Christine Lutz Curriculum Vitae Department of History Fort Valley State University 307 Persons Street 1005 State University Drive Fort Valley, Georgia 31030 Fort Valley, Georgia 31030 [email protected] [email protected] 770-262-5798 478-825-1928 Education Doctor of Philosophy Georgia State University, 2001 Fields: African-American, Africa, Women and Gender in World History, Labor in World History Dissertation: ‘The Dizzy Steep to Heaven’: The Hunton Family and the Atlantic World, 1850-1970 Master of Arts Georgia State University, 1993 Thesis: The Tender Branch: ‘Contraband’ Women during the Civil War Bachelor of Arts Regents College, University of the State of New York, 1986 Teaching and Other Professional Experience Fort Valley State University, 2009- present Assistant Professor The History of American Women Georgia in American History Introduction to Historical Methods Narratives of the Black Atlantic Introduced to FVSU South Africa, 1660-2000 Introduced to FVSU Women and Gender in World History Introduced to FVSU Africans in the Americas Introduced to FVSU Topics in African History Survey of U.S. History, parts 1 & 2 Survey of World History, parts 1 & 2 Georgia Gwinnett College, 2008 – 2009 Fulltime Lecturer Survey of United States History, parts 1 & 2 Georgia State University, 1991-2008 Fulltime Lecturer, 2001- 2008 and Visiting Lecturer, Graduate Teaching Instructor, Part-time Instructor, 1994-2001 Capstone Survey of World History, parts 1 & 2 Introduction to African-American History Survey of United States History Georgia in American History 1-Lutz Graduate Research Assistant, Georgia State University, 1991-1993 Center for Democratic Renewal (prev. National Anti-Klan Network), research associate 1978-1985, 1995-1996 Publication: They Don’t All Wear Sheets Emory University Kenan Chair Research Assistant, Emory University, 1995-1997 Graduate Research Assistant, King Papers Project, Emory University, 1992-1994 Letter of recommendation from Prof. Dan T. Carter included, Section II.E. Other Research & field worker, African-American history markers for Olympics, City of Atlanta, 1995-96. Research & field worker, “African-American History in Atlanta,” Atlanta Preservation Society Field worker, oral history, Southern Labor History Archives, Georgia State University, 1995 Field worker, oral history, African-American Educational Archives, Wayne State University, 1994 Research and Scholarly work Book chapters “Addie Hunton: Peace and Pan-Africanism,” Portraits of African American Life since 1865, ed. Nina Mjagkij. Wilmington, DE: Human Tradition in America #16, Scholarly Resources, 2003. “‘Psycho Killer, Qu-est-ce que c’est?’ The Woolfolk Murders, 1887.” Publication pending, The History of Middle Georgia, ed. Fred van Hartesveldt. Journal articles “‘The People! The People!’ African-American Leaders on Asians and Africans at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century,” Journal of the Georgia Association of Historians, 2011 (2009 issue pub in 2011). Winner of the 2013 Warren Spencer Award. “Another Post-War Reconciliation: Mary McLeod Bethune and Eunice Carter,” Annual Proceedings of the Florida Conference of Historians, March 2009. Winner of 2009 Thomas M. Campbell Award. Book reviews in juried publications “The Agitator’s Daughter,” Alabama Review, Summer 2009. “Stanley Engerman,” The North Carolina Historical Review, December 2007. “Slavery and African Ethnicities in the Americas: Restoring the Links,” The North Carolina Historical Review, April 2006. “A Voting Rights Odyssey: Black Enfranchisement in Georgia,” The Journal of Southern History, February 2005. “Joe Frank Harris: Personal Reflections on a Public Life,” The Journal of Southwest Georgia History, Fall 1999. Encyclopedias “African Americans,” The Twenties in America. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 2012. “Henry Berkowitz” and “Jerry Lewis,” Great Lives from History: Jewish Americans. Pasadena: Salem Press, 2011. “Organizations and Societies” and “Benjamin J. Davis, Jr,” Great Lives from History: African Americans. Pasadena: Salem Press, 2011. “William A. Hunton” and “W. Alphaeus Hunton,” African American National Biography, ed. Henry Gates and Evelyn Higginbotham. New York: W.E.B. DuBois Institute & Oxford University Press, 2008. “Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom,” “National Domestic Workers Union,” and “Center for Democratic Renewal,” Organizing Black America, Ed. Nina Mjagkij. New York: Garland Publishing, 2001. 2-Lutz On-line Publications Southeastern Regional Seminar in African Studies (SERSAS), “The Horn of Africa and the American Left,” Program Website 2003-present, http://www.ecu.edu /african/sersas/ papers/lutzchrisspring2002.htm Popular Publications “Labor Day,” Macon Telegraph, September 2012 “Blooming for Thirty Years in Tucker,” UpClose and Personal in Tucker, 2005. “Miami Rebellion” with Jehu Eaves, Southern Exposure IX: 1 (Spring 1981): 104-110. They Don’t All Wear Sheets. Washington, D.C.: Division of Church and Society, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., 1987. Service/Outreach Since 2000 Fort Valley State University College of Arts & Sciences: Comprehensive Program Review Committee, 2010-2014 Graduate Recruitment Committee, 2014 Curriculum Committee, 2014 Coordinator, Georgia proficiency history test for transfers, 2010-2015 For Department: Middle Georgia History Day, judge, 2010-present Middle Georgia History Day coordinator, 2015 Middle Georgia Oral History Project, vice-chair, 2009-2014 Banks-Pierro-Rutland-Bellamy Colloquium, 2010-present Preview Days, Orientation, Open Houses, and Registration, 2009-present CORE assessments coordinator for department, 2012-present Career Day, 2010 Core Curriculum Assessment subcommittee, 2010 Advisor, Historical Society, 2013-2015 Georgia Gwinnett College University Awards Committee, 2008-2009 Academic Enhancement Center tutor, 2008-2009 Foundation faculty committee, 2008-2009 College, Course Assessment committee, 2008-2009 Georgia State University Freshman Studies Committee, chair, 2001-2008. Publication: Guide to Teaching the History Survey. Speaker, Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program Department Honors Committee, 2000-2001 Mass Communications Department, journalism contest judge, 1999 Rachel’s Daughters (youth charity), 2000-2001 Association of Georgia State University Historians, 1995-2004; founder and officer; chair of program and pedagogy committees Women’s Studies Department, Ph.D. committee, 1999 Clayton State University Site Supervisor, historical preservation intern, Office of Career Services and Department of Social Sciences, 2005-2006 3-Lutz Community Service American Association of University Women, 2011-present Book sale, 2011-present; co-chair of sale, 2012-present Award for book sale ($500 to charity of choice), 2013 Speaker, African-American women during the Civil War, 2013 Tucker Historical Society, 2001-2010. Charter member; chair, fund-raising committee Tucker Garden Club, 2003-2009 Publication, Seventy Years of Service Program committee chair Redbud District, Garden Club of Georgia, 2004-2009 (metro Atlanta) Board of directors. Publicity director, Yellow Daisy Flower Show, 2005-2007. Publication, Forty Years of the Redbud District. DeKalb Federation of Garden Clubs, 2003-2009 Board of Directors and Historian, DeKalb Federation of Garden Clubs (In 2006-2007, 5,000 members) Volunteer, Garden Center, Callanwolde, Atlanta, Georgia Publication, History of the DeKalb Federation of Garden Clubs. Professional Development Grants Co-principal investigator, 2014 proposal, Georgia Humanities Council, “Hometown Teams: How Sports Shape America” Co-principal investigator, 2013 Georgia Humanities Council, “National History Day Workshop Grant.” Co-principal investigator, 2013 grant recipient, Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, “Created Equal: America’s Civil Rights Struggle.” Principal Investigator, 2012 grant recipient, Title III, “Middle Georgia Oral History Project.” Professional Papers and Panels Association for the Study of African-American Life and History “Addie Hunton, Pan-Africanism and Peace,” 2002 Florida Association of Historians “Another Post-War Reconciliation: Mary McLeod Bethune and Eunice Carter,” 2008 Georgia Association of Historians “‘We Won't Be Fooled Again': Addie Hunton and the National Women's Party,” 2010 “‘The People, the People!’ The Social Imagination of Africa and Asia by Leading African Americans, 1880-1914,” 2009 “‘Psycho Killer, Qu-est-ce que c’est?’ The Woolfolk Murders, 1887,” 2014 “Contraband Women: African-American Women during the Civil War,” 1993 Historic Preservation Division, Ga. Dept. of Natural Resources “Civil Rights and Public Memory in Atlanta, the City Too Busy to Remember,” 2000. National Association of African-American Studies “Eunice Hunton Carter and Foreign Affairs,” 2011. “Race and the Obama Administration,” moderator, 2011. Oral History Association 4-Lutz “Results of African-American Educational Archive’s Oral History Survey Project,” 1995 Organization of American Historians, regional meeting “Southern Women’s Biracial Activism,” moderator, 2004 Phi Alpha Theta, regional meeting “World History,” comment, 2001. “Female Troubles: Feminism and the Carter Administration,” 1994 Race and Place Conference, 2004 “W. Alphaeus Hunton: A Pan-Africanist in the American Labor Movement” Southeastern Regional Seminar on African Studies, 2002 “‘Noble, Independent, and Unconquerable’: The Horn of Africa and the American Left,” 2002 Southern Labor Studies Conference “The Sanderson Strike,” 2004 “W. Alphaeus
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