in Transnational Perspective Motherhood Jacki Hedlund Tyler, Eastern Washington University Joint session with the Society for Italian Historical Studies Comment: Audience Chair: Diana Garvin, University of Oregon Papers: The Marketing of Italy to America: Tourism and Italian National 161. Law, Empire, and the Monarquía Hispánica in the Narratives, 1919–53 David Aliano, College of Mount St. Vincent Colonial Andes, 16th–18th Centuries Joint session with the American Society for Legal History and the Visualizing Race, Gender, and Sexuality: Black Women in 1960s Conference on Latin American History and 1970s Italian Film Jessica L. Harris, St. John’s University Chair: Alcira Duenas, Ohio State University at Newark Italy in Seattle, Seattle in Italy: History and Heritage in the Papers: Litigating Nobility in the Monarquía Hispánica: A Comparison of Making of La Marzocco Morisco and Native Andean Strategies for Claiming Noble Status Jonathan Morris, University of Hertfordshire Karoline P. Cook, Royal Holloway, University of London Lawful Rebels from Indian Claims to Imperial Policies in 17th- 158. John F. Richards Prize Discussion of Sebastian Century Andes Prange’s Monsoon Islam: Trade and Faith on the Juan Carlos De Orellana, University of Texas at Austin Medieval Malabar Coast Native Legal Facilitators in the 18th-Century Audiencia of Lima Renzo R. Honores, Instituto Internacional de Derecho Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia y Sociedad Chair: Michele L. Louro, Salem State University Comment: Alcira Duenas, Ohio State University at Newark Panel: Jyoti Gulati Balachandran, Penn State University Michael F. Laffan, Princeton University Sebastian Prange, University of British Columbia 162. Colonial Blackness and Mexican Modernity: Rethinking Afro-Mexican History and the African 159. Latinx Labor and Representation in the American West Diaspora, Part 1: Leaving the African Diaspora? Afro- Mexicans, Independence, and Abolition Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, the Labor and Working Class History Association, the Western Association Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History of Women Historians, and the Western History Association Chair: Theodore Cohen, Lindenwood University Chair: Julie Weise, University of Oregon Papers: The Experiences of African-Descended Peoples in Oaxaca, Papers: “The Ugly American in the Rogue Valley”: Newspaper 1790–1830 Representations of Ethnic Mexicans in Oregon, 1942–67 Sabrina Smith, University of California, Merced Alina R. Mendez, University of Washington, Seattle Presence and Persistence in the Port: African Descendants in Early “Finding Strength in Solidarity”: Latinx Activism and Multiracial Independence Veracruz, Mexico, 1810–50 Coalitions in the Late 20th-Century West Beau D.J. Gaitors, University of Tennessee at Knoxville Allyson Powers Brantley, University of La Verne “To Defend Our Religion”: Honor, Race, and Citizenship in Representation for Change: Latinas and American Government in Oaxaca after Independence the 20th and 21st Century John Milstead, Washington University in St. Louis Tiffany Jasmin Gonzalez, Texas A&M University Comment: David A. Sartorius, University of Maryland, College Park Comment: Julie Weise, University of Oregon This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 277.

160. Law and the Family: Histories of Gender and Race in 163. Limits of Victory: The Afterlife of Loyalty on the Civil 18th- and 19th-Century American, French, and British War’s Contested Border Settler Colonies Joint session with the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies Progressive Era and the Society for French Historical Studies Chair: Diane Mutti Burke, University of Missouri–Kansas City Chair: Jennifer Thigpen, Washington State University Papers: Provost Marshals and the Aftermath of Martial Law on the Border Papers: Settler Patriarchies: Legal Constructions of Fatherhood in 19th- April E. Holm, University of Mississippi Century Australian and Canadian Child Custody Cases “The Policy Which Put Down the War Shall Settle the Result”: Laura Y. Merrell, Indiana University Robert Van Horn and the Reconstruction of the Border West When Women Ruled the Ocean: Polynesian Queens, Contested Jeremy Neely, Missouri State University Power, and Complicated Legacies in 19th-Century Transpacific “Union Missouri She . . . Always Will Be”: Midwestern Encounters Regionalism and Civil War Memory Joy Elizabeth Schulz, Metropolitan Community College Amy Fluker, Youngstown State University Protecting the Family Estate: Refugee Women and Children in Comment: Diane Mutti Burke, University of Missouri–Kansas City Early America Idolina Hernandez, Saint Louis University

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164. Listening to Women’s Liberation: Sounds of Dissent A “Magic Weapon” on the Sino-Tibetan Frontier: The United and Protest in the Archive and Beyond Front as a Transformative Methodology of Nation Making and Unmaking in Early-Maoist China Chair: Alex Sayf Cummings, Georgia State University Benno Ryan Weiner, Carnegie Mellon University Papers: Yeah Yeah Yeah: Liberation and the 1960s Screamscape Negotiating with the Iraqi State: Assyrians and the Ba’th Regime of Nicolette Avie Rohr, Pomona College the 1970s Listening for Women’s Liberation in the 1970s Music Industry Alda Benjamen, Kate Grover, University of Texas at Austin Comment: Audience Dear Sisters: Olivia Records and the Sound of Lesbian Feminist Conflict 168. Making Progress: Comparing and Rethinking Cold Jessica Pruett, University of California, Irvine War Development in Colombia and South Vietnam Festivals and the Women Who Made Them Chair: Nathan Citino, Rice University Emily Hunt, Georgia State University Papers: El Dorado: Mythmaking, Modernity, and the Bogotá International 165. Love, Anarchy, Radical , and Emma Goldman Airport Amanda Carroll Waterhouse, Indiana University Joint session with the Coordinating Council for Women in History and the Labor and Working Class History Association Philanthropic Partnerships in Colombian Modernization during the Cold War Chair: Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara Dieyun Song, University of Miami Panel: Crystal N. Feimster, Yale University The Ford Foundation and South Vietnam, 1959–75 Lara Vapnek, Saint John’s University Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin-Madison Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College, City University of New York “Land to the Tiller” Revisited: The Transnational Politics of Rural Development in Wartime South Vietnam Comment: Candace S. Falk, University of California, Berkeley Sean Fear, University of Leeds Comment: Edward Miller, Dartmouth College 166. Love, Sex, and Marriage in the 20th-Century United States 169. Making Protestant Modernity Work: Secular Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Interventions of US Missionaries around the World, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History 1830–1950 Chair: Alison Lefkovitz, Rutgers University-Newark and New Jersey Chair: Heather D. Curtis, Tufts University Institute of Technology Papers: Secularism, Spirituality, and Racial Formation in Early 20th- Papers: Affection and Colonial Labor: Interracial Intimacies between Century Missionary Education in Africa and the American South White Americans and Filipino/as in the US Empire Gale L. Kenny, Barnard College, Columbia University Allison Wells, University of Iowa Protestant Linguistic Interventions, Print Capitalism, and Nation From Unwanted Dependents to Democratic Marriage: Making the State, 1800–70 Cold War Military Family Nikolay Kamenov, Graduate Institute Geneva Emily Swafford, American Historical Association “The Christian Task in India”: Protestant Internationalism, In Love and Struggle: African American Women’s Romances and US–Indian Missionary Relations, and the International the Missionary Council in the Interwar Period, 1920–40 Traci Lynnea Parker, University of Massachusetts Amherst Michael Brunner, Tufts University 1970s US Gender Roles and Social Change in Public Discourse “Tuning in with Boys around the World”: The YMCA’s Boy’s Work around Congresswomen’s Marriages in India and Its Global Repercussions, 1919–49 Sarah B. Rowley, DePauw University Harald Fischer-Tiné, ETH Zurich Comment: Alison Lefkovitz, Rutgers University-Newark and New Jersey Institute of Technology 170. Making Seattle History 167. Making Minorities in Postwar Asia: Nation-Building, Joint session with the National Council on Public History Minoritization, and the Afterlives of Empire Discussants: Brian Carter, 4Culture David Louter, Cultural Resources Program, National Park Chair: Krista Goff, University of Miami Service Papers: A “Laboratory of Ethnic Relations”: Recasting Border Minorities in Jennifer Ott, HistoryLink Early Postwar Asia, 1945–50 Jackie Peterson, independent consultant Andres Rodriguez, University of Sydney Seeming Like a State: Loyalty, Sovereignty, and the Search for 2021 Legitimacy after Global War in the Indo-Burmese Border-Worlds Aditya Kiran Kakati, School of Oriental and African Studies University of London

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171. Masculinity as Historical Subject and Theory, Part 1: Man Nationalist No More: Jasper Savanhu’s Lament Enough: Masculinity and Belonging in American History Allison K. Shutt, Hendrix College Chair: Timothy J. Williams, University of Oregon Bridging and Breaking Links: Balabbatnät and “Bargains of Collaboration” in Imperial Ethiopia, 1920–74 Papers: Discursive Conquest: Masculinity and Sodomy in 18th-Century Etana Dinka, Oberlin College New Mexico Anderson Hagler, Duke University Comment: Audience Masculinities and Black Men’s Belonging in Early United States This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 81. Taverns Kirsten E. Wood, Florida International University 175. Mid-Career Transitions: A Roundtable Discussion Resistant Masculinity: Fatherhood and the Making of African Panel: Rachel Filene Seidman, Center for the Study of the American American Masculinity in the 19th Century South Thomas B. Blakeslee, Harvard University Anne Mitchell Whisnant, Duke University Manning the Gates: Variant Manhoods to Justify Nativist Rhetoric Miriam Eve Mora, Center for Jewish History 176. Mind the Methodological Gap: Economics, History, Comment: Timothy J. Williams, University of Oregon and Economic History Chair: Juliette Levy, University of California, Riverside This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 315. Panel: Grace Ballor, European University Institute Trevor Jackson, George Washington University 172. New Directions and Perspectives on African Military Caitlin Rosenthal, University of California, Berkeley History, Part 2: Martial Race(s) in African History Madeline Woker, Columbia University Chair: Charles Thomas, Air Command and Staff College 177. Models of Domination and Resistance: Race, Panel: Ron Lamothe, Lesley University Education, and in the US South Myles Gregory Osborne, University of Colorado Boulder Sarah J. Zimmerman, Western Washington University Joint session with the Agricultural History Society Comment: Charles Thomas, Air Command and Staff College Chair: Adrienne Monteith Petty, College of William and Mary This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 100, 248, 264, 284, Papers: Head, Hand, and Heart: The Colonial and Carceral Roots of and 295. Manual Training at the Hampton Institute Vineeta Singh, University of Maryland, College Park W.E.B. Du Bois, the “Black Question in the United States,” and 173. Masculinity, Medicine, and the Global First World War European Colonialism in Africa Joint session with the Central European History Society Christopher McAuley, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Peter Leese, University of The Meaning of Miscegenation: Horace Mann Bond’s Studies of Race and Environment Papers: Psychological Trauma, Masculinity, and Religious Beliefs of Owen Hyman, University of Mississippi German Soldiers in the First World War Jason P. Crouthamel, Grand Valley State University Comment: Adrienne Monteith Petty, College of William and Mary Masculinity and Disability in the Ottoman First World War Kate Dannies, Ohio 178. Knowledge Formation, State Building, and I Am Not the Fit Man: Malaria, Masculinity, and Ex-Servicemen Transregional Integration, Part 1: Modern China’s in Interwar Britain Understandings of South Asia, Southeast Asia, Justin Fantauzzo, Memorial University and Africa A Brotherhood of Healthcare: Managing Masculinities and the Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History Practice of First World War Rehabilitation of South Asia Julie M. Powell, Ohio State University Chair: Matthew Mosca, University of Washington, Seattle Comment: Nicoletta Gullace, University of New Hampshire, Durham Papers: Red Sandalwood across the Early Modern Southern Asian Seas Kyoungjin Bae, Kenyon College 174. Revisiting the Bargain of Collaboration in Colonial and Post-Colonial Africa, Part 2: Mediation, Bargaining, Lama, Spy, and Cartographer: Formation of Tibetan Intelligence System in Qing China and Circulation of Himalayan Geographic and Self-Fashioning: Africans Asserting Agency over the Knowledge in the World Colonial Enterprise Ling-Wei Kung, Columbia University Chair: Benjamin N. Lawrance, University of Arizona From Barbaric Food to Superfood: The Knowledge of Edible Bird’s Papers: Metropolitan Adventure as Colonial Mediation: The Case of Nest in Cross-Cultural Trade, 1700–1900 Nigerian Emirs Yijun Wang, New York University Moses Ebe Ochonu, Vanderbilt University Comment: Matthew Mosca, University of Washington, Seattle Working for the Colonial State and Promoting Himself: Mademba Sèye This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 179. and the Bargains of Collaboration in French West Africa, 1896–91 Richard L. Roberts, Stanford University

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179. Knowledge Formation, State Building, and Transregional 183. Native Nations and Anglo-American Law Integration, Part 2: Modern China’s Understandings of Chair: Michael Leroy Oberg, State University of New York, College South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Africa at Geneseo Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of Panel: Zachary Isaac Conn, Yale University South Asia Julia Lewandoski, California State University, San Marcos Chair: Timothy J. Brook, University of British Columbia Daniel R. Mandell, Truman State University Craig Bryan Yirush, University of California, Los Angeles Papers: Knowing the Exotic: Natural History and State Building in the Qing Empire’s Borderlands, 1680–1800 184. Native Peoples, African Americans, and Law during the Arina Mikhalevskaya, Yale University Long Removal Era Chinese-Language Geographic Writing of the Late Qing Period and Chinese Labor Migration to Africa, 1880–1910 Chair: Joshua L. Reid, University of Washington, Seattle Idriss Paul-Armand Fofana, Columbia University Papers: The Political Economy of Indigenous Claims Rediscovering Morocco: PRC’s Medical Mission and the Making of Emilie Connolly, Dartmouth Society of Fellows New Knowledge of North Africa Legal Exclusion and Coercing Native Migration in the Dongxin Zou, National University of Singapore Antebellum Midwest Comment: Timothy J. Brook, University of British Columbia Sam Davis, Texas Christian University “Determined to Move Her to the United States of America against This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 178. Her Wishes and Will”: Cross-Cultural Alliances and Law in the Florida Borderlands 180. More Than a Name on a Stone: Legacy, Nancy O. Gallman, Lewis & Clark College Memorialization, and Teaching America through Our Comment: Joshua L. Reid, University of Washington, Seattle Nation’s National Cemeteries Chair: Cary C. Collins, Tahoma Senior High School 185. New Approaches to Teaching US Women’s History Papers: Far from Average and Ordinary: Their Stories, Their Legacy Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Jennifer S. Dehorty, Tahoma National Cemetery Chair: Katherine K. Jellison, Ohio University An Honor to Learn: National Memorialization from Statute to Community and Classroom Panel: Erica L. Ball, Occidental College Bryce Carpenter, United States Department of Margie Brown-Coronel, California State University, Fullerton Veterans Affairs Cherisse Jones-Branch, Arkansas State University Rebecca Sharpless, Texas Christian University The Meaning of Legacy Dedi Noble, American Gold Star Mothers Comment: Sharon E. Wood, University of Nebraska, Omaha Monica McNeal, American Gold Star Mothers Mary Bradshaw, American Gold Star Mothers 186. New Approaches to the World History Survey 181. Museums and the Holocaust: Past, Present, and Future Joint session with the World History Association Chair: Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University Chair: M. J. Rymsza-Pawlowska, American University Papers: Move to the City: Using Urban History in World History Survey Papers: Museum Diplomacy and Holocaust Memorialization: The United Courses States Holocaust Memorial Museum and Jasenovac Michael G. Vann, California State University, Sacramento Alexandra Zaremba, American University Global Processes, Local Impact: Bringing the World History Survey Holocaust Memory on the Periphery: “Foreign Child-Care Home for Students Facilities” and Their Representation in Museums Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, California State University, San Lauren Fedewa, University of Toronto Marcos Exploring Museum Objects and Holocaust History with Thinking Globally in a Western Civ Survey? Challenges and Augmented Reality (AR) Sara Pitcairn, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Opportunities Tony Acevedo, Hudson County Community College 182. Theme Studies and A Plagiarism-Resistant Assessment Strategy for World History Nontraditional Ways to Work in, Research, and Teach Surveys Stressing Evidence-Based Analysis Marc Jason Gilbert, Hawai’i Pacific University History Comment: Audience Chair: Cristobal A. Borges, North Seattle College Panel: Cassie Chinn, Wing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific 187. New Directions in the History of Education American Experience Chair: Margaret Pugh O’Mara, University of Washington, Seattle

Christopher Johnson, Preservation and Partnerships Program, 2021 National Park Service Panel: Emily Levine, Stanford University Claudia Kiyama, independent historic preservation consultant Ian McNeely, University of Oregon Erika Lee, University of Minnesota Adam Nelson, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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188. New Histories of Law: Intimacy and Emotion 192. New Perspectives on the Malayan Emergency: Race, Discussants: Jill Hasday, University of Minnesota Law School Space, and Legacy Alison Lefkovitz, New Jersey Institute of Technology Joint session with the North American Conference on Michelle McKinley, University of Oregon British Studies Chair: Karl Hack, The Open University 189. New Histories of Toxicity: Bridging Capitalocene Slow Violence and “Natural” Toxic Disaster Papers: Localities of Occupation: The Spatial Logic of the Malayan Emergency Chair: Linda L. Nash, University of Washington, Seattle David Baillargeon, University of Nottingham Papers: Toxicity, Latent Violence, and the Constraints of Knowledge in a Conflicted Commonwealth: Race and iolenceV in Soldier–Civilian Postcolony: Historicizing Cameroon’s Lake Nyos Disaster of 1986 Encounters Harmony Susan O’Rourke, Pitzer College Kate Imy, University of North Texas The Paradox of Capital in the Capitalocene: Of Coca-Cola, Water, Picturing the “New Village Chinese”: Colonial Photography in the and Sugar in Africa Service of Resettlement in Emergency-Era Malaya Sara G. Byala, University of Pennsylvania Jeremy Taylor, University of Nottingham Toxaphene, Toxicity, and the Nature of Chemical Histories A State of Control: The Malayan Emergency in the Making of the Evan Hepler-Smith, Duke University Malay(si)an State Comment: Audience Bernard Keo, Monash University Comment: Karl Hack, The Open University 190. New Perspectives on Early New England in the Atlantic World 193. New Perspectives on Maternal Descent Laws in Chair: Serena R. Zabin, Early America Papers: Interimperial Trade or Trade Diasporas? Rethinking New Chair: Sophie K. White, University of Notre Dame England’s Commerce in the Early Modern Atlantic Papers: “She Had . . . a Womb Subjected to Bondage”: The Afro-Atlantic Jared Ross Hardesty, Western Washington University Origins of British Colonial Descent Law Women’s Financial Labor and the Political Economy of Colonial Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers, University of California, Berkeley New England Port Cities Cockacoeske’s Dilemma: An Algonquian Woman’s Story of Slavery Sara T. Damiano, Texas State University and Sovereignty during Bacon’s Rebellion “The Road to New England”: Regional Geographies of Enslavement Hayley Negrin, University of Illinois at Chicago Nicole Maskiell, University of South Carolina, Columbia “Bond or Free”: Condition and Descent in Early Virginia From West Africa and Narragansett Bay: African American and Allison Madar, University of Oregon Native American Religious Diversity in New England Comment: Sophie K. White, University of Notre Dame Richard J. Boles, Oklahoma State University Comment: Serena R. Zabin, Carleton College 194. Non-State Actors in Vietnam and the Diaspora during the Long Cold War 191. New Perspectives on Free People of Color in the British Chair: Edward Miller, Dartmouth College Atlantic World Papers: War by Improvisation: Civil Warfare, Irregular Military Forces, Joint session with the North American Conference on and Cold War Politics in the Mekong Delta of South Vietnam, British Studies 1945–63 Chair: Daniel Livesay, Claremont McKenna College Edward Miller, Dartmouth College Papers: To “Enjoy Privileges That Free Negros Enjoy”: Free Women of Brotherly Fellowship and Sister Cities: Diplomatic Interactions African Descent, Slaveholding, and the Creation of British Jamaica between the Republics of Vietnam and China, 1955–75 Christine Walker, Yale-NUS College Alvin Bui, University of Washington, Seattle Servants, Yeomen, and Slaveholders: Free People of Color in the “Bring the Viê.t Kiê`u Back Home to Sustain National Security”: Southern Colonies of British North America The Thai Red Cross Society’s Mission, Politics of Evacuation, Warren E. Milteer Jr., University of North Carolina at and the Ambiguous Diplomacy between and the Two Greensboro Vietnamese Republics, 1955–75 Morragotwong Phumplab, National University of Singapore “Domestic Entrepreneurs”: The Enterprise of Free Women of Color in Jamaica’s Urban Spaces, 1780–1834 Return of the Prodigious Sons: Émigré Contributions to Vietnam’s Erin Malone Trahey, Yale University Economic Revival, 1985–95 Hoang Vu, Cornell University Comment: Audience Comment: Sophia W. Quinn-Judge, Temple University

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195. Obstacles to Freedom during the American Civil War Law, Consent, and the (Un)Making of Marital Relations in and Its Aftermath Premodern North Africa Rosemary Admiral, University of Texas at Dallas Chair: , Mississippi State University Islamic Law as International Law in the Western Medieval Papers: Receiving an Education in Race: White Northerners’ Encounters Mediterranean with African Americans during the Civil War Camilo Gómez-Rivas, University of California, Santa Cruz Marcy S. Sacks, Albion College Comment: Audience Confronting “Slave Dealers” and “Bitter Rebels”: Freedmen, Soldiers, and Slave Traders in the Occupied South Robert Colby, Christopher Newport University 200. Out of the Footnotes: Centering Women in the History of the Yucatan Peninsula “Every Voter Had to Run the Gauntlet”: The US Army on Election Duty in the Reconstruction South Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Christopher S. DeRosa, Monmouth University Chair: Victoria Lyall, Denver Art Museum Comment: Andrew Lang, Mississippi State University Papers: The Encomendera’s Domain: Personal Service and Its Limits Hannah R. Abrahamson, Emory University 196. Oceanic Worlds: A Roundtable Uncovering Women’s Writing: Female Literacy in Late Colonial Yucatan Chair: Bathsheba Demuth, Brown University Mark Lentz, Utah Valley University Catherine Tracy Goode, Americas Research Network Panel: Boyd Cothran, York University Joshua L. Reid, University of Washington, Seattle Women and Violence in the Yucatecan State Archives of the Late Helen M. Rozwadowski, University of Connecticut at 19th Century Avery Point Michele McArdle Stephens, University of Essex Coll Thrush, University of British Columbia Comment: Linda Williams, University of Puget Sound

197. Meeting the Challenges of the Two-Year Faculty 201. Painful Reminders: Incorporating Race and Gender Classroom, Part 2: Online Learning via the Digital into Site Interpretation in the US West Humanities, the Online Classroom, and the Hybrid Classroom Chair: Jennifer Reut, Landscape Architecture Magazine Chair: Christina Ghanbarpour, Saddleback College Papers: Denizens, Dames, and Dirty Districts: The Hushed Histories of One of the American West’s Most Open Secrets Panel: Christina Ghanbarpour, Saddleback College Nichelle Frank, Utah State University Brandon B. Morgan, Central New Mexico Community College Race, Mental Illness, and Erasures in the Texas Landscape Lisa Marie Rude, Normandale Community College Kathleen Powers Conti, University of Texas at Austin Scott M. Williams, Weatherford College From Martyr to Murderer: Critical Reevaluations of Narcissa This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 79 and 211. Whitman in Walla Walla, Washington Annie Reiva, University of Oregon

198. “Our Country Is Full”: Roots and Consequences of Fallen Neon: Monuments and Memory in Las Vegas, Nevada Nicole Batten, University of Nevada at Las Vegas America’s 1921 Immigration Act 100 Years Later Comment: Jennifer Reut, Landscape Architecture Magazine Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and the Immigration and Ethnic History Society 202. Particularities of Place: Material Histories of Textiles Chair: Erika Lee, University of Minnesota from the Americas to the Arctic Panel: Ashley Johnson Bavery, Eastern Michigan University Julio Capo Jr., Florida International University Chair: Zara Anishanslin, University of Delaware Linda Gordon, New York University Papers: Logwood: How the Quest for Black-Dyed Textiles Influenced Alexandra Minna Stern, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Centuries of Fashion, International Policy, and the Making of Nations 199. Out of Bounds: Testing Law’s Limits in the Premodern Chloe Chapin, Harvard University Islamic West Unfrozen from Time: Traders, Anthropologists, Indigenous Chair: Sabahat Adil, independent scholar Knowledge, and the Shifting Meanings of Arctic Fur Sarah Pickman, Yale University Papers: Magians in the Maghrib: A New Legal Category to Enforce Right Belief Patagonian Wool and the Particularity of Place Caitlyn Olson, NYU Abu Dhabi in a Mass-Produced World John Soluri, Carnegie Mellon University Reprehensible Innovations in Medieval Morocco Comment: Zara Anishanslin, University of Delaware Jocelyn N. Hendrickson, University of Alberta 2021

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203. Digital History, Part 2: Perspectives on Publishing 206. Plan S and Open Access Publishing: Challenges and Argument-Driven Digital History Opportunities for Historical Journals in the United Joint session with the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History States and in Europe and New Media Joint session with the Conference of Historical Journals Chair: Stephen M. Robertson, George Mason University Chair: Antia Wiersma, Royal Netherlands Historical Society Panel: Leonardo Barleta, Stanford University Panel: Martin J. Burke, Lehman College, City University Jacquelyne Thoni Howard, Tulane University of New York Matthew B. Karush, George Mason University Tessa Lobbes, BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review Rachel C. Midura, Virginia Tech Antia Wiersma, Royal Netherlands Historical Society Lincoln Mullen, George Mason University Comment: Ruth Mostern, University of Pittsburgh 207. Play as Pedagogy This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 85. Chair: Edward Castronova, Indiana University Panel: Lynneth J. Miller Renberg, Anderson University 204. Pirate Motivations and Information Exchange: Raiding, Tracey K. Rizzo, University of North Carolina, Asheville Slaving, and Drinking in the 17th- and 18th-Century Marc Arsell Robinson, California State University, San Bernardino Caribbean and Atlantic Taylor Anne Sims, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Chair: Kevin P. McDonald, Loyola Marymount University Papers: “Accommodating Themselves as Victorious Soldiers Do”: Warfare, 208. Poster Session Raiding, and Serial Dislocation in the 17th-Century Caribbean The Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the posters Casey Schmitt, Cornell University on display and engage in considered dialogue and engaging interaction with The 1683 Sack of Veracruz as a Slaving Raid: French and the presenters. English Motivations in Colonial Mexico 208-1. Making of National Identity: Men, Nation, and Clothing in Pablo Miguel Sierra Silva, Modern Japan and India Tippling Houses, Rum Shops, and Taverns: How Alcohol Maumita Banerjee, Harvard-Yenching Institute Helped Fuel Commercial Networks and Knowledge Exchange 208-2. Played in Peoria: DIY Punk Rock in the Deindustrializing in the West Indies Midwest Jamie L. H. Goodall, Stevenson University Dawson Barrett, Del Mar College Comment: Mark G. Hanna, University of California, San Diego 208-3. Adapting Historical Family Tree Diagrams for Easy Web Navigation and Student Engagement 205. Place and Power: “Regional Turns” in the History of Andrew P. Bartlett, University of Colorado Boulder 19th-Century Mexico and Brazil 208-4. Twisted Tales: The Fabulous and Fantastic Creatures of the Harappan Civilization Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Shibani Bose, independent researcher Chair: Margaret Chowning, University of California, Berkeley 208-5. Nursing Narratives: Mapping Nurses’ Convalescent Homes and Papers: Mexico’s Provinces and Peripheries in Global Context, Rest Clubs from the First World War 1850–1940 Kayla Campana, University of Central Florida Laura Shelton, Franklin & Marshall College 208-6. Why Repatriate? Inequality, War, and State-Making in the Brazilian Borderlands, Tara Chadwick, History Fort Lauderdale 1830–70 208-7. “Naviguer Entre Plusieurs Eaux”: Quebec English-Speaking Miqueias H. Mugge, Princeton University Communities and Franco-Canadian Relations, 1919–89 Liberalism Divided: Provincial Reparto versus Federal Arnaud Chaniac, Université de Nantes and Université Disentailment in Mexico de Montréal Fernando Pérez Montesinos, University of California, 208-8. Seeking the Fallen: Combining History with Geographic Los Angeles Information Systems for Korean War Recovery Efforts The Other Valley: The Brazilian Far North as an Autonomous Michele Curran Cornell, SNA International for the Defense Frontier, 1840–90 POW/MIA Accounting Agency José Juan Pérez Meléndez, University of California, Davis 208-9. Preserving Cultural Heritage in a Time of Displacement and Comment: Casey M. Lurtz, Johns Hopkins University Social Change: Building the Modern Endangered Archives Program at the UCLA Library Rachel Deblinger, University of California, Los Angeles Library 208-10. Making Anti-Communist Intellectuals? American Academic Exchange with Eastern Europe, 1956–89 Matthias Duller, Central European University

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208-11. Native Peoples, Politics, and Society in Contemporary Paraguay 208-29. Preserving the American in Mexican American: Andres Pico’s Hunt B. A. Ganson, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton for Juan Flores, 1857 Melissa H. Birch, University of Kansas Vincent Romo, Cypress College Paola Canova, University of Texas at Austin 208-30. Dressing the Law: Clothing, Identity, and Local Politics in 17th- 208-12. Mapping National Belonging through Figurative Arts in 1940s Century Mexico Cuba Haley Schroer, University of Texas at Austin Cary Aileen Garcia Yero, Harvard University 208-31. The Right to Fortifications: The oliticalP Movement for Harbor 208-13. Caddying on the Color Line: How Black Workers Challenged Defense in Early Republican Seaports, 1783–1815 White Supremacy in Jim Crow Leisure Spaces Samuel Aldred Slattery, College of William and Mary Craig Gill, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 208-32. Travel Maps for LA Trips: Social Networks and LSD in the 1950s 208-14. Archiving American Service and Sacrifice after the Great War Alexis Turner, Harvard University Keith Gorman, Georgetown University 208-33. Indeed, It Isn’t Fighting: Poison Gas in the Eyes of a First World Kathelene McCarty Smith, University of North Carolina at War Nurse Greensboro Linda Ulbrich, University of California, Santa Cruz 208-15. World History Commons 208-34. From a Digital Portal for Early Modern Print to a Digital Model Daniel Howlett, George Mason University for Comparative Historical Research Jessica Marie Otis, George Mason University Benjamin Alan Wiggins, University of Minnesota Kelly Schrum, George Mason University J. B. Shank, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Nathan Sleeter, George Mason University 208-35. Mapping Urban Contours: Chinese and Japanese American 208-16. Zulu Hlanganani: Native Nostalgia and a Reevaluation of African Histories in a Portland Neighborhood, 1905–40 Nationalism in a South African Township Olivia G. Wing, University of Oregon Cacee Hoyer, University of Southern Indiana 208-17. News Diets of Ordinary Americans: Computationally Comparing 209. Preservation, Digitization, and Network and Spatial the Content of Early 20th-Century Newspapers Analysis of the Endangered History of Atlantic Vilja Hulden, University of Colorado Boulder World Slavery 208-18. Yet Si Blue, the Woman Who Speaks Her Mind: Janet McCloud Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History and a Lifetime of Native Activism in the 20th Century Amanda Johnson, Oklahoma State University Chair: Marshall Eakin, Vanderbilt University 208-19. Recasting Chronological and Material Boundaries of Indigo Trade Papers: Unexpected Discoveries from the Slave Societies Digital Archive and Consumption, 1600–80 Jane Landers, Vanderbilt University Aditi Khare, University of Alberta Social Networks in Colonial Brazil: Transamazonic Slave Trade 208-20. Black Virginians in Blue: Albemarle County’s USCT Story and Transatlantic Slave Trade, 1740–77 William B. Kurtz, University of Virginia Alexandre Pelegrino, Vanderbilt University 208-21. Music and Feasting at Louis XIV’s Versailles Spatial Historian: A New Tool for Historical Research and Susan Lewis, University of Victoria Network and Spatial Analysis James Schindling, Vanderbilt University 208-22. “Where Are the Men?” The Politics of Gender in Evangelical Homeschooling Print Culture Lessons Learned in Restructuring the Slave Societies Digital Lindsey B. Maxwell, Florida International University Archive Daniel Genkins, Vanderbilt University 208-23. Children of the Mother Road: Community Development along Route 66 in Northern Arizona, 1921–87 Comment: Paul E. Lovejoy, York University Daniel Milowski, Arizona State University 208-24. Southern Graces: Women, Faith, and the Quest for Social Justice in 210. Private Missions to Moscow: Cold War Cultural Memphis, Tennessee, 1950–69 Exchange outside of Diplomatic Channels Ann Mulhearn, Middle Tennessee State University Chair: Mary Nolan, New York University 208-25. The Politics of the Boat People Crisis Phi-Vân Nguyen, Université de Saint-Boniface Papers: Ballet in the Cold War: The American Ballet Theatre’s Performance of International Identity in the 208-26. Planning the Atomic-Age Library: The Collaboration of National Anne Searcy, University of Washington, Seattle Resources Planning Board and the ALA Committee on Postwar Planning Becoming a Blue-Collar Musical Ambassador: How Billy Joel Jennifer Burek Pierce, University of Iowa Bridged the American-Soviet Divide in 1987 Nicholas Alexander Brown, Prince George’s County Memorial 208-27. Fostering Student Historical Thinking Skills through Digital Library Queer Public History David A. Reichard, California State University, Monterey Bay Blue Notes in Red Countries: African American Artists in Eastern Bloc Music Markets 208-28. Oral History as Critical Pedagogy: Women’s Histories in South Sven Kube, Florida International University 2021 Texas Beth Robinson, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi Comment: Mary Nolan, New York University

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211. Meeting the Challenges of the Two-Year Faculty 19th-Century European Protestantism: A Network Approach Classroom, Part 3: Project Yellowstone: Campfire Anthony J. Steinhoff, Université du Québec à Montréal Stories on Interdisciplinary Community Engagement Comment: James M. Brophy, University of Delaware This experimental campfire session encourages audience discussion of interdisciplinary This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 231. approaches to the classroom via the lens of community engagement. Chair: Michelle Iden, County College of Morris 215. Public Intellectuals, Public History, and the History of Panel: Michelle Iden, County College of Morris the Profession Maria Isaza, County College of Morris Chair: Marla R. Miller, University of Massachusetts Amherst Samantha Gigliotti, County College of Morris John Soltes, County College of Morris Panel: Ashley Bouknight, Historical Research Associates, Inc. Shane Doyle, Montana State University-Bozeman Michael James Brown, Rochester Institute of Technology Patricia Mooney-Melvin, Loyola University Chicago This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 79 and 197. Naomi Schalit, The Conversation US

212. Promoters, Braceros, and Divas: Mexican Labor, 216. Queer Political Activism and Community Organizing Economic Development, and Public Health in Mexico in the Late 20th Century and the United States Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Transgender History Chair: James Alex Garza, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Chair: Julio Capo Jr., Florida International University Papers: Making the Invisible Visible: Promoting Mexican Labor at Papers: Homonationalism, Israel, and the Gay Jewish International, Universal Exhibitions and World’s Fairs 1975–94 Matthew D. Esposito, Drake University Gregg Drinkwater, University of Colorado Boulder Impure Divas: Public Health, Morality, and Gender Identities of Gay Teachers Unite! Queer Labor Activism in the American Public Entertainment Spaces in 1920s Mexico City Federation of Teachers, 1960s–1980s Emily Wendell, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Sara Smith-Silverman, American River College Invited to Work, Not to Thrive: Crumbling Migrant Worker “Refuse to Run Away”: Title VII Lawsuits as Usurping Normative Infrastructure in Oregon during the Bracero Program, 1942–64 Standards of Transsexual Employment Madelina Cordia, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Shay R. Olmstead, University of Massachusetts Amherst Comment: James Alex Garza, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Comment: Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara

213. Prose and the Prosaic: Historians Writing about 217. LGBTQ+ Public History, Part 2: Queering the Historical Experiences, Including Their Own Traditional Historical Institution Chair: Fabio Lanza, University of Arizona Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Papers: “The Forbidden Stalin” and “Stalin the Foodie”: An Ethnographer’s Transgender History Search for How a Generalissimo Went Missing from History Xenia Cherkaev, HSE University, St. Petersburg Chair: Sarah I. Rodriguez, University of West Georgia When Historians Remember Nothing Panel: Emma Bresnan, independent public historian Susan Crane, University of Arizona William “” Martin, The Valentine Bonnie J. Morris, University of California, Berkeley Telling Space, Crossing Time: Writing the Konkan Coast Stefanie Snider, Kendall College of Art and Design, Ananya Chakravarti, Georgetown University Ferris State University Comment: Audience This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 76.

214. International Protestantism: Networks, Conflict, and 218. Queerness in the City: Race, Sexuality, and Urban Cooperation from the 16th through 19th Centuries, Religious Histories in the United States and Beyond Part 1: Protestant Religious Awakening, Women, and Joint session with the American Society of Church History and the Network Formation in the 19th Century Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History Joint session with the Central European History Society Chair: Judith Weisenfeld, Princeton University Chair: James M. Brophy, University of Delaware Papers: “The Church Is So Queer That It Even Baffles the Prophet”: Faith Papers: Awakening: Transnational Evangelicalism, Immigration, and Piety Healing and Male Sex Work in 1930s New Orleans in the Anglo-German World, 1815–71 Ahmad Greene-Hayes, Princeton University Samuel Blaine Keeley Jr., Leibniz Institute of European History Queer Uses of Episcopal Space: Gay Liberation and the Episcopal Deaconesses: Weaving Women into 19th-Century Transnational Church in , 1968–78 Protestantism Heather R. White, University of Puget Sound Aeleah H. Soine, Saint Mary’s College of California

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“Voices Speak Out”: Gay Christian Public Theologies in 1980s Transsexualism, the Case for National Action: A History of the San Francisco University-Based Gender Clinics and Their Racialized Theory of Lynne Gerber, independent scholar Trans Etiology Emmett Harsin Drager, University of Southern California Say “Yes” to the Spirits: Spiritual Marriage in Manbo Maude’s Temples Policing University Space: How the Nation’s Turn toward Law and Eziaku Nwokocha, University of Pennsylvania Order Shaped the Rise of Student Affairs Yalile Suriel, State University of New York at Stony Brook Comment: Judith Weisenfeld, Princeton University Fighting AIDS with Theory: AIDS Activism, Queer Theory, and the Institutionalization of Gay and Lesbian Studies 219. Questioning Authorities in Transatlantic Constitutions: Rachel Corbman, Wake Forest University Exploring American Legal Thought in the 18th Century Comment: Audience Joint session with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 223. Real Hatred: Exploring the Most Vehemently Despised Chair: Michael Breen, Reed College Presidents in American History Papers: Transatlantic Justice: Governors’ Councils in Early America and Chair: Jeffrey A. Engel, Southern Methodist University Lawsuits Appealed to the Privy Council Sally E. Hadden, Western Michigan University Panel: Sharron Wilkins Conrad, Center for Presidential History, Southern Methodist University A New Order for the Ages? Rethinking the American Joanne B. Freeman, Yale University Confederation, 1776–89 Mark Atwood Lawrence, LBJ Presidential Library and Museum Eliga Gould, University of New Hampshire, Durham Manisha Sinha, University of Connecticut at Storrs From the Imperial to the International: How Early Americans Matthew Avery Sutton, Washington State University, Pullman Built the Legal Infrastructure of a Developing Nation Daniel Hulsebosch, New York University 224. Reconsidering Central Europe: New Directions, Comment: Michael Breen, Reed College Perspectives, and Challenges from the Medieval to the Modern 220. Race and Violence in the Second World War Joint session with the Society for Austrian and Habsburg History Chair: Mark T. Calhoun, Command College Chair: Howard P. Louthan, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Papers: Making Race in the Archive of World War II Panel: John Connelly, University of California, Berkeley Ruth Grace Lawlor, University of Cambridge Jonathan Reed Lyon, University of Chicago Patterning Race Wars: Reassessing War without Mercy in a Magda Teter, Fordham University Comparative Context Daniel L. Unowsky, University of Memphis Benjamin M. Schneider, United States Comment: Nora Berend, University of Cambridge Modernizing Martial Race: British Colonial Racial Theories in the Second World War 225. Reconsidering the Emergence of Sex Education in the Jacob Stoil, School of Advanced Military Studies Gilded Age and Progressive Era Comment: Audience Joint session with the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 221. Race, Gender, and Anarchist Cultural Politics across the Chair: Courtney Q. Shah, Lower Columbia College Americas in the 20th Century Papers: Frederick Hollick, MD: The Forgotten Grandfather of Sex Ed Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Sin Guanci, Ohio State University Transgender History The Liberal Protestant Foundations of Early Sex Education Chair: Kirwin Ray Shaffer, Penn State University, Berks Kristy Slominski, University of Arizona Panel: Spencer Beswick, Cornell University Dr. Ruth Janetta Temple: Leading the Vanguard of Preventative Maria Montserrat Feu Lopez, Sam Houston State University Health Education in Informal Education Spaces Sabrina González, University of Maryland, College Park Monica Perkins, Claremont Graduate University Nikita Shepard, Columbia University Sex Education’s Many Sides: How Eugenics and Immigration Anna Elena Torres, University of Chicago Factored into Public-School Sex Education Comment: Kirwin Ray Shaffer, Penn State University, Berks Julia Haager, Binghamton University, State University of New York and Journal of Women’s History 222. Race, Gender, Sexuality, and the US University Comment: Courtney Q. Shah, Lower Columbia College Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History 2021 Chair: Chandan Reddy, University of Washington, Seattle Papers: Collapsing Blackness: The Problem of “Ghetto Physicians” in 1970s Multicultural Graduate Medical Education Discourse Nic John Ramos, Drexel University

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226. Reenvisioning Empire: Adaptations and Contestations 230. Religion, Difference, and the Ottoman-Russian of World Order, 1930s–60s Frontier in an Age of Empire Joint session with the World History Association Chair: Elena Campbell, University of Washington, Seattle Chair: Joshua Derman, Hong Kong University of Science and Papers: Interlinked Processes of Nation-Making and Empire-Making: The Case Technology of Armenians in the from the 1850s to the 1870s Dzovinar Derderian, independent scholar Papers: The Agronomists Who Grew Empires: Inner Colonization and the Making of a Global Geo-modernity Negotiating Orthodox Sound in the : Chant Revival and Shellen Xiao Wu, University of Tennessee at Knoxville Georgian National Identity Rebecca Mitchell, Middlebury College Anticolonial Imperialism? Visions of World Order in Wartime Japan Jeremy A. Yellen, Chinese University, Hong Kong Non-Muslims and the Naqshbandi Ascendancy in the Ottoman Empire Imperialism in an Age of Decolonization: The Nazi New Order Richard Antaramian, University of Southern California in a Global Mirror, 1942–43 Joshua Derman, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology The Tsar’s European Proselytizers: Scottish and German Missionaries in the Caucasus The Power of Peace: Visions of World Order in Early Cold War India Stephen B. Riegg, Texas A&M University Carolien Stolte, Comment: Audience Comment: Audience 231. International Protestantism: Networks, Conflict, and 227. Reevaluating the Impact of the “Conquest of Mexico” Cooperation from the 16th through 19th Centuries, at 500 Years Part 2: Religious Refugees, Cross-Confessional Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Marriage, International Evangelism, and Migration in Chair: John R. McNeill, Georgetown University the Panel: Kelly McDonough, University of Texas at Austin Joint session with the Central European History Society Stephanie Wood, University of Oregon Chair: Jonathan Strom, Emory University John F. Schwaller, State University of New York, University at Albany Papers: International Protestantism in the 16th Century: Frustrations, Jack Bouchard, Folger Shakespeare Library Failures, and Perseverance Karen Ordahl Kupperman, New York University Jesse A. Spohnholz, Washington State University Brian DeLay, University of California, Berkeley Confessional Identity, Pan-Protestantism, and Secularization: Eliga Gould, University of New Hampshire, Durham International and Cross-Confessional Marriage Projects in the House of Hohenzollern in the 18th Century 228. Reflecting on Reacting to the Past: The Promise and Benjamin Marschke, Humboldt State University Problematics of Role-Playing in the History Classroom Religious Translation and Cross-Cultural Revisionings in Early Chair: Carl R. Weinberg, Indiana University America, 1693–1750 Benjamin Pietrenka, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg Panel: Thomas Chase Hagood, University of Georgia Alison Kibler, Franklin & Marshall College Comment: Susan Longfield Karr, University of Cincinnati William Offutt, Pace University This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 214. Laura M. Westhoff, University of Missouri–St. Louis 232. Resilient Exchange Systems and Regional Money Forms 229. Religion, Biography, and Gender: The Practice of in the Early Modern Era Religious Biography in a Female Black Atlantic World Chair: Catherine Desbarats, McGill University Joint session with the American Society of Church History Papers: “A Parade of Ceremonies”: Resilient Exchange Economies in Early Chair: Heather D. Curtis, Tufts University Northwestern North America Papers: It’s All Church: The Sacred and Secular Life of Aretha Franklin Ryan C. Hall, Colgate University Vernon Mitchell Jr., Washington University in St. Louis The Social Life of Cacao in 16th-Century Central America The Ethics of Religious Biography: Narrative of the Life of Laura E. Matthew, Marquette University Pentecostal Pioneer Regina Gelana Twala Before “Primitive Money”: The Royal African Company on the Joel Cabrita, Stanford University Upper Guinea Coast, 1680–1704 The Eventful Life of Tene Sako: Slavery, Conquest, and Conversion Colleen E. Kriger, University of North Carolina at Greensboro in West Africa, 1895–1930 Comment: Audience Elizabeth A. Foster, Tufts University Raising the Standard: How the Life of Bishop Ida Bell Robinson Redefined Holiness as Gender Equity and Inclusion Dara Delgado, University of Allegheny Comment: Audience

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233. Resisting the Nation in Border Regions: Africa and Ahona Panda, University of Chicago South America in the 20th Century Ritika Prasad, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Lucie Ryzova, Birmingham University Chair: Angeles Picone, Boston College Kathryn Schwartz, University of Massachusetts Amherst Papers: “We Are Regarded as Xhosas When We Are Zulus”: Land, Corinna Zeltsman, Georgia Southern University Ethnicity, and Bantustan Citizenship Ashley Parcells, Jacksonville University 237. Reversing the Decline: Successful Strategies for Resisting Incorporation: Conflicts in mazonianA Borderlands in Attracting More Undergraduates to the History Major the 1930s Chair: Scott Muir, National Humanities Alliance Sarah Sarzynski, Claremont McKenna College Panel: Michelle Brattain, Georgia State University “State-Full” or “Stateless”? Cross-Border Subjects and Citizens in Jason Eric Pierce, Angelo State University West Africa, 1945–80 Brett Rushforth, University of Oregon David Newman Glovsky, Michigan State University “Chileans Deserve Better Treatment”: Targeted Violence in 238. Revisiting Spanish American Independence 200 Years Argentine Patagonia, 1900–40 Later Angeles Picone, Boston College Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Comment: Cynthia Radding, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chair: Scott B. Eastman, Creighton University 234. Rethinking Belonging and Citizenship: Migration and Papers: Two Libertadores Meet in Guayaquil Natalia Sobrevilla Perea, University of Kent Deportation in the Atlantic World Sibling Rivalries: Meetings (and Partings) of the Mind between Chair: Andrea Geiger, Simon Fraser University Simón and María Antonia Bolívar Papers: Mary Wollstonecraft and Agathe Orosmane: Race and Women’s Sarah C. Chambers, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Deployment of Citizenship and American Identity in the New World Meets the Old World: The Grafton Street Symposium Revolutionary Atlantic of 1810 John McNelis O’Keefe, Ohio University Chillicothe Karen Racine, University of Guelph Disabling Legislation, Enabling Citizens: American Jews and the Latin American Independence Seen from Madrid Public Charge Provision in US Immigration Policy Gregorio J. Alonso, University of Leeds Hannah Greene, New York University Comment: Scott B. Eastman, Creighton University Centering Women in the Trelawny Maroons’ Migrations to and Sierra Leone Shavagne Scott, New York University 239. Robin D. G. Kelley’s Freedom Dreams: The Life and Impact of an Influential Text 235. Rethinking Foucault: Prisoner Resistance/Prisoner Chair: Monique Bedasse, Washington University in St. Louis Activism and the Contours of the Carceral State Panel: Joshua Bruce Guild, Princeton University Chair: Natalie J. J. Ring, University of Texas at Dallas Robin D. G. Kelley, University of California, Los Angeles Barbara Ransby, University of Illinois at Chicago Papers: “Twice Escaped and Twice Recaptured”: Strategies of Prisoner Robert Trent Vinson, College of William and Mary Resistance in Post-Civil War Penitentiaries Henry Kamerling, Seattle University 240. Roots and Branches of Liberation Theology: “Forgotten Men”: Prisoner Identities in 1950s Chicago New Research on Religion and Politics in Late Melanie Diane Newport, University of Connecticut at 20th-Century Mexico Hartford Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Subjugated Knowledge and the Prison Archive Dan Berger, University of Washington Bothell Chair: Julia G. Young, Catholic University of America Papers: Miguel Darío Miranda and the Paradox of Mexican Catholicism, 236. Rethinking the Politics and Practices of Print in 1956–77 Madeleine C. Olson, University of Texas at Austin Comparative Colonial Perspective The “Nazas-Aguanaval” Group: A Post-Vatican II Experience of This seminar session will include the following participants, who will pre- Diocesan Priest Political Self-Organization and Involvement in circulate documents that will form the basis of the discussion. Social Justice Struggles in Torreón, Coahuila, 1969–77 Facilitators: Ritika Prasad, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Jorge Ivan Puma Crespo, University of Notre Dame Corinna Zeltsman, Georgia Southern University Making Liberation Theology Indigenous: The Seminario Regional Participants: Hwisang Cho, Emory University Del Sureste and Mexico’s Sierra Negra, 1969–90 Jeremy Dell, University of Edinburgh Eben Levey, University of Maryland, College Park Gabriela Goldin, Duke University 2021 CEBs “As a Trampoline”: Base Communities and Popular Political Hansun Hsiung, University of Durham Cultures during the 1980s in Guadalajara, Mexico Philip Janzen, University of Florida Brad H. Wright, Colorado Mesa University Riley Linebaugh, Justus-Liebig-Universität Michael Ng, University of Hong Kong Comment: Julia G. Young, Catholic University of America

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241. Roundtable: The Contours of Inter-American History, A Trace of Law: State Building and the Criminalization of 1959–76: Revolution, Reform, Rebellion, and Buggery in Jamaica Repression Tracy Robinson, University of the West Indies at Mona Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History The Right to My Daughter: African Women, French Men, and Custody of Métis Children in 20th-Century French Colonial Africa Chair: William O. Walker III, University of Toronto Rachel Jean-Baptiste, University of California, Davis Panel: Thomas C. Field, Embry-Riddle College of Security and Mercenary Breastfeeding: Wetnursing as Intimate Domestic Labor Intelligence in Italian East Africa Alan L. McPherson, Temple University Diana Garvin, University of Oregon Miriam Elizabeth Villanueva, Phillips Academy Comment: Chelsea Angela Schields, University of California, Irvine William O. Walker III, University of Toronto

242. Sacred and Secular: The Global Connections of 246. Sexuality and Slavery: Reclaiming Intimate Histories in Religion and Capitalism in the 19th-Century City the Americas Chair: Michele L. Louro, Salem State University Joint session with the African American Intellectual History Society Papers: Missionary Engagements, Urbanization, and the Contradictions of Chair: Daina Ramey Berry, University of Texas at Austin Caste and Modernity in Colonial Changanacherry, South India, Panel: James T. Downs Jr., Connecticut College 1800–60 Thomas A. Foster, Vineeth Mathoor, NSS Hindu College, Changanacherry Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers, University of California, Berkeley The Temple of Americanism: Executives, Business, and Protestant Bianca Premo, Florida International University Christianity in Colorado Springs, Colorado, 1871–1909 Gregory J. Atkins, Fort Hays State University 247. Slavery and Space: Interdisciplinary and International Trade in Scholarship: The Use of Muslim Student Labor in the Perspectives Building of Religious Cities in the 19th-Century Senegal Chair: Jared Ross Hardesty, Western Washington University Fredrick Hardyway, Washington State University Vancouver Panel: James Delle, Millersville University Comment: Audience Guadalupe Garcia, Tulane University Erin Marie Holmes, University of Missouri 243. Settler Colonialism and American Religion Dienke Hondius, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Andrea Catharina Mosterman, University of New Orleans Chair: Farina King, Northeastern State University Panel: Lisa Barnett, Phillips Theological Seminary 248. New Directions and Perspectives on African Military Dwain Conrad Coleman, University of Iowa History, Part 3: Slavery, Warfare, and African Soldiers Tiffany Hale, Barnard College, Columbia University in the 19th-Century Atlantic World Tisa J. Wenger, Yale University Chair: Maria Alessandra Bollettino, Framingham State University Comment: Farina King, Northeastern State University Papers: Daaga: West African Soldiers and a West India Regiment Mutiny in Trinidad 244. Settler Surveillance, Indigenous Survivance: 20th-Century Kyle Prochnow, York University Assimilation Policy in the United States and Canada Warfare versus Rebellion: A Necessary Discussion to Have Discussants: Building Citizens: Housing Policy and Adult Education on the Manuel Barcia, University of Leeds Crow Reservation Rebecca S. Wingo, University of Cincinnati “A Favourable Destination for Them”? Enlistment as “Liberation” in the Age of Abolition Transborder Knowledge Mobility and Federal Indigenous Maeve Ryan, King’s College London Urbanization Programs in Canada and the US: Notes on the This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 100, 172, 264, 284, 1963 BIA-IAB Summit David Hugill, Carleton University and 295. “Jails They All Know Me”: Settler Surveillance and Incarceration in Urban Indian Country 249. Small States/Big History: How Small Stories Reframe Douglas K. Miller, Oklahoma State University the Big Narrative Chair: Emily Greble, Vanderbilt University 245. Sexuality and Colonialism: New Directions in the Study Panel: Theodora Dragostinova, Ohio State University of Intimacy, Empire, and Racialized Power Marixa Lasso, Panama Ministry of Culture Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Andrea Orzoff, New Mexico State University Dominique K. Reill, University of Miami Chair: Chelsea Angela Schields, University of California, Irvine Comment: Pamela L. Ballinger, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Papers: Single Women and Spiritual Capital: Sexuality and Devotion in Colonial Guatemala Brianna N. Leavitt-Alcantara, University of Cincinnati

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250. Socialist China’s Social Interventionism: The Lived 253. Students, Documents, and Data in the Digital Age: Experience of Mass Politics and Mass Warfare in the Lessons from the Classroom and the Future of the People’s Republic from the 1930s to the 1980s Historical Record Project Chair: James Lin, University of Washington, Seattle Chair: John Randolph, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Papers: The Children Who Never Cry: Wartime Childhood in Communist Papers: Consuming and Creating: Teaching Data Literacy in the Context North China, 1938–45 of the Digital History Classroom Kyle Ellison David, University of California, Irvine Sharon Leon, Michigan State University Jennifer Andrella, Michigan State University New Children for New China: Stabilization and Control in Tianjin, 1949–53 From Campus to K–12: Adapting the “History Harvest” Model to Melissa A. Brzycki, Monmouth University Public Schools Patrick D. Jones, University of Nebraska, Lincoln “Self-Salvation through Labor”: Investigating Social Welfare Aaron Johnson, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Production in Sichuan during the Great Leap Forward Grant Scribner, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Jinghong Zhang, University of California, Santa Cruz Publishing Digital History: Integrating Sourcelab into the Experiencing the Cold War at Shanghai’s Secret Military Industrial Classroom Complex Saniya Lee Ghanoui, University of Illinois Covell Meyskens, Naval Postgraduate School Beth Ann Williams, University of Illinois Comment: Audience Digital Public History’s Contending Stakeholders: Connecting Communities, Learners, and Academic Institutions through 251. Special Powers and Secret Knowledge: New Directions History Harvest in Spanish Inquisition Studies Kathryn J. Oberdeck, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Nathan Tye, University of Nebraska, Kearney Chair: Gretchen Starr-LeBeau, Principia College Comment: Audience Papers: Conspiracy of in Cartagena de , 1634–36: African-Descendant Women, Prison Spaces, and Torture 254. Synthesis without Recentering: Organizing Concepts Ana Maria Diaz Burgos, Oberlin College for the History of American Religion Repurposing the Powers of the Holy Sepulcher Joint session with the American Society of Church History Karen Melvin, Bates College Chair: Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania Irreverence, Inquisition, and the History of Ideas in the 18th- Century Iberian Atlantic Papers: Religion and Race in American History Katrina Olds, University of San Francisco Kathryn Gin Lum, Stanford University Trolling the Inquisition: On the Special Powers of Anonymity Transpacific Religious istoryH Sylvia Sellers-García, Boston College Helen Kim, Emory University Comment: Gretchen Starr-LeBeau, Principia College The Marketplace and American Religion Daniel Vaca, Brown University 252. Stuck in the Middle with You: Counter-Narratives of Finding Ecologies of Religion in the 1926 Census of Religious Bodies the AIDS Epidemic in the US “Flyover” States Lincoln Mullen, George Mason University John G. Turner, George Mason University Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Comment: Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania Transgender History Chair: Clayton C. Howard, Ohio State University 255. Tackling the PhD Disconnect: Partnerships with Papers: Drugs, Nuns, and Medical Schools: The Heartland AIDS Response Community Colleges as Ways to Address Gaps between Katie P. Batza, University of Kansas Doctoral Training and History Careers The Great Gay Migration: AIDS “Homecoming” Narratives and Chair: Rachel Arteaga, Simpson Center for the Humanities, Middle America’s Fantasies of Racial Reconciliation University of Washington René Esparza, Washington University in St. Louis Panel: Julian Barr, University of Washington, Seattle “AIDS in Iowa? Heck No!” AIDS Activism, Emotion, and Rurality Jaime Cardenas Jr., Seattle Central College Korbin Painter, University of Iowa Purnima Dhavan, University of Washington, Seattle Counter Histories, Intimate Pasts: Looking for the Future of HIV Adrian Kane, University of Washington, Seattle in St. Louis Theodore Kerr, writer 2021

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256. Taking Forgotten Latina/o/x History to the Public Alice O’Connor, University of California, Santa Barbara Marian E. Schlotterbeck, University of California, Davis Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Andrew C. McKevitt, Louisiana Tech University Chair: Eladio Bobadilla, University of Kentucky Papers: Civil Rights in Black and Brown and Latino/a History 260. Teaching the Medieval as Mediterranean: Reorienting in North Texas the Metanarrative Max Krochmal, Texas Christian University Joint session with the Medieval Academy of America Katherine Elizabeth Bynum, Texas Christian University Chair: Kenneth Baxter Wolf, Pomona College Digital History and Chicana/o Social Practice as Public History Tools Joel Zapata, Oregon State University Panel: Fred Astren, San Francisco State University Thomas E. Burman, Medieval Institute, University of Hometown Ethnography as Activist History: Refusing Disciplinary Notre Dame Expectations to Tell Stories That Matter to Communities Brian A. Catlos, University of Colorado Boulder and University Aimee Villarreal, Our Lady of the Lake University of California, Santa Cruz Forgotten Frontera: Latina/o Histories and the Center for the Study Claire Gilbert, Saint Louis University of the American West Mayte T. Green-Mercado, Rutgers University-Newark Alex Hunt, West Texas A&M University Mark D. Meyerson, University of Toronto Tim Bowman, West Texas A&M University Comment: Natalie Mendoza, University of Colorado Boulder 261. History of Information, Part 1: Technologies of Information 257. Teaching in the Post-Millennial–Gen Z Era: New and Chair: Ann M. Blair, Harvard University Innovative Approaches Papers: Thinking inside the Blocks: Writing for the Xylographic Page in Chair: Joe P. Dunn, Converse College Early Modern China Bruce Rusk, University of British Columbia Papers: The Politics of Evil: Political Violence in a Film Course Joe P. Dunn, Converse College Shattering the Lightning: Weather Bells, Confessional Space, and the Atmospherics of Demonology in Post- Germany “Protect the Past, Save the Future”: NBC’s Timeless and the Classroom Alexander Fisher, University of British Columbia Angela Esco Elder, Converse College Seeing Like an Early Modern European State: Lists and Chaos “Revolutionizing” the First-Year Seminar Vera Keller, University of Oregon Elizabeth Bouldin, Florida Gulf Coast University There Is No Optimum: Empathy, Games, and Political Economy Playing to Their Strengths: Teaching Underserved Students about in Natural and Artificial Intelligence the Civil War Era Blaise Agüera y Arcas, Google Laura Mammina, University of Houston-Victoria Comment: Audience Social Media in the Classroom Laura June Davis, Southern Utah University This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 269 and 294. Comment: Audience 262. Technology and Social History in Modern Latin America 258. Teaching Premodern Women and Gender Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Chairs: Eve E. Buckley, University of Delaware Chair: Lucy Christine Barnhouse, Wartburg College Jose Ragas, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Papers: Medieval Women, Modern Problems: Teaching Premodern Women Panel: Andra Brosy Chastain, Washington State University Vancouver to First-Generation College Students at a Hispanic-Serving Willie L. Hiatt, Long Island University Post Institution Diana Jeaneth Montano, Washington University in St. Louis Esther Liberman Cuenca, University of Houston-Victoria Jose Ragas, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile What She Said: Recovering Early Modern Women’s Experiences Comment: Eve E. Buckley, University of Delaware through Court Records Jennifer Lynn McNabb, University of Northern Iowa 263. Temporary Unions in the Early Modern World Premodern Pedagogies: Queer Medieval Materiality Hilary Rhodes, independent scholar Chair: Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee Comment: Audience Panel: Allyson M. Poska, University of Mary Washington Eric Schluessel, George Washington University 259. “Teaching the History of Now”: Roundtable Discussion , University of Hawai’i Chair: Andrew J. Kirkendall, Texas A&M University Marcia A. Yonemoto, University of Colorado Boulder Panel: Kathleen K. Belew, University of Chicago Kathryn Cramer Brownell, Purdue University Renata Keller, University of Nevada at Reno

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264. New Directions and Perspectives on African Military 268. The Cold War, Technopolitics, and Disciplinarity: History, Part 4: The African Soldier: Military Men and Reexamining Cold War Humanism Their Experiences Chair: Matthew J. Connelly, Columbia University Chair: Daniel Hoffman, University of Washington, Seattle Papers: The Transhumanism of Nuclear Command and Control Papers: Décolonisation Guerre Révolutionnaire et Occultisme en Sonja Amadae, University of Helsinki Afrique Subsaharienne: Le Cas du Cameroun Thinking the Human System: Futures Studies as Radical Human Science Jacob Tatsitsa, University of Ottawa Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po Forsaken Soldiers? The Lesotho Liberation Army and Basotho Technologies of Freedom: A Brief Genealogy Society, 1974–2004 Nils Gilman, Berggruen Institute Patrick Whang, University of Cape Town Social Scientists in the Global South: Allies or Antagonists of Cold Lions of the Ogaden: African War and the Warrior Experience in War Technopolitics? the 1977–78 Ethio-Somali War Arvind Rajagopal, New York University Joseph Guido, Comment: Matthew J. Connelly, Columbia University Combat and Beyond: The Experience of West African Troops in World War II Asia Oliver Coates, Cambridge University 269. History of Information, Part 2: The Commoditization of Information Comment: Daniel Hoffman, University of Washington, Seattle Chair: Diana Lemberg, This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 100, 172, 248, 284, and 295. Papers: The “Letterocracy” and Political Information as a Commodity in the State Paul Marcus Dover, Kennesaw State University 265. The Antebellum Afterlives of African American Slavery News Agencies Chair: Ousmane K. Power-Greene, Clark University Heidi Tworek, University of British Columbia Papers: Incomplete Freedom: Marriage and Family Separation in Liberian Publicity, Patents, and Public Opinion: Selling Information in Colonization Interwar America Marie Elizabeth Stango, Idaho State University Richard R. John, Columbia University “Purchaser of My Body and Soul”: Fugitivity and Freedom in the Comment: Audience Antebellum United States Julia Wallace Bernier, University of North Alabama This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 261 and 294. The Last Slave in Pennsylvania, or Black Obituary Politics in a Northern “Free” State 270. The Crisis of Democracy Cory James Young, Georgetown University Chair: Janet Ward, University of Oklahoma Comment: Kristin O’Brassill-Kulfan, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Panel: Joseph Crespino, Emory University Jerry Dávila, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Jennifer Evans, Carleton University 266. The Assassination of Patrice Lumumba: Looking Back Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, University of California, Irvine after 60 Years Comment: Janet Ward, University of Oklahoma Chair: Carina E. Ray, Brandeis University Papers: Congolese Regimes and Lumumba’s Ethics of Care 271. The Desert in World History: A Nexus of Intercultural Emery Kalema, Stellenbosch University Contact and Exchange Looking for Lumumba Street Joint session with the World History Association Penny M. Von Eschen, University of Virginia Chair: Matthew T. Herbst, University of California, San Diego Praying to Lumumba Nicole Eggers, University of Tennessee at Knoxville Papers: The Desert in World History: Encounters and Issues Matthew T. Herbst, University of California, San Diego The Children of Lumumba: A Political Generation in the Congo and the Writing of Postcolonial African History The Sonoran Desert as a Crossroads of Empires Pedro Monaville, NYU Abu Dhabi Andrae Marak, Governors State University Laura Tuennerman, California University of Pennsylvania Comment: Audience A Great Northern Revolt: Deserts as Politically Dissident Space in Colonial New Spain 267. The Challenges of Climate History: A Roundtable Nicholas Myers, Cornell University Discussion Comment: Ghislaine E. Lydon, University of California, Los Angeles Chair: John R. McNeill, Georgetown University 2021 Panel: Deborah Rachel Coen, Yale University Bathsheba Demuth, Brown University Ruth Morgan, Australian National University Javier Puente, Smith College

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272. The Edges of Accumulation: Rethinking Transpacific African Economic History Histories of Capitalism and Anti-Capitalism in the Mariana P. Candido, University of Notre Dame 20th Century Isis, a Journal of the History of Science Society Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Alexandra Hui, Mississippi State University Chair: Bradley Camp Davis, Eastern Connecticut State University Comment: Audience Papers: Networks of Diffusion: Spread of Chinese Restaurants across the United States, 1924–43 276. The Future of World Heritage and Preservation in the Heather Ruth Lee, NYU Shanghai United States: Why It Matters to Us All The Will to Possess: Fixing Philippine Slums and Filipino Chair: Glenn T. Eskew, Georgia State University Indigency across Colonies Panel: Sarah Creachbaum, National Park Service, Olympic National Park Allan Lumba, Virginia Tech Glenn T. Eskew, Georgia State University Critiquing Capitalism at an Imperial Crossroads: Migrant Writing Jonathan Jarvis, Institute for Parks, People, and Diversity, on Transpacific Movements University of California, Berkeley Hiroaki Matsusaka, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi Alan , National Parks Conservation Association “If Two Are Dead, Many Will Take Their Place”: The Committee for Justice for Domingo and Viernes (CJDV) and Anti-Imperialist 277. Colonial Blackness and Mexican Modernity: Solidarity during the Radical 1980s Rethinking Afro-Mexican History and the African Michael A. Schulze-Oechtering, Western Washington University Diaspora, Part 2: The and Geographies of Comment: Audience Colonial and Postrevolutionary Afro-Mexico Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History 273. The Ethics of Teaching “the Rest” in Global Chair: Ben Vinson III, Case Western Reserve University Environmental History Papers: Beyond Afro-Mexico: Free Black Mobility in the 17th-Century Chair: Nathaniel Millett, Saint Louis University Gulf-Caribbean Papers: Sultana’s Dream: Teaching Global Histories of Envirotech through J. M. H. Clark, University of Kentucky Feminist Utopian Satire Colonial Masculinity and Modern Femininity: Afro-Mexican Andrew Amstutz, University of Arkansas at Little Rock Authenticity in the 20th Century Across the World with Seventeen Foods: Nutrition, Markets, and Theodore Cohen, Lindenwood University Food Insecurity from the Little Ice Age to Global Warming Comment: Nicole von Germeten, Oregon State University Purnima Dhavan, University of Washington, Seattle This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 162. Climate History: A Thematic Approach to Teaching Global Environmental History 278. The Geopolitics of Transnationalism: The South Seas, Joseph Giacomelli, NYU Shanghai Southern Periphery, and Queer Sinophone Comment: Nathaniel Millett, Saint Louis University Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History 274. The Foreign Relations Series at 160: Considering the Chair: Leo Shin, University of British Columbia Past, Planning the Future Papers: Nanyang Was Not Southeast Asia Joint session with the National Council on Public History, the Shelly Chan, University of California, Santa Cruz Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, and the Society for History in the Federal Government “Refugees” or “Undesirables” in the Southern Periphery: The Fate of Chinese Escapees in the 1950s and 1960s Chair: Kristin L. Ahlberg, United States Department of State Angelina Chin, Pomona College Panel: Adam M. Howard, United States Department of State Creolizing Transgender in the Sinophone Pacific Katherine A. S. Sibley, Saint Joseph’s University Howard Hsueh-Hao Chiang, University of California, Davis Thomas W. Zeiler, University of Colorado Boulder Comment: Leo Shin, University of British Columbia 275. The Future of Scholarly Journals Chair: Barbara Keys, Durham University 279. The Global Economy and Livestock Frontiers in the Americas Panel: Diplomatic History Anne L. Foster, Indiana State University Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Journal of Global History and the Sixteenth Century Journal Chair: Robert W. Wilcox, Northern Kentucky University Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Papers: The Destruction of the Frontier: Cattle Ranching in the Chaco, Hispanic American Historical Review Destruction of the Chaco Indians, and the Nitrate Boom on the Zachary Morgan, Penn State University Pacific Coast, 1860–1930 Erick Detlef Langer, Georgetown University Early Modern Women Allyson M. Poska, University of Mary Washington Ecology and Indigenous Ranching in Pampas-Patagonia, 1885–1930 Robert Christensen, Georgetown University

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Sheep Ranching and the Politics of Wildlife Conservation in Evangelicalism and Intimate Same Sex Partnerships between Patagonia, 1900–2010s American Women Medical Missionaries, 1890s to 1920s John Soluri, Carnegie Mellon University Connie A. Shemo, State University of New York at Plattsburgh No Borders for Beef: The Onset of the Modern Cattle Trade in Building Women’s Reform: The Evolution of Japanese Christian North America, 1880–1914 Aid Societies on the West Coast, 1900–20 Maria-Aparecida Lopes, California State University, Fresno Sarah Griffith, Queens niversityU of Charlotte In Pursuit of Christian Cosmopolitanism: American 280. The Hour of Unbelief in 20th-Century Mexico Congregational Missionary Daughter’s Settlement Work in Japan and Hawaii in the Interwar and Wartime Years Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Noriko Ishii, Chair: Robert G. Weis, University of Northern Colorado Comment: Marc Simon Rodriguez, Portland State University Papers: The Patriarchs of Anticlericalism in Revolutionary Mexico Jurgen Buchenau, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 284. New Directions and Perspectives on African Military Gregory Crider, Winthrop University History, Part 5: The Journal of African Military To Defanaticize and Dealcoholize the Population: The Interrelated History: New Directions and Perspectives on African Anti-clerical and Anti-alcohol Campaigns Military History Gretchen Kristine Pierce, Shippensburg University Chair: Roy Doron, Winston-Salem State University Collective Marriage and the Quiet Secularization of Marriage and Mothers Panel: Manuel Barcia, University of Leeds Jason H. Dormady, Central Washington University Michelle Moyd, Indiana University Timothy Stapleton, University of Calgary Comment: Robert G. Weis, University of Northern Colorado Charles Thomas, Air Command and Staff College This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 100, 172, 248, 264, 281. The Information Economy: What Was It? and 295. Chair: Alex Sayf Cummings, Georgia State University Panel: Alex Sayf Cummings, Georgia State University 285. The Legal Legacies of Refuge: Comparing African and Margaret Pugh O’Mara, University of Washington, Seattle European Asylum Practices and Outcomes Erica Robles-Anderson, New York University Joel Suarez, City University of New York School of Labor and Chair: Abbass Braham, University of Arizona Urban Studies Papers: Refugees and the Development of State Structures in Hesse-Kassel Patrick Vitale, Eastern Connecticut State University and Prussia, 1604–1750 Maximilian Miguel Scholz, Florida State University 282. The Internal Dynamics of Capitalist Development in Interwar Refugee Crises and the Policing of Migration the Early Republican United States David Petruccelli, Dartmouth College Joint session with the Economic History Association Sovereignty in Question: Tanzanian Decolonization and UNHCR Chair: Naomi R. Lamoreaux, Yale University Refugee Aid Jill Rosenthal, Hunter College, City University of New York Papers: Building the Domestic Giant: The Revolutionary Origins of the American Domestic Economy Historicizing Asylum Claiming in Sierra Leone Secret Societies Scott Miller, Yale University Benjamin N. Lawrance, University of Arizona Paterson: The Economic History and Political Ecology of the First Comment: Audience Mill Town in the Early American Republic Brian Murphy, Rutgers University-Newark 286. The Materiality of Migration A Tale of Two Industries: Textile and Manufacturing in Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History the Pre-Industrial Revolution United States Lindsay Schakenbach Regele, Miami University Chair: Lily Pearl Balloffet, University of California, Santa Cruz Comment: Joshua Rosenbloom, Iowa State University Panel: Zeynep Devrim Gürsel, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey David Gutman, Manhattanville College 283. The Intimate Sphere as Resistance to the “Social”: Catherine A. Nolan-Ferrell, University of Texas American Christian Women and an Alternative Vision at San Antonio of Democracy David A. Sartorius, University of Maryland, College Park Joint session with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Chair: Marc Simon Rodriguez, Portland State University Papers: Creating a Cooperative Community through Prayer and Activism: 2021 Ellen Gates Starr, Vida D. Scudder, Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch, and the Episcopal Laywomen’s Order Motoe Sasaki, Hosei University

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287. The Mid-20th-Century Rise of the Middle Class in 291. The Politics of Chicanx/Latinx Queer Community France, the UK, and the US Formations in the US, 1945–80 Chair: Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, Loyola University Chicago Chair: Shirley Yee, University of Washington, Seattle Papers: Inequality and the Making of France’s Fractured, Rebellious Papers: Sounding out the Familiar and Familial in Chicana Community Middle Class, 1945–75 Radio Herrick Chapman, New York University Monica De La Torre, Arizona State University Wealth and Income Inequality in the UK, 1951–75 The Women of Alianza and Postwar America Martin Chick, University of Edinburgh Lora Michelle Key, University of Arizona The Rise of the American Middle Class, 1929–68 Embodying Resistance, Enacting Care: Pachucas Offering a David L. Stebenne, Ohio State University Genealogy of Recognition Michelle Morado, University of Washington, Seattle Comment: Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, Loyola University Chicago Comment: Marisela R. Chávez, California State University, Dominguez Hills 288. The and Its Afterlives 292. The Public and the Historical Enterprise: What Do Chair: Joel Suarez, City University of New York School of Labor They Know? What Do They Do? and Urban Studies Chair: Carin Berkowitz, New Jersey Council for the Humanities Papers: Making a Neoliberal Machine: New Left Activists in Post-60s Chicago Panel: John R. Dichtl, American Association for State and Local Richard Anderson, Humanities Action Lab, Rutgers History University-Newark Peter J. Burkholder, Fairleigh Dickinson University, Florham Robert B. Townsend, American Academy of Arts and Sciences “There Is No Left Left”: The New Politics and the Democratic Party in the 1970s Comment: Carin Berkowitz, New Jersey Council for the Humanities Jacqueline Brandon, Princeton University “Keeping the Animals In”: Vietnam Veterans and the Politics of 293. The Shock of the Ordinary: Everyday Technologies in Mental Health in the Anti-Vietnam War Movement Latin America Clare Joanna Richfield, New York University Chair: Diana Jeaneth Montano, Washington University in St. Louis “Watch His Right Hand”: Punk Renderings of the New Left Papers: Encountering Guns: Technological Interactions and Indigenous in the 1980s Resistance during the Caste War Kristoffer Smemo, Washington University in St. Louis David Pretel, Pompeu Fabra University Comment: Joel Suarez, City University of New York School of Labor and Metering Power: Theft, Inventiveness, and Everyday Life in Urban Studies Mexico City, 1900–25 Diana Jeaneth Montano, Washington University in St. Louis 289. The Ontology of Open Access: The Historians’ Guide from Manuscript to Monograph to Reception Ethnography of Everyday Technology Use and Meaningful Work in Argentina’s Factories and Impact Yovanna Pineda, University of Central Florida Chair: Elizabeth A. S. Demers, University of Michigan Press Thinking with Broken Objects: Exploring Repair in Latin Panel: Beth Bouloukos, University of Amherst Press and Lever Press American Histories of Technology Elizabeth A. S. Demers, University of Michigan Press Fabian Prieto-Nanez, Virginia Tech Beth Fuget, University of Washington Press Comment: Audience Heather Staines, Knowledge Futures Group

290. The Pacific in the Gilded Age 294. History of Information, Part 3: The Social Life of Information Joint session with the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Chair: Paul Duguid, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Ryan Dearinger, Eastern Oregon University Papers: Medical Dissertations and Their Role in the Transmission of Information in Early Modern Europe Papers: Henry Adams and the Toxic Cocktail of American Empire Anja-Silvia Goeing, University of Zurich and Harvard University Angel de Jesus Cortes, Holy Cross College Cases and Casebooks Sartorial Conflict: Confrontations vero Race, Power, and Status Lauren Kassell, Cambridge University between Filipino and White American Women, 1899–1902 Genevieve Clutario, Wellesley College Keywords Daniel B. Rosenberg, University of Oregon Constituting Colonialism: The Lake Mohonk Conferences and US/ Pacific Empire Comment: Audience Oliver Charbonneau, University of Glasgow This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 261 and 269. Comment: Kristin L. Hoganson, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign

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295. New Directions and Perspectives on African Military Lost in Translation: The Republic of Vietnam, the Paris Peace History, Part 6: The Soldier in the Statehouse: Law and Talks, and the Chennault Affair Public Administration in African Military Regimes David Prentice, Oklahoma State University Chair: Samuel Fury Childs Daly, Duke University The US Consulate in Hanoi, 1954–55 Lori Maguire, University of Reims Papers: Becoming “Amin’s Soldiers”: Reckoning with Military Rule in Uganda The NLF and Hanoi’s Struggle for Foreign Hearts and Minds Katherine Bruce-Lockhart, University of Waterloo Pierre Asselin, San Diego State University Comment: Audience Under the Gun: The Military and the Rule of Law in Postcolonial Nigeria Chiemela Godwin Wambu, Abia State University 299. The “Problem” of Gendered Migration from Mexico to Governing the City in Shifts: Cosmopolitan Soldiers, Urbanism, the United States since the 1950s and the Governance of Militarized Kampala Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Benjamin Twagira, Agnes Scott College Chair: Ana E. Rosas, University of California, Irvine “The Madness of the Entire Nation”: Child Soldiers and War Crimes in the Second Sudanese Civil War Papers: Mujeres y Expulsados: Mexican State Responses to Gendered Benjamin Linzy, Marquette University Migration and Deportation in the 1970s Laura D. Gutierrez, University of the Pacific This is part of a multisession workshop. See also sessions 100, 172, 248, 264, and 284. Gendering Elite Mobility: Mexican Women Students on US College Campuses in the Mid-20th Century Rachel Grace Newman, Smith College 296. The State of Drug and Alcohol History Pedagogy: Teaching Challenges and Innovations “Gender Migration” and the Struggle for Immigrants’ Rights since the Reagan Era Joint session with the Alcohol and Drugs History Society Eladio Bobadilla, University of Kentucky Chair: Robert P. Stephens, Virginia Tech Comment: Audience Panel: James Bradford, Berklee College of Music Ken V. Faunce, Washington State University 300. Touchstone Texts 2021: The Historical Works We Are Lucas Richert, University of Wisconsin-Madison Aileen T. Teague, Brown University Reaching for Today Chair: David Greenberg, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 297. The Uses of the Law: Legal Practitioners and the Panel: Why We Can’t Wait, King Jr. Manipulations of the Legal System in Latin America Adam Paul Green, University of Chicago Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History To Be Determined David Greenberg, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Chair: Renzo R. Honores, Instituto Internacional de Derecho y The Best and the Brightest, David Halberstam Sociedad , Harvard University Papers: Maneuvering the Past: The Production of Legal Documents to Truth and Politics, Hannah Arendt Build Legitimacy Sophia Rosenfeld, University of Pennsylvania Judith Mansilla, Florida International University Comment: Audience The New Lawyers of Cuba: Social Transformation in Early 19th- Century Cuba and Its Impact on the Legal Profession 301. Toward a Comparative History of the Relationship Ricardo Pelegrin Taboada, Western Oregon University between Higher Education and the State Lawyers and the City: Legal Professionals in the Resistance against Chair: Charles Dorn, Bowdoin College Rio de Janeiro’s Early 20th-Century Urban Reform Papers: Pedro Cantisano, Kenyon College Stratifying Agriculture: State-Led Educational Expansion and Class Hierarchy in Modern Japan Using Law and History to Resist Land Dispossession: Jamyung Choi, Sungkyunkwan University A Case Study of Colonial Indigenous Resguardos in Riosucio Youth, Social Mobility, and Military Service in the United States (Caldas, Colombia) Gloria Patricia Lopera Mesa, Florida International University from World War I to World War II Masako Hattori, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Comment: Renzo R. Honores, Instituto Internacional de Derecho and Kyoto University y Sociedad The Mission of National Development: US Public Diplomacy and Educational Modernization in Franco’s Spain 298. The Vietnam War: A Diplomatic Contest Óscar J. Martín-García, Complutense University of Madrid Chair: Thomas Alan Schwartz, Vanderbilt University Comment: Charles Dorn, Bowdoin College

Papers: Prime Minister Olof Palme, Sweden, and the Vietnam War: A 2021 Diplomatic History Lubna Z. Qureshi, independent historian

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302. Toward a Global History of Black Reconstruction 305. Transnational Feminism, Globalization, and the Politics Chair: Gregory Downs, University of California, Davis of Representation Papers: “There Will be a Labor of Reconstruction There Also”: Cuban Chair: Debjani Bhattacharyya, Drexel University Émigrés’ Views of US Reconstruction Papers: Gender Violence and Law in Colonial Burma James Murray Shinn Jr., Yale University Rajashree Mazumder, Union College American Reconstruction and the Brazilian Free Womb Law, South-South Encounters of Indian Women in a Colonial Setting: 1861–71 Investigating International Feminism from an Asian Centre Alain El Youssef, Universidade de São Paulo Shobna Nijhawan, York University “More Than Freedom to Fear”: Cuban Slaveowners in the Shadow The Rajah, the Rapist, and the Resident: Sex and Governance in of US Reconstruction, 1866–73 Colonial Rajputana Samantha Leigh Payne, Harvard University Niyati Shenoy, Columbia University Fashioning a New Democracy and Empire: Reconstruction of the Feminist Organizing in Postwar Transnational Networks of American Union in the Shadow of Britain, 1865–85 Medical Aid in India Brooks Swett, Columbia University Archana Venkatesh, Ohio State University Comment: Gregory Downs, University of California, Davis Comment: Audience

303. Tractors, Oil, Gated Developments, and Coca-Cola: 306. Transnational Sacco and Vanzetti, Part 1: New Perspectives on Spreading the American Dream Transnational Memorialization: A Discussion of How Chair: Jason Michael Colby, University of Victoria the Memory of Sacco and Vanzetti Has Been Used Over the Last Century Papers: Corporate Ambassadors: The Diplomacy of American Business in Revolutionary Russia Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Sarah Snyder, American University Chairs: Jon Bekken, Albright College Toward a Free Oil Market: International and Independent Andrew Douglas Hoyt, Palo Verde College Oil Companies and the Shape of the Global Energy Economy, Panel: Michele Fazio, University of North Carolina, Pembroke 1948–80 Nathan Jun, Midwestern State University Gregory Ralph Brew, Southern Methodist University Adam Quinn, University of Oregon Transnational Peripheries: Remaking Suburbs in the US and Mary Anne Trasciatti, Hofstra University Latin America This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 307. Paige Glotzer, University of Wisconsin-Madison US Food and Beverage Corporations and Changes in the Political, 307. Transnational Sacco and Vanzetti, Part 2: Transnational Economic, and Social Landscape of China, 1970–90s Mobilization: A Discussion of the Sacco and Vanzetti Charles Richard Kraus, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Defense Campaign, 1920–27 Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Comment: Audience Chairs: Marcella Bencivenni, Hostos Community College, City University of New York 304. Transitions Without Transformation: Social Rights Andrew Douglas Hoyt, Palo Verde College and Political Struggles Across Authoritarian and Democratic Regimes Panel: Pietro Di Paola, University of Lincoln Steven J. Hirsch, Washington University in St. Louis Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Andrew H. Lee, New York University Chair: Barbara Weinstein, New York University Kenyon W. Zimmer, University of Texas at Arlington Papers: Popular Politics and the Breakdown of Authoritarian Rule in This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 306. Greater Buenos Aires Jennifer Adair, Fairfield University 308. Transpacific History and the American South The Opposition Within: Political Violence and Chair: Guy Emerson Mount, Auburn University Transition Politics in Chile Papers: Freedom, Libertad, Kalayaan: Transpacific Narratives Alison J. Bruey, University of North Florida of Freedom in Filipino Louisiana “Let’s Make History Yet Again”: Education, Democracy, and Michael Salgarolo, New York University Student Mobilization across Dictatorial and Democratic Regimes Planting an Empire: Race and Japanese Rice Farmers in the Early in Brazil, 1961–2013 20th-Century Gulf South Colin M. Snider, University of Texas at Tyler Mishio Yamanaka, Doshisha University Compulsory Retirement: Incomplete Transitions for Amnestied The Philippines, Chicago, or Outer Space: Extravagant Migrations Soldiers after Democratization in Brazil, 1978–85 of the Black Speculative Imagination Marília Corrêa, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Vince Schleitwiler, University of Washington, Seattle Comment: Barbara Weinstein, New York University

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Cultivating a Homeland Duality: Vietnamese Americans and 312. US Immigration and Labor Policy During the Long Their Home Gardens in Texas Age of Restriction: Unimagined Complications and Roy Francis Vu, Dallas College, North Lake Campus Responses at Borders and in Fields Comment: Guy Emerson Mount, Auburn University Joint session with the Immigration and Ethnic History Society

309. Undoing the Erasure: Community Approaches at Chair: Eric V. Meeks, Northern Arizona University Remembering and Learning from the Japanese American Papers: “The Indians Knew Little of International Boundaries, and Cared Exclusion Less”: Interior Salish People, Status, and Labor in the Northwest Borderlands Chair: Caitlin Oiye Coon, Densho Patrick Lozar, University of Victoria Panel: Caitlin Oiye Coon, Densho Making and Unmaking Labor: Border Residents and US Clarence Moriwaki, Bainbridge Island Japanese American Immigration Policy Exclusion Memorial Association Erik Bernardino, University of California, Santa Cruz Mia Russell, Friends of Minidoka Linda Tamura, Willamette University Unexpected Relationships: The Agro-Ecology of Im/Migrant Labor Hanako Wakatsuki, National Park Service in the Northern Colorado Sugar Beet Fields of the 1920s and 1930s Michael Weeks, Utah Valley University 310. Unsexy Histories of Sexuality: New Perspectives on Children, Youth, and Intergenerational Sex INS Depictions of Mexican Detainees versus Realities of Confinement and Resistance in South Texas during Operation Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Wetback, 1942–64 Transgender History Jennifer Cullison, University of Nevada at Reno Chair: Amanda H. Littauer, Northern Illinois University Comment: Eric V. Meeks, Northern Arizona University Papers: The Unsexy History of Intergenerational Sex Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria 313. Utopia or Corporate Dominion? Interpreting the “She Is Not Pretty and He Is Forty-Five Years Old”: Contradictory Historical Narratives of Resource The Problem of Age in Pastoral Sex Scandals of the Gilded Age Extraction Company Towns in the Western Americas and Progressive Era Suzanna Krivulskaya, California State University, Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association San Marcos Chair: Alison J. Kanosky, California State University, Fullerton Innocent Children and Dirty Old Men: Regulating the Adult Papers: Incomplete Remains: Interpreting Chile’s UNESCO Mining Towns Theater in the 1970s Sarah Rovang, independent scholar Erin Barry, Washington University in St. Louis The Recreation of Time: Sports, Leisure, and Historical Narratives Comment: Audience of Daily Life in a Chilean Mining Town Cory Fischer-Hoffman, Lafayette College 311. Urban Inequality and Political Struggle: Socialism, “From the Pencil of a Grade-School Girl”: The Valsetz Star, Capitalism, and Global Cities in Transition Dorthy Anne Hobson, and Life in a Northwest Logging Camp, Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association 1930–40 Organized with the Global Urban History Project Steven Beda, University of Oregon Chair: Emilio de Antuñano, Trinity University 314. Vanguards of Democracy: Black Protestants and the Papers: Housing Inequality in Socialist China: State Building Projects and Residual Neighborhoods Fight for Freedom in the Atlantic World Kristin Stapleton, State University of New York, Joint session with the American Society of Church History University at Buffalo Chair: Elisabeth Engel, German Historical Institute Postwar Reconstruction and the Friendship of Peoples: Papers: Exporting Freedom, Seeking Equality: Joseph Jackson Fuller and Soviet Workers in Warsaw in the 1950s Katherine Zubovich, State University of New York, the Jamaican Baptist Mission to West Africa, 1840s–80s Matt J. Z. Harper, Mercer University University at Buffalo The Other Black Republic: African American Migrants and Tenant Activism, Planning Ideologies, and the Transformation of Missionaries in the Postcolonial Housing, Lagos, 1955–75 Christina Cecelia Davidson, Harvard University Halimat Somotan, Columbia University African American YMCA Leaders in Pursuit of Democracy Unequal Infrastructure: Building the Santiago Metro under through the Missions Movement Democracy and Dictatorship Kimberly Hill, University of Texas at Dallas Andra Brosy Chastain, Washington State University Vancouver Comment: Elisabeth Engel, German Historical Institute Comment: Audience 2021

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315. Masculinity as Historical Subject and Theory, Part 2: Laura Davulis, Johns Hopkins University Press Visibility and Virility: Masculinity in Print and Image Gisela C. Fosado, Len Husband, University of Toronto Press Chair: Miriam Eve Mora, Center for Jewish History Papers: Through Stone and Poem: Masculinity and the State in Early 320. When Social Movements Meet Medicine: Battles Over Modern China Gender, Sexuality, and Politics Daniel Knorr, University of Chicago Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Precarious Masculinity? Male Hysteria and Male Identity in Late Transgender History 19th-Century France Daniela S. Barberis, North Central College Chair: Kacey Calahane, University of California, Irvine American Masculinities and Modern Mathematics, 1890–1945 Papers: To Prevent “These Mothers’ Aborticide”: Phyllis Schlafly, Eagle Ellen Abrams, Cornell University Forum Coalitions, and Pro-Life/Anti-Vax Politics Kacey Calahane, University of California, Irvine Making Photography a Medium of Masculinity, 1839–1900 Nicole Hudgins, University of Baltimore “A Deadly Disease That Can Kill the World”: Lorraine Day, MD, and the Politics of AIDS Care Comment: Miriam Eve Mora, Center for Jewish History Andrea Milne, Case Western Reserve University This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 171. “A Kind of Feeling of Freedom”: Women and Addiction Rehabilitation Radicalism in Postwar California 316. Visual Media in Social Protest and Solidarity Jordan Lee Mylet, University of California, San Diego Comment: Audience Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Camilo Trumper, State University of New York, University at Buffalo 321. Where Have All the Liberals Gone? The Fight for the Papers: Punishing Havana: Urban Streets in Cinema, Politics, and Democratic Party in the Age of Conservatism Planning, 1959–75 Chair: Lily Geismer, Claremont McKenna College Ernesto B. Capello, Macalester College Papers: “Turn Your Eyes Homeward President Carter”: Human Rights and South–South Solidarity in the Archives: Visual History and the Domestic Liberal Reform Legacy of the Organization for Solidarity with the Peoples of Vanessa Walker, Amherst College Africa, Asia, and Latin America Jessica Stites Mor, University of British Columbia Friends or Enemies? Democrats and the Central America Solidarity Movement of the 1980s “In Sight of Heaven and on the Verge of Hell”: Photography, Brian Mueller, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Solidarity, and Undocumented Migration in 1980s Miami Erica Toffoli, University of Toronto Comment: Lily Geismer, Claremont McKenna College Channeling Victor Jara: 1970s Iconography in the 2019 Chilean Protest Movement 322. Why Did Medieval Europe Expel Its Jews? Eric S. Zolov, State University of New York at Stony Brook Joint session with the Central European History Society, the Medieval Comment: Audience Academy of America, and the Society for French Historical Studies Chair: Robert C. Stacey, University of Washington, Seattle 317. Volunteerism and Rebuilding Europe Following the Papers: Doing unto Others: A Comparative Approach to Medieval World Wars Expulsions of Jews Rowan Dorin, Stanford University Chair: Amanda Nagel, US Army Command and General Staff College How Toleration Ended: The Political Processes of Expulsion in Panel: David Mills, US Army Command and General Staff College Medieval German Jewish Communities, 1000–1520 Tammy M. Proctor, Utah State University Kerice Doten-Snitker, Carlos III-Juan March Institute and Molly M. Wood, Wittenberg University Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Comment: Michael Neiberg, US Army War College Edward and the Eleanors: Royal Piety and the Expulsion of the Jews from England (1290) 318. The What and How of Teaching History, Part 2: What E. M. Rose, Foundation for Academic Research and Who Decides to Teach History Comment: Robert C. Stacey, University of Washington, Seattle Chairs: Thomas P. Adams, school board member Jerry Price, Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, 323. Women, Legal Activity, and Struggles for Justice in Washington State Latin America Nancy J. McTygue, University of California, Davis Joint session with the American Society for Legal History and the Conference on Latin American History This is part of a multisession workshop. See also session 136. Chair: Jane E. Mangan, Davidson College

319. What to Expect When You’re Working with an Editor Papers: Protecting Heirs: Black Mothers, Inheritance, and Intergenerational Mobility in Colonial Minas Gerais Chair: Susan Ferber, Mariana L. Dantas, Ohio University Panel: Cecelia A. Cancellaro, Cambridge University Press

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Contested Freedom: Enslaved Women and the Law in Argentina 328. World Languages in the Global South: Postwar and Chile, 1810–30 American, French, and Soviet Language Programs in Erika Denise Edwards, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Asia, Africa, and Latin America Remaking Men in Colonial Lima: Married Women and the Chair: Liora R. Halperin, University of Washington, Seattle Legal Crafting of Masculinity Alex Wisnoski III, University of North Georgia Papers: Waiting for Snow in Saigon: American Aid for English Teaching in South Vietnam Comment: Audience Diana Lemberg, Lingnan University

324. Women’s Activism in Historical Perspective: Labor, “The Latin of the Modern World”: The Alliance Française and the Postwar Fortunes of Global French Feminism, and Organizing in the European and Janet Horne, University of Virginia American 20th Century Cold War in the Classroom and the Teachers’ Lounge: Soviet Chair: Dorothy Sue Cobble, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Russian Language Instructors in Africa and Asia, 1950s–1980s Panel: Rosie Bermudez, University of California, Los Angeles Rachel Applebaum, Tufts University Britta Isabelle McEwen, Creighton University Comment: David C. Engerman, Yale University Mona L. Siegel, California State University, Sacramento Patricia A. Tilburg, Davidson College 329. World War I and Its Legacies in the Global History of the 20th Century 325. Work, Medicine, and the State: Forging Disability in the 20th-Century United States Chair: Kate Dannies, Miami University Ohio Joint session with the Disability History Association and the Labor Panel: Michael Adas, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey and Working Class History Association Jessica L. Adler, Florida International University James L. Gelvin, University of California, Los Angeles Chair: Ryan Lee Cartwright, University of California, Davis Eric J. Lohr, American University Papers: The Disability Politics of Work in the United States, 1930–45 Michael Roper, University of Essex Audra Jennings, Western Kentucky University Sarah D. Shields, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Family Practice: Cold War Medical Expansion, Antibiotics, and the Disability Trajectories of Latino Migrant Physicians, 1945–65 330. Writing and Administration: Maintaining an Active John Mckiernan-González, Texas State University Research Agenda The Sullen Sick Woman: Housekeeper Services for Women with Chair: Steven Corey, Columbia College Chronic Illnesses, 1934–64 Panel: Lisa Boehm, Bridgewater State University Ryan Lee Cartwright, University of California, Davis Steven Corey, Columbia College Comment: Audience D. Bradford Hunt, Loyola University Chicago Elizabeth Lehfeldt, Cleveland State University 326. Workers and the Law in the Southern Cone from the 1880s to the 1980s 331. Writing and Publishing Global History: A Journal Editors’ Roundtable Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History and the Labor and Working Class History Association Joint session with the World History Association Chair: Edward Brudney, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Chair: Carolien Stolte, Leiden University Papers: Beyond Labor Legislation: Argentine Workers and the Law during Panel: Matthias Middell, the Proceso de Reorganización Nacional Katja Naumann, Leipzig University, Leibniz Science Campus Edward Brudney, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Matthew P. Romaniello, Weber State University Heidi Tworek, University of British Columbia Contesting the Frontier: Land Laws and Agricultural Labor in Southern Chile, 1900–12 Amie Campos, University of California, San Diego 332. Writing Same-Sex Desire Before Stonewall: Love Letters, Romantic Poetry, and Other Writings To Be Invited In? State Formation and Maritime Workers in Early 20th-Century Chile Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Joshua Savala, Rollins College Transgender History Comment: Angela Vergara, California State University, Los Angeles Chair: Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria Panel: Anya Jabour, University of Montana 327. Working with Your Publisher on a First Monograph Shad Reinstein, independent scholar from Beyond the Professoriate: From Pitching to Jody Laine, independent scholar Rewriting to Marketing Wendy Rouse, San Jose State University Pamela J. Stewart, Arizona State University Chair: Kevin Boyle, Northwestern University Comment: Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria 2021 Panel: Carin Berkowitz, New Jersey Council for the Humanities Michael J. McGandy, Cornell University Press Tyler McGaughey, University of Chicago Press Amanda B. Moniz,

Program Book 2021.indd 45 26/10/20 8:58 PM 46 Affiliated Society Sessions

Association for Israel Studies Session 2 Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Notions of Indigeneity in the History of Zionism, Societies Palestine, and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Chair: Nir Kedar, Bar-Ilan University Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 2 William J. Rorabaugh: From Alcoholic Republic to Papers: Multiple and Contested Uses of “Indigeneity” in the Israeli- Palestinian Conflict Counter Cultures: A Tribute Ilan Troen, Brandeis University Chair: W. Scott Haine, Alcohol and Drugs History Society Indigenism, Zionism, and Palestinism: The “Hasolel” Circle and Panel: Gary S. Cross, Penn State University Its Different Road for the Jewish-Arab Encounter in Mandatory Dan Malleck, Brock University Palestine David W. Gutzke, Missouri State University Arieh Bruce Saposnik, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Scott C. Martin, Bowling Green State University Zionist Notions of Jewish Indigeneity to Palestine in American Elaine Frantz (Parsons), Kent State University Hebrew Musical Culture, 1920–48 Amy Mittelman, independent scholar Eli Sperling, Emory University Timothy Hickman, Lancaster University Comment: Audience American Academy of Research Historians of Medieval Spain Session 1 Association of Ancient Historians Session 1 Medieval Iberia Before and After Conquest , Rome, and the Chair: Theresa M. Earenfight, Seattle niversityU Chair: Joel Thomas Walker, University of Washington, Seattle Papers: How Arabic Shaped the Religious Life of Christians under Muslim Papers: The Multimodal Trade Networks of Ancient Egypt: Aegean and Rule, 10th–12th Centuries Cypriot Ceramic Imports during the New Kingdom Geoffrey Martin, University of Tennessee at Knoxville Christine Johnston, Western Washington University The Western Roman Caliphate Warfare and Politics in Ancient Assyria and Sparta Natalie Dawn Levin, Indiana University Nicholas Rockwell, University of Colorado Denver Penitence and Crusade in the Assumption Chapel of the Real Considering the Sources for the Origins of the First Romano- Monasterio de las Huelgas, Burgos Parthian War Jessica Renee Streit, College of Charleston Nikolaus Overtoom, Washington State University Comment: Thomas E. Burman, Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame Artashat and Dvin: Armenian Royal Cities between Rome and Sasanian Iran American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Session 2 Scott J. McDonough, William Paterson University German Travelers in the Enlightenment: A Panel in Comment: Audience Honor of Peter Hanns Reill Chair: Beate Allert, Purdue University Association of Ancient Historians Session 2 Panel: Patrick Anthony, Vanderbilt University Life, Property, and Image in the Provinces of Rome Harry Liebersohn, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Chair: Nikolaus Overtoom, Washington State University Peter Park, University of Texas at Dallas Papers: Crisis and Competition: Victory Imagery in Cisalpine and Comment: Chunjie Zhang, University of California, Davis Transalpine Gaul, 125–45 BCE Alyson Roy, University of Idaho Association for Israel Studies Session 1 Provincials Petitioning for the Emperor’s Property Aspects of Israel’s Nation Building Process Luke Hagemann, Emory University Chair: Arieh Bruce Saposnik, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Scholarly Anxieties and the Therapeutae in Context Miguel Manuel Vargas, University of North Carolina Papers: Building a State, Inculcating Civic Awareness at Chapel Hill Nir Kedar, Bar-Ilan University The Gourmand’s Belly: Indigestion and Globalization in the Complete and Total Equality for Women—Ben-Gurion, the First Roman Empire Coalition, and Women in the Building of the Nation Mira Green, University of Utah Gilat Gofer, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Comment: Audience Transitions in the Israeli Labor Market: Local Context and a Global Perspective Omri Shafer-Raviv, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev The Trade Union Movement and Nation Building in Israel and Cyprus: Convergences and Mutual Interests of the Two Youngest States in the Eastern Mediterranean Gabriel Haritos, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Comment: Audience

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Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Session 10 Chinese Historians in the United States Session 2 Association for the Study of African American Life and Reform, Literature, Gender, and Political Economy in History Session 1 Contemporary Rural China from the 1950s–90s Scandalous Socialites and Devoted Yogis: The Joys and Chair: Kan Liang, Seattle University Challenges of Writing about “Complicated” Black Women Papers: Political Economy in Liu Qing’s The Builders Chair: Treva B. Lindsey, Ohio State University Xinjun Wu, Henan University Panel: Tanisha Ford, Graduate Center of the City Rural Nursing and Socialist Women: The Medical Profession, University of New York Knowledge Circulation, and Economic Independence Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University Dewen Zhang, Randolph-Macon College Stephanie Evans, Georgia State University Nneka Dennie, Washington and Lee University The Rural as the Pioneer: Agricultural Reform in Ah Nai’s Novel River of Time Dandan Chen, State University of New York, Farmingdale Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Session 11 State College The Vote and Equal Rights: From the 15th Amendment Comment: Kan Liang, Seattle University to the ERA Chair: Cathleen D. Cahill, Penn State University Conference on Asian History Panel: Cherisse Jones-Branch, Arkansas State University Joint Conference on Asian History and Society for Advancing Anna Sampaio, Santa Clara University the History of South Asia Luncheon Corinne T. Field, University of Virginia Manisha Sinha, University of Connecticut at Storrs Presiding: Michele L. Louro, Salem State University Cathleen D. Cahill, Penn State University Stefan Tanaka, University of California, San Diego Speaker: New Trends in South Asian History Business History Conference Session 1 Mrinalini Sinha, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Business History and Place Chair: Heidi Tworek, University of British Columbia Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Panel: Megan J. Elias, Boston University History Session 16 Marc Levinson, independent scholar Unthinking, New Thinking, Rethinking: Teaching Shaun Nichols, Boise State University LGBT History across Disciplines John Majewski, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Heather R. White, University of Puget Sound Comment: Johan Mathew, Rutgers University-Newark Panel: Melvin Rouse, University of Puget Sound, Psychology Department Chinese Historians in the United States Session 1 Terence Beck, University of Puget Sound Breaking Barriers in History Laura Krughoff, University of Puget Sound, English Department Chair: Jingyi Song, State University of New York, Katy Curtis, University of Puget Sound, Collins Memorial College at Old Westbury Library Papers: Ah Quin, a Founding Father of San Diego Yi Sun, University of San Diego Conference on Faith and History Session 1 Voices of Protest: The Self-Defense of the Chinese in the Denver Riot A Roundtable Discussion of David Swartz’s Facing Jingyi Song, State University of New York, College at Old Westbury West: American Evangelicals in an Age of World A Journey between West and East: Edward H. Hume in Changsha Christianity Liyan Liu, Georgetown College Chair: Beth Allison Barr, Baylor University The Impact of Hu Yaobang’s Ethnic Minority Policy in Xinjiang Panel: Miriam Adeny, Seattle Pacific University Xiaoxiao Li, University of Central Oklahoma Tite Tienou, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School Many Peoples, One Land: Asian Americans’ Community-Building Lauren F. Turek, Trinity University in the Sooner State Comment: David R. Swartz, Asbury University Xiao-Bing Li, University of Central Oklahoma Comment: Xiansheng Tian, Metropolitan State University of Denver 2021

Program Book 2021.indd 47 26/10/20 8:58 PM 48 Affiliated Society Sessions

Conference on Faith and History Session 2 Conference on Latin American History Session 47 A Roundtable on Eugene McCarraher’s The Caribbean Studies Section Meeting: New Directions Enchantments of Mammon: How Capitalism Became in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies in the the Religion of Modernity Caribbean Chair: John Fea, Messiah College Chair: Devyn Spence Benson, Davidson College Panel: Janine Giordano Drake, Indiana University Panel: Sandy Plácido, Queens College, City University of New York Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen, University of Wisconsin-Madison Reena N. Goldthree, Princeton University Eric Miller, Geneva College Devyn Spence Benson, Davidson College Comment: Eugene Brian McCarraher, Comment: Kaysha L. Corinealdi, Emerson College

Conference on Latin American History Session 43 Conference on Latin American History Session 48 Andean Studies Section Meeting: Long Horizons of Central American Studies Section Meeting: Revolution and Reaction in Bolivia Contagions—Illness and Wellness in Central America Chair: Nicole L. Pacino, University of Alabama in Huntsville Chair: Jordana Dym, Skidmore College Panel: Elizabeth M. Shesko, Oakland University Papers: Epidemics and Epistemologies: Experiencing Illness in 16th- Ben Nobbs-Thiesson, University of Winnipeg Century Yucatán Carmen Soliz, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Ryan Amir Kashanipour, University of Arizona Elena C. McGrath, Carleton College Imagining Contagion in Guatemala City, 1800 Sylvia Sellers-García, Boston College Conference on Latin American History Session 44 Infectious Indígenas and Contagious Diseases in Guatemala, Atlantic Studies Section Meeting: Recent Scholarship 1900–50 Connecting Atlantic and Pacific Histories David Carey Jr., Loyola University Maryland Chair: Erin W. Stone, University of West Florida Living through a Pandemic in Costa Rica: Oral Histories Papers: Connecting the Lives of East Africans in Iberian Worlds of Self-Isolation, 2020 Norah Linda Andrews Gharala, Georgian Court University Carmen Kordick, Southern Connecticut State University Drowning in the Spanish Lake: Recent Trends and Limitations in Comment: Audience Atlantic-Pacific History, 1565–1644 Ashleigh Ikemoto, Georgia College and State University Conference on Latin American History Session 49 Inclined to Total Freedom: Vagabonds and Gamblers in Las Calles Central American Studies Section Meeting: Democracy Stefanie Joy Lira, independent scholar and Political Culture in Central America, 1821–2021 Racializing Colonial Manila: Extensions of Atlantic Models into Chair: David Diaz Arias, Universidad de Costa Rica the Pacific Diego Luis, Davidson College Panel: Justin Wolfe, Tulane University Michel Gobat, University of Pittsburgh Comment: Audience Bonar Hernández, Iowa State University Heather Vrana, University of Florida Conference on Latin American History Session 45 Erik K. Ching, Furman University Borderlands and Frontier Studies Section Meeting: Dana Frank, University of California, Santa Cruz Constructing the Story of the Present—An Assignment for Teaching Immigration in the US Conference on Latin American History Session 50 Challenging the Hegemon: Inter-American Relations Chair: Natalie Mendoza, University of Colorado Boulder in the Cold War Panel: Adam Goodman, University of Illinois at Chicago Chair: Daniel Bessner, University of Washington, Seattle S. Deborah Kang, California State University, San Marcos Maddalena Marinari, Gustavus Adolphus College Papers: Latin American Struggles for Information Sovereignty Vanessa Freije, University of Washingon Conference on Latin American History Session 46 Torrijos, Castro, and the Sandinistas, 1978–81 Brazilian Studies Section Meeting: The Politics of Jonathan Brown, University of Texas at Austin Environmental History in Brazil Strange Bedfellows at the End of the Cold War: The Letelier Chair: Heather Flynn Roller, Colgate University Assassination, Human Rights, and State Sovereignty Alan L. McPherson, Temple University Panel: Frederico Santos Soares Freitas, North Carolina State University Comment: Daniel Bessner, University of Washington, Seattle Lise F. Sedrez, University Federal do Rio de Janeiro Sandro Dutra e Silva, Universidade Estadual de Goias and Centro Universitario de Anapolis Jennifer Eaglin, Ohio State University Eve E. Buckley, University of Delaware

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Conference on Latin American History Session 51 Conference on Latin American History Session 55 Chile-Río de la Plata Studies Section Meeting: Mexican Studies Section Meeting: Mexican Numbers— Writing, Thinking, and Teaching the Southern Reconsidering the Quantitative in Times of Violence Cone Today Chair: Pablo Miguel Sierra Silva, University of Rochester Chair: Marian E. Schlotterbeck, University of California, Davis Panel: Sabrina Smith, University of California, Merced Panel: Lily Pearl Balloffet, University of California, Santa Cruz Andres Resendez, University of California, Davis Alyssa Bowen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Rebecca Dufendach, University of California, Los Angeles Carlos S. Dimas, Albright College Camilo Vicente Ovalle, independent scholar Brenda Elsey, Hofstra University Comment: Gladys I. McCormick, Romina A. Green Rioja, University of California, Irvine Hannah Greenwald, Yale University Michael Kenneth Huner, Grand Valley State University Conference on Latin American History Session 56 Craig Johnson, University of California, Berkeley Modernity and Transnational Influences Jennifer Lee Schaefer, Washington State University Vancouver Chair: Jason Daniel, Florida International University Comment: Angeles Picone, Boston College Papers: The Invention of Spanish America in Tocqueville’s Democracy in America Conference on Latin American History Session 52 Alexander Chaparro Silva, University of Texas at Austin Colonial Studies Section Meeting: Freedom before the “No Human Could Do Anything More”: Expanding the Search for End of the Age of Revolution Cuban Timber Under the Royal Havana Company, 1741–48 Chair: Adriana Chira, Emory University Jason Daniel, Florida International University Panel: Fernanda Bretones, University of Florida Folklore’s Orchestrations: Composing Tradition and Managing Mariana L. Dantas, Ohio University Modernity in Maracatu Estilizado Mary Ellen Hicks, Amherst College Amy Medvick, Tulane University Alexandre Pelegrino, Vanderbilt University Madness, Jews, and Argentinian Modernity Joanna Spyra, University of Bergen Conference on Latin American History Session 53 Comment: Audience Gran Colombia Studies Section Meeting: Historical Trajectories of Capitalism and Conference on Latin American History Session 57 Development in the Gran Colombia—Local Neoliberalism in the Jungle: Global Economic and Global Perspectives Reform and Grassroots Intervention in Chair: Stefan Pohl Valero, Universidad del Rosario Central America Panel: Margarita Fajardo, Sarah Lawrence College Chair: Sarah Foss, Oklahoma State University Ricardo Lopez, Western Washington University Aaron Kappeler, University of Edinburgh Papers: An Unseemly Alliance: Local Intellectuals, US Intervention, and Constanza Castro Benavides, Universidad de los Andes the Rise of Neoliberalism in Costa Rica, 1960–80 Stefan Pohl Valero, Universidad del Rosario Isabel Alvarez-Echandi, Indiana University Ana Maria Otero-Cleves, University de los Andes The Tropical Route to Serfdom: Costa Rican Neoliberalism and Comment: Shawn Van Ausdal, Universidad de los Andes Economic Thought, 1981–2000 David Diaz Arias, Universidad de Costa Rica

Conference on Latin American History Session 54 Privatization or Pinata? Conflict vero Worker-Owned Industries in Postwar Nicaragua Local Transformations, Global Reconfigurations: From Chris Jillson, Indiana University Colonial Bees and Water Management to Free-Trade Avocados in Latin America Comment: Sarah Foss, Oklahoma State University Chair: Viridiana Hernandez, University of California, Davis Papers: Furious Waters: The Great Flood of 1626 and the Rebuilding of the Imperial Villa of Potosí Julio Aguilar, University of California, Davis Beekeeping on the Caribbean Frontier: The Rise of Tropical Apiculture in Cuba Angelica Marquez-Osuna, Harvard University Guacamole Ecology: Agriculture, Migration, and Deforestation in Mexico, 1953–97 Viridiana Hernandez, University of California, Davis 2021 Comment: Claudia Leal, Universidad de los Andes

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Conference on Latin American History Session 58 Conference on Latin American History Session 61 Labor and Working Class History Association Session 13 Presidential Panel: Conversations on Anti-Blackness On the Margins of Labor and Capital: Shifting Social and History Identities in the Global South Chairs: Bianca Premo, Florida International University Chair: Denisa Jashari, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Ben Vinson III, Case Western Reserve University Papers: Becoming “Pobladores”: Identity and Place Making in Santiago, Panel: Herman Bennett, City University of New York Chile, 1872–1950 Erika Denise Edwards, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Denisa Jashari, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Korean Women Workers and Social Reproduction in the Japanese Conference on Latin American History Session 62 Countryside after World War I Presidential Panel: Teaching in Crisis Wendy Matsumura, University of California, San Diego Chairs: Bianca Premo, Florida International University “We Will Swap Gachupines for Spaniards”: Mexican Peasant Ben Vinson III, Case Western Reserve University Consciousness during the Spanish Civil War, 1936–39 Panel: Mary Ellen Hicks, Amherst College Kevan Antonio Aguilar, University of California, San Diego Matthew Casey, Arizona State University Comment: Barbara Weinstein, New York University Raquel Ortheguy, Bronx Community College Alex Borucki University of California, Irvine Conference on Latin American History Session 59 Conference on Latin American History Session 63 Peasant and Indigenous Movements Revisiting the Refugee in Cuban History: Chair: James Mestaz, Claremont McKenna College Image-Making, Internationalism, and Return Papers: Faith, Politics, and Liberation: The Development of the in the 20th Century Guatemalan Peasant Movement during the 1970s Chair: Kathleen López, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Bonar Hernández, Iowa State University Papers: Refugee Returns: The “Visitas de la Comunidad” of 1973 Inaugurating the Consultation: Analyzing Community-Level Michael Bustamante, Florida International University Participation in the Consultation in the Tipnis, Bolivia Leah A. Walton, University of North Carolina at Charlotte A “Benevolent Interpretation of National Laws”: Transnational and National Efforts to Resettle Spanish Republican Refugees in Black Cat Rises: The Felipe Bachomo Rebellion in a Mexican and Cuba, 1939–45 Global Peasant Uprising Context Daniel Jesus Fernández-Guevara, University of Florida James Mestaz, Claremont McKenna College On the Frontlines of the Cold War: Chinese Cuban Refugees in the Memory and Immaterial Heritage: The Traveling Museum of the United States 1957–71 Identity and Memory of Montes de María, Colombia Jian Ren, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Jimena Perry, University of Texas at Austin Comment: Audience De Los Famossos Hechos de los Yndios Cañares y de Sus Privilegios: Don Pedro Purqui and the Early Modern Andean Chronicle By Martín De Murúa Conference on Latin American History Session 64 Lisl Schoepflin, University of California, Los Angeles Teaching and Teaching Materials Section Meeting: Comment: Audience Taking Off the White Gloves: Teaching Latin American History through Rare Books and Special Collections Conference on Latin American History Session 60 Chair: Corinna Zeltsman, Georgia Southern University Persistent Inequality in Brazil: New Approaches Using Panel: Alexander Hidalgo, Texas Christian University Multiple Methods Rachel Stein, Tulane University Chair: Cassia Roth, University of Georgia Conference on Latin American History Session 65 Papers: Below the Fold: Illiberal Class Politics and the Press in Mid-20th- The Construction of the Colonial and Republican State Century Brazil Paloma Contreras, New York University Papers: Murderesses in ’s Early Republic, 1810–65 Reuben C. Zahler, University of Oregon Double Jeopardy in the Concrete Jungle: Black Women’s Labor History in 20th-Century São Paulo Tocqueville in the Tropics: Readings of Democracy in (Spanish) Cassandra Osei, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign America Alexander Chaparro Silva, University of Texas at Austin Poverty and Inequality by Design: Economists, Wages, and the Causes of Inflation in Brazil, 1950s–70s “No Human Could Do Anything More”: Expanding the Search for Matthew Nestler, Stanford University Cuban Timber under the Royal Havana Company, 1741–48 Jason Daniel, Florida International University Comment: Miqueias H. Mugge, Princeton University Comment: Audience

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Conference on Latin American History Session 66 International Commission for the History of Representative The History and Legacies of Neoliberalism in Chile and Parliamentary Institutions Session 1 Chair: Angela Vergara, California State University, Los Angeles Constitution Writing and Parliamentary Organization in the Atlantic World, 1775–1815 Papers: Violence, State, and Conflict: The rovinceP of Linares between Agrarian Reform and Dictatorship, 1965–75 Chair: Peter J. Aschenbrenner, National Convenor (US), Constanza Dalla Porta, Princeton University International Commission Advertising Pinochet: J. Walter Thompson in Chile and the Global Papers: Prototypes of a Modern Constitution: The Philadelphia Struggle against Welfarism Convention and French National Assemblies: Constitution- Pablo Pryluka, Princeton University Building in the Late 18th Century Rosamaria Alibrandi, University of Messina The of Copper: Miners and Military Violence in the Chilean Dictatorship Revolutionary Legislatures and State Development in the Georgia Claire Whitaker, Harvard University Revolutionary Mid-Atlantic Nathaniel Conley, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Comment: Margaret M. Power, Illinois Institute of Technology Early Constitutions and Elections in the 19th Century in France and Germany Conference on Latin American History Hedwig Richter, Universität der Bundeswehr München Luncheon Comment: Audience Presiding: Jurgen Buchenau, University of North Carolina at Charlotte International Commission for the History of Representative German Historical Institute Session 1 and Parliamentary Institutions Session 2 Central European History Society Session 9 Elements of European Political Culture from the 11th Reconsidering Looted Cultural Property, Part 1: Century to the Present To the Victors Go the Definitions? Reappraising Chair: Nathaniel Conley, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Salvage and Plunder Papers: Measures of Control: The Scottish Coasts during the Chair: James McSpadden, University of Nevada at Reno Revolution (1691) Papers: Why We Fight? “Western Civilization” and the First Culture Wars Gillian Sarah Macdonald, University of Central Michigan Jason Lustig, University of Texas at Austin The International Commission for the History of Representative After They Left: Looted Objects and the Private Perception of the and Parliamentary Institutions: The Main Questions and Debates Holocaust over 84 Years, 1936–2020 Carolin Lange, Office for Non-State Museums Joseba Agirreazkuenaga, University of the Basque Country American Loot? US Monuments Officers and the rayG Areas of Comment: Audience Restitution after World War II Jonathan Petropoulos, Claremont McKenna College International Commission for the History of Representative Comment: Janet Ward, University of Oklahoma and Parliamentary Institutions Session 3 Pacific Rim Parliamentary istory,H 1850–1945 German Historical Institute Session 2 Chair: Gillian Sarah Macdonald, University of Central Michigan Central European History Society Session 10 Papers: Pacific Rim Parliamentary History from the Reconsidering Looted Cultural Property, Part 2: Japanese Perspective Beyond Looted Art—Reframing Restitution Takii Kazuhiro, International Research Center for Chair: Carolin Lange, Office for Non-State Museums Japanese Studies Papers: From Rescuing Nazi-Looted Jewish Ceremonial Objects to “To Fulfill the hilosophy,P Ua Mau Ke Ea o Ka Aina I Ka Pono”: Promoting Colonial Artifacts: The Julius Carlebach Case New State Making in the Pacific Rim, 1884–1959 Anna-Carolin Augustin, German Historical Institute Peter J. Aschenbrenner, National Convenor (US), International Commission War Booty or Research Materials? Looted Nazi and Holocaust-Era Books in the United States Comment: Audience James McSpadden, University of Nevada at Reno Archival Concepts in the Restitution of Cultural Property James Lowry, Queens College, City University of New York Comment: Mirjam Brusius, German Historical Institute London 2021

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Polish American Historical Association Session 1 Polish American Historical Association Session 5 Nonobvious Sources for Polish American History Polish Immigrants in the United States: Early 20th Chair: Joanna Wojdon, University of Wrocław Century Papers: Migration Photography as a Source in Research of Migration Chair: Neal H. Pease, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Groups and Its Role in Research of Polish Americans Papers: Imagining American Womanhood: Progressive Reformers and Anna Fin, Pedagogical University of Cracow Immigrant Women in American Cities at the Turn of the 20th Polish Americans in the Sources of Intelligence Services Century Anna A. Mazurkiewicz, University of Gdan´sk Marta Cieslak, University of Arkansas at Little Rock A Story That Has Been Painted: Can We Treat an Artwork as a Polish American Women and Their Foodways in Early 20th- Historical Source? Century Chicago Anna Rudek-Smiechowska, Polish Institute of World Art Studies Sylwia Kuz´ma-Markowska, University of Warsaw Comment: Adam Walaszek, Jagiellonian University Intergenerational Mobility Patterns of Polish Migrants in the United States, 1890–1940 Pien Versteegh, Maastricht University Polish American Historical Association Session 2 Poles in Seattle, 1890–2020: Continuity and Change Comment: Audience Chair: Dorota Praszałowicz, Jagiellonian University Polish American Historical Association Session 6 Papers: Polish Studies at the University of Washington: The Past and Present Recent Issues in Polish American and Polish Katarzyna Dziwirek, University of Washington, Seattle Diaspora Life The Polish Home Association in Seattle: The Forgotten Stories Krystyna Untersteiner, University of Washington, Seattle Chair: Marta Cieslak, University of Arkansas at Little Rock The Foundation of a Polish Community in Washington State: The Papers: Elderly Care in Post-Communist Countries as Experienced by Polish National Alliance in Washington State, 1890–1945 Polish Immigrants Living in the Chicago Area Robert Hicker, independent scholar Dorota Allen, independent scholar Comment: Theresa Indelak Davies, Polish Consulate, Seattle Transitional Justice in Argentina: The Central Role of Carlos Rozanski Silvia G. Dapia, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City Polish American Historical Association Session 3 University of New York and the Graduate Center of the Polish American Biographies City University of New York Chair: Mary Patrice Erdmans, Case Western Reserve University James S. Pula, Purdue University Northwest, Westville Papers: Polish Americans in US Diplomatic Service since World War II— Poles and Ukrainians in New York’s East Village: A Reconstructed Preliminary Survey Neighborhood Anna A. Mazurkiewicz, University of Gdan´sk Anna Fin, Pedagogical University of Cracow White Lightning: Steve Dalkowski, the Most Legendary Fastball Comment: Audience Pitcher in the History of Baseball Neal H. Pease, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Polish American Historical Association Session 7 George Adamski—The Most Famous Polish American in Space The Complexities of Polish and Jewish Identities and Maja Trochimczyk, Moonrise Press Memory Comment: Audience Chair: Anna Muller, University of Michigan, Dearborn Papers: Jewish Polish Identity Construction in Wroclaw, New York City, Polish American Historical Association Session 4 and Mississippi Polish and East European Diasporas: The Cold War Era Mary Patrice Erdmans, Case Western Reserve University Chair: Maja Trochimczyk, Moonrise Press Between a Polish Shiksa and a Jewish Woman: Ambiguous Papers: Community Archives as a Way to Manifest Identity and Preserve Identities in Eva Mekler’s Novels One’s Heritage: The Case of Polish Migrants of the World War II Grazyna Kozaczka, Cazenovia College Diaspora in North America Kejdany and Heritage Communities Iwona Flis, University of Gdan´sk Lynn T. Lubamersky, Boise State University American and West European Support for Human Rights and Comment: Audience Dissidents in East-Central Europe in the 1970s and 1980s Francis D. Raska, Charles University Finding Meaning in a Cold War Era Love Letter Robert A. Sloma, independent scholar Comment: Audience

Program Book 2021.indd 52 26/10/20 8:58 PM ProgramAffiliated Committee Society SessionsSessions 53

Polish American Historical Association Session 8 Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 2 The Varieties of Polish American Experience Debating Holiness in Late Medieval and Early over the Decades Modern Italy Chair: Marta Cieslak, University of Arkansas at Little Rock Chair: Daniel Bornstein, Washington University in St. Louis Papers: Political Attitudes of Polish American Voters in the United States Papers: Defining and Defending Saintliness: arianoM of Florence’s Anne Gurnack, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vitae Fratrum, 1500–23 Lezlie S. Knox, Marquette University A Builder of Polish American Identity: How Victor Cordella of Krakow Shaped Church Architecture in Minnesota Saintly Afterlives: Medieval Italian Saints and Early Modern Geoffrey M. Gyrisco, independent scholar Canonizations Mark Dillon, independent scholar Janine Larmon Peterson, Marist College Michael Retka, independent scholar Stalled Saints and Models of Holiness in Early Modern Palermo Collapse Averted? The Chicago School of Sociology and Polish Mary Andino, Washington University in St. Louis Americans Comment: Daniel Bornstein, Washington University in St. Louis John Radzilowski, University of Alaska Southeast Comment: Audience Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 3 Exclusion, Integration, Commemoration: The Varieties Polish American Historical Association Session 9 of Identity Formation in Medieval Italy World War II and Its Legacies Chair: Carol L. Lansing, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Anna Muller, University of Michigan, Dearborn Papers: From Exclusion to Cautious Acceptance: The Construction of Papers: The Experience of Deportation, Exile, and Displacement of Polish Migrant Churches and the Question of Religious Diversity in Late Children to Postwar Britain Medieval Adriatic Italy Agata Blaszczyk, Polish University Abroad Bianca Lopez, Southern Methodist University Laughter in the Kingdom of Barracks: Humor and Satire as a Text, Conquest, and Intergenerational Remembrance in the Counter-Narrative of Polish Displaced Persons Medieval Mezzogiorno: From the Byzantines to the Normans Katarzyna Nowak, University of Manchester Kalina Yamboliev, University of California, Santa Barbara The Personal Service of Hugh Gibson and Anthony Drexel Biddle The Bases of the Popolo in Medieval Central Italy: The Popular to Poland during WWII Network and Its Cellular Composition Vivian Reed, independent scholar Joseph Figliulo-Rosswurm, independent scholar Comment: Audience Comment: Carol L. Lansing, University of California, Santa Barbara

Renaissance Society of America Session 1 Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 4 Isabel La Católica: A Reassessment of Her Life and Food, Magic, and Micropolitics: Institutions and Legacy Ordinary Experiences in the Early Modern Adriatic Chair: Hilaire Kallendorf, Texas A&M University Chair: Guido Ruggiero Jr., University of Miami Papers: Isabel and Her Chroniclers: Propaganda, Self-Fashioning, and Papers: The Inquisitor at the Table: Food and Identity in the Early Historical Memory Modern Venetian Empire David Boruchoff, independent scholar Eric R. Dursteler, Isabel as Commissioner of Saints’ Lives The Venetian Calendar of Magic: Measuring Time and Timing the Cristina Guardiola-Griffiths, University of Delaware Spiritual in 17th-Century Venice Isabel of Castile and the Opening of the Atlantic Anna Bennett, University of Miami William D. Phillips Jr., University of Minnesota Twin Cities Brokering Sovereignty through the Sea: Patterns of Political The Legend of Isabel La Católica, Founder of Spain Expression through Petitions in the Venetian Stato Da Mar Caroline Travalia, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Erasmo Castellani, Duke University Comment: Audience Comment: Guido Ruggiero Jr., University of Miami

Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Joint Society for Advancing the History of South Asia and Conference on Asian History Luncheon Presiding: Michele L. Louro, Salem State University Stefan Tanaka, University of California, San Diego

Speaker: New Trends in South Asian History 2021 Mrinalini Sinha, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Program Book 2021.indd 53 26/10/20 8:58 PM 54 Affiliated Society Sessions

Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 5 Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Geographies of Social Networks: Three Case Studies Publishing Session 1 from the 12th through 15th Centuries Case Studies in Early Modern Scientific Books Chair: Kathryn Lee Jasper, Illinois State University Chair: Paula Findlen, Stanford University Papers: Trade Networks in the Mongol Empire Papers: The Herbarist’s Pudding Pipe Tree: Herbals, Knowledge Colleen C. Ho, University of Maryland, College Park Production, and Early Imperialism Hannah Anderson, McNeil Center for Early American Studies The Lateran Canons and Their Predecessors: Shifting Monastic Networks in Medieval Italy Transmutation in 17th-Century Alchemical Texts Sherri Franks Johnson, Louisiana State University Megan Piorko, Science History Institute Roman Baroni and the Networks of the Early Franciscan Order Exceedingly Accurate, as Well as Skilfully Engraven in Copper: The Emily Graham, Oklahoma State University Role of Images in Early Modern Scientific Books Katherine M. Reinhart, University of Wisconsin-Madison Comment: Audience Comment: Paula Findlen, Stanford University Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 6 Italian Power in the World: A Panel in Honor of Marshall Lecture Victoria De Grazia Chair: Molly Tambor, Long Island University Post The George C. Marshall Foundation Papers: The Construction of Italianità at the Margins of the State: Society for Military History The Case of Istria George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History Claudia Sbuttoni, Columbia University Presiding: John Hall, University of Wisconsin-Madison Selecting and Shaping Colonists: The Mass Organizations of the Paul Levengood, The George C. Marshall Foundation Fascist Party in Italian East Africa Speaker: Sarah C. M. Paine, Naval War College Gianluca Podestà, University of Parma Profiteers and Padroncini: Organizing the Transportation Industry in Italian East Africa, 1934–40 Noelle Turtur, Columbia University Fascism as Infrastructural State Pamela L. Ballinger, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Comment: Molly Tambor, Long Island University Post

Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 7 New Histories of Capitalism in Mussolini’s Italy: A Panel in Honor of Victoria De Grazia Chair: Roy Domenico, University of Scranton Papers: Do Not Pass Go: Playing Monopoli with Mussolini Diana Garvin, University of Oregon Contesting the National Beverage: Wine, Beer, and the Battle over “Foreign” Tastes and Habits in Interwar Italy Brian J. Griffith, University of California, Santa Barbara “Reclamation” and “Reconquest”: The Economy as Strategy in Mussolini’s “Battle for Land” Robert Liming Corban, Columbia University Comment: Giuliana R. Chamedes, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Program Book 2021.indd 54 26/10/20 8:58 PM Topical Index 55

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 52, 102, 106, 124, 177, 184, Family 62, 94, 102, 104, 154, 160, 299, 323 Pacific World 40, 47, 96, 272, 290, 308 195, 239, 246, 265, 314 Feminism 112, 324 Peace and Conflict 48, 149, 223, 264, 317 African Diaspora 52, 60, 90, 113, 115, 124, 162, Film/Media/Photography 316 Political 55, 92, 99, 123, 159, 161, 219, 223, 295, 204, 218, 239, 246, 247, 248, 266, 277, 284, 314 Food and Foodways 157 301, 320, 321 Agrarian/Rural 177 Foreign Policy 70, 99, 241 Political Economy 190, 216, 282, 287 Archives 5, 20, 48, 68, 76, 101, 111, 153, 253, 274 Gender 94, 101, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 154, Popular Culture/Mass Culture 110, 262 Arts 34 159, 160, 166, 171, 173, 191, 193, 221, 263, 283, Postcolonial 66, 98, 189, 233 Asian American 122, 272, 309 299, 305, 315, 320 Print Culture/History of the Book 236 Atlantic World 60, 190, 191, 204, 209, 234, 238, Genocide 125, 151, 181 Profession 10, 15, 16, 30, 46, 89, 131, 134, 137, 247, 277, 297 Global 6, 63, 65, 73, 81, 85, 95, 114, 154, 156, 170, 175, 182, 203, 215, 237, 255, 275, 297, 327 Biography 51, 180, 223, 229, 332 169, 196, 273, 302, 311 Protestantism 116, 169, 214, 231 Borderlands 35, 148, 163, 167, 205, 233, 312 Graduate Studies 29, 31, 32, 134, 138, 215, 255 Public 170, 175, 215, 217, 256, 276, 292, 309 Capitalism 94, 97, 103, 242, 272, 282, 303, 311, 313 Historical Sites(s) 182, 201, 211, 276 Publishing 49, 203, 206, 275, 289, 319, 327, 330, 331 Catholicism 240 Historical Organization(s) 217, 318 Quantitative Methods 176 Chicano(a)/Latinx 108, 291 Historiography/Historical Theory and Method 20, 44, 48, 61, 117, 122, 126, 133, 135, 142, 153, Race and Ethnicity 56, 72, 77, 87, 110, 129, 145, Childhood and Youth 93, 152, 250, 310 176, 213, 235, 300 162, 166, 191, 193, 198, 220, 221, 222, 245, 252, Index Topical 308, 312 Christianity 7, 214, 231, 283, 314 Iberian World 120, 200, 238, 251, 280 Religion 36, 41, 70, 82, 199, 218, 230, 231, 240, Citizenship/National Identity/Nationalism 36, Identity 35, 36, 157, 224, 265, 286 242, 243, 254, 322 37, 98, 122, 167, 205, 234, 266, 286 Immigration 37, 77, 84, 140, 198, 234, 285, 299, 312 Revolution 66, 109, 156, 164, 219, 238, 280 Civil War 163, 302 Imperialism 81, 92, 305 Rural/Agricultural 116 Cold War 41, 63, 64, 65, 66, 70, 73, 117, 139, 148, 155, 168, 194, 210, 241, 249, 266, 274, 298, 304 Indian Ocean World 51, 68, 92, 158 Science 39, 74, 82, 118, 127, 178, 179, 267 Colonialism 12, 51, 68, 69, 73, 81, 83, 93, 100, Indigenous 67, 126, 145, 146, 149, 155, 232, 244 Sexuality 75, 93, 111, 141, 166, 198, 245, 246, 103, 119, 120, 126, 172, 174, 177, 188, 192, 202, Intellectual 4, 39, 52, 74, 95, 114, 127, 281, 300 252, 263, 310 236, 243, 244, 245, 251 Islam 65, 156, 199 Slavery 42, 60, 102, 106, 162, 190, 195, 209, 247, Comparative 43, 61, 62, 87, 97, 125, 128, 168, 248, 265, 277, 302, 323 Jewish 322 174, 189, 200, 205, 224, 227, 230, 233, 235, 236, Social 42, 100, 121, 250, 262, 264 263, 270, 301, 322 Job Market 15, 33, 57, 134, 138 Social Movement 43, 58, 108, 109, 221, 240, 283, Consumption 75, 103 LGBTQ 76, 108, 136, 216, 217, 218, 252, 258, 332 288, 304, 307, 321 Crime and Violence 45, 144, 220, 235 Labor 42, 58, 159, 212, 313, 325, 326 Subaltern 174, 194 Cultural 34, 112, 133, 145, 152, 188, 212, 261, Language 328 Teaching 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 46, 78, 269, 280, 290, 291, 293, 294, 300, 310 Legal 37, 45, 62, 98, 160, 183, 184, 188, 193, 199, 79, 83, 88, 89, 105, 131, 132, 136, 138, 148, 150, Diasporas 140, 285 219, 251, 285, 295, 297, 305, 323, 326 182, 186, 197, 207, 211, 228, 253, 255, 257, 258, 259, 260, 271, 273, 296, 318 Digital 44, 46, 53, 61, 85, 107, 203, 206, 209, 253 Maritime 196, 204 Technology 44, 147, 197, 262, 268, 293 Diplomatic/International 38, 41, 63, 71, 80, 86, Material Culture 178, 179, 202, 232, 286, 293 91, 117, 152, 214, 226, 241, 274, 303 Medicine/Disease/Public Health 53, 67, 82, 120, Transnational 38, 59, 86, 91, 95, 114, 139, 157, 178, 179, 194, 196, 210, 224, 260, 278, 308 Disability 87, 325 121, 128, 129, 130, 141, 317, 320, 325 Travel/Tourism 104 Economic/Business 1, 40, 97, 104, 176, 232, 282, Mediterranean World 260 287, 303 Memory Studies 47, 123, 125, 151, 163, 304, 306 Urban 55, 56, 84, 242, 311 Education 105, 131, 136, 180, 181, 187, 225, 237, Military 8, 9, 35, 100, 101, 172, 180, 248, 264, Visual Materials 142, 143 296, 301, 318 284, 295 War 123, 192, 250, 329 Emotions/Senses 38 Modernity 55, 56, 127, 147, 155, 168, 287 Women 54, 58, 99, 144, 164, 165, 185, 200, 229, Empire 40, 53, 75, 77, 113, 167, 226, 227, 230, 290 Museums 76, 181 258, 291, 324, 332 Environmental 39, 72, 74, 84, 89, 91, 116, 118, Music 164, 210 World War I 249, 317 150, 189, 267, 271, 273, 313 Native American 20, 34, 50, 67, 146, 151, 183, World War II 47, 71, 220, 249, 309 Ethnohistory 133, 146, 153 184, 211, 243, 244, 279 World/Global 26, 43, 83, 85, 128, 140, 141, 147, Exhibition(s) 86 Oral 149 186, 192, 212, 226, 271, 329

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 55 10/29/20 9:35 PM 56 Affiliated Societies

African American Intellectual History Society Session 5, joint with the AHA. Vanguards of Democracy: Black Protestants and the Fight for Freedom in the Atlantic World (p. 43) Session 1, joint with the AHA. Black Intellectual Traditions (p. 8) Association for Computers and the Humanities Session 2, joint with the AHA. Global Visions of Freedom: A Roundtable Discussion on Radical Black Internationalism (p. 17) Session 1, joint with the AHA. Future Directions in Research and Training for Digital History (p. 15) Session 3, joint with the AHA. Sexuality and Slavery: Reclaiming Intimate Histories in the Americas (p. 34) Association for Israel Studies

Agricultural History Society Session 1. Aspects of Israel’s Nation Building Process (p. 46)

Session 1, joint with the AHA. Models of Domination and Resistance: Session 2. Notions of Indigeneity in the History of Zionism, Palestine, Race, Education, and Sociology in the US South (p. 24) and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (p. 46) Alcohol and Drugs History Society Association for the Study of African American Session 1, joint with the AHA. The State of Drug and Alcohol History Life and History Pedagogy: Teaching Challenges and Innovations (p. 41) Session 1, joint with the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. Session 2. William J. Rorabaugh: From Alcoholic Republic to Counter Scandalous Socialites and Devoted Yogis: The Joys and Challenges of Cultures: A Tribute (p. 46) Writing about “Complicated” Black Women (p. 47) American Academy of Research Historians of Association of Ancient Historians Medieval Spain Session 1. Greece, Rome, and the Near East (p. 46)

Session 1. Medieval Iberia before and after Conquest (p. 46) Session 2. Life, Property, and Image in the Provinces of Rome (p. 46) American Society for Eighteenth-Century Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Studies Session 1, joint with the AHA and the Labor and Working Class Session 1, joint with the AHA. Questioning Authorities in Transatlantic History Association. Caring for Money: How Intimate Workers Constitutions: Exploring American Legal Thought in the 18th Employed Creative Strategies to Resist the Undervaluation of Their Century (p. 31) Labor, 1900–2020 (p. 9)

Session 2. German Travelers in the Enlightenment: A Panel in Honor of Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Society for Advancing the Peter Hanns Reill (p. 46) History of South Asia. Consuming Desires: Sex and Drink as Commodities of Empire in South and Southeast Asia (p. 11)

American Society for Legal History Session 3, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American History. Gendered Pursuits of Freedom (p. 16) Session 1, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American History. Childhood, Lineage, and Adoption (p. 9) Session 4, joint with the AHA, the Labor and Working Class History Association, the Western Association of Women Historians, and the Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American Western History Association. Latinx Labor and Representation in the History. Law, Empire, and the Monarquía Hispánica in the Colonial American West (p. 22) Andes, 16th–18th Centuries (p. 22) Session 5, joint with the AHA and the Coordinating Council for Session 3, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American Women in History. Love, Sex, and Marriage in the 20th-Century History. Women, Legal Activity, and Struggles for Justice in Latin United States (p. 23) America (p. 44) Session 6, joint with the AHA. New Approaches to Teaching US American Society of Church History Women’s History (p. 25)

Session 1, joint with the AHA. Face the Pacific: Empire and Religious Session 7, joint with the AHA. Sexuality and Colonialism: New Directions Histories (p. 14) in the Study of Intimacy, Empire, and Racialized Power (p. 34)

Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Session 8, joint with the AHA. Teaching Premodern Women and Bisexual, and Transgender History. Queerness in the City: Race, Gender (p. 36) Sexuality, and Urban Religious Histories in the United States and Session 9, joint with the AHA. The Intimate Sphere as Resistance to the Beyond (p. 30) “Social”: American Christian Women and an Alternative Vision of Session 3, joint with the AHA. Religion, Biography, and Gender: Democracy (p. 39) The Practice of Religious Biography in a Female Black Atlantic Session 10, joint with the Association for the Study of African World (p. 32) American Life and History. Scandalous Socialites and Devoted Yogis: Session 4, joint with the AHA. Synthesis without Recentering: The Joys and Challenges of Writing about “Complicated” Black Organizing Concepts for the History of American Religion (p. 35) Women (p. 47)

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 56 10/29/20 9:35 PM Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 57 Transgender History Committee onLesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Chinese Historians intheUnited States Central European Society History Business Conference History Affiliated Societies Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.LGBTQ+ Public History, Part 1: Membership Meeting Session 2.Reform, Literature, Gender, andPolitical Economy in Session 1.Breaking Barriers inHistory(p. 47) Reception Executive Board Meeting Business Meeting Session 10,jointwiththeGerman Historical Institute. Reconsidering Session 9,jointwiththeGerman Historical Institute. Reconsidering Session 8,jointwiththeAHA,Medieval Academy ofAmerica,and Session 7,jointwiththeAHA.International Protestantism: Session 6,jointwiththeAHA.Knowledge Formation, State Building, Session 5,jointwiththeAHA.Masculinity, Medicine, andtheGlobal Session 4,jointwiththeAHA.How East-CentralEurope Changed: The Session 3,jointwiththeAHA.Histories ofAbsence afterEthnic Session 2,jointwiththeAHA.Gendered ConstellationsofEuropean Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.CentralEuropean HistorySociety Session 1.Business HistoryandPlace (p. 47) Session 11. The Vote andEqual Rights:From the15th Amendment to Conversations Coast-to-Coast(p. 11) Rural China fromContemporary the1950s–90s(p. 47) Restitution (p. 51) Looted Cultural Property, Part 2:Beyond LootedArt—Reframing Reappraising Salvage andPlunder (p. 51) Looted Cultural Property, Part 1: To the Victors Go theDefinitions? Expel Its Jews? (p. 44) the Society forFrench Historical Studies. Why Did Medieval Europe (p. 32) International Evangelism, andMigration intheEarlyModern Period Centuries, Part 2:Religious Refugees, Cross-Confessional Marriage, Networks, Conflict,andCooperationfrom the16ththrough 19th (p. 30) Awakening, Women, andNetwork Formation inthe19thCentury and Transregional Integration, Part 2:Protestant Religious First World War(p.24) István Deák Cleansing andGenocide (p. 18) Culture andPolitics, 1944–89(p. 16) Central Europe after1918(p. 9) Presidential Panel: Between theLocal,Imperial, andtheGlobal: the ERA(p. 47)

School ofHistory(p . 19)

Conference onFaith andHistory Conference History onAsian Conference ofHistorical Journals Session 8,jointwiththeAHAandAmericanSociety ofChurch Session 7,jointwiththeAHA.LGBTQ+ Public History, Part 2: Session 6,jointwiththeAHA.Queer Political Activism and Session 5,jointwiththeAHAandImmigration andEthnic History Session 4,jointwiththeAHA.Identity, Sexuality, andMedical Session 3,jointwiththeAHA.Gender, Sexuality, Activism: On the Session 2,jointwiththeAHAandConference onLatinAmerican Membership andBoard Meeting Session 16.Unthinking, New Thinking, Rethinking: Teaching LGBT Session 15,jointwiththeAHA. Writing Same-Sex Desire before Session 14,jointwiththeAHA. When Social Movements Meet Session 13,jointwiththeAHA.Unsexy Histories ofSexuality: New Session 12,jointwiththeAHA. The Geopolitics of Transnationalism: Session 11,jointwiththeAHA.Stuck intheMiddle with You: Session 10,jointwiththeAHA.Race,Gender, Sexuality, andtheUS Session 9,jointwiththeAHA.Race,Gender, andAnarchist Cultural Session 1.ARoundtable Discussion ofDavid Swartz’s Conference onAsianHistoryandSociety forAdvancing theHistoryof Session 1,jointwith theAHA.Plan SandOpen Access Publishing: History. Queerness intheCity: Queering the Traditional Historical Institution (p. 30) (p.Community Organizing 30) intheLate20thCentury 1921 Immigration Act 100 Years Later(p. 27) Society. Is “Our Country Full”: Roots andConsequencesofAmerica’s Treponemal (p. Disease 20) Campaignsinthe20thCentury Triumphalism: New Perspectives onLocalandGlobal Venereal and Politics andPossibilities oftheArchive (p. 16) Americas, 1940–2000(p. 15) History. Gay Liberation,Solidarity, andIdentities across the History across Disciplines (p. 47) (p. 45) Stonewall: Love Letters,Romantic Poetry, andOther Writings Medicine: Battles over Gender, Sexuality, andPolitics (p. 44) Perspectives onChildren, Youth, andIntergenerational Sex (p. 43) The South Seas, Southern Periphery, andQueer Sinophone (p. 38) (p. 35) Counter-Narratives oftheAIDSEpidemic intheUS“Flyover” States. University (p. 31) Politics (p. across 31) theAmericas in the20thCentury Histories intheUnited States andBeyond (p. 30) South AsiaLuncheon (p. 47) States andinEurope (p. 28) forHistoricalChallenges andOpportunities Journals intheUnited American Evangelicals inanA ge of World Christianity(p. 47)

Race, Sexuality, andU

Facing West: rban Religious 10/29/20 9:35 PM 57

Affiliates 58 Affiliated Societies

Session 2. A Roundtable on Eugene McCarraher’s The Enchantments of Session 20, joint with the AHA. Inverting Metanarratives of Mammon: How Capitalism Became the Religion of Modernity (p. 48) Modernization and Rural/Poor “Backwardness” in Latin America (p. 21) Breakfast Reception Session 21, joint with the AHA and the American Society for Legal Conference on Latin American History History. Law, Empire, and the Monarquía Hispánica in the Colonial Andes, 16th–18th Centuries (p. 22) Session 1, joint with the AHA. Building Modernization: Urban Megaprojects in 20th-Century Latin America (p. 8) Session 22, joint with the AHA. Colonial Blackness and Mexican Modernity: Rethinking Afro-Mexican History and the African Session 2, joint with the AHA. Challenging Slavery in the 19th-Century Diaspora, Part 1: Leaving the African Diaspora? Afro-Mexicans, Americas (p. 9) Independence, and Abolition (p. 22)

Session 3, joint with the AHA and the American Society for Legal Session 23, joint with the AHA. Out of the Footnotes: Centering History. Childhood, Lineage, and Adoption (p. 9) Women in the History of the Yucatan Peninsula (p. 27)

Session 4, joint with the AHA. Desplazamiento: Case Studies of Session 24, joint with the AHA. Place and Power: “Regional Turns” in Displacement and Response in 20th-Century Latin America (p. 12) the History of 19th-Century Mexico and Brazil (p. 28)

Session 5, joint with the AHA and the Disability History Association. Session 25, joint with the AHA. Preservation, Digitization, and Disabling 19th- and 20th-Century Latin American Historical Network and Spatial Analysis of the Endangered History of Atlantic Narratives (p. 12) World Slavery (p. 29)

Session 6, joint with the AHA. Empire’s Children: Childhood, Session 26, joint with the AHA. Promoters, Braceros, and Divas: Colonialism, and Violence in Latin American History (p. 13) Mexican Labor, Economic Development, and Public Health in Mexico and the United States (p. 30) Session 7, joint with the AHA. Engendering the History of Latin American Capitalism: Women and Men in Brazilian and Cuban Session 27, joint with the AHA. Reevaluating the Impact of the Commodity Export Regions, 1880–1960 (p. 13) “Conquest of Mexico” at 500 Years (p. 32)

Session 8, joint with the AHA. Intellectuals, Categories, and Session 28, joint with the AHA. Revisiting Spanish American Geographical Frameworks: New Directions in Latin American Independence 200 Years Later (p. 33) History, Part 1: Exchanges (p. 14) Session 29, joint with the AHA. Roots and Branches of Liberation Session 9, joint with the AHA and the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Theology: New Research on Religion and Politics in Late 20th- Bisexual, and Transgender History. Gay Liberation, Solidarity, and Century Mexico (p. 33) Identities across the Americas, 1940–2000 (p. 15) Session 30, joint with the AHA. Roundtable: The Contours of Inter- Session 10, joint with the AHA. Gender, Culture, and Power in 20th- American History, 1959–76: Revolution, Reform, Rebellion, and Century El Salvador (p. 16) Repression (p. 34)

Session 11, joint with the AHA and the Berkshire Conference of Session 31, joint with the AHA. Special Powers and Secret Knowledge: Women Historians. Gendered Pursuits of Freedom (p. 16) New Directions in Spanish Inquisition Studies (p. 35)

Session 12, joint with the AHA. Intellectuals, Categories, and Session 32, joint with the AHA. Technology and Social History in Geographical Frameworks: New Directions in Latin American Modern Latin America (p. 36) History, Part 2: Geographies (p. 16) Session 33, joint with the AHA. Colonial Blackness and Mexican Session 13, joint with the AHA and the Society for Historians of Modernity: Rethinking Afro-Mexican History and the African American Foreign Relations. Guatemala 1954 as Historical Fantasy: A Diaspora, Part 2: The Genders and Geographies of Colonial and Discussion of Mario Vargas Llosa’s Tiempos Recios (p. 17) Postrevolutionary Afro-Mexico (p. 38)

Session 14, joint with the AHA. Healing the New World: Hospitals and Session 34, joint with the AHA. The Global Economy and Livestock Colonial Public Health in the Spanish Empire (p. 17) Frontiers in the Americas (p. 38)

Session 15, joint with the AHA. Health Policies, Political Power, and Session 35, joint with the AHA. The Hour of Unbelief in 20th-Century Regime Change in 20th-Century Latin America (p. 17) Mexico (p. 39)

Session 16, joint with the AHA. I Gain, You Lose, They Win: Tales of Session 36, joint with the AHA. The Materiality of Migration (p. 39) Successes and Failures in International Solidarity Movements in Cold War Latin America (p. 19) Session 37, joint with the AHA. The Uses of the Law: Legal Practitioners and the Manipulations of the Legal System in Latin Session 17, joint with the AHA. Indigeneity and Patrimony in Modern America (p. 41) Mexico (p. 20) Session 38, joint with the AHA. The “Problem” of Gendered Migration Session 18, joint with the AHA. Insurgency and Daily Life in Peru, from Mexico to the United States since the 1950s (p. 41) 1980–92 (p. 21) Session 39, joint with the AHA. Transitions without Transformation: Session 19, joint with the AHA. Interrogating the Archive: Documentation, Social Rights and Political Struggles across Authoritarian and Transcription, and Translation in the Inquisition (p. 21) Democratic Regimes (p. 42)

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 58 10/29/20 9:35 PM Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 59 Affiliated Societies Session 62.Presidential Panel: Teaching inCrisis (p. 50) Session 61.Presidential Panel: Conversations onAnti-Blackness and Session 60.Persistent Inequality inBrazil: New Approaches Using Session 59.Peasant andIndigenous Movements (p. 50) Session 58,jointwith theLaborand Working ClassHistory Association. Session 57.Neoliberalism intheJungle: Global Economic Reform and Session 56.Modernity and Transnational Influences (p. 49) Session 55.Mexican Studies Section Meeting: Mexican Numbers— Session 54.Local Transformations, Global Reconfigurations: From Session 53.Gran ColombiaStudies Section Meeting: Historical Session 52.ColonialStudies Section Meeting: Freedom before theEnd Session 51.Chile-RíodelaPlata Studies Section Meeting: Writing, Session 50.ChallengingtheHegemon: Inter-American Relations inthe Session 49.CentralAmericanStudies Section Meeting: Democracy and Session 48.CentralAmericanStudies Section Meeting: Session 47.CaribbeanStudies Section Meeting: New Directions in Session 46.Brazilian Studies Section Meeting: The Politics of Session 45.Borderlands andFrontier Studies Section Meeting: Session 44.Atlantic Studies Section Meeting: Recent Scholarship Session 43.AndeanStudies Section Meeting: LongHorizons of Session 42,jointwiththeAHAandLabor Working Class Session 41,jointwiththeAHAandAmericanSociety forLegal Session 40,jointwiththeAHA. Visual Media inSocial Protest and History (p. 50) Multiple Methods (p. 50) Global South (p. 50) On theMargins ofLaborandCapital:Shifting Social Identities inthe Grassroots Intervention inCentralAmerica(p. 49) Reconsidering theQuantitative in Times of Violence (p. 49) Latin America(p. 49) Colonial Bees and Water Management toFree-Trade Avocados in Local andGlobal Perspectives (p. 49) Trajectories ofCapitalismandDevelopment intheGran Colombia— of theAgeRevolution (p. 49) Thinking, and Teaching theSouthern Cone Today (p. 49) Cold War (p. 48) Political Culture inCentralAmerica,1821–2021(p. 48) Illness and W Women, Gender, andSexuality Studies intheCaribbean(p. 48) Environmental HistoryinBrazil (p. 48) Immigration intheUS(p. 48) theStory ofthePresent—AnConstructing Assignmentfor Teaching Connecting Atlantic andPacific Histories (p. 48) Revolution andReaction inBolivia(p. 48) from the1880sto1980s(p. 45) History Association. Workers andtheLawinSouthern Cone America (p. 44) History. Women, LegalActivity, andStruggles forJustice inLatin Solidarity (p. 44) ellness inCentralAmerica(p. 48)

Contagions— Coordinating Councilfor Women inHistory Immigration andEthnic Society History ofScienceSocietyHistory German Historical Institute Economic Association History Disability Association History R Hispanic American Historical Review Session 66. The HistoryandLegaciesofNeoliberalism inChile(p. 51) Session 65. oftheColonialandRepublicanThe Construction State (p. 50) Session 64. Teaching and Teaching Materials Section Meeting: Taking Session 63.Revisiting theRefugee inCuban History:Image-Making, Luncheon General CommitteeMeeting Session 2,jointwiththeAHAandBerkshire Conference of Women Session 1,jointwiththeAHAandLabor Working Class Session 2,jointwiththeAHA.USImmigration andLaborPolicy Session 1,jointwiththeAHAandCommitteeonLesbian, Gay, Session 1,jointwith theAHA.Afterlives inNature: Conceptualizing Session 2,jointwith theCentralEuropean HistorySociety. Session 1,jointwiththeCentralEuropean HistorySociety. Session 1,jointwiththeAHA. The Internal DynamicsofCapitalist Session 2,jointwiththeAHAandLabor Working Class Session 1,jointwiththeAHAandConference onLatinAmerican eception Rare BooksandSpecial Collections(p. 50) Off the White Gloves: Teaching LatinAmericanHistorythrough Internationalism, (p. andReturn 50) inthe20thCentury States (p. 23) Historians. Love, Sex, United andMarriage inthe20th-Century Goldman (p. 23) History Association.Love, Anarchy, RadicalFeminism, andEmma Responses atBorders andinFields (p. 43) during theLongAgeofRestriction: Unimagined Complicationsand Consequences ofAmerica’s 1921Immigration Act 100 Years Later(p. 27) Bisexual, and Transgender History. Is “Our Country Full”: Roots and Death andRevival inEnvironmental Epics (p. 6) Art—Reframing Restitution (p. 51) Reconsidering Looted Cultural Property, Part 2:Beyond Looted the Definitions? Reappraising Salvage and Plunder (p. 51) Reconsidering LootedCultural Property, Part 1: To the Victors Go Development intheEarlyRepublican United States (p. 39) UnitedDisability inthe20th-Century States (p. 45) History Association. Work, Medicine, andtheState: Forging Narratives (p. 12) History. LatinAmericanHistorical Disabling 19th-and20th-Century

Board Meeting 10/29/20 9:35 PM 59

Affiliates 60 Affiliated Societies

International Commission for the History of Session 2, joint with the AHA, the Central European History Society, and the Society for French Historical Studies. Why Did Medieval Representative and Parliamentary Institutions Europe Expel Its Jews? (p. 44) Session 1. Constitution Writing and Parliamentary Organization in the Atlantic World, 1775–1815 (p. 51) National Council on Public History

Session 2. Elements of European Political Culture from the 11th Session 1, joint with the AHA. Making Seattle History (p. 23) Century to the Present (p. 51) Session 2, joint with the AHA, the Society for Historians of American Session 3. Pacific Rim Parliamentary History, 1850–1945 (p. 51) Foreign Relations, and the Society for History in the Federal Government. The Foreign Relations Series at 160: Considering the Labor and Working Class History Association Past, Planning the Future (p. 38)

Session 1, joint with the AHA. An Industrial Slave Society: Race, Class, North American Conference on British Studies and Gender in Antebellum Southern Industry (p. 6) Session 1, joint with the AHA and the Society for French Historical Session 2, joint with the AHA and the Berkshire Conference of Women Studies. Biography, Family, and Microhistory in Europe’s Indian Historians. Caring for Money: How Intimate Workers Employed Ocean Empires, 1750–1918 (p. 8) Creative Strategies to Resist the Undervaluation of Their Labor, 1900–2020 (p. 9) Session 2, joint with the AHA. Countercurrents of Expertise: Race, Community, and Development in the Late British Empire (p. 11) Session 3, joint with the AHA, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, the Western Association of Women Historians, and the Session 3, joint with the AHA and the Society for Advancing the Western History Association. Latinx Labor and Representation in the History of South Asia. Empire, Law, and Revolution in Madras: American West (p. 22) Situating South India in the Indian Ocean and British Imperial Worlds, 1750–1900 (p. 13) Session 4, joint with the AHA and the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Love, Anarchy, Radical Feminism, and Emma Session 4, joint with the AHA and the Society for French Historical Goldman (p. 23) Studies. Law and the Family: Histories of Gender and Race in 18th- and 19th-Century American, French, and British Settler Session 5, joint with the AHA. Taking Forgotten Latina/o/x History to Colonies (p. 22) the Public (p. 36) Session 5, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on Free People of Session 6, joint with the AHA. The Edges of Accumulation: Rethinking Color in the British Atlantic World (p. 26) Transpacific Histories of Capitalism and Anti-Capitalism in the 20th Century (p. 38) Session 6, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on the Malayan Emergency: Race, Space, and Legacy (p. 26) Session 7, joint with the AHA. Transnational Sacco and Vanzetti, Part 1: Transnational Memorialization: A Discussion of How the Memory of Polish American Historical Association Sacco and Vanzetti Has Been Used over the Last Century (p. 42) Session 1. Nonobvious Sources for Polish American History (p. 52) Session 8, joint with the AHA. Transnational Sacco and Vanzetti, Part 2: Transnational Mobilization: A Discussion of the Sacco and Vanzetti Session 2. Poles in Seattle, 1890–2020: Continuity and Change (p. 52) Defense Campaign, 1920–27 (p. 42) Session 3. Polish American Biographies (p. 52) Session 9, joint with the AHA. Urban Inequality and Political Struggle: Socialism, Capitalism, and Global Cities in Transition (p. 43) Session 4. Polish and East European Diasporas: The Cold War Era (p. 52) Session 10, joint with the AHA. Utopia or Corporate Dominion? Interpreting the Contradictory Historical Narratives of Resource Session 5. Polish Immigrants in the United States: Early 20th Century Extraction Company Towns in the Western Americas (p. 43) (p. 52)

Session 11, joint with the AHA and the Disability History Association. Session 6. Recent Issues in Polish American and Polish Diaspora Work, Medicine, and the State: Forging Disability in the 20th- Life (p. 52) Century United States (p. 45) Session 7. The Complexities of Polish and Jewish Identities and Session 12, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American Memory (p. 52) History. Workers and the Law in the Southern Cone from the 1880s Session 8. The Varieties of Polish American Experience over the to the 1980s (p. 45) Decades (p. 53)

Session 13, joint with the Conference on Latin American History. On Session 9. World War II and Its Legacies (p. 53) the Margins of Labor and Capital: Shifting Social Identities in the Global South (p. 50) Board Meeting Medieval Academy of America Renaissance Society of America

Session 1, joint with the AHA. Teaching the Medieval as Mediterranean: Session 1. Isabel La Católica: A Reassessment of Her Life and Reorienting the Metanarrative (p. 36) Legacy (p. 53)

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 60 10/29/20 9:35 PM Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 61 Society forFrench Historical Studies Society forAustrian andHabsburg History of South Asia Society forAdvancing theHistory and New Media Roy Rosenzweig CenterforHistory Affiliated Societies Session 3,jointwiththeAHAandNorth AmericanConference onBritish Session 2,jointwiththeAHA.Histories oftheBrain: Scienceandthe Session 1,jointwith theAHAandNorth AmericanConference Session 1,jointwith theAHA.Reconsidering CentralEurope: New Session 8,jointwiththeAHA.John F. Richards Prize Discussion of Session 7,jointwiththeAHA.Hazardous Heritages, Conflicted Session 6,jointwiththeAHA.Fifty Years ofBangladesh: Tracing Law, Session 5,jointwiththeAHAandNorth AmericanConference on Session 4,jointwiththeAHAandBerkshire Conference of Women Session 3,jointwiththeAHA.ColonialReform inSouth andSoutheast Session 2,jointwiththeAHA.Cold War Migrants: Violence, Ideology, Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.A View from theEdge: Nondominant Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.Digital History, Part 2:Perspectives on Society forAdvancing theHistoryofSouth AsiaandConference on Session 10,jointwiththeAHA.Knowledge Formation, State Session 9,jointwiththeAHA.Knowledge Formation, State 19th-Century American,French,19th-Century andBritish Settler Colonies(p. 22) Studies. LawandtheFamily: Histories ofGender and Racein18th-and Self inModern France (p. 18) Indian Ocean Empires, 1750–1918(p. 8) on British Studies. Biography, Family, andMicrohistoryinEurope’s Modern (p. 31) Directions, Perspectives, andChallengesfrom theMedieval to the Sebastian Prange’s Asia (p. 17) Commemorations: Memorializing Death andLossinModern South Literature, in andLiberty Transition (p. 14) 1750–1900 (p. 13) South India intheIndian Ocean andBritish Imperial Worlds, British Studies. Empire, Law, andRevolution inMadras: Situating Empire inSouth andSoutheast Asia(p. 11) Historians. ConsumingDesires: Sex andDrink asCommoditiesof Asia: Interrogating Meaning and Myth (p. 10) and Displacement inAsianRevolutions, 1945–79(p. 10) Communities and“Minoritization” intheGlobal South (p. 6) Publishing Argument-Driven Digital History(p. 28) Asian HistoryLuncheon (p. 47) Understandings ofSouth Asia,Southeast Asia,andAfrica(p. 25) Building, and Transregional Integration, Part 2:Modern China’s Understandings ofSouth Asia,Southeast Asia,andAfrica(p. 24) Building, and Transregional Integration, Part 1:Modern China’s Malabar Coast(p. 22)

Monsoon Islam: Trade andFaith ontheMedieval

Progressive Era Society for Historians ofthe Gilded and Age Relations Society forHistorians ofAmericanForeign Society for Italian Historical Studies Society intheFederal for History Government Session 4,jointwiththeAHA,National CouncilonPublic History, and Session 4,jointwiththeAHA,CentralEuropean HistorySociety, Session 3,jointwiththeAHA. The Pacific inthe Gilded Age(p. 40) Session 2,jointwiththeAHA.Reconsidering theEmergence ofSex Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.Limitsof Victory: The Afterlifeof Session 3,jointwiththeAHAandConference onLatinAmerican Session 2,jointwiththeAHA.Fighting forAid,Not War: New Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.Diplomacy by Design: Cultural Politics Social Hour Business Meeting Session 7.New Histories ofCapitalisminMussolini’s Italy: APanel in Session 6.Italian Power inthe World: APanel inHonor of Victoria De Session 5.Geographies ofSocial Networks: Three CaseStudies from the Session 4.Food, Magic, andMicropolitics: Institutions andOrdinary Session 3.Exclusion, Integration, Commemoration: The Varieties of Session 2.Debating Holiness inLateMedieval andEarlyModern Italy Session 1,jointwiththeAHA.Italy inthe World, the World inItaly: Session 1,jointwiththeAHA,National CouncilonPublic History, Series at160:ConsideringthePast, Planning theFuture (p. 38) the Society forHistoryintheFederal Government. The Foreign Relations Expel Its Jews? (p. 44) and theMedieval Academy ofAmerica. Why Did Medieval Europe Education intheGilded AgeandProgressive Era (p. 31) Loyalty ontheCivil War’s ContestedBorder (p. 22) Mario VargasLlosa’s History. Guatemala 1954asHistorical Fantasy: ADiscussion of Cold War (p. 14) Directions inUSDomestic Politics andForeign Relations duringthe 1933–39 (p. 12) and theInternational ExpositionsPeriod, oftheLateInterwar Honor of Victoria De Grazia (p. 54) Grazia (p. 54) 12th through 15thCenturies(p. 54) Experiences intheEarlyModern Adriatic (p. 53) Identity Formation inMedieval Italy (p. 53) (p. 53) Modern Italian Culture in Transnational Perspective (p. 22) Future (p. 38) Foreign Relations Series at160:ConsideringthePast, Planning the and theSociety forHistorians ofAmericanForeign Relations. The

Tiempos Recios (p . 17) 10/29/20 9:35 PM 61

Affiliates 62 Affiliated Societies

Society for Military History Western History Association

Session, joint with the George C. Marshall Foundation. George C. Session 1, joint with the AHA, the Berkshire Conference of Women Marshall Lecture in Military History (p. 54) Historians, the Labor and Working Class History Association, and the Western Association of Women Historians. Latinx Labor and George C. Marshall Lecture Reception Representation in the American West (p. 22) Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, World History Association and Publishing Session 1, joint with the AHA. Decolonizing the World History Survey: Session 1. Case Studies in Early Modern Scientific Books (p. 54) Recent Practices and Projects (p. 12) Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Session 2, joint with the AHA. New Approaches to the World History Survey (p. 25)

Session 1, joint with the AHA. Bodies, Hearts, and Hands: Recovering Session 3, joint with the AHA. Reenvisioning Empire: Adaptations and Gender in the Lives and Labor of Early Modern Women (p. 8) Contestations of World Order, 1930s–60s (p. 32) The George C. Marshall Foundation Session 4, joint with the AHA. The Desert in World History: A Nexus of Intercultural Contact and Exchange (p. 37) Session, joint with the Society for Military History. George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History (p. 54) Session 5, joint with the AHA. Writing and Publishing Global History: A Journal Editors’ Roundtable (p. 45) George C. Marshall Lecture Reception Western Association of Women Historians

Session 1, joint with the AHA, the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, the Labor and Working Class History Association, and the Western History Association. Latinx Labor and Representation in the American West (p. 22)

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 62 10/29/20 9:35 PM Participants Index 63

Black, Monica, p. 3 Aa Andrella, Jennifer, p. 35 Barr, Julian, p. 35 Blackbourn, David G., p. 2 Anex-Ries, Quinn Michael, p. 16 Barrett, Dawson, p. 28 Blain, Keisha N., p. 17 Abbe, Spencer, p. 5 Anishanslin, Zara, p. 27 Barrow, Mark, p. 11 Blair, Ann M., p. 36 Abrahamson, Hannah R., p. 27 Antaramian, Richard, p. 32 Barry, Erin, p. 43 Blakeslee, Thomas B., p. 24 Abrams, Ellen, p. 44 Anthony, Patrick, p. 46 Bartee, Seth, p. 18 Blaszczyk, Agata, p. 53 Acevedo, Tony, p. 25 Applebaum, Rachel, p. 45 Bartlett, Andrew P., p. 28 Blee, Lisa, p. 21 Adair, Jennifer, p. 42 Arata, Laura J., p. 11 Bashkuev, Vsevolod, p. 20 Bloch, Brandon, p. 18 Adams, Thomas P., p. 44 Arena, Carolyn, p. 7 Bassiri, Nima, p. 18 Bobadilla, Eladio, p. 36, 41 Adas, Michael, p. 45 Armstead, Shaun, p. 8 Batten, Nicole, p. 27 Boehm, Lisa, p. 45 Adelusi-Adeluyi, Ademide, p. 9 Aroni, Renzo, p. 21 Batchelor, Robert Kinnaird, Boles, Richard J., p. 26 Adeny, Miriam, p. 47 Arteaga, Rachel, p. 3, 35 Jr., p. 12 Bollettino, Maria Alessandra, Adil, Sabahat, p. 27 Aschenbrenner, Peter J., p. 51 Batza, Katie P., p. 35 p. 34 Adler, Jessica L., p. 45 Asselin, Pierre, p. 41 Bavery, Ashley Johnson, p. 27 Bonenfant-Juwong, Francis, p. 6 Admiral, Rosemary, p. 27 Astren, Fred, p. 36 Bay, Mia, p. 8 Booker, Anna Fay, p. 11 Agirreazkuenaga, Joseba, p. 51 Atkas, Oya, p. 5 Bayona, Jorge, p. 12 Booth, Ryan W., p. 5 Agüera y Arcas, Blaise, p. 36 Atkins, Gregory J., p. 34 Beach, Bob, p. 5 Borges, Cristobal A., p. 25 Aguilar, Julio, p. 49 Attig, Derek, p. 19 Beck, Terence, p. 47 Borges, Dain E., p. 14 Aguilar, Kevan Antonio, p. 50 Atwood, Roger, p. 16 Beda, Steven, p. 43 Boris, Eileen, p. 23, 30 Ahlberg, Kristin L., p. 38 Augustin, Anna-Carolin, p. 51 Bedasse, Monique, p. 33 Borja, Melissa May, p. 14 Participants Index Ailes, Mary E., p. 3 Beinin, Joel, p. 10 Bornstein, Daniel, p. 53 Akiboh, Alvita, p. 13 Bb Bekken, Jon, p. 42 Borrero, Mauricio, p. 12 Alberto, Paulina Laura, p. 14 Belew, Kathleen K., p. 36 Boruchoff, David, p. 53 Alexander, Ryan M., p. 12 Bae, Kyoungjin, p. 24 Bellisari, Andrew, p. 14 Borucki, Alex, p. 50 Alexanderson, Kris, p. 11 Bailey, Michael D., p. 3 Belmonte, Laura A., p. 11 Bose, Shibani, p. 28 Ali, Tariq Omar, p. 14 Bailkin, Jordanna, p. 11 Belton, Lloyd, p. 9 Bouchard, Jack, p. 32 Aliano, David, p. 22 Baillargeon, David, p. 26 Bencivenni, Marcella, p. 42 Bouknight, Ashley, p. 30 Alibrandi, Rosamaria, p. 51 Bains, Tiraana, p. 13 Benjamen, Alda, p. 23 Bouldin, Elizabeth, p. 36 Allen, Dorota, p. 52 Baker, Keith M., p. 2 Bennett, Anna, p. 53 Bouloukos, Beth, p. 40 Allert, Beate, p. 46 Balachandran, Jyoti Gulati, p. 22 Bennett, Herman, p. 50 Bourbonnais, Nicole, p. 21 Almohsen, Adey, p. 3 Baldwin, Peter, p. 18 Benson, Devyn Spence, p. 48 Bowen, Alyssa, p. 49 Alonso, Gregorio J., p. 33 Ball, Erica L., p. 25 Berend, Nora, p. 31 Bowen, Elliott, p. 20 Alshaif, Gokh, p. 7 Ball, Rachael I., p. 17 Berger, Dan, p. 33 Bowman, Tim, p. 36 Alvarez-Echandi, Isabel, p. 49 Balleisen, Edward J., p. 19 Berkowitz, Carin, p. 40, 45 Boyer, Christopher R., p. 5, 21 Amadae, Sonja, p. 37 Ballinger, Pamela L., p. 34, 54 Bermudez, Rosie, p. 45 Boyle, Kevin, p. 45 Amador, Emma Balbina, p. 13 Balloffet, Lily Pearl, p. 39, 49 Bernardino, Erik, p. 43 Bradford, James, p. 41 Ambaras, David Richard, p. 8 Ballor, Grace, p. 24 Bernier, Julia Wallace, p. 37 Bradshaw, Mary, p. 25 Amer, Ayal, p. 13 Banel, Feliks, p. 4 Berry, Daina Ramey, p. 34 Braham, Abbass, p. 12, 39 Aminaka, Akiyo, p. 14 Banerjee, Maumita, p. 28 Berry, Michelle K., p. 21 Brake, Elizabeth, p. 19 Amstutz, Andrew, p. 38 Bangura, Joseph, p. 5 Bessner, Daniel M., p. 6, 48 Brandon, Jacqueline, p. 40 Andaya, Barbara Watson, p. 36 Barberis, Daniela S., p. 44 Best, Stephen, p. 15 Brantley, Allyson Powers, p. 22 Anderson, Christopher, p. 17 Barcia, Manuel, p. 34, 39 Beswick, Spencer, p. 31 Brattain, Michelle, p. 33 Anderson, Hannah, p. 54 Barleta, Leonardo, p. 28 Bet-Shlimon, Arbella, p. 7 Breault, Nicole, p. 7 Anderson, Jacey, p. 19 Barnett, Lisa, p. 34 Bezis-Selfa, John, p. 19 Breen, Michael, p. 31 Anderson, Margaret Lavinia, p. 2 Barnett, Lydia, p. 6 Bhattacharyya, Debjani, p. 42 Bresnan, Emma, p. 30 Anderson, Richard, p. 40 Barnett, Robert, p. 3 Birch, Melissa H., p. 29 Bretones, Fernanda, p. 49 Andersson, Jenny, p. 37 Barnhouse, Lucy Christine, p. 36 Birk, Joshua Colin, p. 4 Brew, Gregory Ralph, p. 42 Andino, Mary, p. 53 Barr, Beth Allison, p. 47

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 63 10/29/20 9:35 PM 64 Participants Index

Brook, Timothy J., p. 25 Cao, Mu, p. 13 Cho, Hwisang, p. 33 Costello, Matthew Ryan, p. 15 Brophy, James M., p. 30 Capello, Ernesto B., p. 4, 44 Choi, Jamyung, p. 41 Cothran, Boyd, p. 27 Broussard, Meredith, p. 7 Capo, Julio, Jr., p. 27, 30 Chowning, Margaret, p. 28 Covart, Liz, p. 19 Brown, Jonathan, p. 48 Caprio, Mark E., p. 7 Christensen, Robert, p. 38 Covert, Lisa Pinley, p. 13, 20 Brown, Michael James, p. 30 Cardenas, Jaime, Jr., p. 35 Christmas, Sakura, p. 8 Coy, Jason Philip, p. 3 Brown, Nicholas Alexander, p. 29 Carey, David, Jr., p. 12, 48 Cieslak, Marta, p. 52, 53 Craig, Kalani, p. 8 Brown-Bernstein, Julia, p. 16 Carpenter, Bryce, p. 25 Citino, Nathan, p. 23 Crane, Susan, p. 30 Brown-Coronel, Margie, p. 25 Carpenter, Marc, p. 21 Citino, Robert M., p. 2 Creachbaum, Sarah, p. 38 Brownell, Kathryn Cramer, p. 36 Carter, Brian, p. 23 Clark, J. M. H., p. 38 Creef, Elena Tajima, p. 20 Bruce-Lockhart, Katherine, p. 41 Cartwright, Ryan Lee, p. 16, 45 Cleves, Rachel Hope, p. 43, 45 Crespino, Joseph, p. 37 Brudney, Edward, p. 45 Casey, Matthew, p. 50 Clinton, Catherine, p. 15 Crespo, Jorge Ivan Puma, p. 33 Bruey, Alison J., p. 42 Castellani, Erasmo, p. 53 Clutario, Genevieve, p. 40 Crews, Robert D., p. 9 Brunner, Michael, p. 23 Castilho, Celso T., p. 9 Coates, Oliver, p. 37 Crider, Gregory, p. 39 Brunstedt, Jonathan, p. 18 Castro Benavides, Constanza, Cobble, Dorothy Sue, p. 45 Cross, Gary S., p. 46 Brusius, Mirjam, p. 51 p. 8, 49 Coen, Deborah Rachel, p. 9, 37 Crouthamel, Jason P., p. 24 Brzycki, Melissa A., p. 35 Castronova, Edward, p. 28 Cohen, Theodore, p. 22, 38 Cuenca, Esther Liberman, p. 36 Buchenau, Jurgen, p. 39, 51 Catlos, Brian A., p. 36 Cohn, Edward D., p. 4 Cull, Nicholas, p. 12 Buckley, Eve E., p. 36, 48 Caulkins, Tamara, p. 19 Cohn, Julie, p. 17 Cullison, Jennifer, p. 43 Bueno, Christina M., p. 20 Cha, Javier, p. 12 Colby, Jason Michael, p. 42 Cummings, Alex Sayf, p. 23, 39 Bui, Alvin, p. 26 Chachage, Chambi, p. 3 Colby, Robert, p. 27 Cummings, Sherri, p. 16 Burgos, Ana Maria Diaz, p. 35 Chadwick, Tara, p. 28 Coleman, Dwain Conrad, p. 34 Cupchoy, Lani, p. 13 Burke, Diane Mutti, p. 22 Chakravarti, Ananya, p. 18, 30 Coller, Ian, p. 21 Curran, Francis, p. 7 Burke, Martin J., p. 28 Chambers, Sarah C., p. 33 Collins, Cary C., p. 25 Curtis, Heather D., p. 23, 32 Burkholder, Peter J., p. 5, 40 Chamedes, Giuliana R., p. 54 Conis, Elena, p. 18 Curtis, Katy, p. 47 Burman, Thomas E., p. 36, 46 Chan, Shelly, p. 38 Conley, Nathaniel, p. 51 Burton, Antoinette M., p. 3 Chang, Sandy F., p. 11 Conn, Zachary Isaac, p. 25 Dd Bustamante, Michael, p. 50 Chaniac, Arnaud, p. 28 Connelly, John, p. 31 Byala, Sara G., p. 26 Chapin, Chloe, p. 27 Connelly, Matthew J., p. 37 D’Amico, John, p. 14 Bynum, Katherine Elizabeth, Chapman, Herrick, p. 40 Connolly, Emilie, p. 25 Dalla Porta, Constanza, p. 51 p. 36 Chaparro Silva, Alexander, Conrad, Sharron Wilkins, p. 31 Dallasheh, Leena, p. 10 p. 49, 50 Conroy-Krutz, Emily, p. 7 Daly, Samuel Fury Childs, p. 41 Charbonneau, Oliver, p. 40 Cc Conti, Kathleen Powers, p. 27 Damiano, Sara T., p. 26 Chastain, Andra Brosy, p. 36, 43 Contreras, Paloma, p. 50 Daniel, Jason, p. 49, 50 Cabrita, Joel, p. 12, 32 Chaturvedi, Vinayak, p. 18 Cook, Christine, p. 15 Daniel, Vicki, p. 12 Cahill, Cathleen D., p. 47 Chaudhry, Faisal Iqbal, p. 10 Cook, Karoline P., p. 22 Dannies, Kate, p. 24, 45 Calahane, Kacey, p. 19, 44 Chávez, Marisela R., p. 40 Coon, Caitlin Oiye, p. 43 Dantas, Mariana L., p. 44, 49 Calhoun, Mark T., p. 31 Chen, Dandan, p. 47 Corban, Robert Liming, p. 54 Dapia, Silvia G., p. 52 Cameron, Christopher Alain, p. 8 Chen, Jian, p. 11 Corbman, Rachel, p. 31 Daston, Lorraine J., p. 2 Campana, Kayla, p. 28 Cherkaev, Xenia, p. 30 Cordia, Madelina, p. 30 David, Kyle Ellison, p. 35 Campbell, Elena, p. 32 Chiang, Howard Hsueh-Hao, Córdova, Isabel, p. 21 Davidson, Christina Cecelia, Campos, Amie, p. 45 p. 38 p. 43 Corey, Steven, p. 45 Cancellaro, Cecelia A., p. 44 Chick, Martin, p. 40 Davies, Theresa Indelak, p. 52 Corinealdi, Kaysha L., p. 48 Candido, Mariana P., p. 12, 38 Chin, Angelina, p. 38 Dávila, Jerry, p. 13, 37 Cornell, Michele Curran, p. 28 Canedo, Oscar R., p. 21 Chin, Rita C-K, p. 3 Davis, Bradley Camp, p. 38 Coronado, Pablo Martinez, p. 5 Cannon, Brian, p. 10 Ching, Erik K., p. 16, 48 Davis, Laura June, p. 36 Corrêa, Marília, p. 42 Canova, Paola, p. 29 Chinn, Cassie, p. 25 Davis, Muriam, p. 10 Corrigan, John, p. 8 Cantisano, Pedro, p. 41 Chira, Adriana, p. 49 Davis, Sam, p. 25 Cortes, Angel de Jesus, p. 40

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 64 10/29/20 9:35 PM Participants Index 65

Davis, Teresa E., p. 16 Doten-Snitker, Kerice, p. 44 Esparza, René, p. 35 Fofana, Idriss Paul-Armand, p. 25 Davulis, Laura, p. 44 Dover, Paul Marcus, p. 37 Espinosa, Mariola, p. 18 Ford, Charles, p. 4 Day, Jenny Huangfu, p. 4 Downs, Gregory, p. 42 Esposito, Matthew D., p. 30 Ford, Tanisha, p. 47 de Antuñano, Emilio, p. 8, 43 Downs, James T., Jr., p. 34 Esquit, Edgar, p. 17 Fortuna, James J., p. 10, 12 De La Torre, Monica, p. 40 Doyle, Shane, p. 30 Evans, Jennifer, p. 37 Fosado, Gisela C., p. 44 De Orellana, Juan Carlos, p. 22 Doyle-Raso, John, p. 11 Evans, Stephanie, p. 47 Foss, Chris, p. 14 Dearinger, Ryan, p. 40 Drager, Emmett Harsin, p. 31 Foss, Sarah, p. 21, 49 Deblinger, Rachel, p. 28 Dragostinova, Theodora, p. 34 Ff Foster, Anne L., p. 38 Decker, Corrie, p. 3 Drake, Janine Giordano, p. 48 Foster, Elizabeth A., p. 32 Dehner, George Joseph, p. 18 Drinkwater, Gregg, p. 30 Fajardo, Margarita, p. 16, 49 Foster, Thomas A., p. 34 Dehorty, Jennifer S., p. 25 Duenas, Alcira, p. 22 Falk, Candace S., p. 23 Fourshey, C. Cymone, p. 19 DeLay, Brian, p. 32 Dufendach, Rebecca, p. 49 Fantauzzo, Justin, p. 24 Franco, Robert, p. 16 Delgado, Dara, p. 32 Duguid, Paul, p. 40 Farid, Cynthia, p. 14 Frank, Dana, p. 48 Dell, Jeremy, p. 33 Duller, Matthias, p. 28 Farmer, Ashley D., p. 17 Frank, Nichelle, p. 27 Delle, James, p. 34 Duncan, Natanya, p. 47 Faunce, Ken V., p. 41 Frazier, Alison K., p. 3 Demarest, William J., p. 8 Dunn, Joe P., p. 36 Fazio, Michele, p. 42 Freeman, Damon W., p. 18 Demers, Elizabeth A. S., p. 40 Dunstan, Sarah C., p. 16 Fea, John, p. 48 Freeman, Joanne B., p. 31 Demuth, Bathsheba, p. 27, 37 Dursteler, Eric R., p. 53 Fear, Sean, p. 23 Freije, Vanessa, p. 48 Denetdale, Jennifer, p. 20 Dutra e Silva, Sandro, p. 48 Fedewa, Lauren, p. 25 Freitas, Frederico Santos Soares, Participants Index Dennie, Nneka, p. 47 Dym, Jordana, p. 4, 48 Feild, Erica, p. 21 p. 48 Denning, Andrew, p. 20 Dziwirek, Katarzyna, p. 52 Feimster, Crystal N., p. 23 Frick, Carole Collier, p. 8 Denning, Robert V., p. 18 Feinstein, Tamara D. N., p. 21 Froide, Amy M., p. 8 Derderian, Dzovinar, p. 32 Ee Félicité, Indravati, p. 2 Frost, Adam K., p. 15 Derman, Joshua, p. 32 Ferber, Susan, p. 44 Fuentes, Rodrigo, p. 17 DeRosa, Christopher S., p. 27 Eaglin, Jennifer, p. 48 Fernández-Guevara, Daniel Jesus, Fuget, Beth, p. 40 p. 50 Desbarats, Catherine, p. 32 Eakin, Marshall, p. 29 Funes, José Argueta, p. 9 Fernández Montes de Oca, DeVries, Kelly, p. 3 Earenfight, Theresa M., p. 46 Jose Andres, p. 11 Dhavan, Purnima, p. 3, 35, 38 Eastman, Scott B., p. 33 Fett, Anna, p. 6, 21 Gg Di Cosmo, Nicola, p. 2 Echeverri, Marcela, p. 9 Field, Corinne T., p. 4, 47 Gabel, Isabel, p. 18 Di Paola, Pietro, p. 42 Edwards, Erika Denise, p. 45, 50 Field, Thomas C., p. 34 Gaitors, Beau D.J., p. 22 Diaz, Daniel, p. 15 Edwards, Penny, p. 10 Figliulo-Rosswurm, Joseph, p. 53 Galanda, Gabriel, p. 4 Diaz Arias, David, p. 48, 49 Eggers, Nicole, p. 37 Fin, Anna, p. 52 Galasi, Francis, p. 17 Dichtl, John R., p. 40 Ehlers, Maren Annika, p. 8 Findlay, Eileen J., p. 13 Galeano, Javier Fernández, p. 15 Dillard, Mary Elizabeth, p. 19 El Youssef, Alain, p. 42 Findlen, Paula, p. 54 Gallman, Nancy O., p. 25 Dillon, Mark, p. 53 Elaine, Frantz, p. 46 Fink, Carole K., p. 9 Gama, Yuri Kieling, p. 8 Dimas, Carlos S., p. 49 Elder, Angela Esco, p. 36 Fischer-Hoffman, Cory, p. 43 Ganson, B. A., p. 29 Dingman, Paul, p. 8 Elias, Megan J., p. 47 Fischer-Tiné, Harald, p. 23 Gao, James Z., p. 11 Dinka, Etana, p. 24 Ellis, Reginald K., p. 19 Fisher, Alexander, p. 36 Gao, Yunxiang, p. 11 Domenico, Roy, p. 54 Elsey, Brenda, p. 19, 49 Fisher, Andrew H., p. 4 Garcia, Guadalupe, p. 34 Donaldson, Anthony, Jr., p. 4 Eluwawalage, Damayanthie, p. 19 Fitzgerald, Devin, p. 2 Garcia-Guevara, Aldo Vladimir, Donovan, Brian, p. 16 Emiralioglu, Pinar, p. 9 Fitzpatrick Behrens, Susan R., p. 16 Donovan, Joshua, p. 6 p. 21 Engel, Elisabeth, p. 43 Garcia Yero, Cary Aileen, p. 29 Dorais, Geneviève, p. 19 Flis, Iwona, p. 52 Engel, Jeffrey A., p. 31 Garner, Karen K., p. 10 Dorin, Rowan, p. 44 Flood, Dawn Rae, p. 16 Engerman, David C., p. 2, 45 Garrett, Alexandra, p. 6 Dormady, Jason H., p. 12, 39 Flores-Montaño, Cassandra, p. 16 Erdmans, Mary Patrice, p. 52 Garrison, Olivia, p. 19 Dorn, Charles, p. 41 Fluker, Amy, p. 22 Eskew, Glenn T., p. 38 Garvin, Diana, p. 22, 34, 54 Doron, Roy, p. 14, 39

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 65 10/29/20 9:35 PM 66 Participants Index

Garza, James Alex, p. 30 Gossard, Julia M., p. 19 Haine, W. Scott, p. 46 Hernandez, Idolina, p. 22 Gaynor, Jennifer, p. 10 Goswami, Manu, p. 3 Hale, Tiffany, p. 34 Hernandez, Monica, p. 21 Geiger, Andrea, p. 33 Gould, Eliga, p. 31, 32 Hale, Timothy Cole, p. 5 Hernandez, Viridiana, p. 49 Geismer, Lily, p. 44 Graham, Emily, p. 54 Hall, John, p. 54 Hiatt, Willie L., p. 21, 36 Gelvin, James L., p. 45 Greble, Emily, p. 9, 34 Hall, Ryan C., p. 32 Hicker, Robert, p. 52 Genkins, Daniel, p. 29 Green, Adam Paul, p. 41 Halperin, Liora R., p. 18, 45 Hickman, Timothy, p. 46 Gerber, Lynne, p. 31 Green, Hilary, p. 15 Hamblen, Lauren, p. 21 Hicks, Mary Ellen, p. 49, 50 Gerona, Carla, p. 7 Green, Mira, p. 46 Hamilton, Peter Evan, p. 15 Hidalgo, Alexander, p. 50 Getz, Trevor, p. 5, 25 Green, Monica H., p. 20 Hammond, Kelly, p. 9 Highsmith, Lisa Caitlin, p. 12 Ghanbarpour, Christina, p. 27 Green Rioja, Romina A., p. 49 Hammond, Stephen, p. 15 Hill, Kimberly, p. 43 Ghanoui, Saniya Lee, p. 35 Greenberg, David, p. 41 Hammonds, Evelynn M., Hilliard, Kathleen M., p. 3 Gharala, Norah Linda Andrews, Greene, Alison Collis, p. 14, 17 p. 18 Hirsch, Steven J., p. 7, 42 p. 48 Greene, Annie, p. 6 Hanna, Mark G., p. 28 Ho, Colleen C., p. 54 Ghosh, Saumyashree, p. 13 Greene, Hannah, p. 33 Hansen, Jan E., p. 8 Ho, Denise Y., p. 15 Giacomelli, Joseph, p. 38 Greene-Hayes, Ahmad, p. 30 Hanser, Jessica, p. 8 Hobson, Emily K., p. 15 Gigliotti, Samantha, p. 30 Green-Mercado, Mayte T., p. 36 Hardesty, Jared Ross, p. 26, 34 Hoffman, Daniel, p. 37 Gilbert, Claire, p. 36 Greenwald, Hannah, p. 49 Hardyway, Fredrick, p. 34 Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig, p. 3 Gilbert, Marc Jason, p. 25 Griffith, Brian J., p. 54 Harewood, Susan, p. 16 Hoganson, Kristin L., p. 40 Gill, Craig, p. 29 Griffith, Sarah, p. 39 Haritos, Gabriel, p. 46 Holler, Jacqueline, p. 8 Gilman, Nils, p. 37 Grossner, Karl, p. 12 Harper, Matt J. Z., p. 43 Holley-Kline, Sam, p. 20 Glossner, Jeffrey, p. 7 Grover, Kate, p. 23 Harpin, Natalye Joann, p. 21 Hollinger, David A., p. 10 Glotzer, Paige, p. 42 Grunewald, Susan, p. 12 Harris, Adrienne, p. 18 Holm, April E., p. 22 Glovsky, David Newman, p. 33 Guanci, Sin, p. 31 Harris, Jessica L., p. 22 Holmes, Chad, p. 7 Gobat, Michel, p. 48 Guardiola-Griffiths, Cristina, Harris, Steve, p. 5 Holmes, Erin Marie, p. 34 Goedde, Petra, p. 7 p. 53 Harris, Steven E., p. 11 Hondius, Dienke, p. 34 Goeing, Anja-Silvia, p. 40 Guengerich, Sara, p. 18 Harshman, Jason, p. 7 Honores, Renzo R., p. 22, 41 Gofer, Gilat, p. 46 Guido, Joseph, p. 37 Hart, Jennifer, p. 5 Horbinski, Andrea, p. 8 Goff, Krista, p. 3, 23 Guild, Joshua Bruce, p. 33 Hartog, Hendrik A., p. 9 Horne, Janet, p. 45 Goldin, Gabriela, p. 33 Guiliano, Jennifer E., p. 15 Hasday, Jill, p. 26 Hou, Shen, p. 13 Goldthree, Reena N., p. 16, 48 Gullace, Nicoletta, p. 24 Hattori, Masako, p. 41 Houwink ten Cate, Lotte, p. 16 Gomez, Rocio, p. 12 Gurnack, Anne, p. 53 Hauger, Jessica Joyce, p. 10 Howard, Adam M., p. 38 Gómez-Rivas, Camilo, p. 27 Gürsel, Zeynep Devrim, p. 39 Hayes, Nicole, p. 20 Howard, Clayton C., p. 35 Gonzalez, Cristian Perucci, p. 10 Gutierrez, Laura D., p. 41 Head, Randolph C., p. 2 Howard, Jacquelyne Thoni, González, Juan Carlos Mezo, Gutman, David, p. 39 Healey, Beth, p. 5 p. 28 p. 15 Gutzke, David W., p. 46 Healy, Gavin, p. 15 Howe, Justine, p. 9 González, Sabrina, p. 31 Gyrisco, Geoffrey M., p. 53 Heefner, Gretchen A., p. 13 Howlett, Daniel, p. 29 Gonzalez, Tiffany Jasmin, p. 22 Heifler, Sydney, p. 20 Hoyer, Cacee, p. 29 Goodall, Jamie L. H., p. 28 Hh Helfferich, Tryntje, p. 3 Hoyt, Andrew Douglas, p. 42 Goode, Catherine Tracy, p. 27 Helfgott, Isadora A., p. 5 Hsia, Ronnie Po-chia, p. 2 Goodman, Adam, p. 48 Haager, Julia, p. 31 Helgren, Jennifer Hillman, Hsiung, David C., p. 2 Goodwin, Caitlin, p. 15 Hack, Karl, p. 26 p. 21 Hsiung, Hansun, p. 33 Gordon, Lesley J., p. 2 Hadden, Sally E., p. 31 Henderson, Angus, p. 11 Huang, Yanjie, p. 15 Gordon, Linda, p. 27 Haefeli, Evan, p. 7 Hendrickson, Jocelyn N., p. 27 Huang, Yanzhong, p. 18 Gordon, Sarah Barringer, p. 35 Hagemann, Karen, p. 3 Henry, Robin C., p. 16 Hubbell, Bram, p. 12 Gordon Baty, Christy, p. 8 Hagemann, Luke, p. 46 Hepler-Smith, Evan, p. 26 Hudgins, Nicole, p. 44 Gordon-Reed, Annette, p. 2 Hagler, Anderson, p. 21, 24 Herbst, Matthew T., p. 37 Hudson, Lynn M., p. 3 Gorman, Keith, p. 29 Hagood, Thomas Chase, p. 32 Hernández, Bonar, p. 48, 50 Huerta, Sheri A., p. 6

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Huezo, Stephanie M., p. 16 Johnson, Amanda, p. 29 Keeley, Theresa, p. 10 Ll Hugill, David, p. 34 Johnson, Carina L., p. 5, 18 Keller, Renata, p. 36 Hui, Alexandra, p. 38 Johnson, Christopher, p. 25 Keller, Vera, p. 36 Laffan, Michael F., p. 22 Hulden, Vilja, p. 29 Johnson, Craig, p. 49 Kelley, Robin D. G., p. 33 Lahti, Janne, p. 21 Hulsebosch, Daniel, p. 31 Johnson, David A., p. 17 Kenny, Gale L., p. 23 Laine, Jody, p. 45 Huner, Michael Kenneth, p. 49 Johnson, Gaynor, p. 10 Keo, Bernard, p. 26 Lambert, Laurie, p. 18 Hunt, Alex, p. 36 Johnson, Sherri Franks, p. 54 Kerr, Theodore, p. 35 Lamoreaux, Naomi R., p. 39 Hunt, D. Bradford, p. 45 Johnston, Christine, p. 11, 46 Key, Lora Michelle, p. 40 Lamothe, Ron, p. 24 Hunt, Emily, p. 23 Jones, Griffin, p. 7 Keys, Barbara, p. 7, 38 Landers, Jane, p. 29 Hunt, Nancy Rose, p. 3 Jones, Matthew, p. 7 Khare, Aditi, p. 29 Lang, Andrew, p. 27 Husband, Len, p. 44 Jones, Norman L., p. 4 Kibler, Alison, p. 32 Lange, Carolin, p. 51 Hyde, Anne, p. 3 Jones, Patrick D., p. 35 Kiddle, Amelia M., p. 12 Langer, Erick Detlef, p. 38 Hyde, Elizabeth, p. 11 Jones-Branch, Cherisse, Kim, Helen, p. 14, 35 Lansing, Carol L., p. 53 Hyman, Owen, p. 24 p. 25, 47 Kim, Sung Yup, p. 7 Lanza, Fabio, p. 30 Jones-Rogers, Stephanie E., Kimball, Natalie, p. 17 Lanzillo, Amanda, p. 17 p. 26, 34 King, Farina, p. 34 Larson, Zeb, p. 14 Ii Judson, Pieter M., p. 9, 19 Kinney, Martha E., p. 11 Lasso, Marixa A., p. 21, 34 Jun, Hajin, p. 14 Iden, Michelle, p. 11, 30 Kirkendall, Andrew J., p. 36 Law, Anna, p. 6 Jun, Nathan, p. 42 Ikemoto, Ashleigh, p. 48 Kiyama, Claudia, p. 25 Lawlor, Ruth Grace, p. 31 Jung, Moon-Ho, p. 6 Participants Index Immerwahr, Daniel, p. 2, 13 Klein Hernández, Kris, p. 5 Lawrance, Benjamin N., p. 24, 39 Juni, Mayer, p. 21 Imy, Kate, p. 26 Klein-Pejsova, Rebekah, p. 19 Lawrence, Mark Atwood, p. 31 Inniss, Lolita Buckner, p. 15 Kline, Christopher J., p. 18 Leake, Elisabeth, p. 9 Irwin, Julia F., p. 13 Kk Knorr, Daniel, p. 44 Leal, Claudia, p. 49 Isaza, Maria, p. 30 Knox, Lezlie S., p. 53 Leavitt-Alcantara, Brianna N., Kabala, Jakub J., p. 4 p. 34 Ishii, Noriko, p. 39 Köll, Elisabeth, p. 20 Kakati, Aditya Kiran, p. 23 Leblanc, Zoe Genevieve, p. 15 Ivaska, Andrew M., p. 3 Kordick, Carmen, p. 48 Kalema, Emery, p. 37 Lee, Andrew H., p. 42 Kosto, Adam, p. 3 Kallendorf, Hilaire, p. 53 Lee, Erika, p. 25, 27 Kotin, Daniel, p. 12 Jj Kamenov, Nikolay, p. 23 Lee, Heather Ruth, p. 38 Kowalsky, Sharon A., p. 18 Kamerling, Henry, p. 33 Jabour, Anya, p. 45 Leese, Peter, p. 24 Kozaczka, Grazyna, p. 52 Kane, Adrian, p. 35 Jach, Theresa R., p. 4 Lefkovitz, Alison, p. 23, 26 Kraay, Hendrik, p. 9 Kang, S. Deborah, p. 48 Jackson, Julianna, p. 15 Lehfeldt, Elizabeth, p. 45 Kramm, Robert, p. 7 Kanjwal, Hafsa, p. 18 Jackson, Kellie Carter, p. 15 Leitzel, Stephanie, p. 14 Kraus, Charles Richard, p. 42 Kanosky, Alison J., p. 43 Jackson, Trevor, p. 24 Lemberg, Diana, p. 37, 45 Kraut, Alan, p. 18 Kappeler, Aaron, p. 49 Jagodinsky, Katrina L., p. 4, 18 Lenti, Joseph Umberto, p. 12 Kriger, Colleen E., p. 32 Kapur, Manav, p. 14 Janzen, Philip, p. 33 Lentis, Marinella, p. 18 Krivulskaya, Suzanna, p. 43 Karl, Rebecca E., p. 9 Jarvis, Jonathan, p. 38 Lentz, Mark, p. 27 Krochmal, Max, p. 36 Karr, Susan Longfield, p. 32 Jashari, Denisa, p. 50 Leon, Sharon, p. 15, 35 Krughoff, Laura, p. 47 Karush, Matthew B., p. 28 Jasper, Kathryn Lee, p. 54 Lerner Patrón, Adrian, p. 8 Kube, Sven, p. 29 Kashanipour, Ryan Amir, p. 48 Jean-Baptiste, Rachel, p. 34 Levengood, Paul, p. 54 Kuech, Andrew, p. 9 Kassell, Lauren, p. 40 Jellison, Katherine K., p. 25 Levey, Eben, p. 33 Kumalo, Vusumuzi R., p. 12 Kates, Adrienne, p. 8 Jennings, Audra, p. 45 Levin, Natalie Dawn, p. 46 Kung, Ling-Wei, p. 24 Kawamura, Noriko, p. 7 Jeon, Chihyung, p. 13 Levine, Emily, p. 25 Kupperman, Karen Ordahl, Jillson, Chris, p. 49 Kazuhiro, Takii, p. 51 p. 32 Levine, Zachary, p. 18 Jimenez, Christina M., p. 21 Keating, Andrew, p. 8 Kurtz, William B., p. 29 Levinson, Marc, p. 47 John, Maria, p. 18 Kedar, Nir, p. 46 Kuz´ma-Markowska, Sylwia, Levy, Juliette, p. 24 Keeley, Samuel Blaine, Jr., John, Richard R., p. 37 p. 52 Levy, La TaSha, p. 8 Johnson, Aaron, p. 35 p. 5, 30

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Lewandoski, Julia, p. 25 Lustig, Jason, p. 19, 51 Maxwell, Lindsey B., p. 29 Mestaz, James, p. 50 Lewis, Michael L., p. 11 Lüthi, Lorenz, p. 9 May, Jordyn, p. 20 Metcalf, Alida C., p. 9 Lewis, Susan, p. 29 Lyall, Victoria, p. 27 Mazumder, Rajashree, p. 42 Meyerson, Mark D., p. 36 Li, Danke, p. 11 Lydon, Ghislaine E., p. 37 Mazurkiewicz, Anna A., p. 52 Meyskens, Covell, p. 35 Li, Xiao-Bing, p. 47 Lyon, Jonathan Reed, p. 31 Mbughunu, Azaria, p. 3 Michelle, C. Daniel, p. 20 Li, Xiaoxiao, p. 47 McArdle Stephens, Michele, p. 27 Middell, Matthias, p. 45 Liang, Kan, p. 47 Mm McAuley, Christopher, p. 24 Midura, Rachel C., p. 28 Liebersohn, Harry, p. 46 McCarraher, Eugene Brian, p. 48 Mikhalevskaya, Arina, p. 25 Limerick, Patricia Nelson, p. 3 MacArthur, Julie, p. 12 McCormick, Gladys I., p. 49 Milam, Erika Lorraine, p. 6 Lin, James, p. 35 Macdonald, Gillian Sarah, p. 51 McDonald, Kate, p. 8 Miller, Douglas K., p. 34 Lindsey, Treva B., p. 47 Mack, Graeme, p. 6 McDonald, Kevin P., p. 28 Miller, Edward, p. 23, 26 Linebaugh, Riley, p. 33 Mack, Jessica, p. 8 McDonough, Kelly, p. 32 Miller, Eric, p. 48 Linzy, Benjamin, p. 41 Madar, Allison, p. 26 McDonough, Scott J., p. 46 Miller, Heather Lee, p. 19 Lipartito, Kenneth J., p. 2 Madley, Benjamin, p. 18, 21 McEnaney, Laura, p. 5 Miller, Ian J., p. 17 Lira, Stefanie Joy, p. 48 Maguire, Lori, p. 41 McEwen, Britta Isabelle, p. 45 Miller, Marla R., p. 30 Lirley McCune, Sarah E., p. 12 Mahony, Mary Ann, p. 13 McGaha, Richard, p. 14 Miller, Scott, p. 39 Littauer, Amanda H., p. 43 Majewski, John, p. 6, 7, 47 McGandy, Michael J. , p. 7, 45 Miller Renberg, Lynneth J., p. 28 Liu, Liyan, p. 47 Malleck, Dan, p. 46 McGaughey, Tyler, p. 45 Millett, Nathaniel, p. 38 Liu, Ye, p. 9 Mammina, Laura, p. 36 McGaughy, J. Kent, p. 4, 11 Milligan, Ian, p. 15 Livesay, Daniel, p. 26 Mandell, Daniel R., p. 25 McGillivray, Gillian A., p. 13 Mills, David, p. 44 Lobbes, Tessa, p. 28 Mangan, Jane E., p. 44 McGrath, Elena C., p. 48 Millward, Jessica, p. 19 Loewen, Royden K., p. 17 Mansilla, Judith, p. 41 McGrath, Larry Sommer, p. 18 Milne, Andrea, p. 44 Logevall, Fredrik, p. 41 Marak, Andrae, p. 37 McInerney, Daniel J., p. 11, 19 Milowski, Daniel, p. 29 Lohr, Eric J., p. 45 Marcello, Flavia, p. 12 McKay, Richard A., p. 20 Milstead, John, p. 22 Loiacono, Gabriel J., p. 7 Marchand, Suzanne, p. 5 McKevitt, Andrew C., p. 36 Milteer, Warren E., Jr., p. 26 Lopera Mesa, Gloria Patricia, Marinari, Maddalena, p. 48 Mckiernan-González, John, p. 45 Mitchell, Elise A., p. 16 p. 41 Markle, Seth, p. 3 McKinley, Michelle, p. 9, 26 Mitchell, Laura J., p. 12 Lopes, Maria-Aparecida, p. 39 Marquez-Osuna, Angelica, p. 49 McLeod, Marc C., p. 13 Mitchell, Rebecca, p. 32 Lopez, Bianca, p. 53 Marschke, Benjamin, p. 32 McNabb, Jennifer Lynn, p. 36 Mitchell, Vernon, Jr., p. 32 López, Kathleen, p. 50 Martin, Geoffrey, p. 46 McNeal, Monica, p. 25 Mitman, Gregg, p. 18 Lopez, Maria Montserrat Feu, Martin, Lindsey, p. 5 McNeely, Ian, p. 25 Mitra, Sarbajit, p. 11 p. 31 Martin, Scott C., p. 46 McNeill, John R., p. 32, 37 Mittelman, Amy, p. 46 Lopez, Ricardo, p. 49 Martin William “Bill,” p. 30 McPherson, Alan L., p. 34, 48 Mittermeier, Sabrina, p. 11 Lotz-Heumann, Ute, p. 2 Martín-García, Óscar J., p. 41 McSpadden, James, p. 51 Modica, Justine, p. 9 Louro, Michele L., p. 22, 34, Marvin, Nathan Elliot, p. 8 McTygue, Nancy J., p. 44 Monaville, Pedro, p. 37 47, 53 Maskiell, Nicole, p. 26 Meadows, R. Darrell, p. 7 Moniz, Amanda B., p. 45 Louter, David, p. 23 Mata, Cindy, p. 13 Medvick, Amy, p. 49 Montano, Diana Jeaneth, p. 36, 40 Louthan, Howard P., p. 31 Matera, Marc, p. 11 Meeks, Eric V., p. 43 Montesinos, Fernando Pérez, Lovejoy, Paul E., p. 29 Mathew, Johan, p. 47 Mellors, Sarah, p. 5 p. 28 Lowry, James, p. 51 Mathoor, Vineeth, p. 34 Melvin, Karen, p. 35 Moody, Erin Harvey, p. 8 Lozar, Patrick, p. 43 Matos, Antonio Hernández, p. 19 Mendez, Alina R., p. 22 Moon, Yumi, p. 10 Lubamersky, Lynn T., p. 52 Matsumura, Wendy, p. 50 Mendoza, Mary E., p. 10 Mooney-Melvin, Patricia, p. 30 Luedtke, Aaron, p. 20 Matsusaka, Hiroaki, p. 38 Mendoza, Natalie, p. 36, 48 Moore, Brenda, p. 15 Luis, Diego, p. 48 Matt, Susan J., p. 6 Mercantini, Jonathan, p. 11 Mora, Miriam Eve, p. 24, 44 Lum, Kathryn Gin, p. 35 Matthew, Laura E., p. 2, 32 Mergenthal, Rebekah M. K., p. 6 Morado, Michelle, p. 40 Lumba, Allan, p. 38 Maxson, Stanley, p. 13 Merkel, Ian, p. 14 Moretta, John, p. 5 Lund-Montano, Camilo, p. 5 Maxwell, Jeremy P., p. 15 Merrell, Laura Y., p. 22 Morgan, Brandon B., p. 27 Lurtz, Casey M., p. 28

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 68 10/29/20 9:35 PM Participants Index 69

Morgan, Ruth, p. 37 Newman, Rachel Grace, p. 41 Osborne, Myles Gregory, p. 24 Petropoulos, Jonathan, p. 51 Morgan, Zachary, p. 38 Newport, Melanie Diane, p. 33 Osei, Cassandra, p. 50 Petruccelli, David, p. 39 Moriwaki, Clarence, p. 43 Ng, Michael, p. 33 Osei-Opare, Nana, p. 2 Petty, Adrienne Monteith, p. 24 Morris, Bonnie J., p. 30 Nguyen, Phi-Vân, p. 10, 29 Ossian, Lisa Payne, p. 19 Pfeiffer, Abigail, p. 18 Morris, Jonathan, p. 22 Nichols, Shaun, p. 47 Ostler, Jeff, p. 10 Phillips, Victoria, p. 14 Morse, Kathryn T., p. 10 Nicola, Trish Hackett, p. 4 Otero, Lydia R., p. 10 Phillips, William D., Jr., p. 53 Mosca, Matthew, p. 24 Nijhawan, Shobna, p. 42 Otero-Cleves, Ana Maria, p. 49 Phillips-Cunningham, Danielle, Moskowitz, Kara, p. 10 Nimatuj, Irma Alicia Velásquez, Otis, Jessica Marie, p. 29 p. 9 Mosterman, Andrea Catharina, p. 17 Ott, Jennifer, p. 23 Phumplab, Morragotwong, p. 26 p. 34 Nixon, Deborah, p. 17 Ott, Tanya, p. 19 Pickman, Sarah, p. 27 Mostern, Ruth, p. 12, 28 Nobbs-Thiesson, Ben, p. 48 Ovalle, Camilo Vicente, p. 49 Picone, Angeles, p. 33, 49 Mount, Guy Emerson, p. 8, 42, 43 Noble, Dedi, p. 25 Overtoom, Nikolaus, p. 46 Pierce, Gretchen Kristine, p. 39 Moyd, Michelle, p. 3, 39 Nolan, Mary, p. 29 Pierce, Jason Eric, p. 33 Mt. Pleasant, Alyssa, p. 3 Nolan, Rachel, p. 21 Pp Pierce, Jennifer Burek, p. 29 Mueller, Brian, p. 44 Nolan-Ferrell, Catherine A., p. 39 Pietrenka, Benjamin, p. 32 Mugge, Miqueias H., p. 28, 50 Nord, Philip G., p. 2 Pacino, Nicole L., p. 48 Pilcher, Jeffrey M., p. 15 Muir, Scott, p. 33 Norwood, Arlisha, p. 13 Padilla, Fernando Camacho, p. 19 Pineda, Yovanna, p. 40 Mulhearn, Ann, p. 29 Nowak, Katarzyna, p. 53 Paine, Sarah C. M., p. 54 Pinsker, Matthew, p. 15 Mullen, Lincoln, p. 28, 35 Nunley, Tamika Yolanda, p. 4 Painter, Korbin, p. 35 Piorko, Megan, p. 54 Participants Index Muller, Anna, p. 52, 53 Nwokocha, Eziaku, p. 31 Pal, Srijita, p. 20 Pitcairn, Sara, p. 25 Müller, Viola Franziska, p. 15 Palladino, Chiara, p. 12 Plácido, Sandy, p. 20, 48 Mumford, Jeremy Ravi, p. 13 Oo Palma, Patricia, p. 17 Plummer, Jillian, p. 10 Murayama, Satoshi, p. 13 Palomino, Pablo, p. 16 Podestà, Gianluca, p. 54 Murillo, Bianca, p. 2 O’Brassill-Kulfan, Kristin, Panda, Ahona, p. 14, 33 Pogue, Neall, p. 17 p. 7, 37 Murphy, Brian, p. 39 Pande, Ishita, p. 4, 18 Pohl Valero, Stefan, p. 49 O’Brien, Elizabeth, p. 12 Murphy, Kevin P., p. 16 Parcells, Ashley, p. 33 Polanco, Edward Anthony, p. 10 O’Connor, Alice, p. 36 Musgrove, George Derek, p. 18 Park, Peter, p. 46 Poley, Jared, p. 3 O’Hara, Matt, p. 14 Myers, Nicholas, p. 37 Parker, Jewel, p. 10 Poska, Allyson M., p. 36, 38 O’Keefe, John McNelis, p. 33 Mylet, Jordan Lee, p. 44 Parker, Traci Lynnea, p. 23 Powell, Julie M., p. 24 O’Mara, Margaret Pugh, p. 25, 39 Patel, Trishula Rachna, p. 5 Power, Margaret M., p. 51 O’Rourke, Harmony Susan, Payne, Eva, p. 20 Power-Greene, Ousmane K., Nn p. 26 Payne, Samantha Leigh, p. 42 p. 37 Oberdeck, Kathryn J., p. 35 Nagel, Amanda, p. 44 Peabody, Sue, p. 8 Powers, Amy Godfrey, p. 4 Oberg, Michael Leroy, p. 25 Nager, Cody, p. 6 Pearson, Jessica L., p. 11 Prange, Sebastian, p. 22 Oberiano, Kristin, p. 6 Nash, Linda L., p. 26 Pease, Neal H., p. 52 Prasad, Ritika, p. 33 Ochoa, Enrique, p. 13 Nasseri, Sabauon, p. 10 Pelegrin Taboada, Ricardo, p. 41 Praszałowicz, Dorota, p. 52 Ochonu, Moses Ebe, p. 24 Natarajan, Radhika, p. 11 Pelegrino, Alexandre, p. 29, 49 Premo, Bianca, p. 3, 13, 34, 50 Offutt, Leslie S., p. 4 Naumann, Katja, p. 45 Pellow, David, p. 10 Prentice, David, p. 41 Offutt, William, p. 32 Neely, Jeremy, p. 22 Peñalba-Sotorrío, Mercedes, p. 10 Preston, Andrew, p. 6 Olds, Katrina, p. 35 Negrin, Hayley, p. 26 Pérez Meléndez, Jose Juan, p. 28 Pretel, David, p. 40 Olich, Jacqueline, p. 19 Neiberg, Michael, p. 2, 44 Perkins, Monica, p. 31 Price, Jerry, p. 44 Olmstead, Shay R., p. 30 Nelson, Adam, p. 25 Perrier, Craig, p. 5 Priest, Tyler, p. 17 Olson, Caitlyn, p. 27 Nelson, William Max, p. 2 Perry, Jimena, p. 50 Prieto-Nanez, Fabian, p. 40 Olson, Madeleine C., p. 33 Nemes, Robert, p. 19 Perry, Kennetta Hammond, p. 17 Prochnow, Kyle, p. 34 Orleck, Annelise, p. 9 Nestler, Matthew, p. 50 Peterson, Gigi A., p. 15 Proctor, Tammy M., p. 44 Orozco, Ana, p. 13 Nesvig, Martin A., p. 10 Peterson, Jackie, p. 23 Pruett, Jessica, p. 23 Ortheguy, Raquel, p. 50 Neto, Manoel Rendeiro, p. 5 Peterson, Janine Larmon, p. 53 Pryluka, Pablo, p. 51 Orzoff, Andrea, p. 34

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 69 10/29/20 9:35 PM 70 Participants Index

Puente, Javier, p. 37 Renda, Mary A., p. 3 Rosenthal, Jill, p. 39 Scalenghe, Sara, p. 12 Puff, Helmut, p. 3 Resendez, Andres, p. 49 Ross, Travis E., p. 5 Schachter, Judith, p. 9 Pula, James S., p. 52 Retka, Michael, p. 53 Roth, Cassia, p. 21, 50 Schaefer, Jennifer Lee, p. 49 Putnam, Lara E., p. 15 Reut, Jennifer, p. 27 Rothman, E. Natalie, p. 2 Schakenbach Regele, Lindsay, Pyle, Kenneth, p. 7 Rhodes, Hilary, p. 36 Rotramel, Ariella, p. 9 p. 39 Richert, Lucas, p. 41 Rouse, Melvin, p. 47 Schalit, Naomi, p. 30 Qq Riches, Daniel L., p. 2 Rouse, Wendy, p. 45 Schields, Chelsea Angela, p. 34 Richfield, Clare Joanna, p. 40 Rovang, Sarah, p. 43 Schindling, James, p. 29 Quam-Wickham, Nancy L., p. 4 Richter, Hedwig, p. 51 Rowley, Sarah B., p. 23 Schleitwiler, Vince, p. 42 Quinn, Adam, p. 42 Rickford, Russell John, p. 17 Roy, Alyson, p. 46 Schlotterbeck, Marian E., p. 36, 49 Quinn-Brauner, Mearah, p. 19 Riegg, Stephen B., p. 32 Roy, Rohan Deb, p. 18 Schluessel, Eric, p. 36 Quinn-Judge, Sophia W., p. 26 Ring, Natalie J. J., p. 33 Royster, Briana, p. 21 Schmalz, Timothy J., p. 10 Quraishi, Uzma, p. 9 Rizzo, Tracey K., p. 28 Rozwadowski, Helen M., p. 27 Schmid, Anastazia, p. 20 Qureshi, Lubna Z., p. 41 Roberts, Richard L., p. 24 Rude, Lisa Marie, p. 27 Schmitt, Casey, p. 28 Roberts, Samuel Kelton, Jr., p. 18 Rudeen, Christopher M., p. 19 Schneider, Benjamin M., p. 31 Rr Robertson, Stephen M., p. 28 Rudek-Smiechowska, Anna, p. 52 Schneider, Elena, p. 9 Robey, Sarah, p. 17 Ruediger, Dylan, p. 3, 5 Rabinovitch-Fox, Einav, p. 15 Schoepflin, Lisl, p. 50 Robinson, Beth, p. 29 Rugemer, Edward B., p. 15 Racine, Karen, p. 33 Schoeppner, Michael Alan, p. 6 Robinson, Marc Arsell, p. 28 Ruggiero, Guido, Jr., p. 53 Radchenko, Sergey, p. 9 Scholz, Maximilian Miguel, Robinson, Nova, p. 6, 7 Ruoff, Kenneth J., p. 7 Radding, Cynthia, p. 33 p. 39 Robinson, Tracy, p. 34 Rushforth, Brett, p. 33 Radzilowski, John, p. 53 Schoof, Markus, p. 10 Robles-Anderson, Erica, p. 39 Rusk, Bruce, p. 36 Ragas, Jose, p. 36 Schrenk, Lisa, p. 12 Robson, Laura, p. 6 Russell, Mia, p. 43 Raimo, John Duke, p. 16 Schroer, Haley, p. 29 Rockwell, Nicholas, p. 46 Ryan, Maeve, p. 34 Rajagopal, Arvind, p. 37 Schrum, Kelly, p. 29 Rodríguez, Alexa, p. 20 Rymsza-Pawlowska, M. J., p. 25 Ramos, Christina, p. 17 Schulz, Joy Elizabeth, p. 22 Rodriguez, Andres, p. 23 Ryzova, Lucie, p. 33 Ramos, Nic John, p. 31 Schulze-Oechtering, Michael A., Rodriguez, Daniel Arturo, p. 13 Rzeszutek, Sara, p. 11 Randolph, John, p. 35 p. 38 Rodriguez, Marc Simon, p. 39 Ransby, Barbara, p. 33 Schwaller, John F., p. 32 Rodriguez, Samantha, p. 4 Rappaport, Erika, p. 15 Ss Schwartz, Kathryn, p. 33 Rodriguez, Sarah I., p. 30 Schwartz, Thomas Alan, p. 41 Raska, Francis D., p. 52 Sack, Daniel, p. 7 Rogaski, Ruth, p. 18 Scott, Shavagne, p. 33 Ratner-Rosenhagen, Jennifer, Sacks, Marcy S., p. 27 p. 48 Rohr, Nicolette Avie, p. 23 Scranton, Philip B., p. 2 Sadeh, Roy Bar, p. 6 Ray, Carina E., p. 37 Roller, Heather Flynn, p. 48 Scribner, Grant, p. 35 Safley, Thomas Max, p. 14 Razlogova, Elena, p. 11 Romaniello, Matthew P., p. 45 Searcy, Anne, p. 29 Saha, Jonathan, p. 7 Reddy, Chandan, p. 31 Romero, Felipe César Camilo Seat, Thomas William, II, p. 10 Caro, p. 15 Salgarolo, Michael, p. 42 Reed, Vivian, p. 53 Sebestyen, Joseph P., III, p. 5 Romesburg, Don, p. 19 Sameen, Zoya, p. 11 Reichard, David A., p. 29 Sedrez, Lise F., p. 48 Romo, Vincent, p. 29 Sampaio, Anna, p. 47 Reid, Amanda, p. 14 Seidman, Rachel Filene, p. 24 Roosth, Sophia, p. 6 Saposnik, Arieh Bruce, p. 46 Reid, Joshua L., p. 3, 25, 27 Seipp, Adam R., p. 3 Roper, Michael, p. 45 Sartorius, David A., p. 22, 39 Reill, Dominique K., p. 19, 34 Sellers-García, Sylvia, p. 35, 48 Rosas, Ana E., p. 41 Sarzynski, Sarah, p. 33 Reinhard, Rachel B., p. 15 Sen, Sudipta, p. 13 Rose, E. M., p. 44 Sasaki, Motoe, p. 39 Reinhardt, Bob H., p. 18 Sepinwall, Alyssa Goldstein, p. 25 Rosenberg, Daniel B., p. 40 Sato, Courtney, p. 6 Reinhart, Katherine M., p. 54 Sepkoski, David, p. 6 Rosenbloom, Joshua, p. 39 Savagian, John C., p. 4 Reinstein, Shad, p. 45 Serventi, Jennifer, p. 7 Rosenfeld, Sophia, p. 41 Savala, Joshua, p. 45 Reiva, Annie, p. 27 Shafer-Raviv, Omri, p. 46 Rosenstein, Nathan S., p. 3 Sbuttoni, Claudia, p. 54 Ren, Jian, p. 50 Shaffer, Kirwin Ray, p. 7, 31 Rosenthal, Caitlin, p. 24 Scaglia, Ilaria, p. 6

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 70 10/29/20 9:35 PM Participants Index 71

Shah, Courtney Q., p. 31 Snider, Stefanie, p. 30 Styers, Randall, p. 3 Torres, Anna Elena, p. 31 Shaindlinger, Noa Tova, p. 18 Snyder, Sarah, p. 42 Su, Alastair, p. 6 Tortorici, Zeb, p. 21 Shakir, Ameenah, p. 18 Soares dos Santos, Leonardo, Suarez, Joel, p. 39, 40 Townsend, Robert B., p. 40 Shank, J. B., p. 29 p. 13 Suh, Chris, p. 14 Trahey, Erin Malone, p. 26 Shannon, Kelly J., p. 9 Sobrevilla Perea, Natalia, p. 33 Summers Sandoval, Tomas F., Trasciatti, Mary Anne, p. 42 Shantz, Douglas Hugh, p. 2 Soine, Aeleah H., p. 30 Jr., p. 4 Travalia, Caroline, p. 53 Sharpless, Rebecca, p. 25 Soja, Taylor, p. 8 Sumner, Jaclyn Ann, p. 20 Treitel, Corinna A., p. 2 Shelton, Laura, p. 28 Soliz, Carmen, p. 48 Sun, Yi, p. 47 Trochimczyk, Maja, p. 52 Shemo, Connie A., p. 39 Soltes, John, p. 30 Suri, Jeremi, p. 18 Troen, Ilan, p. 46 Sheng, Fei, p. 13 Soluri, John, p. 27, 39 Suriel, Yalile, p. 31 Trowbridge, David J., p. 19 Shenoy, Niyati, p. 42 Somotan, Halimat, p. 43 Sutton, Matthew Avery, p. 10, 31 Trumper, Camilo, p. 44 Shepard, Nikita, p. 31 Song, Dieyun, p. 23 Swafford, Emily, p. 11, 23 Truschke, Audrey, p. 18 Shermer, Elizabeth Tandy, p. 40 Song, Jingyi, p. 47 Swartz, David R., p. 47 Tuennerman, Laura, p. 37 Shesko, Elizabeth M., p. 48 Songster, E. Elena, p. 11 Swett, Brooks, p. 42 Turek, Lauren F., p. 14, 47 Shields, Sarah D., p. 45 Soppelsa, Peter S., p. 20 Syrett, Nicholas L., p. 4 Turner, Alexis, p. 29 Shin, Leo, p. 38 Soto Laveaga, Gabriela, p. 16, 17 Turner, John G., p. 35 Shinn, James Murray, Jr., p. 42 Spears, Alan, p. 38 Tt Turner, Sasha, p. 7, 21 Shriver, Rebecca, p. 6 Speece, Darren F., p. 21 Turtur, Noelle, p. 54 Tajiryan, Sona, p. 14 Shurts, Sarah Elizabeth, p. 4, 11 Spellberg, Denise A., p. 21 Twagira, Benjamin, p. 41 Talton, Benjamin, p. 18 Participants Index Shutt, Allison K., p. 24 Spencer, Michael, p. 18 Tworek, Heidi, p. 20, 37, 45, 47 Tamao, Shuko, p. 5 Sibley, Katherine A. S., p. 38 Sperling, Eli, p. 46 Tworek, Michael Thomas, p. 19 Tambe, Ashwini, p. 4 Sidel, Mark, p. 23 Spohnholz, Jesse A., p. 32 Tye, Nathan, p. 35 Tambor, Molly, p. 54 Siegel, Mona L., p. 45 Spyra, Joanna, p. 49 Tyler, Jacki Hedlund, p. 22 Tamura, Linda, p. 43 Sierra Silva, Pablo Miguel, Stacey, Robert C., p. 44 Tanaka, Stefan, p. 47, 53 p. 28, 49 Staines, Heather, p. 40 Uu Sievers, Gianni, p. 6 Stango, Marie Elizabeth, p. 37 Tanzer, Frances Anne, p. 18 Silbey, David J., p. 3 Staples, Kate Kelsey, p. 5 Tate, Lessie B., p. 3 Ulbrich, Linda, p. 29 Silvestri, Alessandro, p. 2 Stapleton, Kristin, p. 43 Tatsitsa, Jacob, p. 37 Ulrickson, Maria Cecilia, p. 13 Sims, Taylor Anne, p. 28 Stapleton, Timothy, p. 14, 39 Taylor, Jeremy, p. 26 Unowsky, Daniel L., p. 19, 31 Singh, Vineeta, p. 24 Starr-LeBeau, Gretchen, p. 35 Taylor, William A., p. 15 Untersteiner, Krystyna, p. 52 Sinha, Manisha, p. 31, 47 Stebenne, David L., p. 40 Teague, Aileen T., p. 41 Urban, Kelly L., p. 17 Sinha, Mrinalini, p. 47, 53 Stein, Rachel, p. 50 Teeters, Lila M., p. 5 Utne, Kelsey, p. 17 Sivasundaram, Sujit, p. 21 Steinhoff, Anthony J., p. 30 Teter, Magda, p. 31 Siwi, Marcio, p. 8 Stephens, Randall, p. 17 Thai, Philip, p. 2 Vv Slattery, Samuel Aldred, p. 29 Stephens, Robert P., p. 41 Thigpen, Jennifer, p. 22 Vaca, Daniel, p. 35 Sleeter, Nathan, p. 29 Stern, Alexandra Minna, p. 27 Thilly, Peter Dewitt, p. 8 Valerio, Miguel, p. 17 Sloma, Robert A., p. 52 Sternfeld, Joshua, p. 7 Thomas, Charles, p. 24, 39 Van Ausdal, Shawn, p. 49 Slominski, Kristy, p. 31 Stewart, Austin, p. 20 Thomas, Lynn M., p. 15 Van Dyke, Ian, p. 6 Slutsky, Beth, p. 19 Stewart, Pamela J., p. 45 Thornton, Christy, p. 16 Vann, Michael G., p. 25 Smallwood, Stephanie E., p. 15 Stites Mor, Jessica, p. 19, 44 Thrush, Coll, p. 27 Vapnek, Lara, p. 23 Smemo, Kristoffer, p. 40 Stoff, Laurie, p. 18 Tian, Xiansheng, p. 47 Vargas, Miguel Manuel, p. 46 Smith, Helmut W., p. 2 Stoil, Jacob, p. 31 Tienou, Tite, p. 47 Venkatesh, Archana, p. 42 Smith, Kathelene McCarty, p. 29 Stolte, Carolien, p. 32, 45 Tifft-Ochoa, Jenni, p. 20 Vergara, Angela, p. 45, 51 Smith, Sabrina, p. 22, 49 Stone, Erin W., p. 48 Tilburg, Patricia A., p. 45 Vergara, German, p. 17 Smith-Silverman, Sara, p. 30 Streeter, Stephen, p. 17 Tilton, Lauren, p. 7 Versteegh, Pien, p. 52 Smyth, Noel E., p. 7 Streit, Jessica Renee, p. 46 Tinson, Christopher M., p. 17 Veyrié, Thierry, p. 20 Snider, Colin M., p. 42 Strom, Jonathan, p. 32 Toffoli, Erica, p. 44

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 71 10/29/20 9:35 PM 72 Participants Index

Villanueva, Miriam Elizabeth, Waterhouse, Amanda Carroll, Wilcox, Robert W., p. 38 Yang, Dominic Meng-Hsuan, p. 10 p. 34 p. 23 Williams, Beth Ann, p. 35 Yannakakis, Yanna P., p. 9, 21 Villarreal, Aimee, p. 36 Weber, Torsten, p. 7 Williams, Kristina Ann, p. 16 Yates, Alexia, p. 2 Villarreal, Christina Marie, p. 5 Weeks, Michael, p. 43 Williams, Linda, p. 27 Yaycioglu, Ali, p. 21 Vinson, Robert Trent, p. 33 Weinberg, Carl R., p. 32 Williams, Ogechukwu Ezekwem, Yeaw, Katrina, p. 7 Vinson, Ben, III, p. 38, 50 Weinberg, Eyal, p. 17 p. 21 Yee, Shirley, p. 40 Vitale, Patrick, p. 39 Weiner, Benno Ryan, p. 23 Williams, Scott M., p. 27 Yellen, Jeremy A., p. 32 Von Eschen, Penny M., p. 37 Weinstein, Barbara, p. 42, 50 Williams, Shawna, p. 4 Yirush, Craig Bryan, p. 25 von Germeten, Nicole, p. 38 Weis, Robert G., p. 39 Williams, Timothy J., p. 24 Yonemoto, Marcia A., p. 36 Voyles, Traci Brynne, p. 10 Weise, Julie, p. 22 Windel, Aaron M., p. 11 Young, Cory James, p. 37 Vrana, Heather, p. 12, 16, 48 Weisenfeld, Judith, p. 30, 31 Wing, Olivia G., p. 29 Young, Julia G., p. 33 Vu, Hoang, p. 26 Weisiger, Marsha, p. 21 Wingo, Rebecca S., p. 34 Vu, Roy Francis, p. 43 Weiss, Megan, p. 5 Winslow, Barbara, p. 23 Zz Weld, Kirsten A., p. 17 Wisnoski, Alex, III, p. 45 Ww Wells, Allison, p. 23 Wojdon, Joanna, p. 52 Zabin, Serena R., p. 26 Wendell, Emily, p. 30 Woker, Madeline, p. 24 Zahler, Reuben C., p. 50 Wailoo, Keith A., p. 18 Wenger, Tisa J., p. 34 Wolf, Kenneth Baxter, p. 36 Zahra, Tara, p. 9 Waite, Cally, p. 20 Westad, Odd Arne, p. 9, 10 Wolfe, Justin, p. 48 Zammito, John H., p. 2 Wakatsuki, Hanako, p. 43 Westhoff, Laura M., p. 5, 32 Wong, Stephanie, p. 5 Zanchetta, Barbara, p. 9 Wakild, Emily L., p. 21 Westwood, Sarah Davis, p. 14 Wood, Kirsten E., p. 24 Zapata, Joel, p. 36 Walaszek, Adam, p. 52 Wetherby, Aelwen, p. 12 Wood, Molly M., p. 44 Zappia, Natale, p. 18 Wald, Erica, p. 11 Whang, Patrick, p. 37 Wood, Sharon E., p. 25 Zaremba, Alexandra, p. 25 Walker, Andrew, p. 13 Wheatley, Natasha, p. 9, 16 Wood, Stephanie, p. 32 Zeiler, Thomas W., p. 14, 38 Walker, Charles F., p. 21 Whisnant, Anne Mitchell, Woodard, Blair D., p. 12 Zeller, Nicholas, p. 9 Walker, Christine, p. 26 p. 24 Wright, Brad H., p. 33 Zeltsman, Corinna, p. 33, 50 Walker, Joel Thomas, p. 46 Whitaker, Georgia Claire, Wu, Shellen Xiao, p. 32 Zeng, Xiaoshun, p. 20 p. 51 Walker, Vanessa, p. 44 Wu, Xinjun, p. 47 Zhang, Chunjie, p. 46 White, Heather R., p. 30, 47 Walker, William O., III, p. 34 Wu, Yiching, p. 2 Zhang, Dewen, p. 47 Walter, Alissa, p. 7 White, Sophie K., p. 26 Zhang, Jinghong, p. 35 Walton, Leah A., p. 50 Whitted, Molly, p. 20 Xx Zhu, Qian, p. 7 Wambu, Chiemela Godwin, Wicks-Allen, Jessica, p. 13 Zimmer, Kenyon W., p. 42 p. 41 Wiersema, Courtney Lynne, Xu, Guoqi, p. 11 Zimmerman, Sarah J., p. 24 Wang, Xi, p. 11 p. 5 Zolov, Eric S., p. 44 Wang, Yijun, p. 24 Wiersma, Antia, p. 28 Yy Zou, Dongxin, p. 25 Ward, Janet, p. 37, 51 Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E., Zubovich, Katherine, p. 8, 43 Warren, Adam W. V., p. 20 p. 36, 38 Yamanaka, Mishio, p. 42 Zuelow, Eric G. E., p. 11 Warren, Louis S., p. 3 Wiggins, Benjamin Alan, p. 29 Yamboliev, Kalina, p. 53 Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N., p. 37 Wilcox, Emily, p. 9 Yang, Anand A., p. 18

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 72 10/29/20 9:35 PM Fifty-YearFifty-Year Members Members of of the the AHA AHA 7373

The following members of the AHA completed their 50th year of continuous membership in the Association during 2020. The list also includes members who have already achieved this honor.

Mary Douglas Abu-Shumays Blaine A. Brownell Edith B. Couturier Edward L. Farmer Thomas M. Adams W. Elliot Brownlee Michael K. Cox Ronald L. Feinman Carol A. Adamson Evan B. Bukey Earlene Craver David Felix Mina A. Aibel Robert D. Bulkley Jr. Michael J. Crawford Norman B. Ferris Donald H. Akenson Nicholas C. Burckel Daniel W. Crofts Paula Sutter Fichtner Lee N. Allen Mark A. Burkholder Robert Rhodes Crout Carter V. Findley Sharon Z. Alter Philip M. Burno W. H. Cumberland Carole K. Fink Howard L. Applegate Peter M. Buzanski E. Randolph Daniel J. K. Folmar Peter H. Argersinger Rolfe G. Buzzell Pete Daniel Eric Foner Abraham Ascher John C. Cairns Roger Daniels George B. Forgie John Wendell Bailey Jr. Daniel F. Calhoun Gerald A. Danzer Stephen Foster Deborah F. Baird Daniel F. Callahan Cornelius P. Darcy Daniel M. Fox Jay W. Baird Richard L. Camp Natalie Z. Davis John E. Frangos Keith M. Baker Charles F. Carroll Istvan Deak John B. Freed James M. Banner, Jr. Francis M. Carroll Joseph A. Devine Jr. Richard C. Frey Jr. Roderick J. Barman Rosemary F. Carroll Charles B. Dew Ruth L. Frey Redmond J. Barnett Charles D. Cashdollar David J. Diephouse Richard M. Fried Michael C. Batinski James E. Caskey Robert J. Dinkin Frank A. Friedman Daniel A. Baugh Philander D. Chase James J. Divita Patrick J. Furlong John J. Baughman Min-sun Chen John M. Dobson Mary O. Furner Ross W. Beales Jr. Robert W. Cherny Frank Domurad James P. Gaffey Seymour Becker Roger P. Chickering Marie M. Donaghay Michael J. Galgano Thomas H. Bender Stanley Chodorow Robert C. Donaldson Margery A. Ganz Norman Robert Bennett J. R. Christianson John Patrick Donnelly, SJ Robert Garfield Kathleen Bergan Schmidt Clifford E. Clark Ara Dostourian R. H. Garrett-Goodyear Martin E. Berger Linda L. Clark George A. Drake Bruce M. Garver Joel A. Berlatsky Malcolm C. Clark Seymour Drescher Marianne B. Geiger Winfred E. A. Bernhard Errol M. Clauss Katherine Fischer Drew Richard A. Gerber Mary F. Berry Jerome M. Clubb Jack R. Dukes Larry R. Gerlach Albert J. Beveridge III Charles E. Coate Michael H. Ebner John R. Gillis Richard F. Beyerl Paul A. Cohen Owen Dudley Edwards Lenore M. Glanz Robert D. Billinger Jr. Thomas V. Cohen Carol Jean Ehlers J. Philip Gleason Russell K. Bishop William Cohen Sydney Eisen Robert A. Glen Thomas N. Bisson Thomas S. Colahan Saul Engelbourg Richard M. Golden Robert A. Blackey Marcia L. Colish Carroll L. Engelhardt David R. Goldfield Kenneth John Blume Mary Powlesland Commager Stephen F. Englehart Arthur E. Goldschmidt Stuart M. Blumin Frank F. Conlon Iris H. Engstrand Luis E. Gonzalez-Vales John Blunt Giles Constable Elizabeth York Enstam Joyce D. Goodfriend Douglas E. Bowers Robert T. Coolidge Donald B. Epstein Philip Manning Goodwin Christopher N. Breiseth F. Alan Coombs Ellen L. Evans Bertram M. Gordon Renate Bridenthal Ronald E. Coons William R. Everdell Leonard A. Gordon Roger D. Bridges Sandi E. Cooper Stanley L. Falk Margaret W. Gosfield David Brody Frank J. Coppa Joyce Duncan Falk Richard Graham Elizabeth A. R. Brown James W. Cortada Ena L. Farley Kenneth S. Greenberg

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 73 10/29/20 9:35 PM 74 Fifty-Year Members of the AHA

Jack P. Greene Judith J. Howard Lee B. Kress Gerald W. McFarland Gene M. Gressley John R. Howe Jr. David W. Krueger Roderick E. McGrew Raymond Grew Stanley R. Howe Walter F. LaFeber William Fleming McHugh Patricia Kennedy Grimsted Judith J. Hurwich Howard R. Lamar David O. McNeil Robert A. Gross Frank C. Huyette Jr. Roger Lane John W. McNulty Warren Grover Akira Iriye Vincent A. Lapomarda, SJ James M. McPherson Samuel Haber Travis Beal Jacobs Alphonse F. LaPorta Neville K. Meaney Arthur Haberman John A. Jakle Catherine Grollman Lauritsen John A. Mears Barton C. Hacker William Jannen Jr. Asuncion A. Lavrin W. Knox Mellon Jr. Wm. Kent Hackmann Konrad H. Jarausch John K. Lawrence Michael A. Meyer Daryl M. Hafter L. C. Jennings Dimitri D. Lazo Joel D. Meyerson Edwin C. Hall Herbert A. Johnson John L. LeBrun Norton H. Mezvinsky Paul G. Halpern Arnita A. Jones Richard A. Lebrun Ronald E. Mickel Alonzo L. Hamby Dorothy V. Jones Patricia-Ann Lee Robert L. Middlekauff James N. Hantula K. Paul Jones Andrew Lees David B. Miller Craig R. Hanyan Philip D. Jordan Melvyn P. Leffler John T. Miller David E. Harrell William L. Joyce Virginia W. Leonard Randall M. Miller Susan M. Hartmann Jacob Judd Brian P. Levack James M. Mini Laurence M. Hauptman Richard L. Kagan David Levin Norma Taylor Mitchell Steven C. Hause William Peter Kaldis Vernon L. Lidtke John Modell T. R. H. Havens William Kamman Jonathan J. Liebowitz James C. Mohr Charles W. Hayford Woong Joe Kang David L. Lightner David T. Moore Jo N. Hays Stanley N. Katz Robert D. Linder John A. Moore Jr. Beverly A. Heckart Thomas H. Kean James E. Lindsay Robert J. Moore Dorothy O. Helly Thomas M. Keefe Lester K. Little II Regina Morantz-Sanchez Paul C. Helmreich Kenneth W. Keller Leon F. Litwack Rex D. Morrell John B. Hench David H. Kelly Janet Loengard Karl F. Morrison Charles D. Hendricks Thomas M. Kemnitz Peter J. Loewenberg John H. Morrow Jr. James E. Hendrickson Philip W. Kendall Charles A. Lofgren Charles J. Morton Melinda Meek Hennessey David M. Kennedy John V. Lombardi George Moutafis Charles J. Herber Linda K. Kerber Joseph O. Losos Armin E. Mruck Charles W. Herman Alice Kessler-Harris Joseph L. Love Jr. John H. Mugar Sondra R. Herman Warren F. Kimball William C. Lubenow James M. Muldoon Andrew C. Hess Margaret L. King Myriam D. Maayan Alfred F. Myers Gad J. Heuman Richard S. Kirkendall Richard S. Macha Duane P. Myers John Hillje A. Larkin Kirkman Charles S. Maier Henry Vivian Nelles Edwin Hirschmann Glenn J. Kist Frances Malino Otto M. Nelson Louisa S. Hoberman Carla L. Klausner Maeva Marcus Charles E. Neu Frederick A. Hodes Jacques Paul Klein Kenneth H. Margerison Jr. William G. Nichols Paul E. Hoffman Paul W. Knoll A. Lynn Martin Donald L. Niewyk Richard C. Hoffmann Diane P. Koenker James Kirby Martin Mary Beth Norton Paul S. Holbo Sally Gregory Kohlstedt Donald J. Mattheisen Walter Nugent Christine Holden Richard H. Kohn Allen J. Matusow Ronald L. Numbers David A. Hollinger Peter Robert Kolchin Kenneth R. Maxwell Charles H. O’Brien Frank X. J. Homer Arno W. F. Kolz Joseph M. McCarthy John E. O’Connor Daniel Horowitz Gerard M. Koot Charles H. McCormick Ynez V. O’Neill Robert F. Horowitz Axel Kornfuehrer Kathleen E. McCrone Karen Offen Sandra Horvath-Peterson B. Robert Kreiser John J. McCusker Arnold A. Offner

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 74 10/29/20 9:35 PM Fifty-YearFifty-Year Members Members of of the the AHA AHA 7575

John L. Offner Alfred J. Rieber Kathryn Kish Sklar Graydon A. Tunstall Jr. Keith W. Olson John N. Riismandel Henry B. Smith Thomas R. Turner Thomas R. Osborne Robert C. Ritchie Michael S. Smith J. Daniel Vann III C. Sydney Overall James M. Robertson Theodore L. Smith Josefina Zoraida Vazquez Alice B. Owens Mary L. Robertson Reba N. Soffer Robert W. Venables Eugenia M. Palmegiano Robert A. Rockaway George W. Spencer Maris A. Vinovskis Michael F. Palo Carole R. Rogel Gabrielle M. Spiegel Peter L. Viscusi Robert D. Parmet Elliot A. Rosen Kurt R. Spillmann Clarence E. Walker Peter Pastor David A. Rosenberg Alan B. Spitzer Richard F. Wall Robert B. Patterson William G. Rosenberg Keith L. Sprunger Andrew Wallace William Brown Patterson Dorothy Ross Lawrence Squeri Harry M. Walsh Justus F. Paul Ronald J. Ross Peter D. L. Stansky Ronald G. Walters Samuel C. Pearson Jr. James L. Roth Bruce P. Stark Churchill E. Ward Kenneth J. Pennington Jr. Leslie S. Rowland J. Barton Starr James J. Ward Loren E. Pennington Edward G. Ruestow James Stasevich Jr. Kenneth O. Waterman Robert C. Perkins Julius R. Ruff John E. Stealey III Charles W. Weber Ann M. Pescatello Frederick H. Russell Peter N. Stearns John C. B. Webster Jon A. Peterson David Warren Sabean Charlie R. Steen III Paul B. Wehn William D. Phillips Jr. David Harris Sacks R. Vladimir Steffel Gerhard L. Weinberg Kenneth R. Philp Salvatore Saladino Mark J. Stegmaier Sydney S. Weinberg William B. Pickett Roland Sarti Harry H. Stein J. Walter Weingart Richard V. Pierard Harry N. Scheiber Stephen J. Stein James J. Weingartner Peter O’Malley Pierson Donald G. Schilling Lester D. Stephens Harold J. Weiss Jr. John F. Piper Jr. Albert John Schmidt Frances Glazer Sternberg Robert H. Whealey Edward J. Pluth Hans R. Schmidt Jr. M. Mark Stolarik Dan S. White Emil Polak Raymond P. Schmidt E. J. Stolns Allan R. Whitmore Oliver B. Pollak Gerald Michael Schnabel Kenneth R. Stow Michael N. Wibel Stafford R. Poole, CM Ann Imlah Schneider Lynn A. Struve Nicholas Wickenden David L. Porter Thomas D. Schoonover Charles L. Sullivan Larry D. Wilcox James F. Powers William C. Schrader III Zoe A. Swecker Mira Wilkins Wilfrid R. Prest Paul W. Schroeder Samuel A. Syme Jr. Diane Willen Robert W. Price Klaus Schwabe Marcia G. Synnott Allan M. Winkler John M. Pyne Lois G. Schwoerer Jacques Szaluta Herbert C. Winnik G. Robina Quale-Leach Walter A. Sedelow Jr. Jackson Taylor Jr. Gordon S. Wood Jean H. Quataert Howard P. Segal John A. Tedeschi Phyllis Bannan Woodworth Alexander Rabinowitch Gustav L. Seligmann Jr. Thomas E. Templin Lyle J. Woodyatt Hugh A. Ragsdale Jr. Calvin F. Senning James L. Thane Jr. Marcia Wright Edgar Frank Raines Jr. William H. Sewell Donald E. Thomas Jr. Edith Proctor Young Barbara N. Ramusack Edward S. Shapiro Janet M. Thompson Mary E. Young Edward Ranson James J. Sheehan Jerry J. Thornbery Michael B. Young Jane M. Rausch William F. Sheldon David M. Tiffany Tsing Yuan A. Compton Reeves Merrill F. Sherr Josefina C. Tiryakian Raymond J. Zadzilko Donald M. Reid Barbara Sicherman Frederick F. Travis Ruth Zerner John P. Reid Paul Siff Robert L. Tree Russ Zguta John T. Reilly Judith A. Robert F. Trisco Cecile Zinberg Dennis P. Reinhartz Paul L. Silver Randolph Trumbach Kathryn L. Reyerson Arthur W. Simpson Douglas Tubb C. Thomas Rezner George H. Skau Joseph S. Tulchin

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 75 10/29/20 9:35 PM 76 Exhibitors Index

Visit the booths at historians.org/exhibithall through June 30, 2021.

Gold Exhibitors Supporting Exhibitors Bedford/St. Martin’s, an imprint of Macmillan Learning Harvard University Press

Cambridge University Press Johns Hopkins University Press

Macmillan Publishers Penguin Random House

Oxford University Press New York University Press

Soomo Learning Teachers College Press

University of California Press University of Chicago Press

University of North Carolina Press and the Omohundro University of Georgia Press Institute of Early American History and Culture University of Michigan Press W. W. Norton & Company University of Nebraska Press

Silver Exhibitors University of Pennsylvania Press Adam Matthew Digital University of Texas Press Berghahn Books University of Virginia Press Bloomsbury Academic University Press of Kansas Hackett Publishing Company Yale University Press McGill-Queen’s University Press

Princeton University Press Bronze Exhibitors Duke University Press

Gale, a Cengage Company

HarperCollins Publishers

Louisiana State University Press

Project MUSE

Simon & Schuster

University of New Mexico Press

University of Toronto Press Books

University of Toronto Press Journals

Washington State University Press

Program Book 2021_Backmatter.indd 76 10/29/20 9:35 PM Advertisers Index 77

Organization Pages Organization Pages

American Historical Association vi, 32, 33, 34, Cover 2, Cover 3, Cover 4 The Stanton Foundation 2

Association for Asian Studies 18 University of California Press 25

Berghahn Books 19 University of Chicago Press 12-13

Cambridge University Press 20 University of Georgia Press 26

Editorial Freelancers Association 7 University of Illinois Press 27

HISTORY® 3 University of London Press 28

Louisiana State University Press 21 University of Nebraska Press 14-15

Macmillan Publishers 22 University of North Carolina Press 8-10

Oxford University Press 11 University of Texas Press 29

Princeton University Press 23 University of Virginia Press 30

Simon & Schuster 24 University of Wisconsin Press 31

Stanford University Press 4-6 Yale University Press 16-17

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The Stanton Foundation congratulates winners of its ‘Applying History to Clarify the COVID-19 Challenge’ Contest

Inspired by the AHA's ‘Statement Regarding Historians and the COVID-19 Public Health Crisis’, the Stanton Foundation launched a ten-week Contest last spring to identify the best new Applied History articles that illuminated the coronavirus challenge and identified lessons or clues for policymakers.

Weekly prize winners: Mary Eschelbach Hansen and Bradley Hansen “Making it easier to declare bankruptcy could avert economic catastrophe", Washington Post, 4/24/20 Andrew Ehrhardt, “Disease and Diplomacy in the 19th Century” War on the Rocks, 4/30/20 Douglas Bell and Conrad Crane, “Korean War Economic Mobilization Is More Relevant To The Current Pandemic Than World War II” War on the Rocks, 5/6/20 George H. Nash, “The Coronavirus Pandemic of 2020 in Historical Perspective” National Review, 5/11/20 Michael T. Osterholm and Mark Olshaker, “Chronicle of a Pandemic Foretold” Foreign Affairs, 5/21/20 Walter Scheidel, “The Spanish Flu Didn't Wreck the Global Economy” Foreign Affairs, 5/28/20 Eleanor Russell and Martin Parker, “How pandemics past and present fuel the rise of mega-corporations” The Conversation, 6/3/20 Jim Harris, “Pandemics: Today and Yesterday” Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective, 6/15/20 Marc-Michael Blum and Peter Neumann, "Corona and Bioterrorism: How Serious is the Threat?" War on the Rocks, 6/22/20

Grand Prize winners: A. Wess Mitchell and Charles Ingrao, "Emperor Joseph's Solution to Coronavirus" The Wall Street Journal, 4/6/2020 Andrew Ehrhardt, “Disease and Diplomacy in the 19th Century” War on the Rocks, 4/30/20

As the AHA Statement affirms, "the work that historians do...is especially important in troubled times when facts, evidence, and context are imperative to generating effective and humane public policy."

Watch for details about the 2021 Applied History Contest coming soon at: thestantonfoundation.org/informed-citizens

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YEAR N REV EW 2019-20

LEADERSHIP, ADVOCACY, AND COMMUNITY IN CHALLENGING TIMES Leadership for the Historical Discipline Supporting Historians through the Challenges of COVID-19 • Issued statements on historical research during COVID-19 and on history department closures and faculty firings • Published an Online Teaching Resources series and a Remote Reflections series in Perspectives Daily to help historians adapt to the challenges of remote instruction • Produced graduation videos featuring the AHA president and Smithsonian secretary • Received a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities for “Confronting a Pandemic: Historians and COVID-19,” to create resources for remote teaching, recognize historians’ responses to the global crisis, and host virtual professional development for faculty, teachers, and early career historians Reimagining History Education • Launched virtual programming and resources for History Gateways, an initiative to revise introductory college history courses to better serve students from all backgrounds, and helped partner institutions pivot to teaching remote courses • Sponsored the fifth annual Texas Conference on Introductory History Courses, bringing together high school and college teachers to explore goals and approaches, share teaching experiences, and discuss state policy contexts Publishing Historical Research • Released European Emigration to the Americas, 1492 to Independence, a new booklet by Eric Hinderaker and Rebecca Horn • Published award-winning American Historical Review content such as “The Walrus and the Bureaucrat,” which earned two article prizes from historical societies Advocacy for Historians and Historical Thinking Defending the Work of Historians • Adopted a resolution supporting non-tenure-track scholars, opposed a federal rule change that would weaken graduate student labor organizing, and endorsed a statement on the use of teaching evaluations in faculty hiring and promotion • Joined in a lawsuit, as plaintiffs, challenging the right of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to destroy records documenting mistreatment of detainees • Issued a resolution regarding affiliations between ICE and higher education • Sent letters to administrators at the University System of Georgia, Gordon College, and the US Department of Education defending history programs and curricula • Created a department advocacy toolkit to help faculty, administrators, academic advisors, and students articulate the value of studying and majoring in history

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Protecting Historical Resources and Access to Materials • Defended historians’ rights in India and and archival access in France • Issued a statement condemning the use of historical sites in warfare • Signed an amicus brief supporting the release of grand jury records in the 1946 Moore’s Ford case • Created an ad hoc committee to monitor conditions at the National Archives and Records Administration and provide appropriate consultation and support Promoting Historical Thinking about Current Events • Published a statement, co-signed by 95 scholarly organizations, on the history of racist violence in the United States, and co-sponsored a webinar with the National Council for the Social Studies on its classroom use • Hosted a well-attended webinar on the history of Confederate monuments • Published a statement on domestic terrorism, bigotry, and history • Signed an amicus brief offering historical context for the decision to end DACA • Endorsed a congressional resolution on the Tulsa Race Massacre centennial • Through the AHA’s National History Center, convened fivecongressional briefings by expert historians on topics central to current policy debates, and co-sponsored weekly Washington History Seminar events • Played key leadership roles in the National Humanities Alliance and the National Coalition for History Cultivating the Community of Historians The AHA completed Supporting Professional Development for Historians renovations on its • Awarded 144 research, travel, and other grants and fellowships headquarters in Washington, • Gained approval from the Mellon Foundation to continue the work of the DC, making much-needed Career Diversity for Historians initiative, including an update to Where repairs and creating an Historians Work and the Survey of Graduate Education accessible front entrance. • Expanded the Career Contacts pool of senior contacts to 300 and provided matches to 100 junior contacts • Offered a record number of annual meeting professional development sessions • Issued recommendations for history departments for improving the status of non-tenure-track faculty Building Historical Community • Made the annual meeting more welcoming and accessible by eliminating job interviews, expanding travel grants to underemployed and non-tenure-track faculty, and providing a complimentary headshot booth • Held a successful Second Annual Chairs Workshop for department leaders to share resources and exchange ideas, and began work on a series of virtual seminars for department chairs • Hosted a vibrant online community for members • Offered new support for history graduate student associations, including a dedicated online community and gatherings at the annual meeting

Join: historians.org/join | Donate: historians.org/donate Connect: @AHAhistorians | facebook.com/AHAhistorians

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Now Available Careers for History Majors

A new publication from the American Historical Association

We must “uphold at every possible turn the inherent value of studying history.” Elizabeth Lehfeldt, former Vice President, AHA Teaching Division, Perspectives

Careers for History Majors conveys the value of the undergraduate study of history through clear graphs and informal prose. Readers will find hard data, practical advice, and answers to common questions for students and their parents.

Contributors explore the breadth of career options available to history majors and provide tools to help students get the most out of their degree.

The booklet also includes the personal stories of history majors who work in a range of occupations, including data analysis, finance, and the law. You’ll find out what employers want and learn about the personal transformations that many history majors experience.

Contributors Loren Collins • John Fea • Anne Hyde • Sarah Olzawski • Johann Neem • Claire Potter • John Rowe • Sarah Shurts • Paul Sturtevant • Frank Valadez

Reinforcing the value and utility of a history BA, Careers for History Majors is perfect for directors of undergraduate studies, career center advisers, prospective majors, and their parents.

To order copies, visit historians.org/booklets. For additional resources, visit historians.org/whystudyhistory.

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Become a member of the American Historical Association today.

The American Historical Association is a nonprofit membership organization founded in 1884 and incorporated by Congress in 1889 for the promotion of historical studies. The AHA provides leadership for the discipline by protecting academic freedom, developing professional standards, supporting scholarship and innovative teaching, and helping to sustain and enhance the work of historians. As the largest organization of professional historians in the world, the AHA represents more than 11,000 members and serves historians representing every historical period and geographical area in a wide variety of professions. The AHA is a trusted voice for history education, the professional work of historians, and the critical role of historical thinking in public life.

Learn more online at historians.org/members.

Ads.indd 3 10/29/20 9:38 PM 135th ANNUAL MEETING NEW ORLEANS JANUARY 6-9, 2022

Call for Proposals for the 135th Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association

The AHA’s annual meeting is the We invite proposals for sessions in a variety The AHA’s annual meeting is the We invite proposals for sessions in a variety largest yearly gathering of historians of formats and encourage lively interaction largest yearly gathering of historians of formats and encourage lively interaction in the United States. among presenters and with the audience. in the United States. among presenters and with the audience.

All historians are welcome and encouraged to submit Session Proposals All historians are welcome and encouraged to submit Session Proposals proposals. The AHA also invites historically focused Sessions last for 90 minutes. Most sessions proposals. The AHA also invites historically focused Sessions last for 90 minutes. Most sessions proposals from colleagues in related disciplines and will be limited to four speakers plus a chair. proposals from colleagues in related disciplines and will be limited to four speakers plus a chair. from AHA affiliated societies. The Program Committee The Program Committee will accept proposals from AHA affiliated societies. The Program Committee The Program Committee will accept proposals will consider all proposals that advance the study, for complete sessions only. We encourage will consider all proposals that advance the study, for complete sessions only. We encourage teaching, and public presentation of history. organizers to build panels that bring together teaching, and public presentation of history. organizers to build panels that bring together diverse perspectives. diverse perspectives. The Association seeks submissions on the histories of The Association seeks submissions on the histories of all places, periods, people, and topics; on the uses of Poster Proposals all places, periods, people, and topics; on the uses of Poster Proposals diverse sources and methods, including digital history; The meeting will feature a poster session to diverse sources and methods, including digital history; The meeting will feature a poster session to and on theory and the uses of history itself in a wide allow historians to share their research through and on theory and the uses of history itself in a wide allow historians to share their research through variety of venues. visual materials. Proposals for single, individual variety of venues. visual materials. Proposals for single, individual presentations may be submitted as posters. presentations may be submitted as posters.

The Program Committee welcomes proposals from all historians, whatever their institutional The Program Committee welcomes proposals from all historians, whatever their institutional affiliation or status, and historians working outside the United States. With the exception of affiliation or status, and historians working outside the United States. With the exception of foreign scholars and those from other disciplines, all persons appearing on the program must be foreign scholars and those from other disciplines, all persons appearing on the program must be members of the AHA, although membership is not required to submit a proposal. All participants members of the AHA, although membership is not required to submit a proposal. All participants must register for the meeting when registration opens. The Association aspires to represent the must register for the meeting when registration opens. The Association aspires to represent the full diversity of its membership at the annual meeting. full diversity of its membership at the annual meeting.

Electronic submission only, by midnight PST on February 15, 2021 Before applying, please review the annual meeting guidelines Before applying, please review the annual meeting guidelines and more information at historians.org/proposals. and more information at historians.org/proposals.

Questions about policies, modes of presentation, and the electronic submission process? Questions about policies, modes of presentation, and the electronic submission process? Contact [email protected]. Contact [email protected]. Questions about the content of proposals? Questions about the content of proposals? Contact Program Committee chair Mark Ravina, University of Texas, Austin ([email protected]) Contact Program Committee chair Mark Ravina, University of Texas, Austin ([email protected]) and co-chair Margaret Salazar-Porzio, National Museum of American History ([email protected]). and co-chair Margaret Salazar-Porzio, National Museum of American History ([email protected]).

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