Paul K. Longmore: Curriculum Vita
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Paul K. Longmore: Curriculum Vita Paul K. Longmore phone: (415) 338-6498 or (415) 338-1604 Department of History fax: (415) 338-7539 San Francisco State University email: [email protected] 1600 Holloway Avenue [email protected] San Francisco, CA 94132 I. Education Claremont Graduate School, Ph.D., 1984. Major Field: U.S. History. Minor Fields: Early American History U.S. Intellectual and Cultural History Political Philosophy. Dissertation: “The Invention of George Washington.” Occidental College, M.A., 1971 Major Field: History. Minor: Political Science. Occidental College, B.A., 1968 Major: History. Minor: Political Science. II. Employment and Teaching San Francisco State University, Professor, Department of History, 1998-____. Associate Professor, Department of History, 1995-1998. Tenure, 1995. Assistant Professor, Department of History, 1992-1995. Director, Institute on Disability, 1996-____. Western University of Health Sciences, Adjunct Professor of Health Professions Education, May 2000-____. Western University of Health Sciences, Visiting Scholar, January-May 2000. University of Pittsburgh, Adjunct Professor of Rehabilitation Science and Technology, 1997. Stanford University, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, 1990-1993. California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, Interdisciplinary General Education, Instructor, 1989. University of Southern California, Political Science, Instructor, 1984-1986. University of Southern California, Program in Disability and Society, Administrator, Longmore Vita 2 1983-1986. Claremont Graduate School, U.S. Intellectual and Cultural History, Teaching Associate, 1979, 1980. Occidental College, History of Civilization, Teaching Assistant, 1969. Occidental College, Historiography, Teaching Assistant, 1968. Occidental College Upward Bound, Journalism, Instructor, 1968-1969. III. Contracts, Fellowships, Grants, and Scholarships A. American History San Francisco State University, Research and Professional Development Award, “Nationalism and the Coming of the American Revolution,” 2006-2007, full salary. San Francisco State University, Research and Professional Development, Summer Stipend, “George Washington as Nationalist and Nationalist Icon in the Writing and Ratification of the Constitution,” June 1997, $2,000. San Francisco State University, Research and Professional Development Award, Scanning Research Notes, January-June 1996, $5,000. California State University Affirmative Action Faculty Development Grant, “Recent Theoretical Literature on Nationalism,” January-June 1996, $1,500. Mount Vernon Ladies Association, Research Grant, Scanning Research Notes on George Washington, August 1995, $2,000. San Francisco State University, Research and Professional Development Summer Stipend, “Religion and Politics in Colonial Virginia,” June 1994, $2,000. Andrew W. Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellowship in the Humanities, Stanford University, September 1990-August 1993, $32,000 annually. H. B Earhart Foundation Research Fellowship, “The Invention of George Washington,” December 1986-August 1987, $9,000. Huntington Library Research Fellowship, “The Invention of George Washington,” October- November 1986, $2,000. Longmore Vita 3 B. Disability Studies ELA Foundation grant for Disability and Theatre Arts Workshop: Beyond Victims and Villains, 2008, $1,340. National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for book project: “‘I Am Your Child’: Telethons and the Construction of ‘Disability’ in American Culture,” 2006, $24,000. National Endowment for the Humanities Focus Grant: “Greater San Francisco Bay Area Inter-University Consortium on Disability Studies,” 2001-2002, $25,000. National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute: “Integrating Disability Studies into the Humanities Curriculum,” San Francisco State University, July 10-August 11, 2000, $164,000. San Francisco State University, Research and Professional Development Award, “Telethons and the Uses of Disability in American Culture,” Fall Semester 1999, full salary. U.S. Department of Education, National Institute of Disability and Rehabilitation Research, Innovation Grant, Principal Investigator, “Examining the Impact on Postsecondary Students of Three Disability Studies Paradigms,” 1995-1996, $50,000. San Francisco State University, Research and Professional Development Award, “Telethons and the Cultural Creation of Disabled People,” 1994-1995, $2,500. California State University Affirmative Action Faculty Development Grant, “Analysis of Coded Database of Fictional Television and Movie Images of Characters with Disabilities,” 1994-1995, $1,319. San Francisco State University, Presidential Award for the Professional Development of Probationary Faculty, “Media-Made Disabled People: A Cultural History of Images in Television and Motion Pictures,” Fall Semester 1994, full salary. California State University Affirmative Action Faculty Development Grant, “‘Jobs, Not Tin Cups’: New York City’s League of the Physically Handicapped and Disability Policy, 1935-1937,” 1993-1994, $2,000. C. Disability Training U.S. Department of Education, Rehabilitation Services Administration, Long-Term Training Grant in Independent Living, SUNY Buffalo/Western New York Independent Living Program, subcontract to develop curriculum and on-line training, 2001, $34,500. Longmore Vita 4 U.S. Department of Education, Rehabilitation Services Administration, Long-Term Training Grant in Independent Living, 1997-2000, $300,000. San Francisco State University, Center for the Enhancement of Teaching, grant to develop on-line course, Introduction to Disability Rights Laws and Policies, January-May 1999, $5,000. National Council on Disability, Report on San Francisco Bay Area Racial-Minority- Group Members with Disabilities, in support of Lift Every Voice: Modernizing Disability Policies and Programs to Serve a Diverse Nation, August-December 1998, $23,000. California Foundation of Independent Living Centers, Three Workshops to Instruct Empowerment Team Leaders in the History and Objectives of the Disability Movement, May-June 1998, $2,000. U.S. Department of Education, Director, “Career Development and Mentoring Program for College Students with Disabilities,” 1994-1997, $360,000. D. Undergraduate and Graduate Scholarships, Fellowships, and Assistantships Research Assistantship, Claremont Graduate School, 1982. California State Graduate Fellowship, 1968-1970. California State Scholarship, 1964-1968. American Baptist Scholarship, 1964-1968. Gemco Scholarship, Santa Clara Valley, California, 1964. IV. Publications A. Early American History “‘good English without idiom or tone’: The Colonial Origins of American Speech,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 37, no. 4 (Spring 2007): 370-99. “‘they . speak better English than the English do’: Colonialism and the Origins of National Linguistic Standardization in America,” Early American Literature 40, no 2 (Summer 2005): 279-314. The Invention of George Washington. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988; paperback reprint Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1999. -- excerpts reprinted as “Washington’s Ambition.” In People Who Made History: George Washington, edited by Karen Price Hossell, 24-32. San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press, 2003. Longmore Vita 5 “‘All Matters and Things relating to Religion and Morality’: The Virginia Burgesses’ Committee for Religion, 1769 to 1775.” Journal of Church and State 38 (Autumn 1996): 775-98. “From Supplicants to Constituents: Petitioning by Virginia Parishioners, 1701-1775.” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 103 (October 1995): 407-42. “The Enigma of George Washington: How the Man Became the Myth.” Reviews in American History 13 (June 1985): 184-93. B. Disability History “Introduction,” “Bourne, Randolph S.,” “Disability Rights Movement,” in Encyclopedia of American Disability History, edited by Susan Burch. New York: Facts on File, 2008. “Forum on Disability: Disability and the Transformation of Historians’ Public Sphere,” co-authored with Catherine Kudlick, Perspectives, the Newsmagazine of the American Historical Association 44, no. 8 (November 2006): 8-9, 11-12, http://www.historians.org/perspectives/issues/2006/0611/0611for2.cfm. “Disability Rights Activism” in Speaking Out With Many Voices: Documenting American Activism and Protest in the 1960s and 1970s, edited by Heather Thompson. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, forthcoming. “New paradigm, new Approaches,” Disability History Association Newsletter 1, no. 1 (Fall 2005): 4-5, online at: http://dha.osu.edu/membersonly/Newsletter%20v1%20i1.pdf “‘A Philosophy of Handicap’: the Origins of Randolph Bourne’s Radicalism,” co- authored with Paul Miller. Radical History Review, Issue 94 (2006): 59-83. “The League of the Physically Handicapped and the Great Depression: A Case Study in the New Disability History,” co-authored with David Goldberger, Journal of American History 87, no. 3 (December 2000), 888-922, online at: http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/jah/87.3/; -- reprinted in Paul K. Longmore, Why I Burned My Book and Other Essays on Disability (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2003), 53-102. “Americans with Disabilities Act”; “Independent Living Centers”; “Jerry Lewis Telethon Protests”; “Roberts, Edward V.” In Waldo E. Martin and Patricia Sullivan, eds. Civil Rights in the United States. New York: Macmillan Reference, 1999. “Political Movements of People with Disabilities: The League of the Physically Longmore Vita 6 Handicapped, 1935-1938,” co-authored with David Goldberger. Disability Studies