Curriculum Vitae Dr. NANCY Maclean Personal Website
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Curriculum Vitae Dr. NANCY MacLEAN Personal website: http://www.NancyMacLean.com Department of History office phone: (919) 681-6366 Duke University email: [email protected] Box 90719 Durham, NC 27708 EMPLOYMENT____________________________________________________________________ 2012- William H. Chafe Professor of History and Public Policy, Duke University; Director of the Center for the Study of Class, Labor, and Social Sustainability (CLASS Center) 2010-2012 Trinity College of Arts and Sciences Professor of History, Duke University 2009-2010 Peter B. Ritzma Professor in the Humanities, Northwestern University 2005-2008 Chair, Department of History, Northwestern University 2005-2010 Professor of History and African American Studies, Northwestern University 1996-2005 Associate Professor of History and African American Studies (also at different times Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching Excellence and Wayne V. Jones Research Associate Professor) 1994-2005 Associate Professor of History, Northwestern University 1989-1994 Assistant Professor of History, Northwestern University EDUCATION________________________________________________________________________ 1989 Ph.D. U.S. History, University of Wisconsin-Madison Major Field: U.S. History; Advisor: Linda Gordon; Minor field: Latin American History Dissertation: “Behind the Mask of Chivalry: Gender, Race, and Class in the Making of the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s in Georgia” 1981 M.A. Magna cum Laude, History, Brown University (four-year combined B.A/M.A. program) 1981 B.A. Magna cum Laude, Honors in History, Brown University FELLOWSHIPS AND HONORS ________________________________________________________ Scholarly Prizes and Awards Elected a Fellow of the Society of American Historians, 2010 Philip Taft Labor History Award, Labor and Working Class Studies Association, 2007 Allan Sharlin Book Award, for best book in social science history, Social Science History Association, 2007 Willard Hurst Prize for best book in socio-legal history, Law and Society Association, 2007 Labor History Best Book Prize, International Association of Labor History Institutions, 2007 Lillian Smith Award for outstanding book about the South, Southern Regional Council (selected initially, but unable to attend required ceremony), 2007 Nancy MacLean Richard A. Lester Prize for outstanding book in Labor Economics and Industrial Relations, Industrial Relations Section, Princeton, 2007 Outstanding Book Award, Gustavus Myer Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights, 2007 Finalist, J. David Greenstone Book Award for best book in politics and history, American Political Science Association, 2007 Frank L. and Harriet C. Owsley Prize for a distinguished book in southern history, Southern Historical Association, 1995 James A. Rawley Prize for a distinguished book on the history of race relations, Organization of American Historians, 1995 Hans Rosenhaupt Book Award for a distinguished book of broad humanistic significance, Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, 1995 A. Elizabeth Taylor Prize for best article in southern women’s history, Southern Association of Women Historians, 1992 Binkley-Stephenson Prize for best article in the Journal of American History in 1991, Organization of American Historians, 1992 Pell Medal for excellence in American History, Brown University, 1981 Fellowships 2013-2104 National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship 2008-2009 John Hope Franklin Senior Fellowship, National Humanities Center 2008-2009 Senior Fellowship, American Council of Learned Societies 2008-2009 Stanford Humanities Center Fellowship (declined) 2006-2008 Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University (reduced time) 2002-2005 Wayne V. Jones Research Associate Professor of History 2001-2002 Fellow, Kaplan Humanities Center, Northwestern University 1999-2000 Visiting Scholar, Russell Sage Foundation 1999-2000 National Humanities Center Fellowship (declined) 1996-99 , 2009-2010 Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University (reduced-time) 1995-96 American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship 1988-89 Charlotte Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship 1986-87 Alice Freeman Palmer Fellowship 1985-86 University Fellowship, University of Wisconsin-Madison 1984-85 John Lax Memorial Fellowship, post-graduation, Brown University 1982-83 University Fellowship, University of Wisconsin-Madison Research Grants 1996 Hagley Museum and Library Grant-in-Aid 1996 Lyndon B. Johnson Foundation Moody Grant Teaching Awards 2003 Faculty Honor Roll, Associated Student Government 1996-2000 Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching Excellence 1995 Faculty Honor Roll, Associated Student Government 1993 Distinguished Teaching Award, College of Arts & Sciences 1993 Faculty Honor Roll, Mortar Board (senior honors society) 1992 Faculty Honor Roll, Associated Student Government 2003 Faculty Honor Roll, Associated Student Government PUBLICATIONS:________________________________________________________________ Books Behind the Mask of Chivalry: The Making of the Second Ku Klux Klan (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994). Excerpts reprinted in: Major Problems in American History, 1920-1945, ed. Colin Gordon (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999). Major Problems in the History of the American South, vol. II, The New South, ed. Paul D. Escott, et al. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999). Civil Rights Since 1877: A Reader on the Black Struggle, ed. Jonathan Birnbaum and Clarence Taylor (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000). Czech translation: Pod Maskou Uŝkechtilosti: Ku-Klux-Klan Po První Světové Válce (2007). Freedom Is Not Enough: The Opening of the American Workplace (Harvard University Press and the Russell Sage Foundation, 2006). The American Women’s Movement, 1945-2000: A Brief History with Documents (Bedford/St. Martins, 2008). Debating the American Conservative Movement: 1945 to the Present, with Donald T. Critchlow (Rowman & Littlefield, 2009). With Edward H. Peeples, Scalawag: A White Southerner’s Journey through Segregation to Human Rights Activism (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2014) Books in progress: “The Privatization Project” (currently writing). “American History Since 1945: A History with Documents” (under contract with Bedford Books/MacMillan Higher Education). Articles and review essays: “Women’s History for the Future: Gerda Lerner’s Last Agenda-Setting,” Journal of Women’s History (forthcoming 2014) “Bringing the Organizing Tradition Home: Campus-Labor-Community Partnerships for Regional Power,” Labor Rising: The Past and Future of Working People in America, ed. Daniel Katz and Richard A. Greenwald (New York: The New Press, 2012). “Community Partnerships: Hope for an Embattled Labor Movement? A Conversation with Andrea van den Heever,” Labor: Studies in Working-Class History in the Americas 9:3 (Winter 2012). “A Longstanding Movement or a Multivalent Tactic?” in forum on Buying Power: A History of Consumer Activism in America, by Lawrence B. Glickman,” Labor: Studies in Working-Class History in the Americas 8:1 (2011), 21- 23. 3 Nancy MacLean “The Civil Rights Movement: 1968-2008,” solicited by the National Humanities Center for its TeacherServe series “Freedom Stories: Teaching African American Literature and History,” fall 2010. "Response to Kenneth Mack--and New Questions for the History of African American Legal Liberalism in the Age of Obama," Law and History Review 27 (Fall 2009). (Exchange with Professor Ken Mack, Harvard Law School, over MacLean, Freedom Is Not Enough: The Opening of the American Workplace). “God’s Work: What Can Faith-Based Activism Do for Labor?,” Boston Review, 34 (May/June 2009). “Neo-Confederacy versus the New Deal: The Regional Utopia of the Modern American Right,” The Myth of Southern Exceptionalism, ed. Joseph Crespino and Matthew Lassiter (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010). “Getting New Deal History Wrong,” symposium in International Labor and Working Class History 74 (Fall 2008), 49- 55. “Southern Dominance in Borrowed Language: The Regional Origins of American Neo-Liberalism,” in New Landscapes of Inequality: Neoliberalism and the Erosion of Democracy in America, ed. Micaela di Leonardo and Jane Collins (Santa Fe: School of American Research, 2008). “The Civil Rights Act and the Transformation of Mexican American Identity and Politics,” Berkeley La Raza Law Journal, in special issue, “More Than Whiteness: Comparative Perspectives on Mexican American Citizenship from Law and History” 18 (2007), 123-33. “From the War on Poverty to ‘the New Inequality’: The Fight for a Living Wage,” American Quarterly (March 2007). “White Blight,” In These Times 30 (Sept. 2006), 40-42. “Gender is Powerful: The Long Reach of Feminism,” for special issue on “Social Movements in the 1960s,” OAH Magazine of History 20 (October 2006), 19-23. “Achieving the Promise of the Civil Rights Act: Herbert Hill and the NAACP’s Fight for Jobs and Justice,” Labor: Studies in Working-Class History in the Americas 3 (Summer 2006), 13-19. “Rethinking the Second Wave,” The Nation, 14 Oct. 2002, 28-34. “Postwar Women’s History: From the ‘Second Wave’ to the End of the Family Wage?,” in A Companion to Post-1945 America, ed. Roy Rosenzweig and Jean-Christophe Agnew (London: Blackwell, 2002). “Using the Law for Social Change: Justice Constance Baker Motley,” Journal of Women’s History, 14 (Summer 2002). “From the Benighted South to the Sun Belt: The South in the Twentieth Century,” in Making Sense of the Twentieth Century: Perspectives on Modern