PROGRAMPROGRAM 129TH129TH ANNUALANNUAL MEETINGMEETING

Annual Meeting

Cover.indd 1 21/10/14 6:22 PM The AHA Wishes to Thank Platinum Sponsor

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Cover2.indd 1 10/27/14 6:45 PM Program

of the

129th Annual Meeting January 2–5, 2015

Sharon K. Tune, Editor

Debbie Ann Doyle, Co-Editor

Please bring your copy of the Program to the annual meeting. Additional copies are $10 each.

2014_Program_FM.indd 1 28/10/14 6:20 PM 400 A Street SE Washington, DC 20003-3889 202-544-2422 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.historians.org AHA Today: blog.historians.org Facebook: www.facebook.com/AHAhistorians Twitter: twitter.com/ahahistorians

2014 Officers President: Jan E. Goldstein, University of President-elect: Vicki Ruiz, University of California, Irvine Executive Director: James Grossman AHR Editor: Robert A. Schneider, Indiana University, Bloomington Controller: Randy B. Norell

Council Jan Goldstein Vicki Ruiz Kenneth Pomeranz, past president, John R. McNeill, vice president, Research Division, Georgetown University (2015) Photo by William H. Sewell Elaine K. Carey, vice president, Teaching Division, St. John’s University (2016) Jan E. Goldstein Philippa Levine, vice president, Professional Division, University of Texas at Austin (2017) Norman and Edna Freehling Professor Stephen Aron, University of California at and Autry Department of History National Center (2015) Committee on Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science, Peter A. Porter Jr., Montville Township (NJ) High School and Seton and the College Hall University (2015) University of Chicago Andrew J. Rotter, Colgate University (2015) President of the American Historical Association Randall M. Packard, Johns Hopkins University (2016) Joshua L. Reid, University of Massachusetts, Boston (2016) Mary Louise Roberts, University of Wisconsin–Madison (2016) Catherine Epstein, Amherst College (2017) Trinidad Gonzales, South Texas College (2017) Farina Mir, –Ann Arbor (2017) James Grossman, ex officio Robert A. Schneider, ex officio

Legal Counsel of the Association Albert J. Beveridge III, Beveridge & Diamond, PC

2014_Program_FM.indd 2 28/10/14 6:20 PM Table of Contents iii

General Information ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 1–7 Information for Persons with Disabilities ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������1 Information with Map of Area ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������2 Transportation ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������3 Meeting Registration ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������4 Childcare ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5 Schedule of Meal Meetings �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5 Tours Organized by the Local Arrangements Committee ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������6 Film Festival �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������7

Meetings of the AHA, Affiliated Societies, and Other Groups ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 8–22

Floor Plans of the Hilton and Sheraton ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 23–31

2015 AHA Annual Meeting and Affiliated Societies Programs ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 32–121

Friday, January 2 ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 32–50 Afternoon Sessions ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������37 Late Afternoon Sessions �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������42 Awards Ceremony ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������50 Plenary Session ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������50

Saturday, January 3 ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 51–79 Early Morning Sessions ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������51 Late Morning Sessions ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������59 Luncheons ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������68 Afternoon Sessions ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������69 Presidential Address �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������78 Evening Sessions and Events ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������78

Sunday, January 4 ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 80–106 Morning Sessions �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������80 Midday Sessions �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������87 Luncheons ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������96 Afternoon Sessions ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������97 AHA Business Meeting ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������105 Evening Sessions and Events ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������105

Monday, January 5 ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 107–121 Early Morning Sessions ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������107 Late Morning Sessions �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������114

Indexes and Lists ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 122–140 Topical Index �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������122 Participants Index �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������123 Fifty-Year Members of the AHA �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������135 Map of the Exhibit Hall �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������138 Exhibitors Index �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������139 Advertising ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� follows page 140

2014_Program_FM.indd 3 28/10/14 6:20 PM iv Presidents of the American Historical Association

1884–85 Andrew Dickson White 1930 Evarts Boutell Greene 1972 Thomas C. Cochran 1885–86 George Bancroft 1931 Carl Lotus Becker 1973 Lynn White Jr. 1886–87 Justin Winsor 1932 Herbert Eugene Bolton 1974 Lewis Hanke 1887–88 William Frederick Poole 1933 Charles A. Beard 1975 Gordon Wright 1889 Charles Kendall Adams 1934 William E. Dodd 1976 Richard B. Morris 1890 John Jay 1935 Michael I. Rostovtzeff 1977 Charles Gibson 1891 William Wirt Henry 1936 Charles McIlwain 1978 William J. Bouwsma 1892–93 James Burrill Angell 1937 Guy Stanton Ford 1979 John Hope Franklin 1893–94 Henry Adams 1938 Laurence M. Larson; 1980 David H. Pinkney Frederic L. Paxson 1895 George Frisbie Hoar 1981 Bernard Bailyn 1939 William Scott Ferguson 1896 Richard Salter Storrs 1982 Gordon A. Craig 1940 Max Farrand 1897 James Schouler 1983 Philip D. Curtin 1941 James Westfall Thompson 1898 George Park Fisher 1984 Arthur S. Link 1942 Arthur M. Schlesinger 1899 James Ford Rhodes 1985 William H. McNeill 1943 Nellie Neilson 1900 Edward Eggleston 1986 Carl N. Degler 1944 William L. Westermann 1901 Charles Francis Adams 1987 Natalie Zemon Davis 1945 Carlton J. H. Hayes 1902 Alfred Thayer Mahan 1988 Akira Iriye 1946 Sidney B. Fay 1903 Henry Charles Lea 1989 Louis R. Harlan 1947 Thomas J. Wertenbaker 1904 Goldwin Smith 1990 David Herlihy 1948 Kenneth Scott Latourette 1905 John Bach McMaster 1991 William E. Leuchtenburg 1949 Conyers Read 1906 Simeon E. Baldwin 1992 Frederic E. Wakeman Jr. 1950 Samuel E. Morison 1907 J. Franklin Jameson 1993 Louise A. Tilly 1951 Robert L. Schuyler 1908 George Burton Adams 1994 Thomas C. Holt 1952 James G. Randall 1909 Albert Bushnell Hart 1995 John H. Coatsworth 1953 Louis Gottschalk 1910 Frederick Jackson Turner 1996 Caroline Walker Bynum 1954 Merle Curti 1911 William Milligan Sloane 1955 Lynn Thorndike 1997 Joyce Appleby 1912 Theodore Roosevelt 1956 Dexter Perkins 1998 Joseph C. Miller 1913 William Archibald Dunning 1957 William Langer 1999 Robert C. Darnton 1914 Andrew C. McLaughlin 1958 Walter Prescott Webb 2000 Eric Foner 1915 H. Morse Stephens 1959 Allan Nevins 2001 Wm. Roger Louis 1916 George Lincoln Burr 1960 Bernadotte E. Schmitt 2002 Lynn Hunt 1917 Worthington C. Ford 1961 Samuel Flagg Bemis 2003 James M. McPherson 1918–19 William Roscoe Thayer 1962 Carl Bridenbaugh 2004 Jonathan Spence 1920 Edward Channing 1963 Crane Brinton 2005 James J. Sheehan 1921 Jean Jules Jusserand 1964 Julian P. Boyd 2006 Linda K. Kerber 1922 Charles H. Haskins 1965 Frederic C. Lane 2007 Barbara Weinstein 1923 Edward P. Cheyney 1966 Roy F. Nichols 2008 Gabrielle M. Spiegel 1924 Woodrow Wilson 1967 Hajo Holborn 2009 Laurel Thatcher Ulrich 1924–25 Charles M. Andrews 1968 John K. Fairbank 2010 Barbara D. Metcalf 1926 Dana C. Munro 1969 C. Vann Woodward 2011 Anthony Grafton 1927 Henry Osborn Taylor 1970 R. R. Palmer 2012 William Cronon 1928 James H. Breasted 1971 David M. Potter; 2013 Kenneth Pomeranz 1929 James Harvey Robinson Joseph R. Strayer 2014 Jan Goldstein

2014_Program_FM.indd 4 28/10/14 6:20 PM Planning and Arrangements for the 129th Annual Meeting v v

American Historical Association Program Committee Headquarters Staff Chair: Francesca Trivellato Lisa Moses Leff American University Shatha Almutawa Associate Editor, Perspectives on History Co-chair: Andrew S. Sartori Susan A. Maurer Nassau Community College Julia Brookins Special Projects Coordinator Kathryn Burns Nancy McTygue University of California, Davis Matt Burruss University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Publications Sales and Business Office Assistant Alexander Byrd María E. Montoya New York University Seth J. Denbo Rice University Derek R. Peterson Director, Scholarly Communication and Digital Omnia El Shakry University of Michigan–Ann Arbor Initiatives University of California, Davis Richard Rabinowitz Debbie Ann Doyle Bryna Goodman Coordinator, Committees and Meetings American History Workshop University of Oregon Elizabeth Elliott William G. Thomas III Douglas Haynes Program Assistant University of Nebraska–Lincoln University of California, Irvine Kelly Elmore Jonathan Gebhardt Florence C. Hsia Yale University Manager, Marketing and Business Operations University of Wisconsin–Madison Program Committee assistant James Grossman Executive Director Local Arrangements Committee Michelle Hewitt Assistant Membership Manager Co-chair: Valerie Paley Daniel Levinson Wilk New-York Historical Society Fashion Institute of Technology Jacob Ingram Editorial Assistant Co-chair: Andrew W. Robertson Christopher P. Moore City University of New York, Graduate Center Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Matthew Keough Alex J. Novikoff Administrative Office Assistant William C. Bassell Fordham University Academy of American Studies Stephanie Kingsley Sasha Rolon Pereira Associate Editor, Web Content and Social Media David Dunbar Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History CITYterm at the Masters School Allen Mikaelian Nancy E. Toff Editor, Perspectives on History Julie A. Golia Oxford University Press Brooklyn Historical Society Randy B. Norell Lilly Tuttle Controller David M. Gordon Museum of the City of New York Phu Pham Bronx Community College, City University of Daniel J. Walkowitz Staff Accountant New York New York University Dana L. Schaffer Lesley S. Herrmann Suzanne R. Wasserman Associate Director Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Gotham Center for New York City History Pamela Scott-Pinkney David P. Jaffee Jeanne Gardner Gutierrez Membership Manager Bard Graduate Center LAC Assistant City University of New York, Graduate Center Emily L. Swafford Richard R. John Programs Manager Cambridge Ridley Lynch LAC Assistant Liz Townsend Thai Stein Jones City University of New York, Graduate Center Coordinator, Professional Data and Job Center Columbia University Nora Slonimsky Sharon K. Tune Seth Kamil LAC Assistant Director, Meetings and Administration Big Onion Walking Tours City University of New York, Graduate Center

Program Editorial Staff

Sharon K. Tune With assistance from Jacob Ingram, Matthew Keough, and Editor and Director, Meetings Liz Townsend Debbie Ann Doyle Co-Editor and Coordinator, Committees and Meetings

2014_Program_FM.indd 5 28/10/14 6:20 PM vi AHA Hours / Session Icons

Name Location Hours AHA Headquarters/Staff Office and New York Hilton, Americas I January 2, 12:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m. Information Desk January 3, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 8:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Registration New York Hilton, Americas I January 2, 12:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m. January 3, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 8:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall New York Hilton, Grand Ballroom January 3, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Job Center New York Hilton, Americas II January 2, 12:30 p.m.–6:00 p.m. January 3, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Internet Center New York Hilton, Americas II January 2, 12:30 p.m.–6:00 p.m. January 3, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. AHA Information Desk at the Sheraton Sheraton, Lobby Level January 2, 12:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m. January 3, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 8:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 8:30 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Quiet Room New York Hilton, Rhinelander January 2, 12:30 p.m.–6:00 p.m. Gallery Center January 3, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 4, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. January 5, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. A Nursing Mothers’ Room will be available in the Sheraton New York’s Park Suite 1 for the duration of the meeting.

Session Icons

Session icons are designed to help make finding a particular AHA Program Committee session or event easier. Look for the following icons to help identify a particular type of session, starting on page 32

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Presidential Teaching Public Graduate Film Digital Sessions History

2014_Program_FM.indd 6 28/10/14 6:20 PM General Information 1

he 129th annual meeting of the Association will be held J anuary Early Departure Fee 2–5, 2015, in N ew York City, at the N ew York Hilton Midtown Tand the Sheraton New York Times Square. Many of the AHA’s most Some hav e an early depar ture fee. G uests wishing to av oid an early distinguished members will be pr esent to deliver papers and mor e than 1,500 checkout fee should advise the hotel at or before check-in of any change in scholars will par ticipate in the four-day meeting. I n addition, 43 specializ ed planned length of stay . Hotels will inform attendees of this potential charge societies and organizations will meet in conjunction with the AHA. S ocieties upon check-in. have scheduled sessions and luncheons in par tnership with the Association. AHA awards and honors will be announced on F riday, January 2, followed by the plenary session. Jan E. Goldstein, University of Chicago, will deliv er the Credit Card Guarantee presidential address on January 3. All hotels require a credit card to guarantee the reservation, or one night’s room rate and taxes if payment is to be by check. Credit cards must be valid through January 31, 2015. Major credit cards (MasterCard, Diners Club, Visa, American Accommodations Express, and Discover) are accepted. The AHA has reserved substantial blocks of rooms at the New York Hilton Midtown and the S heraton New York Times Square, with a smaller block at the Manhattan at Times Square. The hotels are located in midtown Manhattan Cutoff Date between Central Park and Times Square. The cutoff date for the AHA’s officialblock at all hotels is December 10, 2014. The New York Hilton (newyorkhiltonhotel.com; 212-586-7000), located After this date, r emaining inventory in each hotel ’s block will be r eleased and at 1335 Avenue of the Americas (S ixth Avenue) between West 53rd and West rooms will be available at the AHA’s rates on a space-available basis 54th Streets, will serve as headquarters and will house the AHA E xhibit Hall, at the time of reservation. If hotel blocks sell out, the AHA will secure additional Job Center, and AHA and affiliate sessions.The Sheraton New York (www. hotel rooms and post details on the AHA web site. sheratonnewyork.com; 212-581-1000), at 811 Seventh Avenue between 52nd and 53rd Streets, will ser ve as co-headquar ters and will accommodate AHA sessions and affiliate events. The side entrances of the H ilton and Sheraton are Changes, Cancellations, and New Reservations directly across the street from each other. The Manhattan at Times Square Meeting attendees can continue to make and modify (depending on availability) (www.manhattanhoteltimessquare.com; 212-581-3300), located at 790 or cancel reservations until a fe w days before their arrival. Each hotel has its Seventh Avenue across the street from the Sheraton, has a block of 250 rooms. own cancellation policy, which can vary from 24 hours to 72 hours prior to the The Manhattan’s guestrooms offer free WiFi for up to 4 devices. reserved arrival date. If cancelled after this window, one night’s room and taxes Rates at the Hilton and Sheraton are $169 and $149 single and $169 double; will be charged. the additional person charge is $30. The rate at the Manhattan is $119 single and If a reservation is not cancelled and the individual is a “no show,” the hotels double for a king room with one bed and $149 for singles and doubles requesting will charge one night’s room and taxes as a penalty. two beds; the triple and quad rate is also $149. The Manhattan’s lower, $119 rate is in effect up to housing cut off (December 10, 2014); thereafter, rates will be the same as the Hilton and Sheraton. All properties are non-smoking. Information and Accommodations for All rooms are subject to 14.75 per cent city and state tax es, plus a 5.875 Persons with Disabilities percent per room, per night New York City occupancy tax (subject to change without notice). Rates are in effect three days before and after the meeting dates, General Information and Resources and are for a limited number of rooms only at each property. New York City is one of the most accessible cities in the world for visitors with disabilities. NYC & Company, the city’s convention and bur eau, offers Making a Hotel Reservation the free Official Accessibility Guide (www.nyc.gov/html/mopd/downloads/pdf/ accessibility_guide.pdf ), which includes detailed accessibility information for Once preregistered for the annual meeting, attendees will receive a confirmation many attractions and . The guide can be accessed by screen reader users. of their registration that will include information on ho w to make a standar d room or suite reservation. Attendees will be able to make reservations via each New York City Transit’s Access-a-Ride provides transportation for people hotel’s customized web site or toll-free number. There will also be a dir ect-dial with disabilities who ar e unable to use public bus or sub way service. It offers number for international attendees to call. Throughout the fall members can shared ride, door-to-door paratransit ser vice. It operates 24 hours a day , seven consult the AHA’s web site (www.historians.org/annual) for complete details days a week, including holidays. There is an application process, so arrangements of each property’s suite types and rates. must be made in advance of arrival in New York City. Visit www.NYC.gov and search for “Access-a-Ride.” Scooter rentals are available by contacting ScootAround Inc., toll-free at 888- Acknowledgement 441-7575, by e-mail at [email protected], or online at www.scootaround. Hotel reservation acknowledgements are available via e-mail or mail. com. Acknowledgements will be e-mailed when e-mail addr esses are provided unless The U.S. D epartment. of Transportation’s Aviation Consumer Protection otherwise indicated. All pr ocessing deadlines and cancellation policies ar e and Enforcement has an online guide, New Horizons: Information for the Air noted on acknowledgements. A reservation ID number will be provided on the Traveler with a Disability (airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/publications/horizons.htm). acknowledgement. This site also explains how to file a complaint with the department.

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Map of the Area

A general resource is Barrier-Free : A Nuts and Bolts Guide for Wheelers and All hotels have accessible guest r ooms. The number of such r ooms at each Slow Walkers. It contains detailed information about the logistics of planning accessible property is noted in the listing below. Among other amenities, these rooms feature —whether by plane, train, or bus. The book includes important details about wheelchair-accessible doors, lever/lever door handles, security peepholes, ample accessible air travel, traveling with oxygen, accessible ground transportation, choosing room space, grab bars in r estrooms, low sinks with insulated pipes, accessible a travel agent, online booking, accessible recreation, and budget travel. towel racks, and accessible mirrors. The following auxiliary aids are available at most properties: flashing fire alarm, doorbell, and telephone; vibrating alarm clock; closed-caption decoders; Braille signage; and TDD telephones. Airports John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), Newark Liberty International New York Hilton Midtown Airport (EWR), and LaG uardia Airport (LGA) are operated b y the P ort Authority of New York and New Jersey. Visitors can visit the joint w eb site Entrance: The hotel’s main entrance on A venue of the Americas (Sixth (www.panynj.gov) for visitors’ guides for patr ons with disabilities, including Avenue) is accessible. information security screening, animal relief areas, taxicab services, and public Parking: The hotel offers v alet parking. The lot has designated spaces transit access. A recently passed New York City law requires taxicab drivers not including van-accessible spots. The valet entrance is located in the back of the to engage the taxi meter until a disabled passenger has settled in and the ride hotel, on West 53rd between Sixth and Seventh Avenues. is about to commence. D rivers are required to assist disabled passengers. I n addition, there is no charge for luggage or belongings transported in the interior Guestrooms: Thirty rooms are equipped for persons with disabilities— of the taxicab, or for use of the taxicab’s trunk. some for the hearing impaired only and others for both hearing impaired and wheelchair accessible. Information about Hotels Sheraton New York Times Square Guests should advise the selected hotel about specific needs when making oomr reservations. All hotels hav e accessible lobbies; sev eral have autoslide doors. Entrance: The main lobb y entrance on the southeast corner of S eventh Thresholds and doormats ar e in compliance with American with D isabilities Avenue and 53rd Street is accessible. Act (ADA) r egulations and door-ser vice personnel ar e available at most Parking: Accessible parking spaces are available; guests should enter on 53rd properties. Lobbies have marble floors and/or low-pile area carpeting. All hotels Street. Maximum vehicle height is six feet, five inches. have accessible registration desks or pr ovide clipboards to guests to complete Guest rooms: The hotel has 42 guest r ooms that meet standar d ADA registration documentation. E levators connect all lev els of each hotel. Each requirements. elevator has a wheelchair accessible keypad, Braille numerals beside each control button, and audible direction. Restrooms in lobbies and on meeting room floors are wheelchair accessible and have tactile signage.

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Manhattan at Times Square For transportation information for all three airports call Air-Ride (800-247- 7433), which offers 24-hour recorded details on bus and shuttle companies and Entrance: The hotel’s entrance on Seventh Avenue is accessible. car services registered with the New York and New Jersey Port Authority. Similar Parking: The hotel has several accessible parking spaces. Garage entrances information is available at the authority’s web site at www.panynj.gov/airports; are on 51st and 52nd streets. click on the airport at which you’ll be arriving. Guestrooms: Twenty-three guestrooms are accessible, five with r oll-in LaGuardia Airport is 8 miles from the meeting hotels. showers. A taxi ride into the city takes anywher e from 30 to 40 minutes and costs a minimum of $45—rides ar e metered and bridge tolls and tip (15–20 per cent is customary) are extra. There is no additional charge for luggage and rates ar e Sign Interpreting based per car, not per passenger (up to four passengers). Hearing-impaired members who will need sign-interpreting service at the AHA GO Airlink NYC provides shared van service from LaGuardia to midtown hotels annual meeting must notify the AHA H eadquarters Office and register for the ($21 one way). The trip takes approximately 45 minutes with busses operating every meeting by December 1, 2014. The request should include the sessions they twenty to thirty minutes, seven days a week. NYC Airporter provides bus service to plan to attend. The AHA will, with the assistance of the Registry of Interpreters, Grand Central Station for $13 one way and $23 r ound trip, with a complimentary secure the services of appropriate interpreters. The AHA will assume the cost for shuttle to hotels. The SuperShuttle provides door-to-door ser vice to and fr om the up to nine hours of sign language interpr eting service or a maximum of $400 airport to downtown hotels. The fare is $16 each way. per member, whichever is less. Kennedy Airport is 17 miles from midtown. An interpreter may also be provided upon request for the presidential address Taxis from the airport to Manhattan charge a flatrate of $52 (plus tolls and (Saturday, January 3) and the annual business meeting (S unday, January 4). tip). There is a New York state tax surcharge of 50 cents on each trip . The trip Please contact Sharon K. Tune, Director, Meetings and Administration, AHA, takes 65 to 75 minutes. The meter will not be turned on. at [email protected] by the deadline of December 1, 2014, if you would like to request this service. GO Airlink NYC provides shared van service from JFK to midto wn hotels ($20 one way), and takes approximately 75 to 85 minutes. NYC Airporter offers bus service between JFK and Grand Central Station for $16 one way and $29 Transportation to New York City round trip; from Grand Central there are complimentary shuttles to hotels. The SuperShuttle provides door-to-door service to and from the airport to downtown Train Fares hotels. The fare is $21 each way. Newark Airport is 15 miles from the meeting hotels. Amtrak offers a 10 per cent discount off the best av ailable fare to New York City between December 30, 2014, and January 8, 2015. To book, call Amtrak at 800- For taxis, the meter ed fare (plus tolls) fr om the airpor t to the hotels is 872-7245 or contact your travel agent. Refer to Convention Fare Code X47U-915. approximately $55. There is an additional charge for o versized luggage, and Please note that this discount cannot be booked via Amtrak’s web site—you must rates are based per car, not per passenger (up to four passengers). To return to call Amtrak directly and provide the fare code. The offer is not valid on Auto Train Newark Airport via a NYC taxi, the approximate fare is $69–75 plus return tolls and Acela service, but is valid on Amtrak Regional for all departures seven days a and a $15 surcharge. week, except for blackouts. O ffer valid with Sleepers, Business Class, or Air Train offers connecting service to New Jersey Transit and Amtrak trains First Class seats with payment of the full applicable accommodation charges. that bring passengers into Manhattan. This can be quicker than taking a cab or bus, and it is much more affordable—$12.50 one way from Newark Airport to NYC Penn Station. GO Airlink NYC offers shared van service for a fee of $12 Ground Transportation per person. Newark Liberty Airport Express offers shuttle service to Manhattan every 15–20 minutes. One-way fare is $16 and round trip is $28. SuperShuttle is From Penn Station (Amtrak) available from Newark for $21, depending on destination. New York’s Penn Station is located at Eighth Avenue and 31st Street in midtown Manhattan. The station is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week; but note that Amtrak’s ticket office at ennP Station is open daily from 5:10 a.m.–10:00 p.m. A Note about Taxicabs in New York City A cab ride to the hotels takes 15–20 minutes and costs fr om $15–$18, plus Yellow Medallion cabs are the only taxis authorized to pick up hails (the act of tip. Attendees can also take the U ptown E subway from Penn Station to the flaggingdown a cab) in Manhattan. Annual meeting attendees should avoid Seventh Avenue stop, right next to the S heraton. Travel time is approximately “gypsy” cabs—regular cars that offer a lift but usually cost more than cabs and 20 minutes and costs $2.75. aren’t as well regulated or as safe. When the numbers on the r oof of the cab are lit, it is available. Taxicabs are required to take you to your destination inside the metropolitan area. Officially, taxicabs can take on only four riders, From Airports three in the back seat and one in the fr ont seat. According to the Taxi and New York City is ser ved by two international airpor ts, John F. Kennedy Limousine Commission rules, drivers are not allowed to use cellular phones International Airport (JFK), in the borough of Queens at the south end of the or any communication device, hands free or otherwise, while operating a cab. Van Wyck Expressway, which primarily handles international flights,and Newark The initial fare is $2.50 and each additional one-fifth mile (four blocks) or Liberty International Airport (EWR), in New Jersey, which handles both domestic one minute waiting time is 50 cents. There is a peak surcharge of $1.00 from and international flights.The region is also served by LaGuardia Airport (LGA), 4:00–8:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. There is a night surcharge of 50 cents also in Queens, on the Grand Central Parkway, which mainly handles domestic from 8:00 p.m.–6:00 a.m. Riders should pay only what is on the meter, plus a flights. All airpor ts offer ground transportation with ser vice available from the 15–20 percent gratuity. airports to the hotels. Taxis, vans, limousines, busses, and rental cars are available.

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For accessible taxi ser vice, passengers call 311 to r equest the ser vice. 311 Attendees can preregister online via a link on the AHA ’s web site (www. connects the passenger to the dispatcher , who collects the passenger ’s pick- historians.org/annual). Please note that preregistration for the 2015 meeting up location and r equest for ser vice. The dispatcher then communicates will be handled by a processing service and forms should be filled out online or electronically with participating drivers. The closest available driver accepts the sent to the address on the form and not to the AHA office. dispatch and picks up the passenger. Advance registration must be received by December 19, 2014, midnight. Thereafter, onsite rates will be charged. Registration materials, including badges, Public Transportation will be distributed at the meeting during registration hours, posted on page vi. Fees for registering beginning December 20, 2014, and during the meeting New York City’s subway operates 24 hours a day , although some stations ar e will be $193 member, $250 nonmember; $193 speaker member, $193 speaker closed between midnight and 6:00 a.m., and the gap betw een trains can be nonmember; $82 student member, $125 student nonmember; $75 unemployed as long as 30 minutes during off-peak hours. S ubway maps are available from member, $85 unemplo yed nonmember; $84 r etired member, $90 r etired station managers or on M etropolitan Transportation Authority’s (MTA) web nonmember; and $45 K-12 teacher member and $50 K-12 teacher nonmember. site (www.mta.info). The subway fare is $2.50 when paid with a M etroCard; The special group rates mentioned above are not available onsite. $2.75 for a single ride ticket. Admission to all sessions, Exhibit Hall, Job Center, Career Fair, and Internet Center requires a registration badge. Parking at the Hotels All hotels hav e parking available. Current published rates for each 24-hour Refund Policy period are: Hilton: no self ser vice, valet $55, van and SUV $63 (in and out Advance registrants who are unable to attend the meeting may r equest a refund service available; valet entrance located in rear of building on West 53rd Street of their registration fee. Cancellations and refund requests should be submitted between Sixth and Seventh Avenues); Sheraton: no self service, valet $50 with in writing and postmar ked (or e-mailed) b y December 19, 2014. R efunds will no in/out privileges (when trav eling west on 53rd the parking lot entrance is be processed less a $20 administrative fee. No refunds will be issued for requests before the hotel entrance); Manhattan: no self service, valet $50 with no in/out postmarked or e-mailed after D ecember 19, 2014. R efunds will not be giv en privileges (garage entrances on 51st and 52nd streets). for no-shows. Cancellations and r efund requests should be submitted to the American Historical Association, Business Office, 400 A S t. SE, Washington, Additional Parking Options DC 20003 or e-mailed to [email protected]. Faxed refund requests will not be accepted. Proof of payment—copies of front and back of cancelled check or There are parking garages thr oughout the city. Many cut their rates on the copy of credit card statement—may also be required. weekend. Depending on wher e you park, garage rates may range fr om $6 to $15 for the first hour to $40 per day, with special rates of about $20 on Sundays. Another option is SpotHero (www.spothero.com). Drivers can type Internet Center in an address to compare hundreds of discounted parking options, then choose A limited number of I nternet terminals will be av ailable during Job Center the dates/times to park. You can reserve a spot by prepaying through SpotHero. hours in the New York Hilton, Americas Hall II. Extensive information about On the date, bring your e-mail confirmation or a print out to give to the garage. the availability and price of I nternet services at meeting hotels, including fr ee Drivers can also visit the city’s Department of City Planning web site for a WiFi options, is posted on the web site (www.historians.org/annual). guide to parking lots and garages in the five boroughs. Once on the site, key in “parking facilities” in the search engine. Quiet Room Available at New York New York City Driving and Parking Tips Hilton Midtown In New York state, the driver and all front-seat passengers are required to wear The AHA will make a Quiet Room available in the Hilton’s Rhinelander Gallery seat belts, and children under the age of 16 must w ear a seat belt in the back Center. The room will have free wireless Internet access. Although the room is seat. New York City forbids making right-hand turns at r ed lights, ex cept of particular use to those on the job market, it is also available for all conference where expressly permitted. The speed limit on str eets (not highways) in the attendees as a quiet place to await their next session or appointment, to send a five boroughs is 25 miles per hour . In addition, drivers should pay special text message, to check a web site, and the like. It’s a room to escape temporarily attention to signs when parking on the street: the city has alternate-side-of- the hubbub of the annual meeting, to read prior to your next session or next the-street rules in effect for different days of the week. City parking meters do appointment, to meet someone befor e heading out to lunch, to pr epare a few not allow all-day privileges—drivers must deposit quarters on an hourly basis. notes for those comments you didn’t quite finish, to estr tired feet from walking among the hotels, or, for New York City-area attendees with no hotel room, to sit for a few minutes of quiet time. Meeting Registration To allow everyone to enjoy the Quiet Room, please avoid: Intending participants are urged to preregister at the reduced rates of $164 • cell-phone conversations—there are hallways and numer ous other member, $220 nonmember; $164 speaker member, $164 speaker nonmember; venues throughout the hotels and elsewhere for these conversations $76 student member, $119 student nonmember; $70 unemplo yed member, $80 unemployed nonmember; $79 r etired member, $85 retired nonmember; • using the room as an informal or alternate site for job interviews $40 K-12 teacher member, $45 K-12 teacher nonmember; $70 K-12 teacher/ • extended conversation student group; $200 undergraduate teacher/student group; and $200 graduate teacher/student group (precandidacy students only). The three group rates are Those who enjo y the r oom’s usage should not leav e personal possessions offered to members only. unattended. To deposit such items, the Hilton has a coat check on the lobby level.

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AHA staff will check the room periodically, but the space will be self policing: Sittercity please bus your own table if you dine, throw away any unwanted papers or other trash, straighten seating if y ou move tables and chairs ar ound, etc. For serious 20 W. Kinzie St., Suite 1500, Chicago, IL 60654 concerns or issues, report to the AHA headquarters office. fI there are problems or 866-205-5625, Monday–Friday, 8:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. CST repeated distractions, the AHA reserves the right to close the room to further use. Web: www.sittercity.com E-mail submission from web site’s “Help and Contact Us” One of the largest online sour ces for child car e, with babysitters in every Business Meeting city nationwide, including Manhattan. They offer a four-step screening process, The AHA Council, divisions, and committees will r eport to the Association at the background checks, sitter reviews, detailed profiles, and more. annual business meeting. Reports are subject to discussion and appropriate motions relating to them. R esolutions on other matters for the business meeting will be handled as follows: (1) resolutions signed by 50 members of the Association will be Nursing Mothers’ Room accepted until November 1, 2014, and (2) must be no more than 300 words in length. A Nursing Mothers’ Room will be located in the S heraton New York’s Park Resolutions should be sent to the Executive Director at the AHA headquarters, with Suite 1 (fifth floor).The room will be equipped with comfortable furniture, a a copy to the Parliamentarian, Michael Les Benedict, Department of History, Ohio small refrigerator, and separate private areas for nursing mothers. Restrooms are State University, 230 W. 17th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210. immediately adjacent.

Voting Cards Schedule of Meal Meetings Voting cards will be distributed to members at the business meeting. Meal events are scheduled as noted below. Tickets (except those sponsored by organizations that sell their o wn tickets) are available for advance purchase on the printed and online meeting pr eregistration forms. L uncheon tickets will also be Affiliated Societies available for purchase during the meeting at the onsite r egistration counters in the The second floorpromenade of the New York Hilton Midtown has been reserved New York Hilton’s Americas Hall I if sponsoring organizations extend sales onsite. from 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. on Saturday, January 3, for affiliatedsocieties to display materials and to meet with members of the profession. Breakfasts Childcare Saturday, January 3 Formal child care services will not be provided at the meeting. Attendees should American Society of Church History Women in Theology make arrangements directly with a provider prior to arriving in New York City and Church History (p. 12) (some options ar e noted belo w). The AHA assumes no r esponsibility with respect to these services and accepts no liabilities related to the services provided. Sunday, January 4 Companies note that they ar e fully insur ed, licensed, and bonded, and they will make arrangements to pr ovide childcare in the client’s hotel room or AHA Committee on Women Historians (p. 80) elsewhere. Pay rates are generally based on a caregiver’s training and experience and the r equirements of the par ticular engagement. Typical rates ar e $25 to Luncheons $30 per hour. If plans must be made closer to the meeting dates, attendees can also call their selected hotel’s concierge desk for a list of childcare providers Saturday, January 3 maintained by the hotel. American Catholic Historical Association (p. 68) Babysitters4hire.com AHA Department Chairs (p. 68) AHA Modern European History Section (p. 68) PO Box 2202, Norfolk, NE 68702 402-379-1898 American Society of Church History (p. 68) E-mail submission from web site’s “Contact Us” Conference on Asian History/Society for Advancing the A free preview of av ailable babysitters is av ailable through the site ’s local History of South Asia (p. 68) neighborhood mapping technology. Once a registered member, individuals will be given immediate access to babysitters through text messaging, e-mail, and phone. Conference on Latin American History (p. 68)

Care.com Sunday, January 4 Business History Conference (p. 96) 1400 Main Street, Waltham, MA 02451 E-mail: [email protected] Coordinating Council for Women in History (p. 96) Care.com is an online service that matches care and service providers in the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (p. 96) areas of child car e, tutoring, pet car e, and senior car e to the people who need their help. The company provides services in midtown Manhattan hotels.

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Two-Year College Faculty Preregistration for tours is highly r ecommended. Tour tickets ar e nonrefundable and cannot be ex changed. Tour participants must be registered History faculty fr om two-year colleges ar e invited to a special r eception on for the AHA meeting. Log in to the registration resource center or call 508-743- Saturday, January 3 from 7:00–8:30 p.m. in the Gibson Suite of the New York 0510 to add tickets to an existing registration. Hilton. Members of the AHA Council, divisions, and committees will host this Tour groups will meet in Americas Hall I at the New York Hilton Midtown. opportunity to become better acquainted and to discuss informally ho w the Association might better serve this constituency’s needs. Tours may travel by bus, subway, or on foot. F ares and admission fees ar e included in the price of the tour . Many New York subway stations ar e not wheelchair accessible. Accessible buses or alternate transportation for people Committee on Minority Historians with disabilities will be av ailable on r equest. Contact [email protected] for additional information. The Committee on Minority Historians invites minority graduate students and faculty to a reception on Sunday, January 4 from 6:00–7:30 p.m. in the Hilton’s Gibson Suite. Tour 1: Bus Tour of Harlem, the Bronx, and Arthur Avenue Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 32)

Graduate Students and Early Career Tour 2: Big Onion: The Upper West Side Professionals Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. (p. 32) The Graduate and Early Career Committee welcomes attendance at its reception to meet fellow students from other institutions, historians at the beginning of Tour 3: Twentieth-Century Queens their careers, and the Association’s leadership on Friday, January 2, 5:00–6:00 Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 32) p.m. in the Sheraton New York’s Central Park West Ballroom. Graduate students and early career professionals are also invited to take part Tour 4: FDR Four Freedoms Park Tour in GECC’s open forum on Saturday, January 3, from 2:30–3:30 p.m. in the Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 1:15–3:30 p.m. (p. 40) New York Hilton’s Concourse C. Tour 5: Big Onion: Historic Lower Manhattan/Wall Street Local Arrangements: Historians Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (p. 41) and New York City Tour 6: History on the Hoof in the Gentrifying City: Maverick Women of For the 129th annual meeting, members of the Local Arrangements Committee Greenwich Village (LAC) will pr ovide Association members with detailed information to make Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 2:00–5:00 p.m. (p. 41) their New York City visit thoroughly enjoyable. Co-chairs Valerie Paley, New- York Historical Society, and Andr ew W. Robertson, City University of New York, Graduate Center, and LAC members have prepared articles on the city Tour 7: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Gilded New York for the fall issues of Perspectives on History, including guides to museums, points Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 2:15–5:15 p.m. (p. 41) of interests, and restaurants in the area. An annual meeting supplement will be posted on the AHA’s web site. Tour 8: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Activist New York Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 2:15–5:15 p.m. (p. 41) Tours Organized by the Local Arrangements Committee Tour 9: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Mac Conner: A New York Life Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 2:15–5:15 p.m. (p. 41) The Local Arrangements Committee has organiz ed 28 tours highlighting the historical resources of New York. Participants will have a unique oppor tunity Tour 10: Museum of the City of New York Tour: The Theater Collection to take these tours with their fello w historians. Tickets for a tour of H arlem Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 2:15–5:15 p.m. (p. 41) religious sites organized by the American Society of Church History will also be sold through AHA registration. Tour 11: American Society of Church History Tour of Harlem Religious Several tours are offered through Big Onion Walking Tours, which specializes Sites in tours led by current doctoral candidates or recent PhDs in history. Since 1991, Big Onion Walking Tours has offered innovative historian-led walks thr ough Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 2:30–5:30 p.m. (p. 41) New York’s historic and ethnic neighborhoods. F ounded by two Columbia University U.S. history PhD candidates, Big Onion has grown to include more Tour 12: United Nations Archive Tour than thirty guides representing six universities. Upon completion of studies, Big Date/Time: Saturday, January 3, 10:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m. (p. 59) Onion guides have gone on to teach at colleges thr oughout the and work for numerous historical societies and nonprofits.Tours weave together Tour 13: Big Onion: The Upper East Side the diverse fabric of urban neighborhoods, combining traditional academic research with public histor y and cutting-edge teaching techniques. B ig Onion Date/Time: Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. (p. 67) offers more than twenty-five tours. The Local Arrangements Committee has selected some of its most unique and inter esting outings specifically for the Tour 14: Museum of the City of New York Tour AHA annual meeting. Date/Time: Saturday, January 3, 1:15–4:15 p.m. (p. 69)

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Tour 15: Melting Pot, Six Feet Under: Trinity Church Cemetery as Muse Tour 27: Green-Wood Cemetery Tour for American Studies: Washington Heights Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 121) Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 69) Tour 28: Big Onion: Historic Harlem Tour 16: The Restaurants of Madison Square Park, 1859–2014 Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 121) Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 69) Tour 29: Municipal Archives Tour 17: Revolutionary Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 121) Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 87)

Tour 18: Museum of Jewish Heritage Film Festival Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 87) The ninth AHA film festival will focus on the theme of Protest and Resistance. The screenings were organized by Jason M. K elly, Indiana University– Tour 19: The “New” New-York Historical Society Purdue University Indianapolis, and Alex Lichtenstein, I ndiana University– Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 95) Bloomington. Imbabazi: The Pardon (p. 50) Tour 20: National 9/11 Memorial Museum Ghosts of Amistad (p. 68) Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 96) The Guguletu 7 (p. 79) The Gulabi Gang (p. 96) Tour 21: Big Onion: Historic Brooklyn Heights, with the Brooklyn Historical Society 1971 (p. 105) Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 97) Please Note: Tour 22: Big Onion: A Multi-Ethnic Eating Tour of the Lower East Side Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 97) The AHA and the pr ess occasionally r ecord sessions for use in broadcast and electr onic media, and videotape or photograph Tour 23: Museum of the City of New York Evening Reception and public areas at the meeting. R egistration, attendance, or Exhibition Tour participation at the meeting constitutes an agreement to the use of Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 105) the attendee’s image in photographs, video, audio, and electr onic communications. Presenters who do not wish for their session to be Tour 24: Big Onion: Greenwich Village recorded may opt out when submitting a pr oposal to the Program Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 113) Committee, or b y contacting [email protected]. I n order to encourage open debate and allo w members to speak as fr eely as Tour 25: Lower East Side Tenement Museum possible, the AHA does not permit audio or video r ecording of Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 114) its Business Meeting. Anyone who wishes to audio or videotape must obtain permission of participants.The AHA is not responsible Tour 26: Tour of the George Gustav Heye Center of the National Museum for unauthorized recording, but does r eserve the right to r evoke of the American Indian registration of any one who r ecords sessions without appr opriate Date/Time: Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (p. 114) permissions.

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American Historical Association 2:15–5:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 9: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Mac Conner: A New York Life (p. 41) The following is an o verview of sessions and ev ents planned b y the 2:15–5:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 10: Museum of American Historical Association’s Professional Division, Research Division, the City of New York Tour: The Theater Collection (p. 41) Teaching Division, Committee on Women Historians, Graduate and Early Career Committee, and Local Arrangements Committee. I t also 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session 31, sponsored includes presidential sessions organized by AHA president Jan Goldstein. by the AHA Professional Division. The American Association of Page numbers ar e indicated to r efer to complete details on each session. University Professors at 100: A Century of Activity in Defense of A complete list of sessions can be found in the main body of the Program Academic Freedom (p. 42) starting on page 32. 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A. Session 32, Friday, January 2 sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Constitutional History in the High School Classroom (p. 42) 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 1: Bus Tour of Harlem, the Bronx, and Arthur Avenue (p. 32) 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Regent Parlor. Session 33, sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. New Initiatives to Improve Teaching, 8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, New York Suite. AHA Council Learning, and Assessment: Projects and Perspectives (p. 42) meeting (invitation only) 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Session 34, sponsored 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room E. Getting by the AHA Teaching Division. Teaching the Common Core: Citing Started in Digital History Workshop (p. 32) Evidence Workshop (p. 42) 9:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor. Session, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Session 35, sponsored sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Workshop on Undergraduate New York Hilton, Sutton South. by the AHA Teaching Division. A Thematic Approach to Teaching World Teaching (p. 32) War I (p. 42) 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 2: Big 4:00–5:00 p.m. Getting the Most Out of Onion: The Upper West Side (p. 32) New York Hilton, Concourse B. the Annual Meeting (p. 49) 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 3: 5:00–6:00 p.m. Reception for Twentieth-Century Queens (p. 32) Sheraton New York, Central Park West. Graduate Students (p. 49) 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. Session 1, sponsored by 5:30–6:30 p.m. Reception for the AHA Research Division. Are We Losing History? Capturing Archival Sheraton New York, Central Park East. History Bloggers and Twitterstorians (p. 49) Records for a New Era of Research (p. 33) 5:30–7:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. AHA Film 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor. Session 2, sponsored Festival. (p. 50) by the AHA Teaching Division. Teaching and Learning the Great War in Imbabazi: The Pardon the Digital Age (p. 33) 6:00–7:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom. AHA Welcome Reception (p. 50) 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 3, sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division and the College Board. Teaching Students 6:00–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. Reception in Chronology: Strategies to Help Students Develop a Chronological Honor of the Centennial of the American Association of University Framework (p. 33) Professors (p. 50)

1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park West. Session 4, 7:30–8:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Metropolitan Ballroom West. sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Teaching the Common Core: American Historical Association Awards Ceremony (p. 50) Writing Arguments (p. 33) 8:30–10:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Metropolitan Ballroom West. 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. Session 5, sponsored by Plenary Session: The New York Public Library Controversy and the the AHA Local Arrangements Committee. A Radical Promise? Building Future of the American Research Library (p. 50) Institutional Contexts in this Interdisciplinary Moment (p. 33) Saturday, January 3 1:15–3:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 4: FDR Four Freedoms Park Tour (p. 40) 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom. Session 61, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division, the AHA Graduate and Early 1:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 5: Big Onion: Career Committee, and the Coordinating Council for Women in History. Historic Lower Manhattan/Wall Street (p. 41) Interviewing in the Job Market in the Twenty-First Century (p. 51)

2:00–5:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 6: History on the 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Presidential Session 62. Hoof in the Gentrifying City: Maverick Women of Greenwich Village (p. 41) Historian-Administrators (p. 51)

2:15–5:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 7: Museum of 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A. Session 63, the City of New York Tour: Gilded New York (p. 41) sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. Historians Writing Fiction: Inside the Academy (p. 51) 2:15–5:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 8: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Activist New York (p. 41)

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9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Green Room. Tuning Project Meeting 2:30–3:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. Graduate and Early (Invitation Only) Career Committee Open Forum: Learning to Teach (p. 69)

9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse A. Session, sponsored 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Presidential Session by the Advanced Placement Program of the College Board. Organized 122. Reassessing the Influence of ClassicTheory on Historical Practice: by the American Historical Association, the Gilder Lehrman Institute of Poststructuralism (Session in Honor of Dominick LaCapra) (p. 69) American History, and National History Day. Food Will Win the War: A K-12 Educators’ Workshop on Teaching World War I, 1914–19 (p. 59) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 123, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. Choosing to Embargo? What to Do 10:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 12: with Your History Dissertation (p. 69) United Nations Archive Tour (p. 59) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Session 124, sponsored 10:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Offsite Workshop, sponsored by the AHA Local by the AHA Professional Division. A Q & A with Publishers (p. 70) Arrangements Committee. New-York Historical Society: Roundtable on Immigration and Global Migration in Public History and the Academy 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 125, sponsored and Exhibit Tour: Chinese American: Exclusion, Inclusion (p. 59) by the AHA Research Division. The State of History Museums: A Roundtable Discussion (p. 70) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Presidential Session 92. Historians as Public Intellectuals in Comparative National 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Regent Parlor. Session 126, sponsored Context (p. 59) by the AHA Teaching Division. Assessing Student Learning in History (p. 70) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 93, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. Historians Writing Fiction: 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room D. Session 127, Outside the Academy (p. 59) sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Student Writing: Assigning, Reading, Commenting (p. 70) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Session 94, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. Measuring Faculty 5:00–6:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Trianon Ballroom. American Productivity for Department Chairs (p. 60) Historical Association Presidential Address (p. 78)

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room D. 6:30–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom. Reception hosted Session 95, sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Digital Pedagogy by the American Historical Association for 2014 President Jan Goldstein, for History: Lightning Round (p. 60) University of Chicago (p. 78)

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room E. Session 7:00–8:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. K–12 Reception (p. 79) 96, sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. The Global Tuning 7:00–8:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Gibson Suite. Reception for Two-Year Project: Reframing Historical Study in the European Union, Latin Faculty (p. 79) America, and the Scholarship on Teaching and Learning (p. 60) 7:00–9:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. AHA Film 10:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 13: Big Festival. The Guguletu 7 (p. 79) Onion: The Upper East Side (p. 67) 7:30–9:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Public Historians’ 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade. Reception (p. 79) Affiliated Societies Display (p. 68) Sunday, January 4 12:00–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. AHA Film Festival. Ghosts of Amistad (p. 68) 8:00–9:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park West. Breakfast Meeting of the AHA Committee on Women Historians (p. 80) 12:15–1:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. AHA Modern European History Section (p. 68) 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Presidential Session 153. Reassessing the Influence of ClassicTheory on Historical Practice: 12:30–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse E. Meet the Editors and Marx (p. 80) Staff of the American Historical Review (p. 68) 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Workshop 154, 12:30–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, New York Suite. Department Chairs’ sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. From Problems to Luncheon: Measuring Faculty Productivity: A Discussion (p. 68) Solutions: Recruiting, Training, and Placing History PhDs in Non- Faculty Careers, Part 1: Building on Institutional Strengths: Career 12:30–2:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Digital Services, Career Advising, and Career Placement (p. 80) Projects Lightning Round (p. 68) 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 155, 1:15–4:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 14: Museum of sponsored by the AHA Professional Division and the Society for History the City of New York Tour (p. 69) in the Federal Government. History in the Federal Government: Careers 1:15–4:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 15: Melting Pot, Serving Policy Makers and the Public (p. 80) Six Feet Under: Trinity Church Cemetery as Muse for American Studies: 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Regent Parlor. Session 156, Washington Heights (p. 69) sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Enhancing Undergraduate 1:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 16: The Student Success: An Initiative to Improve Student Learning in Restaurants of Madison Square Park, 1859–2014 (p. 69) Introductory U.S. History and Other Disciplines (p. 80)

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9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East. Session 157, 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. Session 217, sponsored by sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Connection and Community: the AHA Research Division. Why Caribbean History Matters (p. 97) Teaching Family History in the Classroom (p. 80) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. Session 218, 9:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 17: sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division and the Society for History Revolutionary Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan (p. 87) Education. How Teaching Became a Mission of the American Historical Association from the 1960s (p. 97) 9:30–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. AHA Committee on Women Historians Brainstorming and Mentoring Session (p. 87) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 218-A, sponsored by the AHA Local Arrangements Committee. Harlem: The Unmaking of 11:15 a.m.–2:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 18: the Ghetto (p. 98) Museum of Jewish Heritage (p. 87) 2:30–5:00 p.m. New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade. Session 242. 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Presidential Poster Session #2 (p. 102) Session 183. Reassessing the Influence of Classic Theory on Historical Practice: Foucault (p. 87) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. Digital Drop-in Room (p. 105) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Workshop 184, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. From Problems to Solutions: 3:00–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse D. Affiliated Societies Recruiting, Training, and Placing History PhDs in Non-Faculty Careers, Workshop: Investing Your Endowment Part 2: Faculty and Student Culture and Meeting Immediate Needs of Students (p. 87) 3:45–4:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. Teaching and Learning Networking Opportunity (p. 105) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 185, sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Many Lessons for Many 4:45–6:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor. AHA Business Meeting Students (p. 88) (p. 105)

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Trianon Ballroom. Session 186, 5:00–7:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B. AHA Film Festival. sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Whither the History Major? (p. 88) 1971 (p. 105)

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A. Session 5:15–8:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 23: Museum of 187, sponsored by the AHA Committee on Women Historians. the City of New York Evening Reception and Exhibition Tour (p. 105) Interpreting and Representing Women’s History to the Public: A 6:00–7:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Gibson Suite. Committee on Minority Roundtable (p. 88) Historians’ Reception (p. 106) 11:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade. Session Monday, January 5 213. Poster Session #1 (p. 92) 7:30-9:30 a.m. New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade, Farewell Coffee 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 19: The Reception (p. 107) “New” New-York Historical Society (p. 95) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Session 243, sponsored 11:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. AHR Board of by the AHA Professional Division and the Coordinating Council for Editors luncheon and meeting Women in History. Roundtable: Exploring Alternative Academic Careers: How Your History Ph.D. Can Serve You in Diverse Careers beyond 12:00–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B. AHA Film Festival. Teaching in the Discipline (p. 107) The Gulabi Gang (p. 96) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session 244, 12:30–3:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 20: National sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. Collaboratively Teaching 9/11 Memorial Museum (p. 96) Research Methods in Asian Studies and History (p. 107)

1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse D. Annual Meeting of 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Session 245, sponsored affiliated society representatives by the AHA Teaching Division. Teaching with Primary Sources: What 1:00–5:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall II. Career Fair (p. 96) Students Wish Professors Knew (p. 107)

1:15–5:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 21: Big Onion: 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, New York Suite. AHA Council Historic Brooklyn Heights, with the Brooklyn Historical Society (p. 97) meeting (invitation only)

1:45–5:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 22: Big Onion: A 8:45 a.m.–12:15 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 24: Big Multi-Ethnic Eating Tour of the Lower East Side (p. 97) Onion: Greenwich Village (p. 113)

2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Presidential Session 214. 9:00–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse E. Media Training Reassessing the Influence of Classic Theory on Historical Practice: Freud (p. 97) Workshop for Historians (p. 114)

2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Session 215, sponsored 9:00–11:45 a.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 25: Lower East by the AHA Professional Division and the National Coalition of Side Tenement Museum (p. 114) Independent Scholars. From Surviving to Thriving: The Challenges and 10:45 a.m.–1:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 26: Tour of Rewards of Practicing History as an Independent Scholar (p. 97) the George Gustav Heye Center of the National Museum of the American 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 216, sponsored by the Indian (p. 114) AHA Professional Division. How Can I Be a Historian in this Job? (p. 97)

2014_Program_FM.indd 10 28/10/14 6:20 PM Affiliated Societies 11

11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Session 272, sponsored 6:30–8:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. General Business by the AHA Teaching Division. What’s the Problem? Turning Teaching Questions Meeting of the ACHA into Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Research (p. 114) Saturday, January 3 11:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 27: 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 7. Negotiating Green-Wood Cemetery Tour (p. 121) the Atlantic: Catholic Networks in the Early American Republic (p. 55)

11:15 a.m.–2:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 28: Big 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 8. The Onion: Historic Harlem (p. 121) Jesuit Libraries and Provenance Project (p. 56)

2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 29: Municipal 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 9. Archives (p. 121) Americanism Past and Present (p. 56)

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session Affiliated Societies 10. ACHA Presidental Roundtable (p. 64)

The following is an o verview of sessions and ev ents planned b y the 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session American Historical Association’s affiliated societies. essionsS identified 11. German Catholics and National Socialism before 1933 (p. 64) as joint with the AHA were accepted by the AHA Program Committee. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 12. The Alcohol and Drugs History Society New Sommervogel Project: Jesuit Studies Bibliographical Database (p. 64) 12:00–2:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite. Presidential Saturday, January 3 Luncheon (p. 68) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2. Session 1. 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 13. Explaining Perspectives on Tobacco in the Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century the Pope Francis Effect (and Everything Else about Catholicism in 30 United States (p. 55) Seconds): A Media Primer of Church Historians and Reporters (p. 74) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2. Session 2. 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 14. American and Dutch Discourse on the Production, Distribution, and Resistance and Polemics out of Port-Royal: The Jansenist Responses to Consumption of Licit and Illicit Drugs, 1890–1940 (p. 74) Persecution in Seventeenth-Century France (p. 74) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 4. Session 3. How the Elephant 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 15. Got Stuck in the Room: New Histories of the Long War on Drugs (p. 74) Can It Be History Already? Research into Recent Events in American Catholicism (p. 75) American Academy of Research Historians of Medieval Sunday, January 4 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 16. Sunday, January 4 Caribbean Catholicism: A Transatlantic Odyssey, 1955–75 (p. 85)

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom. Session 1, 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 17. joint with the AHA. In Honor of Teofilo .F Ruiz: Spectacle in Medieval Archives, Libraries, and Community Collaboration (p. 85) Iberia and Beyond (p. 91) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom. Session 2, joint 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 18. The with the AHA. In Honor of Teofilo .F Ruiz: Spectacle in Early Modern Seventeenth Century in , Italy, and Hispanic America (p. 85) Iberia and Beyond (p. 101) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session American Catholic Historical Association 19. An Aggiornamento of Twentieth-Century Italian American Catholic History (p. 93)

Friday, January 2 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 1. Franciscans 20. The Challenge of the Margins: American Women Religious on the on the Periphery: Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Chesapeake (p. 37) Frontier in the United States and Canada (p. 93)

1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 2. 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 21. Varieties of American Catholic Masculinity, 1870–1970 (p. 37) The Church in Revolutionary Times (p. 93)

1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 3. 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 22. The Catholic Ecclesiology after World War I: Centralization or Incipient Refugee in Transnational Catholic Social Thought in the Twentieth Globalization? (p. 38) Century (p. 102)

3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 4. The 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 23. Lives of American Catholic Women, 1850–1920 (p. 47) Medieval Sacramental Life and Thought (p. 103)

3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 5. The 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 24. Southern Part of the Hemisphere (p. 47) Christians, Getting Along or Not (p. 103)

3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 6. New York City’s Other Diocese: Social and Institutional Developments in the Diocese of Brooklyn (p. 47)

2014_Program_FM.indd 11 28/10/14 6:20 PM 12 Joint and Sponsored SessionsAffiliated / Session Societies Icons

Monday, January 5 Saturday, January 3 8:30–10:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 25. 7:00–8:30 a.m. New York Hilton, East Suite. Women in Theology and Catholics and 1970s America (p. 111) Church History Breakfast

8:30–10:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 26. Papal 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 7. Evange’lico, Policy from Peter to Francis (p. 112) Injiliyya, Evangelical: World Christianity and Histories of Evangelicalism (p. 56) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4. Session 27. Twentieth-Century Religious Adaptation and Transformation: A 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 8. Religious Multidisciplinary Examination of Catholicism in the Global Context (p. 119) Cultures and Agriculture: Farming, Faith, and American Identity (p. 56)

11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5. Session 28. 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 9. Emotions American Catholic Social Action from the Progressive Era to the New and Passions in Early Christianity (p. 56) Deal (p. 119) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 10. 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6. Session 29. Revelation, Retrospection, and Representation: The Challenge of The Irish in Diaspora: Rebuilding Families, Faith, and Identity (p. 119) Christian Science History (p. 64)

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, East Suite. Session 11. Futures of American Society for Eighteenth-Century the American Religious Past: A Conversation about Mark Noll’s America’s Studies God and John Lardas Modern’s Secularism in Antebellum America (p. 64) Sunday, January 4 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 12. Far from Heaven: Perspectives on Hell through the Ages (p. 65) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session, joint with the American Society of Church History and the Central European 12:15–1:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Lunch Celebrating the History Society. Evangelicalism and Economy: Interdisciplinary Investigations Career of Grant Wacker (p. 68) of Anglo-American and Central European Theology, Economic Theory, and Social Activism from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century (p. 94) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 13. Ecumenism in the Global South: Three Case Studies from India, Africa, and (p. 75)

American Society for Legal History 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 14. Medieval History and Liturgy: Problems and Methods (p. 75) Friday, January 2 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room K. History and 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, East Suite. Session 15. Believing the Law: Creating, Acquiring, and Preserving Legal Knowledge (p. 47) History: In Celebration of Grant Wacker’s Contributions to American Religious History (p. 75)

American Society of Church History 6:30–7:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Graduate Student Reception Friday, January 2 Sunday, January 4 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 1. Border 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 16. Medieval Crossings: World Christianities and the West from the Mid-Twentieth Exemplarity and Its Afterlife (p. 85) Century to the Present (p. 38) 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 17. American 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 2. Raising a Religion Online: How Digital Projects Can Change How We Teach, Righteous Generation: Educating Christians in the Transatlantic World (p. 38) Research, and Interpret Religious History (p. 85)

1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 3. 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 18. Reinterpreting the American Religious Narrative through the Lens of the Contemporary Orthodox Christianity and Human Rights (p. 85) Primitive and the Pragmatic (p. 38) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 19, joint 2:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Americas Hall I. Tour 11: American with the AHA. On the Discourses of Secularism and Pluralism (p. 90) Society of Church History Tour of Harlem Religious Sites (p. 41) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Conrad Hilton Suite. Executive 20, joint with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and Committee Meeting the Central European History Society. Evangelicalism and Economy: Interdisciplinary Investigations of Anglo-American and Central European 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 4. Spiritual Theology, Economic Theory, and Social Activism from the Eighteenth to Midwifery: The Role of Religion in Midwifery Training and Practices in the Twentieth Century (p. 94) the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (p. 47) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 5. Doing 21. Catholicism, Knowledge, and Authority in Nineteenth-Century History (p. 47) (p. 93) 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 6. Counsellor, Critic, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 22. Religion Comforter, Colleague: Preaching at Court in Early Modern Europe (p. 48) in Public Schools: Church History, Law, Education, and Ethics (p. 93) 7:30–10:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Council Meeting

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11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Green Room. Session 23. Psalms Association for Spanish and Portuguese Across the Empire: The Reform and Revival of Psalmody in the British Imperial Age (p. 93) Historical Studies

2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 24, joint Friday, January 2 with the AHA. American Evangelicals Looking Abroad (p. 98) 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Session 1. Facing Francoist Traumas: Negotiating a New Spain (p. 38) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 25. Studying American Religion, Politics, and Foreign Policy All at the Same Time: 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Session 2. Where Do We Go from Here? (p. 103) Inquisition: A Legal and Intellectual Network that Defined eligiousR Practice (p. 48) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 26. The Digital Humanities and the Study of Christianity in Late Antiquity: Reflections Saturday, January 3 on a Disciplinary Intersection (p. 103) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Session 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 27. 3. Circulation of People and Ideas in the Iberian Atlantic in the Age of Confessional Boundaries in the Reformation Era (p. 103) Independence, Part 1: Key Historical Agents Operating in the Iberian Atlantic in the Age of Independence (p. 65) 5:00–6:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Business Meeting 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Session 4. 6:00–7:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. President’s Address Circulation of People and Ideas in the Iberian Atlantic in the Age of 7:00–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Morgan Suite. Presidential Reception Independence, Part 2: The Making and Unmaking of Gran Colombia (p. 75) Monday, January 5 6:00–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Session 5. Circulation of People and Ideas in the Iberian Atlantic in the Age of 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 28. Francis of Independence, Part 3: Cultural Transfers across Time and the Iberian Assisi: (A)historical Legacies (p. 112) Atlantic (p. 78) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 29. Journeying Sunday, January 4 into Evangelicalism: Twenty-Five Years of Traveling with Randall Balmer’s Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory (p. 112) 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom. Session 6, joint with the AHA. In Honor of Teofilo .F Ruiz: Authority in Medieval and 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 30. Protestants Early Modern Iberia (p. 84) and Catholics in Colonial New England (p. 112)

11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Holland Suite. Session 31. Sixty Association of Ancient Historians Years of Religious Decline? An Interdisciplinary Conversation (p. 119) Saturday, January 3 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 32. 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room F. Session 1. Mapping Religious Space: Four American Cities from the Colonial Era to Inside the Minds of Ancient Writers: Investigating Polybius, Livy, Tacitus, the Twentieth Century (p. 119) and Procopius in the Historical Period from the Second Century BCE to the Seventh Century CE (p. 56) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 33. Silences in Protestant Autobiography: Exploring Sickness, Sexuality, and 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room F. Session 2. Race in American Religion (p. 120) Childhood and Education in the Ancient World (p. 65)

2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room F. Session 3. Association for Computers and Social Values of Color: Making and Meaning of Color through Time and the Humanities Space (p. 75) Saturday, January 3 Business History Conference 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Blogging and the Future of Scholarship (p. 60) Friday, January 2 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 1, joint with 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B. Session 2, the AHA and the Labor and Working Class History Association. Tipping joint with the AHA. Digital Histories of Slavery (p. 61) in American History (p. 46) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor. Session 3, joint Sunday, January 4 with the AHA. Visualization and Digital History: Techniques and Demonstrations (p. 73) 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session 2. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire: A Century of Protest Art (p. 86) Sunday, January 4 12:15–1:45 p.m. Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite. Luncheon: Capitalism, 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor. Session 4, joint Global Business, and Inequality: A Roundtable Discussion (p. 96) with the AHA. Authoring Digital Scholarship for History: Challenges and Opportunities (p. 80)

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Monday, January 5 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 12, joint with the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Session 3, joint the American Society of Church History. Evangelicalism and Economy: with the AHA and the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Interdisciplinary Investigations of Anglo-American and Central European Progressive Era. Immigrant Women at the Edge of the Nineteenth- Theology, Economic Theory, and Social Activism from the Eighteenth to Century Marketplace (p. 108) the Twentieth Century (p. 94) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom. Session 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East. Session 13, 4, joint with the AHA. Exceptional Failures? Interdisciplinary Economic joint with the AHA. Beyond the Musical Sonderweg: Bourgeois Habitus, Analysis of U.S. Banking Failures in the Twentieth Century (p. 115) Art Music, and German National Identity Revisited (p. 98)

Central European History Society 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room B. Session 14, joint with the AHA and the North American Conference on British Friday, January 2 Studies. Humanitarianism, International Relief, and the Problem of 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom. Session 1, joint Humanity in the Wake of the Great War (p. 99) with the AHA. Where Is Central European History? Looking In and Monday, January 5 Looking Out (p. 46) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session Saturday, January 3 15, joint with the AHA. Making Space: Regional Knowledge on East- 7:00–9:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room G. CEHS Board Central Europe beyond the History of Area Studies, 1900–50 (p. 116) Meeting 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Session 16, joint 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session 2. with the AHA. The Transnational Politics of Journalism in Early Postwar New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Part 1: Cities and Germany (p. 117) States: Central European Urban Experiences in Regional and National Contexts (p. 57) Charles Homer Haskins Society

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 3, Friday, January 2 joint with the AHA. Image and Identity in the German Reformation (p. 62) 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. How and Why Men 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West. Appropriate Depictions of Violent Women (p. 48) Session 4, joint with the AHA. Music in Motion: Changing Performance Venues and New Disciplinary Approaches (p. 62) Chinese Historians in the United States

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Friday, January 2 Session 5. New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Part 2: 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room C. Session 1. Surviving and Adapting: Reconstructing Central European Urban Life Preserving China’s Human Resources: War, Everyday Resistance, and after War (p. 65) National Survival, 1937–45 (p. 38)

2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 6, joint with the 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room C. Session 2. AHA. Burning the Reichstag: A Dialogue between History and Law (p. 71) Agency, Activism, and the Making of a New Nation: Christian Women in 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room E. Session 7, Republican China (p. 48) joint with the AHA. Muslim Destinies in Interwar Europe: Laying the Saturday, January 3 Foundations for European Islam (p. 72) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room C. Session 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A. Session 8, joint 3. Transmigration and Transformation: Demographic and Cultural with the AHA. New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Changes and Exchanges (p. 65) Part 3: Urban Culture(s): Manufacturing and Manifesting Central European Urban Identities (p. 73) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room C. Session 4. Frontier Impressions, Overseas Journeys, and the Making of Identities in 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 9. Modern China (p. 76) Douglas H. Shantz’s Introduction to German Pietism: Protestant Renewal at the Dawn of Modern Europe (p. 75) 7:00–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room C. Annual Membership Meeting 6:30–8:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room K. Business Meeting and Reception Sunday, January 4 Sunday, January 4 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Session 5. From Threat to Opportunity: U.S. Perception of China, 1950s–70s (p. 86) 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. Session 10, joint with the AHA. New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Part 4: College Board Minorities and Migrants: Studies in Central European Urban Dynamics (p. 84) Friday, January 2 1:00–3:00 p.m. Session, sponsored by 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session New York Hilton, Sutton Center. 11. Reevaluating 1914: The Experience of World War I and Its Legacy for the AHA Teaching Division. Teaching Students Chronology: Strategies to Weimar Germany’s Unaffiliated Left (p. 94) Help Students Develop a Chronological Framework (p. 33)

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Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Monday, January 5 Transgender History 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 14, joint with the AHA, the Conference on Latin American History, and the Society Friday, January 2 for Advancing the History of South Asia. Sexual Science as a Global Formation: The Multi-directionality of Intellectual Exchange (p. 111) 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B. Session 1, joint with the AHA. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 1: Queer Intimacies 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 15. and the Remaking of Late Twentieth-Century American Politics (p. 37) Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 12: Pragmatism and Audacity: 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 2. Disrupting the Boundaries of Queer Identities, Cultures, and Politics Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 2: Beyond the Binary: Early America through Oral Histories (p. 112) and the Writing of Trans* History (p. 39) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 16, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room E. Session 3, joint joint with the AHA, the Conference on Latin American History, and the with the AHA. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 3: Queer Movements: Society for Advancing the History of South Asia. Local Sexologies in a Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Social Movement Era (p. 46) Global Context (p. 119) Saturday, January 3 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 17. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 13: Archives of Intimacy: Queer 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Session 4, joint with the Affects and Cultural Imaginaries, 1970s–80s (p. 120) Goldberg Center for Excellence in Teaching. Teaching Queer History (p. 58) 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 5. Community College Humanities Association Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 4: Historicizing the Image: The Queer Art of Photography (p. 57) Saturday, January 3 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse E. American Identity and 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room B. Community: Emerson, Thoreau, and Fuller (p. 77) Session 6, joint with the AHA. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 5: Criminalization and Queer History (p. 64) Conference of Historical Journals 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 7. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 6: Queering the Media: LGBTQ Sunday, January 4 History, Television, and the Cyberqueer Archive (p. 65) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room I. Open Access: 12:30–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Membership Meeting U.S. Journals, U.K. Authors, and Beyond? (p. 104) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 8, joint Conference on Asian History with the AHA. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 7: Science and Sexuality: Mental Health and Homosexuality in Post-1973 America (p. 74) Saturday, January 3 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 9. 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse E. The Religious Society Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 8: Making an Exhibition of of Friends in U.S.-Japan Relations, 1880s–1950s: International Marriage, Ourselves: Desiring Bodies, Practices, and Histories (p. 76) Humanitarian Aid, Families (p. 57) 6:00–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Reception 12:15–2:00 p.m. Benares, 240 W 56th St, New York, NY 10019. Luncheon (p. 68) Sunday, January 4 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session Conference on Faith and History 10. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 9: Queer Tourism and Gentrification: eritage,H Neoliberalism, and African American Urbanity Sunday, January 4 (p. 86) 8:00–9:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2. Breakfast Reception 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 11. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 10: Racialized Queer Pasts in 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Blessed: A History Literature and Letters (p. 94) of the American Prosperity Gospel—Roundtable with Kate Bowler (p. 86) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 12, joint with the AHA, the Conference on Latin American History, and Conference on Latin American History the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia. Global Transfers of Friday, January 2 Sexual Knowledge: Dubbing, Appropriations, and Translations (p. 102) 12:30–6:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Lobby Level. Information Table 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Session 13. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 11: Narratives of Knowing: Telling 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 1, joint Queer Lives (p. 103) with the AHA. Before Neoliberalism: ’s Corporations Enter the Global Stage, 1970–93 (p. 33)

1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Racial Paradise: Written and Visual Narratives of Slavery in (p. 37)

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1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 3. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session Biographies of Ambition in the Sixteenth-Century Caribbean (p. 39) 20. Soccer and Society in South America (p. 66)

1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session 4. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Regional Cinemas and Transnational Audiences: New Film Histories in Session 21. Nineteenth-Century Colonizations: Business, State Latin America, 1910–50 (p. 39) Formation, and Planned Migrations in Latin America, 1810s–70s (p. 66)

1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 5. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Abroad: Rethinking Empire and Expatriation in Latin America Session 22. Agrarian Science, Modernization, Social Engineering, and (p. 39) the Idea of Latin America: Transnational Perspectives from Brazil, Colombia, and the Caribbean (p. 66) 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room D. Session 6, joint with the AHA. Resource Conflicts and Popular Imaginaries in Twentieth- 12:15–1:45 p.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park West. Luncheon (p. 68) Century Latin America (p. 45) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Bryant Suite. Session 23, joint with 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 7. Law the AHA. An Atlantic Triangle: New England–Holland–Rio de la Plata and Violence in Nineteenth-Century Latin America (p. 48) Commercial Networks (p. 70)

3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session 8. 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Session 24, joint with “A Fragile Harmony”: Economic Tensions, Social Frictions, and Political the AHA. Child of the Nation: The Politics of Childhood during the Instability in Venezuela during the Age of Revolutions, 1780–1810 (p. 48) Cuban Revolution (p. 71)

3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 9. Home Is 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom. Session 25, joint Where the “Aurika” Is: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on American, Soviet, with the AHA. Silence in the Archives: Transdisciplinary Approaches to and Corporate Modernity in Homes Overseas (p. 49) Reading Absence in the Latin American Past (p. 72)

6:30–8:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. General Committee 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session Meeting 26. Cultures of Transnationalism: Social Networks, Solidarities, and Collectives in Latin America (p. 76) Saturday, January 3 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 27. 8:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Lobby Level. Information Table New Perspectives on the Spanish Atlantic: The Slave Trade to Spanish 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West. America, Part 3 (p. 76) Session 10, joint with the AHA and the Society for Historians of the 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 28. Gilded Age and Progressive Era. Imperial New York City: The Scientific Mapuche Soundscapes: Music, Ethnicity, and National Belonging in Survey of Puerto Rico (p. 52) Chile and (p. 76) 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda. Session 11, 6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room A. Hispa nic joint with the AHA. The Mental Stakes of Nation: Toward Psychiatric American Historical Review Editorial Board Meeting Discipline(s) in Latin America (p. 54) 6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session 12, 29. Borderlands and Frontiers Studies Committee: State, Bordered joint with the AHA. The Politics of Reproduction in the Americas: Communities, and the North-South Dynamic Revisited: Recent Twentieth-Century Bolivia, , and Cuba (p. 54) Scholarship on the Borderlands of Guatemala and Mexico (p. 78) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West. Session 6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite. Session 30. 13, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on the Spanish Atlantic: The Brazilian Studies Committee: Writing New Histories of Gender and Slave Trade to Spanish America, Part 1 (p. 55) Sexuality in Brazil (p. 79) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 14. 6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session Receptions to the Napoleonic Code and the Cadiz Constitution in the 31. Chile-Río de la Plata Studies Committee: Atlantic-Pacific Worlds: Making of the New American Citizenship (p. 57) Rethinking Transnational Paradigms in the Southern Cone (p. 79) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 15. 6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 32. Purifying the Body Politics: Exile and Execution in Nineteenth- and Colonial Studies Committee: Queering the Religious History of the Twentieth-Century Latin America (p. 57) Early Modern Hispanic World (p. 79) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session 16. 6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. Session 33. Gran New Transnational Histories of the Right in the Americas (p. 57) Colombia Studies Committee: Toward a History of Paramilitarism in 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 17, Colombia (p. 97) joint with the AHA. Ruptures and Continuities in Space and Time: Historical Studies of Science in Latin America (p. 63) Sunday, January 4 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Lobby Level. Information Table 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Regent Parlor. Session 18, joint with the AHA. Sporting Bodies and Bodies Politic: Gender and 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 34, joint Soccer in Latin America (p. 63) with the AHA. Mexico in the Global 1960s (p. 82)

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor. Session 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 35, joint with 19, joint with the AHA. New Perspectives on the Spanish Atlantic: The the AHA. Rethinking Territoriality: Indigenous Power in North and South Slave Trade to Spanish America, Part 2 (p. 64) American Borderlands, 1700–1900 (p. 83)

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9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 36. 5:30–7:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 54. Caribbean Education in the Nineteenth-Century Americas (p. 86) Studies Committee: Gender and the Caribbean Archive (p. 106)

9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session 5:30–7:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 55. Central 37. Local Struggles, Translational Alliances: Labor Movements and American Studies Committee: New Directions: Transnational and International Alliances in Latin America (p. 86) Interdisciplinary Histories of Central America (p. 106)

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 38, joint 5:30–7:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite. Session 56. Mexican with the AHA. Memory Studies and the Historian: Cases from Chile Studies Committee: New Directions in Mexican History (p. 106) under Augusto Pinochet to the Present (p. 90) 7:00–9:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park West. Cocktail Reception 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Session 39, joint with the AHA. Mexican Artists at the Disciplinary Crossroads (p. 90) Monday, January 5 8:30–10:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 57. 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 40, joint Solidarity and Revolution: Transnational Perspectives on Latin American with the AHA and the Labor and Working Class History Association. and Caribbean Radical History (p. 112) The Ground Below and Above: New Directions in the Study of Mining in the Colonial Americas (p. 91) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. Session 58, joint with the AHA. “Asia” in Latin America: Migration, Diaspora, and Identity in 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session Brazil and Cuba (p. 107) 41. Connections and Disconnections between the Americas in the Long Nineteenth Century (p. 94) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Bryant Suite. Session 59, joint with the AHA. “The New Conquest History”: New Approaches to the Spanish 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 42. Conquest of Mexico (p. 111) Indigenous Citizens before the Indigenous Movements in Latin America (p. 94) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 60, joint with 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session the AHA. Circumventing Abolition: Slave Traders’ Strategies of Survival 43. When the Guns Stop Roaring: Remembering Conflict in Latin and Success (p. 111) America (p. 95) 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 61, joint with the 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room F. Session 44, AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History, joint with the AHA. Latino Radicalisms, 1930s–70s (p. 99) and the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia. Sexual Science as a 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session 45, joint Global Formation: The Multi-directionality of Intellectual Exchange (p. 111) with the AHA. Whispers in the Archive: Rumor and Gossip as Primary 8:30–10:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. Session 62. Sources (p. 101) Insurgent Ethnographers: Studying Race and Culture from the Outside 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 46, joint with In (Brazil, the Caribbean, and the United States, 1890s–1960s) (p. 113) the AHA. Whither Ethnohistory? Writing Indigenous History across 8:30–10:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 63. Disciplinary and Other Boundaries (p. 101) Transnational Transcripts in South America’s Cold War of the 1960s (p. 113) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A. Session 47, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Bryant Suite. Session 64, joint joint with the AHA. Abolition in Practice: The Implementation of the with the AHA. At the Hour of Our Death: Reinterpreting Illness in Abolition Treaties in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic (p. 101) Iberian Empires (p. 114) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 48, joint 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room B. Session with the AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender 65, joint with the AHA. Methods of Modernity from the Margins: History, and the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia. Toward New Theories of Africa and/in the Americas (p. 116) Global Transfers of Sexual Knowledge: Dubbing, Appropriations, and Translations (p. 101) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B. Session 66, joint with the AHA. Kidnapping and Illegal Enslavement in the 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session 49. Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World (p. 118) Revisiting Development in Twentieth-Century Peru (p. 104) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 67, 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 50. joint with the AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Frontiers of Blackness in Argentina, Colombia, and the Circum- Transgender History, and the Society for Advancing the History of South Caribbean, 1810–1930 (p. 104) Asia. Local Sexologies in a Global Context (p. 119) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 51. 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. Session 68. Public Health Concerns in the Aftermath of Disaster: Perspectives from Historical Pasts and Futures in Colonial Mexico (p. 120) Colonial and Modern Latin America (p. 104) 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 69. 5:30–7:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room A. The Americas Sport, Race, and Gender in Latin America (p. 120) Editorial Board Meeting 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4. Session 5:30–7:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East. Session 52. 70. The “República de Indios” and the Formation of a Legal Culture in Andean Studies Committee (p. 105) Spanish America (p. 120) 5:30–7:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West. Session 53. Teaching and Teaching Materials Committee: Teaching Latin America in the “Global Sixties” (p. 106)

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Coordinating Council for Women in History Goldberg Center for Excellence in Teaching Friday, January 2 Saturday, January 3 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 1. The Adjunct 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Session, joint with the Problem: Collaborating for a Solution (p. 39) Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History. Teaching Queer History (p. 58) 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Annual Business meeting Saturday, January 3 H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom. Session 2, Saturday, January 3 sponsored by the AHA Professional Division and the AHA Graduate and 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Session 1. H-Net Early Career Committee. Interviewing in the Job Market in the Twenty- Commons: Multidisciplinary Networks of Scholars and Educators from First Century (p. 51) All over the World (p. 77) 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. Session 3. Conflict at Home: Refugees, Workers, and Reproduction in Wartime Europe, Sunday, January 4 1929–45 (p. 58) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse G. Session 2. H-Net Commons: A General Overview and Call for New Participants (p. 104) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse E. Session 4. The Living Dead, Microscopic Fibers, Invisible Cloaks, and Radical Cartoons: History of Science Society Methods of Textile Studies for Historians (p. 66)

6:00–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Reception Saturday, January 3 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. Making History Sunday, January 4 Together: Networks of Collaboration and the History of History (p. 66) 12:00–1:45 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse G. Annual Awards Luncheon (p. 96) Immigration and Ethnic History Society 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom. Session 5, joint Friday, January 2 with the AHA. The Traffic inWomen: Early Twentieth-Century Debates 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 1, joint with in France, Argentina, and Vietnam (p. 100) the AHA. Migration History: A Dialogue among the Disciplines (p. 45) Monday, January 5 Saturday, January 3 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton North. Session 6, sponsored 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse A. Session, joint with the AHA. by the AHA Professional Division. Roundtable: Exploring Alternative The Atlantic, Pacific, and n-Between:I Bringing Transnational History to the Academic Careers: How Your History Ph.D. Can Serve You in Diverse United States Survey Course through the Study of Immigration (p. 73) Careers beyond Teaching in the Discipline (p. 107)

8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Session 7. Scholarly Sunday, January 4 Communication: The Online Open Access Publishing Option (p. 113) 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room B. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Negotiating Immigration Reform in an Age of Economic History Association Restriction (p. 82) Sunday, January 4 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West. Session Labor and Working Class History 1, joint with the AHA. Perspectives on Gavin Wright’s Sharing the Prize: Association The Economics of the Civil Rights Revolution in the American South: A Roundtable (p. 82) Friday, January 2 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 1, joint with Monday, January 5 the AHA and the Business History Conference. Tipping in American 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Morgan Suite. Session 2, joint with History (p. 46) the AHA. Rethinking Global History: The Great Divergence and the Military Revolution (p. 109) 4:00–7:00 p.m. Murphy Institute, City University of New York. Reception. The Labor and Working-Class History Association and the German Historical Institute Murphy Center at CUNY will host a reception and lecture. Please consult the LAWCHA website for details: http://lawcha.org/wordpress. Friday, January 2 Saturday, January 3 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room K. Session 1. The Changing World of Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Three Centuries of 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. Session 2, joint with the German American Experience (p. 39) AHA and the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. Soldiers and Workers: Military Labor in the Age of Empire (p. 53)

Sunday, January 4 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session 3, joint with 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse D. Session 2. Little Diplomats: the AHA. Nature, Culture, and Work: Consumption and Politics in Organizing Youth and Foreign Relations in the Twentieth Century (p. 86) Outdoor Labor and Leisure (p. 72)

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Sunday, January 4 National Coalition of Independent Scholars 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East. Session 4, joint with the AHA. New Directions in Unfree American Sunday, January 4 Indian Labor Histories (p. 90) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Session, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. From Surviving to Thriving: The Challenges 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Session 5, joint and Rewards of Practicing History as an Independent Scholar (p. 97) with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American History. The Ground Below and Above: New Directions in the Study of Mining in the Colonial Americas (p. 91) National Council on Public History

2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 6, joint with the Saturday, January 3 AHA. War Work: Race, Gender, Empire, and Labor in World War I (p. 100) 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A. Session, joint with the AHA. The Many Pasts of Public History (p. 54) Monday, January 5 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session 7, joint National Endowment for the Humanities with the AHA. American Labor’s Global Ambassadors (p. 114) Saturday, January 3 Medieval Academy of America 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. NEH Special Initiatives, Programs, and Grant Opportunities for Historians (p. 66) Friday, January 2 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 1, joint National History Center of the American with the AHA. Exile and Expulsion in Medieval Europe (p. 34) Historical Association Monday, January 5 Friday, January 2 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Salutem et Signum: Early Medieval Women’s Participation 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. Session 1. Labor and the in Documentary Culture (p. 110) Workplace in New York City Past and Present (p. 40)

11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park East. Session 3, 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. Session 2. New joint with the AHA. Richard Hoffmann and An Environmental History of Directions in Asian American Immigration (p. 49) Medieval Europe (p. 117) Saturday, January 3 Modern Greek Studies Association 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Negotiating the “Helping Hand”: Local Decolonizations and Friday, January 2 American Aid in the Early Cold War (p. 53) 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session 1. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 4, and the First World War: Consequences in Local and Global joint with the AHA. International Organizations and the End of Empire Perspective (p. 49) in Twentieth-Century Africa (p. 62)

Saturday, January 3 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. Session 5. Oral 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session History in Times of Crisis (p. 77) 2. Continental, Imperial, and Cultural Crossroads: Approaches to 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. Session 6. Serving up Southeastern Europe’s Borderlands (p. 77) Food History and Mastering the Art of Public Engagement (p. 77) Sunday, January 4 Sunday, January 4 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room B. Session 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 7. 3. Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Study of Rural Greece (p. 95) Regions and Geographies of Decolonization (p. 87)

Monday, January 5 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. Session 8. Passing 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room G. Session the Voting Rights Act, 1965 (p. 95) 4. Greek Archaeologies and Foreign Histories of Modern Greek Statehood 6:30–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. Reception from the Nineteenth Century to the Twentieth Century (p. 120) National Coalition for History Monday, January 5 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse H. Session 9. Internationalism Saturday, January 3 and Empire: New Histories of International Society (p. 113) 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. NCH Board Meeting 2:00–4:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Hilton Board Room. Board of Trustees Meeting

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North American Conference on Renaissance Society of America British Studies Saturday, January 3 Saturday, January 3 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom. Session, 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A. Session 1, joint joint with the AHA. Medici Reborn: Modernizing the Renaissance with the AHA. Early Modern European Firms and the Challenge of Archive in a Digital Age (p. 62) Global Commerce (p. 71) Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B. Session 2, joint with the AHA. Ghosts, Grief, and Gas Masks: Subjectivity and New Media Materiality in Britain’s Total Wars, c. 1914–45 (p. 71) Monday, January 5 Sunday, January 4 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Regent Parlor. Session, joint with 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room B. Session the AHA. Learning in Networks of Knowledge (LINK): Toward a New 3, joint with the AHA and the Central European History Society. Digital Tool for Cultivating Historical Thinking (p. 109) Humanitarianism, International Relief, and the Problem of Humanity in the Wake of the Great War (p. 99) Society for Advancing the History of 5:30–7:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Bryant Suite. Reception South Asia North American Society for Oceanic History Friday, January 2 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3. Session 1, joint Friday, January 2 with the AHA. Connected and Comparative History: South Asia in New American, Asian, and Borderlands Histories (p. 34) 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2. Technological Answers to Maritime Problems: Ship Design and Construction in the 1:00–3:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Sutton South. Session 2, joint with the Early Modern Western World—Recent Archival and Archaeological AHA. The Cultures of Distance in Islamic History (p. 36) Discoveries (p. 40) 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 3, joint Oral History Association with the AHA. Alternative Temporal and Geographical Trajectories for the Cold War (p. 43)

Saturday, January 3 6:30–7:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room A. Business Meeting 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room K. Oral Historians and Journalists: Rights, Rules, and Responsibilities (p. 67) Saturday, January 3 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. Session 4, joint with Polish American Historical Association the AHA. Emotional Styles: Seemly and Unseemly Passions in Indian Courtly Settings, 1550–1750 (p. 52) Friday, January 2 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 5. 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Hilton Board Room. Annual Board South Asians in the Americas and New Public Spheres: Oral History, Meeting Archives, and Public Humanities (p. 58)

Saturday, January 3 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East. 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Lincoln Suite. Session 1. Polish Session 6, joint with the AHA. Political Power and Popular Mobilization American Literature (p. 58) on the Radio: India, British East Africa, and France (p. 63)

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Lincoln Suite. Session 2. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 7. Solidarity: At Home and Abroad (p. 67) The Millennial Sovereign: Sacred Kingship and Sainthood in Islam by A. Azfar Moin: Discussion of the 2013 John F. Richards Prize Winning Book (p. 67) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 3. The Long Nineteenth Century: Themes in History (p. 67) 12:15–2:00 p.m. Benares, 240 W 56th St, New York, NY 10019. Luncheon (p. 68) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Lincoln Suite. Session 4. World War II: Literature, Memoir, and ’s Humanitarianism (p. 77) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Clinton Suite. Session 8, joint with the AHA. Atypical Archives: Rendering the Past, Commemoration, and 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 5. Figures in History in South and Central Asia (p. 70) Polish and Polish American History (p. 77) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Morgan Suite. Session 9, joint with the Sunday, January 4 AHA. Biomedicine, Body Parts, and Aging in Africa, India, and the United 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse E. Session 6. Themes States (p. 71) in the History of Polish Music (p. 95) 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 3. Session 10, joint with the 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Session 7. Polish World History Association. Racial Roles in the Victorian Empire (p. 78) American History from the Seventeenth Century through the Mid- Twentieth Century (p. 95)

2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse F. Session 8. The Aftermath of World War II (p. 104)

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Sunday, January 4 Saturday, January 3 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom. Session 11, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West. Session joint with the AHA. Of Borderlands and Frontiers: Crosscurrents and 2, joint with the AHA and the Conference on Latin American History. Divergences within Borderlands History and Settler Colonial Studies (p. 82) Imperial New York City: The Scientific urveyS of Puerto Rico (p. 52)

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park West. Session 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Concourse C. Session 3, joint with the 12, joint with the AHA. Islam in Modern South Asia, South Asian Islam AHA and the Labor and Working Class History Association. Soldiers and in the Modern World: Trends and Transitions (p. 90) Workers: Military Labor in the Age of Empire (p. 53)

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room D. Session 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Gibson Suite. Session 4, joint with 13, joint with the AHA. The Authority of Science at the Edges of Empire the AHA. Constructing Belonging, Making Place: Indigenous Peoples, (p. 91) Memory, and Migration in the Great Lakes Borderlands (p. 71)

2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 14, joint 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 5. New with the AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Approaches to Racial Violence in North America (p. 77) History, and the Conference on Latin American History. Global Transfers of Sexual Knowledge: Dubbing, Appropriations, and Translations (p. 101) Monday, January 5 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Session 6, joint with 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 15. Investigating the AHA and the Business History Conference. Immigrant Women at the the Cold War in South Asia: Diplomacy and Security after Empire (p. 104) Edge of the Nineteenth-Century Marketplace (p. 108)

Monday, January 5 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 7, joint 8:30–10:30 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room H. Session 16, with the AHA. Scholarship, Activism, and Expertise: The Social Sciences joint with the AHA. Cartographies of Caste: Mapping Subordination in in the United States in the Twentieth Century (p. 110) India, 1700–2000 (p. 108) Society for History Education 8:30–10:30 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session 17, joint with the AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History, Saturday, January 3 and the Conference on Latin American History. Sexual Science as a Global 7:30–9:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room A. National Formation: The Multi-directionality of Intellectual Exchange (p. 111) Advisory Board Meeting 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Concourse B. Session 18, joint Sunday, January 4 with the AHA. Islam and the European Empires (p. 115) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. Session, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session 19, sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division. How Teaching Became a joint with the AHA, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Mission of the American Historical Association from the 1960s (p. 98) Transgender History, and the Conference on Latin American History. Local Sexologies in a Global Context (p. 119) Society for History in the Federal Society for Historians of American Government Foreign Relations Sunday, January 4 Saturday, January 3 9:00–11:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Sutton Center. Session, sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. History in the Federal Government: 8:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Hilton Board Room. Council meeting Careers Serving Policy Makers and the Public (p. 80) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A. Session, joint with the AHA. History, Economics, and the Wide-Ranging Impacts of Society for Italian Historical Studies the 1973 Oil Shock on U.S. Foreign Relations (p. 61) Friday, January 2 6:30–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda. Reception 3:30–5:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Green Room. Session 1. Italy at the Sunday, January 4 Start of the First World War (p. 49) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. The Manhattan Club at Rosie O’Grady’s, 201 Saturday, January 3 West 52nd Street. Luncheon (p. 96) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Hudson Suite. Session 2. Intellectual Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Ex-elites and the Struggle for Belonging in Post-World War II Europe (p. 67) Progressive Era Sunday, January 4 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Green Room. Session 3. Multi/ Friday, January 2 Interdisciplinary Investigations into Italy and World War I (p. 105) 1:00–3:00 p.m. Session 1. Rethinking Gender New York Hilton, Concourse F. 5:30–6:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Harlem Suite. Business Meeting and Power: How Elite Women in Turn-of-the-Century New York Leveraged Wealth to Build Domestic, Philanthropic, and Political Capital (p. 40) 6:00–7:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Midtown Suite. Social Hour

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Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Society of Civil War Historians Friday, January 2 Friday, January 2 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 3. Session 1. Gender 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 1. Failure to and Crime in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Part 1 (p. 40) Thrive: Gender, Disability, and Failed Expectations in the Civil War Era (p. 40)

6:30–8:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 1. Session 2. Gender and 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J. Session 2. Crime in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Part 2 (p. 50) Contested Loyalty: Debates over Patriotism in the Civil War North (p. 49) Saturday, January 3 Saturday, January 3 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5. Session 3, joint 8:30–10:00 a.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Women and Conversion in Medieval Iberia (p. 55) with the AHA. James McPherson’s Battle Cry after a Quarter Century (p. 53)

8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 3. Session 4. Gender and Crime in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Part 3 (p. 58) The George C. Marshall Foundation Sunday, January 4 Society for Military History 5:30–7:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. Session, joint Sunday, January 4 with the Society for Military History. George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History (p. 106) 5:30–7:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon. Session, joint with The George C. Marshall Foundation. George C. Marshall Lecture in 7:00–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. Joint with the Society for Military History (p. 106) Military History. George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History Reception

7:00–8:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Petit Trianon. George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History Reception Toynbee Prize Foundation Saturday, January 3 Society for the History of Authorship, 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Central Park East. The Toynbee Reading, and Publishing Prize Lecture (p. 78) Saturday, January 3 Urban History Association 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Green Room. The Practice of Book History: Between and beyond Disciplines (p. 77) Saturday, January 3 9:00–11:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Executive Boardroom. Board Meeting Society for the History of Children and Youth 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B. Session, joint with the Saturday, January 3 AHA. Urban History, Urban Planning, Architectural History, and Civic Engagement: Interdisciplinary Encounters between the Past and Present (p. 73) 8:30–10:00 a.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 2. Session 1. Children at the Periphery: Cross-Cultural Encounters in Child Rescue (p. 58) World History Association 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 2. Session 2. Our Future, Delinquents, and Gifts from God: Challenges and Revelations in New Saturday, January 3 Histories of Childhood and Youth (p. 78) 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2. Session 1. Multi-religious Societies in World History (p. 67) Society for the Study of Early Modern Women 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Park Suite 3. Session 2, joint with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia. Racial Roles in the Sunday, January 4 Victorian Empire (p. 78) 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Madison Suite. Session, joint Sunday, January 4 with the AHA. Dissenting Daughters: Early Modern Women’s Political and Civic Engagement (p. 89) 2:30–4:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Regent Parlor. Session 3, joint with the AHA. Teaching World History across Time, Space, and Place (p. 100)

2014_Program_FM.indd 22 28/10/14 6:20 PM 2014_Program_FM.indd 23 Hotel FloorPlans:New York Hilton

CONCOURSE A

CONCOURSE CONCOURSE CONCOURSE CONCOURSE E D C B

ELEVATOR New York Hilton, Concourse Level

PREFUNCTION AREA STAIRCASE FROM LOBBY

CONCOURSE CONCOURSE G CONCOURSE F H OFFICE SPACE 28/10/14 6:20PM 23 2014_Program_FM.indd 24 24 New York Hilton, Second Floor

ELECTRICIAN ESCALATORS ESCALATORS ESCALATORS TO AMERICAS DN DN UP UP 3RD 3RD LOBBY LOBBY HALL UP UP DN DN FLOOR FLOOR PROMENADE BEEKMAN LOADING DOCK RHINELANDER GALLERY EAST SERVICE ELEVATOR NORTH CORRIDOR

JAPAN COAT BANQUET TRAVEL CHECK STORAGE BUREAU ROOM SERVICE

ELEVATORS SUTTON 3,000-LB. CAPACITY NORTH RHINELANDER GALLERY CENTER GUEST CORRIDOR

MAIL FREIGH ROOM Hotel FloorPlans:New York Hilt TELEVATOR BUSINESS BRYANT CENTER MADISON CLINTON GIBSON MORGAN PACKAGE CENTER SUTTON CENTER

SERVICE CORRIDOR

ELEC. CLOSET SUTTON ELEC. LOSET RHINELANDER SOUTH GRAMERCY MURRAY HILL NASSAU GALLERY SOUTH WEST EAST WEST EAST WEST EAST A/V OPERATIONS

REGENT

SOUTH CORRIDOR on 28/10/14 6:20PM 2014_Program_FM.indd 25 Hotel FloorPlans:New York Hilton Hotel FloorPlans:MarriottWardman Park

TO ESCALATOR TO RINELANDER ESCALATOR PROMENADE ESCALATOR AMERICAS UP DN 2ND 2ND UP HALL I & II DN UP FLOOR OPEN OPEN FLOOR DN TO CHANDELIER TO RENDEZVOUS BELOW BELOW TRIANON AMERICAS HALL FOYER WEST PROMENADE EAST PROMENADE SERVICE ELEVATORS RVICE SE ELEVATORS PETIT ROTUNDA TRIANON

SERVICE FREIGHT BANQUET & BANQUET ELEVATORS AREA EXHIBIT HALL, GRAND BALLROOM SERVICE BAR

PANTRY New York Hilton, Third Floor

MERCURY TRIANON BALLROOM BALLROOM WEST EAST BALCONY BALCONY

HYDRAULIC STAGE LIFT

STAGE DRESSING DRESSING ROOM ROOM STAGE 28/10/14 6:20PM 25 25 2014_Program_FM.indd 26 New York Hilton, Americas Hall II New York Hilton, AmericasHallI 26

54TH STREET 54TH STREET PROMENADE TO THIRD

CAREER FAIR FLOOR (Sun., Jan. 4, 1-5 p.m.) INFO DESK, AHA HEADQUARTERS OFFICE ENTRANCE

UP DN ATRIUM OPEN ATRIUM OPEN TO LOBBY TO LOBBY

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FREIGH TELEVATOR FREIGHT ELEVATOR ENTRANCE Hotel FloorPlans:New York Hilt AHA REGISTRATION

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ELEVATOR AMERICAS HALL II ELEVATOR FREIGHT FREIGHT TOUR MEETINGAREA ATRIUM OPEN ATRIUM OPEN TO LOBBY TO LOBBY

JOB CENTER

53RD STREET 53RD STREET on 28/10/14 6:20PM 2014_Program_FM.indd 27 Hotel FloorPlans:New York Hilton

NEW YORK HUDSON MIDTOWN HARLEM HOLLAND LINCOLN EAST

PREFUNCTION AREA

CONRAD HILTON SUITE HILTON R BOARDROOM GREEN New York Hilton, Fourth Floor S ERVICE ELEVATO

FOYER 28/10/14 6:20PM 27

Hotel Floor Plans Hilton 2014_Program_FM.indd 28 28 Sheraton New York, Lower Level

Fifty-Second Street

ENTRANCE

CONF. ROOM CONF. ROOM KL Hotel FloorPlans:Sherat Seventh Avenue CENTER BUSINESS

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CONF. ROOM EXECUTIVE A BOARDROOM CONF. ROOM CONF. ROOM I CONF. ROOM CONF. ROOM F FOYER CONF. ROOM D E B CONF. ROOM CONF. ROOM CONF. ROOM H C

G on New York

Fifty-Third Street 28/10/14 6:20PM 2014_Program_FM.indd 29 Hotel FloorPlans:Sheraton New York

Fifty-Second Street

EMPIRE BALLROOM

EAST WEST

LENOX BALLROOM Seventh Avenue

METROPOLITAN FOYER Sheraton New York, Second Floor

CENTRAL METROPOLITAN BALLROOM PARK WEST Stage

EAST WEST CENTRAL PARK EAST

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Fifty-Second Street

NEW YORK BALLROOM RIVERSIDE BALLROOM EAST WEST

RIVERSIDE SUITE Seventh Avenue

NEW YORK/CARNEGIE FOYER Hotel FloorPlans:Sherat

RIVERSIDE/LIBERTY FOYER CARNEGIE CARNEGIE EAST WEST

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Fifty-Third Street 28/10/14 6:20PM 2014_Program_FM.indd 31 Hotel FloorPlans:Sheraton New York

Madison Madison Madison Madison Madison Madison Suite Suite Suite Suite Suite Suite 6 5 4 3 2 1 Sheraton New York, FifthFloor

Elevators

Park Park Park Park Park

Suite Suite Suite Suite Suite 5 4 3 2 1 28/10/14 6:21PM 31 32 Friday, January 2, Tours, Workshops

Program for the 2015 Annual Meeting Theme: “History and the Other Disciplines”

Local Arrangements Local Arrangements Committee Tour Committee Tours

Friday, January 2, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. Friday, January 2, 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Tour 1: Bus Tour of Harlem, the Bronx, and Arthur Avenue Tour 2: Big Onion: The Upper West Side New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Tour leader: Kenneth T. Jackson, Columbia University Tour leader: A graduate student, historian, guide from Big Onion Walking Tours Professor Jackson is the editor of The Encyclopedia of N ew York and a preeminent authority on N ew York City histor y. He will lead the gr oup on If the street plan south of 14th Street has you confused and looking for order a bus and of H arlem and the S outh Bronx. Sites will include amidst chaos, spend some time in the logical grid pattern of the U pper West central Harlem, the Morris-Jumel Mansion, the Hamilton Grange, the Grand Side. Unlike the haphazard, spontaneous construction of streets in Greenwich Concourse in the B ronx, the P oe Cottage, and Charlotte S treet. The tour Village or the Lo wer East S ide, Upper West Side planners and lando wners will feature a lunch stop at Arthur Avenue, also known as Belmont (“the real imagined an orderly neighborhood of estates and mansions that would be Little Italy”). connected to the city while r etaining elements of a r emote country paradise. Please note: This bus tour includes some walking. See how far the results strayed from the original plan as we visit Lincoln Center, the Dakota, Dante Square, and sites associated with Florence Mills, Mae West, Limit 50 people. $25 members, $30 nonmembers Leonard Bernstein, and the home of the Charleston. Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately 1.5 orkshops W miles, at a moderate pace, during the two-hour tour. Limit 25 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers, $15 students Friday, January 2, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Getting Started in Digital History Workshop Friday, January 2, 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Conference Room E Tour 3: Twentieth-Century Queens Our Getting Started in Digital History workshop last year brought historians New York Hilton, Americas Hall I with an interest in using digital tools and r esources together with exper ts in Tour leader: Katie Uva, City University of New York, Graduate Center a range of digital-histor y methodologies. This year, we’re providing another round of introductory overview sessions, but we’re also expanding the workshop Join us as w e explore Manhattan’s sprawling, dynamic neighbor to the East! to include intermediate hands-on workshops. For all of our attendees, we have Queens is the physically largest, second most populous, and most diverse an overview of digital history as a whole and the state of digital history funding, borough in New York City. On this walking and bus tour w e will learn a bit and a brief look at the impor tance of collaboration and pr oject management about what drove Queens’ enormous growth in the twentieth century, and we in digital history. Jennifer Serventi of the NEH’s Office of Digital Humanities will learn about how this beneficiary of so much modern urban infrastr ucture will talk about the wor k that the ODH does to suppor t digital scholarship. has maintained its identity as a collection of neighborhoods. Why was living in There will also be intr oductory sessions on preparing research data for digital Corona the fulfillment of Louis Armstrong’s American dream? What promise history projects, making use of various digital tools and methodologies to ask does the borough continue to hold for the 2.3 million people, about half of new research questions, building and managing the collaborativ e aspects of whom are immigrants, who make their home her e? And why was Q ueens, digital history, and using digital tools in the classr oom and in public-histor y in 1939 and again in 1964, the center of international conv ersations about endeavors. If you have a little experience but need some hands-on help to get humanity and its futur e at the two N ew York World’s Fairs? This tour takes your digital history project kickstarted, we have several sessions that focus participants on a guided visit to the Louis Armstr ong House Museum, a on a single methodology and tool set. If you’re interested in big data applied portion of the World’s Fair site at Flushing Meadow Park, and on a guided to primary sources, we have workshops on text mining, networ k theory and tour of World’s Fair memorabilia at the Queens Museum. visualization, and historical GIS and spatial history. For historians focused on Please note: This bus tour includes some walking. The historic Louis collaborative efforts, we also have hands-on sessions for pr oject sustainability Armstrong house is not wheelchair accessible. and management, and teaching with digital tools. Limit: 25 people. $25 members, $30 nonmembers The workshop is free, but space is limited , so please sign up when y ou register for the annual meeting. We look forward to seeing you there. Friday, January 2, 9:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Workshop on Undergraduate Teaching New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 32 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 33 Friday, writing assignments. The audiencewillreceive copies ofallthree lessons. the audience willengageinselectedactivitiesfrom three lessons withargumentative argumentative writing atthe5th,8thand11thgradelevels. During the workshop, toteachstudents w willdemonstrateho presenters kshop/practicum, thiswor In Chair: Chair: Chair: Papers: Panel: Panel: 4. 3. 2. 1. Friday, January2,1:00–3:00p.m.

Sponsored by theAHA Teaching Division Sheraton New York, Central Park West Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division andtheCollege Board New York Hilton, Sutton Center Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Sponsored by theAHAResearch Division New York Hilton, ClintonSuite Arguments Teaching theCommonCore:Writing Framework to HelpStudentsDevelopaChronological Teaching StudentsChronology:Strategies Digital Age Teaching andLearningtheGreatWarin a NewEraofResearch Are WeLosingHistory?CapturingArchivalRecordsfor

A History SurveyHistory African American Leaders’ Goals, Strategies, andSuccesses Samantha Shir Jamie Lathan,North Car AcademyKatie Gulledge, (N Cary Lynn Rainville,Sweet B Paul Wester Derek R.Peterson, U Robert E.Lee,East V Matthew Connelly, LondonSchoolofE Megan Phillips, National Ar Erik Vincent, H Periodizing the“LongNineteenth Centur Geri Hastings, Catonsville High School(B Teaching ContinuityandChangeover Patricia McGloine, P Some Simple Strategies onH Allison Thurber, CollegeBoard fternoon

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Sessions

Sponsored by theAHALocalArrangementsCommittee New York Hilton, ConcourseC Joint sessionwiththeConference onLatinAmericanHistory Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 this InterdisciplinaryMoment A RadicalPromise?BuildingInstitutionalContextsin Global Stage,1970–93 Before Neoliberalism:Mexico’sCorporationsEnterthe

on the Vietnam War Middle SchoolwithaLessonontheBostonMassacre Company That Became aGlobal Power House Century Chelsea Schields,CityUniversity ofNe Micki Kaufman,City University ofN David P. Jaffee, B Joshua Bro Neil CityUniv Agarwal, Chase Robinson, CityUniversity ofN Beth Slutsky, CaliforniaH Argumentative W Shennan Hutton, CaliforniaHistor Argumentative W Nancy J.McTygue, CaliforniaH and Their Mexican Partners, 1974–93 1960–90 Noel Maurer Andrew Paxman, Centr Helping Mexico Smoke: B Gustavo Del Angel,Centr Early Inter Rossana Fuentes-Berain, I Cementing Mexico’ Susan M.Gauss, Univ How Corona B Noel Maurer University ofCalifornia,Davis University ofCalifornia,Davis Center andGoucher College Center University ofCalifornia,Davis Económicas New York) Económicas, Región Centro de

México nationalization oftheMexican Financial System, wn, CityUniversity ofNew York, Graduate Center , Harvard University ecame King:Mexican Beer intheLate Twentieth riting: An Eleventh-Grade Lesson U.S.History riting: Bridging theGap from Elementaryto ard Graduate Center s Globalization: Cemex, aRegional Cement ersity atAlbany(State University of o deInvestigación yDocencia ersity ofNew York, Graduate Center ritish American Tobacco, Phillip Morris, nstituto Tecnológico Autónomo o deInvestigación yDocencia istory-Social ScienceProject,istory-Social istory-Social ScienceProject,istory-Social y-Social ScienceProject, ew ew York, Graduate Center ew ew York, Graduate w York, Graduate 28/10/14 6:26PM 33

January 2, 2015 34 Friday, January 2, 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sessions

7. Connected and Comparative History: South Asia in New Papers: Addressing New York City’s Postwar Heroin Boom American, Asian, and Borderlands Histories Christopher Hayes, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 Old Allies, New Problems: Civil Rights Activists and New York’s Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Drug War Marsha E. Barrett, Mississippi State University Chair: Neilesh Bose, St. John’s University Condemning Crack, Condemning Crime, Condemning Ourselves: Topics: Race, Repression, and Indian Anti-colonialism across the American Crack Era Reform from the Grassroots to Washington and British Empires Michael Jordan Durfee, Buffalo State College (State University of Seema Sohi, University of Colorado Boulder New York) Before and beyond 1965: South Asian American History as ­ Comment: Vesla Weaver, Yale University Cross-Racial and Working Class Vivek Bald, Massachusetts Institute of Technology From Calcutta to the Caribbean: Indian Women and the Journey of 11. Exile and Expulsion in Medieval Europe Indenture New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Gaiutra Bahadur, independent scholar Joint session with the Medieval Academy of America Comment: Moon-Ho Jung, University of Washington Seattle Chair: William Chester Jordan, Princeton University Papers: Justifying Just Deserts: Carolingian Exile as Imperfect Imperial Ideal 8. Crises of the 1970s Steven A. Stofferahn, Indiana State University Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom Exile in the Eye of the Beholder: Jews, Christians, and the Embrace Chair: Kim Phillips-Fein, New York University of Exile in Medieval Europe Deeana C. Klepper, Boston University Panel: Beverly F. Gage, Yale University Donna Murch, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Moneylending Maggots: Foreign Usurers and the Rhetoric of Kim Phillips-Fein Expulsion in the Late Middle Ages Robert O. Self, Brown University Rowan Dorin, Harvard University Heather Ann Thompson, Temple University

12. History and Historians in the Ukraine Crisis 9. Disasters Fast and Slow: Crafting a Multidisciplinary New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Research Agenda for Risk Reduction Chair: Jeffrey Mankoff, Center for Strategic and International Studies New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Panel: Tarik C. Amar, Columbia University Chair: Gabrielle Hecht, University of Michigan Omer Bartov, Brown University Topics: Disasters Fast and Slow: The View from Environmental Studies Kate Brown, University of Maryland Baltimore County Scott Frickel, Washington State University Pullman Faith C. Hillis, University of Chicago Disasters Fast and Slow: The View from Disaster Anthropology Alison Kenner, Drexel University 13. History of the Human Sciences Disasters Fast and Slow: The View from the History of Technology New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B and Science Chair: Camille Robcis, Cornell University Scott Knowles, Drexel University Topics: Widening the Turn to Practice Disasters Fast and Slow: The View from Sociology Charles Camic, Northwestern University Lori Peek, Colorado State University–Fort Collins Putting the “Human” Back into the Human Sciences: Reflections on Disasters Fast and Slow: The View from Policy History the History of Anthropology in the West Patrick Roberts, Virginia Tech Alice L. Conklin, Ohio State University “Once Was Blind but Now Can See”: Modernity and the Human 10. Drug Policy and the Battle for Order in Post-Civil Sciences Sanjay Seth, Goldsmiths, University of London Rights New York New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A The Historical Sociology of Sociology as Disciplinary Reflexivity George Steinmetz, University of Michigan—Ann Arbor Chair: Eric C. Schneider, University of Pennsylvania

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 34 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 35 Friday, Comment: Chair: Papers: Chair: Topics: Chair: Papers: Comment: 16. 15. 14.

New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East Indigenous Revolutions,1700–1850 Links, BroadeningtheConversation Human Rights,ForcedMigrations,Genocides:Making 1400–1800 History, OtherDisciplines,andGlobalEncounters,

White Eyes North America Nations R Minority Protection v Tara Zahra, Univ Ethnic Cleansingin1930sEurope The First Final Solution:Humanitarianism, E Alon Confino,U Memory inIsrael after1948 Empathy andthe Telling ofH Eric D. Weitz, CityCollegeofN Republican Turkey Genocide: Property andCitizenshipRightsinSouthwest Africaand The ColorLine and the National Line intheAfter A. Dirk Moses, E Michael Wintr Questions of Tr Claudia Swan, Northw The Politics ofGlobal T Matthew Restall, P Ethnohistory andEncounter FullerMary Extreme Explor Felipe Fernández-Armesto, U History’ Surekha Davies, The Audience Seth Archer, U Virgin Soil,Hawaiian Cultur Daniel A. Papsdorf Uncommon Means toaCommonEnd: Natale Zappia, Whittier College Revolutions intheGr Elizabeth Fenn, Univ A. Dirk Moses Sarah Shields, Univ University, Israel

January s Interdisciplinarity edefines Rights , Massachusetts Institute of Technology ust inPre-modern Global Encounters ation—Interdisciplinarity atMIT niversity of California,Riverside oub, University ofCalifornia,Berkeley Western ConnecticutState University niversity of V ersity ofChicago uropean University Institute ennsylvania State University , Duke University ersity ofNorth Carolina atChapelHill ass: Politics andFood Systems inContinental ersus Population Exchange: The Leagueof ersity ofColoradoBoulder ransfer estern University

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ew ew York 1:00–3:00 The Life ofGeorge Morgan migration, and math of

p.m. Papers: Chair: Comment: Topics: Chair: Panel: Chair: 18. 17. 19.

Sessions

Sheraton New York, Conference Room B New York Hilton, ConcourseD Sheraton New York, Conference Room F Atlantic New HistoriesofCapitalisminandbeyondthe of MoroccoasaGlobalHistory Internationalizing theMaghrib:The(De)Colonization Intersection ofHistoryandMathematics “Of Numbers’Use,theEndlessMight”:Researchat

Interwar Morocco, 1925–39 Independence inPost-World War IIFrance under theFrench Protectorate Nationalist Movement, andal-Umma Newspaper Intellectual History? Guillaume Wadia, H Municipal Order andI James Roslington, Univ Final Years ofMoroccan Independence, 1894–1912 The Morocco Question R Rocio Velasco deCastr Franco’ David Stenner, U In theShadow oftheE Jessica Marglin, Univ Between Refor Joshua S.Schreier, Jessica Marie Otis Christopher Phillips, New Math in/as History Stephanie Dick, Har Programming P Mordechai Levy-Eichel, Why Is of M theHistory Jessica Marie Otis, CarnegieM Prasannan Parthasarathi, BostonCollege Pedro A.Machado, I Walter Johnson, Har Gillian U Hart, Jeffrey Sklansky s “Liberal” Colonialism: Fascist Spain, theMoroccan m andR roof niversity ofCalifornia,Berkeley , University ofIllinois atChicago niversity ofCalifornia,Davis Vassar College vard University ndiana University Bloomington vard University arvard University ersity ofSouthern California iffel Tower: Advocating forMoroccan eification: mperial Disorder: Policing Tangier in o, Universidad deExtremadura athematics Not aCentral Strand of ersity ofCambridge econsidered: Culture andCrisis inthe Yale University York University ellon University The Moroccan LegalSystem 28/10/14 6:26PM 35

January 2, 2015 36 Friday, January 2, 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sessions

20. Race, Sex, and the Law in Louisiana’s Long Jean M. Hébrard, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Nineteenth Century Martha S. Jones, University of Michigan Sheraton New York, Conference Room D Rebecca J. Scott, University of Michigan Chair: Emily Clark, Tulane University Papers: Impossible Promises: Ephemeral Objects in New Orleans’ 24. The Cultures of Distance in Islamic History Antebellum Sex Trade New York Hilton, Sutton South Emily Owens, Harvard University Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia “Clothed with All the Formalities Required by Law”: Federal Authority and Formalism in a Postemancipation Marriage Case Chair: Ismail Alatas, University of Michigan Diana I. Williams, University of Southern California Papers: Indian Pilgrims and the Hajj “Bazaar” Economy of the West “With Her Consent”: The Conundrum of “Carnal Knowledge” in Indian Ocean, 1707–1810 Turn-of-the-Century New Orleans Rishad Choudhury, Cornell University Emily Landau, University of Maryland at College Park Corresponding Sanctity: Extending Presence and Negotiating From Plaçage to Sugar Babies: Contracts for Intimate Attachment Distance in a Nineteenth-Century Saintly Epistle from the Nineteenth Century to Today Ismail Alatas Adrienne Davis, Washington University Law School Geographies of Conquest: A Maghrebi Chart of the Western Comment: Emily Clark Mediterranean, c. 1350 Jeremy Ledger, University of Michigan Comment: The Audience 21. Scholarship beyond Text Sheraton New York, Conference Room E Chair: Steven Lubar, Brown University 25. The History of Emotions and the Other Disciplines New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Papers: Mapping a Slave Revolt: Digital Tools and the Historian’s Craft Vincent Brown, Harvard University Chair: Susan J. Matt, Weber State University When Virginia Was the Wild West Topics: Reflections on istoryH of Science, and History of Emotions Cary Carson, Colonial Williamsburg Otniel E. Dror, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Haiti’s History Embedded in Amber: Historians and Artists Shame on History: Reviving an Interdisciplinary Approach to a Key Laurent M. Dubois, Duke University Emotion Peter N. Stearns, George Mason University Curating History’s Silences Richard Rabinowitz, American History Workshop (Moral) Philosophy and Its Use of Emotions: From Smith to Nussbaum Ute Frevert, Center for the History of Emotions, Max Planck Institute for Human Development 22. Society and the State in Mao-Era Shanghai New York Hilton, Madison Suite Approaches to Emotion: Experimentation in Neuroscience and Historical Interpretation Chair: Paul Mariani, Santa Clara University William M. Reddy, Duke University Papers: Coping with Socialism: The Shanghai Way under Mao The Myth of the Rational Actor: Emotions, Economics, and History Hanchao Lu, Georgia Institute of Technology Susan J. Matt The Cultural Revolution and Catholic Shanghai Paul Mariani Contradictions within Mass Society: Civil Conflict in hanghai,S 26. The Resurgence of Science in Historical Method 1956–58 Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Jake Werner, University of Chicago Chair: Samuel Moyn, Harvard University The Incremental Takeover of Shanghai’s Civil Society Papers: On the Use and Abuse of Neuroscience for History Steven Pieragastini, Brandeis University Stefanos N. Geroulanos, New York University Comment: The Audience Just the Facts: The Fantasy of a Historical Science Ethan Kleinberg, Wesleyan University Scientific rchivesA and the Science of the Archive 23. The Allure of the Judicial Archives: Writing the History Joanna Radin, Yale University of Slavery through Case Files, Dockets, and Silences New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Comment: Carolyn J. Dean, Yale University Chair: Hendrik Hartog, Princeton University Panel: Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto Ada Ferrer, New York University Ariela J. Gross, University of Southern California

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 36 28/10/14 6:26 PM Friday, January 2, 1:00–3:00 p.m. Sessions 37

27. Undergraduate Experience and Current 30. Slavery as History, Slavery as Fiction, Part 1: Racial Scholarly Trajectory: A Panel Honoring Paradise: Written and Visual Narratives of Slavery in Brazil Mary Beth Norton New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda New York Hilton, Regent Parlor Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Max Edelson, University of Virginia (Cornell University ‘92) Chair: Mariana L. Dantas, Ohio University Papers: What Did Early American Religious Liberty Mean for American Papers: U.S. Representations of Brazilian Slavery Women? Luciana da Cruz Brito, Universidade de São Paulo Chris Beneke, Bentley University (Cornell University ’94) The Body of Black Women in Brazil in the Context of Racial From Witches to Whales; or, The Prescient Professor and the Representation Unlikely Undergraduate Maria Helena Pereira Toledo Machado, University of São Paulo Lisa A. Norling, University of Minnesota Twin Cities (Cornell University ’85) Narratives of the “Good Master” and the Origins of Black Communities in Brazil, 1870–1920 Making Sense of the Passions: A Tribute to Mary Beth Norton Oscar de la Torre, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Jason Opal, McGill University (Cornell University ’98) Escava Então Ela é Escrava? Projections of Brazilian History and She Said the Hard Part Is Asking the Right Questions: Fiction in the Soap Opera Escava Isaura, 1976 Understanding Near Kin Marriage in Late Medieval England Paula Halperin, Purchase College (State University of New York) Marylynn Salmon, Smith College (Cornell University ’74) Comment: Yuko Miki, Fordham University From Salem to Sri Lanka: Learning to Follow a Lead Molly A. Warsh, University of Pittsburgh (Cornell University ‘99) This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 60 and 152. Comment: The Audience Afternoon Sessions of the AHA ffiliated ocieties 28. What Should History Teachers Learn at A S Historic Sites? A Research Agenda Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom Friday, January 2, 1:00–3:00 p.m. Chair: Christine Baron, Teachers College, Columbia University Panel: Linda A. Sargent Wood, Northern Arizona University American Catholic Historical Association Session 1 Kelly Schrum, George Mason University Franciscans on the Periphery: Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Brenda Trofanenko, Acadia University the Chesapeake Christine Woyshner, Temple University Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 Denice Blair, Michigan State University Chair: Jeffrey Burns, Academy of American Franciscan History Christine Baron Papers: Outlaw Franciscans on the Chesapeake Jack Clark Robinson, Academy of American Franciscan History 29. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 1: Queer Franciscans in Puerto Rico Intimacies and the Remaking of Late Twentieth- Alfonso Guzman Alfaro, OFM, OFM, Centro de Estudios de Century American Politics los Dominicos del Caribe New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B Reporting the End of an Era: The Spanish-Cuban-American War Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and from the Perspective of a Franciscan Archbishop Transgender History Arelis Rivero-Cabrera, University of California, Davis Chair: Vicki Eaklor, Alfred University Comment: Dominic Monti, Holy Name Province and Saint Bonaventure University Topics: Rethinking Lesbian Separatism as a Vibrant Political Theory and Feminist Practice Julie Enszer, University of Maryland at College Park American Catholic Historical Association Session 2 The Female World of Love and New Possibilities: Same-Sex Varieties of American Catholic Masculinity, 1870–1970 Intimacies and the Reimagination of 1970s American Public Life Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 David Palmer, New York University Chair: Anthony Smith, University of Dayton “No One Needs to Know You’re Listening”: Bridging Suburb and Papers: Cause Celebre and “Sexual Deviant”: Pere Hyacinte Loyson, a City with Gay Radio in 1970s Detroit Married Priest Tim Retzloff, Michigan State University James McCartin, Fordham University Sex, Lies, and Indigeneity: Queering Colonialism on Lesbian Land Boy-ology and Boxing: Catholicism and the “Boy Crisis,” 1910–50 Katherine Schweighofer, Indiana University Bloomington Amy Lynn Koehlinger, Oregon State University Comment: Marcia M. Gallo, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Defining atholicC Manhood at Boston College, 1940–70 James M. O’Toole, Boston College

Comment: The Audience 2015 2, January

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American Catholic Historical Association Session 3 Papers: Pragmatism and Primitivism in the Early American Republic Catholic Ecclesiology after World War I: Amanda Porterfield, loridaF State University Centralization or Incipient Globalization? Azuza’s “Poor, Rough Indian from Central Mexico”: Missing Data Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 and Theoretical Lacunae in Pentecostal Historiography Chair: Patrick Hayes, Redemptorist Archives of the Baltimore Province, Daniel Ramirez, University of Michigan Brooklyn, New York Pentecostal Missions and the Global Expansion of Spirit-Filled Papers: Action Française Catholicism and Opposition to Vatican II’s Christianity Dignitatis Humanae Heather Curtis, Tufts University Peter Bernardi, Loyola University Chicago The Paradoxes of Twenty-First Century Pentecostal Primitivism and Missionary Activities and American Nationalism Pragmatism Vefie oels,P Tilburg School of Theology Candy Gunther Brown, Indiana University Bloomington Competing Claims of Authority? The Rise and Fall of Catherine de Comment: Grant Wacker, Duke Divinity School Hueck’s Friendship House in the Archdiocese of Toronto Nicholas Rademacher, Cabrini College Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Comment: Joseph Komonchak, Catholic University of America Session 1 Facing Francoist Traumas: Negotiating a New Spain Sheraton New York, Conference Room I American Society of Church History Session 1 Border Crossings: World Christianities and the West Chair: Andrew H. Lee, New York University from the Mid-Twentieth Century to the Present Papers: Reframing “Disenchantment”: Regulating Citizen Participation New York Hilton, Holland Suite and Constructing Sites of Memory during Spain’s Transition to Chair: David King, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Democracy Andrea Davis, University of California, San Diego Papers: The Emergence of the “Younger Church” after the Korean War: American Missionaries, Korean Ministers, and the Uneasy Transnationalizing the Transition: How the International Women’s Beginnings of the Reverse Mission to the West, 1950–65 Movement Shaped Spanish Democracy, 1974–95 William Yoo, Columbia Theological Seminary Kathryn L. Mahaney, City University of New York, Graduate Center Seek Justice: Sex Trafficking and issionaryM Humanitarianism Kimberly Pendleton, George Washington University Fear and Orphanages in Spanish Film: A Gendered Memory of the Franco Regime Comment: David King Jessica Davidson, James Madison University Comment: Aurora G. Morcillo, Florida International University American Society of Church History Session 2 Raising a Righteous Generation: Educating Christians Chinese Historians in the United States Session 1 in the Transatlantic World Preserving China’s Human Resources: War, Everyday New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Resistance, and National Survival, 1937–45 Chair: Adrian Chastain Weimer, Providence College Sheraton New York, Conference Room C Papers: “[F]ull of Profound Learning and Sublime Devotion”: The Role of Chair: Sophia Lee, California State University, East Bay Patristic Sources in the Training of New England’s Puritan Clergy Ann-Stephane Schaefer, University of Applied Sciences, Mainz Papers: War, Everyday Life, and Resistance in Wartime Chongqing, 1937–45 Foxe’s Children: Rereading the “Book of Martyrs” in Nineteenth- Danke Li, Fairfield nivU ersity Century American Children’s Literature Heike Jablonski, University of Heidelberg My Way of Resistance: Middle-Class Women under Japanese Occupation in China’s War of Resistance against Japan, 1937–45 “Let Our Popular Schools Then be Christian”: Religion and Yihong Pan, Miami University of Ohio Transatlantic Educational Reform in the 1830s David Komline, University of Notre Dame Preserving Chinese Scholarly Personnel: John King Fairbank and the Rescue Mission of the Harvard-Yenching Institute in Wartime Comment: Adrian Chastain Weimer China Shuhua Fan, University of Scranton American Society of Church History Session 3 Comment: Sophia Lee Reinterpreting the American Religious Narrative through the Lens of the Primitive and the Pragmatic New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Chair: Angela Tarango, Trinity University

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Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Papers: The First Generation of North Americans Born in Mexico? History Session 2 American Schooling and the Postwar Formation of a Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 2: Beyond the Transnational Elite Taylor Jardno, Yale University Binary: Early America and the Writing of Trans* History New York Hilton, Midtown Suite “Introduction to Argentina”: Cultural Pan-Americanism and Argentine Tourism in the Early Twentieth Century Chair: Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria Mark Petersen, Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford Panel: Sharon Block, University of California, Irvine The GI Bill Abroad: A Postwar Experiment in International Relations Greta LaFleur, Yale University Lisa Pinley Covert, College of Charleston Scott Larson, George Washington University Elizabeth Reis, University of Oregon “Bound for an Island I Had Hardly Thought of a Few Weeks Before”: Sean Trainor, Pennsylvania State University The Formative Role of Radical Relationships in 1950s Puerto Rico Kathryn E. Wichelns, University of New Mexico Sandy Placido, Harvard University Comment: Penny M. Von Eschen Conference on Latin American History Session 3 Biographies of Ambition in the Sixteenth-Century Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 1 Caribbean Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 The Adjunct Problem: Collaborating for a Solution New York Hilton, Concourse B Chair: Sarah Cline, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Susan Wladaver-Morgan, co-president, Coordinating Council Papers: Vasco Porcallo de Figueroa: Ambition and Individualism in the for Women in History Early Spanish Caribbean Ida Altman, University of Florida Papers: Don’t Sit Back: Organizing for Change Kate Bullard, Adjunct Action Network/SEIU The Governor and the Bishop: Conquest and Compromise in the German Occupation of Sixteenth-Century Venezuela One Paycheck Away from Becoming Homeless: The Plight of the Spencer Tyce, Ohio State University Adjunct Jesse J. Esparza, Texas Southern University A Conquistador’s Resume: Pedro de Ursúa in New Granada and Panama The Life of a Freeway Flyer: Adjuncting in Southern California Robert L. Smale, University of Missouri–Columbia Amy Essington, California State University, Fullerton Comment: Andres Resendez, University of California, Davis Welcome to Feminized Labor: Precarity for All Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara Finding Allies and Building Alliances in Support of Adjunct Faculty Conference on Latin American History Session 4 Susan Wladaver-Morgan Regional Cinemas and Transnational Audiences: New Film Histories in Latin America, 1910–50 Comment: The Audience Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Chairs: Lena Suk, University of Louisiana at Lafayette German Historical Institute Session 1 Daniel Richter, University of Maryland at College Park The Changing World of Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Papers: Silent Film Culture in Yucatán: Entrepreneurship and Three Centuries of German American Experience Entertainment Sheraton New York, Conference Room K Laura Isabel Serna, University of Southern California Chair: Hartmut Berghoff, German Historical Institute, Washington, D.C. Picturing Regional Modernity in Brazil: Silent Cinema outside Rio Papers: German American Capital, Communication, and de Janeiro and São Paulo, 1923–30 Networks in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Rielle Navitski, University of Georgia Benjamin Schwantes, German Historical Institute, Celluloid Gauchos and Tangos: Buenos Aires as the Cultural Washington, D.C. Capital of South America in the 1930s and 1940s The Rise and Decline of Family Businesses: German American Daniel Richter Immigrant Entrepreneurship, 1850–1920s A Civilized Diversion in an Industrial City: Movie-Going and Uwe Spiekermann, German Historical Institute, International Prestige in São Paulo, Brazil, in the 1940s Washington, D.C. Lena Suk Brain Circulation? Émigré Networks, Knowledge Transfers, and Comment: Fernando Purcell, Pontificia nivU ersidad Católica de Chile Transatlantic Commercial Ties Jan Logemann, University of Göttingen Immigration and Entrepreneurship in the Postwar United States: Conference on Latin American History Session 5 Contextualizing the German Immigrant Entrepreneurship Biographies Americans Abroad: Rethinking Empire and Expatriation Dan Wadhwani, University of the Pacific in Latin America Comment: Susanna Fellman, University of Gothenburg Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Chair: Penny M. Von Eschen, University of Michigan January 2, 2015 2, January

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National History Center of the American Historical Papers: The Murder of William of Cantilupe, Marital Discord, and Association Session 1 Impotence on Trial in a Medieval English Court Labor and the Workplace in New York City Past and Frederik Pedersen, University of Aberdeen Present Crime in the City: The Gendered Geography of Bologna, 1600– New York Hilton, Concourse H 1900, Part 1 Sanne Muurling, Leiden University This panel is part of the National History Center’s Historians, Journalists, and the Challenges of Getting It Right program. Crime in the City: The Gendered Geography of Bologna, 1600– 1900, Part 2 Chair: Eric Arnesen, George Washington University Marion Pluskota, Leiden University Panel: David Huyssen, New York University Comment: Monica H. Green, Arizona State University Rachel L. Swarns, New York Times Daniel Walkowitz, New York University Society of Civil War Historians Session 1 North American Society for Oceanic History Failure to Thrive: Gender, Disability, and Failed Technological Answers to Maritime Problems: Ship Expectations in the Civil War Era Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Design and Construction in the Early Modern Western World—Recent Archival and Archaeological Discoveries Chair: Nancy Bercaw, Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2 Papers: “I Shall Try and Be a Man”: Institutionalized Union Veterans in Chair: Grant Walker, U.S. Naval Academy the Civil War North Sarah Handley-Cousins, University at Buffalo (State University Papers: The Twelve Apostles: Reconstruction, Outfitting, and istoryH of of New York) Late Sixteenth-Century Spanish Galleons José Casaban, Texas A&M University at College Station ”As Few Able Bodied Men as Possible Will be Allowed to Gather on the Place”: Emancipation, Disability, and Dependence in Union- Designing and Building the 1717 Princess Carolina, an American Occupied Louisiana Colonial Merchant Ship William Pritchard, University at Buffalo (State University of Warren Riess, University of Maine at Walpole New York) “The Americans Build Their Ships Much Faster Than We Do”: “How Long Will It Be before I Can Clasp My Wife and Little Ones Archaeological Comparison of United States and Royal Navy to My Breast!” The Civil War as a Crisis in Fatherhood Building on the Lakes, 1812–15 John Riley, Binghamton University (State University of New York) Kevin Crisman, Texas A&M University at College Station Comment: Brian Craig Miller, Emporia State University Comment: William J. McCarthy, University of North Carolina at Wilmington

Local Arrangements Committee Tours Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Session 1 Rethinking Gender and Power: How Elite Women in Friday, January 2, 1:15–3:30 p.m. Turn-of-the-Century New York Leveraged Wealth to Tour 4: FDR Four Freedoms Park Tour Build Domestic, Philanthropic, and Political Capital New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York Hilton, Concourse F Tour leaders: Staff of the FDR Four Freedoms Park Chair: Maureen Montgomery, University of Canterbury Opened in O ctober 2012, the F ranklin D. R oosevelt Four Freedoms Park Papers: Using Privilege to Transcend Tradition: An Analysis of Gender and is the only memorial dedicated to the former pr esident in his home state of Power in the Home New York. It is the last wor k of the late Louis I. Kahn, an iconic ar chitect of Yael Merkin, Harvard University the twentieth century. The park celebrates the Four Freedoms, as pronounced How the Socialites of Edith Wharton’s New York Took Woman’s in President Roosevelt’s famous January 6, 1941, State of the Union speech. Suffrage from Frumpy to Fashionable Learn about the histor y of the R oosevelt era and the F our Freedoms, Louis Johanna C. Neuman, American University Kahn’s design principles and philosophies, the story behind the building of the memorial, and the history of Roosevelt Island. Funding the Birth Control Movement: Margaret Sanger’s New York Network of Wealthy Feminists Please note: There is no indoor , so the walking tour is Joan Marie Johnson, Northeastern University completely outdoors. Limit: 20 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Session 1 Gender and Crime in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Part 1 Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 3 Chair: Jennifer C. Edwards, Manhattan College

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Friday, January 2, 1:30–4:30 p.m. early twentieth century. The dazzling works in the exhibition will illuminate an era when members of the ne w American aristocracy often display ed their Tour 5: Big Onion: Historic Lower Manhattan/Wall Street wealth in storied balls in Fifth Avenue mansions and hotels. It was a time when New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York became the nation’s corporate headquarters and a popular Ladies’ Tour leader: A graduate student, historian, guide from Big Onion Walking Mile of luxury retail establishments and cultural institutions helped launch the Tours city to global prominence. Explore the neighborhood wher e New York began! This tour will span 400 Limit: 20 people. $10 members, $15 nonmembers years of N ew York City histor y. From the original D utch settlement and trading outpost at Bo wling Green, to the peaceful takeo ver of the B ritish in 1664, to the world financial capital of today, this tour has it all. O ur walk Tour 8: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Activist weaves together the history of Lower Manhattan with the architecture, people New York and events that power Wall Street. We will visit many stops including Trinity New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Church, Federal Hall, the New-York Stock Exchange, and sites associated with Tour leaders: Museum of the City of New York staff eighteenth-century slave uprisings, Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, Victoria Woodhull, J.P. Morgan, and Abbie Hoffman. Explore the drama of social activism in New York City from the seventeenth century to the present. In a town renowned for its in-your-face persona, citizens Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately 1.5 of the city hav e banded together on issues as div erse as historic pr eservation, miles, at a moderate pace, during the two-hour tour. civil rights, wages, sexual orientation, and r eligious freedom. Using artifacts, Limit: 25 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers, $15 students photographs, audio and visual pr esentations, as well as interactive components that seek to tell the entire story of activism in the five boroughs, Activist New York presents the passions and conflicts that underlie the city’s history of agitation. Friday, January 2, 2:00–5:00 p.m. Limit: 30 people. $10 members, $15 nonmembers Tour 6: History on the Hoof in the Gentrifying City: Maverick Women of Greenwich Village Tour 9: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Mac Conner: New York Hilton, Americas Hall I A New York Life Tour leader: Kathleen Hulser, independent public historian New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Drawing on new commitments to public historical literacy, this expedition looks Tour leaders: Museum of the City of New York staff at characters in a setting known for its political and social activism for more than 100 years. This two-hour tour narrates a female story of breaking codes of McCauley (“Mac”) Conner (born 1913) grew up admiring Norman Rockwell public decorum in the iconic spaces of G reenwich Village. It models how the magazine covers in his father’s general store. He arrived in New York as a young walking tour can be used to modify attitudes toward quotidian environments, man to work on wartime Navy publications and stay ed on to make a car eer deepen engagement with the historical fabric of the city, and give a living edge to in the city ’s vibrant publishing industr y. The exhibition pr esents Conner’s historical materials that too often reach only readers of academic books. hand-painted illustrations for adv ertising campaigns and women’s magazines like Redbook and McCall’s, made during the y ears after World War II when The walking tour starts with Emma Goldman, explores political activism in Union commercial artists helped to redefine American style and culture. Square, probes the female side of pre-World War I bohemian culture in the West Village, and ends with references to Jane Jacobs’s legacy of brownstone neighborhood Limit: 30 people. $10 members, $15 nonmembers activism. Other significant characters include rystalC Eastman, Clara Lemlich, Dorothy Day, Henrietta Rodman, and Louise B ryant. The storyline emphasizes Tour 10: Museum of the City of New York Tour: The Theater women engaged in public life and public spaces, and the interpr etations stress how urban contexts fostered opportunity for maverick personalities and lifestyles. Collection New York Hilton, Americas Hall I The rapid transformation of neighborhoods in the grips of gentrification offers fascinating opportunities for the historian using outdoor expeditions to teach Tour leaders: Museum of the City of New York staff young and old alike. This tour offers not just the story of what once was in A behind-the-scenes tour of the museum’s theater collection, which documents lovely old brownstone neighborhoods, but also a platform for questioning the theatrical history in N ew York from the late eighteenth centur y to the workings of urban democracy in defining place. present. The collection includes set and costume designs, scripts, adv ertising, Please note: The walking part of the tour will last approximately two hours. photographs, contracts, correspondence, and ephemera. Limit: 25 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers Limit: 10 people. $10 members, $15 nonmembers

Friday, January 2, 2:15–5:15 p.m. Tour Tour 7: Museum of the City of New York Tour: Gilded New York New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Tour leaders: Museum of the City of New York staff Friday, January 2, 2:30–5:30 p.m. Inaugurating the museum’s Tiffany & Co. Foundation Gallery, Gilded New American Society of Church History York explores the city’s visual culture at the end of the nineteenth century, when Tour 11: American Society of Church History Tour of its elite class flaunted their money as never before. In New York, this era was Harlem Religious Sites marked by the sudden rise of industrial and corporate wealth, amassed by such New York Hilton, Americas Hall I titans as Cornelius Vanderbilt and Jay Gould, who expressed their high status through extravagant fashions, architecture, and interior design. The exhibition Tour leaders: David R. Bains, Samford University; Daniel Sack, independent presents a lavish display of some 100 wor ks, including costumes, je welry, scholar; Peter W. Williams, Miami University, Ohio portraits, and decorative objects, all cr eated between the mid-1870s and the

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Topics: Beyond the Bubble ate fternoon essions of the L A S AHA Joel Breakstone, Stanford University Program Committee SSRC Measuring College Learning Richard Arum, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. SSRC Measuring College Learning from a Historian’s Perspective Lendol G. Calder, Augustana College 31. The American Association of University Professors at 100: Tracy L. Steffes, Brown University A Century of Activity in Defense of Academic Freedom New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Lumina Tuning Norman L. Jones, Utah State University Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division Chair: Joan Wallach Scott, Institute for Advanced Study Papers: They Could Be Flying Machine Advocates: Academic Freedom and 34. Teaching the Common Core: Citing Evidence the Founding of the American Association of University Professors Workshop Hans-Joerg Tiede, Illinois Wesleyan University New York Hilton, Sutton North Academic Freedom under Fire: The American Association of Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division University Professors from McCarthyism to the 1970s Ellen Schrecker, Yeshiva University In this workshop/practicum, presenters will demonstrate ho w to teach students selection, use, and citation of evidence at the 5th and 10th grade lev els. During Individualism, Professionalism, and Economic Security: Academic the remainder of the workshop, the audience will engage in selected activities from Freedom, Collective Bargaining, and the American Association of lessons focused on citing evidence. The audience will receive copies of both lessons. University Professors Henry Reichman, California State University, East Bay Chair: Shennan Hutton, California History-Social Science Project, University of California, Davis Comments: Joan Wallach Scott Clyde Barrow, University of Texas at Rio Grande Valley Papers: Citing Evidence on Cold War Perspectives for High School Students Shelley Brooks, University of California, Davis A reception will follo w beginning at 6:00 p .m. in the H ilton’s Rendezvous Trianon Room. Citing Evidence in Elementary School History with the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution Tuyen Tran, University of California, Davis

32. Constitutional History in the High School Classroom New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A 35. A Thematic Approach to Teaching World War I Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division New York Hilton, Sutton South Chair: Maeva Marcus, New-York Historical Society and George Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Washington University Law School Chair: Lora Vogt, National World War I Museum at Liberty Memorial Topics: Is Our Constitution Undemocratic? What Changes Would Make It More Democratic? Papers: Teaching World War I through the Concept of Leadership Laura Dull, State University of New York at New Paltz Kevin Wagner, Carlisle Area School District (Pennsylvania) The Reconstruction Amendments as a Charter of Freedom in Exploring the Price of Freedom Collection from the Smithsonian America’s Unfinished evolutionR Museum of American History Stacie Brensilver, New York University Ron Hustvedt, Salk Middle School (Minnesota), STEM Pre- Engineering Magnet Program Race as a Factor in Determining Admissions Policies for Public Schools and Universities Using Poetry and Journalism to Teach World War I Diana Turk, New York University Amanda Smith, Beaufort County Early College High School (North Carolina) Using Sonia Sotomayor’s Memoir My Beloved World to Explore Debates over Judicial Diversity, the Constitution, and Educational Using Modernity and Scientific rogrP ess to Teach World War I Equity Brian Weaver, Central Bucks High School–West (Pennsylvania) Robert Cohen, New York University Comment: Eric Shed, Brown University

33. New Initiatives to Improve Teaching, Learning, and Assessment: Projects and Perspectives New York Hilton, Regent Parlor Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Chair: Nancy Quam-Wickham, California State University, Long Beach

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36. A Southern Peace? History, Literary Studies, and the Papers: “Freer and Happier Every Year”: Calculating the Future of Public New Southern Studies Credit in Eighteenth-Century Britain Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 William Deringer, Columbia University Chair: David Moltke-Hansen, Cambridge Studies on the American Climate, Crops, and Capital: The U.S. Weather Bureau and South Predictive Data in the West Indies, 1898–1902 Jamie Pietruska, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Topics: Reading Readers during the Southern Literary Renaissance Sarah Gardner, Mercer University What’s Good f or Dow Jones Eli Cook, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Integrating the Discipline of History into the New Southern Studies Natalie J. Ring, University of Texas at Dallas Predicting a “Mature Population”: How Corporate Risk-Making Tools Popularized American Stagnation on the Eve of the Baby Boom Sideways, Backwards, and Queer: Toward a New Southern Studies Dan Bouk, Colgate University Benjamin E. Wise, University of Florida Comment: Jeffrey Sklansky Fables of the Reconstruction Scott Romine, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

40. Combating Disease and Spreading Expertise: Interdisciplinary and Transnational Perspectives on the 37. Alternative Temporal and Geographical Trajectories for History of Women and Global Public Health the Cold War Sheraton New York, Conference Room B Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 Chair: Julie Fairman, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Papers: Health Nursing or Health Visiting: An American Debate over Public Chair: Erez Manela, Harvard University Health Care in Europe, 1918–25 Papers: Countering the “Communist Menace”: Transnational and Inter- Jaime Lapeyre, Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, imperial Responses to International Communism in 1920s Southeast University of Toronto Asia Lavinia Dock, International Nurse: Transnational Approaches to Heather E. Streets-Salter, Northeastern University Feminism, Social Justice, and Global Public Health The Johnstone Affair and Cold War Beginnings in India Aeleah Soine, Saint Mary’s College of California Michele Louro, Salem State University Sioban Nelson, Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto Onward to Tashkent: Indian Revolutionary Exiles in 1920s Central Asia From Colonial Diseases to Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs): Carolien Stolte, Leiden University Historicizing the Current Moment in Global Health Mari K. Webel, University of Pittsburgh Comment: Erez Manela Comment: Anne-Marie Rafferty, King’s College London

38. Buying and Selling History: Some Perspectives on the Marketplace 41. Critics of the Mainstream: The Collapse of Journalistic New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Authority in the United States, 1955–2000 Sheraton New York, Conference Room F Chair: Timothy Bent, Oxford University Press Chair: Michael Schudson, Columbia University Topics: History across the Market Spectrum Diane Burrowes, HarperCollins Publishers Papers: The Making of the President, 1968 and the Unmaking of Theodore H. White Shaping History for the Marketplace James L. Baughman, University of Wisconsin–Madison Michael Gentile, Random House “You Have Been Severely Criticized by Persons Who Are Bigoted and The University Press and the Marketplace Unfair”: Mayor Daley and the “Liberal Media” in the Aftermath of Mary Beth Jarrad, New York University Press the 1968 Democratic National Convention Changes in the Market for History Robert Rabe, Marshall University Keith Goldsmith, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group National Review and the Idea of a Liberal Media Bias Julie B. Lane, Boise State University It’s Complicated: Republicans’ Relationship with Talk Radio 39. Calculating the Future: Capitalism and Predictive Brian Rosenwald, University of Pennsylvania Statistics Comment: David Greenberg, Rutgers University–New Brunswick New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Chair: Jeffrey Sklansky, University of Illinois at Chicago January 2, 2015 2, January

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 43 28/10/14 6:26 PM 44 Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sessions

42. Digital Tools: From the Archive to Publication 0101 46. History Meets Archaeology in Indigenous/Colonial New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor 0111 1010 North America Chair: Leah Weinryb Grohsgal, independent scholar New York Hilton, Madison Suite Panel: Nancy Brown, Purdue University Chair: James Brooks, University of California, Santa Barbara Rachel Kantrowitz, New York University Topics: Discovering the Ancient South: Methodological Considerations Ashley Sanders, Michigan State University Robbie Ethridge, University of Mississippi Nora Slonimsky, City University of New York, Graduate Center In Not-So-Small Things Forgotten: Archaeologies of Colonialism and Racialization in the Northeast Katherine Hayes, University of Minnesota Twin Cities 43. Experiencing Revolutions: A Comparative Perspective Remapping King Philip’s War: New Geographies and Methodologies New York Hilton, Gibson Suite for the Indigenous and Colonial Northeast Chair: Gilbert M. Joseph, Yale University Christine DeLucia, Mount Holyoke College Papers: The Experience of the Iranian Revolution of 1979 Critical Insights on a Precarious Time: Shellmounds and Naghmeh Sohrabi, Brandeis University Colonialism in the San Francisco Bay, California Tsim Schneider, University of California, Santa Barbara “Feeling Like Fidel”: Empowerment, Surveillance, and Emotion in the Cuban Revolution Lillian Guerra, University of Florida Revolutionary Emotions: A Content Analysis of Emotional 47. Intimacies and Empires Engagement for Revolution New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda Jean-Pierre Reed, Southern Illinois University Carbondale Chair: Barbara M. Cooper, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Trajectories of Fear in Syria Topics: Troubles with Intimacy Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University Ann Laura Stoler, New School for Social Research Comment: Gilbert M. Joseph Transgressive Sex and Provocative Comfort in the French Colonial Archives Jennifer Anne Boittin, Pennsylvania State University 44. Fostering Interdisciplinary Work and “Africa Will Accept Us If We Remain Faithful to Her”: Métissage, Expanding History’s Reach: Dual Degree Culture, and Belonging in Francophone Africa Rachel Jean-Baptiste, University of California, Davis Programs and Professional Schools as Opportunities The Fat Queer Maghrebi French Kid Talks Back: Queer Linguistics Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom and Intersectional Approaches to the Study of Empire and Intimacies Chair: Merlin Chowkwanyun, University of Wisconsin–Madison Denis M. Provencher, University of Maryland Baltimore Panel: Martha S. Jones, University of Michigan County David Rosner, Columbia University Karen Tani, University of California, Berkeley Julian Zelizer, Princeton University Merlin Chowkwanyun 48. Legal Orientalism: Law, History, and the Global New York Hilton, Concourse C Chair: Teemu Ruskola, Emory University 45. Globalization and Comestibles: History and Food Panel Topics: Development and the Rule of Law: Global Scripts, Vernacular Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East Worlds Ritu Birla, University of Toronto Chair: Richard Trembath, University of A Quiet Exercise of Power: Quantification and the lobalG Papers: Food Safety and Global Comestibles Circulation of Expertise Nicole Tarulevicz, University of Tasmania Sally Engle Merry, New York University Curry Stuff: Comparing the History of Curry Consumption in Legal Orientalism: Locating China in Law’s World Early and Colonial Asia, c. 1900–65 Teemu Ruskola Cecilia Leong-Salobir, University of Wollongong Law, Hegemony, Competition, and Hierarchy: Historical Context Kare’e and Kari’i: Indian Cuisine and Pan-Asianism in Interwar of Law and Globalization Japan Bryant G. Garth, University of California, Irvine George Solt, New York University Comment: Samuel Moyn, Harvard University Tapioca Days: Food Scarcity during the Japanese Occupation of Singapore Sandra Hudd, University of Tasmania Comment: Richard Trembath

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 44 28/10/14 6:26 PM Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sessions 45

49. Living with (and without) the Americans with 52. Migration History: A Dialogue among the Disciplines Disabilities Act (ADA): Reflections, Refractions, and New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Reactions in Disability History Joint session with the Immigration and Ethnic History Society New York Hilton, Concourse D Chair: Nancy L. Green, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Chair: Frances L. Bernstein, Drew University Topics: Migration: An Interdisciplinary Natural? Topics: Disability Rights Activisms in Eastern and Southern Africa: Lessons Nancy L. Green from the ADA and Lessons for the ADA Fikru Negash Gebrekidan, St. Thomas University History and the Social Sciences: Interdisciplinary Exchange in Migration Studies Celebration versus Commemoration: What Mounting a Public Donna R. Gabaccia, University of Toronto Scarborough History Exhibit is Teaching Me about the ADA Catherine J. Kudlick, San Francisco State University Historical Approach in Sociology of Immigration: Some Lessons Sinking In? “Acts” of Disability Politics in Francophone African Literature and Ewa Morawska, University of Essex Film Julie Nack Ngue, University of Southern California Law and the Study of Migration David Abraham, University of Miami The End of Normal? Michael A. Rembis, University at Buffalo (State University of The Politics of International Migration: How Can We “Bring the New York) State Back In”? James F. Hollifield, outhernS Methodist University Doing Disability History in Non-Western Societies: A Perspective from the Arab World Sara Scalenghe, Loyola University Maryland 53. Religion, Orientalism, and Decolonization New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B 50. Magna Carta in the Age of Enlightenment, Revolution, Chair: James Chappel, Duke University and Empire: Rethinking Constitutional History on the Papers: German Jews, Orientalism, and Islam 800th Anniversary of Magna Carta Susannah Heschel, Dartmouth College New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B The Theological Origins of Anti-imperialist Thought Chair: Paul Halliday, University of Virginia Udi Greenberg, Dartmouth College Papers: Written Constitutions and the Reimagining of Magna Carta Foe or Friend? Catholics and the Specter of Islam at the End of Linda Colley, Princeton University French Empire in West Africa Elizabeth A. Foster, Tufts University Magna Carta for the World? The Constitutional Protection of Foreign Subjects in the Age of Revolutions Comment: Naomi Davidson, University of Ottawa Daniel Hulsebosch, New York University “The Magna Charta of Hindostan”: Constituting the British Empire in Eighteenth-Century India 54. Resource Conflicts and Popular Imaginaries in Robert Travers, Cornell University Twentieth-Century Latin America Sheraton New York, Conference Room D Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History 51. Making History “Popular”: Challenges and Chair: Kevin Young, Stony Brook University Opportunities in the College Classroom New York Hilton, Sutton Center Papers: Fossil Fuels and Industrialization in the Basin of Mexico, 1870–1915 Germán Vergara, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Polly Beals, Southern Connecticut State University Petroleum Laborers, Rural Land, and the Rhetoric of Resource Topics: Comparing Accounts: Using Popular Culture in History Pedagogy Nationalism in 1930s Mexico Malgorzata Rymsza-Pawlowska, Eastern Illinois University Julia del Palacio Langer, Columbia University The Promises and Perils of Teaching the History of Fun Water and Revolution: The Bolivian Revolution and the Kathleen Casey, Virginia Wesleyan College Nationalization and Redistribution of Water Resources in the “I Love Comics Like a First Born”: Teaching History through Cochabamba Valley Contemporary Graphic Narratives Sarah Thompson Hines, University of California, Berkeley Charles Baraw, Southern Connecticut State University The Slippery Contours of Bolivian Nationalism: Oil in the Popular Pirates in the College Classroom Economic Imaginary, 1952–69 Samantha Meigs, University of Indianapolis Kevin Young Minerals, Nation, and Resistance in Peru Gerardo Rénique, City College of New York Comment: The Audience January 2, 2015 2, January

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55. Technology and the Material Turn in Transnational Topics: When Central Europe Wanders: Austrians Abroad History: A Roundtable Alison Frank Johnson, Harvard University Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Our Empire: Habsburg Central Europe, 1780–1948 Chair: Lynn M. Thomas, University of Washington Seattle Pieter Judson, European University Institute Topics: Carbon Fibers: Coal and the Materiality of the Transnational Central Europe in the Twentieth Century: The Vortex of New On Barak, Tel Aviv University Technologies for Living and Dying Kate Brown, University of Maryland Baltimore County The Global Infrastructure of Biometric Citizenship: Civil Registration in the Aftermath of Empire Mapping Imagined Germany, 1660–1870 Keith Breckenridge, University of the Witwatersrand Helmut W. Smith, Vanderbilt University Ontologies of Waste Gabrielle Hecht, University of Michigan Geographies of Toxic War 59. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 3: Queer Toby C. Jones, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Movements: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Social Disconnecting the Undersea Cable Network, 1850–2015 Movement Era Sheraton New York, Conference Room E Nicole Starosielski, New York University Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History

56. The Nation in the World: 150 Years of Critical Chair: Emily Thuma, University of California, Irvine Engagement Topics: The Seventies, Sexuality, and the Profusion of Entangled Events Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West Roderick Ferguson, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Chair: Katrina Vanden Heuvel, The Nation Making Space for Pauli Murray: Transformations in a Queer Politics and a Queer Life Topics: Freda Kirchwey’s Nation: The War in Europe and Its Aftermath, Dayo Gore, University of California, San Diego 1937–55 Sara Alpern, Texas A&M University at College Station Left Out: Situating Stigma in U.S. Radical and Left Social Movement History The Nation on Russia Christina B. Hanhardt, University of Maryland at College Park Stephen F. Cohen, New York University and Princeton University Rules of the Craft: Apophasis and Occult Politics in the Gay Liberation Movement The Nation in the Middle East and South Asia Abram J. Lewis, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Juan R. I. Cole, University of Michigan and Informed Comment The Nation in Latin America and the Caribbean Greg Grandin, New York University 60. Slavery as History, Slavery as Fiction , Part 2: The Slavery Archive As History and Narrative New York Hilton, Morgan Suite 57. Tipping in American History Chair: Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Papers: The Great Escape: Runaway Slave Narratives in Chicago’s Joint session with the Business History Conference and the Labor and Antislavery Press M. Scott Heerman, Johns Hopkins University Working Class History Association Chair: Julia Ott, New School for Social Research “Persecuted People”: A Comparison of Nineteenth-Century Autobiographical and Fictional Slave Narratives Papers: Tipping the Scales: Progressive Ideals and the Limits of American Amanda Bellows, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Class Protest in the Early Twentieth Century Andrew P. Haley, University of Southern Mississippi Transnational History as Epistolary Novel: Archives and the Comparative Politics of Producing Narratives of Slavery and When Red Caps Lost Their Tips Empire in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans Daniel Levinson Wilk, Fashion Institute of Technology Gunja SenGupta, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City Tipping Today: An Insider’s View Univerity of New York Chockie Tom, The Flat Awam Amkpa, New York University Comment: The Audience Slavery, Marriage, and the Nature of History: Representations of Female Litigants in Gold Coast Antislavery Courts, 1874 to the Present Trevor Getz, San Francisco State University 58. Where Is Central European History? Looking In and Comment: Edward A. Alpers, University of California, Los Angeles Looking Out This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 30 and 152. Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom Joint session with the Central European History Society Chair: James J. Sheehan, Stanford University

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 46 28/10/14 6:26 PM Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sessions 47

Beyond the Islands: Caribbean Education in Public and Catholic ate fternoon essions of the L A S AHA Schools in Post-Civil Rights Era New York City Affiliated Societies Dominique Jean-Louis, New York University Comment: The Audience Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. American Catholic Historical Association Session 4 American Society for Legal History The Lives of American Catholic Women, 1850–1920 History and the Law: Creating, Acquiring, and Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 Preserving Legal Knowledge Sheraton New York, Conference Room K Chair: Mary Henold, Roanoke College Chair: Richard Bernstein, New York Law School Papers: Maria Monk, “Bridget,” or Just Plain Invisible? Catholic Lay and Religious Women in the Era of the American Civil War Papers: Colonial Lawyers and Their Books: Connecting Legal History to the William B. Kurtz, University of Virginia History of the Book Sally E. Hadden, Western Michigan University “The Edification and ncouragementE of Others”: The Roman Catholic Faith of Louise Imogen Guiney Historicism and Materiality in Legal Theory Patricia Fanning, Bridgewater State University Christopher Tomlins, University of California, Irvine The Life, Work, and Mysterious Death of Catholic Writer Eugenie Orientalism in American Legal Thought Uhlrich Ian J. Drake, Montclair State University Stephanie A.T. Jacobe, independent scholar Comment: William Nelson, New York University School of Law Comment: Mary Henold American Society of Church History Session 4 American Catholic Historical Association Session 5 Spiritual Midwifery: The Role of Religion in Midwifery The Southern Part of the Western Hemisphere Training and Practices in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Centuries Chair: Julia G. Young, Catholic University of America New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Papers: “In Peru We Learned about Our Humanity”: The Sisters of Charity Chair: Horace Means, United Theological Seminary of the Immaculate Conception, Saint John, New Brunswick, and Papers: Spiritualizing Maternity: Responses from the Counterculture the Peru Mission Experiment Marianne Martin Delaporte, Notre Dame de Namur University Elizabeth W. McGahan, University of New Brunswick Sisters as Midwives: Soeurs de la Charité Maternelle of Metz Catholics as Citizens: Navigating Loyalties to the Church and to during the Nineteenth Century the Nation in Latin America Morag Martin, College at Brockport (State University of Lisa M. Edwards, University of Massachusetts Lowell New York) Archbishop Marcos McGrath of Panama: A Window on Vatican II, Sisterhood and Grace: Mormon Women as Obstetricians and Medellín, and Puebla Midwives Robert Hurteau, Loyola Marymount University Mary Melcher, Sharlot Hall Museum Jewish Subtexts in Two Early Nahuatle/Spanish Plays of Sor Juana Invisible Parteras: Midwives Surviving Colonization in New Inés de la Cruz Mexico Pamela Rappaport, St. John’s University Rebecca Tatum, Union Theological Seminary in the City of Comment: Julia G. Young New York Comment: Jessica Ann Sheetz-Nguyen, University of Central Oklahoma American Catholic Historical Association Session 6 New York City’s Other Diocese: Social and Institutional American Society of Church History Session 5 Developments in the Diocese of Brooklyn Doing History Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Chair: Jane Hannon, Georgetown Visitation Preparatory Chair: Randall Balmer, Dartmouth College Papers: Socialization and Assimilation in the City of Homes: Religious and Papers: Doing History Voluntary Affiliation among rooklynB Irish, 1850–1917 David Steinmetz, Duke Divinity School Steven Sullivan, Lawrence High School (New York) “There Is Dark and Amazing Intricacy in the Ways of Providence”: The Outer Boroughs: Parochial Schools in the Diocese of Brooklyn, Storytelling as History, History as Storytelling 1920–57 David Hall, Harvard University James T. Carroll, Iona College Who Makes History? American Religious Historians and the Catholic Hospitals in the Age of Medicare: The Brooklyn Experience Problem of Historical Agency Thomas F. Rzeznik, Seton Hall University Catherine A. Brekus, Harvard Divinity School Comment: Peter Kaufman, University of Richmond January 2, 2015 2, January

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48 Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sessions

American Society of Church History Session 6 Papers: Christian Women and the Rise of the Popular Resistance Culture in Counsellor, Critic, Comforter, Colleague: Preaching at Shanghai, 1931–37 Court in Early Modern Europe Dewen Zhang, Randolph-Macon College New York Hilton, Holland Suite Converting the Christian Faith into the City’s Modern Landmarks: Chair: Douglas Shantz, University of Calgary The Beijing Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA) and Its Public Establishments, 1920s–30s Papers: Christoph Brunchorst (1604–64): A Thuringian Court Preacher Aihua Zhang, Stony Brook University and His Times Mary Noll Venables, independent scholar Daughters of Reconstruction: Women and Catholic Revival in Republican Beijing Preaching for the King: Pietist Sermons and Ecclesiastical-Political Anthony E. Clark, Whitworth University Discussions at the Court of Frederick William I of Prussia Benjamin Marschke, Humboldt State University Gendering World History: Laura White and the History of Woman’s Social Progress The Word of the “Ecclesiastical Monarchy”? Court Preachers in Xin Chen, University of Alberta France during the Early Modern Period Benoist Pierre, Université François–Rabelais de Tours Comment: Peg Christoff, Stony Brook University Comment: Douglas Shantz Conference on Latin American History Session 7 Law and Violence in Nineteenth-Century Latin America Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Session 2 Chair: Joshua M. Rosenthal, Western Connecticut State University Inquisition: A Legal and Intellectual Network that Defined Religious Practice Papers: The Death Penalty and the Post-Colonial Condition in Latin America Sheraton New York, Conference Room I Everard Meade, University of San Diego Chair: Katrina B. Olds, University of San Francisco “La Justicia Divina Se Ha de Conocer y Sentir Aunque Sea Tarde”: Ethnic Violence and Authoritarian Pluralism in Papers: De Erroribus Sarracenorum: Islam through Inquisitorial Lenses Nineteenth-Century Chiapas Robin J. E. Vose, St. Thomas University Marc Antone, Indiana University Bloomington The Rhetoric of Defense Statements in Spanish and Portuguese Natives, Legal Culture, and Gender: Mexico City’s Institutions of Inquisition Trials Authority in the Late Eighteenth through Nineteenth Centuries Gretchen Starr-LeBeau, University of Kentucky Margarita R. Ochoa, Loyola Marymount University Alumbradismo across the Atlantic Military Recruitment and Legal Sovereignty in Early Republican Jessica J. Fowler, University of California, Davis Mexico, 1820s–40s Comment: Katrina B. Olds Timo Schaefer, Indiana University Bloomington Comment: Joshua M. Rosenthal Charles Homer Haskins Society How and Why Men Appropriate Depictions of Violent Conference on Latin American History Session 8 Women “A Fragile Harmony”: Economic Tensions, Social New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Frictions, and Political Instability in Venezuela during Chair: Daniel Kelly, St. John’s University the Age of Revolutions, 1780–1810 Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Papers: Ancient Paragons and Contemporary Corruptions: Depictions of Female Aggression in Late Anglo-Saxon England Chair: Greg Childs, Brandeis University Tracey-Anne Cooper, St. John’s University Papers: Anxieties and Identity Formation among People of African Descent Anxiety and Approbation in Twelfth-Century Chronicler’s Writings in the Province of Caracas by the End of the Eighteenth Century on Queenly Leadership and Aggression Evelyne Laurent-Perrault, New York University Christine Senecal, Shippensburg University Slavery, Free Labor, and the Coro Rebellion of 1795 Naturally Unsuited or Appropriately Virile: Thirteenth-Century Enrique Rivera, Vanderbilt University Francophone Views of Violent Women “We Cannot Trust Black Slaves Anymore”: Contestation and Katrin Sjursen, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Negotiation between Whites and People of African Descent in Comment: Valerie Eads, School of the Visual Arts Venezuela, 1791–1800 Cristina Soriano, Villanova University Chinese Historians in the United States Session 2 “Unprovided Province”: Commercial Crisis, Food Shortage, and Agency, Activism, and the Making of a New Nation: Authority in Venezuela during the Age of Revolution, 1797–1812 Edward P. Pompeian, College of Mary Washington Christian Women in Republican China Sheraton New York, Conference Room C Comment: Reuben Zahler, University of Oregon Chair: Gloria Tseng, Hope College

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Friday, January 2, 3:30–5:30 p.m. Sessions 49

Conference on Latin American History Session 9 The Conclave of 1914 and the Election of Benedict XV Home Is Where the “Aurika” Is: Multidisciplinary John Pollard, University of Cambridge Perspectives on American, Soviet, and Corporate Comment: Frank J. Coppa Modernity in Homes Overseas Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 Society of Civil War Historians Session 2 Chair: Joel W. Wolfe, University of Massachusetts Amherst Contested Loyalty: Debates over Patriotism in the Civil Papers: Electric Home Sewing: Singer Electric Sewing Machines in War North Transnational Perspective Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Paula de la Cruz-Fernandez, Humboldt University Chair: Eric Walther, University of Houston The Material Culture of Domestic Space in Socialist Cuba Papers: The Crime of Disloyalty: Curbing Dissent in the Civil War North Maria Cabrera Arus, New School for Social Research Robert Sandow, Lock Haven University New Homes to Raise a Nation: The United Nations, American “I Felt a Little Rebellious”: Copperhead Politics through the Eyes of Cooperativists, and the “Master Plan” to Renovate Haiti’s Capital a University of Michigan Law Student City, Port-au-Prince Julie Mujic, Sacred Heart University Adam M. Silvia, Florida International University “All of That Class That Infest N.Y.”: Loyalty, Patriotism, and Comment: Joel W. Wolfe the Irish American Response to the New York City Draft Riots in Connecticut and Wisconsin Modern Greek Studies Association Session 1 Ryan W. Keating, California State University, San Bernardino Greece and the First World War: Consequences in Local Comment: Melinda A. Lawson, Union College (New York) and Global Perspective Sheraton New York, Conference Room H Chair: Papamichos Chronakis, Brown University Annual Meeting Orientation Papers: Historiographical Approaches of Greece’s Great War: Between National Narrative and the Global Context Friday, January 2, 4:00–5:00 p.m. Emilia Salvanou, University of Peloponnese War-Weary and War-Wary: Revisiting the Perspective of Greece’s Getting the Most Out of the Annual Meeting New Lands in the First World War New York Hilton, Concourse B Stefan Papaioannou, Framingham State University Please join us for an orientation for first-time participants in the annual The Thessaloniki Fire of 1917: Minority Conflicts aughtC in the Crossfire meeting. Learn how to navigate the annual meeting and get the most out of Katerina Lagos, California State University, Sacramento the professional development opportunities it provides. Participants will have a chance to ask questions informally, suggest ways to improve the meeting, and Comment: Keith Brown, Brown University to meet others attending the annual meeting for the first time. Speaker: Debbie Ann Doyle, American Historical Association National History Center of the American Historical Association Session 2 New Directions in Asian American Immigration AHA Receptions New York Hilton, Concourse H Chair: Jack Tchen, New York University Friday, January 2, 5:00–6:00 p.m. Panel: Tarry Hum, Queens College, City University of New York Kathleen López, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Reception for Graduate Students Matt K. Matsuda, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Sheraton New York, Central Park West The AHA Graduate and Early Car eer Committee invites graduate students Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 1 attending the 2015 annual meeting to a r eception in the Sheraton New York’s Italy at the Start of the First World War Central Park West. New York Hilton, Green Room Chair: Frank J. Coppa, St. John’s University Friday, January 2, 5:30–6:30 p.m. Papers: War at Any Cost: The Italo-Turkish War, 1911–12, the Reception for History Bloggers and Twitterstorians Interventionist Crisis, and the Birth of Fascism Sheraton New York, Central Park East Paul Arpaia, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Cosponsored by MapStory Honor and Crisis: The Chivalric Assumptions of Italian The AHA cor dially invites histor y bloggers and Twitterstorians to attend a Intervention in 1915 reception in the Sheraton New York’s Central Park East. Steven Hughes, Loyola University Maryland January 2, 2015 2, January

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 49 28/10/14 6:26 PM

50 Friday, January 2, Evening Events

Film Festival AHA Awards Ceremony

Friday, January 2, 5:30–7:30 p.m. Friday, January 2, 7:30–8:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B American Historical Association Awards Ceremony Imbabazi: The Pardon Sheraton New York, Metropolitan Ballroom West Joel Karekezi, producer, director, and writer; M iriam Odaka and Presiding: Vicki L. Ruiz, University of California, Irvine Masarait Kashmiri, co-pr oducers (Ndolo F ilms, a Kar ekezi Film Awards for Publications: Production, 2013) Herbert Baxter Adams Prize The co-producers of the film will lead a discussion afterward. George Louis Beer Prize Jerry Bentley Prize Albert J. Beveridge Award AHA Receptions Paul Birdsall Prize James Henry Breasted Prize Albert B. Corey Prize Friday, January 2, 6:00–7:30 p.m. Raymond J. Cunningham Prize John K. Fairbank Prize in East Asian History AHA Welcome Reception Morris D. Forkosch Prize Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom Leo Gershoy Award William and Edwyna Gilbert Award The AHA invites all attendees to a r eception with light refreshments to open Friedrich Katz Prize the 129th annual meeting. Joan Kelly Memorial Prize in Women’s History Friday, January 2, 6:00–8:00 p.m. Martin A. Klein Prize in African History Littleton-Griswold Prize Reception in Honor of the Centennial of the American J. Russell Major Prize Association of University Professors Helen & Howard R. Marraro Prize New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon George L. Mosse Prize James A. Rawley Prize in Atlantic History Sponsored by the American Association of U niversity Professors, the Premio Del Rey Professional Staff Congress, and the American Historical Association. John F. Richards Prize James Harvey Robinson Prize Evening Session of AHA Roy Rosenzweig Prize for Innovation in Digital History Wesley-Logan Prize Affiliated Society Honors for Scholarly and Professional Distinction: Eugene Asher Distinguished Teaching Award Friday, January 2, 6:30–8:00 p.m. Beveridge Family Teaching Award Equity Awards Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Session 2 Herbert Feis Award Gender and Crime in Medieval and Early Modern Nancy Lyman Roelker Mentorship Award Europe, Part 2 Honorary Foreign Member for 2014 Sheraton New York, Park Suite 1 Awards for Scholarly Distinction Chair: Sara Ritchey, University of Louisiana at Lafayette Papers: “Vile Sluts” versus “Gassy Procuress”: Prostitutes and lenary ession Deununciations in Late Medieval Marseille P S Susan Alice McDonough, University of Maryland Baltimore County Friday, January 2, 8:30–10:00 p.m. Paying Damages: Financial Settlement for Rape in Catalonia Sarah Ifft Decker, Yale University The New York Public Library Controversy and the Future of On Re-institutionalizing Women’s Rights of Succeeding and the American Research Library Inheriting Family Property in Pre-Modern Korea Sheraton New York, Metropolitan Ballroom West SeoKyung Han, Binghamton University (State University of Chair: Stanley N. Katz, Woodrow Wilson Center, Princeton University New York) Panel: Michael Kimmelman, New York Times Joan Wallach Scott, Institute for Advanced Study Elliott Shore, Association of Research Libraries Amy Ryan, Boston Public Library

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 50 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 51 Papers: Chair: Panel: Chair: Panel: Chair: Chair: Papers: Chair: Comment: 65. 64. 63. 62. 61. Saturday, January3,8:30–10:00a.m. Saturday

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p.m.

New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East New York Hilton, Madison Suite Internationalism Children intheVisualCulturesofNationalismand Contested Archives Twentieth Century China throughTravel:PleasureandPoliticsinthe

Sessions

Willibald S Kathleen Davis, U Reinhar Manu G Bey Secularization Julia Paula S.F Heide F Image-Making Children andO Sabine F of Twentieth-Century Japan Militarizing Childhoods,I Julia A Francis X.B Todd S 2012 and thePost-decolonization French andAlgerian Republics, 1962– “Of So Erin M 1994 tothe Challenges andComplexitiesofDocumenting Genocide inRwanda, Historians andA Br of Atrocity Seizur William G.R Rebecca E.Karl,N Christopher R.Leighton,Massachusetts I 1949–79 Selling theR Qian Zhu, W Educating Yajun M China Tr Yajun M Life Education Movement in1930sChina Narratives inRepublican China Sessions uce Montgomery, University ofColoradoBoulder ond a Boundary: ond aBoundary: Thinking Koselleck outsideEurope Adeney Thomas e, Exploitation, andRestitution ofSaddam Hussein’s Archive vereignty”: DisputedArchives, Modern” “Wholly Archives, deney Thomas, University ofNotre Dame hepard, Johns Hopkins University osely, Harvard University t Koselleck’s Temporalization andtheProblem ofHistory of ehrenbach, Northern Illinois University rühstück, University ofCalifornia,Santa Barbara oswami, New York University o o, LongIsland University aveler: The Tourism Industry, Print Culture, and Travel ass, University ofCalifornia,Berkeley Through Travel: Xin’an Children Travel Group andthe

teinmetz, University ofBielefeld P evolution: CommunistChina’s Capitalist Ambassadors, louin, University ofMichigan resent abash College osenberg, University ofMichigan ther Civilians: Photography andHumanitarian rchivists intheShadow of“Never Again”: The niversity ofRhodeIsland ew ew York University nfantilizing Wars inthe Visual Culture nstitute of Technology 28/10/14 6:26PM 51 51

January 3, 2015

52 Saturday, Saturday, January January 3, 3, 10:30 8:30 a.m.–10:00a.m.–12:00 p.m.a.m. Sessions

The New Race History outside the West 69. Doing More with Less: The Promise and 0101 0111 Bruce Hall, Duke University Pitfalls of Short-Form Scholarship in the 1010 Digital History Age Historicizing the Subject: Foucault after Liberalism and Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Eurocentrism Chair: Kristin Purdy, Palgrave Macmillan Andrew Zimmerman, George Washington University Panel: Kathryn Nasstrom, University of San Francisco Comment: Sarah C. Maza, Northwestern University Ben Railton, Fitchburg State University Judith R. Walkowitz, Johns Hopkins University Stephanie Westcott, George Mason University Kristin Purdy 73. Imperial Fantasy or Internationalist Achievement: The Boy Scouts and Girl Guides in the Early Twentieth 70. Emotional Styles: Seemly and Unseemly Passions in Century Indian Courtly Settings, 1550–1750 Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Chair: Susan Thorne, Duke University Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Papers: “Brother Britons”: Robert Baden-Powell, the Boy Scouts, and the Chair: Samira Sheikh, Vanderbilt University British World, 1907–18 John Mitcham, Samford University Papers: Royal Rage in Rajputana: The Politics of Anger in Mughal India Cynthia Talbot, University of Texas at Austin Internationalism alongside Ethnic Exclusivity: The Girl Guides in Egypt in the Years Surrounding the First World War Royal Passions: Emotions, Bodies, and Sovereignty in the Qutb Annalise DeVries, University of Alabama Shahi Deccan Eric Beverley, Stony Brook University Clean Claws, Kosher Beavers, and New French Jews: Class, Ethnicity, and the Eclaireurs Israélites de France between the From Courtly Pleasure to Unseemly Passion: The Mastani Scandal World Wars at the Peshwa’s Court in Mid-Eighteenth-Century India Erin M. Corber, University of Maine Sumit Guha, University of Texas at Austin Comment: Tammy Proctor, Utah State University Comment: Samira Sheikh

74. Imperial New York City: The Scientific Survey of 71. Geographies of Identity, Solidarity, and Belonging Puerto Rico in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History and the Chair: Matthew Smith, University of the West Indies, Mona Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Papers: We Dream Together: Mid-Century Anticolonial Movements and Chair: Darryl E. Brock, University of Bridgeport Shifting Axes of Caribbean Solidarity, 1822–74 Anne Eller, Yale University Papers: Nathaniel Lord Britton and the Making of the Scientific urveyS of Puerto Rico Black Freedom and the Metageography of North America, Brian M. Boom, New York Botanical Garden 1850–65 Ikuko Asaka, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign The Scientific urS vey of Puerto Rico as Agent for Insular Development and Cultural Nationalism Spatial Shifts and Generational Advancement in Post- Darryl E. Brock emancipation: Barbadian Families, Migration, and Political Transitions in The Science of Imperialism and the New York Academy of Sciences’ Caree Banton, University of Arkansas Puerto Rican Survey Julio Figueroa-Colon, Fundación Sendero Verde Comment: Matthew Smith Comment: Mariola Espinosa, University of 72. Historical Analysis after the “History Wars”: Gender, Race, Subjectivity Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom Chair: Gabrielle M. Spiegel, Johns Hopkins University Topics: Gender: A History of the Category, 1980s to the Present Anna Krylova, Duke University

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 52 28/10/14 6:26 PM

SaturdaySaturday,, January 3, 8:3010:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m.–12:00 a.m. p.m. Sessions Sessions 5533

75. Imperial Policing and the Networks of Empire A Symbol to the Resistance to Integration: Loewen v. Turnipseed Sheraton New York, Conference Room D and Guarding Historical Knowledge in Mississippi, 1963–81 Kevin Johnson, Mississippi State University Chair: Heather E. Streets-Salter, Northeastern University Comment: Joseph Crespino, Emory University Papers: Discourse of the Dum-Dum: Imperialism and British and American Counterinsurgency, 1890–1914 Kim A. Wagner, Queen Mary, University of London Black Soldiers, Arab Civilians, and the Everyday Violence of French 79. Political Philosophy across Translingual and Colonial Rule in 1930s Tunisia Transnational Confucian Heritages Suzanne K. Kaufman, Loyola University Chicago Sheraton New York, Conference Room E Transnational Colonial Surveillance and Dutch Foreign Consulates Chair: Viren Murthy, University of Wisconsin–Madison during the Interwar Period Papers: Rethinking Confucius in Light of Post-World War I Political Crises: Kris Alexanderson, University of the Pacific _ Okawa Shu-mei’s Reading of the Doctrine of the Mean Comment: Michael Silvestri, Clemson University Viren Murthy Rousseau’s “Revolution” in a Global Context: Nakae Chomin’s Classical Chinese Translation of The Social Contract and Its 76. James McPherson’s Battle Cry after a Quarter Century Reception in China Guangxin Fan, Hong Kong Baptist University New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Joint session with the Society of Civil War Historians Family, Law, and Justice in Creole Malay Translations of the Confucian Four Books in Dutch Colonial Java Chair: James M. McPherson, Princeton University Guo-Quan Seng, University of Chicago Panel: Judith Giesberg, Villanova University Lesley Gordon, University of Akron Michael Todd Landis, Tarleton State University Daniel E. Sutherland, University of Arkansas 80. Slaves and Mistresses: The Female Slaveholder in the Americas Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 Chair: Natasha Lightfoot, Columbia University 77. Negotiating the “Helping Hand”: Local Decolonizations and American Aid in the Early Cold War Papers: Mistresses in the Making: White Girls, Mastery, and the Practice of Slave Ownership in the Nineteenth-Century South New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Stephanie Jones-Rogers, University of California, Berkeley Sponsored by the National History Center of the American Historical Association “My Conscience is Free and Clear”: Slavery and Respectability in Mid-Colonial Mexico Chair: Matthew Connelly, London School of Economics Danielle Terrazas Williams, Cornell University Topics: Irrigating Nazareth, Leveraging U.S. Aid: Water and Point Four “Of a Stronger Make Than Most Ladies”: Female Slaveholding on Local Politics in the Middle East the Post-independence Colombian Black Pacific Leena Dallasheh, Rice University Yesenia Barragan, Columbia University Negotiating Development in Ethiopa Comment: Thavolia Glymph, Duke University Amanda McVety, Miami University of Ohio Winning Hearts and Minds, or Teaching Hands? Point Four and the “Underdeveloped” World Jason C. Parker, Texas A&M University at College Station 81. Soldiers and Workers: Military Labor in the Age of Empire 2015 3, January New York Hilton, Concourse C Comment: Sheyda F. A. Jahanbani, University of Kansas Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association and the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Chair: Peter M. Beattie, Michigan State University 78. New Politics of Exclusion after the Civil Rights Papers: Soldiering Lives, Working Lives: Life Courses of African Colonial Soldiers Movement: Perspectives from the Desegregated Schools Michelle Moyd, Indiana University Bloomington New York Hilton, Petit Trianon “An Army of Working-Men”: American Soldiers as a Labor Force, Chair: Ansley Erickson, Teachers College, Columbia University 1865–1900 Papers: High School Student Activism, a Legal Lynching, and the New Jim Crow A. Hope McGrath, University of Pennsylvania Walter Stern, Tulane University The Work of U.S. Colonial Warfare and Administration and Freedom of Organization: The Dissolution and Merger of Southern Counterinsurgency in Cuba and the Philippines, 1898–1902 Black Teacher Associations Justin Jackson, New York University Jon Hale, College of Charleston Comment: Julie Greene, University of Maryland at College Park

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5454 Saturday, Saturday, January January 3, 3, 10:30 8:30 a.m.–10:00a.m.–12:00 p.m.a.m. Sessions

82. The Many Pasts of Public History “As Common as Daily Bread”: The Politics of Unwanted Pregnancy New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A and Abortion in Bolivia’s Military Era, 1964–82 Natalie (Tasha) Kimball, College of Staten Island, City Joint session with the National Council on Public History University of New York Chair: Kathleen Franz, American University Comment: Raul Necochea, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Panel: Denise Meringolo, University of Maryland Baltimore County Robert B. Townsend, American Academy of Arts and Sciences William S. Walker, State University of New York at Oneonta 86. The Social Origins of Political Repression and Mass Comment: Kathleen Franz Violence New York Hilton, Regent Parlor Chair: Ronald Grigor Suny, University of Michigan 83. The Mental Stakes of Nation: Toward Psychiatric Papers: Mass Violence against Communists and Others for a “New Order” Discipline(s) in Latin America in Indonesia, 1965–68 New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda Christian Gerlach, Universität Bern Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History The Social Origins of Terror and Repression in the : Chair: Greg Childs, Brandeis University Victims and Perpetrators, 1936–39 Wendy Z. Goldman, Carnegie Mellon University Papers: Madness and Freedom; or, Color-Coding Insanity in Post- emancipation Brazil The Social Origins of the Second Red Scare in the United States, Greg Childs 1938–56 Landon Storrs, University of Iowa In the Shadow of the Double: Psychiatry and Popular Religion in Cuba Comment: Ronald Grigor Suny Jennifer Lambe, Brown University Scientific xperimentationE in Peru’s Manicomio del Cercado and Larco Herrera Psychiatric Hospitals 87. Toward a Trans-imperial Intellectual History of Central Adam W. V. Warren, University of Washington Seattle Eurasia, 1644–1820 Comment: Richard Keller, University of Wisconsin–Madison New York Hilton, Sutton Center Chair: Carla S. Nappi, University of British Columbia Papers: Chinggis Khan in Eurasian Intellectual History, 1650–1850 84. The Photographic Event Matthew Mosca, College of William and Mary New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B Tartar, Manchu, or Hu? Global Discussions of Qing Origins, Chair: Martin Jay, University of California, Berkeley 1630–1780 Devin Fitzgerald, Harvard University Papers: The Photographic Events of American Abolitionism Matthew Fox-Amato, Washington University in St. Louis The Chinese Shariah: Islamic Legal Scholarship under the Early Manchu Roberta Tontini, University of Heidelberg The “Look” of History: Photography and Paris’s 1944 Liberation Catherine E. Clark, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ethnicity, Intelligence, and the Russo-Qing Cold War, 1674–1818 Gregory Afinogenov, Harvard University Comment: Jennifer Tucker, Wesleyan University Comment: Carla S. Nappi

85. The Politics of Reproduction in the Americas: Twentieth-Century Bolivia, Jamaica, and Cuba 88. What Were They Afraid Of? Understanding the Silent New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Majority Fifty Years Later New York Hilton, Concourse D Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Matthew D. Lassiter, University of Michigan Chair: Cassia Roth, University of California, Los Angeles Papers: The Silent Majority: A Human Perspective Papers: The Racial, Class, and Reproductive Politics of Birth Control in Donald Critchlow, Arizona State University British Colonial Jamaica, 1938–41 Darcy Hughes Heuring, University of Chicago Sweet Home Alabama: Integration and the Silent Majority Brittany Bounds, Texas A&M University at College Station Cuban Doctors without Borders: Family Planning Networks in the 1930s and 1960s Vietnam, the Silent Majority, and Modern Conservatism Rachel M. Hynson, Dartmouth College Sandra Scanlon, University College Dublin Comment: Matthew D. Lassiter

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 54 28/10/14 6:26 PM

SaturdaySaturday,, January 3, 8:3010:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m.–12:00 a.m. p.m. Sessions Sessions 55

89. Women and Conversion in Medieval Iberia Papers: Atlantic History and the Slave Trade to Spanish America Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 David Eltis, Emory University Joint session with the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship The Slave Trade to Colonial Mexico: Revising from Puebla de los Ángeles, 1595–1695 Chair: Paola Tartakoff, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Pablo Sierra, University of Rochester Papers: Maneuvering between the Lines: Conversa Widows after the The Early Iberian Slave Trade to the Spanish Caribbean, Violence of 1391 in Girona 1500–1640 Alexandra Guerson, University of Toronto Marc V. Eagle, Western Kentucky University Dana Wessell Lightfoot, University of Northern British David Wheat, Michigan State University Columbia Comment: Paul LaChance, University of Ottawa Debts and Dowries: The Challenges Facing Mallorcan Conversas in the Aftermath of 1391 Natalie Oeltjen, University of Toronto Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Abduction, Adultery, and Sexual Violence: The Plight of Portuguese Cristãs Novas after the Jewish Expulsion of 1496–97 Affiliated Societies Susannah Humble Ferreira, University of Guelph Saturday, January 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

90. Lessons Learned from the AHA’s Bridging Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 1 Cultures Program, Part 1: PechaKucha 1: Perspectives on Tobacco in the Nineteenth- and Incorporating the Atlantic and Pacific Worlds Twentieth-Century United States Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2 into the U.S. History Survey Course New York Hilton, Sutton South Chair: David T. Courtwright, University of North Florida Following an introduction by the session chair, participating speakers will give Papers: “The Sailor Loves His Backy-O”: Comfort and Conformity in short visual presentations in “PechaKucha” format. Each pr esenter will show Maritime Culture and discuss 20 slides for 20 seconds (six minutes and 40 seconds per person). Stephen N. Sanfilippo, aineM Maritime Academy After the six “PechaKucha” presentations, speakers will discuss common themes The Rediscovery of Addiction: U.S. Medical and Social Perspectives of their work followed by questions and comments from the audience. on the Tobacco Habit, 1800–1988 Chair: Trinidad Gonzales, South Texas College Scott C. Martin, Bowling Green State University Papers: American Expansion in the Atlantic and the Pacific That Body Destroying, Heartbreaking, Dangerous, Desolating Shannon Bontrager, Georgia Highlands College Habit: Tobacco Usage in the Antebellum Congress Thomas J. Balcerski, Purdue University Calumet Coffee, Sugar, and Chocolate: Commodities and Unfree Labor in the Americas across the Atlantic and Pacific Comment: David T. Courtwright Carlos Alberto Contreras, Grossmont College Culture and Capital in the Classroom: Lessons from Teaching American Catholic Historical Association Session 7 Pacific orthwestN History of the United States Negotiating the Atlantic: Catholic Networks in the Jaime Cardenas Jr., Seattle Central Community College Early American Republic Connecting the Atlantic and PacificWorld in the U.S. History Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 Surveys Chair: Amanda Porterfield, loridaF State University Vincent A. Clark, Johnson County Community College

Papers: Speaking in Tongues: Black Dominguans and the Growth of 2015 3, January Teaching Environmental History: Pacific and tlanticA Bio-Worlds American Catholicism, 1791–1853 in the U.S. and World History Surveys John Davies, University of Delaware Allison Frickert-Murashige, Mount San Antonio College “The Fanciful Alliance of Church and State”: Transatlantic Teaching Hawaiian History from a Comparative Perspective Influences on the merican-CatholicA Religious Freedom Discourse Joy Schulz, Metropolitan Community College Nicholas Pellegrino, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Comment: The Audience Commerce, Church-Building, and Citizenry: Atlantic Convergences This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 181, 212, 269 and 295. in New York Catholicism, 1785–1815 Jeffrey Wheatley, Florida State University Comment: Catherine O’Donnell, Arizona State University 91. New Perspectives on the Spanish Atlantic: The Slave Trade to Spanish America, Part 1 Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Manuel Barcia, University of Leeds

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5656 Saturday, Saturday, January January 3, 3, 10:30 8:30 a.m.–10:00a.m.–12:00 p.m.a.m. Sessions

American Catholic Historical Association Session 8 Of Filth, Lucre, and Faith: Converting the Wandering Oklahoman The Jesuit Libraries and Provenance Project in California Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Jonathan Ebel, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Chair: Kyle B. Roberts, Loyola University Chicago To Build a New Economic Life: Cooperative Economics and Radical Christianity in the Rural South after World War II Papers: The Jesuit Libraries and Provenance Project: Digital Approaches to Alison Collis Greene, Mississippi State University Nineteenth-Century Catholic Print Culture Kyle B. Roberts Good Seed, High Yield: The Industrial Discourse of Megachurches and Agribusiness in the Late Twentieth-Century American South Digital Approaches to Nineteenth-Century Catholic Print Culture Chad Seales, University of Texas at Austin Evan Thompson, Loyola University Chicago Comment: Joseph Kip Kosek Comment: Kyle B. Roberts

American Society of Church History Session 9 American Catholic Historical Association Session 9 Emotions and Passions in Early Christianity Americanism Past and Present New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 Chair: Elizabeth A. Clark, Duke University Chair: Gerald P. Fogarty, University of Virginia Papers: “Anger Is a Shameless Dog”: Wrath in the Preaching of John Papers: Exceptionalism and the “Phantom Heresy”: Antecendents to a Chrysostom Contemporary American Catholic Church Blake Leyerle, University of Notre Dame Paul Lubienecki, Steel Plant Museum Sadness, Grief, and Depression in Late Ancient Asceticism An Americanist in Paris: The Early Career of the Abbé Félix Klein Andrew Crislip, Virginia Commonwealth University Charles Talar, University of Saint Thomas (Houston) Tears without Sadness: Methods and Passions in Evagrian Practice Comment: Gerald P. Fogarty Ellen Muehlberger, University of Michigan Comment: Maria Doerfler, Duke University American Society of Church History Session 7 Evange’lico, Injiliyya, Evangelical: World Christianity and Association of Ancient Historians Session 1 Histories of Evangelicalism New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Inside the Minds of Ancient Writers: Investigating Polybius, Livy, Tacitus, and Procopius in the Historical Chair: Joel A. Carpenter, Calvin College Period from the Second Century BCE to the Seventh Papers: Coming from the Outside: Why Did Uganda Want to “Kill the Century CE Gays”? Sheraton New York, Conference Room F Jason Bruner, Arizona State University Chair: Rachael B. Goldman, College of New Jersey Reading Church History in Arabic: Syrian Christian and Muslim Papers: Polybius’s Animal House: Platonic Influence on olybius’sP Histories Representations of Evangelicalism in Ottoman Syria William Burghart, University of Maryland at College Park Deanna Womack, Princeton Theological Seminary Roma Victrix: Livy and Roman Military Superiority over the Crossing Boundaries in Buenos Aires: René Padilla, José Miguez Greek East Bonino, and Theological Exchange within Latin American Nikolaus Overtoom, Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge Protestantism David Kirkpatrick, University of Edinburgh Cold War in Classical Rome: The Parthian Pretenders in Tacitus’s Annals Improving “The Plight of the Free World”: China and the Rise of John Poirot, Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge Evangelical Internationalism in Christianity Today Aaron Griffith, ukeD Divinity School Procopius and the Audience for “Classicizing History” in Late Antiquity Comment: Joel A. Carpenter Joseph Frechette, University of Maryland at College Park

American Society of Church History Session 8 Religious Cultures and Agriculture: Farming, Faith, and American Identity New York Hilton, Holland Suite Chair: Joseph Kip Kosek, George Washington University Papers: The Cultivation of Culture: Anthropological Depictions of Native American Religions in the Assimilation Era Sarah Dees, Indiana University Bloomington

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SaturdaySaturday,, January 3, 8:3010:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m.–12:00 a.m. p.m. Sessions Sessions 5577

Central European History Society Session 2 Conference on Latin American History Session 14 New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Receptions to the Napoleonic Code and the Cadiz Part 1: Cities and States: Central European Urban Constitution in the Making of the New American Experiences in Regional and National Contexts Citizenship Sheraton New York, Conference Room H Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 Chair: Bridget Heal, University of St. Andrews Chair: Beverly David, University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point Papers: Location, Location, Location: Explaining the Vicissitudes of Early Topics: From Civil Death to Genocide in Napoleonic Europe: The Erasure Modern Andernach of “Noirs, Mulâtres et Autre Gens de Couleur” Robert Mark Spaulding, University of North Carolina at Margaret Crosby-Arnold, Columbia University Wilmington Against White Supremacy: Blacks and People of Color in the Early Modern Ground Zeros: Big City Fires in Central Europe Making of a New Citizenry Cornel Zwierlein, Harvard University and University of Dennis Ricardo Hidalgo, Virginia Tech Bochum White Supremacy and Genocide: The 1937 Haitian Massacre in German Capital Cities: Empowerment and State Construction, Fiction and History 1815–66 Diana Pardo, University of Central Oklahoma Zef Segal, Hebrew University Comment: Sibylle Fischer, New York University All Politics Is Local: National Architecture and Urban Identity in Bonn in the 1960s Samuel Sadow, City University of New York, Graduate Center Conference on Latin American History Session 15 Purifying the Body Politics: Exile and Execution in Comment: Christopher Friedrichs, University of British Columbia Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Latin America Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Chair: Victor Uribe Uran, Florida International University History Session 5 Topics: “Another Bloody Drama”: The Yáñez Massacre and the Attempted Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 4: Historicizing Eradication of the Belcista Movement the Image: The Queer Art of Photography Heather K. Thiessen-Reily, Western State Colorado University New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Mier and Freedom of Thought in the Late New Spain and Early Chair: Kirsten Leng, Columbia University Mexico Papers: The American Nuclear Coverup and a Rural Redlight District in Spain Alejandro Quintana, St. John’s University John Howard, King’s College London Mariquita Sanchez’s Salon in Exile Queering Trans* History: Photography and the “Family Album,” Jeffrey M. Shumway, Brigham Young University 1970–90 From “Purifying” the Body Politic to Remembering the Hero: The Elspeth H. Brown, Centre for the Study of the United States, Killing of Augusto Sandino and Its Memorialization in Exile, University of Toronto 1934–56 The Transnational Queer: Mail-Order Pornography and Queer Susy M. Sánchez, University of Notre Dame Aesthetics during the Sexual Revolution Comment: Victor Uribe Uran Jennifer Evans, Carleton University Comment: Richard Meyer, Stanford University Conference on Latin American History Session 16 New Transnational Histories of the Right in the Conference on Asian History Americas 2015 3, January The Religious Society of Friends in U.S.-Japan Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Relations, 1880s–1950s: International Marriage, Chair: Jaime Pensado, University of Notre Dame Humanitarian Aid, Homestay Families Papers: “Nosso Terreno”: New York Hilton, Concourse E Moral Crisis and Rightwing Evangelicals in the Political Sphere Chair: Sally Ann Hastings, Purdue University Benjamin Arthur Cowan, George Mason University Papers: International Marriage in Meiji/Taisho Japan: Inazo and Mary Martial Student Nationalisms: Writings from the Guatemalan Elkinton Nitobe Anti-Communist Student Committee, 1950–54 Sharlie Ushioda, Lower Merion School District (Pennsylvania) Heather A. Vrana, Southern Connecticut State University Aiding Former Enemies: Humanitarian Efforts of U.S. Quakers in Conservatives beyond Borders, the American-Israeli Case: An Allied Occupied Japan, 1945–52 Exploratory Study of Transnational Conservative Networks Marlene Mayo, University of Maryland at College Park Noam Gidron, Harvard University The Society of Friends and the Hiroshima Maidens, 1950s Comment: Lisa McGirr, Harvard University Elyssa Faison, University of Oklahoma Comment: Sally Ann Hastings

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5858 Saturday,Saturday, January January 3, 10:30 3, 8:30–10:00a.m.–12:00 p.m.a.m. Sessions

Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 3 Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Session 5 Conflict at Home: Refugees, Workers, and South Asians in the Americas and New Public Spheres: Reproduction in Wartime Europe, 1929–45 Oral History, Archives, and Public Humanities New York Hilton, Concourse H Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Chair: Susan Wladaver-Morgan, Pacific istoricalH Review and Portland Chair: Neilesh Bose, St. John’s University State University Papers: Creating and Archiving Regional South Asian Community Papers: Defining qualE Work for Equal Pay: Trade Unions, the Post Office, Histories: Insider/Outsider Dilemmas and the Battle for Wage Equity in World War II Amy Bhatt, University of Maryland Baltimore County Mark Crowley, University of Wuhan The Devon Ave(nue) Digital History Archive (DADHA) The Experiences of Alice Juliette Wentzinger as an Alsatian Refugee John R. Pincince, Loyola University Chicago during World War II The South Asian American Digital Archive: History and Nupur Chaudhuri, Texas Southern University Community-Based Archives Calling the Midwife during the Blitz: Mothers and Midwives Manan Desai, Syracuse University Laboring in Wartime Britain, 1939–45 Comment: John R. Pincince Sandra Trudgen Dawson, Northern Illinois University Comment: The Audience Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Session 4 Gender and Crime in Medieval and Early Modern Goldberg Center for Excellence in Teaching Europe, Part 3 Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Sheraton New York, Park Suite 3 History Session 4 Chair: Marita von Weissenberg, Xavier University Teaching Queer History New York Hilton, Concourse F Papers: Rape and the First Crusade Andrew Holt, Florida State College at Jacksonville Papers: The Challenge of Teaching LGBT History John A. D’Emilio, University of Illinois at Chicago Black Market Priests: Church Law and Parish Religion in the Archdeaconry of Paris, 1483–1505 Questions, Not Test Answers: Teaching LGBT History in Public Tiffany D. Vann Sprecher, Kingsborough Community College Schools Emily K. Hobson, University of Nevada, Reno Lay Religious Women, University Clerics, and the Trial of Felicia T. Perez, Los Angeles Unified School istrictD Marguerite of Porete (d.1310) Tanya Stabler Miller, Purdue University Calumet Incorporating the LGBT Past in High School History Daniel Hurewitz, Hunter College, City University of New York The California FAIR Act Society for the History of Children and Youth Session 1 Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University Children at the Periphery: Cross-Cultural Encounters in Child Rescue Sheraton New York, Park Suite 2 Polish American Historical Association Session 1 Chair: Ellen R. Boucher, Amherst College Polish American Literature New York Hilton, Lincoln Suite Papers: Narratives of Marginalization: The Emigration of Poor Children in Late Nineteenth-Century England Chair: Pien Versteegh, Windesheim University of Applied Sciences Steven J. Taylor, University of Leicester Papers: Brigid Pasulka’s A Long, Long Time Ago and Essentially True “A Bit of American Philanthropy in Swampy Pinsk”: Caring for and and the Work of Ethnic Fiction Constructing Children in Eastern Poland, 1919–22 Ann Hetzel Gunkel, Columbia College at Chicago Melissa J. Hibbard, University of Illinois at Chicago The Case against My Brother: The Intersection of History, Cold War, Warm Embrace: The United States and the Ultimate Literature, and Ethnicity Admission of Europe’s Displaced Orphans, 1945–52 Thomas Napierkowski, University of Colorado Colorado Julia Bowes, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Springs Comment: Ellen R. Boucher Patterns of Ethnicity in Polish American, Polish Canadian, and Anglo-Polish Fiction after 1989 Grazyna Kozaczka, Cazenovia College Comment: The Audience

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 58 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 59 Saturday

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a.m.–12:00 Panel: Chair: Panel: Chair: lobby atnoon.Advance registration isnotrequired. in the oup who wishtoattendthetouronlymaymeetgr Those America. KuoWei NewYork Tchen, UniversityMuseumof Chinesein and cofounder, its curator,of theNew-YorkReavenbyMarci led Society,Historical and John a touroftheChineseAmericanexhibition, by wed session willbefollo The Exhibit Tour:ChineseAmerican:Exclusion,Inclusion 12:00 p.m.–1:00p.m. y versus academicscholarship. in publichistor esented in whichthetopicisframedandpr differences the andinclusion,the nuanced roles ofraceandclassinimmigrationnarratives. clusion Panelists willdiscuss globalmigrationpatterns,notionsofex on Chinese American: Exclusion/Inclusion, this roundtable will considerscholarship HostedNew-Yorkbythe Historical Society, exhibition its in conjunctionwith Chair: Roundtable onImmigrationandGlobalMigrationinPublic 10:30 a.m.–12:00p.m. 93. 92. Saturday, January3,10:30a.m.–12:00p.m. Panel:

Sponsored by theAHAProfessional Division New York Hilton, Sutton Center New York Hilton, Sutton North History andtheAcademy Historians WritingFiction:OutsidetheAcademy Comparative NationalContext Historians asPublicIntellectualsin L ate

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Laura Croghan Kamoie,U.S.Nav Andrea Robertson C David B. Coe, author Jennifer L.Goloboy Thomas Bender Jürgen Kocka, Wissenschaftsz Ellen F. Fitzpatrick, U Partha Chatterjee,ColumbiaUniv Roger A.Chartier, CollègedeF Thomas Bender, Ne Annie Polland, Lower EastS Mae M.Ngai,ColumbiaUniversity Sarah Henry Hasia R.Diner, N Jack K (John p.m. M co-founder, Museum ofChineseinAmerica orning P

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AHA ­ 28/10/14 6:26PM 9

January 3, 2015

6060 Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions

94. Measuring Faculty Productivity for Department Chairs 97. African Americans and Maoist China New York Hilton, Sutton South New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division Chair: Charles W. Hayford, independent scholar Chair: Tracy E. K’Meyer, University of Louisville Papers: The Reception of Paul Robeson in Maoist China Yunxiang Gao, Ryerson University Panel: Michael P. Breen, Reed College Paul R. Deslandes, University of Vermont Convenient Optimists? U.S. Transnational Actors in the Eyes of the Diane P. Koenker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign PRC Foreign Policy Establishment, 1949–66 David Rich Lewis, Western Historical Quarterly and Utah State Matthew Johnson, Grinnell College University W.E.B. Du Bois, China, and the “World Revolution” Lawrence Martin, Stony Brook University Bill Mullen, Purdue University Comment: Ann Waltner, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

95. Digital Pedagogy for History: Lightning Round Sheraton New York, Conference Room D 98. American Dispositions: Boredom, Rationality, and Aggression in Historical Perspective Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division 0101 0111 New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Using the “lightning r ound” method of spr eading ideas in the 1010 Chair: Debbie Weinstein, Brown University digital humanities, this experimental panel featur es one-minute expositions on innovative projects and cool ideas in digital history for teaching Papers: “Perfectly Contented to Sit and Look Out the Window All Day”: and learning. Five or more panelists will be invited to register via Twitter at the The Automaton and the Self in American Psychiatry, 1920s–1970s meeting. Audience members will also be invited to join the lightning round. Heather Anne Alexandra Murray, University of Ottawa Chair: Mark Tebeau, Arizona State University Rethinking the Triumph of the Therapeutic: Psychology, Sex, and Panel: Kalani Craig, Indiana University Bloomington Living Rationally in Twentieth-Century America Jason A. Heppler, Stanford University Michael Pettit, York University Patrick Jones, University of Nebraska–Omaha The Kidnapping at Gombe: Decolonization, Evolution, and Shane Landrum, Florida International University Human Behavior Sharon Leon, George Mason University Erika Milam, Princeton University Jeffrey W. McClurken, University of Mary Washington Comment: Rebecca Jo Plant, University of California, San Diego Elijah Meeks, Stanford University Kathryn Tomasek, Wheaton College (Massachusetts) Tom Scheinfeldt, University of Connecticut Jesse Stommel, University of Wisconsin–Madison 99. Blogging and the Future of Scholarship 0101 Comment: Mark Tebeau New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A 0111 1010 Joint session with the Association for Computers and the Humanities 96. The Global Tuning Project: Reframing Chair: Clay Risen, New York Times Historical Study in the European Union, Latin Topics: Rewiring the Historian’s Craft America, and the Scholarship on Teaching and Sara Georgini, Boston University Learning On Writing in Public Sheraton New York, Conference Room E Michelle Moravec, Rosemont College Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division The Immanent Frame, Secularism Studies, and Interstitial Spaces Chair: Daniel J. McInerney, Utah State University Jonathan VanAntwerpen, The Henry Luce Foundation Papers: Tuning Educational Structures in the European Union, Russia, Comment: Clay Risen Georgia, Central Asia, and Australia: The Subject Area of History Ann Katherine Isaacs, University of Pisa Tuning América Latina:The History Work Group’s Outline of 100. Bodily Disciplines: Writing at the Interface of History “Subject Specific Competences” and Public Health Fernando Purcell, Pontificia nivU ersidad Católica de Chile New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Tuning and the International Conversation on Teaching and Chair: Alexandra Stern, University of Michigan Learning David Pace, Indiana University Bloomington Panel: Christopher Hamlin, University of Notre Dame Sarah Hodges, University of Warwick Comment: Daniel J. McInerney Julie Livingston, New York University and Rutgers University–New Brunswick Samuel Roberts, Columbia University

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 60 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 61 Saturday

Saturday, Comment: Chair: in advance tothechairforinclusionindiscussionperiod. will beinvitedtosubmitquestions to discussion.Participants be devoted will time remaining The their keyconclusions. e minutes tosummariz seven take Papersand commentator’s remarks will beavailable in advance. Presenters will Comment: Topics: Chair: Chair: Papers: Comment: Papers: 103. 102. 101.

Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East Humanities Joint sessionwiththeAssociationforComputersand New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Challenges—Russia andBeyond eHistory andtheDiscipline:NewPerspectives Digital HistoriesofSlavery Use inIsraelandtheUnitedStates Comparing LinguisticDiversity:MinorityLanguage

Jessica Johnson, Michigan S Vanessa M.Holden, Michigan S Working Group andDigitalHistories ofSlavery Taste theSweat toCheckforS Don Debats, Flinders U Alexandria, Virginia Complexity ofSlavery inaNineteenth-Century Commercial City, Slavery Confr Edward Baptist, CornellU American Slavery Freedom ontheMo Philip Misevich, St. J Farina Mir, U Zevi Gutfreund, LouisianaS Schools during World War II Lessons inLoyalty: The Contradictor Liora Halperin, University ofColoradoBoulder Revival: The Case ofJewish Palestine Resituating Multilingualism Rosina Lozano,Princeton Univ Language Use Spanish inO John Bezis-S The Audience Jeffrey P. B atPlayHistory Christopher Stolarski, University of Photographs ofRussia Boris Dralyuk, University ofCalifornia,LosAngeles intheBackgrHistory Nikolay Koposov Philip Misevich Jennifer E.Guiliano, Univ William G. Thomas III,Univ American Families (Dis)covering Legal R Race: ,

rooks, Johns Hopkins University January January elfa, Wheaton College(Massachusetts) fficial U.S.S onted: Using toUnderstand DigitalHistory the niversity ofMichigan , Georgia Institute of Technology ve: ADatabase ofFugitives from North ’s Past ound ohn’s University niversity ettings: New Mexico ecords andtheFragmentary Histories of ersity of Maryland atCollegeParkersity ofMaryland niversity in theHistory of Nationalist Language tate University tate University atBaton Rouge ickness: The Queering Slavery ersity ofNebraska–Lincoln ersity tate University

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10 01 a.m.–12:00 01 1011 Papers: Comment: Papers: Comment: Chair: Chair: Comment: Papers: Chair: 105. 104. 106.

New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda New York Hilton, Madison Suite Relations Joint sessionwiththeSociety forHistorians ofAmericanForeign New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Television ShouldMattertoHistorians Historicizing AmericanBroadcasting:WhyRadioand Century Architecture andInfrastructureintheNineteenth Global CirculationoftheImageryIconic the 1973OilShockonU.S.ForeignRelations History, Economics,andtheWide-RangingImpactsof

a.m.

Conservative MovementConservative Death ofJFKthrough aMedia Studies Lens The Man Who W Allison Perlman, University ofCalifornia,I Bonnie G.Smith Hazel Hahn, S Nineteenth-Century France Imagery of“Indian Vimalin Rujivacharakul, U Aesthetics inAfghanistan Images ofGuldara S Peter Christensen, University ofR The Suez Canal andIts G Bonnie G.Smith, Rutgers Univ Transnational Media History Amy C.Offner, Univ David Wight, U The Triangle tothe Nile: Christopher R. W. Dietrich, F Economic Order, 1973–75 intheUnitedDemagoguery N Betsy A.Beasley, Power after1973 Oil Futures: P Francis J.Gavin, Univ Allison Perlman Heather Hendershot, Massachusetts I Firing Line,William F Aniko Bodroghkozy, Univ NationalAssassination, T Michele Hilmes, Univ Petrodollars intoEgypt p.m.

esos 6 Sessions

etrochemical andtheCulture Services of U.S.Global esos 61 Sessions eattle University niversity of California,Irvine ent to War: World War and II,Race, Yale University ” Architecture, Exoticism, andPrint Culture in tupa: Politics andPortrayal ofBuddhist ersity ofPennsylvania . Buckley Jr., andtheAmerican ersity of Wisconsin–Madison ersity of Texas at Austin The United States’ Effort toRecycle rauma, and Television: Historicizing the lobal Image ersity of Virginia niversity ofDelaware ations: The New International ordham University ersity–New Brunswick ochester nstitute of Technology rvine rvine 28/10/14 6:26PM 1

January 3, 2015

6262 Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions

107. Hydroelectric Development in Mexico, Palestine, Papers: “We Defend Nations Not Tribes”: The United Nations and and the U.S. South: Three Cases of Modern State Statecraft in Somalia under Trusteeship, 1950–60 Coproduction Annalisa Urbano, Universität Bayreuth New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A The International Labor Organization’s Role in Colonial Labor Chair: Isa Blumi, Georgia State University Reform within the Portuguese and British Empires, 1945–63 José Pedro Monteiro, University of Lisbon Papers: Powering Mexico: Hydroelectricity, Foreign Interests, and the Modernizing State, 1900–20 Debating Dependency at the United Nations: The Belgian Thesis Jonathan Hill, City University of New York, Graduate Center and Europe’s Critique of Informal Empires in a Decolonizing World Jessica Pearson-Patel, University of Oklahoma Producing National Spaces in the Levantine Borderlands, 1920–54 Fredrik Meiton, New York University Comment: Jennifer L. Foray, Purdue University Nature and the Nation: Hydropower, Political Economy, and the Post-World War II U.S. South Casey Cater, Georgia State University 111. Medici Reborn: Modernizing the Renaissance Archive in a Digital Age 0101 Comment: The Audience 0111 Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom 1010 Joint session with the Renaissance Society of America 108. Image and Identity in the German Reformation Chair: Alessio Assonitis, The Medici Archive Project New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Topics: The Birth of News and the Medici Digital Archive (BIA) Joint session with the Central European History Society Brendan Dooley, University College Cork Chair: Shira Brisman, University of Wisconsin–Madison Jewish History and Culture in the BIA Digital Archive: Problems Papers: Sebald Beham’s Moses and Aaron: On Godly Law and and Solutions Charismatic Authority in the Radical Reformation Piergabriele Mancuso, Medici Archive Project Mitchell Merback, Johns Hopkins University Researching Women Patrons, Collectors, and Artists in the Medici Protestant Family Portraits: Art and Evidence Digital Archive (BIA) Andrew Morrall, Bard Graduate Center Sheila ffolliott, George Mason University Protestant Baroque: The Afterlife of a Reformation Altarpiece Medici Grand Duchesses and their Pharmacies Bridget Heal, University of St. Andrews Sheila Barker, Medici Archive Project Comment: Joseph Koerner, Harvard University The Construction of a New Research Program at Medici Archive Project: France and the Medici Joanna Milstein, Medici Archive Project 109. In Loco Parentis: Redefining Childhood through ­ State-Sponsored Child Protection Initiatives in the Twentieth Century 112. Music in Motion: Changing Performance Venues and Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West New Disciplinary Approaches Chair: Pamela F. Scully, Emory University Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West Papers: Discourses of Gender, Childhood, and Delinquency: A Look at Joint session with the Central European History Society Childhood and Citizenship in Industrial Schools in Colonial Chair: Walter Frisch, Columbia University Jamaica, 1918–38 Papers: Leaving Bayreuth: Reflections on the Local ppropriationA of Shani Roper, Smith College Richard Wagner’s Parsifal Hawking or Street Walking? Petites Vendeuses and Sexual Assault Anthony Steinhoff, Université du Québec à Montréal in French West Africa, 1920s–40s French Concerts in Berlin: Religious Music between the Jessica Reuther, Emory University Cosmopolitan and National “Juliet Was Just Thirteen”: The Age of Consent and the Transition Andrei Pesic, Princeton University to Adulthood in the United States, 1965–90 The German Lied and the Songs of Black Volk Timothy Cole, Temple University Kira Thurman, University of Akron Comment: The Audience Comment: Celia S. Applegate, Vanderbilt University

110. International Organizations and the End of Empire in Twentieth-Century Africa New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Sponsored by the National History Center of the American Historical Association Chair: Elizabeth Borgwardt, Washington University in Saint Louis

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 62 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 63 Saturday, Chair: Comment: Papers: Chair: Comment: Papers: Chair: Comment: Chair: Papers: 116. 115. 114. 113.

Joint session with theConference onLatinAmerican History New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom New York Hilton, ConcourseD Asia Joint sessionwiththeSociety forAdvancing theHistoryofSouth Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Historical StudiesofScience inLatinAmerica Ruptures andContinuitiesinSpaceTime: Rethinking theGullahGeechee Provincializing EuropeanIntellectualHistory Radio: India,BritishEastAfrica,andFrance Political PowerandPopularMobilizationonthe

the Women Who Researched andImagined theGullah, 1915–91 Geechee The Audience Andrew M.Daily The Place ofEmpire: S Marc A.Matera, U Histories Imperial/Post-imperial Londonand Black A Sandrine Sanos, T and theSex of Violence The Philosopher’s Body:S M. Gary W Derek W Isabel Huacuja Alonso,Univ “Indian Masses” Hindustani News Bulletins, theS Caroline Ritter, Univ Development ofBritish Broadcasting inAfrica “Listened To Evan Spritz 1936–40 Not Mobilizing theMasses: F J Rick A. Lopez, AmherstCollege Rick A.Lopez, Orville V Melissa Cooper, Univ Gendering Gullah Makers: R Ras Michael Bro Rethinking Gullah-Geechee R Edda L.Fields-Black, CarnegieM “Lowcountry C Orville V udith Coffin,U Center . Vaillant, University ofMichigan ernon Burton ernon Burton, ClemsonUniversity

er, New York University ” Rather ” Rather Than “Heard”: The BBCandthe ilder, CityUniversity ofNew York, Graduate January reoles”: Rethinking ofthe Gullah theHistory wn, Southern Illinois University Carbondale niversity of , University ofMemphis exas A&MUniversity atCorpusChristi niversity ofCalifornia,Santa Cruz ersity ofCalifornia,Berkeley ersity ofSouth Carolina Columbia patial Thinking inEdouard Glissant imone deBeauvoir, theAlgerian War, rench andthePeople, Radio ecovering theIntellectual Motives of Texas atAustin eligious Cultures ersity of Texas atAustin econd World War, andthe

ellon University 3,

10:30 tlantic Intellectual

a.m.–12:00 Comment:

Papers: Panel: Chair: Comment: Papers: Chair: Comment: Papers: Chair: 117. 119. 118.

New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 Joint sessionwiththeConference onLatinAmericanHistory New York Hilton, Regent Parlor Slavery andAntislaveryintheAntebellumNorth Feminism inthe1960sand1970s Transnational andTrans-disciplinaryRoutes:Black in LatinAmerica Sporting BodiesandPolitic:GenderSoccer

World ofIndigeneity intheConstruction Twentieth Centuries Geodesic ScienceandLandscapeArt intheEighteenth through Jordana Dym,Skidmor Shelley Garrigan, Nor the P Truth inNumbers: S Ernesto B.Capello,Macalester College Graphic andNarr Rick A.Lopez Depicting Mexican Natur Joseph Murphy, CityU Sarah L.H.Gronningsater James Gigantino, Univ Corey Brooks, Sean Wilentz, P Robyn Spencer W. ChrisJohnson, Univ Black Power toSelf-Help Britain’s B Choonib Lee,Stony Brook U Black Panther W Sarah Seidman, Museum of theCityN Feminism andRevolution: A Robyn Spencer Brenda J.Elsey Joshua Nadel, Nor Mexico City Gravel P J.Campbell,InstituteCourtney ofHistorical R “Ela Vale um Jeffrey Richey, 1914–30 Rethinking Masculinities: Argentine Roger Kittleson, Williams College 1954–62 Brazilian World Cup and Miss Universe Press Coverage, p.m. Studies andCaliforniaInstitute of Technology of Advanced Study, University ofLondon orfirian E itches andBorrowed Balls: Gender and Women’s Soccerin lack Liberation Front: Transnational Feminisms from

Time deFutebol”: Gender, Victory, andLossin esos 63 Sessions ra , Hofstra University Weber State University York CollegeofPennsylvania , LehmanCollege,CityUniversity ofNew York rinceton University omen inthe Third World ative Depictions oftheEquatorial Andes in th Carolina CentralUniversity haping theModern Mexican Nation during th Carolina State University ersity ofArkansas e College niversity ofNew York, Graduate Center ersity ofMemphis e: Science, Visuality, andtheNatural , McNeil Center forEarlyAmerican ngela Davis inCuba niversity Women inMen’s Soccer, ew ew York esearch, School 28/10/14 6:26PM

January 3, 2015

64 Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions

120. New Perspectives on the Spanish Atlantic: The Slave American Catholic Historical Association Session 11 Trade to Spanish America, Part 2 German Catholics and National Socialism before 1933 New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Frank J. Coppa, St. John’s University Chair: Elena Schneider, University of California, Berkeley Papers: The Catholic Center Party, the Bavarian People’s Party, and National Socialism during the Late Weimar Period Papers: “Trading Slaves as If This Port Were Open”: Buenos Aires and the Martin R. Menke, Rivier University South Atlantic Slave Trade, 1580–1700 Kara Schultz, Vanderbilt University Germany’s Catholic Fraternities and Their Confrontation with National Socialism on a Volatile University Landscape Enslaved Africans in the Province of Guatemala, 1600–50 Jeremy Stephen Roethler, Schreiner University Paul Lokken, Bryant University Comment: Frank J. Coppa Urban Slavery in New Spain: A Study on Oaxaca City, 1680–1710 Sabrina Smith, University of California, Los Angeles American Catholic Historical Association Session 12 Comment: Alex Borucki, University of California, Irvine The New Sommervogel Project: Jesuit Studies Bibliographical Database Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 121. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 5: Chair: Robert Maryks, Boston College Criminalization and Queer History Papers: Jesuit Studies Bibliographic Database Sheraton New York, Conference Room B Robert Maryks Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Jesuit Bibliographic Database Transgender History Kasper Volk, Boston College Chair: Jen Manion, Connecticut College Bibliographic Database Christopher Staysniak, Boston College Topics: Identity and Activism: The Effort to Repeal the Sodomy Laws in 1820s Britain Comment: Kasper Volk Charles J. Upchurch, Florida State University “Trouble over Sex”: Racialized Gender Normativity and the American Society of Church History Session 10 Construction of Penal Sex-Segregation Revelation, Retrospection, and Representation: The Elias Vitulli, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Challenge of Christian Science History Spotlight on the Prodigy: Narrating Peripheral Taiwan through New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Queerness and Criminality Chair: Ann Braude, Harvard Divinity School Howard Chiang, University of Warwick Papers: No Pastor but the Word: Mary Baker Eddy’s Reformation of Comment: Jen Manion Protestant Textualism David Holland, Harvard Divinity School Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Building Respectability: Globalizing Christian Science Architecture Affiliated Societies Paul Ivey, University of Arizona Community, Culture, Text: The Social Development of Mary Baker Eddy’s Science and Health Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Amy Voorhees, Principia College American Catholic Historical Association Session 10 Comment: Ann Braude ACHA Presidental Roundtable Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 American Society of Church History Session 11 Chair: Angelyn Dries, Saint Louis University Futures of the American Religious Past: A Conversation Topics: From Graduate Student to Junior Faculty Status: Some about Mark Noll’s America’s God and John Lardas Connections and Issues Modern’s Secularism in Antebellum America Angelyn Dries New York Hilton, East Suite Graduate Student to Junior Faculty: Connections and Issues Chair: Laurie Maffly-Kipp, Washington University in Saint Louis Charles T. Strauss, Mount Saint Mary’s University Panel: Sonia Hazard, Duke University Comments: Angelyn Dries Alexandra Kaloyanides, Yale University Charles T. Strauss Dana Logan, Indiana University Bloomington Caleb Maskell, Princeton University Comments: John Modern, Franklin and Marshall College Mark A. Noll, University of Notre Dame

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 64 28/10/14 6:26 PM Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions 65

American Society of Church History Session 12 Central European History Society Session 5 Far from Heaven: Perspectives on Hell through the New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Ages Part 2: Surviving and Adapting: Reconstructing Central New York Hilton, Holland Suite European Urban Life after War Chair: Randall Styers, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sheraton New York, Conference Room H Papers: Dismantling Hell in the Fourth Century: The Egyptian Revival of Chair: Michael Liddon Meng, Clemson University Origen Papers: Urban Warfare and Reconstruction during the Napoleonic War: Robin Young, Catholic University of America Case Studies from Hamburg and Leipzig Hell on Earth: The Perspective of the “Medieval Manichees” Katherine Aaslestad, West Virginia University Dyan H. Elliott, Northwestern University The Home Town as a Redemptive Postwar Geography: The Case of Competing Conceptions of Hell in the Gilded Age Cologne, 1945–65 Gary Smith, Grove City College Jeremy DeWaal, Freie Universität Berlin “Perverted Devotion”: English Catholic Liberals and the Critique Outpost of Freedom: Remigrés’ Reappropriation of Berlin as a of Hell Cosmopolitan Metropolis and its Political Potency in the Early Cold War Elizabeth A. Clark, Duke University Scott Krause, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Comment: Randall Styers Reinventing the Socialist Heritage in Post-Cold War Berlin: The Karl Marx Allee as Urban Icon Eszter Gantner, Humboldt University Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Ayse Nur Erek, Yeditepe University Session 3 Comment: Michael Liddon Meng Circulation of People and Ideas in the Iberian Atlantic in the Age of Independence, Part 1: Key Historical Agents Operating in the Iberian Atlantic in the Age of Chinese Historians in the United States Session 3 Independence Transmigration and Transformation: Demographic and Sheraton New York, Conference Room I Cultural Changes and Exchanges Sheraton New York, Conference Room C Chair: Karen Racine, University of Guelph Chair: Jingyi Song, College at Old Westbury (State University of Papers: An Itinerant Liberal: Almeida Garrett’s Exilic Itineraries and the New York) Evolution of His Political Thought Gabriel Paquette, Johns Hopkins University Papers: Christianity and the Transformation of Medicine in Early Twentieth-Century China Transnational Influences and ulturalC Transfers in the Formation Liyan Liu, Georgetown College of Spanish Anti-Slavery Discourses, 1802–34: The Anglophilia of Agustín De Argüelles Confucius in the Sooner State: How the Oklahoma University Jesus Sanjurjo, University of Leeds Confucius Institute Survived and Succeeds Xiaobing Li, University of Central Oklahoma The Transatlantic Life and Times of Manuel de la Bárcena Scott Eastman, Creighton University Inserting the Visible Hand: Government in Chinese Students’ Migration and Transformation in the Cold War America and the Making of Baldomero Espartero Hongshan Li, Kent State University at Tuscarawas Adrian Shubert Sr., York University Past and Present: The Flourishing Chinese American Community Comment: Natalia Sobrevilla, University of Kent in San Diego Yi Sun, University of San Diego January 3, 2015 3, January Association of Ancient Historians Session 2 Comment: Xiansheng Tian, Metropolitan State University of Denver Childhood and Education in the Ancient World Sheraton New York, Conference Room F Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Chair: Rachael B. Goldman, College of New Jersey History Session 7 Papers: Beating to Learn: Theory, Practice, and Resistance Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 6: Queering W. Martin Bloomer, University of Notre Dame the Media: LGBTQ History, Television, and the Socializing Mothers: The Education of and by Women in Classical Cyberqueer Archive Athens New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Viktoria Raeuchle, Freie Universität Berlin Chair: Damon R. Young, University of Michigan The Futility of Educating Alcibiades Papers: Queer Talk: Alan Bennett and BBC TV in the 1980s Elizabeth Kosmetatou, University of Illinois at Springfield Amy Villarejo, Cornell University Pedagogy and Punishment: Distinguishing between Erudire and Video Renegades and Lesbian TV “Broadcasting” in 1990s France Inuria in Roman Education and Law Tamara Chaplin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Barbara Ellen Logan, University of Wyoming Re-Mediation and Ephemerality in Queer Historiography Hollis Griffin, enisonD University Comment: Damon R. Young

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6666 Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions

Conference on Latin American History Session 20 Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 4 Soccer and Society in South America The Living Dead, Microscopic Fibers, Invisible Cloaks, Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 and Radical Cartoons: Methods of Textile Studies for Chair: Heather Levi, Temple University Historians New York Hilton, Concourse E Papers: Dreaming of Sports City: Stadium Construction, Urban Transformation, and Soccer Clubs in Buenos Aires 1955–73 Chair: Kate Haulman, American University Alex Galarza, Michigan State University Papers: Costume Communities: The Flattening Field of Clothing Scholars, Dual Passions: A History of Fútbol Films in Argentina, 1933–90 Living Historians, Entrepreneurs, and Bloggers Rwany Sibaja, University of Maryland Baltimore County Samantha Dorsey, City of Bowie Museums From Vagrants to Referents of Cultural Change: Colombian The Analytical Puzzle of Martha Washington’s Cross-Stitched Professional Footballers in Medellín, 1960s–70s Chair Cushions: Study Design, Challenges, and Results Ingrid Bolivar, University of Wisconsin–Madison Anne Kingery-Schwartz, Kingery Conservation, LLC A “Public for Export”: Staging the Nation at Argentina’s 1978 Material Culture without the Material: Combining Sources to World Cup Study Slave Clothing Jennifer L. Schaefer, Emory University Katie Knowles, Rice University Comment: Heather Levi Visual Culture and the Bloomer Costume: Using Images as Sources Laura J. Ping, City University of New York, Graduate Center

Conference on Latin American History Session 21 Comment: The Audience Nineteenth-Century Colonizations: Business, State Formation, and Planned Migrations in Latin America, History of Science Society 1810s–70s Making History Together: Networks of Collaboration Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West and the History of History Chair: Benjamin Bryce, University of Toronto Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 Papers: Colonization and State Formation in the Frontier Provinces of Chair: Margaret C. Jacob, University of California, Los Angeles Cauca and Antioquía, Colombia, 1825–70 Papers: Rewriting Knowledge of This Realm: Astronomy, Fujiwara no Sebastián Martínez Botero, Universidad de Caldas Michinori’s Intellectual and Political Networks, and the Honcho¯ “Destined by Divine Providence”: Reconsidering Anglo-American Seiki Chronicle Immigration to Mexican Texas and the Geopolitics of Nineteenth- Kristina Buhrman, Florida State University Century North America A Good Darwinian? Winwood Reade, Charles Darwin, and the Sarah K. M. Rodríguez, University of Pennsylvania Making of a Late Victorian Evolutionary Epic The Sociedade Promotora da Colonização: International Ian Hesketh, Centre for the History of European Discourses, Conjunctures and Ideology-Driven Migrations, 1836–41 University of Queensland José Juan Pérez Meléndez, University of Chicago Being Hubert Howe Bancroft: Bancroft’s History Company and the A New Poland in South America? The Establishment of the First Scandal of Collaboration Polish Colony in Paraná, Brazil, 1860s–70s Travis E. Ross, University of Utah Lenny A. Ureña Valerio, University of Michigan Comment: Margaret C. Jacob Comment: Benjamin Bryce National Endowment for the Humanities Conference on Latin American History Session 22 NEH Special Initiatives, Programs, and Grant Agrarian Science, Modernization, Social Engineering, Opportunities for Historians and the Idea of Latin America: Transnational New York Hilton, Concourse H Perspectives from Brazil, Colombia, and the Caribbean Chair: Jennifer Serventi, National Endowment for the Humanities Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Panel: Joseph Phelan, National Endowment for the Humanities Chair: Jeffrey Needell, University of Florida Daniel Sack, National Endowment for the Humanities Leah Weinryb Grohsgal, National Endowment for the Papers: “Was It Hatched in Syracuse?” Engineers, Agronomists, and the Humanities Making of a Transnational Brazilian Elite, 1868–90 Julia Huston Nguyen, National Endowment for the Judy Bieber, University of New Mexico Humanities Enlightened Agriculture: International Science and Agricultural Modernization in the Revista Agrícola de Instituto Fluminense de Agricultura, 1869–89 C. Teresa Cribelli, University of Alabama Cultivating Racial Democracy: Latin American History from a Tropical Agriculture Institute Timothy Lorek, Yale University Comment: Jeffrey Needell

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Oral History Association Society for Italian Historical Studies Session 2 Oral Historians and Journalists: Rights, Rules, and Intellectual Ex-elites and the Struggle for Belonging in Responsibilities Post-World War II Europe Sheraton New York, Conference Room K New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Chair: Clifford Kuhn, Oral History Association Chair: Michael R. Hayse, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey Panel: Mary Marshall Clark, Columbia University Center for Oral Papers: Fascists in a Post-Fascist World: Ex-elites Negotiate Belonging in History Democratic Italy, 1945–60 Nicholas Lemann, Columbia University Graduate School of Rhiannon Evangelista, Kennesaw State University Journalism Anti-Fascist Intellectuals at the Nexus of Cultural Crisis and Regime Beth McMurtrie, Chronicle of Higher Education Change John Neuenschwander, author, A Guide to Oral History and the Mark W. Clark, University of Virginia at Wise Law The Cultural Cold War over Spain’s Lost Revolution: Exiled Spanish Intellectuals, the Politics of Transition, and the Intersection of History Polish American Historical Association Session 2 and Literature Solidarity: At Home and Abroad Jonathan Sherry, University of Pittsburgh New York Hilton, Lincoln Suite Comment: Charles Killinger, University of Central Florida Chair: Anna Mazurkiewicz, University of Gdansk Papers: To Be a Woman in the Male-Dominated World of the Lenin World History Association Session 1 Shipyard Workers: Anna Walentynowicz’s Quest in Life Multi-religious Societies in World History Anna Muller, University of Michigan–Dearborn Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2 Andrzej Wajda’s Solidarity Trilogy Chair: Alan Kramer, independent scholar Sheila Skaff, Columbia University Papers: Multi-religious Societies in World History: Comparative/Conceptual The Return Migration of Solidarity Refugees Approaches to Peace Mary Patrice Erdmans, Case Western Reserve University Alan Kramer Comment: The Audience Practicing, Preaching, and Proselytizing Islam in Multi-religious Societies in World History Polish American Historical Association Session 3 Abdul Karim Khan, Leeward Community College and University The Long Nineteenth Century: Themes in History of Hawai’i New York Hilton, Concourse B Emergence of Geography as Race in a Multi-religious Country: Tolerance and Conflict in Colonial and ost-ColonialP Modern India Chair: Neal Pease, University of Wisconsin– Lavanya Vemsani, Shawnee State University Papers: “Domestic Education” and “Work at the Foundations”: Class, Comment: The Audience Gender, and Progressive Reformism in the United States and Poland Marta Cieslak, University at Buffalo (State University of New York) Local Arrangements Committee Tour Future War of John Bloch versus Norman Angell’s Great Illusion Andrzej Pieczewski, University of Lodz To Save the Union; or, For the Just and Right Cause? Why Poles Saturday, January 3, 10:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Fought in the Civil War, 1861–65 Piotr Derengowski, University of Gdansk and University at Tour 13: Big Onion: The Upper East Side January 3, 2015 3, January Buffalo (State University of New York) New York Hilton, Americas Hall I The Battle of Maciejowice and Tadeusz Kosciuszko’s Myth Tour leader: A graduate student, historian, guide from Big Onion Anna Cortes, Polish Academy of Science Walking Tours Comment: The Audience Explore one of the most luxurious neighborhoods in the world as w e delve into the personalities, scandals, and institutions that have made it so legendary. Our tour will include a visit inside one of New York’s most significant historic galleries Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Session 7 and landmarked townhouses. Stops could include the P ark Avenue Armory, The Millennial Sovereign: Sacred Kingship and the Frick Mansion, and sites associated with Richar d Morris Hunt, Alexander Sainthood in Islam by A. Azfar Moin: Discussion of the Calder, and Stanford White, as w ell as the M organ, Tiffany, Vanderbilt, and 2013 John F. Richards Prize Winning Book Houdini families. Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately 1.5 Chair: Neilesh Bose, St. John’s University miles, at a moderate pace, during the two-hour tour. Limit: 25 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers, $15 students Panel: Hussein Fancy, University of Michigan Teena Purohit, Boston University Jonathan L. Sheehan, University of California, Berkeley Comment: A. Azfar Moin, University of Texas–Austin

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6868 Saturday, Saturday, January January 3, 3,10:30 Luncheons a.m.–12:00 and p.m.Other Sessions Events

Saturday, January 3, 12:15–2:00 p.m. Affiliated Societies Table Display Conference on Asian History Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Saturday, January 3, 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. Luncheon New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade Benares, 240 W 56th Street, New York, NY 10019 An opportunity to meet with members of the AHA’s affiliated societies, eviewr Presiding: Stefan Tanaka, University of California, San Diego materials, and talk with officers. Neilesh Bose, St. John’s University Speaker: Writing Indian History after Subaltern Studies Dilip Menon, University of Witswatersrand Film Festival

Open Forum Saturday, January 3, 12:00–1:30 p.m. New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon Ghosts of Amistad Saturday, January 3, 12:30–1:30 p.m. Tony Buba, director; Marcus Rediker, producer (2014) Meet the Editors and Staff of the American Historical Review Marcus Rediker, University of P ittsburgh, and Tony Buba, filmmaker, will New York Hilton, Concourse E introduce the film and lead a discussion afterward. What do y ou want fr om the flagship journal of the American istoricalH Association? The editors and staff of the AHR invite members to attend an informal, open session to express their views on the journal. We are prepared Luncheons to offer advice on how members might best prepare articles for submission and tell them what they should expect from the review process. Most importantly, we are eager to hear what you have to say. Please bring your brown-bag lunch Saturday, January 3, 12:00–2:00 p.m. and join us. American Catholic Historical Association Presidential Luncheon Luncheon Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite

Saturday, January 3, 12:15–1:45 p.m. Saturday, January 3, 12:30–2:00 p.m. American Society of Church History Department Chairs’ Luncheon: Measuring Faculty Lunch Celebrating the Career of Grant Wacker Productivity: A Discussion New York Hilton, Concourse B New York Hilton, New York Suite Chair: Philip Goff, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division. Panel: Lydia Hoyle, Campbell University Department chairs are invited to shar e experiences, discuss common issues, Mark A. Noll, University of Notre Dame and receive encouragement fr om their colleagues. I ncoming, current, and Laura Stern, Millbrook United Methodist Church former chairs are welcome to attend. David Weaver-Zercher, Messiah College Tickets are $30 for chairs who are individual members of the AHA, $40 for chairs of departments that are institutional members of the AHA, and $60 for Conference on Latin American History nonmembers. Tickets can be pur chased in advance through the registration form or at the meeting at the onsite registration counters. Luncheon Sheraton New York, Central Park West Workshop AHA Modern European History Section New York Hilton, Concourse C Presiding: Caroline Ford, University of California, Los Angeles and Saturday, January 3, 12:30–2:00 p.m. section chair, AHA Modern European History Section Digital Projects Lightning Round Speaker: Who’s Afraid of the Auslandsdeutsche? Latin America and the Sheraton New York, Conference Room I Promise of Respatializing Modern German History H. Glenn Penny, University of Iowa The luncheon is open to all. Tickets can be pur chased in adv ance through the registration form or at the meeting at the onsite r egistration counters. Individuals who only want to hear the speech are invited to arrive at 12:45 p.m.

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 68 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 69 Saturday, Tour leader:Daniel Levinson Wilk, Fashion Institute of Technology tothe oduction interdisciplinary auniqueintr Places—as istoric ofH Register National the on cemetery—listed e Manhattan’s lastactiv Discover Island. Manhattan on elopment urbandev frames this modestnaturallandscape,whichformstheonlystillactive Today, institutions. cemetery eleemosynary nineteenth-century ’snumerous also containthecommonburiallotsofsomecity grounds co-founder.The Society Ernst, Historical doctor andNew-York Hosack, hilip David and poet;P Moore, ke ClementClar merchant; Astor, Jacob Johnadventuress; Jumel, Eliza Madame I. Koch; and Edward Hall, Oakey A. Wood, ernando Cadwallader D.Colden,F YorkCity mayors New naturalist; its cultural meltingpot.Notable interments here include John James Audubon, York ew City’spast and eventful is apalimpsest ofN cemetery garden 24-acre issues. y War, in Revolutionary Steeped War, historicandcontemporar Civil this civic history,and socialhistory, between elation ens; unsungcitiz toconsiderthecorr and ominent and bothpr on events of interplay the explore to peopling of New York through the city’s class, race,ethnic,andgenderidentities; Trinitywalk uses to examinethe This Cemetery and thepast. Church present likely,the the endofline?More it isanintersectionbetween Isa cemetery Tour leader:Eric K. Washington, independent historianandauthorof on displayanddiscover how eachr Participants will view the variety of photographs,maps,documentsand objects exhibitions. y ongoing andtemporar ’s in themuseum displayed artifacts and of the Museum: During this interactive tour, participants will experiencetheart exhibitions. complimentary other experience multi-media the through history excitingcity’s the exploring in delight will YorkersNew New York City grow into themetropolis it istoday?Bothnewcomers and native (subject to demand): ed tours willbeoffer York.following ew The of theCityN the Museum at aselectionofexhibitions w tovie tunity theoppor e attendeeswillhav Tour Tour leaders:Museum oftheCityNew York staff York State’ Tour 16:TheRestaurantsofMadisonSquarePark, Saturday, January3,1:30–4:30p.m. Tour 15:MeltingPot,SixFeetUnder:TrinityChurch Saturday, January3,1:15–4:45p.m. Tour 14:MuseumoftheCityNewYork Saturday, January3,1:15–4:15p.m. Please note: ofthetourwilllasttwohours. The walkingpart L New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York Hilton, Americas Hall I 1859–2014 Washington Heights Cemetery asMuseforAmericanStudies: oca s mostsignificantbur Manhattanville: Old Heart of West Harlem Limit: 30people.$20members,$25nonmembers Limit: 25people.$20members,$25nonmembers l

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New York Hilton, ConcourseC Sponsored by theAHAProfessional Division New York Hilton, Sutton Center New York Hilton, Sutton North to Teach History Dissertation Choosing toEmbargo?WhatDowithYour Historical Practice:Poststructuralism Reassessing theInfluenceofClassicTheoryon Sessions A

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69 28/10/14 6:26PM

January 3, 2015

70 Saturday,Saturday, January January 3, 10:30 3, a.m.–12:002:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions

124. A Q & A with Publishers Writing Responses Students Will Use: Reinforcing Intellectual New York Hilton, Sutton South Values and Practices through Comments Nicole Wallack, Columbia University Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division Chair: Philippa Levine, University of Texas at Austin Panel: Gillian Berchowitz, Ohio University Press 128. An Atlantic Triangle: New England–Holland–Rio de la Robert Devens, University of Texas Press Tom Gray, Ashgate Publishing Plata Commercial Networks New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Joyce Seltzer, Harvard University Press Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Wim Klooster, Clark University 125. The State of History Museums: A Roundtable Papers: Varieties of Trade: A Dutch Merchant in the Rio de la Plata Discussion David Freeman, University of Missouri–Kansas City New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Carousing and Trade: Early American Merchants in Surinam Sponsored by the AHA Research Division Kim Todt, University of Louisiana at Lafayette Chair: Stephen Aron, University of California, Los Angeles and Autry New England–Rio de la Plata Connections: Trans-imperial National Center of the American West Networks in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions Fabricio Prado, College of William and Mary Panel: Steven Conn, Ohio State University Caroline Ford, University of California, Los Angeles Comment: Alison F. Games, Georgetown University Nancy L. Green, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Mark Meigs, Université de Paris–Diderot Valerie Paley, New-York Historical Society H. Glenn Penny, University of Iowa 129. Atypical Archives: Rendering the Past, Commemoration, and History in South and Central Asia New York Hilton, Clinton Suite 126. Assessing Student Learning in History New York Hilton, Regent Parlor Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Chair: Cynthia Talbot, University of Texas at Austin Chair: Anne Hyde, Colorado College Papers: Religiously Being, Historically Relating: Distinguishing the Papers: Assessing the Common Core Swaminarayan Sampradaya in Gujarat, India Joel Breakstone, Stanford University Shruti Patel, University of Washington Seattle Sam S. Wineburg, Stanford University Placing Partition: Alternative Histories of 1947 in India Teaching College History Amber Abbas, Saint Joseph’s University Maria Montoya, New York University Religious Processions and Urban Publics in Postcolonial Western Assessing Historical Thinking India Peter Seixas, University of British Columbia Arafaat Valiani, University of Oregon Kadriye Ercikan, University of British Columbia Locating the Past: The Case of Takht-i Sulaiman Jennifer Webster, University of Washington Seattle Comment: Cynthia Talbot 127. Student Writing: Assigning, Reading, Commenting Sheraton New York, Conference Room D 130. Being a Public Intellectual: Historians and the Public Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division New York Hilton, Concourse D Chair: David Laurence, Modern Language Association Chair: Julian Zelizer, Princeton University Topics: Integrating Writing Skills into History Lesson Plans Panel: Eric Foner, Columbia University Olivia Weisser, University of Massachusetts Boston Peniel Joseph, Tufts University Questions We Can’t Answer: The Secret to a Good Writing Michael Kazin, Georgetown University Assignment Claire Bond Potter, New School for Public Engagement James Seitz, University of Virginia Julian Zelizer Reading Like an (Academic) Historian Kurt Spellmeyer, Rutgers University–New Brunswick

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131. Biomedicine, Body Parts, and Aging in Africa, India, 134. Constructing Belonging, Making Place: Indigenous and the United States Peoples, Memory, and Migration in the Great Lakes New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Borderlands Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Chair: Megan Vaughan, King’s College, University of Cambridge Joint session with the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Papers: “Rhesus Sensitization in the Bantue”: Technology, Medicine, and Race in South African Blood Research Chair: Jean M. O’Brien, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Catherine Burns, University of the Witwatersrand Papers: Roots of Rebellion: Anishinaabeg of Upper Canada and the Surviving Experiments: The Afterlives of Chemotherapy Trials in Challenge of Transnationality Uganda Karen Marrero, Wayne State University Marissa Mika, University of Pennsylvania Veterans and Bureaucrats “Out in the Brush”: Anishinaabe Biomedical Opposition to Skin Lighteners Claims in Postbellum Michigan Lynn M. Thomas, University of Washington Seattle Michelle Cassidy, University of Michigan Recasting Aging and Degenerative Disease: International Experts Between Past and Presence: Settler Masculine Imaginings and and Studies on the Geographic Pathology of Cancer in India and Settler and Indigenous Encounters in Detroit, 1871–1922 , 1950–60 Kyle T. Mays, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, Mailman School of Public Health, Comment: The Audience Columbia University

Comment: Julie Livingston, New York University and Rutgers University– 135. Early Modern European Firms and the Challenge of New Brunswick Global Commerce New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A 132. Burning the Reichstag: A Dialogue between History Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies and Law Chair: Philip J. Stern, Duke University Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 Papers: Joint session with the Central European History Society The Royal African Company’s Competitors in the Transatlantic Slave Trade Database, 1672–1732 Chair: Andrew I. Port, Wayne State University Matthew David Mitchell, Sewanee: University of the South Panel: Hilary C. Earl, Nipissing University Honor, Civility, and Authority among English Merchants in Devin Owen Pendas, Boston College the Ottoman Empire: The Case of Sackville Crowe and Thomas Pamela E. Swett, McMaster University Bendish, 1645–66 Comment: Benjamin C. Hett, Hunter College, City University of New York Jason C. White, Appalachian State University A Tale of Failing Institutions and Firm Renewal—Cunertorf, Snel, Janssen & Co., 1570–95 133. Child of the Nation: The Politics of Childhood during Catia Antunes, Leiden University the Cuban Revolution New York Hilton, Madison Suite Comment: Philip J. Stern Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History 136. Ghosts, Grief, and Gas Masks: Subjectivity and Chair: Ada Ferrer, New York University Materiality in Britain’s Total Wars, c. 1914–45 Papers: ”To Save Our Children”: The Politics of Childhood in the Anti- New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B

Castro Struggle, 1959–62 2015 3, January Anita Casavantes Bradford, University of California, Irvine Joint session with the North American Conference on British Studies From Pioneers to Young Communists: Constructing Childhood in Chair: Gill Plain, University of St. Andrews Revolutionary Cuba Papers: Attending to Ghosts: Some Reflections on the Disavowals of Great Anne Luke, University of Derby War Historiography “This Is Why We Fight”: The Cuban Revolution, the Argentine Martin Francis, University of Cincinnati Left, and the Politics of Childhood, 1959–76 A Broken Silence: Remembrance of the War Dead in Interwar and James Shrader, University of California, San Diego Second World War Britain. The Antonio Maceo Brigade and the Politics of Cuban Émigré Lucy Noakes, University of Brighton Radicalism in 1970s America Facing Scientific avagery:S Gas Masks and the Materiality of Teishan Latner, University of California, Irvine Modern War in Britain’s Domestic Front, c. 1915–45 Comment: Lillian Guerra, University of Florida Susan R. Grayzel, University of Mississippi Comment: Gill Plain

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72 Saturday,Saturday, January January 3, 10:30 3, a.m.–12:002:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions

137. Global Perspectives on Modern Arabian History: Chair: Lawrence B. Glickman, Cornell University A View from Two Coasts Topics: “Achieving Self-Renewal”: The National Outdoor Leadership New York Hilton, Mercury Rotunda School and the Work of a Generation, 1960s–70s Chair: Toby C. Jones, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Phoebe S. K. Young, University of Colorado Boulder Papers: Gokaldas Khimji: A Twentieth-Century Banyan Merchant in Muscat Working for Fun but Not Profit: utdoorO Guides at the Center Calvin Allen, Shenandoah University and on the Margins Anne Gilbert Coleman, University of Notre Dame For Allah, Mammon, and Empire: Islamic Law and Capitalism in Oman and the Indian Ocean, c. 1880–1915 “An Adverse Effect on Nature”: Outdoor Recreation and the Fahad A. Bishara, College of William and Mary Lament of the Gearmaker Rachel Gross, University of Wisconsin–Madison A Political Economy of the Hajj, 1925–39 Nathan Hodson, Princeton University From Producing to Consuming: The End of the Volunteer Work Ethic in American Hiking Culture Mapping Micro-relations between the Omani Interior and Coast Silas A. Chamberlin, Lehigh University in the Nineteenth Century Nadav Samin, Dartmouth College Comment: The Audience 141. Proliferation and Counterproliferation: Historians and Political Scientists for Nuclear Studies Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East 138. Microhistories of the Illegal Slave Trade and the Old South Chair: Robert Jervis, Columbia University Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 Topics: Archives, History, Theory, and the Study of Nuclear Politics Chair: James Sidbury, Rice University Hal Brands, Duke University Papers: The Last Slaves of New Orleans History as the Link between Theory and Policy in Nuclear Adam Rothman, Georgetown University Proliferation Studies The Many Lives of Francisco: Luso-African Recaptives in Key West, Nuno Monteiro, Yale University Florida Alexandre Debs, Yale University Sharla M. Fett, Occidental College Studying Nuclear History of Difficult Countries:The Case of Identity, Mobility, and the Risks of Illegal Enslavement: Africans in South Asia the Old South Jayita Sarkar, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Randy J. Sparks, Tulane University University Comment: James Sidbury 142. Religion in Europe after the “Secular” 1960s 139. Muslim Destinies in Interwar Europe: Laying the Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West Foundations for European Islam Chair: Philip G. Nord, Princeton University Sheraton New York, Conference Room E Papers: The Catholic 1968: Humanae Vitae and the Global Shift from Joint session with the Central European History Society East-West to North-South Piotr H. Kosicki, University of Maryland at College Park Chair: Peter Wien, University of Maryland at College Park From a Society Free of Religion to Freedom of Conscience: How Papers: Deconstructing the Fascination of the Middle East with Europe Toleration Emerged from within Totalitarianism from Europe Victoria Smolkin-Rothrock, Wesleyan University Mehdi Sajid, University of Bonn From “Christian Nation” to a Multi-faith Society: Reimagining Dutch Converts to Islam and the Construction of Mosques in the Religion in Multicultural Britain Interwar Netherlands Daniel Loss, Harvard University Umar Ryad, University of Utrecht Comment: Hugh McLeod, University of Birmingham Rethinking the History of Muslim Jewish Relations: Jewish Convert Hugo Marcus and Muslim Responses to Nazism in Germany, 1933–39 143. Silence in the Archives: Transdisciplinary Approaches Marc Baer, London School of Economics and Political Science to Reading Absence in the Latin American Past Alimjan Idris and Islam in Four Germanys, 1916–59 Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom David Motadel, Gonville and Caius College, University of Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Cambridge Chair: Karen Graubart, University of Notre Dame Comment: Peter Wien Panel: Kathryn J. Burns, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Kittiya Lee, California State University, Los Angeles 140. Nature, Culture, and Work: Consumption and Politics María Elena Martinez, University of Southern California in Outdoor Labor and Leisure Pete Sigal, Duke University New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 72 28/10/14 6:26 PM Saturday, January 3, 2:30–4:3010:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions p.m. Sessions 73

144. Teaching Liberal Arts in “Illiberal” Places 148. Urban History, Urban Planning, Architectural History, Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West and Civic Engagement: Interdisciplinary Encounters Chair: Joanna Waley-Cohen, New York University– between the Past and Present Shanghai New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Topics: Teaching Revolutions during the Arab Spring Joint session with the Urban History Association Edward James Kolla, Georgetown University–Qatar Chair: Jeffry M. Diefendorf, University of New Hampshire Teaching the “Clash of Civilizations” in Qatar Topics: Urban Past, Present, and Future in Black and White: The Utility Karine V. Walther, Georgetown University–Qatar of Figure-Ground Teaching More Than Dead White Men Michael Hebbert, University College London Jessica Hanser, Yale University–Singapore Planning from the Past: The Historical Legacy of Waterfront Planning in a Southeast Asia Megacity, Jakarta Christopher Silver, University of Florida 145. The Atlantic, Pacific, and In-Between: Learning—and Not Learning—from Nazi Urban Planning Bringing Transnational History to the United Janet Ward, University of Oklahoma States Survey Course through the Study of The Wilhelmine Reform Milieu Reconsidered: The Deutscher Immigration Werkbund, the Prussian Commerce Ministry, and Germany’s New York Hilton, Concourse A Global Commercial Ambitions John Maciuika, Baruch College, City University of New York Joint session with the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Hasia R. Diner, New York University Papers: Domesticating the International: Los Angeles as Case Study 149. Visualization and Digital History: Techniques 0101 Suzanne Borghei, Santa Monica College 0111 and Demonstrations 1010 Bringing Global History to the American History Survey: Rock New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Springs, 1885, the Meeting of Pacific and Atlantic Worlds in the Joint session with the Association for Computers and the Humanities Wyoming Desert Timothy Dean Draper, Waubonsee Community College Chair: William G. Thomas III, University of Nebraska–Lincoln East Meets West and West Meets East: Immigrant and Ethnic Topics: The Spatial Turn of 1932: Revisiting the Atlas of the Historical History in the U.S. Survey Geography of the United States Lesley A. Kawaguchi, Santa Monica College Scott Nesbit, University of Richmond Seeing Anew: Humanistic Approaches to Data Visualization Benjamin MacDonald Schmidt, Northeastern University 146. The Past, Present, and Future of the Voting Rights Act Mapping Dissent in the Civil War North: Digital History’s New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom Potential to Recast Political History Thomas Summerhill, Michigan State University Chair: Thomas C. Holt, University of Chicago Comment: Janice L. Reiff, University of California, Los Angeles Panel: Julian Hayter, University of Richmond J. Morgan Kousser, California Institute of Technology Nina Perales, Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund 150. New Research on Central European Cities and Abigail Thernstrom, Adjunct Scholar, American Enterprise Towns, Part 3: Urban Culture(s): Manufacturing and

Institute 2015 3, January Janelle Wong, University of Maryland at College Park Manifesting Central European Urban Identities New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A Joint session with the Central European History Society 147. Translating Science: Disciplines, Objects, Processes Chair: Neil Gregor, University of Southampton Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East Papers: Lipsiae Contra Omnes: Local Culture and Transregional Chair: J. Michelle Molina, Northwestern University Competition in Nineteenth-Century Leipzig Margaret Eleanor Menninger, Texas State University Panel: Daniela Bleichmar, University of Southern California Michael D. Gordin, Princeton University Germany’s Preferred Fremdenstadt: Cosmopolitan Dresden before Kristina Kleutghen, Washington University in Saint Louis World War I Scott L. Montgomery, University of Washington Seattle Nadine Zimmerli, College of William and Mary Carla S. Nappi, University of British Columbia Becoming a Nazi Town: How Culture Shaped Politics in Göttingen during the 1920s and 1930s David Imhoof, Susquehanna University Bookshops and Urban Political Culture in Germany, 1800–70 James M. Brophy, University of Delaware Comment: Mary Lindemann, University of Miami

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74 Saturday,Saturday, January January 3, 10:30 3, a.m.–12:002:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions

151. Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 7: Science and Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 3 Sexuality: Mental Health and Homosexuality in Post- How the Elephant Got Stuck in the Room: 1973 America New Histories of the Long War on Drugs New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Sheraton New York, Park Suite 4 Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Chair: Eric C. Schneider, University of Pennsylvania Transgender History Topics: Projects Recovery and Reform: The Return of Rehabilitative Chair: Susan K. Cahn, University at Buffalo (State University of New York) Corrections in an Age of Mass Incarceration, 1986–92 Claire D. Clark, University of Houston Papers: Sexuality, Therapeutic Culture, and Family Ties in Modern America Debbie Weinstein, Brown University Chief William H. Parker, Drug-Law Enforcement, and Defendants’ Rights in California, 1955–63 Science, Compassion, and Ex-gay Ministries: Understanding the Sarah Brady Siff, Ohio State University Logic of Antigay Activism in the 1970s Emily Suzanne Johnson, University of Tennessee Intercept: The United States, Mexico, and Nixon’s First Battle in the War on Drugs, 1969–70 The Science of Rights: Medical Authority in Lesbian Mother Aaron Brown, Ohio University Custody Cases Marie-Amelie George, Yale University Comments: Matthew D. Lassiter, University of Michigan Miriam Lynn Kingsberg, University of Colorado Boulder Queer Preposterousness; or, How to Do Temporally Disoriented History Mathias Danbolt, University of Copenhagen American Catholic Historical Association Session 13 Comment: Susan K. Cahn Explaining the Pope Francis Effect (and Everything Else about Catholicism in 30 Seconds): A Media Primer of Church Historians and Reporters Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 152. Slavery as History, Slavery as Fiction , Part 3: Imagining the Unimaginable: Film, Fiction, and Chair: David Gibson, Religion News Service Fabulation in Narratives of New World Slavery Papers: More Than a Soundbite: What Academics Can Bring to News Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom Coverage Rachel Zoll, Associated Press Chair: Patrick H. Breen, Providence College The Professor and the Reporter: Getting the Story Right Together Panel: Kristen Block, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Christopher M. Bellitto, Kean University Marisa J. Fuentes, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Elena Machado Sáez, Florida Atlantic University What Am I Doing Here? Jenny Shaw, University of Alabama Rita Ferrone, Commonweal Comment: Saidiya Hartman, Columbia University From the Lecture Hall to Live TV Enez Paganuzzi, W-NBC This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 30 and 60. Comment: The Audience

Afternoon Sessions of the AHA American Catholic Historical Association Session 14 Affiliated Societies Resistance and Polemics out of Port-Royal: The Jansenist Responses to Persecution in Seventeenth- Century France Saturday, January 3, 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Alcohol and Drugs History Society Session 2 Chair: Eva Martin, University of Mary Washington American and Dutch Discourse on the Production, Papers: Doubt and Certitude: The Epistemology of Angélique de Saint- Distribution, and Consumption of Licit and Illicit Jean Arnauld d’Andilly Drugs, 1890–1940 John Conley, Loyola University Maryland Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 1&2 Apology in the Form of Autohagiography: Angélique Arnauld’s Chair: Scott C. Martin, Bowling Green State University Defense of Her Reform of Port Royal Papers: The Dutch Coca and Cocaine Industry and the American Elissa Cutter, Saint Louis University Discourse, c. 1910–40 The Visual Becomes Risible: Port-Royal’s Response to the Jesuit Arjo Roersch van der Hoogte, University of Utrecht Almanac of 1653 Blending the American Taste into the Dutch Cigarette Daniella J. Kostroun, Indiana University-Purdue University Melvin Wevers, University of Utrecht Indianapolis Dutch Medial Actors and American Morphine Users in the Dutch Comment: Ralph Keen, University of Illinois at Chicago Public Discourse, c. 1890–1920 Lisanne Walma, University of Utrecht Comment: The Audience

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American Catholic Historical Association Session 15 Getting Real with Grant Wacker Can It Be History Already? Research into Recent Events Joel A. Carpenter, Calvin College in American Catholicism The Wackerites: A Ethnographic Account of a North Carolina Sect Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 Kate Bowler, Duke University Chair: James T. Carroll, Iona College The Stealth Sarsaparilla: Mentorship as Scholarship Laurie Maffly-Kipp, Washington University in Saint Louis Papers: Helping the Holy Souls in Purgatory: The Dynamic Relationship between the Living and the Dead in the American Catholic Church Comment: Grant Wacker, Duke Divinity School Sarah K. Nytroe, DeSales University Historical Diagnosis of the Catholic Medical School in Cold War Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies America: The Seton Hall Medical School Story, 1954–65 Session 4 Alan Delozier, Seton Hall University Circulation of People and Ideas in the Iberian Atlantic The Danger of a Single Issue: The USCC and Its Response to the in the Age of Independence, Part 2: The Making and Abortion Plank in the ’76 Democratic Convention Unmaking of Gran Colombia Daniel Conkle, independent scholar Sheraton New York, Conference Room I Gary Wills and the American Catholic Public Intellectual as Critic Chair: Gabriel Paquette, Johns Hopkins University Mel W. Piehl, Valparaiso University Papers: The United States and the Early Constitutional Movements in New Comment: The Audience Granada, Venezuela, and Ecuador, 1810–30 Eduardo Posada-Garbó, University of Oxford American Society of Church History Session 13 Capitalist Republicanism: Vicente Rocafuerte and the Colombian Ecumenism in the Global South: Three Case Studies System from India, Africa, and Latin America Gregorio Alonso, University of Leeds New York Hilton, Harlem Suite French-Trained Naturalists Map out an Early Colombian Republic’s Chair: Scott Sunquist, Fuller Theological Seminary Interiors, 1820s–40s Lina Del Castillo, University of Texas at Austin Papers: A Sign of Things to Come: How the Church of South India Succeeded and Failed Comment: Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra, University of Texas at Austin Dyron Daughrity, Pepperdine University Violence, Mistrust, and Dialogue: Catholics and Protestants in Association of Ancient Historians Session 3 Latin America Social Values of Color: Making and Meaning of Color Todd F. Hartch, Eastern Kentucky University through Time and Space Ecumenism as a Renewed Platform in a Post-Apartheid South Sheraton New York, Conference Room F Africa Chair: Rachael B. Goldman, College of New Jersey Fiona Vernal, University of Connecticut Papers: Coloring the Roman Mind Comment: Scott Sunquist Rachael B. Goldman Social Values of Red in Western Needlework and Textiles, American Society of Church History Session 14 1750–1850 Medieval History and Liturgy: Problems and Methods Maureen Daly Goggin, Arizona State University New York Hilton, Holland Suite Coloring Natural History Illustrations Chairs: Susan Boynton, Columbia University Beth Fowkes Tobin, Arizona State University Andrew Irving, General Theological Seminary 2015 3, January The Dark Side of Yellow: Katharina Fritsch’s 2008 Cook Panel: Susan Boynton Andrea Feeser, Clemson University Richard F. Gyug, Fordham University Louis Hamilton, Drew University Julian Hendrix, Carthage College Central European History Society Session 9 Andrew Irving Douglas H. Shantz’s Introduction to German Pietism: Julia Schneider, University of Notre Dame Protestant Renewal at the Dawn of Modern Europe Daniel Sheerin, University of Notre Dame Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Chair: Jared S. Burkholder, Grace College American Society of Church History Session 15 Panel: Katherine Faull, Bucknell University Believing History: In Celebration of Grant Wacker’s Tanya E. Kevorkian, Millersville University Contributions to American Religious History Hartmut Lehmann, University of Kiel New York Hilton, East Suite Benjamin Marschke, Humboldt State University A. Gregg Roeber, Pennsylvania State University Chair: Nathan Hatch, Wake Forest University Douglas Shantz, University of Calgary Papers: The Problem of Historical Knowledge in the Work of Grant Wacker Mark A. Noll, University of Notre Dame

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76 Saturday,Saturday, January January 3, 10:30 3, a.m.–12:002:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions

Chinese Historians in the United States Session 4 The Eclectic Interdisciplinarity of Studying Transcendentalism Frontier Impressions, Overseas Journeys, and the Nicholas Aaron Friesner, Brown University Making of Identities in Modern China The American Legacy of Social Reform in the Time of Emerson, Sheraton New York, Conference Room C Thoreau, and Fuller: The “Wealth” I Hope to Own Natalia Fiore, Hillsborough Community College at Plant City Chair: Jingyi Song, College at Old Westbury (State University of New York) Papers: United, They Became Strong: The Collaboration of Chinese American Conference on Latin American History Session 26 Laborers in the Mainstream Labor Movement in the 1930s Cultures of Transnationalism: Social Networks, Jingyi Song Solidarities, and Collectives in Latin America Labor, Literature, and Love: The Making of a Chinese Celebrity Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Intellectual in Interwar Europe Chair: Alejandra M. Bronfman, University of British Columbia Ke Ren, Johns Hopkins University Papers: Cultural Ambassadorship: The Pan-American Games, 1929–79 “Journey to the West”: Internal Orientalism, Nation-Building, and Brenda J. Elsey, Hofstra University the Photographic Frontier in Republican China Yajun Mo, Long Island University Visual Politics of Solidarity: Film and Graphic Art in the Argentine Left’s Struggle against Imperialism and State Repression, 1971–76 Return to the Frontier or Return to a Foreign Land: Eileen Chang’s Jessica Stites Mor, University of British Columbia at Okanagan Travel Writings and Discovery of Chineseness Dandan Chen, Farmingdale State College (State University of The Language of Song: Folk Music and Solidarity in the Americas, New York) 1967–74 Ashley Black, Stony Brook University Comment: Zhiwei Xiao, California State University, San Marcos The Sound of Latin America: Sandro and the Invention of Latin Pop Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Matthew B. Karush, George Mason University History Session 9 Comment: Lara E. Putnam, University of Pittsburgh Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 8: Making an Exhibition of Ourselves: Desiring Bodies, Practices, Conference on Latin American History Session 27 and Histories New York Hilton, Midtown Suite New Perspectives on the Spanish Atlantic: The Slave Trade to Spanish America, Part 3 Chair: Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Topics: Cruising the Archives: The Nazi Persecution of Homosexuals and Chair: Jane G. Landers, Vanderbilt University Sexual Desire Jacob Evoy, University of Western Ontario Papers: Trans-Imperial Bondage: The French Slave Trade in the Early Eighteenth-Century Spanish Caribbean Willies Bully: Reflections on the hotographicP Representation of Aaron Alejandro Olivas, University of California, Los Angeles Young Male Social and Sexual Violence Jordy Jones, independent scholar The Slave Trade to the Rio de la Plata in the Eighteenth Century Alex Borucki, University of California, Irvine Un/Becoming History: Past, Present, and Future Histories of the AIDS Crisis Cuba and the United States in the Atlantic Slave Trade Susan Knabe, University of Western Ontario Jorge Felipe Gonzalez, Michigan State University Marial Iglesias Utset, W.E.B. Du Bois Research Institute, Queering Public History in a New National Landmark Harvard University Michelle McClellan, University of Michigan Andrea Rottmann, University of Michigan Comment: David Wheat, Michigan State University Bears in Boxes: Community, Bodily Byproducts, and the Bareness of the Porn Archive Conference on Latin American History Session 28 Joshua Morrison, University of Michigan Mapuche Soundscapes: Music, Ethnicity, and National Belonging in Chile and Argentina Community College Humanities Association Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 American Identity and Community: Emerson, Thoreau, Chair: Ericka Verba, California State University, Dominguez Hills and Fuller Papers: Perquenco’s Traveling Guitarists: Music and Mapuche Cultural New York Hilton, Concourse E Revival under the Pinochet Dictatorship, 1980–88 Chairs: David A. Berry, Essex County College and Community College Scott Crago, University of New Mexico Humanities Association Mingako Kultural: Harvesting Music, Poetry, and Autonomy Diane Whitley Bogard, Austin Community College Jacob Rekedal, University of California, Riverside Papers: Transcendentalism and the Black Freedom Movement Mapuche Soundscapes in the Argentine Folklore Movement: From Frederick Douglass Dixon, University of Illinois at Urbana- Winka Ventriloquism to Neo-Liberal Multiculturalism Champaign Oscar Chamosa, University of Georgia Emerson and Thoreau: Diverging Transcendentalist Views Comment: Karin A. Rosemblatt, University of Maryland at College Park Derek Menchen, Polk State College

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 76 28/10/14 6:26 PM Saturday, January 3, 10:302:30–4:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sessions p.m. Sessions 77

H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online Session 1 Papers: Warsaw Polish Writers-Diarists Encountering the Holocaust: The H-Net Commons: Multidisciplinary Networks of Cases of Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz and Maria Dabrowska Scholars and Educators from All over the World Rachel Brenner, University of Wisconsin–Madison New York Hilton: Concourse F Integrating History, Memory, and Intimate Ethnography: A Polish Presiding: Jean Stuntz, H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online Biography-Memoir of World War II, Immigration, and a Life Remade Barbara Rylko-Bauer, Michigan State University Herbert Hoover, Poles, and Poland: An Inquiry into a Dynamic Modern Greek Studies Association Session 2 Relationship Continental, Imperial, and Cultural Crossroads: Frederick J. Augustyn, Approaches to Southeastern Europe’s Borderlands Comment: The Audience Sheraton New York, Conference Room H Chair: Evdoxios Doxiadis, Simon Fraser University Polish American Historical Association Session 5 Papers: Island Borderlands: Agents of Change in the Mediterranean during Figures in Polish and Polish American History the Nineteenth Century New York Hilton, Concourse B Chris Theofilogiannakos, niversityU of California, San Diego Chair: John Radzilowski, University of Alaska, Southeast Europe’s Borderland: The Balkans, the Nineteenth Century, and French Influence Papers: Father Theodore Suk: A Man of Faith Alex Tipei, Indiana University Bloomington Barbara Pulaski, Mount Ida College Re-Orienting Imperial Jews: Constantinople at the Crossroads of Alfred Jurzykowski and his Foundation: A Brief Outline Jewish Identities Czeslaw Karkowski, Hunter College and Mercy College Devi Mays, University of Michigan Zbyszko, “The Mighty Pole”: Stanley Zbyszko, Polish Americans, Life of a Triple Border: Methodological Considerations on the and Sport in the Early Twentieth Century Function of Borders during Times of Crisis Neal Pease, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Irina Marin, University of Leicester Jan Broz˙ek’s Contribution to Copernican Studies Originating from His Queries in Warmia in 1618 National History Center of the American Historical Jan Chroboczek, Institute de Microélectronique, Électromagnétisme et Photonique Association Session 5 Oral History in Times of Crisis Comment: The Audience New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon Chair: Donald A. Ritchie, U.S. Senate Historical Office Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Panel: Mark Cave, New Orleans Collection Era Session 5 Mary Marshall Clark, Columbia University Center for Oral New Approaches to Racial Violence in North America History New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Stephen M. Sloan, Baylor University Chair: Lisa A. Arellano, Colby College Michelle Winslow, University of Sheffield Topics: In Search of Robert Charles: Race and Violence in Jim Crow New Orleans National History Center of the American Historical K. Stephen Prince, University of South Florida Association Session 6 Survivors’ Stories Serving up Food History and Mastering the Art of Kidada Williams, Wayne State University

Public Engagement 2015 3, January Anti-Chinese Violence and the National Significance of Local Vigilantism New York Hilton, Concourse H Beth Lew-Williams, Northwestern University Chair: Amanda B. Moniz, National History Center of the American Racial Violence and the Creation of National Spaces Historical Association Benjamin Hoy, Stanford University Panel: Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria Comment: Michael J. Pfeifer, John Jay College, City University of New York Julia Irwin, University of South Florida Paula Johnson, National Museum of American History David Shields, University of South Carolina Columbia Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing Helen Veit, Michigan State University The Practice of Book History: Between and beyond Psyche Williams-Forson, University of Maryland at Disciplines College Park New York Hilton, Green Room Chair: Thomas Lannon, New York Public Library Polish American Historical Association Session 4 World War II: Literature, Memoir, and Herbert Panel: Meredith L. McGill, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Jessica Rogers, University of Iowa Hoover’s Humanitarianism Jonathan Rose, Drew University New York Hilton, Lincoln Suite Robert J. Scholnick, College of William and Mary Chair: Thomas Napierkowski, University of Colorado Colorado Springs Jonathan Senchyne, University of Wisconsin–Madison

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 77 28/10/14 6:26 PM Saturday, January 3, 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions, 78 Saturday, JanuaryPresidential 3, 10:30 Addres a.m.–12:00s, Evening p.m. Sessions

Society for the History of Children and Youth Session 2 Evening Sessions of AHA Our Future, Delinquents, and Gifts from God: Affiliated Societies Challenges and Revelations in New Histories of Childhood and Youth Sheraton New York, Park Suite 2 Saturday, January 3, 6:00–8:00 p.m. Chair: Rebecca de Schweinitz, Brigham Young University Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Panel: Susan Eckelmann, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Session 5 Abosede George, Barnard College, Columbia University Circulation of People and Ideas in the Iberian Atlantic Fabio Lanza, University of Arizona in the Age of Independence, Part 3: Cultural Transfers Zachary Scarlett, Butler University Heather A. Vrana, Southern Connecticut State University across Time and the Iberian Atlantic Sheraton New York, Conference Room I Chair: Gregorio Alonso, University of Leeds Toynbee Prize Foundation The Toynbee Prize Lecture Papers: Bible and Empire: The Old Testament in the Spanish American Sheraton New York, Central Park East Wars of Independence Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra, University of Texas at Austin Chair: Dominic Sachsenmaier, Jacobs University Bremen Conservative, Traditionalists, and Reactionaries: The Mexican Paper: From Globalization to Global Warming: A Historiographical Reception of European Anti-liberal Thought, 1821–67 Transition Javier López-Alós, University of Leeds Dipesh Chakrabarty, University of Chicago The Roman Classics and the Independence Discourse Comment: Darrin M. McMahon, Dartmouth College Susana Gazmurri, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez The Emancipatory Ideal in Spanish American Independence World History Association Session 2 Karen Racine, University of Guelph Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Session 10 Comment: Scott Eastman, Creighton University Racial Roles in the Victorian Empire Sheraton New York, Park Suite 3 Saturday, January 3, 6:30–8:00 p.m. Chair: Marc Jason Gilbert, Hawai’i Pacific niversityU Papers: Changing Tides: The Exclusion of Educated Africans from Colonial Conference on Latin American History Session 29 Service in Lagos, Nigeria, 1890–1930 Borderlands and Frontiers Studies Committee: State, Oluwatoyin Oduntan, Towson University Bordered Communities, and the North-South Dynamic The Right Kind of “Native” Revisited: Recent Scholarship on the Borderlands of Edwin Hirschmann, Towson University Guatemala and Mexico Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Racial Passing and the Raj Uther Charlton-Stevens, Volgograd State University Chair: Eric Michael Schantz, independent scholar Comment: Marc Jason Gilbert Papers: National Rhetoric, Local Concerns: The Mexico-Guatemala Border as Seen from the Soconusco Casey M. Lurtz, University of Chicago Power on the Border: Dams, Water, and Development along the Presidential Address Guatemalan-Mexican Border Aaron Margolis, University of Texas at El Paso Saturday, January 3, 5:00–6:30 p.m. De Colonos Prósperos a Extranjeros Reticentes: Rusos Molokanes en Baja California American Historical Association Rogelio Everth Ruíz Ríos, Universidad Autónoma de Baja Presidential Address California at Tijuana New York Hilton, Trianon Ballroom Estado y Administración de la Naturaleza: Formas Emergentes de Agencia Indígena en la Reserva de la Biosfera Pantanos de Presidential Address: Centla Toward an Empirical History of Moral Pablo Marín, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco Thinking: The Case of Racial Theory in Mid-Nineteenth-Century France Comment: The Audience Jan Goldstein, University of Chicago After the addr ess, the AHA invites all r egistrants to a reception for 2014 pr esident Jan Goldstein in the N ew York Hilton’s Mercury Ballroom from 6:30–8:00 p.m.

Sponsored by HISTORY®

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January 3, 2015 80 Sunday,Friday, January Jan. 3,4, 8:30–10:009:00–11:00 a.m. Sessions

155. History in the Federal Government: Careers AHA Committee on Women Historians Serving Policy Makers and the Public reakfast eeting B M New York Hilton, Sutton Center Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division and the Sunday, January 4, 8:00–9:30 a.m. Society for History in the Federal Government Sheraton New York, Central Park West Chair: Carl Ashley, U.S. Department of State Sponsored by the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Panel: Lincoln Bramwell, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service Kristina Giannotta, Naval History and Heritage Command The Committee on Women Historians’ annual networking breakfast provides Jessie Kratz, National Archives and Records Administration an exciting and unique oppor tunity to meet scholars acr oss generations Matthew Wasniewski, Office of the istorian,H U.S. House of working in all fields.We warmly invite women historians and anyone with an Representatives interest in gender history to this year’s breakfast. Continental breakfast is open to all and will be pr eregistered through the registration form. Preregistration is urged; a v ery limited number of tickets 156. Enhancing Undergraduate Student Success: will be available at the meeting. Cost: $35 members, $50 nonmembers, $15 An Initiative to Improve Student Learning in student members, and $25 student nonmembers. P repaid tickets will be distributed with the badge at meeting registration. Introductory U.S. History and Other Disciplines New York Hilton, Regent Parlor AHA members may bring a student nonmember to the br eakfast at the student member rate. Contact [email protected] for details. Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Presiding: Maria Bucur-Deckard, Indiana University and chair, AHA Chair: Andrew Koch, John N. Gardner Institute for Committee on Women Historians Excellence in Undergraduate Education Speaker: Jacqueline Jones, University of Texas at Austin Panel: Kevin Brown, Lansing Community College Jeff Janowick, Lansing Community College Address: Women and Social Justice: What’s History Got to Do with It? Aaron McArthur, Arkansas Tech University

Morning Sessions of the AHA Comment: Trinidad Gonzales, South Texas College Program Committee 157. Connection and Community: Teaching Family Sunday, January 4, 9:00–11:00 a.m. History in the Classroom Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East 153. Reassessing the Influence of Classic Theory on Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Historical Practice: Marx New York Hilton, Sutton North Chair: Kristen Ziller, Wake County Schools (North Carolina) Chair: Martin Jay, University of California, Berkeley Papers: Research Nuggets: Personalizing Middle School Student Family History Research Panel: Gillian Hart, University of California, Berkeley Kristen Ziller, Wake County Schools (North Carolina) Katsuya Hirano, University of California, Los Angeles Laura Richardson, Wake County Schools (North Carolina) Moishe Postone, University of Chicago Andrew Sartori, New York University At-Risk Adolescents: Using the Past to Help Find a Future Elizabeth Wiggs, Lee Early College

154. From Problems to Solutions: Recruiting, 158. Authoring Digital Scholarship for History: Training, and Placing History PhDs in 0101 Challenges and Opportunities 0111 Non-Faculty Careers, Part 1: Building on 1010 Institutional Strengths: Career Services, Career New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Advising, and Career Placement Joint session with the Association for Computers and the Humanities New York Hilton, Sutton South Chair: Edward L. Ayers, University of Richmond Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division Topics: Fracture or Continuum? Chair: Robert B. Townsend, American Academy of Arts and Sciences Cameron Blevins, Stanford University Panel: Lauren Apter Bairnsfather, University of Texas at Austin Digitizing “Chinese Englishmen”: Empire, Whiteness, and the W. Fitzhugh Brundage, University of North Carolina at Chapel Digital Nineteenth-Century Archive Hill Adeline Koh, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey Melissa Bostrom, Duke University Looking Past the Written Word: Digital Authoring and the Rachel Bernard, American Council of Learned Societies Representation of Knowledge Comment: Robert B. Townsend Lauren Tilton, Yale University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also session 184. Open Sources: Realizing the Potential of Hypertext for History Yoni Appelbaum, Harvard University Comment: Edward L. Ayers

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 80 28/10/14 6:26 PM Sunday,Friday, Jan. January 3, 8:30–10:00 4, 9:00–11:00 a.m. a.m.Sessions Sessions 81

Topics: Cybernetic Archives 159. Can DH Answer Our Questions? Using 0101 0111 Orit Halpern, New School Digital Humanities to Address the Concerns of 1010 Feminist Historians History As a Field of Struggle: The Making of Black Archives, New York Hilton, Concourse A 1915–50 Chair: Monica L. Mercado, Bryn Mawr College Laura E Helton, Carter G. Woodson Institute, University of Virginia Topics: Mapping the Community: ArchGIS and the History of Religious Experience Must Every People Have an Archive? Jewish Archives, Self- Kathryn Falvo, Pennsylvania State University Definition, and tateS Power Jason Lustig, University of California, Los Angeles Survival and Surveillance: Recovering Narratives of Black Female Criminality during the Civil War Comment: Jack (John Kuo Wei) Tchen, New York University Tamika Richeson, University of Virginia

Her Hat Was in the Ring: Women, History, Politics, and Digital 163. Ghosts of Modernity: Spiritism and History in Humanities in the Twenty-First Century Wendy E. Chmielewski, Swarthmore College Peace Collection Catalonia, Puerto Rico, and Cuba Sheraton New York, Conference Room D Chair: Deirdre de la Cruz, University of Michigan 160. Contentions of Sovereignty and Empire: The Ottoman Papers: Catalan Spiritism and the Paradoxes of Modernity Empire and International Law, 1400s to 1900s Gerard Horta, University of Barcelona New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Cosas que no se Mencionan: Poetics and Politics of Spectrality in Chair: Aimee M. Genell, Yale University Nineteenth-Century Puerto Rico Papers: Ottoman Legal Challenges to the Scramble for Africa Wadda Rios-Font, Barnard College, Columbia University Aimee M. Genell Futures Past in Santiago: Religion, American Neocolonialism, and The Fifth Column: Foreign Muslims, Extraterritoriality, and the the Remaking of Eastern Cuba Autonomy of the Ottoman Hijaz Reinaldo L. Roman, University of Georgia Michael C. Low, Columbia University Spirit Histories and the Lack of Them: Toward an Understanding of Piracy and the Evolution of Ottoman-Venetian Maritime Law, the Plastic Cosmos in Cuban Creole Spiritism 1482–1670 Diana Espírito Santo, Center for Research in Anthropology, New Joshua Michael White, University of Virginia University of Lisbon Negotiating the Law of War in the Ottoman Empire: Neutrality, Comment: Paul Christopher Johnson, University of Michigan Subjecthood, and Prisoners of War, 1787–92 Will Smiley, Princeton University 164. Human-Animal Histories: Animal Studies and Comment: The Audience Posthumanism in Comparative Contexts Sheraton New York, Conference Room C 161. Environmental History and Outer Space: Linking Chair: Mark S. Swislocki, New York University at Abu Dhabi Terrestrial and Extraterrestrial Natures across Time Topics: Animal Miracles New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Susan Crane, Columbia University Chair: Asif Siddiqi, Fordham University The Silence of Animals: Writing on the Edge of Anthropomorphism Papers: Discovering the Final Frontier: The Seventeenth-Century Encounter in Contemporary Chinese Literature with the Lunar Environment Haiyan Lee, Stanford University Michael J. Rawson, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City The Science of Posthumanism University of New York Alan Mikhail, Yale University Heavenly Bodies: The Intimate History of the Space Race and Second Comment: Dominick C. LaCapra, Cornell University Wave Feminism Lori Gruen, Wesleyan University Neil M. Maher, Rutgers University–Newark and New Jersey Institute of Technology January 4, 2015 4, January Alien Atmospheres and the Making of Earth’s Environmental 165. Interdisciplinary Institutes and Humanities Research: Sciences Europe and the United States Lisa Messeri, University of Virginia Sheraton New York, Central Park East Comment: Asif Siddiqi Chair: Peter N. Miller, Bard Graduate Center Panel: Thomas Gaehtgens, Getty Research Institute Simon Goldhill, University of Cambridge 162. From Source to Subject: Historical Writing and the Gerhard Wolf, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz “Archival Turn” Comment: Mariët Westermann, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation New York Hilton, Madison Suite Chair: Catherine E. Clark, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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166. Mass Death in World War I: Interdisciplinary 169. Of Borderlands and Frontiers: Crosscurrents and Explanations Divergences within Borderlands History and Settler Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Colonial Studies Chair: Mustafa Aksakal, Georgetown University Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom Papers: Hand of Man or Hand of Fate? The Role of Environment in the Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Lebanese Famine of World War I Chair: Lorenzo Veracini, Swinburne University of Technology Tylor Brand, American University of Beirut Panel: Erik Altenbernd, University of California, Irvine The Intertextuality of Wartime Memoirs: Ohannes Pasha’s Account Manan Ahmed Asif, Columbia University of Famine and Mass Murder in Lebanon and Anatolia Lisa Ford, University of Elizabeth F. Thompson, University of Virginia Karl Jacoby, Columbia University State Formation and Ethnic Cleansing in Late Ottoman Anatolia Stacey Van Vleet, University of California, Berkeley and Post-Ottoman Greater Syria: The Armenian Genocide in Regional and Temporal Perspective Ariel C. Salzmann, Queen’s University 170. Perspectives on Gavin Wright’s Sharing the Prize: Comment: Mustafa Aksakal The Economics of the Civil Rights Revolution in the American South: A Roundtable Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West 167. Mexico in the Global 1960s Joint session with the Economic History Association Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 Chair: Daniel Raff, University of Pennsylvania Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Panel: William Collins, Vanderbilt University Chair: Eric Zolov, Stony Brook University Jane Dailey, University of Chicago Steven H. Hahn, University of Pennsylvania Papers: Preparing to Rebel: Growing Up in Mexico City, 1940–70 Gerald Jaynes, Yale University Mary Kay Vaughan, University of Maryland at College Park Sophia Z. Lee, University of Pennsylvania Student Catholic Radicalism in Cold War Mexico: The Case of the Comment: Gavin Wright, Stanford University Movimiento Estudiantil Profesional (MEP) Jaime Pensado, University of Notre Dame The 1968 Olympic Games and the Student Movement: 171. Pirates, Collaborators, Students, and Martyrs: Incompatible Realities? Nationalism and the Memory of War in Modern China Ariel Rodriguez Kuri, Colegio de Mexico New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Mixtec Youth in Oaxaca: Indigenous Rebels of the Global 1960s Chair: Diana Lary, University of British Columbia Alan Shane Dillingham, Reed College Papers: Founding Fathers of a Contested Nation: Chinese Collaborators Comment: William Marotti, University of California, Los Angeles and the Founding Myth of Manchukuo, 1932–37 Rui Hua, Harvard University 168. Negotiating Immigration Reform in an Age of From Patriotic Youth to Bogus Students and Back Again: The Restriction Politics of Wartime History in Postwar China Jonathan Henshaw, University of British Columbia Sheraton New York, Conference Room B Pirates, Collaborators, or Patriots? The Loyal and Patriotic Army Joint session with the Immigration and Ethnic History Society and Chinese Coastal Guerrillas during the Second Sino-Japanese Chair: Madeline Hsu, University of Texas at Austin War, 1937–45 Papers: The Ambivalent Geopolitics of Inclusion: The Case of Colonial Weiting Guo, University of British Columbia Asian American Groups Noble Ghosts, Empty Graves, and National Trauma: The Tale of Jane Hong, Occidental College Taiyuan’s “Five Hundred Martyrs” in the Chinese Civil War Immigration Reform Advocates and the Passage of the 1952 Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang, University of Texas at Austin Immigration and Nationality Act Comment: Diana Lary Maddalena Marinari, Saint Bonaventure University Transnational Fight for the Rights of Undocumented Migrants, 1965–86 Ana Minian, Stanford University Comment: Lon Kurashige, University of Southern California

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172. Politics Big and Small: African Americans, Law, and the Leaving the Cuckoo’s Nest: Challenging Incarceration in Psychiatric Negotiation of Slavery and Freedom in the Nineteenth- Hospitals Century American South Anne Parsons, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Sheraton New York, Conference Room F The Prison Litigation Explosion and the Long History of the Civil Chair: Manisha Sinha, University of Massachusetts Amherst Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act, 1973–96 Amanda Hughett, Duke University Papers: Suing Whites: Black Litigants and the Politics of Daily Life in the Comment: The Audience Antebellum Natchez District Kimberly Welch, West Virginia University

Moral Contagions and “Foreign Emissaries”: Negotiating Race, 175. The Future of the Book Review Status, and Rights beyond the Antebellum Courtroom New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A Michael Schoeppner, University of Maine at Farmington Chair: David A. Bell, Princeton University Shifting Ground: St. Louis Freedom Suits in the Era of Dred Scott Kelly Marie Kennington, Auburn University Topics: Academic Journals Sarah Covington, Queens College and Graduate Center, City Comment: Kirt von Daacke, University of Virginia University of New York Public Intellectuals 173. Rethinking Territoriality: Indigenous Power in North Michael Kazin, Georgetown University and South American Borderlands, 1700–1900 E-Journals New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Timothy Michael Law, University of St. Andrews Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History National Magazines John Palattella, The Nation Chair: Cynthia Radding, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Book Publishing Papers: “We Should Be Obligated to Destroy Them”: Changing Brigitta van Rheinberg, Princeton University Press Intercultural Diplomacy of the Lower Mississippi Valley, 1699–1775 Elizabeth Ellis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 176. The National Endowment for the Humanities at Fifty Beyond Dominance and Resistance: Charrúas, Minuanes, and the New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Making of a Borderline between Brazil and La Plata, 1750–1805 Jeffrey Erbig Jr., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chair: Douglas Greenberg, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Redrawing the Frontera Mapuche: Space and Power in the Panel: Ric Burns, Steeplechase Films Araucanía, Valdivia, and the Pampas, 1793–1862 Mary Beth Norton, Cornell University Jesse Zarley, University of Maryland at College Park Clement Alexander Price, Rutgers University–Newark Gretchen Sorin, Cooperstown Graduate Program Indigenous Politics in Northern Patagonia: Reciprocity, Kinship, and Territorial Networks of Power, 1850–80 Geraldine Davies Lenoble, Georgetown University 177. The Transnational Landscapes of Civil Rights and Comment: Sara Ortelli, National Scientific andT echnical Research Council Antiracist Activism and Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Buenos Aires Chair: Anne-Marie Angelo, University of Sussex Papers: “Vor den Augen der Ganzen Welt”: Transnational Teenage 174. Struggles for Institutionalized People’s Rights in Mental Political Cultures and the U.S. Civil Rights Movement Abroad Health and Corrections Susan Eckelmann, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon Places of Public : The Transatlantic Resonances of This session will include four 15-minute pr esentations, with one 30-minute Desegregating Public Space in Britain discussion after the first two presentations, and a second 30-minute discussion Brett Bebber, Old Dominion University at the end. Forging Transnational Ties: Afro-German Women and the Cross- Cultural Black Women’s Studies Summer Institute

Chair: Susan Burch, Middlebury College 2015 4, January Tiffany Florvil, University of New Mexico Papers: The Intolerable Dr. Rose: Psychiatry, Prisons, and the Groupe d’Information sur les Prisons (GIP) Comment: Mary L. Dudziak, Emory University Michael A. Rembis, University at Buffalo (State University of New York) “With Dignity Intact”: Rainbow Coalitions, Control Units, and Struggles for Human Rights in the U.S. Federal Prison System, 1969–74 Alan Gomez, Arizona State University

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178. Too Soon? (Too Sad? Too Sensitive? Too An End to Conquests: Military Debates and Political Culture in Sacred?): The National September 11 Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Spain Memorial and Museum Xavier Gil, Universitat de Barcelona Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West Comment: The Audience Chair: Richard Rabinowitz, American History Workshop This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 211 and 239. Panel: Clifford Chanin, National September 11 Memorial and Museum 181. Lessons Learned from the AHA’s Bridging Cultures Jan Seidler Ramirez, National September 11 Memorial and Museum Program, Part 2: Transnational Voyages and Voyagers in Nineteenth-Century Oceania and Southeast Asia Comment: Max Page, University of Massachusetts Amherst New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Chair: William Deverell, University of Southern California 179. Transnational History: Middle Eastern and North Topics: Playing with Fire: Volcanoes, Voyages, and the Environmental African Perspectives Impact of White Missionary Children in the Pacific during the New York Hilton, Concourse C Nineteenth Century Joy Elizabeth Schulz, Metropolitan Community College Chairs: Andrew Arsan, University of Cambridge Akram Khater, North Carolina State University The Golden Chersonese: Racial Empowerment in the Travel Writings of Victorian Women and Chinese Men in Colonial Topics: The Middle East as a Site of Imperial Experimentation Singapore and Malaysia Andrew Arsan Allison Frickert-Murashige, Mount San Antonio College Multiple Mobilities: Controlling Movement in the Middle East Washerwomen, Prostitutes, Midwives, and Barbers: Issei Women Valeska Huber, German Historical Institute London and Work Middle Eastern Routes to the Global Kelli Y. Nakamura, Kapi’olani Community College Wilson Chacko Jacob, Concordia University (Montreal) This is par t of a multi-session wor kshop. See also sessions 90, 212, 269 A “South-South” Perspective on Europe and the Middle East and 295. Jacob Norris, University of Sussex Comment: Akram Khater 182. New Research on Central European Cities and Towns, Part 4: Minorities and Migrants: Studies in Central European Urban Dynamics 180. Authority and Spectacle in Medieval and Early Modern New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Iberia, Part 1: In Honor of Teofilo F. Ruiz: Authority Joint session with the Central European History Society in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom Chair: Robert Mark Spaulding, University of North Carolina at Wilmington Joint session with the Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Papers: Religion and Reform in Renaissance Cracow Howard P. Louthan, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Chair: Yuen-Gen Liang, Wheaton College (Massachusetts) Germany’s Urban Frontier: Urbanization and Germanization in Papers: A Border Policy? Louis IX and the Spanish Connection the Late Nineteenth Century William Chester Jordan, Princeton University Kristin Poling, University of Michigan–Dearborn The King, the Coin, and the Word: Imagining and Enacting Performing National Identity on the Town Square: Germans, Poles, Castilian Frontiers in the Early Modern Mediterranean and Jews in Poznań/Posen, 1886–1914 Claire Gilbert, University of California, Los Angeles Elizabeth Drummond, Loyola Marymount University “All Things to All Men”: Political Messianism in Late-Medieval Guest Workers and City Policy in the Federal Republic of Germany, and Early Modern Spain 1955–73 Bryan Givens, Pepperdine University Mark Spicka, Shippensburg University Early Modern Social Networks: The Vallgornera Family across the Comment: The Audience Mediterranean Sea Carrie Sanders, University of California, Los Angeles

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They Do Exist: Images of Maria de la Leche, 1600–Present Morning Sessions of the AHA Neomi DeAnda, University of Dayton Affiliated Societies Comment: The Audience

Sunday, January 4, 9:00–11:00 a.m. American Society of Church History Session 16 American Catholic Historical Association Session 16 Medieval Exemplarity and Its Afterlife Caribbean Catholicism: A Transatlantic Odyssey, New York Hilton, Holland Suite 1955–75 Chair: Kevin Madigan, Harvard Divinity School Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 Papers: Moved by Example: The Affective Pedagogy of The Life of St. Francis Chair: David Badillo, Lehman College, City University of New York Robert Davis, Fordham University Papers: “An Appropriate Spiritual Mission of the Bishops?” Francis Cardinal Biblical Exegesis as Hagiography in Christine de Pizan’s Cité des Spellman, Bishop James E. McManus, CSSR, and the Relationship of Dames Church and State in the 1960 Puerto Rican Gubernatorial Election Margaret Gower, Saint Mary’s College of California Stephen M. Koeth, CSC, Columbia University Suffering Nature and the Imitation of Christ: Contemplation Redemptorists and Vatican II: A Study of the Vice-Province of San of the Book of Nature and Spiritual Progress in the Diaries of Juan, 1965–75 Thomas Coke Patrick Hayes, Redemptorist Archives of the Baltimore Province, Brett Grainger, Harvard University Brooklyn, New York Externalization and Encryption: Female Exemplarity in Thomas of “La Conciencia del Gran Miami”: Monsignor Bryan Walsh, Cold Cantimpré and Johannes Nider War Catholicism, and the Making of a Multiethnic City Rachel Smith, Villanova University Anita Casavantes Bradford, University of California, Irvine Comment: The Audience Comment: Lillian Guerra, University of Florida American Society of Church History Session 17 American Catholic Historical Association Session 17 American Religion Online: How Digital Projects Archives, Libraries, and Community Collaboration Can Change How We Teach, Research, and Interpret Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Religious History Chair: Kate Feighery, Archdiocese of New York Archives New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Papers: Collaboration between Student Information Professionals and Archives Chair: John Fea, Messiah College Christine Angel, St. John’s University Papers: The American Converts Database: The Database as an Expression of Collaboration among Communities of Religious and Historians Scholarship on Religious History Carol Coburn, Avila University Erin Bartram, University of Connecticut Collaboration among Individuals, Groups, and Institutions to The Jesuit Libraries Provenance Project Provide Enduring Access to Catholic Research Resources Kyle B. Roberts, Loyola University Chicago Patricia Lawton, University of Notre Dame Placing Pluralism: Digital Scholarship, Public History, and the Collaboration with Scholars to Create Catholic History Educational Mapping of Chicago’s Religious Diversity Materials Christopher Cantwell, University of Missouri–Kansas City Maria R. Mazzenga, Catholic University of America Comment: John Fea Collaboration, Ethics, and Costs: A Brief History Peter J. Wosh, New York University American Society of Church History Session 18 Comment: The Audience Contemporary Orthodox Christianity and Human Rights American Catholic Historical Association Session 18 New York Hilton, Hudson Suite The Seventeenth Century in England, Italy, and Chair: Sarah Gordon, University of Pennsylvania Law School Hispanic America Papers: Orthodox Theology in Dialogue with Human Rights: Themes, January 4, 2015 4, January Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 Problems, and Perspectives Chair: Stefania Tutino, University of California, Santa Barbara Alfons Bruening, Saint Radboud University Papers: Lallemant, Surin, and Bergoglio: Pope Francis and the “Mystical Orthodox Rights in the U.S. Context: Religious Freedom, Public Movement” in Jesuit History Accommodation, and Marriage Benjamin Peters, University of Saint Joseph A. Gregg Roeber, Pennsylvania State University Building a Duchy to the Greater Glory of God: The Jesuits and the Comments: Elizabeth Prodromou, Tufts University Farnesian Policy in Parma, 1539–1604 Mark Movsesian, St. John’s University Law School Cristiano Casalini, University of Parma

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Business History Conference Session 2 Conference on Latin American History Session 36 The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire: A Century of Education in the Nineteenth-Century Americas Protest Art Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Sheraton New York, Conference Room H Chair: G. Antonio Espinoza, Virginia Commonwealth University Chair: Daniel Levinson Wilk, Fashion Institute of Technology Topics: Preparing New Ground: Education as Federal Policy in the Panel: Ellen Wiley Todd, George Mason University Territories of the United States, 1867–1912 Ruth Sergel, Street Pictures Nancy Beadie, University of Washington Seattle Harriet Bart, independent artist Culture Wars in the Trenches: Secular Education versus Catholic Ernesto Martinez, E.Lo.Ma Designs Education in the Archbishopric of Mexico in 1885 Margaret Chowning, University of California, Berkeley Chinese Historians in the United States Session 5 Nurturing the Nation: Normal Schools and the Professionalization From Threat to Opportunity: U.S. Perception of China, of Teaching in Nineteenth-Century Boston and Buenos Aires 1950s–70s M. Carolina Zumaglini, Florida International University Sheraton New York, Conference Room I “Civilizing the People”: Primary Teachers and the State in Lima, Chair: Yafeng Xia, Long Island University Brooklyn 1860–1921 G. Antonio Espinoza Papers: Seeking United Action: The Geneva Conference on Indochina and U.S. Policy toward China Comment: Roberta Wollons, University of Massachusetts Boston Tao Wang, Yale University Cultural Revolution in the U.S. Media Conference on Latin American History Session 37 Guolin Yi, Fairleigh Dickinson University Local Struggles, Translational Alliances: Labor Sino-American Rapprochement Reconsidered: Economic Diplomacy, Movements and International Alliances in Latin America Soft Power, and U.S.-China Relations in the 1970s Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Mao Lin, University of Southern Mississippi Chair: Barbara Weinstein, New York University Comment: Meredith L. Oyen, University of Maryland Baltimore County Papers: Abundance Won’t Return This Year: Argentine and Bolivian Workers, Nationalist Revolutions, and the Muddy Grounds of Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Perón’s Ambitions of Regional Leadership Ernesto Semán, New York University History Session 10 Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 9: Queer Tourism “International Solidarity Is the Best Way of Achieving the Workers’ and Gentrification: Heritage, Neoliberalism, and Aspirations”: Chilean and Argentine Workers and the Struggle over Gath and Chaves, 1951–52 African American Urbanity Angela Vergara, California State University, Los Angeles New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Conflicts of nterestsI and Strategic Alliances between Brazilians and Chair: Jeffrey Escoffier, Barnard College, Columbia University American Trade Unionists during the Civil-Military Dictatorship Topics: Queering Gay Gentrification:The Neoliberal State as Gentrifier on in Brazil Seattle’s Capitol Hill, 1986–91 Larissa Rosa Corrêa, University of Campinas Kevin McKenna, University of Washington Seattle Ties that Bind: Working Class Solidarity during the 1954 Banana Queer Tourism and Late Capitalism: San Francisco’s Fillmore and Strike in Honduras Castro Suyapa Portillo, Pitzer College Nan Alamilla Boyd, San Francisco State University Comment: Barbara Weinstein Planning around Queer Time: The District of Columbia’s African American Heritage Trails and the Maturation of Black Urbanity Kwame Holmes, University of Colorado Boulder German Historical Institute Session 2 Little Diplomats: Organizing Youth and Foreign Comment: Jeffrey Escoffier Relations in the Twentieth Century New York Hilton, Concourse D Conference on Faith and History Chair: Mischa Honeck, German Historical Institute Blessed: A History of the American Prosperity Gospel— Topics: Burying the Hatchet: The Boy Scouts and the Infantilization of Roundtable with Kate Bowler Peace, 1920–37 Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 Mischa Honeck Chair: John Wigger, University of Missouri “Young Siegfrieds”: The German American Bund’s Youth Divisions Panel: Kate Bowler, Duke University in Comparative Perspective Jay Green, Covenant College Julia Lange, University of Hamburg Randall Stephens, Northumbria University Newcastle U.S. Girl Scouts and Cold War “Democratic” Internationalism John Turner, George Mason University Emily L. Swafford, American Historical Association Popular Front, Part Two: Youth and the Origins of the Cold War Nick Rutter, Colgate University Comment: Gabriel N. Rosenberg, Duke University

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 86 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 87 Sunday, iewr blne uirfclycnen uha iigadtnre career e, diversity, balance,juniorfacultyconcernssuchashiringandtenur life-work topic orchallengefacingwomeninthediscipline, suchas a different discuss each will groups Small session. mentoring and brainstorming a to members AHA ested invitesallinter cordially Historians Women Committeeon The Park, andSt. Paul’s/Trinity Church. Fraunces Tavern,view the Battery,City Hall Green,Bowlingto Hall,Federal to thePrison(monument ShipManhattanacross to Martyrs),and back island GreeneFortPark Army Plaza, Pass at Grand the Battle House,Stone Old the to ces in Hill of theContinentalfor attle the retreat then follow Green-WoodCemetery, thetourwillstopatB arrows Lower ough AftertouringtheN Manhattan. andon thr rooklyn thebattlesitesinB through Brooklyn, and York,of New attle beginning with theBritish invasion at theNarrows between Staten Island bus andwalkingtourwillvisittheprincipalsitesofB This Tour leader:Sean Robertson, Harlem Academy Comment: Papers: Chair: Presiding: and continuedne Inthe faceofbothimprovements go forward. of thecommitteeaswe mission through various terrain. AHA CommitteeonWomenHistoriansBrainstormingand Sunday, January4,9:30–11:00a.m. Tour 17:RevolutionaryBrooklynandLowerManhattan Sunday, January4,9:15a.m.–1:15p.m. Association Session7 National HistoryCenteroftheAmericanHistorical Sunday, January4,9:00–11:00a.m.

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185. Many Lessons for Many Students The Cultural Dimensions of Cuba’s Angolan Adventure New York Hilton, Sutton Center Linda M. Heywood, Boston University Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Commanders in the Diaspora: West African Warfare in Colonial Cuba and the Issue of Leadership Chair: John H. Ball, Hillsborough Community College Manuel Barcia, University of Leeds Topics: Universal Design/Differentiated Instruction: Two Approaches to Comment: The Audience Engaged Learning Miguel Alonso, Nassau Community College Teaching History to Honors Students at a Community College 189. America and the Left: Past and Present John H. Ball New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Teaching American History Now, Tomorrow, and Forever: Learning Chair: Meg Jacobs, Princeton University American History in a Post-racial World Keith W. Berry, Hillsborough Community College Topics: The Ever-Present Roar of Gender Alice Kessler-Harris, Columbia University Using “Global” Social Media to Teach World History at Bronx Community College Radicalism’s Future: A History Terrence Corrigan, Bronx Community College, City University Christopher Phelps, University of Nottingham of New York State-Building from the Bottom Up World History as a Way of Knowing: Teaching Practical Meg Jacobs Cosmopolitanism The Democratic Party’s Right Turn David Goodman, Nassau Community College Rick Perlstein, independent scholar Extending a Hand: Teaching History at Community Colleges Reluctant Radicals: How the Labor Movement Moved to the Left Seth Offenbach, Bronx Community College, City University of Margins of American Politics New York Nelson Lichtenstein, University of California, Santa Barbara Teaching Critical Thinking on the Assembly Line Josué Rey, Florida International University The Political and Economic Context of Teaching History in Today’s 190. Capitalist Crisis, Surplus Labor, and Migration Community Colleges in East Asia Charles A. Zappia, San Diego Mesa College New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Chair: Wendy Matsumura, Furman University Topics: Shifting Boundaries of Okinawa: The Agricultural Crisis and 186. Whither the History Major? Expulsion of Workers to the Colonies New York Hilton, Trianon Ballroom Wendy Matsumura Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division Japanese Imperialism and the Colonial Precariat: Imperialist Distortions Chair: Trinidad Gonzales, South Texas College of Marx’s “Absolute, General Law of Capitalist Accumulation” Ken Kawashima, University of Toronto Panel: Allyson Hobbs, Stanford University Anne Hyde, Colorado College On the History and Politics of Political Economy in Japan: The Debate on David Kinkela, State University of New York at Fredonia Capitalism in Prewar Japan and Uno Kozo’s Theory of Capitalist Crisis W. Caleb McDaniel, Rice University Gavin Walker, McGill University The Osaka Incident and the Revolutionary Overthrow of the Meiji State Mark Driscoll, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 187. Interpreting and Representing Women’s History to the Public: A Roundtable New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A 191. Choosing Your Own History: Scholars as 0101 0111 Sponsored by the AHA Committee on Women Historians Game Designers 1010 New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Chair: Maria Bucur-Deckard, Indiana University Bloomington Chair: Pennee Bender, City University of New York, Graduate Center Panel: Louise Mirrer, New-York Historical Society Karen Offen, Stanford University Papers: Mission US: Reanimating Social History for the Twenty-First Century Vicki L. Ruiz, University of California, Irvine Leah Yale Potter, Electric Funstuff Joan Wages, National Women’s History Museum “Or Perish in the Attempt”: Choice versus History in the Videogame Meriwether Carlos Hernandez, Borough of Manhattan Community College 188. Africa and Cuba: Links and Legacies Serious Fun: Role Immersion Games and the Transformation of New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Higher Education Chair: Matt D. Childs, University of South Carolina Columbia Mark Carnes, Barnard College, Columbia University Papers: The Kingdom of Kongo and Afro-Cuban Saints Comment: Karl Jacoby, Columbia University John K. Thornton, Boston University

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192. Contesting the Meaning of “International” Governance: Panel: Jason A. Heppler, Stanford University Minorities and the League of Nations T. Mills Kelly, George Mason University New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Jana Remy, Chapman University Andrew J. Torget, University of North Texas Chair: Susan Pedersen, Columbia University Papers: The Nansen , International Law, and the Legal Imagination, 1921–30 196. Historians and the New Sound Studies Christopher A. Casey, University of California, Berkeley Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West Jewish Memory and the Human Right to Petition, 1933–50 Chair: Kathryn Burns, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Nathan Kurz, Yale University Topics: Sound Studies and Time “Our Great Disappointment”: Arab Women’s Campaigns for Susan Boynton, Columbia University Representation on the League of Nation’s Committee on the Legal Status of Women Sound of the South Nova Robinson, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Grace Elizabeth Hale, University of Virginia Comment: Susan Pedersen Organized Sound Studies: Notating the Ambiguous Interval between Sound and Music Scholarship Karl Hagstrom Miller, University of Texas at Austin 193. Dissenting Daughters: Early Modern Women’s Political Hearing Difference and Civic Engagement Mara Mills, New York University New York Hilton, Madison Suite Sound, Silence, Picture, and Place in the Medieval Cloister Joint session with the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Diane Reilly, Indiana University Bloomington Chair: Jennifer M. Jones, Rutgers University–New Brunswick When Sound Matters: The Case of Sonic Booms David Suisman, University of Delaware Papers: Dissenting Sons and the Construction of Female Authority in Fontevraud, 1627–43 Annalena Müller, University of Basel 197. History and Biology: Doing History With Biology Writing to the King: Women’s Petitions and Politics in the Spanish Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom Empire Chair: Edmund Russell, University of Kansas Irene Olivares, University of Kansas Papers: History and the Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences: Toward a Model Early Modern Dutch Women’s Engagement in Political Disputes of Interdisciplinary Collaboration Amanda Cathryn Pipkin, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Dan O’Brien, Harvard University Female Gossip and Political Engagement in Early Modern Italy Rethinking Transformation and Emergence: Cattle, E. coli Megan Moran, Montclair State University O157:H7, and Evolutionary History Comment: Jennifer M. Jones Christopher J. Otter, Ohio State University Octopuses and Ottonians: The Possibilities of Biological Systems Theories for Historical Inquiry 194. Food and History: Setting the Table for an Laura Wangerin, University of Wisconsin–Madison Interdisciplinary Discussion Comment: Harriet Ritvo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Chair: Jeffrey M. Pilcher, University of Toronto Topics: Can Food Be Disciplined? 198. Hustle and Show: Labor, Power, and Space on the Julia Abramson, University of Oklahoma Streets Sheraton New York, Conference Room F Teaching Food History in an Interdisciplinary Program Kyri Watson Claflin, Boston nivU ersity Chair: George Derek Musgrove, University of Maryland Baltimore County Sensorial Histories Amy Trubek, University of Vermont Topics: “Everybody Had a Hustle”: Street Capitalism and Cooperation in

an African American Neighborhood, 1930–45 2015 4, January Historical Sociology: Questions of Access and Limits of Digitized Jessica D. Klanderud, Tabor College Newspaper Databases Krishnendu Ray, New York University The Ku-Klux and the Contest for the Street in the Reconstruction- Era South Backstories of Global and Local Food Elaine Frantz Parsons, Duquesne University Susanne Freidberg, Dartmouth College Junkies and Jim Crow: The Integration of the NOPD Narcotics Squad Amund Tallaksen, Carnegie Mellon University 195. Digital Scholarship, Academic Careers, and 0101 0111 Tenure 1010 Comment: George Derek Musgrove New York Hilton, Regent Parlor Chair: Katina Rogers, City University of New York, Graduate Center

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199. Islam in Modern South Asia, South Asian Islam in the 202. New Directions in Unfree American Indian Labor Modern World: Trends and Transitions Histories Sheraton New York, Central Park West Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Chair: Muzaffar Alam, University of Chicago Chair: Alan Gallay, Texas Christian University Papers: The Global Context of Mughal Civility; or, Rethinking What We Topics: New Directions in the Study of Unfree American Indian Labor: Think about When We Think about Sulh-i Kull Geography, Law, and Methodology Rajeev Kumar Kinra, Northwestern University Preston McBride, University of California, Los Angeles Narrating Decline: Critiquing “Custom” at Aligarh and Deoband Slaves, Servants, Soldiers, Captives, and Wage-Earners: The Brannon Ingram, Northwestern University Complex World of Indian Labor in Colonial New England Margaret Newell, Ohio State University The Interface of Prophecy and Modernity in the Teachings of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad “Unholy Traffic in umanH Blood and Souls”: Systems of California Teena Purohit, Boston University Indian Servitude under United States Rule Benjamin Madley, University of California, Los Angeles Comment: Muzaffar Alam

200. Memory Studies and the Historian: Cases from Chile 203. On the Discourses of Secularism and Pluralism Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 under Augusto Pinochet to the Present New York Hilton, Concourse B Joint session with the American Society of Church History Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Tisa Wenger, Yale Divinity School Chair: Karin A. Rosemblatt, University of Maryland at College Park Topics: Pluralism, Secularism, and Religious Freedom in the Southern Baptist Convention Papers: “I Don’t Like to Ask Names, and I Never Remember Anything”: Tisa Wenger Narratives of Violence, Resistance, and Justice in Poblaciones of Gran Santiago, 1973–2013 Christianization, Colonialism, and the Secular Alison J. Bruey, University of North Florida Pamela Klassen, University of Toronto Women, Gender, and Memories on the Margins in Valparaíso, Religious Authenticity, Hegemony, and Agency 1973–2012 K. Healan Gaston, Harvard Divinity School Brandi A. Townsend, University of Maryland at College Park (Dis)establishments and the Paradoxes of American Judaism Crafting Indigenous Oral Histories: Social Scientists and Non- Shari Rabin, Yale University government Organizations in the Production of Oral Archives and Sources in Chile, 1990–2011 Claudio Javier Barrientos, Diego Portales University 204. The Age of Extreme(s): Age, Public Health, and the Minor Characters: Childhood in Pinochet’s Chile in Fiction and Postwar U.S. Welfare State, 1945–80 Film Sheraton New York, Conference Room C Marian E. Schlotterbeck, University of California, Davis Chair: Gerald Markowitz, John Jay College and Graduate Center, City Comment: Steve J. Stern, University of Wisconsin–Madison University of New York Topics: Stress and Welfare State Science: Postwar Medical Research Policy and the Pathologization of Old Age 201. Mexican Artists at the Disciplinary Crossroads Vanessa Burrows, City University of New York, Graduate New York Hilton, Concourse F Center Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Babies Having Babies: The National Epidemic of Teenage Pregnancy and the Case for Federal Intervention Chair: Mary Kay Vaughan, University of Maryland at College Park Jenna Healey, Yale University Papers: Art and the Creation of Mexico’s Communist Party Hunger Doesn’t Take a : United Bronx Parents and New Stephanie Smith, Ohio State University York City’s First-Ever Citywide Free Summer Meals Program Writing History “Against the Grain” of History: Walter Benjamin Lana Povitz, New York University and Jose Clemente Orozco’s Epic of American Civilization “The Federal Government Can and Should Provide Maximum Mary Coffey, Dartmouth College Leadership”: The Problem of Age Discrimination and the Failure of Frida Kahlo’s Self-Fashioning in Art and Life: Making Trouble, Executive Order 11141, 1956–65 Third Gender, Third Space Benjamin Hellwege, City University of New York, Graduate Adriana Zavala, Tufts University Center Queerly Mexican: Art, Identity, and the LGBTQ Movement in Mexico Edward McCaughan, San Francisco State University Comment: Rick A. Lopez, Amherst College

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205. The Authority of Science at the Edges of Empire 209. War Material: Perspectives on the Study of Sheraton New York, Conference Room D the Material Culture of Conflict in the United Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia States and Europe New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Chair: Deborah Coen, Barnard College Short, visual, “PechaKucha”-style presentations will transition into a modified Papers: To Bridge the Hemispheres: Nineteenth-Century Refrigerators and roundtable discussion with teaching simulation. The audience will be provided Technological Precarity in Colonial Australasia with a set of primary sources, including an object, image, and text, to prompt Rebecca Woods, Columbia University conversations about interweaving material, visual, and textual sour ces to pose Reading Imperial Skies: Climatology and the Limits of Colonial research questions and enliven history for students. Planning Chair: Sophie K. White, University of Notre Dame Philipp N. Lehmann, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Papers: How the “Merely Material” Matters: Jewish Possessions during and Mad around the Edges: Psychiatric Enclaves in British India after the Second World War Anouska Bhattacharyya, Harvard University Leora Auslander, University of Chicago Sweetness and Control: Chemists in the Sugar Market Bombs Away: Combating Dangerous World War II Trophies in the David Singerman, Rutgers Center for Historical Analysis Early Postwar Era Comment: Deborah Coen James B. Seaver, Indiana University Bloomington Material Politics: World War I, a Silver Inkstand and Object-Based U.S. Cultural Nationalism 206. The Democratization of Higher Education in the Catherine Whalen, Bard Graduate Center United States since World War II Clothed in Conflict: Clothing and Racial Violence in the Post-Civil Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West War American South Chair: James Grossman, American Historical Association Sarah Jones Weicksel, University of Chicago Panel: Daniel Greenstein, Gates Foundation The Performance and Representation of Alsatian Folk Dress during Earl Lewis, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation World War I Carol Geary Schneider, Association of American Colleges and Sara Hume, Kent State University Museum Universities Comment: Joan E. Cashin, Ohio State University Maris Vinovskis, University of Michigan

210. Women and the Gendered Contours of Black 207. The Ground Below and Above: New Directions in the Internationalism in the Twentieth Century Study of Mining in the Colonial Americas New York Hilton, Morgan Suite New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Chair: Keisha N. Blain, Pennsylvania State University Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History and the Labor and Working Class History Association Papers: African American Women and Racial Uplift in U.S.-Occupied Haiti, 1915–34 Chair: Allison Bigelow, University of Virginia Brandon R. Byrd, Mississippi State University Topics: The Impact of Colonial Latin American Mining: For the Global Cosmopolitan Minstrelsy: Race, Gender, and Transatlantic Theatre Economy and for the Environment Zakiya Adair, University of Missouri–Columbia Kendall Brown, Brigham Young University The National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) and South Mining Exploration and the Limits of Empire in Colonial Brazil Africa: Global Black Motherhood during the Early Cold War Hal Langfur, University at Buffalo (State University of New York) Nicholas Grant, University of East Anglia Taking the Enlightenment Underground: Mapping Mining Spaces The Multidimensional International Activism of the National in the Late Colonial Andes Council of Negro Women, 1944–75 Heidi Scott, University of Massachusetts Amherst Brandy Thomas Wells, Ohio State University Revisiting Silver Mining and Its Many Societies in New Spain Comment: Tiffany Gill, University of Delaware Dana Velasco Murillo, University of California, San Diego Comment: Kris E. Lane, Tulane University 211. Authority and Spectacle in Medieval and Early Modern 2015 4, January Iberia, Part 2: In Honor of Teofilo F. Ruiz: Spectacle in 208. The Problem of Slavery Medieval Iberia and Beyond New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom Chair: Mia E. Bay, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Joint session with the American Academy of Research Historians of Panel: David Brion Davis, Yale University Medieval Spain Laurent M. Dubois, Duke University Chair: Jarbel Rodriguez, San Francisco State University Walter Johnson, Harvard University Paul E. Lovejoy, York University Andrea Major, University of Leeds

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92 Sunday, JanuaryFriday, Jan. 4, 11:30 3, 8:30–10:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m.a.m. Sessions

Papers: The Saint at the Gate: Giving Relics a “Royal Entry” in Eleventh- 213-4. Virtual Tours for Teaching History in the Digital Age to Twelfth-Century France Clayton Brown, Utah State University Kate Craig, University of California, Los Angeles 213-5. More Than a Pretty Picture: The Function of Art in the Plague Years Seasonal Dining in the Middle Ages Shellie Clark, College at Brockport (State University of New York) Paul Freedman, Yale University 213-6. Africa through the Windshield: Seeing Like a Motorist in the Age of Poetry’s Struggle with “Judaism” in Thirteenth-Century Castile Empire David Nirenberg, University of Chicago Andrew Denning, University of British Columbia Poverty and Authority in Late Medieval Castile 213-7. Private Guns, National Politics: Understanding Foreign Gun Francisco García-Serrano Nebras, Saint Louis University Ownership in Republican China, 1912–49 Lei Duan, Syracuse University Transmitting Urgency in the Romance: An Example of Strategic Codeswitching in the Crown of Aragon’s Thirteenth-Century 213-8. History and the Other Disciplines: History of Costume, Aesthetics, Chancery and Appearance Antonio M. Zaldivar, University of California, Los Angeles Damayanthie Eluwawalage, University of Wisconsin–Stout Comment: The Audience 213-9. The Beauty, the Beast, the Goofy: Images of the Communist in Cold War Italy This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 180 and 239. Rosario Forlenza, Columbia University 213-10. The Programming Historian 212. Lessons Learned from the AHA’s Bridging Cultures Fred Gibbs, University of New Mexico Program, Part 3: Incorporating the Atlantic and the 213-11. The “Counter-Plantation” and Sugar Cultivation: How Peasant Pacific into the U.S. and the Comparative Americas Practices Shaped Dominican Sugar Plantations Survey Courses: Methodologies for the Classroom Amelia Hintzen, University of Miami New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A 213-12. Space, Assistance, and Material Culture: Discussing Marginality in Chair: Oscar Cañedo, Grossmont College Barcelona’s Hospital de la Santa Creu during the Fifteenth Century Ximena Illanes, Pontificia nivU ersidad Católica de Chile Panel: Stephanie Amerian, Santa Monica College Neil P. Buffett, Suffolk County Community College 213-13. The United States of AIDS: Digitizing ACT UP Oral History Oscar Cañedo Norma Juarez, New School Lesley A. Kawaguchi, Santa Monica College Guy Greenberg, New School Amy Godfrey Powers, Waubonsee Community College 213-14. Corridors: Pathologies of Mixed-Use Space in Socialist Chinese Architecture This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 90, 181, 269 and 295. Katie Lambright, University of Minnesota Twin Cities 213-15. Reading between the Lines: The Runaway Art Project Michael Lord, Historic Hudson Valley 213-16. The Reconstitution of Occitan Jewish Culture after the French Expulsions Poster Session Tamar Marvin, Jewish Theological Seminary 213-17. A Digital Reading of Twentieth-Century Demography Emily Klancher Merchant, University of Michigan Sunday, January 4, 11:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. 213-18. Mapping the Creek Indian World of Spirits in the Long Nineteenth 213. Poster Session #1 Century New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade Steven Peach, University of North Carolina at Greensboro This poster session provides a venue for the newest developing historical research. 213-19. A New Database of the Moneyers from Late Anglo-Saxon and Early Though relatively new to the humanities, poster sessions have long been utilized Anglo-Norman England at professional meetings in scientific fields.n O sessions with sev eral panel Jeremy Piercy, University of Edinburgh participants, audience interaction is limited to brief discussion periods—usually 213-20. The Devil Himself: A Tale of Honor, Insanity, and the Birth of only a few people are able to ask questions and each pr esenter may not hav e Modern America time to discuss their r esearch fully. The poster session addr esses this common Andrew Porwancher, University of Oklahoma problem, allowing for considered dialogue and engaging interaction. 213-21. Henry Clay’s Coffin:The Politics of Death and Material Culture The 2015 Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the Sarah Purcell, Grinnell College posters on display. The following presenters will be av ailable to discuss their posters between 11:30 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, January 4: 213-22. Architects of the State: The Rebuilding of Lisbon and the Portuguese Public Sphere, 1755–77 213-1. From Minecraft to Mindcraft: Integrating Digital Humanities into Tyson Reeder, University of California, Davis History Courses Amy Absher, Case Western Reserve University 213-23. Provincializing Pacific istorH y: Hubert Howe Bancroft’s History Company, the Historical Profession, and the Unmaking of the 213-2. Spreading the Light in New York, 1880-82 Pacific Coast Robert Allen, Auckland University of Technology Travis E. Ross, University of Utah 213-3. Thugs and Gangs of Lebanon’s Civil War: Reconsidering Conflict 213-24. Encircling Value: Historical Linguistics and Documenting through Microhistory Precolonial Inland African Trade Dylan Baun, University of Arizona Andrea Felber Seligman, Allegheny College

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Sunday,Friday, Jan. January 3, 8:30–10:00 4, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 a.m. Sessions p.m. Sessions 93

American Society of Church History Session 21 Midday Sessions of the AHA Catholicism, Knowledge, and Authority in Nineteenth- Affiliated Societies Century Germany New York Hilton, Holland Suite Sunday, January 4, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Chair: Margaret Bendroth, Congregational Library American Catholic Historical Association Session 19 Papers: Ignaz von Döllinger Prior to the First Vatican Council An Aggiornamento of Twentieth-Century Italian Thomas Albert Howard, Center for Faith and Inquiry, Gordon College American Catholic History Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 Provincial Kulturkampf: Those Rhineland Radicals and Their Berlin State Authorities Chair: Mary Elizabeth Brown, Marymount Manhattan College and Michael B. Gross, East Carolina University Center for Migration Studies Portrait of a Recovering Catholic: Dante in Nineteenth-Century Papers: Catholic Political Thought, Modernity, and the Italian German Catholic Scholarship Constitution Richard Schaefer, Plattsburgh (State University of New York) Rosario Forlenza, Columbia University Comment: The Audience The Great Earthquake: Catholics Face a Challenge Salvatore La Gumina, Nassau Community College Liberty and Identity: Faith and Art in the Italian American American Society of Church History Session 22 Colonies in the Years of Mass Migration Religion in Public Schools: Church History, Law, Marina Loffredo, School of Archival Studies and Paleography, Education, and Ethics State Archive of Rome New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Comment: Mary Elizabeth Brown Chair: Candy Gunther Brown, Indiana University Bloomington Papers: That Olde Deluder Reconsidered: The Devil and the Dawn of American Catholic Historical Association Session 20 American Public Education The Challenge of the Margins: American Women Charles McCrary, Florida State University Religious on the Frontier in the United States and One Hundred Years of the Good Book as Textbook in American Canada Public Schools Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Mark Chancey, Southern Methodist University Chair: Stephanie A.T. Jacobe, independent scholar Narratives of Moral Decline and the Civil Religion of Moral Education Papers: “Abandoned for His Love”: Marie de l’Incarnation and Narrative Leslie Ribovich, Princeton University Identity Mary Corley Dunn, Saint Louis University Comment: Sarah Gordon, University of Pennsylvania Law School Adele Brise: Belgian Catholic Pioneer, Visionary, and Priest Karen Park, St. Norbert College American Society of Church History Session 23 The Saint Frances Orphan Asylum: The Oblate Sisters of Psalms Across the Empire: The Reform and Revival of Providence Mission to Save Orphaned African American Girls Psalmody in the British Imperial Age Amy Rosenkrans, Notre Dame of Maryland University New York Hilton, Green Room Comment: Stephanie A.T. Jacobe Chair: Hugh McLeod, University of Birmingham Papers: The Early Influence ofWatts ’s Hymns and Psalms in the American American Catholic Historical Association Session 21 Colonies Jane Giscombe, Dr. Williams Library (London) The Church in Revolutionary Times Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 The Revival of Tudor Psalmody in Early Twentieth Century Oxford Laura Wiebe, Central Methodist University (Missouri) Chair: Martin R. Menke, Rivier University From Geneva to Lahore: Calvinist Psalmody and Church Growth Papers: Christ the King Seminary and the Very Last Crusade: The Knights among Low-Caste Christians in Colonial India of Malta and the Greek War of Independence Jeffrey Cox, University of Iowa 2015 4, January Dennis Castillo, Christ the King Seminary Comment: Hugh McLeod England’s Conversation: Ethnic, National, and Religious Discourse in Robert Parsons’s Three Conversions Lauren Horn Griffin, nivU ersity of California, Santa Barbara Corpus Mysterium Regni and the Execution of Louis XVI Alexandra Wang, St. John’s University Comment: The Audience

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94 Sunday, January 4, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sessions

Central European History Society Session 11 “Dear Doctor Kinsey”: Letters to Kinsey about Queer Female Desire Reevaluating 1914: The Experience of World War I and in the Postwar United States Its Legacy for Weimar Germany’s Unaffiliated Left Amanda H. Littauer, Northern Illinois University Sheraton New York, Conference Room H The Interdisciplinary Imperative in Writing and Reading about Chair: Eric D. Weitz, City College of New York Subcultures of the Queer Past: A Study of Queer Spaces in the Work of Eileen Myles, Samuel R. Delany, and David Wojnarowicz Papers: “Many Went and Risked Their Lives…and Should Those Who Faye Guenther, York University Come Back Once Again Be Persecuted?” The First World War and the Transformation of German Homosexual Emancipation “Creative Empowerment”: Other Countries Collective and Black Laurie T. Marhoefer, Syracuse University Gay AIDS Activism in New York City Darius Bost, San Francisco State University The Demand for the Inviolability of Life: Radical Pacifism and the Comment: Roderick Ferguson Politics of Subjectivity in World War I and Weimar Germany Ian Grimmer, University of Vermont Asserting the Primacy of Human Love: Internationalism, Pacifism, Conference on Latin American History Session 41 and Sex Reform during the First World War Connections and Disconnections between the Americas Kirsten Leng, Columbia University in the Long Nineteenth Century Comment: Kathleen M. Canning, University of Michigan Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Chair: Caitlin A. Fitz, Northwestern University Central European History Society Session 12 Papers: Envisioning Latin America: Intellectual Practices of Difference in American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies America’s Fin de Siècle American Society of Church History Session 20 Franz Hensel-Riveros, University of Texas at Austin Evangelicalism and Economy: Interdisciplinary The Other Hemispheric Revolution: Neutral Commerce between Investigations of Anglo-American and Central European Venezuela and the United States, c. 1797–1810 Theology, Economic Theory, and Social Activism from Edward P. Pompeian, University of Mary Washington the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century Black Freedom in the Urban Americas: Free People of Color, Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Organizational Membership, and Social Distinction in Charleston and Cartagena Chair: Kate Carté Engel, Southern Methodist University John Garrison Marks, Rice University Papers: Playing Games with Your Life: Halle Pietism and the Worship of Comment: Mariana L. Dantas, Ohio University Wealth Peter James Yoder, Berry College Christian LaTrobe, Moravian Missions, and the Slave Economy in Conference on Latin American History Session 42 the British West Indies, 1780s–1830s Indigenous Citizens before the Indigenous Movements Jenna M. Gibbs, Florida International University in Latin America “When the Poor Are Redeemed, then the World Will be Redeemed”: Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 Eschatology and Political Economy in the Thought of Christoph Chair: Laura Gotkowitz, University of Pittsburgh Blumhardt Papers: Trying Testimonies: The Liberal-Aymara Alliance in the 1899 Civil Christian T. Collins Winn, Bethel University War Comment: Benjamin Marschke, Humboldt State University E. Gabrielle Kuenzli, University of South Carolina Columbia Indigenous Constituents in the White Republic: Costa Rica, 1910–40 Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Alejandra Boza, Universidad de Costa Rica History Session 11 How to Fight Like an Indian Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 10: Racialized Marc Becker, Truman State University Queer Pasts in Literature and Letters Land for Those Who Work It? Or Land for Its Original Owners? New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Carmen Soliz, New York University Chair: Roderick Ferguson, University of Illinois at Chicago Comment: James Sanders, Utah State University Papers: Facts and Fictions M. Shelly Conner, University of Illinois at Chicago

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 94 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 95 Sunday, Panel: Chair: and theChallengesofGetting It Rightprogram. This roundtable is part of theNational History Center’s Historians, Journalists, Comment: Papers: Chair: Comment: Papers: Chair:

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January 4, 2015 96 Sunday, JanuaryFriday, Jan. 4, Luncheons 3, 8:30–10:00 and a.m.Other Sessions Events

Luncheons Luncheons

Sunday, January 4, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Sunday, January 4, 12:15–1:45 p.m. Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Business History Conference Luncheon Luncheon: Capitalism, Global Business, and Inequality: The Manhattan Club at Rosie O’Grady’s, 201 West 52nd Street A Roundtable Discussion Presiding: Tim Borstelmann, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite Speaker: Stuart L. Bernath Memorial Lecture: “Revolutionary Circuits: Chair: Mary A. Yeager, University of California, Los Angeles Toward Internationalizing Cultural Approaches to the Study of Panel: Richard R. John, Columbia University U.S. in the World” Juliette Levy, University of California, Riverside Lien-Hang T. Nguyen, University of Kentucky Stephanie Decker, Aston Business School SHAFR will award the Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize, the Stuart L. Bernath Bartow Jerome Elmore, University of Alabama Dissertation Research Grant, the W. Stull Holt Dissertation Fellowship, the Lawrence Gelfand-Armin Rappaport-Walter LaFeber Dissertation Fellowship, the Samuel Flagg Bemis Dissertation Research Grants, the Michael J. Hogan Local Arrangements Committee Tour Foreign Language Fellowship, the William Appleman Williams Junior Faculty Research Grants, and the Myrna F. Bernath Fellowship. The event will take place at the M anhattan Club at R osie O’Grady’s, 201 Sunday, January 4, 12:30–3:30 p.m. West 52nd Street. Tickets cost $40 and must be purchased in advance through the AHA registration process. Tour 20: National 9/11 Memorial Museum New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Tour leaders: 9/11 Museum staff Sunday, January 4, 12:00–1:45 p.m. Opened in 2014, the National September 11 Memorial Museum serves as the country’s principal institution for examining the implications of the ev ents of Coordinating Council for Women in History 9/11, documenting the impact of those ev ents, and exploring the continuing Annual Awards Luncheon significance of S eptember 11, 2001. The museum’s 110,000 squar e feet of New York Hilton, Concourse G exhibition space are located within the archaeological heart of the World Trade Center site—telling the stor y of 9/11 thr ough multimedia displays, ar chives, Presiding: Susan Wladaver-Morgan, co-president, Coordinating Council narratives, and a collection of monumental and authentic ar tifacts. The lives of for Women in History every victim of the 2001 and 1993 attacks will be commemorated as visitors have Rachel Fuchs, Arizona State University and co-president, the opportunity to learn about the men, women, and children who died. Join a Coordinating Council for Women in History staff member on a guided tour of the museum, examining authentic artifacts to Speaker: A Catalyst for Change—the Shirley Chisolm Project of Brooklyn understand what happened on 9/11, how people responded in the aftermath of Women’s Activism: Social Justice In and Outside the Academy the attacks, and the history and rebuilding of the World Trade Center. Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Limit: 25 people. $25 members, $30 nonmembers

Film Festival AHA Career Fair Sunday, January 4, 12:00–2:00 p.m. New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B Sunday, January 4, 1:00–5:00 p.m. The Gulabi Gang Career Fair Nishtha Jain, director and writer (P iraya Film, Final Cut for R eal, New York Hilton, Americas Hall II Raintree Films, 2010) Sponsored by the AHA’s Career Diversity for Historians initiative. Cosponsored by the I ndiana University-Purdue University The AHA will hold its second Car eer Fair during the 2015 annual meeting. Indianapolis Arts and Humanities Institute Historians from a variety of fields—government agencies, military, nonprofits, businesses, colleges and univ ersities, presses, independent scholars, K–12, etc.—will speak with students and job candidates about the path to becoming a historian. M entors can hold informational inter views, display materials about being a historian in their field, or just be available to talk about their own journey in the history profession. All AHA annual meeting attendees ar e invited to participate; contact Liz Townsend at [email protected] for more information.

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Elizabeth Lunbeck, Vanderbilt University Local Arrangements Committee Tours Joan Wallach Scott, Institute for Advanced Study Debora Leah Silverman, University of California, Los Angeles

Sunday, January 4, 1:15–5:45 p.m. Tour 21: Big Onion: Historic Brooklyn Heights, with the 215. From Surviving to Thriving: The Challenges and Brooklyn Historical Society Rewards of Practicing History as an Independent Scholar New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York Hilton, Sutton South Tour leader: A graduate student, historian, guide from Big Onion Walking Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division and the National Tours Coalition of Independent Scholars Explore New York City’s first Landmark District on a special tour co-sponsored Chair: Susan R. Breitzer, National Coalition of Independent Scholars with the B rooklyn Historical Society. We will discuss the neighborhood ’s Topics: The Rights and Responsibilities of Equity: Independent Scholars, agricultural roots, its emergence as the country’s firstsuburb, and its twentieth- Professional Standards, and the National Coalition of Independent century decline and dramatic r egeneration. The tour will conclude with Scholars a visit inside B rooklyn Historical Society (BHS). A BHS interpr eter will Susan R. Breitzer share a brief histor y of the institution and its impact on B rooklyn, and offer visitors a glimpse inside the landmar k Othmer Library, which holds the most The Independent Historian and the Question of “Academic” Rigor comprehensive collection of materials related to Brooklyn’s history and culture Neil B. Dukas, National Coalition of Independent Scholars in the world. Tour stops could include the Hotel St George, Plymouth Church Beyond the Academy: History Employment and Scholarly of the Pilgrims, and sites associated with Seth Low, George Washington, Arthur Professionalism Miller, Victoria Woodhull, W.E.B DuBois, and Gypsy Rose Lee. Ray F. Kibler III, National Coalition of Independent Scholars Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately one mile, at a moderate pace, during the two-hour tour. Limit: 25 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers, $15 students 216. How Can I Be a Historian in this Job? New York Hilton, Sutton Center Sponsored by the AHA Professional Division Sunday, January 4, 1:45–5:15 p.m. Chair: Julia Akinyi Brookins, University of Chicago Tour 22: Big Onion: A Multi-Ethnic Eating Tour of the Panel: Carin Berkowitz, Chemical Heritage Foundation Lower East Side John A. Lawrence, former chief of staff to House Speaker Nancy New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Pelosi Tour leader: A graduate student, historian, guide from Big Onion Walking Jennifer Reut, American Society of Landscape Architects Tours Steven C. Wheatley, American Council of Learned Societies This tour exploring the ethnic and immigrant history of the diverse Lower East Side, focusing on the neighborhoods of the Jewish East Side, Little Italy, and Chinatown. During the course of our walk w e will sample about 10 differ ent 217. Why Caribbean History Matters items, representing the Dominican, Jewish, Italian, and Chinese communities New York Hilton, Concourse C of the Lo wer East S ide. Our “noshing” stops ar e designed to highlight the Sponsored by the AHA Research Division neighborhood history and come from unique and historic shops and markets. Most of these items ar e vegetarian or dair y. All food sampling will be done Chair: Lillian Guerra, University of Florida outdoors and we do not include r estaurants on our tour. Our “noshing” tour Panel: Laurent M. Dubois, Duke University uses the markets and shops to highlight the histor y and this walk should not Jesse E. Hoffnung-Garskof, University of Michigan be considered a meal. Melanie J. Newton, University of Toronto Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately 1.5 Stuart B. Schwartz, Yale University miles, at a moderate pace, during the two-hour tour. Limit: 25 people. $25 members, $30 nonmembers, $20 students. 218. How Teaching Became a Mission of the American Historical Association from the 1960s New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Program Committee Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division and the Society for History Education Chair: T. Mills Kelly, George Mason University Sunday, January 4, 2:30–4:30 p.m. Panel: William Weber, California State University, Long Beach 214. Reassessing the Influence of Classic Theory on Matthew Downey, University of Northern Colorado Historical Practice: Freud Marjorie Bingham, St. Louis Park High School (Minnesota) New York Hilton, Sutton North Judith P. Zinsser, Miami University of Ohio Stanley N. Katz, Woodrow Wilson Center, Princeton University Chair: Eli Zaretsky, New School Panel: Ben Kafka, New York University and Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

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218-A. Harlem: The Unmaking of the Ghetto Topics: Confronting the Impossibility of Representation: Literary Responses New York Hilton, Concourse B to the Armenian Genocide Talar Chahinian, California State University, Long Beach Sponsored by the AHA Local Arrangements Committee The Armenian Genocide Debate as a Paradigm of Conceptual Chair: Craig Steven Wilder, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Blockage in Holocaust and Genocide Studies Panel: Lance Freeman, Columbia University A. Dirk Moses, European University Institute Jonathan Gill, University of Amsterdam The Armenian Genocide as a Nation-Building Policy Cheryl L. Greenberg, Trinity College (Hartford) Harris Mylonas, George Washington University David Levering Lewis, New York University Kevin McGruder, Antioch College “Speaking to One Another?” Lessons Learnt from the First Camilo José Vergara, writer, photographer, and documentarian Collaborative Oral History Project between Armenia and Turkey Leyla Neyzi, Sabanci University

219. American Evangelicals Looking Abroad Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 222. GIS and History: Epistemologies, 0101 0111 Joint session with the American Society of Church History Considerations, and Reflections 1010 New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Chair: Elizabeth Flowers, Texas Christian University Chair: Alexander von Lünen, Loughborough University Papers: The Global Apocalypses of Billy Graham Topics: Matthew Avery Sutton, Washington State University Pullman “Is It about a Bicycle?” Digital Spatial History and Its Pitfalls Alexander von Lünen Seeking to Save the World: American Evangelicals and Global Beyond the Cartesian Pale: Digital De-territorializations of History Population Control Charles Travis, Trinity College (Dublin) David King, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Postcolonial Technoscience: GIS for Indigenous History Remember the Palestinians: Progressive Evangelicals’ Rejection Mark H. Palmer, University of Missouri–Columbia of Christian Zionism and Criticism of American Foreign Policy, 1977–2013 Brickmakers and Architects: Mapmaking and the Presentation of Brantley Gasaway, Bucknell University History Robert K. Nelson, University of Richmond “Packed With Joyous People”: Christianity Today, American Foreign Policy, and Christians Abroad Space Syntax Augmented GIS as a Method of “Thick Spatial Sarah Ruble, Gustavus Adolphus College Description” in Built Environment Research for Social History Sam Griffiths, nivU ersity College London Comment: Seth Dowland, Pacific utheranL University

220. Beyond the Musical Sonderweg: Bourgeois Habitus, Art 223. History and Biology: History and Evolution New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Music, and German National Identity Revisited Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom East Chair: Julia Adeney Thomas, University of Notre Dame Joint session with the Central European History Society Papers: Convergence or Coevolution? Ishikawa Chiyomatsu and the Problem of Japanese Modernization Chair: Michael Beckerman, New York University Ian Jared Miller, Harvard University Papers: Musical Time, Social Time, and the Bourgeois Habitus: Concert- When Is a Cow Not a Cow? Going as an Urban Social Practice in Nazi Germany Harriet Ritvo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Neil Gregor, University of Southampton The Implications of Epigenetic Research for the Study of History Music, Bürgerlichkeit, and the Social Hierarchies of the Randolph Roth, Ohio State University Theresienstadt Ghetto Anna Hajkova, University of Warwick Comment: Daniel L. Smail, Harvard University Culture in Flight: Refugees and the Politics of Music in Latin America, 1933–60 Andrea Orzoff, New Mexico State University 224. History and Literature: The State of the Relationship New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Comment: The Audience Chair: Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto Panel: Elaine Freedgood, New York University 221. Considering Genocide: Understanding the Fate of Ottoman Catherine Gallagher, University of California, Berkeley Armenians and Its Legacy One Hundred Years Later Jane Kamensky, Brown University New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Sudipta Kaviraj, Columbia University Chair: Ronald Grigor Suny, University of Michigan

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Sheraton New York, Empire Ballroom West Joint sessionwiththeConference onLatinAmericanHistory Sheraton New York, Conference Room F North AmericanConference onBritish Studies Joint sessionwiththeCentralEuropean HistorySociety andthe Sheraton New York, Conference Room B Law andtheHumanities Latino Radicalisms,1930s–70s Problem ofHumanityintheWakeGreatWar Humanitarianism, InternationalRelief,andthe

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Sessions

New York Hilton, Morgan Suite New York Hilton, Madison Suite Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Netherland andItsAtlanticConnections Interdisciplinary ApproachtoUnderstandingNew New PerspectivesonDutchYork:An across TimeandSpace New Meanings,OldWords:MuslimReadingPractices Imperial China Religious AspectsofConfucianPracticeinLate

Miranda Frances Spieler isLaw?”intheAge ofEmpir“What Camille Robcis, CornellUniversity The Search for T Manan AhmedAsif, ColumbiaUniv Helen Pfeifer, Princeton U Of Cannons Konrad Hirschler, U Reading Practices andM Joel Blecher AndalusiaCentury Did Muhammad Write b Joel Blecher, in theOttoman Empire Ann Waltner Daniel Burton-R Wenchang Devotion attheChangzhou CountySchool,1550s–1790s Jennifer Eichman, Resear Confucian Academies: Reading thePr Miaw-fen Lu, Academia S Qing Confucians Household Worship ofConfucianS Thomas Wilson, Hamilton College Imperial andAncestral S Ann Waltner, U Wim Klooster, Clark Andrea CatharinaMosterman, Univ Reconstructing aSlav Danny Noorlander, S All the Wor Deborah Hamer, BostonCollege The Dutch West India CompanyandMarriage “Each andEver Jeroen van denH Netherlandic City Planning inNorth America The “Ideal City” ofN Dennis Maika, Ne Slave Trade intoNew Amsterdam Seventeenth-Century Dutch Traveler Studies, University ofLondon,SOAS ld’s aStage: The Life andPoems ofJacob Steendam, and Canons: Imperial Expansion and Islamic Literacy Washington andLeeUniversity y One Must Refrain from Adulterous Intercourse”: ranshistorical LegalConcepts niversity of Minnesota Twin Cities ose, Princeton University urk, CoastalCarolina Research w Netherland Institute e Ship Voyage: The Gideon andtheDutch niversity ofLondon ew Amsterdam: Seventeenth-Century

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January 4, 2015 100 Sunday,Friday, January Jan. 3, 4, 8:30–10:00 2:30–4:30 p.m.a.m. Sessions

231. Teaching World History across Time, Space, Genocide and Resistance: The Northern Paiutes and Oregon’s and Place “Exterminator” Governor George L. Woods during the “Snake New York Hilton, Regent Parlor War” of 1855–68 Simone Smith, University of Oregon Joint session with the World History Association Comment: The Audience Chair: Robert B. Bain, University of Michigan 234. The Traffic in Women: Early Twentieth-Century Topics: Different Semester, Different Format: Flexibility in Teaching the World History Survey While Maintaining Academic Integrity Debates in France, Argentina, and Vietnam Sheraton New York, Lenox Ballroom Kathy Callahan, Murray State University Joint session with the Coordinating Council for Women in History Teaching across Cultures and Place: World History in the U.S. and Indian Classrooms Chair: Rachel Fuchs, Arizona State University Rajeshwari Dutt, Indian Institute of Technology Mandi Papers: Philanthropy, Politics, and the White Slave Trade in Belle Époque From Plato to NATO and Then Some: Compressing Time and France Space in the AP World History Survey Eliza Earle Ferguson, University of New Mexico Erik Vincent, Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School (Georgia) Rumors, Lies, and Unreliable Narrators: The Crafting of White Online to Brick and Mortar, and College to Middle School: Slave Narratives Teaching World History across Boundaries Elisa Camiscioli, Binghamton University (State University of John Rosinbum, Arizona State University New York) Comment: Grace Peña Delgado, University of California, Santa Cruz 232. The History of Engineering and the Engineering of History 235. Under the of Hirschman: The Doux Commerce Sheraton New York, Central Park West Thesis and the Historians Chair: Paul Israel, Thomas Edison Papers, Rutgers University Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West Topics: Professional Courtesy: Historians Encounter Engineers Chair: Rebecca E. Karl, New York University Michael Geselowitz, IEEE History Center at Stevens Institute Papers: What to Do about “Doux Commerce”? of Technology Anoush F. Terjanian, East Carolina University Industry and Reflection: ngineers’E Class Struggle and Philosophy The Doux Commerce Thesis in Action after World War II of Technology around 1900 Sheryl Kroen, University of Florida Adelheid Voskuhl, University of Pennsylvania Rethinking Homo Economicus: Albert Hirschman, Montesquieu, Standardization, Diversity, and the Digital Age and Adam Smith Andrew Russell, College of Arts and Letters, Stevens Institute Jeremy I. Adelman, Princeton University of Technology Solving Problems but Only Reactively? Engineers, Laws, Corporations, and Technological Risk 236. War Work: Race, Gender, Empire, and Labor Lee Vinsel, College of Arts and Letters, Stevens Institute of in World War I Technology New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association 233. The Northern Paiute History Project: Chair: Chad Williams, Brandeis University Engaging Undergraduates in Decolonizing Topics: Race and Work in France, 1914–18 Research with Tribal Community Members Richard S. Fogarty, University at Albany (State University of Sheraton New York, Conference Room D New York) Chair: Kevin Hatfield, nivU ersity of Oregon A New Kind of Woman Is Following the Army: Women’s Work Papers: A Shared History Pedagogy: Undergraduate Researchers and with the American Expeditionary Forces Indigenous Communities Kara Dixon Vuic, High Point University Kevin Hatfield Zoom In: Visualizing Egyptian Laborers in World War I France Reciprocal Research: Protocols and Guidelines for Conducting Mario M. Ruiz, Hofstra University Native American Archival Research Unexpected Encounters: Chinese and North African Laborers in Jennifer O’Neal, University of Oregon the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I Oregon Apocalypse: The Hidden History of the Northern Paiute Shuang Wen, Georgetown University James Gardner, Gardner and Associates

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237. Whispers in the Archive: Rumor and Gossip as Primary “Nuestros Españoles”: Hispanic Identity in the Habsburg Sources Historical Imagination New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Katherine Elliot van Liere, Calvin College Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Comment: Teofilo .F Ruiz, University of California, Los Angeles Chair: Lauren (Robin) Derby, University of California, Los Angeles This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 180 and 211. Papers: “Words Not Fit for the Writing”: Rumor and Popular Politics in Late-Mughal Delhi, 1700–40 240. Reexamining the Illegal Slave Trade in the Nineteenth- Abhishek Kaicker, University of California, Berkeley Century Atlantic, Part 1: Abolition in Practice: The Personal Politics and the Politics of the Personal: Innuendo, Gossip, Implementation of the Abolition Treaties in the and Networking in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Beijing Nineteenth-Century Atlantic Andrea S. Goldman, University of California, Los Angeles New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A Oral Pleasures, Neighbors’ Tongues: Stories of Transgendering Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Avant la Lettre in Buenos Aires, 1902–30 Chair: Anita Rupprecht, University of Brighton Mir Yarfitz, Wake Forest University Papers: “Traders in Chains and the Enslaved Set Free”: The Transatlantic Specters of Marx, Hegel, and Columbus Too: Haunting and Slave Trade Turned Upside Down and What Happened Next Historicity in the Haitian-Dominican Borderlands Emma Christopher, University of Lauren (Robin) Derby Comment: Lynn A. Hunt, University of California, Los Angeles Foreign Policy and Slave Trade: The Courts of Mixed Commission and Their Role in Implementing Abolition in Havana and Rio de Janeiro Jennifer Nelson, University of Leeds 238. Whither Ethnohistory? Writing Indigenous History across Disciplinary and Other Boundaries The Juan Francisco Cascales’ Registers of Liberated Africans from the Havana Mixed Commission, 1827–36 New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Henry B. Lovejoy, University of British Columbia Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History “Crimes Committed by the Captain and Crew”: Race, Ethnicity, Chair: Laura Matthew, Marquette University Nationality, and Culpability on a Nineteenth-Century Illegal Panel: Héctor Concohá Chet, Plumsock Mesoamerican Studies and Slave Ship Voyage Universidad Rafael Landivar Laura Rosanne Adderley, Tulane University Janine Gasco, California State University, Dominguez Hills Comment: Jane G. Landers, Vanderbilt University Stacie M. King, Indiana University Bloomington This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 270 and 296. Sergio Romero, University of Texas at Austin Frauke Sachse, University of Bonn

241. Toward a Global History of Sexual Science, c. 1900- 239. Authority and Spectacle in Medieval and Early Modern 70, Part 1: Global Transfers of Sexual Knowledge: Iberia, Part 3: In Honor of Teofilo F. Ruiz: Spectacle in Dubbing, Appropriations, and Translations Early Modern Iberia and Beyond New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B New York Hilton, Mercury Ballroom Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Joint session with the American Academy of Research Historians of Transgender History, the Conference on Latin American History, and Medieval Spain the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Chair: Anthony Grafton, Princeton University Chair: Veronika Fuechtner, Dartmouth College Papers: Poor Colors, Rich Colors: Spanish Clothing in the Early Sixteenth Papers: The Rise of Global Scientia Sexualis: Dubbing and the Century Epistemologies of Sexual Science throughout the World, c. 1900 Hilario Casado Alonso, Universidad de Valladolid Pablo E. Ben, San Diego State University From New Rome to Old: Andrew’s Head and the Circulation of The “Ellis Effect”: Translating Sexual Science in Republican Sanctity China, 1911–49 Maya Maskarinec, University of California, Los Angeles Douglas E. Haynes, Dartmouth College “Muy Grandes Hombres de Acaballo”: New World Influences on Translating Havelock Ellis in Republican China, 1910s–1940s Spanish Horsemanship in the Sixteenth Century Rachel Hui-Chi Hsu, Johns Hopkins University Kathryn Renton, University of California, Los Angeles Comment: Howard Chiang, University of Warwick This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 271 and 297.

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102 Saturday,Sunday, January January 3, 10:30 4, a.m.–12:002:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions

242-13. American Debates over the Meaning of Labor Unionism Examined Poster Session with Digital Humanities Tools Vilja Hulden, University of Colorado Boulder Sunday, January 4, 2:30–5:00 p.m. 242-14. The Volunteers Join World War I: Inside a History Exhibition Kathleen Hulser, Pace University 242. Poster Session #2 New York Hilton, 2nd Floor Promenade 242-15. Louisiana Purchases: The Acquisition of the Indian Estate Robert Lee, University of California, Berkeley This poster session pr ovides a v enue for the ne west developing historical research. Though relatively new to the humanities, poster sessions hav e long 242-16. The “Érdekes Ujság Battlefield hotoP Album” and the Experience been utilized at professional meetings in scientific fields.n O sessions with several of Hungarian Photography during World War I panel participants, audience interaction is limited to brief discussion periods— Matthew R. Lungerhausen, Winona State University usually only a fe w people are able to ask questions and each pr esenter may 242-17. Preparing Future Faculty alongside High School Teachers: A not have time to discuss their research fully. The poster session addresses this Workshop Model common problem, allowing for considered dialogue and engaging interaction. Jared McBrady, University of Michigan The 2015 Program Committee encourages all meeting attendees to visit the 242-18. Palmer Park: A Digital and Micro-history posters on display. The following presenters will be av ailable to discuss their Kevin McQueeney, University of New Orleans posters between 2:30 and 5:00 p.m. on Sunday, January 4: 242-19. Teaching Graduate Students to Code Lincoln Mullen, George Mason University 242-1. Visualizing Saintly Commerce in the Medieval Mediterranean Ali Akhtar, Bates College 242-20. Landscapes in Orbit: The Material and Political Topography of Near-Earth Space 242-2. Drawing Liberalism: A Macroanalysis of Herblock’s Political Lisa Ruth Rand, University of Pennsylvania Cartoons, 1946–76 Simon Appleford, Creighton University 242-21. Standardizing the Periodic Table: Science, Pedagogy, and Graphical Representation 242-3. Mapping the Medieval Bishop: Sacral Landscape and Episcopal Ann E. Robinson, University of Massachusetts Amherst Activity in Thirteenth-Century Avignon Christine Axen, Boston University 242-22. Disciplinary Art: Race and Criminal Sketches in U.S.-Occupied Haiti Grace Sanders Johnson, University of Pennsylvania 242-4. National History Day Senior Individual Exhibit Winner: “Malaga Island: The Community That Maine Erased” 242-23. Born in Columbia: The Birth of a Nation and Nationalizing a Noah Binette, Noble High School (North Berwick, Maine) City’s Reconstruction Memory Jennifer Taylor, University of South Carolina Columbia 242-5. Public Policy in Teaching Historical Methods David R. Buck, Thiel College 242-6. FRANKLIN—Access to the FDR Library’s Digital Collections Afternoon Sessions of the AHA Kirsten Carter, Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Affiliated Societies Museum Sarah Malcolm, Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Sunday, January 4, 2:30–4:30 p.m. 242-7. “No Weeds to Be Seen Anywhere”: Pingree’s Potato Patches and the American Catholic Historical Association Session 22 Visual Culture of Vacant Lot Gardening in Detroit, 1890–1900 The Refugee in Transnational Catholic Social Thought Joseph Cialdella, University of Michigan in the Twentieth Century 242-8. Beyond Citation: Critical Thinking about Academic Databases Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Eileen Clancy, City University of New York Chair: James McCartin, Fordham University 242-9. History and Materiality of Dispensational Charts A.T. Coates, Duke University Papers: Family Unity, Child Refugees, and the American Catholic Bishops’ Brendan Pietsch, Nazarbayev University Response to the Wagner-Rogers Bill, 1939 Gráinne McEvoy, Boston College 242-10. Missing Links: Embodiments of Evolution in Late Nineteenth- Century American Culture Here Come the Cubans: The American Catholic Church and Their Kathrinne Duffy, Brown University Cold War Refugee Resettlement Efforts, 1960–80 Todd Scribner, Catholic University of America 242-11. Integrating a Video “Narrative Lab” in the History Survey Course James Frusetta, Hampden-Sydney College Migration, Solidarity, and the Italian Church’s Response to the 1991 Albanian Refugee Crisis 242-12. State Taxes, Wealth, and Public Debt after the American Elizabeth Venditto, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Revolution, 1783–1815 Frank Garmon Jr., University of Virginia Comment: James McCartin

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American Catholic Historical Association Session 23 Papers: Information Revolutions Past and Present: How Digital Medieval Sacramental Life and Thought Humanities Can and Can’t Transform Scholarship on the History Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 of Christianity in Late Antiquity David Michelson, Vanderbilt University Chair: Jodi E. Bilinkoff, University of North Carolina at Greensboro The Social Network: Digitizing and Mapping Evidence for Greco- Papers: A Satisfactory Satisfaction? The Importance of Satisfactory Works Roman Voluntary Associations in Medieval Penance Sarah Bond, Marquette University Raymond J. Dansereau, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Linked Open Data and the Promise of Syriac Prosopography A Time of Cleansing or a Place of Cleansing? Bernard of Daniel L. Schwartz, Texas A&M University at College Station Clairvaux on Purgatory James G. Kroemer, Concordia University Comment: J. Edward Walters, Princeton Theological Seminary Bathing Susanna: The Gender of Baptism in Later Anglo-Saxon England American Society of Church History Session 27 Carolyn Twomey, Boston College Confessional Boundaries in the Reformation Era Comment: Jodi E. Bilinkoff New York Hilton, Holland Suite Chair: Jonathan Strom, Emory University American Catholic Historical Association Session 24 Papers: Boundaries of Belief: Remapping Heaven and Earth in Christians, Getting Along or Not Reformation Europe Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 Erin Lambert, University of Virginia Chair: Mary Elizabeth Brown, Marymount Manhattan College and Autobiographical Narrative, Conversion, and Confessional Center for Migration Studies Boundaries in the Reformation: Caspar Güttel (1471–1542) and George Witzel (1501–73) Papers: Toward Cooperation: Protestants and Catholics in French Vincent Evener, University of Chicago Divinity School Polynesia, 1860–1924 Matthew Dowling, Providence College English Catholic Historiography at Home and Abroad: The Writings of Harpsfield and tapletonS Strange Gallows-Fellows: The Ecumenical Martyrdom(s?) of Lauren Horn Griffin, nivU ersity of California, Santa Barbara Archbishop Oliver Plunkett and Edward Fitzharris Mark Thomas Duggan, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Comment: Jonathan Strom The New “Non-sectarianism”: Public Relations in the Age of Secularization Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Kolby Knight, University of California, Santa Barbara History Session 13 Bible Wars: Catholics, Immigrants, and the Public School Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 11: Narratives of Controversy in the Antebellum West Knowing: Telling Queer Lives Luke Ritter, Saint Louis University New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Comment: Mary Elizabeth Brown Chair: Nicholas L. Syrett, University of Northern Colorado Papers: “As Natural as Breathing”: Butch-Femme Subjectivity in Postwar American Society of Church History Session 25 America Studying American Religion, Politics, and Foreign Alix Genter, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Policy All at the Same Time: Where Do We Go from Plagued Memory: AIDS and the Telling of the 1970s Here? Katie Batza, University of Kansas New York Hilton, Hudson Suite “My Music Is All Little Queer Things”: Analyzing Memoirs and Chair: Andrew Preston, Clare College, University of Cambridge Case Studies of African American Women Performers Who Loved Women, 1915–40 Panel: Raymond Haberski, Indiana University-Purdue University Cookie Woolner, Case Western Reserve University Indianapolis Darryl Hart, Hillsdale College Transgender Lives: Decentering Narratives of Discovery in the Christine Leigh Heyrman, University of Delaware Nineteenth Century Leo P. Ribuffo, George Washington University Jesse Bayker, Rutgers University–New Brunswick January 4, 2015 4, January Comment: Leisa D. Meyer, College of William and Mary American Society of Church History Session 26 The Digital Humanities and the Study of Christianity in Late Antiquity: Reflections on a Disciplinary Intersection New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Chair: Jeanne-Nicole Saint-Laurent, Marquette University

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104104 Saturday,Sunday, January January 3, 10:30 4, a.m.–12:002:30–4:30 p.m. Sessions

Conference of Historical Journals Hurricanes, Public Health, and Citizenship under Empire and Open Access: U.S. Journals, U.K. Authors, and Beyond? Dictatorship: A Comparative Analysis of Puerto Rico and the Sheraton New York, Conference Room I Dominican Republic during the Great Depression Geoff Burrows, City University of New York, Graduate Center Comment: Mark Healey, University of Connecticut Conference on Latin American History Session 49 Revisiting Development in Twentieth-Century Peru Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online Session 2 Chair: Charles F. Walker, University of California, Davis H-Net Commons: A General Overview and Call for New Participants Papers: Roads to Progress: Public Perceptions of Highway Construction in New York Hilton: Concourse G Peru, 1920–30 Mark Rice, Baruch College, City University of New York Presiding: Peter Knupfer, H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online Jean Stuntz, H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online Revisiting Stagnation: An Urban Environmental History of Iquitos between the Rubber Boom and the Oil Boom, 1920–70 Adrián Lerner, Yale University Polish American Historical Association Session 8 “Popular Participation Is Revolution”: Development through The Aftermath of World War II Organized Self-Help in Revolutionary Peru New York Hilton, Concourse F Helen Gyger, Pratt Institute Chair: Anna Jaroszynska-Kirchmann, Eastern Connecticut State Attacking Power in Peru: Blackouts, Technology, and Shining Path University Violence Papers: Citizenship Practices during the Cold War: A Polish American Willie Hiatt, Long Island University Post Model? Comment: Charles F. Walker Florence Vychytil-Baudoux, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales

Conference on Latin American History Session 50 Paralyzing the Polonia from Within: Communist Secret Police Infiltration of the Polish American Community Frontiers of Blackness in Argentina, Colombia, and the Pawel Styrna, Institute of World Politics Circum-Caribbean, 1810–1930 Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 Cold War Émigrés: Looking for Patterns in Exile Political Activism Anna Mazurkiewicz, University of Gdansk Chair: Anne Eller, Yale University Polish Refugees from Siberia in the United States, 1945–2014 Papers: A Talented Tenth; or, A Functional Majority: Education and Iwona Korga, Józef Piłsudski Institute of America African Descendants in Cordoba, Argentina 1810–53 Erika Edwards, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Defending the Remnants: American Jews Respond to Poland’s 1968 Anti-Zionist Campaign Neither Colombian nor Jamaican: A Perspective from the Rachel Rothstein, University of Florida Caribbean Islands of San Andrés and Providencia Sharika D. Crawford, U.S. Naval Academy Comment: The Audience From a Mulato Caribbean to a Black Pacific: Changing Locations of Racialization in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Colombia Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Session 15 Jason Peter McGraw, Indiana University Bloomington Investigating the Cold War in South Asia: Diplomacy Comment: Herman Bennett, City University of New York, Graduate and Security after Empire Center Sheraton New York, Conference Room J Chair: Andrew Jon Rotter, Colgate University Conference on Latin American History Session 51 Topics: From Russia with Love: Dissidents, Defectors, and the Politics of Public Health Concerns in the Aftermath of Disaster: Asylum in Cold War India Perspectives from Colonial and Modern Latin America Paul M. McGarr, University of Nottingham Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room East Diplomacy of Quiet Candor: John Sherman Cooper’s Tenure as Chair: Teresita Levy, Lehman College, City University of New York Ambassador to India, 1955–56 Andrew L. Johns, Brigham Young University Papers: Earthquakes, Typhus, and the Cultural Construction of Colonial Medicine in Late Colonial Central America U.S. Alliance Politics and Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia: Martha Few, University of Arizona The Cases of Franco-Pakistani and West German-Indian Nuclear Relations, 1974–78 State and Public Health Responses to Natural Disasters: Jayita Sarkar, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Earthquakes in Argentina and Chile, 1835–1939 University Quinn Dauer, Indiana University Southeast Comment: Robert J. McMahon, Ohio State University Treating Burns and Reducing Fire Risk: Hygiene Experts and the Fight against Fire Hazards in Mexico City, 1870–1910 Anna Alexander, Georgia Southern University

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 104 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 105 Sunday, Parliamentarian: Pass theGavel Other Business Reports oftheVicePresidents: Report oftheNominatingCommittee: Report oftheAHREditor: Report oftheExecutiveDirector: Presiding: Comment: Papers: Chair:

AHA BusinessMeeting Sunday, January4,4:45–6:00p.m. Teaching andLearningNetworkingOpportunity Sunday, January4,3:45–4:45p.m. Digital Drop-inRoom Sunday, January4,2:30–4:30p.m. Society forItalianHistoricalStudiesSession3 Sunday, January4,2:30–4:30p.m.

Research Division: J Professional Division: Teaching Division: Elaine K.Carey, St. John’s University Dane Kennedy, George Washington University Robert A.Schneider, Indiana University James Grossman Jan Goldstein, University ofChicago New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor New York Hilton, ConcourseH Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 New York Hilton, Green Room World WarI Multi/Interdisciplinary InvestigationsintoItalyand

Michael LesBenedict, Ohio State University Adrian Lyttleton Alessia Palanti, ColumbiaUniversity through theGreat War Cinema: F Jacqueline Reich, For Maciste Goes to W Ernest Ialongo, Hostos CommunityCollege,CityU an Avant-Garde Movement Futurism from Foundation to Adrian Lyttleton, Johns H New York AHA

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Conference on Latin American History Session 53 Conference on Latin American History Session 56 Teaching and Teaching Materials Committee: Teaching Mexican Studies Committee: New Directions in Latin America in the “Global Sixties” Mexican History Sheraton New York, Carnegie Room West Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite Chair: Jessica Stites Mor, University of British Columbia at Okanagan Chair: David E. Tavárez, University of Chicago Panel: Christine Hatzky, Leibniz Universität Hannover Papers: Nahua Cultural History Studied across Disciplinary Boundaries Marc Hertzman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Justyna Olko, University of Warsaw Jessica Stites Mor Change and Cultural Continuity as Object and Method of Study Margaret Power, Illinois Institute of Technology in Colonial Indigenous Documents Eric Zolov, Stony Brook University Michel Oudijk, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Studies of Race in Colonial Mexico Conference on Latin American History Session 54 María Elena Martínez, University of Southern California Caribbean Studies Committee: Gender and the New Directions in Borderlands History; or, Strategies for Caribbean Archive Transgressing the Nation-State Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 José Angel Hernández, University of Massachusetts Amherst Chair: Marisa J. Fuentes, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Panel: Yvonne Fabella, University of Pennsylvania Aisha K. Finch, University of California, Los Angeles Society for Military History Natasha Lightfoot, Columbia University The George C. Marshall Foundation Nicole Saffold Maskiell, Cornell University George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History Katherine Paugh, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee New York Hilton, Rendezvous Trianon Sasha Turner, Quinnipiac University Chairs: Gregory J. W. Urwin, Temple University and president, Society for Military History Conference on Latin American History Session 55 Rob Havers, president, George C. Marshall Foundation Central American Studies Committee: New Directions: Paper: George C. Marshall and the “Europe First” Strategy, 1939–51: A Transnational and Interdisciplinary Histories of Study in Diplomatic as Well as Military History Central America Mark A. Stoler, University of Vermont and editor, Papers of Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 George Catlett Marshall Chair: Heather Abdelnur, Georgia Regents University A reception will follow beginning at 7:00 p.m. in the Hilton’s Petit Trianon Room. Papers: Signs of Life: Mesoamerican and Colonial Medical Cultures in Enlightenment Guatemala eception Martha Few, University of Arizona AHA R Oral History Project, Latin America David Carey Jr., University of Southern Maine Sunday, January 4, 6:00–7:30 p.m. Rethinking Regions: Trade and Migration along the Southern Committee on Minority Historians’ Reception Pacific Coast New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Laura Matthew, Marquette University Sponsored by The Graduate Center, CUNY – Office of Educational Chapinismos: Producing the Local and Everyday Life in Late Opportunity and Diversity Capitalist Latin America J.T. Way, Georgia State University The Committee on M inority Historians cordially invites minority scholars, graduate students, and others attending the 2015 annual meeting to a reception in the New York Hilton’s Gibson Suite.

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 106 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 107 Monday,Monday, Chair: Panel: Chair: Chair: January 7–10,2016. 130th annualmeeting, ’s is thehostcityforAHA Atlanta to offer. has Georgia, tlanta, for coffeeandlightpastriestolearnaboutallthatA by Stop Topics: 245. 244. 243. Monday, January5,8:30–10:30a.m. Monday, January5,7:30–9:00a.m.

E Sponsored by theAHA Teaching Division New York Hilton, Sutton South Sponsored by theAHA Teaching Division New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Council for Women inHistory Sponsored by the AHAProfessional Division andtheCoordinating New York Hilton, Sutton North Sponsored by theAtlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau New York Hilton, 2ndFloor Promenade Wish Professors Knew Wish ProfessorsKnew Teaching withPrimarySources: WhatStudents Asian StudiesandHistory Collaboratively TeachingResearchMethodsin Discipline You inDiverseCareersbeyondTeachingthe Careers: HowYourHistoryPh.D.CanServe Roundtable: ExploringAlternativeAcademic Farewell CoffeeReception

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January 5, 2015

108108 Saturday,Monday, January January 3, 10:30 5, 8:30–10:30a.m.–12:00 p.m.a.m. Sessions

248. Cartographies of Caste: Mapping Subordination in 251. History and the Other Disciplines in the India, 1700–2000 Classroom: Creating Connections to History Sheraton New York, Conference Room H through Interdisciplinary Courses and Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Programs New York Hilton, Concourse G Chair: Dilip Menon, University of Witswatersrand Chair: Linda K. Salvucci, Trinity University Papers: Mixed-Caste, Illegitimate Interloper, or Virtuous King? A Case for a Vernacular History of State-Making in Colonial Banaras, Papers: Connecting History: Our Discipline’s Role in an Interdisciplinary Northern India, 1770–81 Liberal Arts Core Rochisha Narayan, William Paterson University John Bezis-Selfa, Wheaton College (Massachusetts) Built Environment and Caste: Producing Dalits in Bombay, 1900–39 Pairing History with the Other Disciplines: Linked Courses and Juned Shaikh, University of California, Santa Cruz Learning Communities in History Education Sarah Elizabeth Shurts, Bergen Community College The Possibility of Namasudra and Muslim Unity in Late Colonial Bengal History for STEM Majors: Pitfalls, Opportunities, and Rewards Dwaipayan Sen, Amherst College Nancy L. Quam-Wickham, California State University, Long Beach Dalit Women’s Education in Modern India: Double Discrimination Comment: The Audience Shailaja D. Paik, University of Cincinnati

252. Immigrant Women at the Edge of the Nineteenth- 249. Citizenship at the End of Empire: Navigating Century Marketplace Sovereignty and Loyalty in the Late Ottoman, British, New York Hilton, Madison Suite and Habsburg Empires Joint session with the Business History Conference and the Society New York Hilton, Concourse B for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Chairs: Leyla Amzi-Erdogdular, Columbia University Chair: Tracey Deutsch, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Lale Can, City College of New York Papers: Enslaved Women and African Marketing Practices in Antebellum Papers: Contested Subjects: Ottoman and British Jurisdictional Quarrels Charleston over Afghans and Indians Abroad, 1878–1914 Alisha Cromwell, University of Georgia Faiz Ahmed, Brown University Sacred Savings? Irish American Women and the Domestic Economy Not Quite Foreign, Not Quite Ottoman: Central Asian Muslims Laura D. Kelley, Tulane University and Imperial Citizenship in the Late Ottoman Empire Lale Can “About Making a Living”: Immigrant Businesswomen in Nineteenth-Century U.S. Cities Citizens of Two Empires: Ottoman and Habsburg Muslims’ Allegiances Susan Ingalls Lewis, State University of New York at Leyla Amzi-Erdogdular New Paltz Pertinents, Residents, and Citizens: Fiume’s Three-Way Post-imperial Comment: Jocelyn Wills, Brooklyn College, City University of Policy to Count Everyone and Exclude Almost Everyone, 1918–21 New York Dominique K. Reill, University of Miami Comment: Naor Ben-Yehoyada, Harvard University 253. Innovation in Digital Publishing in the

Humanities 0101 0111 250. Gendered Marginalization and Rapid Urbanization in New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor 1010 the Twentieth-Century Middle East Chair: Stephen Robertson, Roy Rosenzweig Center for New York Hilton, Concourse D History and New Media Chair: Sara Pursley, Princeton Society of Fellows Panel: Martin Eve, University of Lincoln and Open Library of Papers: Managing Gendered Marginality in Colonial Cairo, 1920–39 Humanities Francesca Biancani, Bologna University Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Modern Language Association Matthew K. Gold, New York City College of Technology and Gendered Thievery: Women, Shoplifting, Petty Theft, and Money City University of New York, Graduate Center Forgery in Interwar Egypt Cecy Marden, Wellcome Trust Hanan Hammad, Texas Christian University Lisa Norberg, Barnard College Library, Columbia University Between Port Cities: Women Travelling Alone around the Mediterranean Liat Kozma, Hebrew University of Jerusalem The Uneasy Condition of Artistes: Performers and Prostitutes in the Mandate Mediterranean Camila Pastor, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas Comment: Sara Pursley

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254. Learning in Networks of Knowledge (LINK): 257. Paperwork/Paper-at-work Toward a New Digital Tool for Cultivating Sheraton New York, Central Park East Historical Thinking Chair: Florence C. Hsia, University of Wisconsin–Madison New York Hilton, Regent Parlor 0101 Panel: Martha Fleming, Reconstructing Sloane Consortium/British 0111 Joint session with the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History 1010 Museum and New Media Lisa Gitelman, New York University Chair: David Pace, Indiana University Bloomington Neil F. Safier, John Carter Brown Library Elizabeth Yale, University of Iowa Topics: Designing the Tool Ali Erkan, Ithaca College Comment: Ann M. Blair, Harvard University Designing the Tool, Part II Steven Lam, Cornell University 258. People and Technology: Comparing Road Building Using the Tool across Three Continents Matthew E. Klemm, Ithaca College Sheraton New York, Central Park West Using the Tool, Part II Chair: Jo Guldi, Brown University Michael B. Smith, Ithaca College Papers: What Is Public Utility? Roads and Communities in Western Assessment France, 1757–90 Susannah McGowan, University of California, Santa Barbara Katherine McDonough, Stanford University Views of Nature and Road Building in Central America, 1800–38 Sophie Brockmann, University of London 255. Moving History beyond the Academy: Lessons from the World of Jewish History Trade Routes and Road Building in North India, c. 1820–1900 Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Jagjeet Lally, University College London Chair: Rebecca Kobrin, Columbia University Comment: Jo Guldi Topics: Museums: Making the Multiple Strands of History Accessible and Meaningful Annie Polland, Lower East Side Tenement Museum 259. Power and Place: The Semantics of Economic Growth in the Twentieth Century Repackaging a History Ph.D.: A View from the Jewish Foundation Sheraton New York, Conference Room B World Felicia Herman, The Natan Fund Chair: Brodwyn M. Fischer, University of Chicago From the Academy to a Learned Society: Reflections of an Papers: A Green Revolution for France? Executive Director Venus Bivar, Washington University in Saint Louis Rona Sheramy, Association for Jewish Studies Bringing Development Back Home: The United States and the Global War on Poverty Daniel Immerwahr, Northwestern University 256. Networks of the Dead: Politics, Ethics, Technologies, Integrating U.S. Regionalism into “Americanization” Narratives in Method the Era of Development Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West Tore Olsson, University of Tennessee at Knoxville Chair: Rebecca Nedostup, Brown University Comment: Brodwyn M. Fischer

Topics: Counting Bodies: The Tokyo Air Raids and the Politics of Memory 2015 5, January Cary Karacas, College of Staten Island, City University of New York 260. Rethinking Global History: The Great Divergence and Tradition and Testimony: Protecting Indigenous Ancestral Remains the Military Revolution and Cultural Items New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Honor Keeler, Wesleyan University Joint session with the Economic History Association Bodies Borne Home: The Kinship of the Dead in a World of Chair: R. Bin Wong, University of California, Los Angeles Nation States Rebecca Nedostup Topics: The Great Divergence in Global Military History Tonio A. Andrade, Emory University Between the Dead Body and the Body Politic: Compulsory Exhumation in Singapore Does the Great Divergence Matter? Ruth E. Toulson, University of Wyoming Pamela Kyle Crossley, Dartmouth College Individuating War Dead: Scientific nterI vention into Post-conflict Why Did Europe Conquer the World? Political Economy, the Societies Military Revolution, and the Great Divergence Sarah Wagner, George Washington University Philip Hoffman, California Institute of Technology The Great Divergence in the Anthropocene Prasannan Parthasarathi, Boston College Comment: R. Bin Wong

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110 Saturday,Monday, January January 3, 10:30 5, 8:30–10:30a.m.–12:00 p.m.a.m. Sessions

261. Salutem et Signum: Early Medieval Women’s 264. Seeking Freedom in Modern Commercial Society: An Participation in Documentary Culture Interdisciplinary Approach to Studying Hong Kong New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A Cinema and Its Global Connections, 1950s–90s Joint session with the Medieval Academy of America Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom Chair: Megan Welton, University of Notre Dame Chair: Poshek Fu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Papers: Women and Documents in Early Medieval Legal Formularies Papers: Hong Kong/China/Hollywood: Colonial Censorship and the Warren C. Brown, California Institute of Technology Cultural Politics of Cinema in the Cold War Kenny Ng, Open University of Hong Kong Women and Charters in the Carolingian East Julie A. Hofmann, Shenandoah University Commercializing Revolution and Patriotism: The Leftist Repackaging of the PRC Opera Film in 1950s–60s Hong Kong Exchanges of Women: Gift Giving and Donation in Early Kwok Wai Hui, Hong Kong Institute of Education Medieval Women’s Letters and Charters Hailey Lavoy, University of Notre Dame The Lure of the Afterimage Kristine Harris, State University of New York at New Paltz Comment: Joan Ferrante, Columbia University Comment: Poshek Fu

262. Scholarship, Activism, and Expertise: The Social 265. The Black 1980s: Politics, Culture, and New Sciences in the United States in the Twentieth Century Historiographies New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A Joint session with the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Chair: Peniel Joseph, Tufts University Progressive Era Papers: The Policing of Black Youth and the Rise of Urban Violence during Chair: John Louis Recchiuti, University of Mount Union the Reagan Era Papers: Experts and Democracy: Political Science and Urban Reform in Elizabeth Hinton, Harvard University the Early Twentieth Century Black Ivy Rage and Reform: Activism on the 1980s Harvard Ariane M. Liazos, Harvard University Campus When Empathy Fails: Some Problematic “Progressives” and Afrah Richmond, University of Bridgeport Expertise Black Politics and School Reform in Harold Washington’s Chicago Stephen Turner, University of South Florida Elizabeth Todd-Breland, University of Illinois at Chicago The Carnegie Corporation’s Gunnar Myrdal, Black Scholars of Black America, Black France: The 1980s, Hip Hop, and Race, and Postwar Racial Liberalism Colorblindness across the Atlantic Maribel Morey, Clemson University Samir Meghelli, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Comment: John Louis Recchiuti Comment: Martha Biondi, Northwestern University

263. Science and Religion across Time, Space, and 266. The Digital Recovery of African American and 0101 0111 Disciplinary Borders African Diaspora History and Literary History: 1010 Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite A Roundtable Discussion Chair: Ronald L. Numbers, University of Wisconsin–Madison New York Hilton, Concourse A Topics: Magic (Wu), Medicine (Yi), Religion (Jiao), and the Scope of Chair: Kim Gallon, Purdue University Rationality (Li) in Imperial China Topics: African Diaspora, Ph.D. and Radical Black History Online TJ Hinrichs, Cornell University Jessica Johnson, Michigan State University A Quest for Authenticity: Science and Religion in the Medieval Margaret Walker Personal Papers Digital Archives Project and Modern Middle East Robert Luckett, Jackson State University Ahmed Ragab, Harvard University Black Press Research Collective Modernity’s Enchantments: Science and Religion in Japan and Kim Gallon Western Europe - Jason Ananda Josephson, Williams College The Virtual Harlem Project Bryan Carter, University of Arizona Historicizing the Here and Now: Science and Religion in Modern America Andrew Jewett, Harvard University Comment: Ronald L. Numbers

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267. “The New Conquest History”: New Approaches to the Atlantic Slavery and the Hidden Atlantic: Slaves Trades and the Spanish Conquest of Mexico Smuggling of Human Bodies ( Negreros, Captains, Crews, and New York Hilton, Bryant Suite Personnel) in the Nineteenth Century Michael Zeuske, University of Cologne Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Agricultural Slight of Hand: Cuban Plantations as Fronts for the Chair: Stuart B. Schwartz, Yale University Illegal Trade in African Slaves Panel: Michel Oudijk, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México William C. Van Norman, James Madison University Maria Castaneda de la Paz, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Comment: David Eltis, Emory University México Matthew Restall, Pennsylvania State University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 240 and 296. John Schwaller, University at Albany (State University of New York) Stephanie Wood, University of Oregon Comment: Camilla D. Townsend, Rutgers University–New Brunswick 271. Toward a Global History of Sexual Science, c. 1900– 70, Part 2: Sexual Science as a Global Formation: The Multi-directionality of Intellectual Exchange 268. The War Come Home: Domestic Economies and New York Hilton, Sutton Center Household Management in the Midst of Total War Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B Transgender History, the Conference on Latin American History, and Chair: Helen Veit, Michigan State University the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Papers: Fields of Plenty and Lives of Want: Pan-American Food Chair: Douglas E. Haynes, Dartmouth College Production during the Great War Papers: Freud, the Global Sexual Scientist Tait Keller, Rhodes College Veronika Fuechtner, Dartmouth College Feeding War: Mobilizing the Kitchen in World War I Germany Normalizing the Deviant: Mexican Sexology and Homosexuality, Heather R. Perry, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 1860–1960 Recycling for Victory: The British Campaign to Salvage Raw Ryan Jones, State University of New York at Geneseo Materials during the Great War International Networks across the Atlantic: Latin Eugenics and Peter Thorsheim, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Sexual Knowledge in Italy and Argentina, 1916–46 Comment: Helen Veit Chiara Beccalossi, Oxford Brookes University Comment: Chris Waters, Williams College 269. Lessons Learned from the AHA’s Bridging This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 241 and 297. Cultures Program, Part 4: Going Global in the U.S. History Survey New York Hilton, Petit Trianon Early Morning Sessions of the AHA Chair: Philip D. Morgan, Johns Hopkins University Affiliated Societies Panel: Brittany Adams, Irvine Valley College Steven R. Blankenship, Georgia Highlands College Monday, January 5, 8:30–10:30 a.m. Timothy Dean Draper, Waubonsee Community College Sarah Lucinda Grunder, Suffolk County Community College American Catholic Historical Association Session 25 This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 90, 181, 212 and 295. Catholics and 1970s America Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 2015 5, January Chair: Raymond Haberski, Indiana University-Purdue University 270. Reexamining the Illegal Slave Trade in the Nineteenth- Indianapolis Century Atlantic, Part 2: Circumventing Abolition: Slave Traders’ Strategies of Survival and Success Papers: Making a Responsible Autonomy: American Catholics and the Turn to Conscience, 1968–80 New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Peter Cajka, Boston College Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History The Pope Comes to Buildings on Fire: Pope John Paul II’s First Chair: Matt D. Childs, University of South Carolina Columbia Trip to the United States and 1970s America Papers: The Atlantic Slave Trade in the Bight of Benin in the Age of Anthony Smith, University of Dayton Abolition From Humanae Vitae to Three Mile Island: Catholic Technocrats Olatunji Ojo, Brock University and American Culture in the 1970s Innovation and Entrepreneurship as Strategies for Success among Charles T. Strauss, Mount Saint Mary’s University Havana-Based Slave Trading Firms after 1820 Comment: Raymond Haberski Effie esidou,K University of Leeds Manuel Barcia, University of Leeds

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American Catholic Historical Association Session 26 Rumors of Popery: Massachusetts Bay and the Politics of Papal Policy from Peter to Francis Restoration Anti-Catholicism Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Adrian Chastain Weimer, Providence College Chair: R. Bentley Anderson, Fordham University Travel Observations, World Religions, and Anglo-American Protestant Approaches to Catholicism from the Seventeenth to the Papers: From Christ to the Crusades Eighteenth Century Lawrence Duggan, University of Delaware Mark Valeri, Washington University in St. Louis Pope Francis and the People of God: Reinterpreting the Second Comment: David Hall, Harvard University Vatican Council in the Francis Papacy Trevor J. Kilgore, University of Michigan Papal Approval of the Holy Roman Empire in the Later Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Middle Ages History Session 15 Thomas J. Renna, Saginaw Valley State University Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 12: Pragmatism Comment: The Audience and Audacity: Disrupting the Boundaries of Queer Identities, Cultures, and Politics through Oral Histories New York Hilton, Midtown Suite American Society of Church History Session 28 Chair: Nan Alamilla Boyd, San Francisco State University Francis of Assisi: (A)historical Legacies New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Papers: Uncovering Queer Voices in New Mexico through the Process of Oral History Chair: Maura Jane Farrelly, Brandeis University Jordan Biro, University of New Mexico Papers: Franciscans and the Natural World in the Thirteenth Century A Contested Vision: California Lesbian Feminisms and Telling Zachary Matus, Boston College Queer Stories through Oral Histories Blessing the Animals: The Emergence and Meaning of a Popular Chelsea Del Rio, University of Michigan Practice Boundaries of Activism: The Lesbian and Feminist Activists Who Patricia Appelbaum, University of Massachusetts Amherst Transformed Houston, 1970–81 “Rebuild My Church”: Francis of Assisi and the Papacy of Francis Rebecca Smith, University of Houston Thomas Burke, Boston University Comment: Daniel Hurewitz, Hunter College, City University of New York Comment: Maura Jane Farrelly Conference on Latin American History Session 57 American Society of Church History Session 29 Solidarity and Revolution: Transnational Perspectives Journeying into Evangelicalism: Twenty-Five Years of on Latin American and Caribbean Radical History Traveling with Randall Balmer’s Mine Eyes Have Seen Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 the Glory Chair: Evan Matthew Daniel, Queens College, City University of New York Hilton, Hudson Suite New York Chair: Edward J. Blum, San Diego State University Topics: Black Flag and Caribbean Red: Anarchist Antiauthoritarian Panel: Brantley Gasaway, Bucknell University Networks in the Caribbean, 1890s–1930s Marie Griffith,W ashington University in Saint Louis Kirwin Shaffer, Pennsylvania State University at Berks College Daniel Vaca, Brown University Transnational Solidarity in the Americas: The Campaign in Molly Worthen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Support of the Sandino Movement in Nicaragua, 1927–34 Comment: Randall Balmer, Dartmouth College Barry Carr, La Trobe University So Near and Yet So Far: Nationalism and Identity among the Brazilian Exiles in Chile American Society of Church History Session 30 Mila Burns, City University of New York, Graduate Center Protestants and Catholics in Colonial New England New York Hilton, Holland Suite “We Could No Longer Do This Work as Separate Entities”: Transnational Solidarity in the Puerto Rican Diaspora, 1975–85 Chair: Laura Chmielewski, Purchase College (State University of Michael Staudenmaier, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign New York) Comment: Evan Matthew Daniel Papers: Contesting the City on a Hill: Puritans, Catholics, and the Visible Church Abram Van Engen, Washington University in Saint Louis

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Conference on Latin American History Session 62 Papers: The Changing Nature of Scholarly Communication Insurgent Ethnographers: Studying Race and Culture Patrick Dawson from the Outside In (Brazil, the Caribbean, and the The California Digital Library United States, 1890s–1960s) Lisa Schiff, California Digital Library Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 The Digital POWRR Project Chair: Marc Adam Hertzman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Jaime Schumacher, Northern Illinois University Papers: Records of the Sonic Exotic Comment: The Audience Alejandra M. Bronfman, University of British Columbia Visual Artifacts and Ontological Transformation among Cottica National History Center of the American Historical Ndyuka in Suriname Association Session 9 Olivia Maria Gomes da Cunha, Museu Nacional, Universidade Internationalism and Empire: New Histories of Federal do Rio de Janeiro International Society Writing from Inside and Out: Edison Carneiro Tackles Marxism, New York Hilton, Concourse H Race, and Folklore in Brazil, 1930s–60s Marc Adam Hertzman Chair: Wm. Roger Louis, University of Texas at Austin Between Preservation and Reform: Challenging U.S. Constructions Papers: International Society by Law: Mandates, Minorities, and of Race and Nation in the Work of the Hampton Folklore Society, Non-States in Interwar International Law 1893–1900 Natasha Wheatley, Columbia University Shirley Moody-Turner, Pennsylvania State University League of Empires: Interwar Internationalism, European Simey’s Interlocutors: Postwar Jamaican Intellectuals and the Colonialism, and the Problem of “Native Labor” Transnational Pathologization of the Black Family Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo, University of Lisbon Lara E. Putnam, University of Pittsburgh Institutionalizing Peace: Rethinking John Foster Dulles, Comment: The Audience International Law, and the Origins of a Cold War Ryan Irwin, University at Albany (State University of New York) Conference on Latin American History Session 63 Comment: Glenda Sluga, University of Sydney Transnational Transcripts in South America’s Cold War of the 1960s Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 Local Arrangements Committee Tour Chair: Teresa A. Meade, Union College (New York) Papers: Argentina: Cuba and the Rise of Armed Revolution Jonathan Brown, University of Texas at Austin Monday, January 5, 8:45 a.m.–12:15 p.m. Chile and Peru: Universities and the Cold War, Peace Corps Tour 24: Big Onion: Greenwich Village Volunteers, and Their Transnational Experiences in South America New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Fernando Purcell, Pontificia nivU ersidad Católica de Chile Tour leader: A graduate student, historian, guide from Big Onion Walking Bolivia: A Splintering Left and the Failure of Armed Struggle, 1963–65 Tours. Thomas C. Field, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University A walking tour exploring one of the most div erse and complex M anhattan The Transnational Diffusion of Anti-Communism: Conservative neighborhoods. Greenwich Village has evolved from exclusive summer enclave Women in Brazil, Chile, and the United States of the 1820s to the home of decades of counter-culture movements. Our walk Margaret M. Power, Illinois Institute of Technology will combine the histor y and ar chitecture of the ar ea with a discussion of January 5, 2015 5, January the social and political activism of the past centur y. Stops could include the Comment: Teresa A. Meade Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, the Stonewall , Jefferson Market Courthouse, and sites associated with Stanford White, Aaron Burr, Jimi Hendrix, Gertrude Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 7 Vanderbilt Whitney, Tom Paine, and Eleanor Roosevelt. Scholarly Communication: The Online Open Access Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately 1.5 Publishing Option miles, at a moderate pace, during the two-hour tour. New York Hilton, Concourse F Limit: 25 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers, $15 students Chair: Patrick Dawson, Northern Illinois University Library

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The museum presents the lifeways and traditions of Native people throughout the Workshop Americas through artifacts and exhibitions. I t is located in the historic Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. Monday, January 5, 9:00–10:30 a.m. Limit: 25 people. Cost: $10 members, $15 nonmembers Media Training Workshop for Historians New York Hilton, Concourse E Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Are you looking to increase your media profile? Do your articles and op-eds Program Committee get ignored or rejected by editors at mainstream periodicals? Do you panic and mumble into the mic when doing radio inter views, or fumble and flail when in front of a camera? Do you have, or need to have, a social media platform to Monday, January 5, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. get noticed by major media today? For helpful tips in crafting ar ticles and op-eds that don ’t get r ejected, 272. What’s the Problem? Turning Teaching participating in radio and TV interviews and navigating social media Questions into Scholarship of Teaching and platforms that will highlight y our research and establish y ou as pr oducers’ Learning Research go-to historian, join Clay Risen of ’s Disunion blog; Bill New York Hilton, Sutton North Parkhurst, media trainer; and Sarah Russo, freelance publicist and brand and Sponsored by the AHA Teaching Division platform consultant, to understand a few simple insights on how to get editors to say “yes” to your pitch, and producers to add you to their address books and Chair: Laura M. Westhoff, University of Missouri–St. Louis book you onto their radio/TV shows. Panel: Lendol G. Calder, Augustana College Chair: Christian J. Purdy, Oxford University Press Keith A. Erekson, LDS Church History Library Panel: Clay Risen, New York Times David P. Jaffee, Bard Graduate Center Bill Parkhurst, Parkhurst Communications Leah Shopkow, Indiana University Bloomington Sarah Russo, SarahRussoPR Laura M. Westhoff

Local Arrangements Committee Tours 273. American Labor’s Global Ambassadors New York Hilton, Nassau Suite A Monday, January 5, 9:00–11:45 a.m. Joint session with the Labor and Working Class History Association Chair: Robert A. Waters Jr., Ohio Northern University Tour 25: Lower East Side Tenement Museum New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Panel: Mathilde von Bülow, University of Glasgow Eric Chenoweth, Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe Tour leaders: Museum staff Quenby Olmsted Hughes, Rhode Island College The Tenement Museum preserves and interprets the history of immigration Yevette Richards, George Mason University through the personal experiences of the generations of newcomers who settled Comment: Jason C. Parker, Texas A&M University at College Station in and built lives on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, America’s iconic immigrant neighborhood. Its programs forge emotional connections between visitors and immigrants of the past as w ell as the pr esent, and enhance appr eciation for the profound role immigration has play ed and continues to play in shaping 274. At the Hour of Our Death: Reinterpreting Illness in America’s growing national identity . The museum tells the stories of 97 Iberian Empires Orchard Street, the tenement on Manhattan’s Lower East Side that was home New York Hilton, Bryant Suite to nearly 7,000 wor king class immigrants fr om 1863 onwar d. The “Hard Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Times” tour describes how some of the building’s residents survived economic depressions between 1863 and 1935. Chair: Verónica A. Gutiérrez, Azusa Pacific niversityU Please note: The historic building has limited wheelchair access. Papers: The Limits of a Moral Imagination: Disease and Explanation in Colonial Brazil, 1549–68 Limit: 30 people. $20 members, $25 nonmembers Hugh Cagle, University of Utah Indians, Epidemics, and Colonial Mexico’s Theater of Death Monday, January 5, 10:45 a.m.–1:45 p.m. Erika R. Hosselkus, Southeast Missouri State University Tour 26: Tour of the George Gustav Heye Center of the Death, Judgment, Heaven, and Franciscan Habits: The Art of National Museum of the American Indian Dying in Late Sixteenth-Century Spanish-Indigenous Cholula Verónica A. Gutiérrez New York Hilton, Americas Hall I Tour leader: William Chimborazo (Quechua), George Gustav Heye Center Entre Enfermedad y Pecado: Idolatry and Disease in Colonial of the National Museum of the American Indian Yucatán Ryan Kashanipour, Northern Arizona University Comment: Adam W. V. Warren, University of Washington Seattle

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275. Aural Histories: Transnational Approaches to Radio in Too Big to Fail in 1930: The Bank of the United States and the France and Beyond, 1926–46 Failed Immigrant “Bank” That Reshaped America New York Hilton, Beekman Parlor Rebecca Kobrin, Columbia University Chair: Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin–Madison Mapping the Savings and Loan Crisis of the 1980s through Text Mining and Social Network Analysis Papers: Sounds Subversive: Cultural Mixture and Colonial Politics on the Susie J. Pak, St. John’s University Airwaves Jana Diesner, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Rebecca P. Scales, Rochester Institute of Technology How to Build a Sound Empire: The Contested Techno-Aesthetics of Pre-World War II U.S.-French Broadcasting 279. Intersectionality: Disciplinary Perspectives Derek W. Vaillant, University of Michigan and Practices Soundscapes of Liberation: Radio, Jazz, and the U.S. Military in Sheraton New York, Riverside Suite Postwar France, 1944–46 Our papers and other information and ideas will be posted befor ehand on a Celeste Day Moore, Hamilton College blog. Although it will enrich the discussion if members of the audience hav e Comment: Emily Thompson, Princeton University read this blog prior to attending the session, all will be able to engage in the discussion based on the short oral presentations by each panel participant. Chair: Alison M. Parker, College at Brockport (State University of 276. Bridging the High School/College Divide: New York) Conversations toward Creating a Papers: Intersectional and Decolonial Feminisms: Toward a Conversation Comprehensive History Pedagogy Vrushali Patil, Florida International University New York Hilton, Concourse A Intersectionality: A Concept of Liberation or Oppression? Chair: Michael J. Mulvey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College Topics: Teaching with Primary Sources at the High School Level Intersectionality in a Multiracial Feminist Framework: Bridging Natasha S. Naujoks, Norfolk Academy Intersectionality and Empirical Social Science Research Teaching with Primary Sources at the College Level Catherine E. Harnois, Wake Forest University Meghan Roberts, Bowdoin College “Something Substantial and Worthy”: Intersectionality in the Teaching with Secondary Scholarship at the High School Level French-Language Diaries of Mary Church Terrell Stefanie S. Bator, Lake Forest Academy Jennifer M. Wilks, University of Texas at Austin Teaching with Secondary Scholarship at the College Level “A Colored Woman in a White World”: The Intersectional Rebecca K Marchiel, Northwestern University Perspective of Mary Church Terrell Alison M. Parker Comment: The Audience 277. Diversifying Income Streams: How a New Generation of Scholars Is Funding Research in the Twenty-First Century 280. Islam and the European Empires New York Hilton, Sutton Center New York Hilton, Concourse B Chair: Jeff Ewen, Drew University Joint session with the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Panel: Elizabeth Keohane Burbridge, Fordham University Patricia Chappine, Drew University Chair: David Motadel, Gonville and Caius College, University of Lesley Skousen, Princeton International School of Math and Cambridge January 5, 2015 5, January Science Topics: The Ottoman Caliphate and the Muslim Subjects of the European Empires Cemil Aydin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 278. Exceptional Failures? Interdisciplinary Economic World War I and Islam in France’s North African Empire Analysis of U.S. Banking Failures in the Twentieth Julia A. Clancy-Smith, University of Arizona Century Sheraton New York, Riverside Ballroom Islam and Tsarist Russia: The Imperial Logic behind Confrontation and Cultivation Joint session with the Business History Conference Michael A. Reynolds, Princeton University Chair: David Weiman, Barnard College, Columbia University Britain’s Muslim Empire Papers: Economic Effects of Runs on Early Shadow Banks: Trust John Slight, Gonville and Caius College, University of Companies and the Panic of 1907 Cambridge Eric Hilt, Wellesley College

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281. Jewish History/General History: Rethinking the Divide Papers: The Elephant and the Castle: Kingship and Coinage in Britain New York Hilton, Concourse G and West Africa, 1663–1726 Andrew Apter, University of California, Los Angeles Chair: Leora Auslander, University of Chicago Fugitive Modernities, Spirit Biographies, and the Transatlantic Politics Panel: Marc Baer, London School of Economics and Political Science of Reputation: Angola and the Americas in the Seventeenth Century Maud S. Mandel, Brown University Jessica Krug, George Washington University Michael Satlow, Brown University Magda Teter, Wesleyan University Archipelagos of Insurrection: Slave Revolt and the Geographic Imagination Vincent Brown, Harvard University 282. Listening, Tasting, Reading, Touching: Comment: Stephan Palmié Interdisciplinary Histories of American Food Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom East Chair: Paul Freedman, Yale University 285. Reimagining Race in America’s Hometown—Brooklyn, USA Papers: This Is My Body: Communion and Cannibalism in Colonial New Sheraton New York, Central Park West England Carla Cevasco, Harvard University Chair: Brian Purnell, Bowdoin College “Cantel-lope-ah! Fresh and Fine!” Immigrant Food Vendors, Street Topics: West Indian Carnival and the Challenge of Black Ethnic Identity Cries, and Ethnic Identity in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans in Brooklyn Ashley Rose Young, Duke University Joshua Guild, Princeton University Chop Suey for Two: The Role of Chinese Restaurants in the Leisure Black Women and Politics in New York City: The Early Years Industry, 1900–30 Julie Gallagher, Pennsylvania State University at Brandywine Heather Ruth Lee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ebbets Field, Race, and Racism Contextualizing Creole Cuisine: Reading Ethnicity, Race, and Gender Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Ohio State University in New Orleans Menus and Community Cookbooks, 1930–65 Black Power in Brooklyn Theresa McCulla, Harvard University Brian Purnell Comment: Paul Freedman Shirley Chisholm and the Color of the Twelfth Congressional District Jason Sokol, University of New Hampshire 283. Making Space: Regional Knowledge on East-Central Europe beyond the History of Area Studies, 1900–50 Sheraton New York, Conference Room H 286. Revisiting New York’s Experience of World Joint session with the Central European History Society War II through Digital Public History Sheraton New York, New York Ballroom West Chair: Stephen Gross, New York University Chair: Andrew T. Urban, Rutgers University–New 0101 Papers: Bernard Pares, Robert W. Seton-Watson, and the Making of 0111 Brunswick 1010 Regional Studies in Britain, 1905–22 Georgios Giannakopoulos, Queen Mary, University of London Papers: The Seamen’s Church Institute’s American Merchant Marine Oral History Project: An Archival Intervention In the Heart of Europe: Danubian Studies and American Schemes Johnathan Thayer, City University of New York, Graduate for Economic Reconstruction after World War I Center and Seamen’s Church Institute of New York and Katharina Rietzler, University of Sussex New Jersey Eastern Europe as an Economic World Region: Landau, Kalecki, Brooklyn in Love and at War: Making Private Correspondence and International Statistics in the Mid-Twentieth Century Public Online Malgorzata Mazurek, Heyman Center for the Humanities, Molly Rosner, Rutgers University–Newark Columbia University Democratizing the Archives: An Aggregation of Diverse Histories in Ethnopolitics: The Making of Scientific Knowledge and Utopian Queens Projects in Interwar Poland Natalie Milbrodt, Queens Library Olga Linkiewicz, Institute of History, Polish Academy of Science

284. Methods of Modernity from the Margins: Toward New Theories of Africa and/in the Americas Sheraton New York, Conference Room B Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Stephan Palmié, University of Chicago

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287. Richard Hoffmann and An Environmental History of Using Big Data to Answer Historiographical Questions; or, Can Medieval Europe Digital History Fulfill the romiseP of Social History? Sheraton New York, Central Park East Michelle Moravec, University of Rosemont Joint session with the Medieval Academy of America Between Text, Argument, and Data: Interpreting New Visualizations in History Chair: Richard W. Unger, University of British Columbia Fred Gibbs, University of New Mexico Papers: Other (Environmental) Middle Ages Comment: Robert K. Nelson Paolo Squatriti, University of Michigan The Importance of Documentary Evidence of Environmental Practices 290. The History of Science, Medicine, and Technology in Constance H. Berman, University of Iowa Global Perspective Nature, Economy, and Medieval Environmental History New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite B Steven A. Epstein, University of Kansas Chair: Ronald L. Numbers, University of Wisconsin–Madison Comment: Richard C. Hoffmann, York University Topics: “Global” Relationships, International Agreements, and Satellite Communications Hugh R. Slotten, University of Otago 288. Socialism and the Twentieth Century: Master Transnational Medicine and the Creation of the Tropics in Latin Narratives and Historiographies America New York Hilton, Morgan Suite Heather McCrea, Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Chair: Jonathan R. Zatlin, Boston University Society Topics: Modernization or Modernity? ConflictingV isions of the Soviet Imaging Infrastructures and Global Environments Experience Etienne S. Benson, University of Pennsylvania Ronald Grigor Suny, University of Michigan Teaching Basic English to the World: International Broadcasting, Unlikely Bedfellows: The Plan and the Market in a Stalinist Language Education, and Anglo-American Ideologies of Economy Civilization, 1935–43 Elena Osokina, University of South Carolina Columbia Michael A. Krysko, Kansas State University A New Cultural History of the Soviet Century? Visualizing Disease in East Asia, Globalizing the History of Medicine Anna Krylova, Duke University Marta E. Hanson, Johns Hopkins University Capital Changes: Reexamining the Last Two Decades of the Soviet Union Oscar Sanchez-Sibony, University of Macau 291. The Transnational Politics of Journalism in Early Postwar Germany Reconsidering “State Capitalism” in Light of the Sources New York Hilton, Madison Suite Andrew Jay Sloin, Baruch College, City University of New York Joint session with the Central European History Society Chair: Belinda Davis, Rutgers University–New Brunswick Papers: Völkisch Journalists in Postwar Germany: Intellectual Continuities 289. Text Analysis, Visualization, and Historical in German Journalism, 1930–70 Interpretation Alexander Korb, University of Leicester New York Hilton, Murray Hill Suite A Democratization through the Press: Hildegard Hamm-Brücher, Chair: Robert K. Nelson, University of Richmond the “Neue Zeitung,” and Politics in Postwar Munich 2015 5, January Topics: “Everything on Paper Will Be Used Against Me”: Quantifying Jacob S. Eder, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena Kissinger: A Computational Analysis of the Digital National Shaping a Democratic Press: Allied Media Policies and West Security Archive’s Kissinger Memcons and Telcons German Journalists, 1945–52 Micki Kaufman, City University of New York, Graduate Volker R. Berghahn, Columbia University Center Comment: Deborah Barton, University of Toronto The Promise of WebARChive Files: Exploring the Internet Archive as a Historical Resource Ian Milligan, University of Waterloo

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292. Urban Transformations and the Cross-Mediterranean 295. Lessons Learned from the AHA’s Bridging Politics of Space in the Late Ottoman Empire Cultures Program, Part 5: PechaKucha 2, New York Hilton, Clinton Suite Incorporating the Atlantic and Pacific Worlds Chair: Sarah Shields, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill into the U.S. History Survey Course New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite A Papers: Shared Activities, Increased Visibility, and Communal Boundaries: Physical Culture in Late Ottoman Istanbul’s Theatres, Gardens, Following an introduction by the session chair, participating speakers will give and Clubs short visual presentations in “PechaKucha” format. Each presenter will show Murat Yildiz, University of California, Los Angeles and discuss 20 slides for 20 seconds (six minutes and 40 seconds per person). After the six “P echaKucha” presentations, speakers will discuss common From Public Sphere to Public Arena: Boycotts and Narratives of themes of their work followed by questions and comments from the audience, Urban Space in Late Ottoman Salonica offering a chance for dialogue about ho w to incorporate the A tlantic and Paris Papamichos Chronakis, University of Illinois at Chicago Pacific worlds into the U.S. history survey course. Safeguarding the “Home of the Public”: The Jews of Late Ottoman Chair: Cheryll A. Cody, Houston Community College Izmir in a Changing Urban Environment Dina Danon, Binghamton University (State University of New York) Papers: Integrating Pacific and tlanticA Histories into the U.S. History Survey Religion, Economy, and the Making of Communal Boundaries in Gerald Betty, Del Mar College Ottoman Jerusalem Michelle Campos, University of Florida European and Native American Encounters Sarah Boyle, Johnson County Community College Comment: Sarah Shields Conceptualizing U.S. History within the Wider Context of the Pacific 293. Women, Sex and the Courts in Early Modern Eurasia Brian L. Cassity, Kapi’olani Community College New York Hilton, Concourse D Using Maps to Bring the Atlantic and PacificWorlds into the U.S. History Survey Course Chair: Shannon McSheffrey, Concordia University (Montreal) Amy Helene Forss, Metropolitan Community College Topics: Using the Court: Rape and Gender Discourse on Trial in Early Online Activities to Explain Migration and Trade in the Atlantic Modern Korea World Jungwon Kim, Columbia University Kimberly DeJoie Hill, Del Mar College The Politics of Infidelity in ighteenthE Century China Migration Patterns of Asians into the Americas Janet Theiss, University of Utah Tracy Lai, Seattle Central Community College “She Is No Longer Pure!” Allegations of Sexual Transgression and This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 90, 181, 212 and 269. Defamation in Eighteenth-Century Istanbul Leyla Kayhan Elbirlik, Ozyegin University Social Control and Agency: A Working Woman in Early Modern 296. Reexamining the Illegal Slave Trade in the Nineteenth- Paris Century Atlantic, Part 3: Kidnapping and Illegal Jacob Melish, University of Northern Colorado Enslavement in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World Constructing the Murderous Harlot in Tudor London New York Hilton, Gramercy Suite B Shannon McSheffrey Joint session with the Conference on Latin American History Chair: Sharla M. Fett, Occidental College 294. Writing for the Public: What Makes a Successful Trade Papers: Illegal Enslavement and International Law in the Southern History Book Borders of South America in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth New York Hilton, Gibson Suite Centuries Keila Grinberg, Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro Chair: Wendy J. Strothman, Strothman Agency, LLC Kidnapping, Slavery, and the Politics of Interregional Cooperation Panel: Raymond Arsenault, University of South Florida, in the Early United States St. Petersburg Richard Bell, University of Maryland at College Park David Ebershoff, Random House Caitlin A. Fitz, Northwestern University West African Intellectuals and the Problem of Illegal Enslavement Deanne Urmy, Houghton Mifflin arcourtH in the Nineteenth Century Jennifer Lofkrantz, State University of New York at Geneseo Illegal Slave Trade, Individual Identification, and Rights in Nineteenth-Century Brazil Beatriz Mamigonian, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina Comment: Randy J. Sparks, Tulane University This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 240 and 270.

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297. Toward a Global History of Sexual Science, c. 1900–70, Restoring All Things in Christ: Catholic Social Activity in the Part 3: Local Sexologies in a Global Context Progressive Era New York Hilton, Nassau Suite B Michael Lombardo, Anna Maria College Joint session with the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Public Opinion from the Pulpit: Catholic and Protestant Responses Transgender History, the Conference on Latin American History, and to FDR’s 1935 “Letter to the Nation’s Clergy” the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia Julie Yarwood, Catholic University of America Chair: Ryan Jones, State University of New York at Geneseo Comment: Thomas F. Rzeznik Papers: “Forms So Attenuated That They Merge into Normality Itself”: Alexander Lipschütz, Gregorio Marañón, and Theories of American Catholic Historical Association Session 29 Intersexuality in Chile, c. 1930 The Irish in Diaspora: Rebuilding Families, Faith, and Kurt MacMillan, University of California, Irvine Identity Sexual Deviance between Biological and Social Causation: International Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 6 Approaches and Czechoslovak Sexology in the 1960s and 1970s Chair: Gráinne McEvoy, Boston College Katerina Liskova, Masaryk University Papers: “Everything Depends on the First Year”: Archbishop Hughes and Time for Sex: Kaam-Discipline and the Conduct of Childhood in His Thousand-Dollar Cathedral Donors Global/Hindu Sexology Kate Feighery, Archdiocese of New York Archives Ishita Pande, Queen’s University Lowly Laborers: Labor on Colonial Monserrat at the Culture This is part of a multi-session workshop. See also sessions 241 and 271. Construction of Identity Nicole Jacoberger, St. John’s University Comment: The Audience Late Morning Sessions of the AHA Affiliated Societies American Society of Church History Session 31 Sixty Years of Religious Decline? An Interdisciplinary Monday, January 5, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Conversation New York Hilton, Holland Suite American Catholic Historical Association Session 27 Twentieth-Century Religious Adaptation and Chair: J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University Carbondale Transformation: A Multidisciplinary Examination of Panel: Joseph Blankholm, Columbia University Catholicism in the Global Context Michael Clawson, Baylor University Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 4 Elesha Coffman, University of Dubuque Theological Seminary Matthew Phillips, Wake Forest University Chair: Michael Geyer, University of Chicago Benjamin Zeller, Lake Forest College Papers: The Sorrowful Mother Stood Weeping: Catholic Women and Total War in Central Europe, 1914–62 American Society of Church History Session 32 Patrick J. Houlihan, University of Chicago Mapping Religious Space: Four American Cities from Religious Difference and “The Human Spirit”: French Catholic the Colonial Era to the Twentieth Century Orientalism after Secularism New York Hilton, Harlem Suite Brenna Moore, Fordham University Chair: Brett Carroll, California State University, Stanislaus Francis I, Evangelical Catholicism, and the Global Struggle over Sexual Ethics Papers: Houses of Worship in the Twin Cities: Using Spatial Mapping to Kimba Tichenor, Kalamazoo College Gauge Interaction among Immigrant Religious Groups, 1849–1924 2015 5, January Jeanne Halgren Kilde, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Comment: Michael Geyer Social Networks in Colonial Philadelphia: Using GIS to Map Religious Ties onto Geographic Space American Catholic Historical Association Session 28 Marie Basile McDaniel, Southern Connecticut State University American Catholic Social Action from the Progressive Mapping Boston’s Religions from the Revolution to 1800 Era to the New Deal Lincoln Mullen, George Mason University Sheraton New York, Madison Suite 5 Harlem Is Heaven: Utopic Space in the Kingdom of Father Divine Chair: Thomas F. Rzeznik, Seton Hall University Judith Weisenfeld, Princeton University Papers: Mystical Body Theology Crosses the Atlantic: The Case of Virgil Comment: Christopher Cantwell, University of Missouri–Kansas City Michel, OSB Timothy Gabrielli, Seton Hill University

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American Society of Church History Session 33 Conference on Latin American History Session 69 Silences in Protestant Autobiography: Exploring Sport, Race, and Gender in Latin America Sickness, Sexuality, and Race in American Religion Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 5 New York Hilton, Hudson Suite Chair: Stephen D. Allen, Boise State University Chair: W. Clark Gilpin, University of Chicago Papers: “It’s More Important Than the Oil”: Eugenics, the Ejidal Leagues, Papers: Silence, Pain, and the Act of Writing in Eighteenth-Century and the Federalization of Campesino Sport in Revolutionary American Sickness Narratives Mexico, 1921–40 Philippa Koch, University of Chicago David Wysocki, University of Arizona “The Subject Is Unusual and Requires Extreme Delicacy”: Sex, “The Champion without a Crown”: Remembering Rodolfo Time, and Silence in the Journal of an Early National Preacher Casanova and Mexico’s First Golden Age of Boxing Seth Perry, Princeton University Stephen D. Allen Sex and Silence in the League of Nations’ “Enquiry into the Traffic Presidente, Madrina, Pelotero, Demócrata, Comunista, Madre: in Women and Children” The Dominican Family at the Ballpark Eva Payne, Harvard University April Yoder, University of New Haven Purposeful Silence: African American Intellectual Tradition in the Comment: Anne Rubenstein, York University Autobiography of Adam Clayton Powell Sr. Vernon Mitchell, Princeton University Conference on Latin American History Session 70 Comment: W. Clark Gilpin The “República de Indios” and the Formation of a Legal Culture in Spanish America Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 4 History Session 17 Chair: Alcira Dueñas, Ohio State University at Newark Promiscuous Interdisciplinarity, Part 13: Archives of Papers: Rhetoric and Strategy in Early Colonial Andean Litigation, 1552– Intimacy: Queer Affects and Cultural Imaginaries, 74 1970s–80s Renzo Honores, High Point University New York Hilton, Midtown Suite Space Management in the Indian Pueblo: Indigenous Officeholders Chair: Jennifer Brier, University of Illinois at Chicago and Their Legal Practice Alcira Dueñas Papers: Healthy Desires: AIDS Activism and the Queer Transgressions of Safer Sex Videos Merida’s Maya Cabildos in the Age of Independence: Language, Karisa Butler-Wall, University of Minnesota Twin Cities Landholding, and the Law, 1790–1830 Mark Lentz, Utah Valley University “Bugged by the Past”: Visiting the Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance Archives with Vicki Gabriner On the Road to Justice: Indigenous Communities and the Colonial Rachel Gelfand, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Legal System in Late Eighteenth-Century Altiplano Victor Maqque, University of Notre Dame “It Takes all Kinds to Make a World”: Humor and Queer Representation on American Sitcoms, 1969–79 Sascha Elise Cohen, Brandeis University Modern Greek Studies Association Session 4 Comment: Jennifer Brier Greek Archaeologies and Foreign Histories of Modern Greek Statehood from the Nineteenth Century to the Conference on Latin American History Session 68 Twentieth Century Sheraton New York, Conference Room G Historical Pasts and Futures in Colonial Mexico Sheraton New York, Liberty Suite 3 Chair: Thomas W. Gallant, University of California, San Diego Chair: Peter B. Villella, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Papers: Classical Scholars and Modern Political Scientists: French Archeologists in Nineteenth-Century Greece and the Question of Papers: “They Did Not Die until They Were Old”: Remembering Health Statehood and Wellness in Sixteenth-Century Mexico Tassos Anastasiadis, McGill University Peter B. Villella Greeks, Germans, and the Origins of the Idea of Cultural Visions of the Future in Sixteenth-Century New Spain Patrimony Matthew D. O’Hara, University of California, Santa Cruz Suzanne Lynn Marchand, Louisiana State University at Doomsday Preppers: Signs, Warnings, and Descriptions of the Baton Rouge Apocalypse in Nahuatl and Maya Texts Digging for Democracy in Greece: Civilizing and De-civilizing Mark Zinn Christensen, Assumption College Processes during the “American Century” Comment: David E. Tavárez, Vassar College Despina Lalaki, New York University

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 120 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 121 Big Apple Nightclub, and sites associated with W.E.B. Du Bois, the H arlem arlem Bois,theH Du W.E.B.Renaissance, Madame C.J. Walker, Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X, andmanyothers. the andsitesassociatedwith Theater, Nightclub, pollo Apple theA Row,Big Striver’s Culture, lack inB esearch forR Center clubs, and homes.Stops could includeAbyssinian Baptist Church, the Schomburg politics, art and culture. Harlem features a widearrayofhistoricchurches, theaters, hub forAfricanAmericanbusiness, an important Today1920s. remains Harlem America” the lack by its transformationintothe“CapitalofB 1600s, through the village in utch its originsasaD from e. of Harlem, andcultur the history y tour explores This walkingtourexploringthecenterofAfricanAmericanhistor A Tour leader: trees, andstoriesofthefascinatingpersonsinterred atGreen-Wood. hills, century-old rolling oughout, beautiful monumentsthr views, great Each tourboasts hot chocolateontoursallwinter. complimentary offers Green-Wood and muchmore. of Brooklyn, fought theBattle troops his and Washington George where tread of Manhattan, views breathtaking York ew see reen-Wood’s inN permanent residents, fascinating storiesofG es City.Hear themostmagnificentandhistoric478acr Experience staff Tour leaders:Cemetery miles, atamoderatepace,duringthetwo-hourtour. Tour 28:BigOnion:HistoricHarlem Monday, January5,11:15a.m.–2:45p.m. Tour 27:Green-WoodCemetery Monday, January5,11:00a.m.–3:00p.m. Monday, Please note: There are no stairs on this tour. We will walk approximately 1.5 Please note:Participants by heatedtrolley. willtourthecemetery L Limit: 25people.$20members,$25nonmembers,$15students New York Hilton, Americas Hall I New York Hilton, Americas Hall I oca

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January 5, 2015 122 Topical Index

Numbers are session numbers. This index was compiled from keywords selected by session organizers thorough the electronic prop osal system. It is intended as a guide rather than a comprehensive list.

African American 10, 30, 97, 115, 172, 198, Film 264 Oral 200 210, 218-A, 265, 266, 285 Foreign policy 106, 110, 219 Pacific 90, 181, 212, 269, 295 African Diaspora 30, 71, 80, 91, 115, 119, 120, Gay/Lesbian/GLBTQ 29, 241, 271, 297 Political 22, 32, 41, 68, 79, 88, 105, 146, 172, 138, 152, 188, 210, 265, 266, 284 180, 189, 192, 204, 245-A, 249 Gender 47, 85, 109, 114, 118, 159, 193, 279 Archaeology 46 Political Economy 6, 54, 106, 107, 259 Global 6, 14, 24, 48, 77, 139, 167, 169, 179, Archives 1, 23, 68, 111, 129, 143, 162, 224, 219, 241, 247, 258, 264, 271, 280, 290, 297 Popular Culture/Mass Culture 41, 51, 105, 233, 244, 286 118, 275 Graduate Studies 5, 44, 154, 184 Arts 108, 201 Print Culture 41, 253, 257 Historic Sites(s) 28 Asian American 7, 97 Profession 5, 31, 44, 51, 61, 69, 82, 96, 130, Historical Methods 2, 9, 19, 42, 52, 59, 72, 84, Atlantic 18, 71, 90, 91, 115, 120, 128, 135, 138, 154, 165, 176, 184, 195, 232, 243 104, 105, 129, 143, 162, 179, 191, 194, 200, 207, 212, 229, 240, 269, 270, 284, 295, 296 201, 209, 238, 244, 259, 276, 278, 284 Protestantism 108 Biography 137, 138, 291 Historical Organization(s) 31, 82, 165, 176, Psychology 25, 151 Business 57, 135, 252, 278 218 Public 82, 125, 155, 178 Christianity 11, 142, 219, 274 Historiography 36, 58, 65, 72, 129, 132, 165, Publishing 38, 67, 69, 175, 195, 253, 294 Civil War 76, 117 179, 222, 265, 281, 288 Quantification 19 Cold War 37, 88, 133, 273 Holocaust 291 Race 20, 59, 75, 112, 134, 226, 245-A, 279, 285 Colonialism 16, 17, 46, 47, 74, 75, 77, 104, Identity 88, 89, 112, 121, 182, 192, 247 Religion 22, 24, 142, 163, 203, 230, 256, 110, 114, 143, 169, 190, 199, 207, 217, 229, Immigration 52, 145, 168, 234, 247, 252 263, 281 267, 274, 275 Imperialism 37, 45, 50, 73, 74, 75, 87, 110, Revolution 16, 43, 260 Comparative 7, 14, 40, 43, 55, 58, 60, 65, 73, 160, 163, 180, 190, 205, 217, 267, 280 81, 101, 109, 128, 142, 147, 156, 169, 173, 177, Science and Technology 13, 19, 35, 39, 74, 98, Intellectual 11, 79, 87, 114, 211, 228, 230, 239, 225, 238, 249, 259, 261 116, 131, 147, 161, 197, 205, 207, 223, 232, 246, 283, 291 258, 263, 275, 290 Computing 55, 222, 257, 289 Islam 24, 137, 199, 228, 280 Sexuality 20, 29, 36, 47, 59, 85, 121, 151, 234, Consumption 45, 57, 140, 211, 268, 282 Job Market 44, 61, 215, 243, 277 241, 271, 293, 297 Crime and Violence 10, 174, 198, 221 Judaism 255 Slavery 23, 30, 60, 64, 80, 91, 102, 117, 120, Cultural 25, 29, 36, 70, 103, 104, 116, 133, 152, 202, 208, 217, 240, 270, 296 Labor 31, 57, 81, 140, 190, 198, 202, 273 136, 201, 211, 228, 237, 239, 267, 282 Social 8, 22, 25, 35, 171, 204, 248 Language 101, 127, 224 Diaspora Studies 97, 133 Sports 118 Legal 11, 23, 32, 48, 121, 132, 160, 172, 192, Digital 42, 64, 69, 95, 99, 102, 149, 158, 159, 227, 246, 293, 296 Teaching 3, 27, 28, 32, 33, 34, 35, 51, 64, 90, 175, 191, 195, 222, 232, 244, 253, 254, 266, 95, 96, 126, 127, 144, 145, 156, 157, 185, 186, 286, 289 Medicine 40, 83, 85, 100, 131, 151, 204, 290 191, 212, 218, 231, 233, 244, 245, 251, 254, Diplomatic 77, 141, 240, 273 Mediterranean 160, 180, 292 269, 272, 276, 295 Disability 49, 174, 246 Memory 60, 132, 152, 171, 178, 200 Travel/Tourism 67, 119, 181 Economic 6, 18, 39, 135, 137, 170, 235, 258, Military 35, 81, 260 Urban 10, 148, 150, 182, 218-A, 226, 245-A, 261, 270, 278, 288 285, 292 Modernity 13, 65, 79, 107, 109, 163, 199, 249, Education 2, 4, 78, 206, 218, 251 264, 288, 292 Visual Materials 66, 84, 108, 116, 254, 289 Environment 54, 107, 140, 161, 164, 205, Museums 28, 125, 178 War 35, 209 268, 287 Music 112, 220 Women 40, 80, 89, 159, 181, 193, 210, 234, Ethnicity 15, 52, 58, 101, 173, 182, 226, 282 250, 252, 261, 293 Nationalism 54, 56, 67 Exploration 161 World History 7, 18, 37, 53, 71, 106, 131, 231 Native American 16, 46, 134, 173, 202, 233, Family 102, 230 238, 274 World War I 2, 73, 166, 236, 268 Feminism 119, 279 Objects/Material Culture 84, 209, 239 World War II 171, 286

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 122 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 123 Participants Apter, Andrew p. 116 Applegate, CeliaS.p. 62 Appleford, Simon p. 102 Appelbaum, Yoni p. 80 Appelbaum, Patricia p. 112 Antunes, Catiap. 71 Antone, Marc p. 48 Angelo, Anne-Marie p. 83 Angel, Gustavo Del p. 33 Angel, Christinep. 85 Andrade, Tonio A.p. 109 Anderson, Rickp. 69 Anderson, R.Bentley p. 112 Anastasiadis, Tassos p. 120 Amzi-Erdogdular, Leylap. 108 Amar, Tarik C.p. 34 Altman, Ida p. 39 Altenbernd, Erik p. 82 Alpers, Edward A.p. 46 Alpern, Sara p. 46 Alonso, Miguel p. 88 Alonso, Isabel Huacuja p. 63 Alonso, Hilario Casadop. 101 Alonso, Gregorio p. 75,p. 78 Allen, Stephen D.p. 120 Allen, Robert p. 92 Allen, Calvinp. 72 Alfaro, Alfonso Guzman p. 37 Alexanderson, Krisp. 53 Alexander, Annap. 104 Alatas, Ismail p. 36 Alam, Muzaffar p. 90 Aksakal, Mustafa p. 82 Akhtar, Alip. 102 Ahmed, Faiz p. 108 Agrama, Hussein Alip. 99 NeilAgarwal, p. 33 Afinogeno Adelman, Jeremy I.p. 100 Adderley, LauraRosanne p. 101 Adair, Zakiya p. 91 Absher, Amyp. 92 Abramson, Julia p. 89 Abraham, David p. 45 Abdelnur, Heather p. 106 Abbas, Amberp. 70 Aaslestad, Katherinep. 65 Aa v, Gregory p. 54

Index Ayers, Edward L.p. 80 Aydin, Cemil p. 115 Axen, Christinep. 102 Auslander, Leorap. 91,p. 116 Augustyn, Frederick J.p. 77 Assonitis, Alessiop. 62 Asif, Manan Ahmedp. 82,p. 99 Ashley, Carlp. 80 Asaka, Ikuko p. 52 MariaArus, Cabrera p. 49 RichardArum, p. 42 Arsenault, Raymondp. 118 Arsan, Andrew p. 84 Arpaia, Paul p. 49 Aron, Stephen p. 70 Arnesen, Eric p. 40 Arellano, LisaA.p. 77 Archer, Seth p. 35 Araujo, AnaLucia p. 46 Bator, Stefanie S.p. 115 Bartram, Erin p. 85 Bartov, Omer p. 34 Barton, Deborah p. 117 Bart, Harriet p. 86 Barrow, Clyde p. 42 Barrientos, ClaudioJavier p. 90 Barrett, Richard p. 107 Barrett, Marsha E.p. 34 Barragan, Yesenia p. 53 Baron, Christinep. 37 Barker, Sheila p. 62 Barcia, Manuel p. 55,p. 88 Baraw, Charlesp. 45 Barak, On p. 46 Baptist, Edward p. 61 Banton, Caree p. 52 Balmer, Randallp. 47,p. 112 Ball, John H.p. 88 Bald, Vivek p. 34 Balcerski, Thomas J.p. 55 Bairnsfather, Lauren Apter p. 80 Bains, David R.p. 41 Bain, Robert B.p. 100 Bahadur, Gaiutra p. 34 Baer, Marc p. 72,p. 116 Badillo, David p. 85 Bb Bilinkoff, Jodi E.p. 103 Bigelow, Allisonp. 91 Bieber, Judy p. 66 Biancani, Francesca p. 108 Anouskap.Bhattacharyya, 91 Bhatt, Amyp. 58 Bezis-Selfa, John p. 61,p. 108 Beverley, Eric p. 52 Betty, Gerald p. 118 Berry, Keith W. p. 88 Berry, David A.p. 76 Berkery, Peter, Jr. p. 69 Bernstein, Richard p. 47 Bernstein, Frances L.p. 45 Bernardi, Peter p. 38 Bernard, Rachelp. 80 Berman, Constance H.p. 117 Berkowitz, Carinp. 97 Berghoff, p. Hartmut 39 Berghahn, Volker R.p. 117 Berchowitz, Gillian p. 70 Bercaw, Nancy p. 40 Ben-Yehoyada, Naor p. 108 Bent, Timothy p. 43 Benson, Etienne S.p. 117 Bennett, Herman p. 104 Beneke, Chris p. 37 Benedict, Michael Lesp. 105 Bendroth, Margaret p. 93 Bender, Thomas p. 59 Bender, Pennee p. 88 Ben, Pablo E.p. 101 Bellows, Amandap. 46 Bellitto, ChristopherM.p. 74 Bell, Richard p. 118 Bell, David A.p. 83 Beckerman, Michael p. 98 Becker, Marc p. 94 Beccalossi, Chiarap. 111 Bebber, Brett p. 83 Beattie, Peter M.p. 53 Beasley, Betsy A.p. 61 Beals, Polly p. 45 Beadie, Nancy p. 86 Bayker, Jesse p. 103 Bay, Mia E.p. 91 Baun, Dylanp. 92 Baughman, James L.p. 43 Batza, Katiep. 103 Botero, Sebastián Martínez Bostrom, Melissa p. 80 Bost, Darius p. 94 Bose, Neilesh p. 34,p. 58,p. 67 Alexp.Borucki, 64,p. 76,p. 79 Borstelmann, Tim p. 96 Boris, Eileen p. 39 Borgwardt, Elizabeth p. 62 Borghei, Suzanne p. 73 Boom, Brian M.p. 52 Bontrager, Shannon p. 55 Bond, Sarah p. 103 Bolivar, Ingrid p. 66 Boittin, Jennifer Annep. 44 Bogard, Diane Whitley p. 76 Bodroghkozy, Anikop. 61 Blumi, Isa p. 62 Blum, Edward J.p. 112 Blouin, Francis X.p. 52 Bloomer, W. Martin p. 65 Block, Sharon p. 39 Block, Kristenp. 74 Blevins, Cameron p. 80 Bleichmar, Daniela p. 73 Blecher, Joel p. 99 Blankholm, Joseph p. 119 Blankenship, Steven R.p. 111 Blair, Denice p. 37 Blair, AnnM.p. 109 Blain, Keisha N.p. 91 Black, Ashleyp. 76 Bivar, Venus p. 109 Bishara, Fahad A.p. 72 Biro, Jordan p. 112 Birla, Ritup. 44 Biondi, Martha p. 110 Bingham, Marjorie p. 97 Binette, Noah p. 102 Bouk, D Boynton, Susan p. 75,p. 89 Boyle, Sarah p. 118 Boyer Boyd, Nan Alamilla Bowler, Katep. 75,p. 86 Bowes, Julia p. 58 Bounds, Brittany p. 54 Boucher p. 86,p. 112 p. 66 , J ohn W. p. 51 , Ellen R.p an p. 43 . 58

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Participants Index 124 Participants Index

Boza, Alejandra p. 94 Bruner, Jason p. 56 Capello, Ernesto B. p. 63 Chiang, Howard p. 64, p. 101 Bradford, Anita Casavantes Bryce, Benjamin p. 66 Cardenas, Jaime, Jr. p. 55 Childs, Greg p. 48, p. 54 p. 71, p. 85 Buck, David R. p. 102 Carey, David, Jr. p. 106 Childs, Matt D. p. 88, p. 111 Bramwell, Lincoln p. 80 Bucur-Deckard, Maria p. 80, Carey, Elaine K. p. 105, p. 107 Chimborazo (Quechua), William Brand, Tylor p. 82 p. 87, p. 88 Carla S. Nappi p. 54, p. 73 p. 114 Brands, Hal p. 72 Buffett, Neil P. p. 92 Carnes, Mark p. 88 Chmielewski, Laura p. 112 Braude, Ann p. 64 Buhrman, Kristina p. 66 Carpenter, Joel A. p. 56, p. 75 Chmielewski, Wendy E. p. 81 Breakstone, Joel p. 42, p. 70 Bukowczyk, John J. p. 95 Carr, Barry p. 112 Chotkowski, Charles p. 95 Breckenridge, Keith p. 46 Bullard, Kate p. 39 Carroll, Brett p. 119 Choudhury, Rishad p. 36 Breen, Michael P. p. 60 Bülow, Mathilde von p. 114 Carroll, James T. p. 47, p. 75 Chowkwanyun, Merlin p. 44 Breen, Patrick H. p. 74 Burbridge, Elizabeth Keohane Carson, Cary p. 36 Chowning, Margaret p. 86 p. 115 Breitzer, Susan R. p. 97 Carson, Clayborne p. 95 Christensen, Mark Zinn p. 120 Burch, Susan p. 83 Brekus, Catherine A. p. 47 Carter, Bryan p. 110 Christensen, Peter p. 61 Burghart, William p. 56 Brenner, Rachel p. 77 Carter, Kirsten p. 102 Christoff, Peg p. 48 Burke, Thomas p. 112 Brensilver, Stacie p. 42 Casaban, José p. 40 Christopher, Emma p. 101 Burkholder, Jared S. p. 75 Brier, Jennifer p. 120 Casalini, Cristiano p. 85 Chroboczek, Jan p. 77 Burns, Catherine p. 71 Brisman, Shira p. 62 Casey, Christopher A. p. 89 Chronakis, Paris Papamichos Burns, Jeffrey p. 37 Brito, Luciana da Cruz p. 37 Casey, Kathleen p. 45 p. 49, p. 118 Burns, Kathryn J. p. 72, p. 89 Brock, Darryl E. p. 52 Cashin, Joan E. p. 91 Cialdella, Joseph p. 102 Burns, Mila p. 112 Brockmann, Sophie p. 109 Cassidy, Michelle p. 71 Cieslak, Marta p. 67 Burns, Ric p. 83 Bronfman, Alejandra M. Cassity, Brian L. p. 118 Claflin, Kyri Watson p. 89 Burrowes, Diane p. 43 p. 76, p. 113 Castillo, Dennis p. 93 Clancy, Eileen p. 102 Burrows, Geoff p. 104 Brookins, Julia Akinyi p. 97 Castillo, Lina Del p. 75 Clancy-Smith, Julia A. p. 115 Burrows, Vanessa p. 90 Brooks, Corey p. 63 Castro, Rocio Velasco de p. 35 Clark, Anthony E. p. 48 Burton, Orville Vernon p. 63 Brooks, James p. 44 Cater, Casey p. 62 Clark, Catherine E. p. 54, p. 81 Burton-Rose, Daniel p. 99 Brooks, Jeffrey P. p. 61 Caulfield, Sueann p. 79 Clark, Claire D. p. 74 Bussche, Eric Vanden p. 107 Brooks, Peter p. 99 Cave, Mark p. 77 Clark, Elizabeth A. p. 56, p. 65 Butler-Wall, Karisa p. 120 Brooks, Shelley p. 42 Censer, Jack R. p. 51 Clark, Emily p. 36 Byrd, Brandon R. p. 91 Brophy, James M. p. 73 Cevasco, Carla p. 116 Clark, Mark W. p. 67 Brown, Aaron p. 74 Chahinian, Talar p. 98 Clark, Mary Marshall p. 67, p. 77 Brown, Candy Gunther Cc Chakrabarty, Dipesh p. 78 Clark, Shellie p. 92 p. 38, p. 93 Chamberlin, Silas A. p. 72 Clark, Vincent A. p. 55 Cagle, Hugh p. 114 Brown, Clayton p. 92 Chamosa, Oscar p. 76 Clawson, Michael p. 119 Cahn, Susan K. p. 74 Brown, Elspeth H. p. 57 Chancey, Mark p. 93 Cleves, Rachel Hope Cajka, Peter p. 111 Brown, Jonathan p. 113 Chao, Sheau-Yueh (Janey) p. 39, p. 77 Calder, Lendol G. p. 42, Brown, Joshua p. 33 p. 107 Cline, Sarah p. 39 p. 107, p. 114 Brown, Kate p. 34, p. 46 Chaplin, Tamara p. 65 Coates, A.T. p. 102 Callahan, Kathy p. 100 Brown, Keith p. 49 Chappel, James p. 45, p. 107 Cobb, Kenneth p. 121 Camic, Charles p. 34 Chappine, Patricia p. 115 Cobb, William Jelani p. 107 Brown, Kendall p. 91 Camiscioli, Elisa p. 100 Charlton-Stevens, Uther p. 78 Coburn, Carol p. 85 Brown, Kevin p. 80 Campbell, Courtney J. p. 63 Chartier, Roger A. p. 59, p. 87 Cody, Cheryll A. p. 118 Brown, Mary Elizabeth Campos, Michelle p. 118 p. 93, p. 103 Chatelain, Marcia p. 107 Coe, David B. p. 59 Can, Lale p. 108 Brown, Nancy p. 44 Chatterjee, Partha p. 59 Coen, Deborah p. 91 Cañedo, Oscar p. 92 Brown, Ras Michael p. 63 Chaudhuri, Nupur p. 58 Coffey, Mary p. 90 Cañeque, Alejandro p. 79 Brown, Vincent p. 36, p. 116 Chen, Dandan p. 76 Coffin, udithJ p. 63 Cañizares-Esguerra, Jorge Brown, Warren C. p. 110 p. 75, p. 78 Chen, Xin p. 48 Coffman, Elesha p. 119 Bruening, Alfons p. 85 Canning, Kathleen M. p. 94 Cheng, Yinghong p. 107 Cohen, Andrew p. 87 Bruey, Alison J. p. 90 Cantwell, Christopher p. 85, Chenoweth, Eric p. 114 Cohen, Robert p. 42 Brundage, W. Fitzhugh p. 80 p. 119 Chet, Héctor Concohá p. 101 Cohen, Sascha Elise p. 120

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Cohen, Stephen F. p. 46 Cunha, Olivia Maria Gomes da Derengowski, Piotr p. 67 Ee Cole, Juan R. I. p. 46 p. 113 Deringer, William p. 43 Cole, Timothy p. 62 Curcio-Nagy, Linda p. 79 Desai, Manan p. 58 Eads, Valerie p. 48 Coleman, Anne Gilbert p. 72 Curtis, Heather p. 38 Deslandes, Paul R. p. 60 Eagan, Wendy p. 59 Colley, Linda p. 45 Cutter, Elissa p. 74 Deutsch, Tracey p. 108 Eagle, Marc V. p. 55 Collins, William p. 82 Devens, Robert p. 70 Eaklor, Vicki p. 37 Confino, Alon p. 35 Dd Deverell, William p. 84 Earl, Hilary C. p. 71 Conkle, Daniel p. 75 DeVries, Annalise p. 52 Eastman, Scott p. 65. p. 78 D’Emilio, John A. p. 58 Conklin, Alice L. p. 34 DeWaal, Jeremy p. 65 Ebel, Jonathan p. 56 Daacke, Kirt von p. 83 Conley, John p. 74 Dick, Stephanie p. 35 Ebershoff, David p. 118 Dailey, Jane p. 82 Conn, Steven p. 70 Diefendorf, Jeffry M. p. 73 Eckelmann, Susan p. 78, p. 83 Daily, Andrew M. p. 63 Connelly, Matthew p. 33, p. 53 Diehl, Chad p. 107 Edelson, Max p. 37 Dallasheh, Leena p. 53 Conner, M. Shelly p. 94 Dietrich, Christopher R. W. p. 61 Eder, Jacob S. p. 117 Dallett, Nancy p. 107 Contreras, Carlos Alberto p. 55 Dillingham, Alan Shane p. 82 Edwards, Erika p. 79, p. 104 Danbolt, Mathias p. 74 Cook, Eli p. 43 Diner, Hasia R. p. 59, p. 73 Edwards, Jennifer C. p. 40 Daniel, Evan Matthew p. 112 Cooper, Barbara M. p. 44 Dixon, Frederick Douglass p. 76 Edwards, Lisa M. p. 47 Danon, Dina p. 118 Cooper, Melissa p. 63 Doerfler, Maria p. 56 Eichman, Jennifer p. 99 Dansereau, Raymond J. Cooper, Tracey-Anne p. 48 Elbirlik, Leyla Kayhan p. 118 p. 103 Dooley, Brendan p. 62 Coppa, Frank J. p. 49, p. 64 Dorin, Rowan p. 34 Eller, Anne p. 52, p. 104

Dantas, Mariana L. Participants Index Corber, Erin M. p. 52 p. 37, p. 94 Dorn, Georgette Magassy p. 107 Elliott, Dyan H. p. 65 Corrêa, Larissa Rosa p. 86 Dauer, Quinn p. 104 Dorsey, Samantha p. 66 Ellis, Elizabeth p. 83 Corrigan, Terrence p. 88 Daughrity, Dyron p. 75 Dowland, Seth p. 98 Elmore, Bartow Jerome p. 96 Cortes, Anna p. 67 David, Beverly p. 57 Dowling, Matthew p. 103 Elsey, Brenda J. p. 63, p. 76 Courtwright, David T. p. 55 Davidson, Jessica p. 38 Downey, Matthew p. 97 Eltis, David p. 55, p. 111 Covert, Lisa Pinley p. 39 Davidson, Naomi p. 45 Doxiadis, Evdoxios p. 77 Eluwawalage, Damayanthie p. 92 Covington, Sarah p. 83 Davies, John p. 55 Doyle, Debbie Ann p. 49 Eng, David L. p. 99 Cowan, Benjamin A. Davies, Surekha p. 35 Drake, Ian J. p. 47 Engel, Kate Carté p. 94 p. 57, p. 79 Davis, Adrienne p. 36 Dralyuk, Boris p. 61 Engen, Abram Van p. 112 Cox, Jeffrey p. 93 Davis, Andrea p. 38 Draper, Timothy Dean p. 73 Enszer, Julie p. 37 Crago, Scott p. 76 Davis, Belinda p. 117 Dries, Angelyn p. 64 Epstein, Steven A. p. 117 Craib, Raymond p. 79 Davis, David Brion p. 91 Drinot, Paulo p. 95 Erbig, Jeffrey, Jr. p. 83 Craig, Kalani p. 60 Davis, Kathleen p. 51 Driscoll, Mark p. 88 Erdmans, Mary Patrice p. 67 Craig, Kate p. 92 Davis, Natalie Zemon p. 36, p. 98 Dror, Otniel E. p. 36 Erekson, Keith A. p. 107, p. 114 Crane, Susan p. 81 Davis, Robert p. 85 Drummond, Elizabeth p. 84 Erickson, Ansley p. 53 Crawford, Sharika D. p. 104 Dawson, Patrick p. 113 Duan, Lei p. 92 Erkan, Ali p. 109 Cremer, Andrea Robertson Eschen, Penny M. Von p. 39 p. 59 Dawson, Sandra Trudgen p. 58 Dubois, Laurent M. p. 36, p. 91, p. 97 Escoffier, Jeffrey p. 86 Crespino, Joseph p. 53 Dean, Carolyn J. p. 36, p. 69 Dudziak, Mary L. p. 83 Esparza, Jesse J. p. 39 Cribelli, C. Teresa p. 66 DeAnda, Neomi p. 85 Crislip, Andrew p. 56 Debats, Don p. 61 Dueñas, Alcira p. 120 Espinosa, Mariola p. 52 Crisman, Kevin p. 40 Decker, Sarah Ifft p. 50 Duffy, Kathrinne p. 102 Espinoza, G. Antonio p. 86 Critchlow, Donald p. 54 Decker, Stephanie p. 96 Duggan, Lawrence p. 112 Essington, Amy p. 39 Cromwell, Alisha p. 108 Dees, Sarah p. 56 Duggan, Mark Thomas p. 103 Ethridge, Robbie p. 44 Crosby-Arnold, Margaret p. 57 Delaporte, Marianne Martin p. 47 Dukas, Neil B. p. 97 Evangelista, Rhiannon p. 67 Crossley, Pamela Kyle p. 109 Delgado, Grace Peña p. 100 Dull, Laura p. 42 Evans, Jennifer p. 57 Crowley, Mark p. 58 Delozier, Alan p. 75 Dunn, Mary Corley p. 93 Eve, Martin p. 108 Cruz, Deirdre de la p. 81 DeLucia, Christine p. 44 Durfee, Michael Jordan p. 34 Evener, Vincent p. 103 Cruz-Fernandez, Paula de la Denning, Andrew p. 92 Dutt, Rajeshwari p. 100 Evoy, Jacob p. 76 p. 49 Derby, Lauren (Robin) p. 101 Dym, Jordana p. 63 Ewen, Jeff p. 115

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 125 28/10/14 6:26 PM 126 Participants Index

Ff Fogarty, Richard S. p. 100 Gao, Yunxiang p. 60 Goldman, Andrea S. p. 101 Foner, Eric p. 70 Gardner, James p. 100 Goldman, Rachael B. p. 56, Fabella, Yvonne p. 106 Foray, Jennifer L. p. 62 Gardner, Sarah p. 43 p. 65, p. 75 Fairman, Julie p. 43 Ford, Caroline p. 68, p. 70 Garmon, Frank, Jr. p. 102 Goldman, Wendy Z. p. 54 Faison, Elyssa p. 57 Ford, Lisa p. 82 Garrigan, Shelley p. 63 Goldsmith, Keith p. 43 Falvo, Kathryn p. 81 Forlenza, Rosario p. 92, p. 93 Garth, Bryant G. p. 44 Goldstein, Jan p. 78, p. 105 Fan, Guangxin p. 53 Forss, Amy Helene p. 118 Gasaway, Brantley p. 98, p. 112 Goloboy, Jennifer L. p. 59 Fan, Shuhua p. 38 Foster, Elizabeth A. p. 45 Gasco, Janine p. 101 Gomez, Alan p. 83 Fancy, Hussein p. 67 Fowler, Jessica J. p. 48 Gaston, K. Healan p. 90 Gonzales, Trinidad p. 55, p. 80, p. 88 Fanning, Patricia p. 47 Fox-Amato, Matthew p. 54 Gauss, Susan M. p. 33 Gonzalez, Jorge Felipe p. 76 Farrelly, Maura Jane p. 112 Francis, Martin p. 71 Gavin, Francis J. p. 61 Goodman, David p. 88 Fass, Paula S. p. 51 Franz, Kathleen p. 54 Gazmurri, Susana p. 78 Gordin, Michael D. p. 73 Faull, Katherine p. 75 Frechette, Joseph p. 56 Gebrekidan, Fikru Negash p. 45 Gordon, Colin H. p. 107 Fea, John p. 85 Freedman, Paul p. 92, p. 116 Gelfand, Rachel p. 120 Gordon, Lesley p. 53 Feeser, Andrea p. 75 Freeman, David p. 70 Genell, Aimee M. p. 81 Gordon, Sarah p. 85, p. 93 Fehrenbach, Heide p. 51 Freeman, Lance p. 98 Genter, Alix p. 103 Gore, Dayo p. 46 Feighery, Kate p. 85, p. 119 Freidberg, Susanne p. 89 Gentile, Michael p. 43 Goswami, Manu p. 51 Fellman, Susanna p. 39 Frevert, Ute p. 36 George, Abosede p. 78 Gotkowitz, Laura p. 94 Fenn, Elizabeth p. 35 Frickel, Scott p. 34 George, Marie-Amelie p. 74 Gower, Margaret p. 85 Ferguson, Eliza Earle p. 100 Frickert-Murashige, Allison Georgini, Sara p. 60 Ferguson, Roderick p. 46, p. 94 p. 55, p. 84 Gerlach, Christian p. 54 Grafton, Anthony p. 101 Fernández-Armesto, Felipe p. 35 Friedland, Paul p. 87 Germany, Kent p. 95 Grainger, Brett p. 85 Fernandez, Johanna p. 99 Friedrichs, Christopher p. 57 Geroulanos, Stefanos N. p. 36 Grandin, Greg p. 46 Fernando Purcell, p. 36, Friesner, Nicholas Aaron p. 76 Geselowitz, Michael p. 100 Grant, J. Tobin p. 119 p. 60, p. 113 Frisch, Walter p. 62 Getz, Trevor p. 46 Grant, Nicholas p. 91 Ferrante, Joan p. 110 Frühstück, Sabine p. 51 Geyer, Michael p. 119 Graubart, Karen p. 72 Ferreira, Susannah Humble p. 55 Frusetta, James p. 102 Giannakopoulos, Georgios p. 116 Gray, Tom p. 70 Ferrer, Ada p. 36, p. 71 Fu, Poshek p. 110 Giannotta, Kristina p. 80 Grayzel, Susan R. p. 71 Ferrone, Rita p. 74 Fuchs, Rachel p. 96, p. 100 Gibbs, Fred p. 92, p. 117 Green, Jay p. 86 Fett, Sharla M. p. 72, p. 118 Fuechtner, Veronika p. 101, p. 111 Gibbs, Jenna M. p. 94 Green, Monica H. p. 40 Few, Martha p. 104, p. 106 Fuentes, Marisa J. p. 74, p. 106 Gibson, David p. 74 Green, Nancy L. p. 45, p. 70 ffolliott, Sheila p. 62 Fuentes-Berain, Rossana p. 33 Gidron, Noam p. 57 Greenberg, Cheryl L. p. 98 Field, Thomas C. p. 113 Fuller, Mary p. 35 Giesberg, Judith p. 53 Greenberg, David p. 43 Fields-Black, Edda L. p. 63 Gigantino, James p. 63 Greenberg, Douglas p. 83 Figueroa-Colon, Julio p. 52 Gg Gil, Xavier p. 84 Greenberg, Udi p. 45 Finch, Aisha K. p. 106 Gilbert, Claire p. 84 Greene, Alison Collis p. 56 Fiore, Natalia p. 76 Gabaccia, Donna R. p. 45 Gilbert, Marc Jason p. 78 Greene, Julie p. 53 Fischer, Brodwyn M. p. 109 Gabrielli, Timothy p. 119 Gill, Jonathan p. 98 Gregor, Neil p. 73, p. 98 Fischer, Sibylle p. 57 Gaehtgens, Thomas p. 81 Gill, Tiffany p. 91 Griffin, Hollis p. 65 Fitz, Caitlin A. p. 94, p. 118 Gage, Beverly F. p. 34 Gilpin, W. Clark p. 120 Griffin, Lauren Horn p. 93, p. 103 Fitzgerald, Devin p. 54 Galarza, Alex p. 66 Giscombe, Jane p. 93 Griffith, Aaron p. 56 Fitzpatrick, Ellen F. p. 59 Gallagher, Catherine p. 98 Gitelman, Lisa p. 109 Griffith, arieM p. 112 Fitzpatrick, Kathleen p. 108 Gallagher, Julie p. 116 Givens, Bryan p. 84 Griffiths, Sam p. 98 Fleming, Katherine p. 95 Gallant, Thomas W. p. 95, p. 120 Glickman, Lawrence B. p. 72 Grimmer, Ian p. 94 Fleming, Martha p. 109 Gallay, Alan p. 90 Glymph, Thavolia p. 53 Grinberg, Keila p. 118 Fletcher, Robert S. G. p. 87 Gallo, Marcia M. p. 37 Goff, Philip p. 68 Grohsgal, Leah Weinryb Florvil, Tiffany p. 83 Gallon, Kim p. 110 Goggin, Maureen Daly p. 75 p. 44, p. 66 Flowers, Elizabeth p. 98 Games, Alison F. p. 70 Gold, Matthew K. p. 108 Gronningsater, Sarah L. H. p. 63 Fogarty, Gerald P. p. 56 Gantner, Eszter p. 65 Goldhill, Simon p. 81 Gross, Ariela J. p. 36

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Gross, Michael B. p. 93 Harkness, Deborah p. 51 Hett, Benjamin C. p. 71 Hsu, Rachel Hui-Chi p. 101 Gross, Rachel p. 72 Harnois, Catherine E. p. 115 Heuring, Darcy Hughes p. 54 Hua, Rui p. 82 Gross, Stephen p. 116 Harris, Kristine p. 110 Heuvel, Katrina Vanden p. 46 Huber, Valeska p. 84 Grossman, James p. 91, p. 105 Hart, Darryl p. 103 Heywood, Linda M. p. 88 Hudd, Sandra p. 44 Gruen, Lori p. 81 Hart, Gillian p. 35, p. 80 Hiatt, Willie p. 104 Hughes, Quenby Olmsted p. 114 Grunder, Sarah Lucinda p. 111 Hartch, Todd F. p. 75 Hibbard, Melissa J. p. 58 Hughes, Steven p. 49 Guenther, Faye p. 94 Hartig, Anthea p. 107 Hidalgo, Dennis Ricardo p. 57 Hughett, Amanda p. 83 Guerra, Lillian p. 44, p. 71, Hartman, Saidiya p. 74 Hill, Jonathan p. 62 Hui, Kwok Wai p. 110 p. 85, p. 97 Hartog, Hendrik p. 36 Hill, Kimberly DeJoie p. 118 Hulden, Vilja p. 102 Guerson, Alexandra p. 55 Hastings, Geri p. 33 Hillis, Faith C. p. 34 Hulsebosch, Daniel p. 45 Guha, Sumit p. 52 Hastings, Sally Ann p. 57 Hilmes, Michele p. 61, p. 115 Hulser, Kathleen p. 41, p. 102 Guild, Joshua p. 116 Hatch, Nathan p. 75 Hilt, Eric p. 115 Hum, Tarry p. 49 Guldi, Jo p. 109 Hatfield, evinK p. 100 Hines, Sarah Thompson p. 45 Hume, Sara p. 91 Gulledge, Katie p. 33 Hattem, Michael D. p. 69 Hinrichs, TJ p. 110 Huner, Michael p. 79 Gumina, Salvatore La p. 93 Hatzky, Christine p. 106 Hinton, Elizabeth p. 110 Hunt, Lynn A. p. 101 Gunkel, Ann Hetzel p. 58 Haulman, Kate p. 66 Hintzen, Amelia p. 92 Hurewitz, Daniel p. 58, p. 112 Guo, Weiting p. 82 Havers, Rob p. 106 Hirano, Katsuya p. 80 Hurk, Jeroen van den p. 99 Gurnack, Ann p. 95 Hayes, Christopher p. 34 Hirsch, Francine p. 107 Hurteau, Robert p. 47 Gutfreund, Zevi p. 61 Hayes, Katherine p. 44 Hirschler, Konrad p. 99 Hustvedt, Ron p. 42 Gutiérrez, Verónica A. p. 114 Hayes, Patrick p. 38, p. 85 Hirschmann, Edwin p. 78 Hutton, Shennan p. 33, p. 42 Participants Index Gyger, Helen p. 104 Hayford, Charles W. p. 60 Hobbs, Allyson p. 88 Huyssen, David p. 40 Gyug, Richard F. p. 75 Haynes, Douglas E. p. 101, p. 111 Hobson, Emily K. p. 58 Hyde, Anne p. 70, p. 88 Hayse, Michael R. p. 67 Hodges, Sarah p. 60 Hynson, Rachel M. p. 54 Hh Hayter, Julian p. 73 Hodson, Nathan p. 72 Hazard, Sonia p. 64 Hoffman, Elizabeth Cobbs p. 51 Ii Haberski, Raymond p. 111 Heal, Bridget p. 57, p. 62 Hoffman, Philip p. 109 Hadden, Sally E. p. 47 Healey, Jenna p. 90 Hoffmann, Richard C. p. 117 Ialongo, Ernest p. 105 Hahn, Hazel p. 61 Healey, Mark p. 104 Hoffnung-Garskof, Jesse E. p. 97 Idol, David p. 95 Hahn, Steven H. p. 82 Hébrard, Jean M. p. 36 Hofmann, Julie A. p. 110 Illanes, Ximena p. 92 Hajkova, Anna p. 98 Hebbert, Michael p. 73 Holden, Vanessa M. p. 61 Imhoof, David p. 73 Hale, Grace Elizabeth p. 89 Hecht, Gabrielle p. 34, p. 46 Holland, David p. 64 Immerwahr, Daniel p. 109 Hale, Jon p. 53 Heerman, M. Scott p. 46 Hollifield, amesJ F. p. 45 Ingram, Brannon p. 90 Haley, Andrew P. p. 46 Hellwege, Benjamin p. 90 Holmes, Kwame p. 86 Irving, Andrew p. 75 Hall, Bruce p. 52 Helton, Laura E p. 81 Holt, Andrew p. 58 Irwin, Julia p. 59, p. 77, p. 99 Hall, David p. 47, p. 112 Hendershot, Heather p. 61 Holt, Thomas C. p. 73 Irwin, Ryan p. 113 Halliday, Paul p. 45 Hendrix, Julian p. 75 Honeck, Mischa p. 86 Isaacs, Ann Katherine p. 60 Halperin, Liora p. 61 Henold, Mary p. 47 Hong, Jane p. 82 Israel, Paul p. 100 Halperin, Paula p. 37 Henry, Sarah p. 59 Honores, Renzo p. 120 Ivey, Paul p. 64 Halpern, Orit p. 81 Hensel-Riveros, Franz p. 94 Hoogte, Arjo Roersch van der Hamer, Deborah p. 99 Henshaw, Jonathan p. 82 p. 74 Jj Hamilton, Louis p. 75 Heppler, Jason A. p. 60, p. 89 Horta, Gerard p. 81 Hammad, Hanan p. 108 Herman, Felicia p. 109 Hosselkus, Erika R. p. 114 Jablonski, Heike p. 38 Han, SeoKyung p. 50 Hernández, José Angel p. 106 Houlihan, Patrick J. p. 119 Jackson, Justin p. 53 Hancock, Anne p. 107 Hernandez, Carlos p. 88 Howard, John p. 57 Jackson, Kenneth T. p. 32 Handley-Cousins, Sarah p. 40 Hertzman, Marc Adam p. 113 Howard, Thomas Albert p. 93 Jacob, Margaret C. p. 66 Hanhardt, Christina B. p. 46 Hertzman, Marc p. 106 Hoy, Benjamin p. 77 Jacob, Wilson Chacko p. 84 Hannon, Jane p. 47 Heschel, Susannah p. 45 Hoyle, Lydia p. 68 Jacobe, Stephanie A.T. p. 47, p. 93 Hanser, Jessica p. 73 Hesketh, Ian p. 66 Hsia, Florence C. p. 109 Jacoberger, Nicole p. 119 Hanson, Marta E. p. 117 Hesse, Carla p. 51 Hsu, Madeline p. 82 Jacobs, Meg p. 88

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 127 28/10/14 6:26 PM 128 Participants Index

Jacoby, Karl p. 82, p. 88 Judson, Pieter p. 46 King, Stacie M. p. 101 Krylova, Anna p. 52, p. 117 Jaffee, David P. p. 33, p. 114 Jung, Moon-Ho p. 34 Kingery-Schwartz, Anne p. 66 Krysko, Michael A. p. 117 Jahanbani, Sheyda F. A. p. 53 Kingsberg, Miriam Lynn p. 74 Kudlick, Catherine J. p. 45 Janowick, Jeff p. 80 Kk Kinkela, David p. 88 Kuenzli, E. Gabrielle p. 94 Jardno, Taylor p. 39 Kinra, Rajeev Kumar p. 90 Kuhn, Clifford p. 67 Jaroszynska-Kirchmann, Anna Kafka, Ben p. 97 Kirkpatrick, David p. 56 Kurashige, Lon p. 82 p. 104 Kaicker, Abhishek p. 101 Kittleson, Roger p. 63 Kuri, Ariel Rodriguez p. 82 Jarrad, Mary Beth p. 43 Kaloyanides, Alexandra p. 64 Klanderud, Jessica D. p. 89 Kurtz, William B. p. 47 Jay, Martin p. 54, p. 69, p. 80 Kamoie, Laura Croghan p. 59 Klassen, Pamela p. 90 Kurz, Nathan p. 89 Jaynes, Gerald p. 82 Kantrowitz, Rachel p. 44 Kleinberg, Ethan p. 36 Kyle B. Roberts p. 56 Jean-Baptiste, Rachel p. 44 Karacas, Cary p. 109 Klemm, Matthew E. p. 109 Jean-Louis, Dominique p. 47 Karkowski, Czeslaw p. 77 Klepper, Deeana C. p. 34 Ll Jean Stuntz p. 77 Karl, Rebecca E. p. 51, p. 100 Kleutghen, Kristina p. 73 Jeffries, Hasan Kwame p. 116 Karl, Robert p. 79 Klooster, Wim p. 70, p. 99 LaCapra, Dominick C. p. 69, p. 81 Jervis, Robert p. 72 Karush, Matthew B. p. 76 K’Meyer, Tracy E. p. 60 LaChance, Paul p. 55 Jewett, Andrew p. 110 Kashanipour, Ryan p. 114 Knabe, Susan p. 76 LaFleur, Greta p. 39 Jerónimo, Miguel Bandeira p. 113 Katz, Stanley N. p. 50, p. 97 Knight, Kolby p. 103 Lagos, Katerina p. 49 John, Richard R. p. 96 Kaufman, Micki p. 33, p. 117 Knupfer, Peter p. 104 Lai, Tracy p. 118 Johns, Andrew L. p. 104 Kaufman, Peter p. 47 Knowles, Katie p. 66 Lalaki, Despina p. 120 Johnson, Alison Frank p. 46 Kaufman, Suzanne K. p. 53 Knowles, Scott p. 34 Lally, Jagjeet p. 109 Johnson, Emily Suzanne p. 74 Kaviraj, Sudipta p. 98 Kobrin, Rebecca p. 109, p. 115 Lam, Steven p. 109 Johnson, Grace Sanders p. 102 Kawaguchi, Lesley A. p. 73, p. 92 Koch, Andrew p. 80 Lambe, Jennifer p. 54 Johnson, Jessica p. 110 Kawashima, Ken p. 88 Koch, Philippa p. 120 Lambert, Erin p. 103 Johnson, Joan Marie p. 40 Kazin, Michael p. 70, p. 83 Kocka, Jürgen p. 59 Lambright, Katie p. 92 Johnson, Kevin p. 53 Keating, Ryan W. p. 49 Koehlinger, Amy Lynn p. 37 Landau, Emily p. 36 Johnson, Matthew p. 60 Keeler, Honor p. 109 Koenker, Diane P. p. 60 Landers, Jane G. p. 76, p. 101 Johnson, Paul Christopher p. 81 Keen, Ralph p. 74 Koerner, Joseph p. 62 Landis, Michael Todd p. 53 Johnson, Paula p. 77 Keller, Richard p. 54 Koeth, Stephen M. p. 85 Landrum, Shane p. 60 Johnson, T. Scott p. 107 Keller, Tait p. 111 Koh, Adeline p. 80 Lane, Julie B. p. 43 Johnson, W. Chris p. 63 Kelley, Laura D. p. 108 Kolla, Edward James p. 73 Lane, Kris E. p. 91 Johnson, Walter p. 35, p. 91 Kelly, Daniel p. 48 Komline, David p. 38 Lange, Julia p. 86 Jones, Jacqueline, p. 69, p. 80, p. 87 Kelly, T. Mills p. 89, p. 97 Komonchak, Joseph p. 38 Langer, Julia del Palacio p. 45 Jones, Jennifer M. p. 89 Kennedy, Dane p. 105 Kondyli, Foteini p. 95 Langfur, Hal p. 91 Jones, Jordy p. 76 Kenner, Alison p. 34 Koposov, Nikolay p. 61 Lannon, Thomas p. 77 Jones, Martha S. p. 36, p. 44 Kennington, Kelly Marie p. 83 Korb, Alexander p. 117 Lanza, Fabio p. 78 Jones, Norman L. p. 42 Kesidou, Effie p. 111 Korga, Iwona p. 104 Lapeyre, Jaime p. 43 Jones, Patrick p. 60 Kessler-Harris, Alice p. 88 Kosek, Joseph Kip p. 56 Larson, Scott p. 39 Jones, Ryan p. 111, p. 119 Kevorkian, Tanya E. p. 75 Kosicki, Piotr H. p. 72 Lary, Diana p. 82 Jones, Toby C. p. 46, p. 72 Keyssar, Alexander p. 95 Kosmetatou, Elizabeth p. 65 Lassiter, Matthew D. p. 54, p. 74 Jones-Rogers, Stephanie p. 53 Khan, Abdul Karim p. 67 Kostroun, Daniella J. p. 74 Lathan, Jamie p. 33 Jordan, William Chester Khater, Akram p. 84 Kousser, J. Morgan p. 73 Latner, Teishan p. 71 p. 34, p. 87 Kibler, Ray F., III p. 97 Kozaczka, Grazyna p. 58, p. 95 Laurence, David p. 70 Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. p. 115 Kilde, Jeanne Halgren p. 119 Kozma, Liat p. 108 Laurent-Perrault, Evelyne p. 48 Jordheim, Helge p. 51 Kilgore, Trevor J. p. 112 Kramer, Alan p. 67 Lavoy, Hailey p. 110 Joseph, Gilbert M. p. 44 Killinger, Charles p. 67 Kratz, Jessie p. 80 Law, Timothy Michael p. 83 Joseph, Peniel p. 70, p. 110 Kim, Jungwon p. 118 Krause, Scott p. 65 Lawrence, John A. p. 97 – Josephson, Jason Ananda p. 110 Kimball, Natalie (Tasha) p. 54 Kroemer, James G. p. 103 Lawson, Melinda A. p. 49 Joshua M. Rosenthal p. 48 Kimmelman, Michael p. 50 Kroen, Sheryl p. 100 Lawton, Patricia p. 85 Juarez, Norma p. 92 King, David p. 38, p. 98 Krug, Jessica p. 116 Ledger, Jeremy p. 36

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 128 28/10/14 6:26 PM Participants Index 129

Lee, Andrew H. p. 38 Logemann, Jan p. 39 Mankoff, Jeffrey p. 34 McCartin, James p. 37, p. 102 Lee, Choonib p. 63 Lokken, Paul p. 64 Maqque, Victor p. 120 McCaughan, Edward p. 90 Lee, Haiyan p. 81 Lombardo, Michael p. 119 Marchand, Suzanne Lynn p. 120 McClellan, Michelle p. 76 Lee, Heather Ruth p. 116 López-Alós, Javier p. 78 Marchiel, Rebecca K p. 115 McClurken, Jeffrey W. p. 60 Lee, Kittiya p. 72 López, Kathleen p. 49 Marcus, Maeva p. 42 McCrary, Charles p. 93 Lee, Robert E. p. 33, p. 102 Lopez, Rick A. p. 63, p. 90 Marden, Cecy p. 108 McCrea, Heather p. 117 Lee, Sophia Z. p. 38, p. 82 Lord, Michael p. 92 Marglin, Jessica p. 35 McCulla, Theresa p. 116 Lehmann, Hartmut p. 75 Lorek, Timothy p. 66 Margolis, Aaron p. 78 McCurry, Stephanie p. 51 Lehmann, Philipp N. p. 91 Loss, Daniel p. 72 Marhoefer, Laurie T. p. 94 McDaniel, Marie Basile p. 119 Leighton, Christopher R. p. 51 Louis, Wm. Roger p. 113 Mariani, Paul p. 36 McDaniel, W. Caleb p. 88 Lemann, Nicholas p. 67 Louro, Michele p. 43 Marin, Irina p. 77 McDonough, Katherine p. 109 Leng, Kirsten p. 57, p. 95 Louthan, Howard P. p. 84 Marinari, Maddalena p. 82 McDonough, Susan Alice p. 50 Lenoble, Geraldine Davies p. 83 Lovejoy, Henry B. p. 101 Marín, Pablo p. 78 McEvoy, Gráinne p. 102, p. 119 Lentz, Mark p. 120 Lovejoy, Paul E. p. 91 Markowitz, Gerald p. 90 McGahan, Elizabeth W. p. 47 Leon, Sharon p. 60 Low, Michael C. p. 81 Marks, John Garrison p. 94 McGarr, Paul M. p. 87, p. 104 Leong-Salobir, Cecilia p. 44 Lowe, Kimberly p. 99 Marotti, William p. 82 McGill, Meredith L. p. 77 Lerner, Adrián p. 104 Lozano, Rosina p. 61 Marrero, Karen p. 71 McGirr, Lisa p. 57 Levi, Heather p. 66 Lu, Hanchao p. 36 Marschke, Benjamin p. 48, p. 75, McGloine, Patricia p. 33 Levine, Philippa p. 51, p. 70, p. 105 Lu, Miaw-fen p. 99 p. 94 McGowan, Susannah p. 109

Levy, Juliette p. 96 Lubar, Steven p. 36 Martin, Eva p. 74 McGrath, A. Hope p. 53 Participants Index Levy, Teresita p. 104 Lubienecki, Paul p. 56 Martin, Lawrence p. 60 McGraw, Jason Peter p. 104 Levy-Eichel, Mordechai p. 35 Luckett, Robert p. 110 Martin, Morag p. 47 McGruder, Kevin p. 98 Lewis, Abram J. p. 46 Luke, Anne p. 71 Martin, Scott C. p. 55, p. 74 McInerney, Daniel J. p. 60 Lewis, David Levering p. 98 Lunbeck, Elizabeth p. 97 Martinez, Ernesto p. 86 McKenna, Kevin p. 86 Lewis, David Rich p. 60 Lünen, Alexander von p. 98 Martinez, María Elena p. 72, p. 106 McLeod, Hugh p. 72, p. 93 Lewis, Earl p. 91 Lungerhausen, Matthew R. p. 102 Marvin, Tamar p. 92 McMahon, Darrin M. p. 78 Maryks, Robert p. 64 Lewis, Susan Ingalls p. 108 Lurtz, Casey M. p. 78 McMahon, Robert J. p. 104 Maskarinec, Maya p. 101 Lew-Williams, Beth p. 77 Lustig, Jason p. 81 McMurtrie, Beth p. 67 Maskell, Caleb p. 64 Leyerle, Blake p. 56 Lyttleton, Adrian p. 105 McNeill, John R. p. 105 Li, Danke p. 38 Maskiell, Nicole Saffold p. 106 McPherson, James M. p. 53 Li, Hongshan p. 65 Matera, Marc A. p. 63 McQueeney, Kevin p. 102 Li, Xiaobing p. 65 Mm Matsuda, Matt K. p. 49 McSheffrey, Shannon p. 118 Liang, Yuen-Gen p. 84 Machado, Maria Helena Pereira Matsumura, Wendy p. 88 McTygue, Nancy J. p. 33 Liazos, Ariane M. p. 110 Toledo p. 37 Matt, Susan J. p. 36 McVety, Amanda p. 53 Lichtenstein, Nelson p. 88 Machado, Pedro A. p. 35 Matthew, Laura p. 101, p. 106 Meade, Everard p. 48 Liere, Katherine Elliot van p. 101 Maciuika, John p. 73 Matus, Zachary p. 112 Meade, Teresa A. p. 113 Lightfoot, Natasha p. 53, p. 106 MacMillan, Kurt p. 119 Matysik, Tracie p. 87 Means, Horace p. 47 Lin, Mao p. 86 Madigan, Kevin p. 85 Maurer, Noel p. 33 Meeks, Elijah p. 60 Lindemann, Mary p. 73 Madley, Benjamin p. 90 Mayo, Marlene p. 57 Meghelli, Samir p. 110 Linkiewicz, Olga p. 116 Maffly-Kipp, Laurie p. 64, p. 75 Mays, Devi p. 77 Meigs, Mark p. 70 Lipkowitz, Elise p. 87 Mahaney, Kathryn L. p. 38 Mays, Kyle T. p. 71 Meigs, Samantha p. 45 Liskova, Katerina p. 119 Maher, Neil M. p. 81 Maza, Sarah C. p. 52 Meiton, Fredrik p. 62 Littauer, Amanda H. p. 94 Maika, Dennis p. 99 Mazurek, Malgorzata p. 116 Meléndez, José Juan Pérez p. 66 Liu, Liyan p. 65 Major, Andrea p. 91 Mazurkiewicz, Anna p. 67, p. 104 Melcher, Mary p. 47 Livingston, Julie p. 71 Mamigonian, Beatriz p. 118 Mazzenga, Maria R. p. 85 Melillo, Edward Dallam p. 79 Loffredo, Marina p. 93 Mancuso, Piergabriele p. 62 McArthur, Aaron p. 80 Melish, Jacob p. 118 Lofkrantz, Jennifer p. 118 Mandel, Maud S. p. 116 McBrady, Jared p. 102 Menchen, Derek p. 76 Logan, Barbara Ellen p. 65 Manela, Erez p. 43 McBride, Preston p. 90 Meng, Michael Liddon p. 65 Logan, Dana p. 64 Manion, Jen p. 64 McCarthy, William J. p. 40 Menke, Martin R. p. 64, p. 93

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 129 28/10/14 6:26 PM 130 Participants Index

Menninger, Margaret Eleanor p. 73 Moore, Celeste Day p. 115 Nebras, Francisco García-Serrano Offenbach, Seth p. 88 Menon, Dilip p. 68, p. 108 Mor, Jessica Stites p. 76, p. 106 p. 92 Offner, Amy C. p. 61 Merback, Mitchell p. 62 Moran, Megan p. 89 Necochea, Raul p. 54 Ogle, Vanessa p. 107 Mercado, Monica L. p. 81 Moravec, Michelle p. 60, p. 117 Nedostup, Rebecca p. 109 Ojo, Olatunji p. 111 Merchant, Emily Klancher p. 92 Morawska, Ewa p. 45 Needell, Jeffrey p. 66 Olds, Katrina B. p. 48 Meringolo, Denise p. 54 Morcillo, Aurora G. p. 38 Nelson, Jennifer p. 101 Olivares, Irene p. 89 Merkin, Yael p. 40 Morey, Maribel p. 110 Nelson, Robert K. p. 98, p. 117 Olivas, Aaron Alejandro p. 76 Nelson, William p. 47 Merry, Sally Engle p. 44 Morgan, Philip D. p. 111 Olko, Justyna p. 106 Nesbit, Scott p. 73 Messeri, Lisa p. 81 Morrall, Andrew p. 62 Olsen, Patrice Elizabeth p. 95 Neuenschwander, John p. 67 Meyer, Leisa D. p. 103 Morrison, Joshua p. 76 Olsson, Tore p. 109 Neuman, Johanna C. p. 40 Meyer, Richard p. 57 Mosca, Matthew p. 54 Opal, Jason p. 37 Newell, Margaret p. 90 Michelson, David p. 103 Mosely, Erin p. 52 Ortelli, Sara p. 83 Newton, Melanie J. p. 97 Mika, Marissa p. 71 Moses, A. Dirk p. 35, p. 98 Orzoff, Andrea p. 98 Neyzi, Leyla p. 98 Mikhail, Alan p. 81 Mosterman, Andrea Catharina Osokina, Elena p. 117 Ng, Kenny p. 110 Miki, Yuko p. 37 p. 99 Otis, Jessica Marie p. 35 Ngai, Mae M. p. 59 Milam, Erika p. 60 Motadel, David p. 72, p. 115 Ott, Julia p. 46 Ngue, Julie Nack p. 45 Milbrodt, Natalie p. 116 Moura, Shawn p. 79 Otter, Christopher J. p. 89 Nguyen, Julia Huston p. 66 Miller, Brian Craig p. 40 Movsesian, Mark p. 85 Oudijk, Michel p. 106, p. 111 Nguyen, Lien-Hang T. p. 96 Miller, Ian Jared p. 98 Moyd, Michelle p. 53 Overtoom, Nikolaus p. 56 Nirenberg, David p. 92 Miller, Karl Hagstrom p. 89 Moyn, Samuel p. 36, p. 44, p. 107 Owens, Emily p. 36 Nishida, Mieko p. 107 Miller, Peter N. p. 81 Muehlberger, Ellen p. 56 Oyen, Meredith L. p. 86 Noakes, Lucy p. 71 Miller, Tanya Stabler p. 58 Muhammad, Khalil p. 107 Noll, Mark A. p. 64, p. 68, Milligan, Ian p. 117 Mujic, Julie p. 49 p. 75 Pp Mills, Kenneth R. p. 105 Müller, Annalena p. 89 Noorlander, Danny p. 99 Mills, Mara p. 89 Mullen, Bill p. 60 Pace, David p. 60, p. 109 Norberg, Lisa p. 108 Milstein, Joanna p. 62 Mullen, Lincoln p. 102, p. 119 Paganuzzi, Enez p. 74 Nord, Philip G. p. 72 Minian, Ana p. 82 Muller, Anna p. 67 Page, Max p. 84 Norling, Lisa A. p. 37 Mir, Farina p. 61 Paik, Shailaja D. p. 108 Mulvey, Michael J. p. 115 Norman, William C. Van Mirrer, Louise p. 88 Pak, Susie J. p. 115 Murch, Donna p. 34 p. 111 Misevich, Philip p. 61 Palanti, Alessia p. 105 Murillo, Dana Velasco p. 91 Norris, Jacob p. 84 Mitcham, John p. 52 Palattella, John p. 83 Murphy, Joseph p. 63 Norton, Mary Beth p. 83 Mitchell, Matthew David p. 71 Paley, Valerie p. 70, p. 95 Murray, Heather Anne Alexandra Numbers, Ronald L. p. 110, Mitchell, Vernon p. 120 p. 60 p. 117 Palmer, David p. 37 Mo, Yajun p. 51, p. 76 Murthy, Viren p. 53 Nytroe, Sarah K. p. 75 Palmer, Mark H. p. 98 Modern, John p. 64 Musgrove, George Derek p. 89 Palmié, Stephan p. 116 Moin, A. Azfar p. 67 Muurling, Sanne p. 40 Oo Pan, Yihong p. 38 Molina, J. Michelle p. 73 Muzio, Rose p. 99 Pande, Ishita p. 119 Molnar, Elizabeth p. 95 Mylonas, Harris p. 98 O’Brien, Dan p. 89 Papaioannou, Stefan p. 49 Moltke-Hansen, David p. 43 O’Brien, Jean M. p. 71 Papsdorf, Daniel A. p. 35 Moniz, Amanda B. p. 77 Nn O’Donnell, Catherine p. 55 Paquette, Gabriel p. 65, p. 75 Monteiro, José Pedro p. 62 O’Hara, Lynne p. 59 Pardo, Diana p. 57 Monteiro, Nuno p. 72 Nadel, Joshua p. 63 O’Hara, Matthew D. p. 120 Park, Karen p. 93 Montgomery, Bruce p. 51 Nakamura, Kelli Y. p. 84 O’Neal, Jennifer p. 100 Parker, Alison M. p. 115 Montgomery, Maureen p. 40 Napierkowski, Thomas p. 58, O’Toole, James M. p. 37 Parker, Jason C. p. 53, p. 114 Montgomery, Scott L. p. 73 p. 77 O’Toole, Rachel Sarah p. 79 Parkhurst, Bill p. 114 Monti, Dominic p. 37 Narayan, Rochisha p. 108 Ochoa, Margarita R. p. 48 Parsons, Anne p. 83 Montoya, Maria p. 70 Nasstrom, Kathryn p. 52 Oduntan, Oluwatoyin p. 78 Parsons, Elaine Frantz p. 89 Moody-Turner, Shirley p. 113 Naujoks, Natasha S. p. 115 Oeltjen, Natalie p. 55 Parthasarathi, Prasannan Moore, Brenna p. 119 Navitski, Rielle p. 39 Offen, Karen p. 88 p. 35, p. 109

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 130 28/10/14 6:26 PM Participants Index 131

Pastor, Camila p. 108 Plain, Gill p. 71 Rr Reynolds, Michael A. p. 115 Patel, Shruti p. 70 Plant, Alisa p. 107 Rheinberg, Brigitta van p. 83 Patil, Vrushali p. 115 Plant, Rebecca Jo p. 60 Rabe, Robert p. 43 Ribovich, Leslie p. 93 Paugh, Katherine p. 106 Pluskota, Marion p. 40 Rabin, Shari p. 90 Ribuffo, Leo P. p. 103 Paxman, Andrew p. 33 Poels, Vefie .p 38 Rabinowitz, Richard Rice, Mark p. 104 p. 36, p. 84 Payne, Eva p. 120 Poirot, John p. 56 Richards, Yevette p. 114 Racine, Karen p. 65, p. 78 Peach, Steven p. 92 Poling, Kristin p. 84 Richardson, Laura p. 80 Radding, Cynthia p. 83 Pearlman, Wendy p. 44 Polland, Annie p. 59, p. 109 Richeson, Tamika p. 81 Rademacher, Nicholas p. 38 Pearson-Patel, Jessica Pollard, John p. 49 Richey, Jeffrey p. 63 p. 62 Radin, Joanna p. 36 Pompeian, Edward P. Richmond, Afrah p. 110 Pease, Neal p. 67, p. 77 p. 48, p. 94 Radzilowski, John Richter, Daniel p. 39 p. 77, p. 95 Pedersen, Frederik p. 40 Port, Andrew I. p. 71 Riess, Warren p. 40 Raeuchle, Viktoria p. 65 Pedersen, Susan p. 89 Porterfield, Amanda Rietzler, Katharina p. 116 Raff, Daniel p. 82 Peek, Lori p. 34 p. 38, p. 55 Riley, John p. 40 Rafferty, Anne-Marie p. 43 Pellegrino, Nicholas p. 55 Portillo, Suyapa p. 86 Ring, Natalie J. p. 43 Pendas, Devin Owen p. 71 Porwancher, Andrew p. 92 Ragab, Ahmed p. 110 Rio, Chelsea Del p. 112 Pendleton, Kimberly p. 38 Posada-Garbó, Eduardo p. 75 Railton, Ben p. 52 Rios-Font, Wadda p. 81 Penny, H. Glenn p. 68, p. 70 Postone, Moishe p. 80 Rainville, Lynn p. 33 Ríos, Rogelio Everth Ruíz p. 78 Pensado, Jaime p. 57, p. 82 Potter, Claire Bond p. 70 Ramirez, Daniel p. 38 Risen, Clay p. 60, p. 114

Perales, Nina p. 73 Potter, Leah Yale p. 88 Ramirez, Jan Seidler p. 84 Ritchey, Sara p. 50 Participants Index Perlman, Allison p. 61 Povitz, Lana p. 90 Rand, Lisa Ruth p. 102 Ritchie, Donald A. p. 77 Perlstein, Rick p. 88 Power, Margaret M. p. 106, Rappaport, Pamela p. 47 Ritter, Caroline p. 63 Perry, Heather R. p. 111 p. 113 Rawson, Michael J. p. 81 Ritter, Luke p. 103 Perry, Seth p. 120 Powers, Amy Godfrey p. 92 Ray, Krishnendu p. 89 Ritvo, Harriet p. 89, p. 98 Pesic, Andrei p. 62 Prado, Fabricio p. 70 Reaven, Marci p. 107 Rivera, Enrique p. 48 Peters, Benjamin p. 85 Preston, Andrew p. 103 Recchiuti, John Louis p. 110 Rivero-Cabrera, Arelis p. 37 Petersen, Mark p. 39 Price, Clement Alexander p. 83 Reddy, William M. p. 36 Robcis, Camille p. 34, p. 99 Peterson, Derek R. p. 33 Prince, K. Stephen p. 77 Reed, Jean-Pierre p. 44 Roberts, Kyle B. p. 56, p. 85 Pettit, Michael p. 60 Pritchard, William p. 40 Reeder, Tyson p. 92 Roberts, Mary Louise p. 69 Pfeifer, Helen p. 99 Proctor, Tammy p. 52, p. 99 Reich, Jacqueline p. 105 Roberts, Meghan p. 115 Pfeifer, Michael J. p. 77 Prodromou, Elizabeth p. 85 Reichman, Henry p. 42 Roberts, Patrick p. 34 Phelan, Joseph p. 66 Provencher, Denis M. p. 44 Reiff, Janice L. p. 73 Roberts, Samuel p. 60 Phelps, Christopher p. 88 Pulaski, Barbara p. 77 Reill, Dominique K. p. 108 Robertson, Sean p. 87 Phillips, Christopher p. 35 Pun, Raymond p. 107 Reilly, Diane p. 89 Robertson, Stephen p. 108 Phillips, Matthew p. 119 Purcell, Sarah p. 92 Reis, Elizabeth p. 39 Robinson, Ann E. p. 102 Phillips, Megan p. 33 Purdum, Todd p. 95 Rekedal, Jacob p. 76 Robinson, Chase p. 33 Phillips-Fein, Kim p. 34 Purdy, Christian J. p. 114 Rembis, Michael A. Robinson, Jack Clark p. 37 p. 45, p. 83 Pieczewski, Andrzej p. 67 Purdy, Kristin p. 52 Robinson, Nova p. 89 Remy, Jana p. 89 Piehl, Mel W. p. 75 Purnell, Brian p. 116 Rodríguez, Sarah K. M. p. 66 Ren, Ke p. 76 Pieragastini, Steven p. 36 Purohit, Teena p. 67, p. 90 Rodriguez, Jarbel p. 91 Rénique, Gerardo p. 45 Piercy, Jeremy p. 92 Pursley, Sara p. 108 Roeber, A. Gregg p. 75, p. 85 Pierre, Benoist p. 48 Renna, Thomas J. p. 112 Roethler, Jeremy Stephen p. 64 Putnam, Lara E. p. 76, p. 113 Pietruska, Jamie p. 43 Renton, Kathryn p. 101 Rogers, Jessica p. 77 Pilcher, Jeffrey M. p. 89 Resendez, Andres p. 39 Rogers, Katina p. 89 Pincince, John R. p. 58 Qq Restall, Matthew p. 35, p. 111 Roldán, Mary J. p. 79 Ping, Laura J. p. 66 Quam-Wickham, Nancy L. Retzloff, Tim p. 37 Roman, Reinaldo L. p. 81 Pipkin, Amanda Cathryn p. 89 p. 42, p. 108 Reut, Jennifer p. 97 Romero, Sergio p. 101 Pitts, Bryan p. 79 Quillen, Carol p. 51 Reuther, Jessica p. 62 Romesburg, Don p. 58, p. 76 Placido, Sandy p. 39 Quintana, Alejandro p. 57 Rey, Josué p. 88 Romine, Scott p. 43

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 131 28/10/14 6:26 PM 132 Participants Index

Ronderos, María Teresa p. 79 Saint-Laurent, Jeanne-Nicole Schrum, Kelly p. 37 Sheetz-Nguyen, Jessica Ann Roper, Shani p. 62 p. 103 Schudson, Michael p. 43 p. 47 Rose, Jonathan p. 77 Sajid, Mehdi p. 72 Schultz, Kara p. 64 Sheikh, Samira p. 52 Rosemblatt, Karin A. p. 76, Salmon, Marylynn p. 37 Schulz, Joy Elizabeth p. 55, p. 84 Shepard, Todd p. 52, p. 107 p. 90 Salvanou, Emilia p. 49 Schumacher, Jaime p. 113 Sheramy, Rona p. 109 Rosenberg, Gabriel N. p. 86 Salvucci, Linda K. p. 108 Schwaller, John p. 111 Sherry, Jonathan p. 67 Rosenberg, William G. p. 51 Salzmann, Ariel C. p. 82 Schwantes, Benjamin p. 39 Shields, David p. 77 Rosenheck, Uri p. 95 Samin, Nadav p. 72 Schwartz, Daniel L. p. 103 Shields, Sarah p. 35, p. 118 Rosenkrans, Amy p. 93 Sanchez-Sibony, Oscar p. 117 Schwartz, Stuart B. p. 97, Shires, Samantha p. 33 Rosenwald, Brian p. 43 Sánchez, Susy M. p. 57 p. 111 Shopkow, Leah p. 114 Rosinbum, John p. 100 Sanders, Ashley p. 44 Schweighofer, Katherine p. 37 Shore, Elliott p. 50 Roslington, James p. 35 Sanders, Carrie p. 84 Schweinitz, Rebecca de p. 78 Shrader, James p. 71 Rosner, David p. 44 Sanders, James p. 94 Scott, Heidi p. 91, p. 105 Shubert, Adrian, Sr. p. 65 Rosner, Molly p. 116 Sandow, Robert p. 49 Scott, Joan Wallach p. 42, Shumway, Jeffrey M. p. 57 Ross, Travis E. p. 66, p. 92 Sanfilippo, Stephen N. p. 55 p. 50, p. 97 Shurts, Sarah Elizabeth p. 108 Roth, Cassia p. 54, p. 79 Sanjurjo, Jesus p. 65 Scott, Rebecca J. p. 36 Sibaja, Rwany p. 66 Roth, Randolph p. 98 Sanos, Sandrine p. 63 Scribner, Todd p. 102 Sidbury, James p. 72 Rothman, Adam p. 72 Santiago, Aldo Lauria p. 99 Scully, Pamela F. p. 62 Siddiqi, Asif p. 81 Rothstein, Rachel p. 104 Santo, Diana Espírito p. 81 Seales, Chad p. 56 Sierra, Pablo p. 55 Rotter, Andrew Jon Santos, Martha S. p. 79 Seaver, James B. p. 91 Siff, Sarah Brady p. 74 p. 51, p. 104 Sarkar, Jayita p. 72, p. 104 Segal, Zef p. 57 Sigal, Pete p. 72, p. 79 Rubenstein, Anne p. 120 Sartori, Andrew p. 80 Seidman, Sarah p. 63 Silver, Christopher p. 73 Ruble, Sarah p. 98 Satlow, Michael p. 116 Seipp, Adam R. p. 87 Silverman, Debora Leah p. 97 Ruiz, Mario M. p. 100 Scalenghe, Sara p. 45 Seitz, James p. 70 Silvestri, Michael p. 53 Ruiz, Teofilo .F p. 101 Scales, Rebecca P. p. 115 Seixas, Peter p. 70 Silvia, Adam M. p. 49 Ruiz, Vicki L. p. 50, p. 88 Scanlon, Sandra p. 54 Self, Robert O. p. 34 Singerman, David p. 91 Rujivacharakul, Vimalin p. 61 Scarlett, Zachary p. 78 Seligman, Andrea Felber Sinha, Manisha p. 83 Rupprecht, Anita p. 101 p. 92 Schaefer, Ann-Stephane p. 38 Sivaramakrishnan, Kavita p. 71 Ruskola, Teemu p. 44 Seltzer, Joyce p. 70 Schaefer, Jennifer L. p. 66 Sjursen, Katrin p. 48 Russell, Andrew p. 100 Semán, Ernesto p. 86 Schaefer, Richard p. 93 Skaff, Sheila p. 67 Russell, Edmund p. 89 Sen, Dwaipayan p. 108 Schaefer, Timo p. 48 Sklansky, Jeffrey p. 35, p. 43 Russo, Sarah p. 114 Senchyne, Jonathan p. 77 Schantz, Eric Michael p. 78 Skousen, Lesley p. 115 Rutter, Nick p. 86 Senecal, Christine p. 48 Scharff, Virginia p. 51 Slight, John p. 115 Ryad, Umar p. 72 Seng, Guo-Quan p. 53 Scheinfeldt, Tom p. 60 Sloan, Stephen M. p. 77 Ryan, Amy p. 50 SenGupta, Gunja p. 46 Schields, Chelsea p. 33 Sloin, Andrew Jay p. 117 Rylko-Bauer, Barbara p. 77 Sergel, Ruth p. 86 Schiff, Lisa p. 113 Slonimsky, Nora p. 44 Rymsza-Pawlowska, Malgorzata Serna, Laura Isabel p. 39 Slotten, Hugh R. p. 117 p. 45 Schlotterbeck, Marian E. p. 90 Serventi, Jennifer p. 66 Sluga, Glenda p. 113 Rzeznik, Thomas F. p. 47, Seth, Sanjay p. 34 p. 119 Schmidt, Benjamin MacDonald Slutsky, Beth p. 33 p. 73 Shaffer, Kirwin p. 112 Smail, Daniel L. p. 98 Schneider, Elena p. 64 Shaikh, Juned p. 108 Smale, Robert L. p. 39 Ss Schneider, Eric C. p. 34, p. 74 Shantz, Douglas p. 48, p. 75 Smiley, Will p. 81 Saba, Roberto p. 51 Schneider, Julia p. 75 Shaughnessy, Kathryn p. 107 Smith, Amanda p. 42 Sachse, Frauke p. 101 Schneider, Robert A. p. 105 Shaw, David Gary p. 51 Smith, Anthony p. 37, p. 111 Sachsenmaier, Dominic p. 78 Schneider, Tsim p. 44 Shaw, Jenny p. 74 Smith, Bonnie G. p. 61 Sack, Daniel p. 41, p. 66 Schoeppner, Michael p. 83 Shed, Eric p. 42 Smith, Gary p. 65 Sadow, Samuel p. 57 Scholnick, Robert J. p. 77 Sheehan, James J. p. 46 Smith, Helmut W. p. 46 Sáez, Elena Machado p. 74 Schrecker, Ellen p. 42 Sheehan, Jonathan L. p. 67 Smith, Matthew p. 52 Safier, Neil F. p. 109 Schreier, Joshua S. p. 35 Sheerin, Daniel p. 75 Smith, Michael B. p. 109

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 132 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 133 Smolkin-Rothrock, Victoria Smith, Stephanie p. 90 Smith, Simone p. 100 Smith, Sabrina p. 64 Smith, Rebecca p. 112 Smith, Rachelp. 85 S Staysniak, Christopherp. 64 Staudenmaier, Michael Starr-LeBeau, Gretchen p. 48 Starosielski, Nicole p. 46 Squatriti, Paolo p. 117 Spritzer, Evan p. 63 Sprecher, Tiffany D. Vann p. 58 S Spiekermann, Uwe p Spiegel, Gabrielle M. Spicka, Mark p. 84 Spencer, Robyn p. 63 S Stofferahn, Steven A.p. 34 Stern, Walter p. 53 Stern, Steve J.p. 90 Stern, Philip J. p. 71 Stern, Laurap. 68 Stern, Alexandrap. 60 Stephens, Randallp. 86 Stenner, David p. 35 Steinmetz, Willibald p. 51 Steinmetz, George p. 34 Steinmetz, David p. 47 Steinhoff, Anthonyp. 62 Steele, Abbey p. 79 Spaulding, Robert Mark Sparks, RandyJ.p. 72,p. 118 Sorin, Gretchen p. 83 Soriano, Cristina p. 48 Song, Jingyi p. 65,p. 76 Solt, George p. 44 Soliz, Carmenp. 94 Sokol, Jason p. 116 Soine, Aeleah p. 43 Sohrabi, Naghmeh p. 44 Sohi, Seema p. 34 S Participants tearns, P pieler, Miranda Frances p. 99 pellmeyer obrevilla, N p. 99,p. 112 p. 52,p. 69 p. 57,p. 84 p. 72 eter N.p. 36 , K atalia p urt p.urt 70 . 65 . 39

Index Streets-Salter, Heather E. Strauss, Charles T. p. 64,p. 111 Storrs, Landonp. 54 Stommel, Jesse p. 60 Stolte, Carolien p. 43 Stoloff, Sam p. 51 Stoler, Mark A.p. 106 Stoler, AnnLaurap. 44,p. 87 Stolarski, Christopherp. 61 Taylor, Jennifer p. 102 Tavárez, David E.p. 106,p. 120 Tatum, Rebecca p. 47 Tate, Winifred p. 79 Tarulevicz, Nicole p. 44 Tartakoff, Paola p. 55 Tarango, Angelap. 38 Tani, Karen p. 44 Tanaka, Stefan p. 68 Tallaksen, Amundp. 89 Talbot, Cynthia p. 52,p. 70 Talar, Charlesp. 56 Tt Syrett, Nicholas L.p. 103 Swislocki, Mark S.p. 81 Swett, Pamela E.p. 71 Swarns, RachelL.p. 40 Swan, Claudiap. 35 Swafford, Emily L.p. 86 Sutton, Matthew Avery p. 98 Sutherland, Daniel E.p. 53 Surkis, J Suny, Ronald Grigor p. 54, Sunquist, Scottp. 75 Sun, Yi p. 65 Summerhill, Thomas p. 73 Sullivan, Steven p. 47 Suk, Lenap. 39 Suisman, David p. 89 Sugrue, Thomas J.p. 107 Styrna, Pawel p. 104 Styers, Randallp. 65 Stuntz, Jean p. 104 Sturgeon, Melanie p. 107 Strothman, Wendy J.p. 118 Strom, J p. 98,p. 117 p. 43,p. 53 udith p onathan p . 69,p. 69 . 103

Tchen, Jack Kuo (John Wei) Taylor, Steven J.p. 58 Trainor, S Townsend, Robert B. Townsend, CamillaD.p. 111 Townsend, Brandi A.p. 90 Toulson, Ruth E.p. 109 Torre, Oscar dela p. 37 Torget, Andrew J.p. 89 Toothman, Stephanie p. 107 Tontini, Roberta p. 54 Tomlins, Christopherp. 47 Tomasek, p. 60 Kathryn Tom, Chockiep. 46 Todt, Kimp. 70 Todd-Breland, Elizabeth p. 110 Todd, Ellen Wiley p. 86 Tobin, Beth Fowkes p. 75 Tipei, Alexp. 77 Tilton, Lauren p. 80 Tiede, Hans-Joerg p. 42 Tichenor, Kimbap. 119 Tian, Xianshengp. 65 Thurman, Kirap. 62 Thurber, Allisonp. 33 Thuma, Emily p. 46 Thorsheim, Peter p. 111 Thornton, John K.p. 88 Thorne, Susan p. 52 Thompson, Heather Annp. 34, Thompson, Evan p. 56 Thompson, Emily p. 115 Thompson, Elizabeth F. p. 82, Thomas, William G.,IIIp. 61, Thomas, Lynn M.p. 46,p. 71 Thomas, Lorrinp. 99 Thomas, Julia Adeney p. 51,p. 98 Thiessen-Reily, Heather K.p. 57 Thernstrom, Abigail p. 73 Theofilogiannakos, Chrisp Theiss, Janet p. 118 Thayer, Johnathan p. 116 Teter, Magda p. 116 Terjanian, AnoushF. p. 100 T ebeau, Mar p. 54,p. 80 p. 107 p. 99 p. 73 p. 49,p. 59,p. 81 ean p k p . 39 . 60

. 77

Tyce, Spencer p. 39 Twomey, Carolyn p. 103 Tutino, Stefania p. 85 Tusan, Michelle E.p. 99 Turner, Stephen p. 110 Turner, Sasha p. 106 Turner, John p. 86 Turk, Diana p. 42 Tucker, Jennifer p. 54 Tseng, Gloria p. 48 Trumper, Camilop. 79 Trubek, Amyp. 89 Troyan, Brett p. 95 Trofanenko, Brenda p. 37 Trochimczyk, Maja p. 95 Trembath, Richard p. 44 Travis, Charlesp. 98 Travers, Robert p. 45 Tran, Tuyen p. 42 Veracini, Lorenzo p. 82 Venditto, Elizabeth p. 102 Venables, Noll Mary p. 48 Vemsani, Lavanya p. 67 Velasco, p. Sherry 79 Veit, Helen p. 77, p. 111 Vaughan, Megan p. 71 Vaughan, Kayp. Mary 82,p. 90 Vanderford, Nathan L.p. 87 VanAntwerpen, Jonathan p. 60 Valiani, Arafaatp. 70 Valerio, LennyA.Ureña p. 66 Valeri, Mark p. 112 Vaillant, Derek W. p. 63,p. 115 Vaca, Daniel p. 112 Vv Uva, Katiep. 32 Ushioda, Sharlie p. 57 Urwin, Gregory J. W. p. 106 Urmy, Deanne p. 118 Urbano, Annalisap. 62 Urban, Andrew T. p. 116 Uran, Victor Uribe p. 57 Upchurch, CharlesJ.p. 64 Unger, Richard W. p. 117 Uu 133 28/10/14 6:26PM

Participants Index 134 Participants Index

Verba, Ericka p. 76 Warren, Adam W. V. Wiggins, Benjamin p. 51 Yy Vergara, Angela p. 86 p. 54, p. 114 Wiggs, Elizabeth p. 80 Vergara, Camilo José p. 98 Warsh, Molly A. p. 37 Wight, David p. 61 Yale, Elizabeth p. 109 Vergara, Germán p. 45 Washington, Eric K. p. 69 Wilder, Craig Steven p. 98 Yang, Dominic Meng-Hsuan p. 82 Vernal, Fiona p. 75 Wasniewski, Matthew p. 80 Wilder, Gary M. p. 63 Watenpaugh, Keith David Yarfitz, irM p. 101 Versteegh, Pien p. 58, p. 95 Wilentz, Sean p. 63 p. 99 Yarwood, Julie p. 119 Villarejo, Amy p. 65 Wilk, Dan Levinson p. 46, Waters, Chris p. 111 Villella, Peter B. p. 120 p. 69, p. 86 Yeager, Mary A. p. 96 Waters, Robert A., Jr. p. 114 Vincent, Erik p. 33, p. 100 Wilks, Jennifer M. p. 115 Yi, Guolin p. 86 Way, J.T. p. 106 Vinovskis, Maris p. 91 Williams, Chad p. 100 Yildiz, Murat p. 118 Weaver, Brian p. 42 Vinsel, Lee p. 100 Williams, Danielle Terrazas Yoder, April p. 120 Weaver, Vesla p. 34 Vitulli, Elias p. 64 p. 53 Yoder, Peter James p. 94 Weaver-Zercher, David p. 68 Vleet, Stacey Van p. 82 Williams, Diana I. p. 36 Yoo, William p. 38 Webel, Mari K. p. 43 Vogt, Lora p. 42 Williams, Kidada p. 77 Young, Alden p. 87 Weber, William p. 97 Volk, Kasper p. 64 Williams, Peter W. p. 41 Young, Ashley Rose p. 116 Webster, Jennifer p. 70 Voorhees, Amy p. 64 Williams-Forson, Psyche p. 77 Young, Damon R. p. 65 Weicksel, Sarah Jones p. 91 Vose, Robin J. E. p. 48 Wills, Jocelyn p. 108 Young, Julia G. p. 47 Weiman, David p. 115 Voskuhl, Adelheid p. 100 Wilson, Thomas p. 99 Young, Kevin p. 45 Weimer, Adrian Chastain Vrana, Heather A. p. 57, p. 78 p. 38, p. 112 Winn, Christian T. Collins Young, Phoebe S. K. p. 72 Vuic, Kara Dixon p. 100 p. 94 Weinstein, Barbara p. 86 Young, Robin p. 65 Vychytil-Baudoux, Florence Winslow, Barbara p. 96 Weinstein, Debbie p. 60, p. 74 p. 104 Winslow, Michelle p. 77 Weisenfeld, Judith p. 119 Zz Weissenberg, Marita von p. 58 Wintroub, Michael p. 35 Zahler, Reuben p. 48 Ww Weisser, Olivia p. 70 Wise, Benjamin E. p. 43 Wladaver-Morgan, Susan Zahra, Tara p. 35 Wacker, Grant p. 38, p. 75 Weitz, Eric D. p. 35, p. 94 p. 39, p. 58, p. 96 Zaldivar, Antonio M. Wadhwani, Dan p. 39 Welch, Kimberly p. 83 Wolf, Gerhard p. 81 p. 92 Wadia, Guillaume p. 35 Wells, Brandy Thomas p. 91 Wolfe, Joel W. p. 49 Zappia, Charles A. p. 88 Wages, Joan p. 88 Welton, Megan p. 110 Wollons, Roberta p. 86 Zappia, Natale p. 35 Wagner, Kevin p. 42 Wen, Shuang p. 100 Womack, Deanna p. 56 Zaretsky, Eli p. 97 Wagner, Kim A. p. 53 Wenger, Tisa p. 90 Wong, Janelle p. 73 Zarley, Jesse p. 83 Wagner, Sarah p. 109 Werner, Jake p. 36 Wong, R. Bin p. 109 Zatlin, Jonathan R. p. 117 Waley-Cohen, Joanna Westcott, Stephanie p. 52 p. 51, p. 73 Wester, Paul p. 33 Wood, L. Maren p. 87 Zavala, Adriana p. 90 Walker, Charles F. p. 104 Westermann, Mariët p. 81 Wood, Linda A. Sargent p. 37 Zelizer, Julian p. 44, p. 70 Walker, Grant p. 40 Westhoff, Laura M. p. 114 Wood, Stephanie p. 111 Zeller, Benjamin p. 119 Walker, William S. p. 54 Wevers, Melvin p. 74 Woods, Rebecca p. 91 Zeuske, Michael p. 111 Walkowitz, Daniel p. 40 Whalen, Catherine p. 91 Woolner, Cookie p. 103 Zhang, Aihua p. 48 Walkowitz, Judith R. p. 52 Wheat, David p. 76 Worthen, Molly p. 112 Zhang, Dewen p. 48 Wallack, Nicole p. 70 Wheatley, Jeffrey p. 55 Wosh, Peter J. p. 85 Zhu, Qian p. 51 Walma, Lisanne p. 74 Wheatley, Natasha p. 113 Woyshner, Christine p. 37 Ziller, Kristen p. 80 Walters, J. Edward p. 103 Wheatley, Steven C. p. 97 Wright, Gavin p. 82, p. 88 Zimmerli, Nadine p. 73 Walther, Eric p. 49 White, Jason C. p. 71 Wrycza-Sabol, Julianna p. 95 Zimmerman, Andrew Walther, Karine V. p. 73 White, Joshua Michael p. 81 Wysocki, David p. 120 p. 52, p. 87 Waltner, Ann p. 60, p. 99 White, Sophie K. p. 91 Zinsser, Judith P. p. 97 Wang, Alexandra p. 93 Wichelns, Kathryn E. p. 39 Xx Zoll, Rachel p. 74 Wang, Tao p. 86 Wiebe, Laura p. 93 Zolov, Eric p. 82, p. 106 Wangerin, Laura p. 89 Wien, Peter p. 72 Xia, Yafeng p. 86 Zumaglini, M. Carolina p. 86 Ward, Janet p. 73 Wigger, John p. 86 Xiao, Zhiwei p. 76 Zwierlein, Cornel p. 57

2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 134 28/10/14 6:26 PM 2014_Program_05ProgramSessions.indd 135 have already achieved thishonor. The following members oftheAHAcompletedtheir50thyear of continuousmembershipintheAssociationduring2014. The list alsoincludesmemberswho Fifty-Year George P. Blum N. Jo Tice Bloom A. Blane Bradford B.Blaine Robert A.Blackey William H.Bittel Thomas N.Bisson Richard F. Beyerl J.BeveridgeAlbert III Winfred E.Bernhard Milton Berman James M.Bergquist Walter L.Berg Norman Robert Bennett William Beik Kurt Beermann Seymour Becker Ross W. Beales James L.Baumgardner John J.Baughman Daniel A.Baugh Samuel H.Baron Harold M.Baron James M.Banner, Jr. John W. Baldwin Jay W. Baird Deborah F. Baird Bernard Bailyn Roy A.Austensen Abraham Ascher Walter L.Arnstein Howard L.Applegate Herbert D.Andrews Lee N.Allen Martin Albaum

Members Robert T. Coolidge J. Q.Cook Giles Constable Frank F. Conlon Marcia L.Colish Nicholas R.Clifford Errol M.Clauss Malcolm C.Clark Clifford E.Clark J. R.Christianson Stanley Chodorow Roger P. Chickering Min-sun Chen Philander D.Chase Lena L.Charney Richard T. Chang James Caskey Charles D.Cashdollar F.Rosemary Carroll Francis M.Carroll Richard L.Camp Daniel H.Calhoun Daniel F. Calhoun John C.Cairns Peter M.Buzanski Philip M.Burno J. C.Burnham Rand Burnette W. Elliot Brownlee Blaine A.Brownell Elizabeth A.R.Brown Roger D.Bridges Christopher N.Breiseth Charles M.Brand Allan G.Bogue

of

the

AHA Elizabeth L.Eisenstein Sydney Eisen Irma E.Eichhorn Carol Jean Ehlers Owen Dudley Edwards M. L.Edwards A. Hunter Dupree Jack R.Dukes Katherine Fischer Drew Seymour Drescher Ara Dostourian John Patrick Donnelly SJ Robert C.Donaldson James J.Divita Leonard Dinnerstein Duane Norman Diedrich Samuel E.Dicks Charles B.Dew Joseph A.Devine Jr. Carl N.Degler Istvan Deak Frederick A.deLuna Natalie Zemon Davis Calvin D.Davis Gerald A.Danzer Roger Daniels E. RandolphDaniel W. H.Cumberland Don M.Cregier Theodore RawsonCrane Edith B.Couturier Roger W. Corley Frank J.Coppa Sandi E.Cooper Ronald E.Coons Philip Manning Goodwin Luis E.Gonzalez-Vales E.Goldschmidt Arthur J. Philip Gleason Lenore M.Glanz Robert J.Gibbons R.Gerlach Larry Richard A.Gerber Donna Broderick Gavac Bruce M.Garver Wendell D.Garrett James P. Gaffey O.FurnerMary Patrick J.Furlong Frank A.Friedman Richard C.Frey Jr. Daniel M.Fox Robert Forster John Douglas Forbes BriantMary Foley Willard AllenFletcher Ralph T. Fisher Jr. Ernest F. Fisher Jr. Paula S.Fichtner Bruce S.Fetter Norman B.Ferris Robert H.Ferrell David Felix Stanley L.Falk Joyce Duncan Falk Donald B.Epstein Iris H.Engstrand Carroll L.Engelhardt Saul Engelbourg Ainslie T. Embree 135 28/10/14 6:26PM

50-Year Members 136 Fifty-Year Members of the AHA

Bertram M. Gordon John Hillje Alice Kessler-Harris Donald J. Mattheisen

Leonard A. Gordon Gertrude Himmelfarb Richard S. Kirkendall Allen J. Matusow

Henry F. Graff Harwood P. Hinton Glenn J. Kist Joseph M. McCarthy

Richard Graham A. William Hoglund Jacques Paul Klein John J. McCusker

Walter D. Gray Paul S. Holbo Paul W. Knoll Gerald W. McFarland

Jack P. Greene David A. Hollinger Richard H. Kohn Lyle A. McGeoch

Victor R. Greene Robert B. Holtman Paul A. Koistinen Michael McGiffert

Raymond Grew Ari Hoogenboom Arno W. F. Kolz Roderick E. McGrew

Kenneth J. Grieb Daniel Horowitz Jordan E. Kurland William F. McHugh

Patricia K. Grimsted Richard M. Hunt Walter F. LaFeber Allan S. McLellon

Paul S. Guinn Jr. Robert Edgar Hunter Daniel Lane William H. McNeill

Samuel Haber Alfred F. Hurley Roger Lane John W. Mcnulty

Arthur Haberman Frank C. Huyette Jr. Vincent A. Lapomarda James M. McPherson

Barton C. Hacker Georg G. Iggers Alphonse F. LaPorta Samuel T. McSeveney

Wm. Kent Hackmann Akira Iriye Catherine Grollman Lauritsen C. Wade Meade

Daryl M. Hafter Travis Beal Jacobs Daniel J. Leab Neville K. Meaney

Edwin C. Hall William Jannen Jr. John L. LeBrun John A. Mears

Timothy Hallinan Konrad H. Jarausch Richard A. Lebrun W. Knox Mellon Jr.

Paul G. Halpern Jerome Jareb Maurice D. Lee Jr. Michael A. Meyer

Alonzo L. Hamby Raymond J. Jirran Patricia-Ann Lee Norton H. Mezvinsky

James N. Hantula Harold B. Johnson Jr. Andrew Lees Ronald E. Mickel

Craig R. Hanyan Herbert A. Johnson Jesse Lemisch Robert L. Middlekauff

David E. Harrell James E. Johnson John A. Leopold Edwin A. Miles

Susan M. Hartmann Philip D. Jordan David Levin David B. Miller

Donald J. Harvey Jacob Judd Vernon L. Lidtke Mary Emily Miller

T. R. H. Havens Frank A. Kafker Helen Liebel-Weckowicz Norma Taylor Mitchell

Hugh D. Hawkins William Peter Kaldis Jonathan J. Liebowitz John Modell

Ellis W. Hawley William Kamman David L. Lightner Raymond A. Mohl

Albert A. Hayden Lawrence S. Kaplan Robert D. Linder Robert J. Moore

Jo N, Hays John P. Karras Lester K. Little George Moutafis

Leopold Hedbavny Jr. Stanley N. Katz Leon F. Litwack Armin E. Mruck

Dorothy O. Helly Firuz Kazemzadeh Peter J. Loewenberg James M. Muldoon

James E. Hendrickson Thomas H. Kean John V. Lombardi John M. Murrin

Melinda Hennessey Thomas M. Keefe Joseph O. Losos Edward John Muzik

James N. J. Henwood Frederick Kellogg Richard Lowitt Alfred F. Myers

Charles J. Herber Philip W. Kendall William C. Lubenow Duane P. Myers

Richard G. Hewlett Joseph Frederick Kenkel Donald F. Manthei Otto M. Nelson

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