(August 2018) Joan Wallach Scott School of Social Science Institute
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AHR Forum the Kids Are All Right: on the “Turning” of Cultural History
AHR Forum The Kids Are All Right: On the “Turning” of Cultural History JAMES W. COOK To situate this introduction, it will be useful to focus briefly on just what con- stituted the cultural turn. Victoria E. Bonnell and Lynn Hunt RUN A FEW WEB SEARCHES FOR the term “cultural turn,” and you will begin to grasp the scope of an increasingly viral concept. In Google Books alone, you will find more than 100,000 citations, the bibliographic traces of the concept’s extended wandering.1 Switch to the search engine at OCLC WorldCat, ArticleFirst, or ECO, and the num- bers become less daunting, somewhere on the order of a few hundred hits. In these more specialized databases, however, the searchable content is limited to titles and abstracts. So what you are really seeing is the initial layers of a much larger con- versation: the figurative tip of the bibliographic iceberg.2 What might the iceberg tell us? Most of all, perhaps, it provides a wide-angle view of the concept’s current ubiquity. In addition to Victoria Bonnell and Lynn Hunt’s 1999 volume Beyond the Cultural Turn, you will find thousands of recent books in- voking “cultural turns” in a wide variety of scholarly contexts—from sociology to My first thanks go to my fellow authors in this forum, especially Judith Surkis and Julia Adeney Thomas, as well as Konstantin Dierks, Sarah Knott, and Robert Schneider, who laid the groundwork for this project. For helpful ideas, readings, criticisms, and encouragements, I am grateful to Eric Slauter, Mer- edith McGill, Ann Fabian, Jackson Lears, Gina Morantz-Sanchez, Mark Hewitson, Marni Sandweiss, Andy Rotter, Tanya Erzen, Rachel St. -
Joan Wallach Scott
81(+,6725,(11(,1&/$66$%/(-2$1:$//$&+6&277 5RVH0DULH/DJUDYH / +DUPDWWDQ_m&DKLHUVGX*HQUH} Qr_SDJHV¢ ,661 ,6%1 $UWLFOHGLVSRQLEOHHQOLJQH¢O DGUHVVH Document téléchargé depuis www.cairn.info - EHESS 193.48.45.201 10/01/2017 13h47. © L'Harmattan KWWSZZZFDLUQLQIRUHYXHFDKLHUVGXJHQUHSDJHKWP 3RXUFLWHUFHWDUWLFOH 5RVH0DULH/DJUDYHm8QHKLVWRULHQQHLQFODVVDEOH-RDQ:DOODFK6FRWW}&DKLHUV GX*HQUH Qr S '2,FGJH 'LVWULEXWLRQ«OHFWURQLTXH&DLUQLQIRSRXU/ +DUPDWWDQ k/ +DUPDWWDQ7RXVGURLWVU«VHUY«VSRXUWRXVSD\V /DUHSURGXFWLRQRXUHSU«VHQWDWLRQGHFHWDUWLFOHQRWDPPHQWSDUSKRWRFRSLHQ HVWDXWRULV«HTXHGDQVOHV OLPLWHVGHVFRQGLWLRQVJ«Q«UDOHVG XWLOLVDWLRQGXVLWHRXOHFDV«FK«DQWGHVFRQGLWLRQVJ«Q«UDOHVGHOD OLFHQFHVRXVFULWHSDUYRWUH«WDEOLVVHPHQW7RXWHDXWUHUHSURGXFWLRQRXUHSU«VHQWDWLRQHQWRXWRXSDUWLH VRXVTXHOTXHIRUPHHWGHTXHOTXHPDQLªUHTXHFHVRLWHVWLQWHUGLWHVDXIDFFRUGSU«DODEOHHW«FULWGH O «GLWHXUHQGHKRUVGHVFDVSU«YXVSDUODO«JLVODWLRQHQYLJXHXUHQ)UDQFH,OHVWSU«FLV«TXHVRQVWRFNDJH GDQVXQHEDVHGHGRQQ«HVHVW«JDOHPHQWLQWHUGLW Document téléchargé depuis www.cairn.info - EHESS 193.48.45.201 10/01/2017 13h47. © L'Harmattan Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Cahiers du Genre, n° 61/2016 Lecture d’une œuvre Une historienne inclassable : Joan Wallach Scott Rose-Marie Lagrave À la mémoire de Rolande Trempé De thèses en thèses, d’articles en articles, la définition du concept de genre élaborée par Joan Scott finit par résonner comme un moulin à prières, ou comme un signe obligé d’allégeance et de conformité à l’égard d’une définition devenue légitime en sciences sociales. Cette phrase, « Le genre est un élément consti- tutif des relations sociales fondé sur les différences perçues entre les sexes, et le genre est une façon première de signifier les rapports de pouvoir » (Scott 2012a, p. 41), sert de signe de reconnaissance et de bible méthodologique à tout·e débutant·e Document téléchargé depuis www.cairn.info - EHESS 193.48.45.201 10/01/2017 13h47. © L'Harmattan en études de genre, et c’est heureux. -
Unanswered Questions Author(S): by Joan W
Unanswered Questions Author(s): By Joan W. Scott Reviewed work(s): Source: The American Historical Review, Vol. 113, No. 5 (December 2008), pp. 1422-1430 Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the American Historical Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/ahr.113.5.1422 . Accessed: 07/09/2012 10:27 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. The University of Chicago Press and American Historical Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The American Historical Review. http://www.jstor.org AHR Forum Unanswered Questions JOAN W. SCOTT WHEN I SUBMITTED MY “GENDER” ARTICLE to the AHR in 1986, its title was “Is Gender a Useful Category of Historical Analysis?” The editors made me turn the question into a statement because, they said, interrogatives were not allowed in article titles. Dutifully, I complied with this convention, though I thought the revision eliminated a certain rhetorical punch. Some twenty years later, the articles prepared for this forum seem to answer the question in the affirmative, and they do so with a rich variety of examples from recent historical writing. -
Emancipation and Equality: a Critical Genealogy
Joan Wallach Scott Emancipation and Equality: A Critical Genealogy Universiteit Utrecht Faculteit Geesteswetenschappen 1046880_Oratie_Scott_omslag.indd 1 25-09-12 10:35 Oratie 7 november 2012 2 1046880_Oratie_Scott_binnenwerk.indd 2 08-10-12 07:28 Joan Wallach Scott Emancipation and Equality: A Critical Genealogy 1046880_Oratie_Scott_binnenwerk.indd 3 08-10-12 07:28 Inaugural Address Inaugural lecture delivered on 7 November 2012 on the occasion of accepting the Treaty of Utrecht Chair at Utrecht University. 4 1046880_Oratie_Scott_binnenwerk.indd 4 08-10-12 07:28 Emancipation and Equality: A Critical Genealogy1 It was by no means sufficient to ask: Who should emancipate? who should be emancipated? The critic should ask a third question: what kind of emancipation is involved? Karl Marx, On the Jewish Question, 1843. We must not think that by saying yes to sex, one says no to power; on the contrary, one tracks along the course laid out by the general deployment of sexuality. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality, Vol. I, 1976. Emancipation is a tricky word. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, it denotes the lifting of “restraints imposed by superior physical force or legal obligation.”2 In Roman law emancipation referred to the freeing of women or children from the patria potestas— the father’s power. In English civil law Catholics were enfranchised by the Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829. Slaves in the United States were manumitted in 1863; the terms set forth in Abraham Lincoln’s famous Emancipation Proclamation. (Although emancipation and manumission are now used synonymously, in ancient Rome, manumission referred specifically to slaves or servants, emancipation to family members.) Figuratively, the word has been extended to mean liberation from “intellectual, moral, or spiritual fetters.”3 Here the issue is not so much action by an external agency, as it is an internal matter, a change in consciousness. -
Teaching Gender with Libraries and Archives the Power of Information
Teaching Gender with Libraries and Archives The Power of Information i5 Libraries 00 book.indb 1 2013.10.04. 9:49 Titles in the Series: 1. Teaching with Memories. European Women’s Histories in International and Interdisciplinary Classrooms 2. Teaching Gender, Diversity and Urban Space. An Intersectional Approach between Gender Studies and Spatial Disciplines 3. Teaching Gender in Social Work 4. Teaching Subjectivity. Travelling Selves for Feminist Pedagogy 5. Teaching with the Third Wave. New Feminists’ Explorations of Teaching and Institutional Contexts 6. Teaching Visual Culture in an Interdisciplinary Classroom. Feminist (Re)Interpretations of the Field 7. Teaching Empires. Gender and Transnational Citizenship in Europe 8. Teaching Intersectionality. Putting Gender at the Centre 9. Teaching “Race” with a Gendered Edge 10. Teaching Gender with Libraries and Archives The Power of Information Title 1 is published by ATHENA2 and Women’s Studies Centre, National University of Ireland, Gal- way; Titles 2–8 are published by ATHENA3 Advanced Thematic Network in Women’s Studies in Europe, University of Utrecht and Centre for Gender Studies, Stockholm University; Title 9-10 are jointly published by ATGENDER, The European Association for Gender Research, Edu- cation and Documentation, Utrecht and Central European University Press, Budapest. i5 Libraries 00 book.indb 2 2013.10.04. 9:49 Edited by Sara de Jong and Sanne Koevoets Teaching Gender with Libraries and Archives The Power of Information Teaching with Gender. European Women’s Studies in International and Interdisciplinary Classrooms A book series by ATGENDER ATGENDER. The European Association for Gender Research, Education and Documentation Utrecht & Central European University Press Budapest–New York i5 Libraries 00 book.indb 3 2013.10.04. -
Opportunities and Needs in Environmental History
Opportunities and Needs in Environmental History 10-12 June 2010, Washington, D.C. Sponsors: Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, LMU Munich; National History Center; Center for the American West; John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress Conveners: Christof Mauch (RCC / LMU Munich), Patricia Limerick (University of Colorado, Boulder)(unable to attend), John Gillis (Rutgers University), James Banner (American University / National History Center), Miriam Hauss Cunningham (National History Center) Participants: James Banner (National History Center), David Blackbourn (Harvard University), Carolyn Thompson Brown (John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress), Peter Coates (University of Bristol), Kimberly Coulter (RCC), Miriam Hauss Cunningham (National History Center), John Gillis (Rutgers University), Arnita Jones (American Historical Association), Christof Mauch (RCC / LMU Munich), John McNeill (Georgetown), Martin V. Melosi (University of Houston), Marta Niepytalska (RCC) Stephen Pyne (Arizona State University), Mahesh Rangarajan (University of Delhi), Harriet Ritvo (MIT), Libby Robin (Australian National University), Frank Uekoetter (RCC), Richard Walker (University of California, Berkeley), Douglas R. Weiner (University of Arizona), Richard White (Stanford University), Frank Zelko (University of Vermont) Environmental history is young, dynamic, and poised to contribute knowledge and understanding to a variety of problems facing the entire planet. While its roots as a discipline lie in environmentalism and in the cultural construction of the environment, its desirable future subjects, collaborators, and impacts are up for debate. Is environmental history our best hope for the future? This question, posed by Patricia Limerick in a conversation with Christof Mauch, ignited plans for a more in-depth discussion about the future of the field. -
Gender and Equality in the French Revolution ______
Defining Humanity: Gender and Equality In the French revolution ______________________________________________ Erin K. Sheek April 8, 2013 DePauw University ______________________________________________ 2 Table of Contents Introduction … 7 Chapter I: Meanings of humanity in the 18th century: Exploring the gender divide … 12 Chapter II: What did it mean to be a woman in the 18th century? … 26 Chapter III: Test Case - The National Convention … 39 Conclusion … 54 Bibliography … 58 3 4 Acknowledgements A week before this thesis was due, my father called and asked how the project was coming along. The first thing that came to mind was directly from the film Jerry Maguire, when Tom Cruise yelled, “it is an up-at-dawn, pride-swallowing SIEGE that I will never fully tell you about, okay??” While saying that to my father may have been somewhat of a joke, I certainly could not have made it through this arduous journey without all of the support I received from faculty, family, and friends over the year. I would first like to sincerely thank my advising committee. James Ward, Barbara Whitehead, and Meryl Altman have put so much time and energy into this project all year long. From countless meetings and edited drafts to pep talks and research assistance, they have been there every step of the way. This thesis would not have been possible without them. To Kevin Moore, Amy Welch, and Peg Lemley for guiding me through four years of the Honor Scholar program and making sure that I made every deadline and kept my sanity when things got tough. They made our Honor Scholar community feel like a family, one of the things that I will miss most after DePauw. -
(January 2021) Joan Wallach Scott School of Social Science Institute
CURRICULUM VITAE (January 2021) Joan Wallach Scott School of Social Science Institute for Advanced Study Princeton, New Jersey 08540 (609) 734-8280 (Voice) (609) 951-4457 (Fax) E-mail: [email protected] EDUCATION B.A. Brandeis University, 1962 M.S. University of Wisconsin, 1964 Ph.D University of Wisconsin, 1969 Honors: Magna Cum Laude Phi Beta Kappa ACADEMIC POSITIONS I. 1970 - 72 Assistant Professor, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle 1972 - 74 Assistant Professor, Northwestern University 1974 - 77 Associate Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 1977 - 80 Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 1980 - 85 Nancy Duke Lewis University Professor and Professor of History, Brown University 1981 - 85 Founding Director, Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, Brown University 1985 - 2014 Professor of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, Harold F. Linder Professor (2000) 2014 Professor Emerita 2015 - Adjunct faculty, Graduate Center, CUNY II. Summer 1977 Director, NEH Summer Seminar for College Teachers, "The History of the Family as Social History" 1978 - 79 Member, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton 1980 - 81 Director, NEH Residential Seminar for College Teachers, "The New Labor H History" May 1984 Directeur d'études associé, École des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris 1985 - 1991 Adjunct Professor, Brown University 1993 - 2005 Adjunct Professor of History, Rutgers University 1996 - 98 Visiting Professor, Associates Program, Humanities Center, Johns Hopkins University 1 Summer 1997 Faculty, School of Criticism and Theory 2012 Treaty of Utrecht Chair, University of Utrecht PUBLICATIONS I. Books: The Glassworkers of Carmaux: French Craftsmen and Political Action in a Nineteenth Century City. -
Michael Bérubé
Michael Bérubé 813 West Foster Avenue Department of English State College, Pennsylvania 16801 219 Burrowes Building [email protected] Pennsylvania State University University Park, PA 16802 (814) 863-8663 Employment Pennsylvania State University Chair, University Faculty Senate, 2018-19 Director, Institute for the Arts and Humanities, 2010-17 Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Literature, 2012- Paterno Family Professor in Literature, 2001-12 Co-Director, Disability Studies Program, 2004-10 Affiliate, Program in Science, Technology, and Society, 2007-12 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Founding Director, Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities, 1997-2001 Professor, Department of English, 1996-2001 Associate Professor, 1993-96 Assistant Professor, 1989-93 Affiliate, Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory, 1989-2001 Affiliate, Afro-American Studies and Research Program, 1989-2001 Education Ph.D., English, University of Virginia, 1989 M.A., English, University of Virginia, 1986 B.A., English, Columbia University, 1982 Publications Books Life as Jamie Knows It: An Exceptional Child Grows Up. Beacon Press, 2016. Paperback, 2017. The Secret Life of Stories: From Don Quixote to Harry Potter, How Understanding Intellectual Disability Transforms the Way We Read. New York UP, 2016. Korean translation, 2017. Paperback, 2018. Portuguese translation forthcoming. Michael Bérubé 2 Curriculum Vitae The Humanities, Higher Education, and Academic Freedom: Three Necessary Arguments. With Jennifer Ruth. Palgrave, 2015. Cloth and paper. The Left at War. New York UP, 2009. Paperback, 2010. Rhetorical Occasions: Essays on Humans and the Humanities. U of North Carolina P, 2006. What’s Liberal about the Liberal Arts? Classroom Politics and “Bias” in Higher Education. W. W. -
National History Center an Initiative of the American Historical Association
400 A Street, SE Washington, DC 20003 www.nationalhistorycenter.org National History Center An initiative of the American Historical Association Volume III Issue 1 Spring 2008 We recognize and thank our newest Founders and Lecture Series with Council on Foreign Contributors who have supported the Center since the last Relations Begins newsletter in Spring 2007. Renewing Founders Douglas & Margo Arnold Bernard Bailyn James M. Banner, Jr. Jerry Bentley Roger Brown Giles Constable Hunter Dupree Marshall C. Eakin Stanley N. Katz Wm. Roger Louis William H. & Elizabeth McNeill Joseph C. Miller J. Alden Nicholas Maureen Murphy Nutting Donald A. Ritchie James J. Sheehan Fritz Stern R. Vladimir Steffel Founders, August 2007–April 2008 James B. & Laura Crooks Roger Louis (left) with Ernest May at the lecture with the CFR Felipe Fernández-Armesto Alice George The lecture series cosponsored by the National History Center and the Council John Gillis Edward Gosslein on Foreign Relations began with two talks, one featuring Professor Ernest May, Samuel A. Syme, Jr. the Charles Warren Professor of History at Harvard University, and the second with Professor Fritz Stern, University Professor Emeritus of Columbia Contributors, August 2007–April 2008 University. Michael Bailey Ralph Buultjens The inaugural lecture with Ernest May was held at the Council’s New York Nancy W. Collins headquarters on October 24, 2007. Richard Haas, President of the Council, Robert & Geri Dalleck welcomed the members of the Council on Foreign Relations to the event and Donald & Jean Lamm Wm. Roger Louis, founding director of the the National History Center, James C. Turner introduced Ernest May. -
(September 2015) Joan Wallach Scott School of Social Science Institute
CURRICULUM VITAE (September 2015) Joan Wallach Scott School of Social Science Institute for Advanced Study Princeton, New Jersey 08540 (609) 734-8280 (Voice) (609) 951-4457 (Fax) e-mail: [email protected] EDUCATION B.A. Brandeis University, 1962 M.S. University of Wisconsin, 1964 Ph.D University of Wisconsin, 1969 Honors: Magna Cum Laude Phi Beta Kappa Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences (elected 2008) ACADEMIC POSITIONS I. 1970 - 72 Assistant Professor, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle 1972 - 74 Assistant Professor, Northwestern University 1974 - 77 Associate Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 1977 - 80 Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 1980 - 85 Nancy Duke Lewis University Professor and Professor of History, Brown University 1981 - 85 Founding Director, Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, Brown University 1985 - 2014 Professor of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, Harold F. Linder Professor (2000) 2014 Professor Emerita 2015 - Adjunct faculty, Graduate Center, CUNY II. Summer 1977 Director, NEH Summer Seminar for College Teachers, "The History of the Family as Social History" 1978 - 79 Member, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton 1980 - 81 Director, NEH Residential Seminar for College Teachers, "The New Labor History" May 1984 Directeur d'études associé, École des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris 1985 - 1991 Adjunct Professor, Brown University 1993 - 2005 Adjunct Professor of History, Rutgers University 1996 - 98 Visiting Professor, Associates Program, Humanities Center, Johns Hopkins 1 University Summer 1997 Faculty, School of Criticism and Theory 2012 Treaty of Utrecht Chair, University of Utrecht PUBLICATIONS I. Books: The Glassworkers of Carmaux: French Craftsmen and Political Action in a Nineteenth Century City. -
Annual Report 2018 Table of Contents Minutes of the 133Rd Business Meeting
Annual Report 2018 Table of Contents Minutes of the 133rd Business Meeting ................................................................................. 2 Council Decisions and Actions ............................................................................................... 5 Officers’ Reports ................................................................................................................... 9 Professional Division Report .......................................................................................................................... 9 Research Division Report ............................................................................................................................. 11 Teaching Division Report ............................................................................................................................. 13 American Historical Review Report ....................................................................................... 15 AHR Editor’s Report ..................................................................................................................................... 15 AHR Publisher’s Report................................................................................................................................ 29 Committee Reports .............................................................................................................. 43 Committee on Affiliated Societies Report ..................................................................................................