Bryan Rindfleisch

Bryan Rindfleisch

BRYAN C. RINDFLEISCH Marquette University Sensenbrenner Hall 303E Department of History 1103 W. Wisconsin Ave. [email protected] Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881 (414) 288-6463 Positions Assistant Professor of History, Marquette University (2015-2020) Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Teaching Excellence, University of Oklahoma (2014-2015) Education University of Oklahoma (Ph.D. in History, 2014) Marquette University (M.A. in History, 2009) University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire (B.A. in American Indian Studies & History, 2007) Fellowships, Awards/Prizes, Grants American Philosophical Society Franklin Research Grant / British Academy Fellowship for Research in London (2019-2020) The Huntington Library Fellowship & Travel Grant for Study / Research in the United Kingdom (2019-2020) George C. Rogers Jr. Award for Best Book in South Carolina History, South Carolina Historical Society (2019-2020) Seminar on the History of Early America Honorarium, Providence College (2019-2020) The Bright Institute Trust Research & Teaching Fellowship in Early American History, Knox College (2018-2021) Anne B. and James B. McMillan Prize for Best Book in Southern History and Culture, University of Alabama (2018-2019) Way Klinger Young Scholar Award, Marquette University (2018-2019) Archie K. Davis Research Fellowship, North Caroliniana Society & University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (2018-2019) Filson Historical Society Research Fellowship (2018-2019) Seminar on the American Revolution Honorarium, Fort Ticonderoga (2018-2019) National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Digital Native American & Indigenous Studies Fellowship (2017-2020) Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture Lapidus Scholars’ Workshop Fellowship (2016-2017) Jacob M. Price Fellowship, William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan (2016- 2017) Provost’s Ph.D. Dissertation Prize, University of Oklahoma (2014-2015) Newberry Library Consortium on American Indian Studies (NCAIS) Graduate Student Research Fellowship (2013-2014) Dale-Gibson Award in Native American History, University of Oklahoma (2013-2014) David Library of the American Revolution Resident Research Fellowship (2013-2014) Phi Alpha Theta Doctoral Research Scholarship, University of South Florida (2013-2014) American Antiquarian Society & Common-place: The Journal of Early American Life Editorial Publication Fellowship (2011-2013) American Society for Ethnohistory Graduate Student Travel Grants (2010, 2013, 2014) Summersell Prize, The Southern Historian, University of Alabama (2009-2010) William Livezey Prize, University of Oklahoma (2009-2010) Butterfield Prize in U.S. History, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire (2006-2007) Internal Fellowships & Grants Educational Preparedness Program & Milwaukee Prison Education Consortium “Blended Course” Development Grant, Marquette University (2020-2022) Andrew W. Mellon Grant for “New Directions in Critical Indigenous Studies,” Marquette University (2020-2021) Center for Urban Research, Teaching & Outreach (CURTO) Faculty Fellowship, Marquette University (2018-2019) College of Arts & Sciences Travel Awards, Marquette University (2017, 2018, 2019) Office of Research & Innovation International Travel Grant, Marquette University (2017) Office of Research & Innovation Faculty Development Grant, Marquette University (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020) Center for Transnational Justice and Office of Research & Innovation Regular Research Grant (RRG), Marquette University (2015-2016) Office of Research & Innovation Summer Faculty Fellowship (SFF), Marquette University (2015-2016) Center for Teaching & Learning Integrated Service Course Grant, Marquette University (2016-2017) College of Arts & Sciences Research Grant, Marquette University (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020) College of Arts & Sciences Digital Humanities Grant, Marquette University (2015-2016) Department of History Dissertation Research Grant, University of Oklahoma (2013-2014) Graduate Student Senate Dissertation Research Grant, University of Oklahoma (2013-2014) Robberson Family Endowment Dissertation Research Grant, University of Oklahoma (2013- 2014) Robberson Family Endowment Creative Endeavors Grant, University of Oklahoma (2012- 2013) University of Oklahoma Foundation Research & Travel Grant (2010, 2011, 2012, 2013) Bea Mantooth Estep Family Endowment Grant, University of Oklahoma (2010-2011) Department of History Graduate Student Scholarship, University of Oklahoma (2009-2010) Office of Research & Innovation Graduate Student Grant, Marquette University (2007-2008) Department of History Teaching Scholarship, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire (2006-07) Publications Books Brothers of Coweta: Kinship, Empire, & Revolution in the Muscogee World, 1700-1800. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press [in-press, forthcoming summer 2021]. George Galphin’s Intimate Empire: The Creek Indians, Family, & Colonialism in Early America. “Indians and Southern History” series, eds. Angela Pulley Hudson, Andrew Frank, and Kristofer Ray. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2019. Peer-Reviewed Articles, Book Chapters “Metawney of Coweta: Creek Indian (Muscogee) Women & Their Eighteenth-Century World.” Native South, University of Nebraska Press, Vol. 14: No. 1 (2021) [in-press, forthcoming spring 2021]. “American Horror Stories: Teaching American History and the Violence of Our Past using Horror Film.” The American Historian, Organization of American Historians (OAH) [in-press, forthcoming 2021] “A Pattern of Violence: Muscogee (Creek Indian) Women in the Eighteenth-Century & Today’s MMIWG – the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women & Girls.” The Historian, Phi Alpha Theta and Taylor & Francis Publishers, Vol. 82: No. 3 (Fall 2020): 346-362. “The Enslaved Black Community of Silver Bluff: Family, Resistance, and Freedom in Early America.” Georgia Historical Quarterly, Georgia Historical Society, Vol. 104: No. 3 (Fall 2020): 172-205. “The Cherokee Kings: Peace, Land, & Intra-Indigenous Relationships in Cherokee and Creek Country, 1700-1800.” XVIII: New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century, South- eastern American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Vol. 17: No. 1 (Spring 2020): 93-123. “The Red Atlantic and the Atlantic World, 1500-Present.” Oxford Bibliographies in Atlantic History, ed. Trevor Burnard. Oxford University Press & Oxford Bibliographies Online, Winter 2019. “Cherokee Kings and Creek Kings: Intra-Indigenous Connections and Interactions in the American South, 1700-1800.” Journal of Southern History, Southern Historical Association, Vol. 85: No. 4 (November 2019): 769-802. “The Journal of William Dells & the Many Violences of the Cherokee Expedition of 1776.” Ohio Valley History, Filson Historical Society & University of Cincinnati, Vol. 19: No. 4 (Winter 2019): 88-93. “The Last Will and Testament of George Galphin: Family, Empire, and Revolution in the Eighteenth-Century South.” South Carolina Historical Magazine, South Carolina Historical Society, Vol. 118: No. 3 (July 2019): 192-213. “David Holmes, Timothy Barnard, & Questionable Loyalties in the American Revolution.” Journal of the American Revolution, Westholme Publishing, Vol. 6: No. 2 (Summer 2019): 1-16. “The Creek Indians and the Atlantic World, 1500–Present.” Oxford Bibliographies in Atlantic History, ed. Trevor Burnard. Oxford University Press & Oxford Bibliographies Online, Spring 2019. “The ‘Irish Settlement called Queensborough’: Immigration, Empire, & Revolution in Colonial Georgia.” Georgia Historical Quarterly, Georgia Historical Society, Vol. 102: No. 3 (Winter 2018): 203-237. “‘My Land Is My Flesh’: Silver Bluff, the Creek Indians, & the Transformation of Colonized Space in Early America.” Early American Studies, McNeil Center of Early American Studies & University of Pennsylvania Press, Vol. 16: No. 3 (Summer 2018): 405-430. “The Indian Factors: Kinship, Trade, and Authority in the Creek Nation & the American South, 1700–1800.” Journal of Early American History, European Early American Studies Association & Brill Publishers, Vol. 8: No. 1 (April 2018): 1-29. “‘We are now, as we have always been, a Free & Independent People’: The Familial and Interpersonal Dimensions of Creek Sovereignty, 1783–1800.” XVIII: New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century, Southeastern American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Vol. 15: No. 1 (Spring 2018): 33-53. “‘Where your Warriors have Left their Bones, There our Bones are Seen Also’: The Stockbridge-Mohican Community in the Revolutionary War, 1775–1783.” In Journal of the American Revolution: Annual Volume 2017, ed. Todd Andrlik and Don N. Hagist (Yardley PA: Westholme Publishing, 2017), 297-309. “‘What We Say Matters’: The Power of Words in American and Indigenous Histories.” The American Historian, Organization of American Historians (OAH), Vol. 11: No. 1 (February 2017): 22-27. “Family, Linen, and Emigration in Ulster, 1700–1740: The Galphin Family in Ireland & North America,” New Hibernia Review, Center for Irish Studies & University of St. Thomas, Vol. 20: No. 4 (Winter 2016): 128-143. “The ‘Owner of the Town Ground, who Overrules All when on the Spot’: Escotchaby of Coweta and the Politics of Personal Networking in Creek Country, 1740–1780.” Native South, University of Nebraska Press, Vol. 9: No. 1 (Summer 2016): 54-88. “‘Twas a Duty Incumbent on Me’: George Galphin & the War in the South, 1775–1780.” In Journal of the American Revolution: Annual Volume 2016, ed. Todd Andrlik and Don N. Hagist (Yardley PA: Westholme Publishing, 2016), 121-135. “‘Our Lands are Our Life

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