2014 Society for Military History Annual Meeting – Program Details (as of 140210) DAILY EVENTS SCHEDULE Thursday, April 3 Exhibitor Setup Location: Century Ballroom A 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Registration Location: Westport Room 12:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Trustee Meeting and Lunch Location: Roanoke Room 12:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Opening Reception Location: Liberty Memorial, National WorlD War I Museum 6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. (Shuttles proviDeD from the hotel to the Museum) Friday, April 4 Journal of Military History Editorial Board Breakfast Location: InDepenDence Room 7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Registration (continued) Location: Westport Room 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Awards Luncheon Location: Century Ballroom C 11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Book Exhibits Location: Century Ballroom A 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Truman Library Tour (By preregistration only.) Location: Front Lobby for a 12:30 bus Departure 12:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. Historical Weapons Display Location: Century Ballroom Foyer 11:00 a.m. - 4:00 .pm. Graduate Student Reception Location: Amigoni Winery (GraDuate stuDents anD by invitation) 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. (Shuttles proviDeD from the hotel to the Winery) Saturday, April 5 Tour of Fort Leavenworth (By preregistration only) Location: Front Lobby for a 9:00 a.m. bus departure 9:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. Banquet Reception Location: Century Ballroom C 6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. SMH Banquet Location: Century Ballroom C 7:15 p.m. – 11:00 p.m. Sunday April, 6 SMH Business Meeting Location: Liberty Room 7:15 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. SESSION SCHEDULE Session #1: Friday 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. All Day – Chinese Military History Society Room: Pershing South Session 1/Panel 1 Room: Pershing West Title: COLLABORATION, LIAISON AND THE LEGACY OF THE MEUSE-ARGONNE, 1918 Chair: Richard S. Faulkner, US Army CommanD anD General Staff College The French Army in the Meuse-Argonne Campaign, Sept-Nov 1918 Elizabeth Greenhalgh, Australian Defense Force Academy, University of New South Wales “An Antipathy of Arms”: The 79th Division and French Tank Support during the First Phase of the Meuse-Argonne Campaign. Patrick R. Osborn, National Archives anD RecorDs Administration New Light on the Cause of Failure at Montfaucon William T. Walker, WooDrow Wilson PresiDential Library anD Museum Comments: Timothy K. Nenninger, National Archives anD RecorDs ADministration Session 1/Panel 2 Room: Pershing East Title: THE "OTHER" IN EARLY AMERICAN WARFARE: NEW SOCIAL AND CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES Chair: Holly A. Mayer, Duquesne University "Insufferable Insolence”: Civilians and the Military in the Fort-City of Albany, 1755-1763 Elizabeth Horner, MiDAmerica Nazarene University A Loyal People at War: Virginia Loyalists, Military Service, and the Fate of the Revolution at Yorktown Stephanie Ann Seal, University of Southern Mississippi Symbolizing the Other War: Red Stick Creek Adornment and the War of 1812 Alice A. Ivas, University of Southern Mississippi Comments: Holly A. Mayer, Duquesne University Session 1/Panel 3 Room: Penn Valley Title: THE TRANSFORMATION OF GUNBOAT DIPLOMACY: NAVAL POWER AND COERCIVE DIPLOMACY 1870-2011 Chair: Nikolas GarDner, Royal Military of Canada Frontier Gunboats: The Experience of Royal Navy Officers in the SW Pacific in the 1870s and 80s Robert L. DaviDson, WilfriD Laurier University Maritime Intervention: America and the Brazilian Navy Revolt of 1893-1894 Karina Esposito, West Virginia University Israel's Naval Response to the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, 2010 Corri Zoli, Syracuse University Effect without Regret: Gunboat Diplomacy in Libya in 2011 Steven Paget, Australian National University Comments: Douglas C. Peifer, US Air War College Session 1/Panel 4 Room: Roanoke Title: EASTERN FRONTS IN THE 20TH CENTURY Chair: Everett Dague, InDepenDent Scholar "Viribus Unitis”: Nationalities within the Austro-Hungarian Army during the First Year of the War (August 1914-May 1915) Rian Van Meeteren, Independent Scholar "When Laws Were Silenced”: Criminalization of Imperial Russia's Southeastern Borderlands (1914-1918) Margarita Karnysheva, University of Kansas Liberated Conscripts: Civilian Labor and Preparations for the Battle of Kursk Daniel Giblin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Comments: Jonathan M. House, US Army CommanD anD General Staff College Session 1/Panel 5 Room: Shawnee Title: WAR AND GENDER NORMS Chair: Janet G. Valentine, US Army CommanD anD General Staff College "Let Me Give This Woman the Way of Going on the War Path”: Warrior Women and Womanish Men in the 19th Century Pawnee and Arikara Indian Warfare Mark van De Logt, Texas A&M University, Qatar Are They for Real? Women Who Take a Proactive Approach to War Mary Kathryn Barbier, Mississippi State University Fashioning Citizenship: American Civilian Women in Military Uniform During WW I Alexandria Marie Elias, Syracuse University Comments: Lisa Beckenbaugh, TriDeum Corporation Session 1/Panel 6 Room: Mission Title: WHAT HISTORY CAN TEACH US ABOUT INSURGENCY, COUNTERINSURGENCY, AND COUNTERTERRORISM Chair: Bryon Greenwald, National Defense University Internalizing Reality: Missouri's Civil War as Context for Future Conflicts DaviD HolsteaD, US Army CommanD anD General Staff College Reassessing Reagan's Counterterrorism Policy Josh Potter, National Defense University The Exit through the Ivory Gate: Securing the Peace - Lessons from Iraq Mark Hovatter, National Defense University Comments: Gregory Miller, National Defense University Session 1/Panel 7 Room: Liberty Title: PRESIDENTIAL PANEL (Society of Civil War Historians) VIOLENCE AND THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR Chair: Ethan S. Rafuse, US Army CommanD anD General Staff College A Delightful and Unmolested Trip across the Country: Sherman's Veterans, Violence, and Storytelling Ann Sarah Rubin, University of MarylanD-Baltimore Battlefield Cowardice, Violence, and Memory in the American Civil War Lesley J. GorDon, University of Akron Under the Shield of the Law of Nations: Black Women Refugees in the Civil War Thavolia Glymph, Duke University Comments: Susannah J. Ural, University of Southern Mississippi Session 1/Panel 8 Room: Pershing North Title: "OUR LIVES WERE FOREVER CHANGED": THE LEGACY OF WAR IN THE LIVES OF FAMILIES Chair: Beth Bailey, Temple University Pennsylvania Confederates: The Ingrahams in the Civil War Richard B. McCaslin, University of Texas "My Life Was Over”: The Effects of Combat and Loss on the Family in the Vietnam War Andrew A. Wiest, University of Southern Mississippi The Experiences of Naval Wives at the Time of the Falklands War Victoria WooDman, University of Portsmouth Comments: Beth Bailey, Temple University Session #2: Friday 10:15 a.m. – 11:45 a.m. All Day – Chinese Military History Society Room: Pershing South Session 2/Panel 1 Room: Pershing West Title: INCARCERATION, REDEMPTION, AND REGENERATION: DEVIANTS, COLONIAL SUBJECTS, AND MILITARY SERVICE Chair: Debra Sheffer, Park University Criminalizing Irish-American Civil War Veterans: The 1866 Habeas Corpus Suspension Act Jerome Devitt, Trinity College-Dublin Reshaping Moral Deviance through Military Service: Eastern State Penitentiary and the First World War, 1917-1925 Bobby Wintermute, Queens College-New York World War I, Manhood, Modernity, and the Remaking of the Puerto-Rico Peasant Harry Franqui-Rivera, Hunter College-CUNY Comments: Mitchell Yockelson, National Archives anD RecorDs ADministration Session 2/Panel 2 Room: Pershing East Title: SUPPLYING MORALE: THREE NATIONAL PERSPECTIVES FROM THE WORLD WARS Chair: Mike BechtolD, WilfriD Laurier University Blockade and Mismanagement: Economic Struggles and the Collapse of Morale at Home and on the Front in WW I Germany Mark Karau, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan Bringing the Home to the Front: The Supply of Canadian Soldiers Comforts and Leisure in the Second World War Will J. Pratt, University of Calgary More Than Hot Chocolate: The Y, the Red Cross and Outsourcing Supply for the American Expeditionary Force in WW I Marian Vlasak, Syracuse University Comments: Theodore A. Wilson, University of Kansas Session 2/Panel 3 Room: Penn Valley Title: PRESIDENTIAL PANEL (Bibliographical Society of America) MILITARY HISTORIANS AND BIBLIOGRAPHERS: OPPORTUNITIES FOR INSIGHT AND COLLABORATION Chair: Mark H. Danley, University of Memphis Russell L. Martin III, Southern MethoDist University Ira D. Gruber, Rice University Commentator: Thomas WarD, UniteD States Military AcaDemy Session 2/Panel 4 Room: Shawnee Title: Military Thought and Doctrine during the Napoleonic Era: The Intellectual Influence on French and American Doctrine from 1780 to the 1820s Chair: Mark T. Gerges, US Army Command and General Staff College Guibertian Influences on the Reglement of 1791 Jonathan Abel, University of North Texas Napoleon vs. Petraeus: The COIN Manual Napoleon Would Not Print Jackson Sigler, FloriDa State University Light Infantry Drill in Winfield Scott's 1825 Infantry Tactics: A Unique Light Infantry Tradition in the History of American Arms Michael Bonura, US Army Comments: Kevin Farrell, InDepenDent Scholar Session 2/Panel 5 Room: Mission Title: THE KOREAN WAR: SOCIETY, MEMORY, AND LEGACY Chair: Adrian R. Lewis, University of Kansas Courting Korea: 19th Century American-Korean Relations and their Repercussions in the 20th Century Eric Price, US Army CommanD anD General Staff College Stalin’s Unspoken Strategy for the Korean War: Maximum Gain/Minimum Risk Kim Young-jun, University of Kansas Before the Korean War: Experiencing the War before June 25, 1950 Son Kyengho, Korean Defense University Comments: Adrian R. Lewis, University of Kansas Session 2/Panel 6 Room:
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