Professor of History

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Professor of History

Lisbeth Haas 2011 1

Lisbeth Haas Professor of History Chair of Feminist Studies Humanities Office Building University of California, Santa Cruz Phone: 831-459-2304 e-mail: [email protected]

4082 Cesar Chavez St. San Francisco, CA 94131 Phone: (h) 415-695-7955 (c) 415-377-2232

EMPLOYMENT HISTORY 2010-13 Chair, Feminist Studies Department 2009-present Professor of History, University of California, Santa Cruz 1995-2009 Associate Professor of History, University of California, Santa Cruz. 1987-1995 Assistant Professor of History, University of California, Santa Cruz. 1982-83 Asistant de Langue Vivant, Lycée-Collège Victor Duruy, Paris. 1980-82 Humanities Core Course, Teaching Associate, University of California, Irvine l977-l980 Department of History, Teaching Assistant, University of California, Irvine

EDUCATION 1986 Ph.D. in History, University of California, Irvine 1982-83 École Normal Superior, rue d’Ulm, and École Des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris, France 1975 B.A. in History, University of California, San Diego

HONORS and AWARDS 2007-2013 Re-Appointed twice Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians 2009-10 Keynote Speaker for the Sesquicentennial Symposium of Bancroft Library 2007-08 Fellowship from the Davis Center for the Study of History, Princeton University 2007-10 Re-Appointed Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians 2007 Keynote Speaker (Distinguished Alumnae) for the Humanities Graduation at the University of California, Irvine 1997 Elliot Rudwick Prize for the book Conquests and Historical Identities, Organization of American Historians 1993-94 Fellowship at the Humanities Research Institute (Minority Discourse Group) University of California, Irvine (Winter and Spring) 1980-81 Rotary Scholarship

GRANTS 2009-2010 Special Research Grant, COR, University of California, Santa Cruz 2006 Recovering U.S. Hispanic Religious Thought and Practice Grant, University of Houston 2006 MEXUS Research Grant, UC-system-wide 2006 Undergraduate Research Apprenticeship Program, Chicano Latino Research Center 2004 Institute for Humanities Research grant 2002 Institute for Humanities Research Fellowship, Fall Quarter 2002 Chicano-Latino Curriculum Fellowship, UCSC 2001 MEXUS Research Grant, UC-system-wide 2000.1 University of California President’s Fellowship 2000-01 Mellon Foundation Fellowship at the Huntington Library Lisbeth Haas 2.

1998-99 Huntington Library Haynes Fellowship 1997-98 Instructional Improvement Grant, University of California, Santa Cruz 1995-98 Faculty Senate Research Grant, University of California, Santa Cruz 1994-95 MEXUS Research Grant, UC-system-wide 1992-93 MEXUS Research Grant, UC-system-wide 1990-87 MEXUS Travel and Acquisition Grant, University of California, System-wide 1988-89 National Endowment for the Humanities, Travel to Collections Grant 1984-85 Chicano/Mexico Research Grant (twice granted) 1981-82 Humanities Research Grant, University of California, System-wide 1981-82 Chancellor’s Research Grant, University of California, Irvine

WRITINGS AND PUBLICATIONS IN PROGRESS:

Saints and Citizens: Indigenous Histories of Colonial Missions and Mexican California, 1750-1850 (UC Press Forthcoming, submitted revised version that is under contract, August, 2011.) [first draft reviewed]

Pablo Tac, Indigenous Scholar Writing on Luiseño Language and Colonial History, c 1840 (UC Press, Nov., 2011) [never reviewed]

“Fear in Colonial California and along the Borderlands”, chapter 4 in Facing Fear: The History of an Emotion in Global Perspective, ed. Michael Laffan and Max Weiss (Princeton: Princeton University Press, Fall, 2011) [never reviewed]

Keynote Address: “California and the Borderlands: A Mutliethnic Place that Lives Quietly in the Archives” Proceedings from the Sesquicentennial Symposium of Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley (Fall, 2011) [never reviewed]

PUBLISHED WRITINGS

Books and Monographs 1995 Conquests and Historical Identities in California, 1769-1936 University of California Press (Paperback Editions in 1986 and 1988) 1981 The Bracero in Orange County: A Work Force for Economic Transition, Working Papers, 13 La Jolla: Institute of U.S.-Mexican Studies

Journal Articles 2008 “The Power of a Humanist” Expressions/Impressions, vo. 5, Fall, 2008, 88-92 [not reviewed] 2005 “Pablo Tac and the Subversive Power of the Translator” News from Native California (Spring): 2004 “Symposium on James Sandos’ Conquering California” Commentary and Response (Fall, 2004) in Boletín: The Journal of the California Mission Studies Association, 21 (2, 2004): 63- 65, 71-72. 2003 “Emancipation and the Meaning of Freedom in Mexican California” Boletín: The Journal of the California Mission Studies Association, 20 (1, 2003): 11-22 1998 “War in California, 1846-1848” California History, v. LXXVI, 2/3 (Summer and Fall, 1997): 331-355 (same article published as a chapter in the book Contested Eden) 1995 “San Juan Capistrano: A Rural Society in Transition to Citrus” California History v. LXXIV, 1, Spring: 46-57 1990 “What is an American? The Pluralist Society Reconsidered,” Journal of Orange County Studies 3/4, Fall 1989/Spring 1990: 9-12. 1979 “Marcuse: Por Qué su preocupación con la Estetica?” Siempre! September Lisbeth Haas 3.

Chapters in Book 2010 “Raise Your Sword and I Will Eat You”: Luiseño Scholar Pablo Tac” in Steven Hackel, ed., Alta California: Peoples Motion, Identities in Formation, 1769-1850 (Berkeley, University of California Press and The Huntington Library, 2010): 79-110. [not reviewed] 2005 “Indigenous Ethnic and Interethnic Relations in the Spanish/Mexican Borderlands: The Chumash Revolt” in Ada Savin, Journey into Otherness: Essays in North American History, Culture, and Literature (Amsterdam: VU University Press):135-148 2005 “Pablo Tac: Memory, Identity, History” in Emendatio: James Luna, (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institute) 2005 “Them” in Shock and Awe: War on Words Bregje von Eekelen, Jenifer Gonzalez, Betina Stotzer, Anna Tsing (2007) 2002 Pablo Tac and other Interpreters of Culture” in Boyhood in America ed.Jackie Reinier, ABC- CLIO (4 pp) 2002 “Conflicts and Cultures in the West, l780-1880” in Nancy Hewitt, ed., A Companion to American Women’s History (Malden, Ma.: Blackwell): 132-149 2000 “Modesta Avila vs. the Railroad and Other Stories about Conquest, Resistance, and Village Life” in Culture and Society in Dialogue: Chicana Literary and Artistic Expressions, ed. María Herrera-Sobek (Santa Barbara: Chicano Studies Publications): 21-40 1998 “War in California, 1846-1848” Contested Eden: California Before the Gold Rush, Ramón Gutiérrez, Richard Orsi, eds. (University of California Press, 1998): 331-355 1998 “El Barrio” and “Urbanization” The Reader’s Companion to U.S. Women’s History , ed. by Wilma Mankiller, et. al. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998): 55, 597-98. 1996 “Performing History: el Teatro and the barrio” in Genevieve Fabre and Catherine Lejeune, eds. Cultures de la Rue: Les barrios d’Amérique du Nord (Paris: Cahiers Charles V, 1996): 63-75 1991 “La Relación entre la protesta colectiva y el espacio social del barrio, 1890-1930,” Culturas Hispanas en los Estados Unidos (Madrid: Ediciones de Cultura Hispana): 229- 238. 1991 “Grass-Roots Protest and the Politics of Planning: Santa Ana, 1976-88” in Kling, Rob, Spencer Olin and Mark Poster, eds. Postsuburban California (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991): 254-280. 1987 “Argentine Labor Movements” in Latin American Labor Movements, S. Maram and G. Greenfield, eds. (Westport: Greenwood Press): 1-24.

Book Reviews 2009 Barbara Voss, The Archaeology of Ethnogenesis : Race and Sexuality in Colonial San Francisco (Berkeley: University of Califiornia Press, 2008) 2007 Steven Hackel, Children of Coyote, Missionaries of Saint Francis: Indian-Spanish Relations in Colonial California, 1769-1850 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2005) American Historical Review June 2005 Kent Lightfoot, Indians, Missionaries, and Merchants: The Legacy of Colonial Encounters on the California Frontiers (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005) Journal of American History 2003 Steven Pitti The Devil in Silicon Valley: Northern California, Race, and Mexican Americans for Social History 2001 Valerie Matsumoto and Black Allmedringe, Over the Edge: New Directions in Western History for Social History 1998 Klein, Norman, The History of Forgetting: Los Angeles and the Erasure of Memory and Leonard Pitt and Dale Pitt, Los Angeles A to A: An Encyclopedia of the City and County for the Journal of American History Lisbeth Haas 4.

1998 William McCawley, The First Angelinos: The Gabrieliño Indians of Los Angeles for California History 1998 Norma Elia Cantú, Canícula: Snapshots of a Girlhood en la Frontera for Journal of theWest 1998 Antonio María Osio, The History of Alta California (trans./intro. Rose Marie Beebe and Robert Senkewicz) for Pacific Historical Review 1995 Devra Weber, Dark Sweat, White Gold: California Farm Workers, Cotton, and the New Deal for Agricultural History. 1995 Robert Jackson and Edward Castillo, Indians, Franciscans, and Spanish Colonization: The Impact of the Mission System on California Indians for the Journal of American History 1994 George Harwood Phillips, Indians and Intruders in Central California, 1769-1849 for the Journal of American History.

LECTURES and OTHER PRESENTATIONS (select) Papers Presented

2010 Keynote “California and the Borderlands: A Mutliethnic Place that Lives Quietly in the Archives” at the Sesquicentennial Symposium of Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley 2009 “Crossing Borders: Traveling Images and Popular Intellectuals in the Colonial and Mexican Borderlands” OAH Distinguished Lecturer University of Texas, Pan American. 2008 “The Absence of Fear in Colonial Indigenous Documents” International Institute for the Study of the Americas, Tepoztlán, Mexico 2008 “Fear in Colonial California and within the Borderlands” Davis Center for Historical Studies at Princeton University 2008 “’Raise your sword and I will Eat You’ the writing of Luiseño Indian Scholar Pablo Tac” American Studies Seminar, Princeton University 2008 Distinguished Alumnai Keynote Speaker, Humanities Graduate, Irvine School of Humanities 2007 “Pablo Tac: Luiseño Scholar, l821-l841” Franciscan History in the Americas, Cholula, Mexico 2007 “The Body and Colonialism: Co-motion in Historical Narrative” The Ends of Interdisciplinarity, UC Santa Cruz 2006 “Indigenous Translations of Catholicism and Interpretations of History, Huntington Library 2005 “Translation and Luiseño Catholicism” Graduate Theological Seminary, UC Berkeley 2003 “Inter-Ethnic Relations in the Spanish/Mexican Borderlands” International Conference on Regarding the ‘Other’: Inter-Ethnic Dynamics in North America, Paris 2003 “Native Politics of Emancipation” California Indian Studies Conference, Watsonville 2001 “Emancipation in Mexican California” Society for Early American History, Baltimore 2001 “Indigenous Perspectives on Conquest and Colonial Encounters” Conference on the Comparative Americas, Huntington Library 1999 “Painting the Conquest: Indian Artists at the California Missions” Society of Historians of Early American Republic Conference, Kentucky 1999 “Women in Nineteenth Century California” Conference on Early California, Stanford University 1999 “Conversation - Perspectives on Chicano/a History” Organization of American Historians 1999 Round Table: “Public Space, History and Culture”, Minority Historians Committee Panel, American Historical Association 1988 “Latinos in the Gold Rush - Painting the Gold Rush” Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History 1998 “ Mexican Los Angeles: Civil Rights and the Politics of Identity” El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument, El Pueblo Historical Monument, Los Angeles 1998 “Latinos in the Gold Rush” Gold Rush symposium, Oakland Museum 1997 “California History and its Visual Representation” California State University, Monterey Bay 1997 “Recent Historiography on the Southwest and Borderlands” Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City 1995 “El Teatro Popular, Historical Consciousness, and the Barrio, 1880-1930” Streets of North American Barrios conference, Université Paris 7, Paris. Lisbeth Haas 5.

1994 “Rural life before and after the Citrus Industry” Huntington Library, San Marino, CA. 1993 “Modesta Avila and Others: on the Historiography of Conquest and Region,” Culture and Society in Dialogue: Issues in Chicana Scholarship, University of California, Irvine. 1993 “Memory and cultural history in the pueblo of San Juan Capistrano,” California Seminar, University of California, Berkeley. 1992 “Modesta Avila vs. the Railroad and Other Stories of Empowerment and Resistance, 1880-1920,” V Conferencia Internacional Sobre Cultura Hispana en E.U., Madrid, Spain. 1991 “What Did Freedom Mean? Emancipation from the California Missions,” Association of Western Historians 1991 “Californianas and Indian Women Farmers at the Turn-of-the-Century,” Organization of American Historians 1990 “The Representation of Gender, Class, and Ethnic Identities in the 1930’s Agricultural Strikes” American Studies Association, New Orleans 1990 “Mexican Women in the California Agricultural Strikes,” 1933-36. Organization of American Historians 1990 “Gender and Labor Activism” Bay Area Labor History Workshop, San Francisco 1985 “The Formation of the Barrios of Santa Ana: The Interplay Between Culture and Urban Politics, “VIII Conference of Mexican and United States Historians, Oaxaca, Mexico. 1985 “The Barrios of Santa Ana: A Slide Essay,” National Association of Chicano Studies, 1985 “Locating the Barrio: Defining its Boundaries in Time and Space—The Case of Santa Ana,” Stanford University. 1984 “The Chicano Experience in Orange County, 1850-1890,” Conference on Local History, California State University, Long Beach. 1984 “Emma Goldman: Autobiografía e Historia,” Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico, D.F. 1981 “Women and Undocumented Workers in the Southwest: Notes on the Gender and Racial Stratification of Labor” Conference on Women’s Culture in American Society, Women’s Building, Los Angeles. 1979 “Agribusiness and Bracero Labor in Orange County” Southwest Labor Studies Conference, Dominguez Hills.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE (select)

Professional Organizations 2011-2014 Elliot Rudwick Prize Committee, Organization of American Historians 2007-11 Steering Committee, Tepoztlán Institute for the Transnational History of the Americas 2007 Chair, Hundley Book Award Committee, American Historical Association, Pacific Coast 2005-06 Hundley Book Award Committee, American Historical Association, Pacific Coast 2004 Local Committee, Organization of American Historians Conference 2002 Program Committee, Organization of American Historians 2000/01 Nominating Committee, Organization of American Historians (elected, two year term) 2000 Program Committee, American Historical Association

Public History 2010-11 Advisor for the Film Kate Carew 2007 Southwest History, Institute for Junior High and High School Teachers, Salinas, Ca. 2006-07 Board of Directors, California Mission Studies Association 2006 Center for Latin American Studies, Summer Institute for Teachers, UC Berkeley 2006 Crossroads: Summer Institute for Elementary Educators, Hayward Historical Society 2005 Advisor. NEH work with James Luna. 2003-04 Advisor. NEH Grant: Public Display and Themes, Santa Barbara Presidio 2002 Advisor. Castro Adobe, State Park Service Lisbeth Haas 6.

2000-99 Advisor. Peralta House State Park, Oakland; Principal Historian, NEH Advisor for Peralta Project 1999 Work and Statement Exhibited, California Historical Society 1998 Advisor. “The Border” for PBS by Paul Espinosa Productions, et al. 1998 Los Angeles County Museum of Art, advisor for the show “California”

History Department 2011-12 Merit and Increase Personnel Committee 2008-09 Merit and Increase Personnel Committee 2006-07 Chair, U.S. Search Committee 2006-07 Merit Increase and Personnel Committee 2005-06 Chair, Latin American Search Committee 2001-02 Chair, U.S. Search Committee 1999-00 Chair, U.S. Search Committee l998-99 Merit Increase and Personnel Committee 1995-98 Coordinator, U.S. Caucus and Curriculum Committee

Feminist Studies Department 2011-13 Graduate Program Director (division’s graduate program directors) 2010-13 Chair, Feminist Studies Department 2008-10 Executive Committee, Feminist Studies

The Senate Committee Service 2008-2009 Committee on Privilege and Tenure

The Service for Office of the President [Committee on Chicano/Latino Education]

Service for CLRC

Service for MEXUS

Graduate Students [MA, QE, Dissertation Committees, Advising]

2001-02 Ph.D. Qualifying Exams Michelle Morton (Literature) Heather Waldroff (History of Consciousness) David Raymond, Advisor, history (ON sabbatical and fellowships this year, but present for the exams and advising)

2002-03 Masters Eliza Martin Jamaica Hutchinson Dissertation Advisor Michelle Morton (co-advisor with Susan Gillman) David Raymond

2003-04 Lisbeth Haas 7.

Masters Thesis Cheryl Lumis Andrea Logrin Dissertation Advisor Michelle Morton (co-advisor with Susan Gillman) David Raymond

2004-05 M.A. Natale Zappia Ph.D. Awarded: Michelle Morton (co-advisor with Susan Gillman)

Ph.D. Qualifying Exam: Kojun Sunseri (Anthro) Marianne Bueno

2005-06 Ph.D. Qualifying Exam: Sarah Ginn (Anthro) Natale Zappia

Dissertation Advisor Natale Zappia Sarah Ginn (Anthro) Marianne Bueno

2006-07 Dissertation Advisor Natale Zappia Sarah Ginn (Anthro) Marianne Bueno

2007-08 Ph.D. granted, Natale Zappia M.A. committee, Jeff Sanceri Q.E. Exam, Sabrina Sanchez

Dissertation Advisor (or committee member): Sabrina Sanchez, Advisor Natale Zappia, Advisor Maryanne Bueno, Advisor Sarah Ginn Peelo (Anthro)

2008-09 Ph.D. granted, Sarah Ginn Peelo (Anthro) M.A. committee, Marcel Garcia

Dissertation Advisor (or committee member): Sabrina Sanchez (from 2008) Advisor Maryanne Bueno, Advisor Sarah Ginn Peelo Eliza Martin, Advisor Lisbeth Haas 8.

2009-10 Ph.D. granted, Eliza Martin M.A. committee, Martin Rizzo Q.E. Exam, Jeff Sanceri

Dissertation Advisor (or committee member): Sabrina Sanchez (from 2008), Advisor Maryanne Bueno, Advisor Jeff Sanceri, Advisor

2010-11 Q.E. Exams, Edward Noel Smyth Q.E. Prep, Martin Rizzo

Dissertation Advisor or Committee Member Alicia Romero (from 2010) Sabrina Sanchez (from 2008) Advisor Maryanne Bueno (from 2002) Advisor Jeff Sanceri (from 2010) Advisor Edward Noel Smyth (from 2010)

Undergraduate Mentorship Programs (more here) 2004-05: Robert Rodriguez 2005-06: Maria Elena Lisbeth Haas 9.

ADD: Q.E. Exams Dimitri Papandreau Jessica Delgado Katie Simpton Urmi Engineer Lisbeth Haas 10.

Q.E. Exams Kojun Sunseri (anthro), 2004

Advisor and M.A. Jamaica Hutchins, 2005 David Raymond Cheryl Lemmus, 2003 Jessica Delgado 2004 Nat Zappia 2003 Andrea Lowgren

Q.E. Committee and Exams 2002 Michelle Morton 2002 Heather Waldroup, History of Consciousness

Graduate Courses: 2004(w) Colonialism and Nationalism 2003 (w) His 230 Research Colloquium 2001 (f) His 201, Methods and Theories SEE THE NUMBER OF GRADUATE COURSES

Contributions to Diversity and Equal Opportunity [Research, Teaching, and Service] My Research My Teaching

Service/Mentorship:

Undergraduate Mentor – [all those who went through] CLRC Faculty Mentorship Program Maria Elena Xxx , 2006-07

Faculty Mentorship Program, EOP Robert Rodriguez, [Merrill College Chicano/Latino Scholars' Forum and formal mentor, 2004] Michael Duran, [won an award], l996 Freddy Herrera, l995

Chicano faculty -- Stephen Pitti (Yale, etc. backed young Chicano historians) Josie Saldaña (back for grants)

Recommended publications