Directory of Fellows and
Research Associates, 1972-Present
C
CABLE, MARY PRATT
Fellowship: R.A. 89-90, early history of the
Massachusetts Bay
Colony (freelance writer)
Fellowship: R.A. 90-91, early history of the
Massachusetts
Bay Colony (freelance writer)
Education: Barnard, A.B., 41
Other Publications: American Manners and
Morals (American
Heritage, 1969); The Avenue of the Presidents
(Houghton Mifflin,
1969); Black Odyssey: The Case of the Slaveship
Amistad (Viking,
1971; Penguin,1998); The Little Darlings: A History of
Childrearing
in America (Scribner's, 1975); Lost New Orleans
(Houghton
Mifflin, 1980); Avery's Knot (Putnam's, 1981); Top
Drawer
(Atheneum, 1984); The Blizzard of '88 (Atheneum,
1988)
[Updated 2005]
CANUP, JOHN
(Died February 19, 2005)
Fellowship: Boni 90-91, "New England Culture and
the Pacific"
(asst. prof. of history, Texas A & M)
Education: Georgia, A.B., 73; Hawaii at Manoa, M.A.,
75;
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Ph.D., 86
Current Position: assoc. prof. of history, Texas A & M
Other Publications: Dream Castles (Viking,
1966);
Andrew Deutsch (London, 1966); El Escorial
(Newsbreak
Books, 1971); "The Cry of Sodom Enquired
Into," Proceedings of
the American Antiquarian Society 98
(1988): 113-34; Out of
the Wilderness (Wesleyan Univ. Press, 1990); "Cotton
Mather
and Criolian Degeneracy," Early American Literature
24 (1989):
20-34
[Updated 2005]
CARLEBACH, MICHAEL L.
Fellowship: Peterson 86-87, "The Origins of
Photojournalism
in America, 1839-80" (asst. prof. of history,
Miami)
Education: Colgate, A.B., 67; Florida State, M.A.,
80; Brown,
Ph.D., 88
Current Position: prof. of art history,
Miami
Fellowship Publications: The Origins of
Photojournalism in
America (Washington: Smithsonian Institute Press,
1992)
Other Publications: "Art and Propaganda: The
Photography
Project of the Farm Security Administration," Journal of
Decorative
and Propaganda Arts 8 (1988): 6-25; (with Eugene
Provenzo) Farm
Security Administration Photographs of Florida
(Gainesville:
Univ. of Florida Press, 1993); American Photojournalism
Comes
of Age (Washington: Smith. Inst. Press,
1997); Working Stiffs
(Smithsonian, 2002)
Address: Dept. of Art and Art History, University of
Miami,
P.O. Box 248106, Coral Gables, FL
33124-4410
Web Page:
http://www.as.miami.edu/art/carlebach.html
[Updated 2005]
CARLSON, HANNAH
Fellowship: Botein 06-07, "In the Company of Books:
Reading the Pocket Companion" (Ph.D. cand. in American studies,
Boston)
Education: Wesleyan, B.A., 90; Fashion Institute of
Technology, M.A., 01
[Updated 2006]
CARLSON-BRADLEY, MARTHA
Fellowship: Baron 08, poet, Hillsborough, NH,
research for a collection of poems based on the New England Primer
Education:
[Updated 2008]
CARP, BENJAMIN L.
Fellowship: Peterson 01-02, "Cityscapes and
Revolution: Urban
Spaces and Revolutionary Mobilization in North America,
1740-1790"
(Ph.D. cand. in history, Virginia)
Education: Yale, B.A., 98; Virginia, M.A., 99,
Ph.D. 04
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Tufts
Fellowship Publications: Cityscapes and Revolution: Political Mobilization and Urban Spaces in
Anglo-America, 1740-1783 (forthcoming, Oxford University Press, title
subject to change)
Other Publications: "Fire of liberty: firefighters, urban
voluntary culture, and the revolutionary movement", William and Mary
Quarterly 58:4 (October 2001), 781-818;
"Nations of American rebels: understanding nationalism in revolutionary
North America and the Civil War South", Civil War History 48:1
(March 2002), 5-33;
"The Night the Yankees Burned Broadway: The New York
City Fire of 1776," Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary
Journal,
4:2 (Fall 2006)
Address: Tufts University, Dept. of History, East Hall, On
the Green, Medford, MA 02155; Benjamin.Carp[at]tufts.edu
Web Page:
http://ase.tufts.edu/history/faculty/bcarp.html
[Updated 2006]
CARROLL, BRET EVAN
Fellowship: Peterson 97-98, "Religion and
Masculinity in
Antebellum America" (visiting asst. prof. of
history,
Texas at Arlington)
Education: Emory, B.A., 83; Cornell, M.A., 88, Ph.D.,
91
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, California
State
Univ. at Stanislaus
Address: Dept. of History, California State University
at Stanislaus,
801 West Monte Vista Ave., Turlock, CA
95382
Web Page:
http://www.csustan.edu/history/Faculty/Carroll/Carroll.html
[Updated 2005]
CARROLL, BRIAN
Fellowship: Peterson 08-09, "Military Masculinities
in New England: Anglo-American and Native-American Soldiers, 1689-1763" (Ph.D.
cand. in history, Connecticut)
Education:
[Updated 2008]
CARTER, MICHAEL STEVEN
Fellowship: Botein, 05-06, "Matthew Carey and the
Public Emergence of Roman Catholicism in the United States, 1789-1839
" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Southern California)
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Dayton
Education: Southern California, B.A., 99; M.A., 03;
Ph.D., 06
Fellowship Publication: "Under the Benign Sun of Toleration: Mathew
Carey, the Douai Bible, and Catholic Print Culture, 1789-1791," Journal
of the Early Republic, Fall 2007
Address: Dept. of History, Univeristy of Dayton, 300 College Park,
Dayton, OH 45469; carterms[at]notes.udayton.edu
[Updated 2007]
CARTER, SARAH ANNE
Fellowship: Last, 07-08, "Object Lessons in
Nineteenth-Century America" (Ph.D. cand. in the history of American
civilization, Harvard)
Education: Harvard, A.B., 02; Delaware/Winterthur,
M.A., 04
[Updated 2007]
CASPER, SCOTT E.
Fellowship: Peterson 90-91, "The Cultural and
Literary
Contexts of Antebellum Campaign Biography and Children's
Biography"
(Ph.D. cand. in American studies, Yale)
Fellowship: Peterson 98-99, "First
Families: Presidents
at Home in the American Imagination,
1789-1920" (assoc. prof.
of history, Nevada at Reno)
Education: Princeton, A.B., 86; Yale, M.A., M.Phil.,
90.;
Ph.D., 92
Current Position: assoc. prof. of history, Nevada at
Reno
Fellowship Publications:
"The Two Lives of Franklin Pierce: Hawthorne, Political Culture, and the Literary Market," American Literary
History 5 (1993): 203-230;
"Constructing American Lives: The Cultural History of Biography in Nineteenth-Century
America" (Ph.D. diss., 1992) [Theron Rockwell Field prize, Yale, for
outstanding diss.];
Constructing American Lives: Biography and Culture in Nineteenth Century America (Chapel
Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1999) [Sharp Book Prize 1999 for
Best Book in the History of the Book
Other Publications:
"An Uneasy Marriage of Sentiment and Scholarship: Elizabeth
F. Ellet and the Domestic Origins of American Women's
Histoy," Journal of Womens' History 4 (Fall 1992): 10-35;
"Defining the National
Pantheon: The Making of Houghton Mifflin's Biographical Series,
1880-1900," in Michele Moylan and Lane Stiles eds., Reading
Books: Essays on the Material Text and Literature in America,
(Amherst, 1997);
ed. with Joanne Chaison and Jeffrey Groves
Perspectives on
American Book History: Artifacts and Commentary (Univ. of
Massachusetts Press, 2002)
Web Page:
http://www.unr.edu/cla/ch/faculty_casper.htm
[Updated 2005]
CASTAGNA, JOANN E.
Fellowship: AAS-NEMLA 90-91, "Women, Sexuality, and
Popular
Culture: Sensation Novels and Gender Ideology in
Nineteenth-Century
Newspapers" (academic advisor, Iowa)
Education: Eastern Connecticut, B.A., 75; Iowa, M.A.,
83,
Ph.D., 89
Current Position: asst. to the assoc. dean for
academic programs & services
Other Publications: w/ Robin Radespiel, Making Rape
Romantic:
A Study of Rosemary Rogers' "S'Steve a
Ginny" Novels,"
in Katherine Ackley, ed. Violence Against Women in
Literature
(Garland, 1989); twenty-six bio. entries on nineteenth-
and
early twentieth-century American women writers in The
Feminist
Companion to Literature in English (Batsford/Yale,
1990); Mary
Daly, bio. entry in The Oxford Companion to Women's
Writing in
the United States (Oxford Univ. Press, 1994); cont.,
Chronology
of Women Worldwide (Gale Research, 1997); eleven
bio. entries
in the American National Biography series (Oxford
Univ. Press,
1998); entry on "Solon Robinsonin Indiana Resource Link
(CD-ROM,
ABC-CLIO, 1999); entries on "Orville Victor," "Frank
Leslie's Illustrated
Weekly," and "Maum Guinea" in the Encyclopedia of the
American Civil
War (ABC-CLIO, 2000); "Eleanor Glynn" entry for the New
Dicitonary
of National Biography (Oxford Univ. Press, forthcoming)
Address: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Office
of
the Dean, 240 Schaeffer Hall, University of Iowa, Iowa City,
IA
52242; PO Box 842, Iowa City, IA
52244; joann-castagna[at]uiowa.edu
[Updated 2005]
CAVE, RODERICK GEORGE
Fellowship: Daniels 76-77, "A History of Printing in the
West
Indies" (prof. of library science, Univ. of the West
Indies)
Education: Loughborough, M.A., 72, Ph.D., 79
Current Position: prof. of information studies,
Nanyang Technological
Fellowship Publications: "The Printing of the Honduras
Almanack,'"
Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 87
(1977):
195-99; "Early Circulating Libraries in Jamaica," Libri
(1980):
53-65; Printing and the Book Trade in the West Indies
(London:
Pindar Press, 1987)
Other Publications: The Private Press
(1971; rev.
1983); Rare Book Librarianship (1975; rev. 1982)
[Updated 1997]
CHARBENEAU, BRETT
Fellowship: AAS-ASECS 95-96, "Williamsburg Imprints
Program"
(journeyman printer, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation)
Current Position: systems administrator, Williamsburg
Regional
Library
Fellowship Publications: "Colonial Virginia Ephemera," The
Proceedings of the Ephemera Society of America (Spring 1997)
Web Page:
http://www.happysnowman.com/desbib/arch/brett.html
[Updated 2005]
CHAVIGNY, KATHERINE A.
Fellowship: Peterson 93-94, "American Confessions: The
Formation
of Antebellum Addiction Narratives" (Ph.D. cand. in history,
Chicago)
Education: Harvard, B.A., 87; Chicago, M.A., 88,
Ph.D. 99
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Sweet Briar
Web Page:
http://www.history.sbc.edu/chavigny_cv.html
[Updated 2005]
CHERNOS LIN, RACHEL
Fellowship: Peterson 02-03, "The Rhode Island Slave
Traders
and their Communities, 1750-1807" (Ph.D. cand., Brown)
Education: Toronto, B.A., 95; Queen's, M.A., 97
Fellowship Publications: "The Rhode Island
Slave-Traders: Butchers, Bakers and Candlestick Makers." Slavery &
Abolition 23, no. 3 (2002): 21-38.
[Updated 2005]
CHOPRA, RUMA
Fellowship: Peterson 06-07, "Loyalist Persuasions: New
York City, 1776-1783" (Ph.D. cand. in history, California at Davis)
Education: Carnegie Mellon, B.S., 90; SUNY at Albany
M.A., 92; Carnegie Mellon, M.A., 97
[Updated 2006]
CHU, JONATHAN M.
Fellowship: NEH 87-88, "Where's Mine?: Debt in
Post-Revolutionary
Massachusetts" (assoc. prof. of history, Massachusetts
at Boston)
Education: Pennsylvania, A.B., 67; Hawaii, M.A.,
69; Washington,
Ph.D., 78; Yale, M.S. Law, 83
Current Position:assoc. prof of history,
Massachusetts at Boston (and assoc. dean, Graduate College of
Education, Massachusetts at Boston, until Sept. 1, 2006)
Fellowship Publications: "Debt Litigation
& Shays Rebellion,"
in Robert Gross and Frederick Allis eds., Debt to
Shays,
(Charlottesville: Univ. of Virginia Press, 1992); "Debt
and
Taxes: Public Finance and Private Economic Behavior in
Post-Revolutionary
Massachusetts," in Conrad Wright ed., Massachusetts
Historical
Society Studies in American History and Culture,
(forthcoming);
Debt and Tax Entrepeneurs, ed., by Conrad Wright and
Katherine
Viens;
"Imagining a World without Sugar: Teaching Strategies for America, the
Atlantic and Global Consumer Demand, for OAH-College Board publication on
AP Central; "Reorienting Trade: American Commerce and the Origins of
Sino-American Trade," Proceedings of the 2002 Conference on Sino-American
Communication (Changchun, PRC, 2003)
Other Publications: Neighbors, Friends, or
Madmen: The
Puritan Adjustment to Quakerism in Seventeenth-Century
Massachusetts
Bay (1985); "Nursing a Poisonous Tree: Litigation
and Property
Law in Seventeenth-Century Essex County, Massachusetts, the
Case
of Bishop's Farm," American Journal of Legal
History
31 (1987): 221-52; "Historiographical Developments in
Early
American Quakerism: A Reply," Southern Friend
(Fall,1991);
Does Real History Begin at Jamestown and Plymouth?, OAH
Magazine
of History (Fall, 1996);
"George Frisbie Hoar and Chinese Exclusion: The Political Construction of
Race," in Faces of Community: Immigrant Massachusetts, 1840-2000,
ed.
by
Conrad Wright and Reed Ueeda; "The Demon and Daniel Webster: Drinking in
the Ante-bellum Senate." American Nineteenth Century Studies
(Summer 2000)
Address: University of Massachusetts-Boston, Graduate College of
Education, 100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA, 02125; jonathan.chu@umb.edu
Web Page:
http://www2.www.umb.edu/directory/person_detail.php?id=709
[Updated 2006]
CHUDACOFF, HOWARD P.
Fellowship: Rockefeller 74-75, "The Effect of
Industrialization
and Urbanization upon Family Structure in Nineteenth-Century
Worcester"
(asst. prof. of history, Brown)
Fellowship: Peterson 00-01, "Children and Their
Styles of
Play, 1750-1880" (prof. of history, Brown)
Education: Chicago, A.B., 65, A.M., 67,
Ph.D., 67
Current Position: Univ. prof. and prof. of history,
Brown
Fellowship Publications: "New Branches on the
Tree: Household
Structure in Early Stages of the Family Cycle in Worcester,
Massachusetts,
1860-1880," in Tamara K. Hareven ed., Themes in the
History of
the Family, (Worcester: AAS, 1978); "From Empty Nest to
Family
Dissolution: Life Course Transitions into Old
Age," Journal of
Family History 4 (Spring 1979)
Other Publications: How Old Are You? Age
Consciousness
in American Culture (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press,
1989);
The Age of the Bachelor (1999)
Web Page:
http://www.brown.edu/Departments/History/faculty/hchud.html
[Updated 2001]
CLAPPER, MICHAEL
Fellowship: Peterson 92-93, "The `Popular' and
`Elite'
Disjunction in Art inthe United States after the Civil
War"
(Ph.D. cand. in art history, Northwestern)
Education: Swarthmore, B.A., 87; Washington Univ.,
M.F.A.,
89; Northwestern, Ph.D., 97
Current Position: assoc. asst. prof. of art
history,
Franklin and Marshall
Fellowship Publications: "Art, Industry, and
Education
in Prang's Chromolithograph Company," Proceedings of the
American
Antiquarian Society 105:1 (April 1995): 145-161
Other Publications: "The Chromo and the Art
Museum:
Popular and Elite Art Institutions in Late
Nineteenth-Century America,"
in Christopher Reed ed., Not at Home: The Suppression of
Domesticity
in Modern Art and Architecutre: 33-47;
"'I Was Once a Barefoot Boy!': Cultural Tensions in a Popular Chromo"
American Art 16 (Summer 2002): 16-39
[Updated 2006]
CLARK, CHARLES EDWIN
Fellowship: Daniels 80-81, "A Comparative Study of
English
and American Journalism,1665-1765" (prof. emeritus of
history,
New Hampshire)
Fellowship: Boni 85-86, "The Public Prints: An
Essay
in Anglo-American Journalistic Origins" (prof. emeritus
of
history, New Hampshire)
Education: Bates, A.B., 51; Columbia, M.S.,
52; Brown, Ph.D.,
66
Current Position: prof. emeritus of history, New
Hampshire
Fellowship Publications: "James
Franklin," Boston
Printers, Publishers, and Booksellers, ed. Benjamin
Franklin
V (1980); co-author, with Charles Wetherell, "The
Measure of
Maturity: The Pennsylvania
Gazette,1728-1765," William
and Mary Quarterly 3d ser. 46
(1989): 279-303; "`Metropolis'
and `Province' in Eighteenth-Century Press Relations: The
Case of
Boston," Journal of Newspaper and Periodical
History
(London, 1989); "The Newspapers of Provincial
America,"
Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 100
(1990):
367-89; "Boston and the Nurturing of
Newspapers: Dimensions
of the Cradle," New England Quarterly 69
(1991): 243-71;
"The Colonial Press," in Jacob Ernest Cooke et
al., eds.,
Encyclopedia of the North American Colonies, 3
vols. (New
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1993), 3: 111-22; The
Public Prints:
The Newspaper in Anglo-American Culture, 1665-1740 (New
York:
Oxford Univ. Press, 1994), Printers, the People , and
Politics:
The New Hampshire Press and Ratification
(Concord: N.H. Humanities
Council,1989); Early American Journalism: News and
Opinions
in the Popular Press (eds. Hugh Amory and David
Hall); The
Colonial Book in the Atlantic World, (pgs, 347-366)
Other Publications: The Eastern Frontier: The
Settlement
of Northern New England, 1610-1763 (New
York: Knopf,1970, repr.
Hanover: New England, 1983); Maine: A History (New
York:
Norton, 1977; repr. Hanover: New England, 1990), The
Meetinghouse
Tragedy: An Episode in the Life of New England
Town. (Hanover:
New England, 1998);
Bates Through the Years: An Illustrated History (Lewiston, ME:
Bates
College, 2005)
Address: 40A Emerson Road, Durham, NH 03824; charles.clark@unh.edu
[Updated 2006]
CLARK, CHRISTOPHER F.
Fellowship: Haven 82-83, "Economy and Culture in
Rural
Massachusetts, 1790-1860" (lecturer in history,
York)
Fellowship: Peterson 90-91, "To Live in the
Common Cause:
Communal and Cooperative Groups in Nineteenth-Century
America"
Education: Warwick, B.A., 74; Harvard, M.A., 75,
Ph.D., 82
Current Position: prof. of history,
Connecticut
Fellowship Publications: "The Diary of an
Apprentice Cabinetmaker:
Edward Jenner Carpenter's
Journal,1844-45," (1988); "Work
and Labor in Rural Massachusetts: The Connecticut Valley,
1750-1820,"
in E. Marienstras and B. Karskyeds., Travail e loisir
dans les
societes pre-industrielles, (Nancy: Presses
Universitaires de
Nancy, 1991); The Roots of Rural Capitalism: Western
Massachusetts
1780-1860 (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press,1990) [Frederick
Jackson
Turner Award]; "Social Structure and Manufacturing
before the
Factory: Rural New England, 1750-1830," in T.M. Safley
and
L. Rosenband, eds., The Workplace before the Factory
(Ithaca:
Cornell Univ. Press, 1993); The Communities Movement: The
Radical
Challenge of the Northampton Association
(Ithaca: Cornell Univ.
Press, 1995);
Letters from an American Utopia: The
Stetson
Family and the Northampton Association, 1843-1847 ed. with Kerry
Buckley (Amherst: Univ. of
Massachusetts Press, 2004)
Other Publications: "Household Economy, Market
Exchange,
and the Rise of Capitalism in the Connecticut Valley,
1800-1860,"
Journal of Society History 13 (1979-80); "The
Truck
System in 19th-Century New England: An
Interpretation," in
R.E. Ommer, ed, Merchant Credit and Labour Strategies
(Fredericton,
N.B.: Acadiensis Press,1990); "Economics and
Culture: Opening
Up the Rural History of the EarlyAmerican
Northeast," American
Quarterly (June 1991); "Agrarian Societies and
Economic
Development in Nineteenth-Century North America," in
W.L. Bernecke
and H.W. Tobler, eds., Development and Underdevelopment
in America
(Berlin and New York: de Gruyter, 1993); "The
Consequences
of the `Market Revolution' in the American North," in
M. Stokes
and S. Conway, eds., The Market Revolution: Social
Culture and
Religious Expression (Charlottesville: Univ. Press of
Virginia,
1996); Rural America and the Transition to
Capitalism," Journal
of the Early Republic (June 1996)
Web Page:
http://www.history.uconn.edu/faculty/clark.html
[Updated 2005]
CLARK, THOMAS
Fellowship: Ebeling 05-06, "Toquevillian
Moments: Transatlantic Visions of an American Republican Culture"
(asst. prof. of history, Kassel)
Education:
[Updated 2005]
CLAVIN, MATTHEW J.
Fellowship: Peterson 03-04, "Men of Color, to
Arms!"
(Ph.D. cand. in history, American)
Education: Bloomsburg, B.A., 94; George Washington, M.A, 99;
American, Ph.D., 05
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, West Florida
Fellowship Publications: 'Men of Color, to
Arms!' Remembering Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution in the
American Civil War (Ph.D. diss., 2005)
Address: University of West Florida, Department of History, 11000
University Parkway, Pensacola, FL, 32514; mclavin@uwf.edu
[Updated 2006]
COBB, DAVID A.
Fellowship: Mellon 73-74, "Bibliography of Maps for
the
New England States" (Geography and map librarian,
Indiana)
Current Position: head, Harvard Map Collection,
Harvard
Other Publications: Guide to U.S. Map Resources
(Chicago:
American Library Association, 1990)
[Updated 1997]
COCKRELL, DALE
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 83-84, "The Journals of the
Hutchinson
Family" (asst. prof. of music, Middlebury)
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 94-95, "Demons of
Disorder: The
Early Blackface Minstrel and His World" (David N. and
Margaret
C. Bottoms prof. of music, William & Mary)
Education: Illinois, B.M., 71, M.M., 73, Ph.D.,
78
Current Position: prof. of Musicology and American
Southern
Studies, Blair School of Music, Vanderbilt
Fellowship Publications: "The Hutchinson Family,
1841-45,
or The Origins of Some Yankee Doodles," Institute
forStudies
in American Music Newsletter, vol. XII/1 (November
1982): 12-15,
reprinted, Sheet Music Exchange, II/2 (February
1984); articles
in The New Grove Dictionary of Music in America
(1986); Excelsior:
Journals of the Hutchinson Family Singers, 1842-1846
(Stuyvesant,
NY: Pendragon Press, 1989) [Irving Lowens Award in American
Music,
1989]; "Jim Crow, Demon of Disorder," American
Music
14/2 (Summer 1996): 161-84; "Callithumpans, Mummers,
Maskers,
and Minstrels: Blackface in the Streets of Jacksonian
America,"
Theatre Annual 49 (1996): 1-20; "Hutchinson
Family Singers,"
Encyclopedia of New England Culture, eds. Burt
Feintuch and
David Watters (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, forthcoming);
Demons
of Disorder: Early Blackface Minstrels and Their World,
Cambridge
Studies in American Theatre and Drama, no. 8, Don
B.Wilmeth,
gen. ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997) [C. Hugh
Holman
Award]
Other Publications: "Of Gospel Hymns, Minstrel
Shows,
and Jubilee Choirs: Toward Some Black South African
Musics,"
American Music (1987). History of Western
Music, with
Hugh Miller (New York: Harper Collins, 1991); Il
Pescaballo and
Ten Nights in a Barroom, Nineteenth-Century American
Musical
Theatre, no. 8, Deane L. Root, gen. ed. (New York: Garland
Press,
1994); "Popular Music in the United
States: 1820-1880,"
in Alan Gilmourand John Shepherd gen.eds., The Universe
of Music:
A World History, vol. 10, (Washington,
DC: Smith. Inst. Press,
forthcoming); "Popular Music of the Parlor and
Stage,"
in Timothy Rice and James Porter, gen. eds. Garland
Encyclopedia
of World Music vol. 8: North America volume,
ed. Ellen
Koskoff (New York: Garland Press, forthcoming); American
National
Biography, ed. John A. Garraty (New York: Oxford
Univ. Press,
forthcoming); "Nineteenth-Century Popular
Music," in
The Cambridge History of American Music, ed. David
Nicholls
(Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, forthcoming)
Address: Blair School of Music, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville,
TN 37212; 906 Walnut Grove Rd., Christiana, TN
37037; dale.cockrell[at]vanderbilt.edu
[Updated 2001]
COCLANIS, PETER A.
Fellowship: Daniels 77-78, "Economy and Society in
Colonial
Charleston" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Columbia)
Education: Columbia, M.A., 74; M.Phil., 76; Ph.D., 84
Current Position: assoc. provost and Albert
R. Newsome Professor of history, North
Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Fellowship Publications: The Shadow of a
Dream: Economic
Life and Death in the South Carolina Low Country,
1670-1920
(New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1989) [Allan Nevins
Prize]; 15 articles
Web Page:
http://www.unc.edu/depts/history/faculty/coclanis.html
[Updated 1997]
COENS, THOMAS M.
Fellowship: Peterson 02-03, "The Formation of the
Jackson Party,
1822-1829" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Harvard)
Education: Yale, B.A., 96; Harvard, Ph.D., 04
Current Position: research asst. prof., Tennessee, and asst. ed. of
The Papers of Andrew Jackson
Address:University of Tennessee, 213 Hoskins Library, Knoxville,
TN, 37996;
tcoens[at]utk.edu
[Updated 2006]
COHEN, DANIEL A.
Fellowship: Botein 92-93, "Beyond Domesticity: Literary
Images of Working-Class Women, 1790-1860" (asst. prof. of history,
Florida International)
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 07-08, "Burning the Charlestown
Convent: Private Lives, Public Outrage, and Contested Memory in
Nineteenth-Century America" (assoc. prof. of history, Case Western)
Education: Amherst, B.A.,79; Duke, M.A.,
80; Brandeis, 89
Current Position: assoc. prof. of history,
Case Western Reserve
Fellowship Publications: "`The Female Marine' in an Era
of Good
Feelings: Cross-Dressing and the `Genius' of Nathaniel
Coverly,
Jr.," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society
103
(October 1993): 359-93; "Mis Reed and the Superiors: The
Contradictions
of Convent Life in Antebellum America," Journal of
Society History
30 (Fall 1996): 149-84; "The Respectability of Rebecca
Reed: Genteel
Womanhood and Sectarian Conflict in Antebellum
America," Journal
of the Early Republic 16 (Fall 1996): 419-461; "The
Female
Marine and Related Works: Narratives of Cross-Dressing and
Urban
Vice" in America's Early Republic
(Amherst: Univ. of
Massachusetts Press, 1997)
Other Publications: Pillars of Salt, Monuments of
Grace:
New England Crime Literature and the Origins of American
Popular
Culture, 1674-1860 (New York: Oxford Univ. Press,
1993);
"Alvah Kelley's Cow: Household Feuds, Proprietary Rights, and the
Charlestown Convent Riot," New England Quarterly 74 (December
2001): 531-79;
"Blood Will Out: Sensationalism, Horror, and the Roots of American Crime
Literature," in Nancy Isenberg and Andrew Burstein, eds., Mortal
Remains: Death in Early America (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Press, 2003), 31-55
Web Page:
http://www.case.edu/artsci/hsty/cohen.html
[Updated 2007]
COHEN, JOANNA
Fellowship: Last, 07-08, "Millions of
Luxurious Citizens: Consumption and Citizenship in New York and
Philadelphia, 1815-1876" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Pennsylvania)
Education: Cambridge, B.A., 01; Northwestern,
M.A., 03; Cambridge, M.A., 05
[Updated 2007]
COHEN, KENNETH
Fellowship: AHPCS 06-07, "'To Give Good
Sport': The Making and Meaning of Sporting Leisure in Early America,
1750-1840" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Delaware)
Education: Allegheny, B.A., 98; Delaware,
M.A., 00, M.A. certificate, 00; Winterthur, M.A., 02
[Updated 2007]
COHEN, LARA
Fellowship: Botein 08-09, "Counterfeit Presentments:
Fraud and the Production of Nineteenth Century American Literature"
(asst. prof. of English, Wayne State)
Education:
[Updated 2008]
COHEN, LESTER H.
Fellowship: Daniels 81-82, "The Origins of American
Liberalism,
1780-1820" (assoc. prof. of history, Purdue)
Education: California at Los Angeles, B.A.,
66; Yale,
M.A., 72, Ph.D., 74
[Updated 1997]
COHEN, MICHAEL C.
Fellowship: Tracy 05-06, "Poetic Discourses in America,
1870-1915" (Ph.D. cand. in English, New York Univ.)
Education: Dartmouth, B.A., 00
[Updated 2005]
COHEN, PATRICIA CLINE
Fellowship: Daniels 77-78, "Americans and
Numbers"
(asst. prof. of history, California at Santa Barbara)
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 87-88, "Safety and
Danger: Women
in Public" (assoc. prof. of history, California at
Santa Barbara)
Fellowship: Mellon Dist. Scholar-in-Residence 01-02,
"Thomas Low Nichols and Mary Gove Nichols:
Sex and Marriage Reform in the 1840s" (prof. of
history,
California at Santa Barbara)
Education: Chicago, B.A., 68; California at Berkeley,
Ph.D.,
77
Current Position: prof. of history, California at Santa
Barbara
Fellowship Publications: "Statistics and the
State: Changing
Social Thought and the Emergence of a Quantitative Mentality
in
America, 1790-1820," William and Mary Quarterly
3d ser.,
38 (1981); A Calculating People: The Spread of Numeracy
in Early
America (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press,
1982; paperback, 1985,
reprinted 1999 by Routledge); "The Helen Jewett
Murder: Gender,
Licentiousness and Violence in Antebellum
America," NWSA
Journal (1990); "The Early (and soon
broken) Marriage of
History and Statistics: Boston, 1839," Historical
Methods
(1990); "Safety and Danger: Women on American Public
Transport,
1750-1850," in Susan Reverby and Dorothy Helly eds.,
Gendered
Domains: Beyond the Public-Private Dichotomy in Women's
History,
(Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1992),
109-22; "Unregulatd Youth:
Masculinity and Murder in the 1830s City," Radical
History
Review 52 (Winter1992); "Reckoning with
Commerce: Numeracy
in 17th- and 18th-Century America," in Roy Porter and
John
Brewer eds., Consumption and the World of Goods (New
York:
Routledge, 1993): 320-34; "Doing Women's History at the
American
Antiquarian Society," Proceedings of the American
Antiquarian
Society 103 (April 1993); "The Mystery of Helen
Jewett:
Romantic Fiction and the Eroticization of
Violence," Legal
Studies Forum (Fall 1993); "Ministerial
Misdeeds: Bishop
Onderdonk's Trial for Sexual Harassment in the
1840s," The
Journal of Women's History 7 (Fall 1995): 34-57, longer
version
in Susan Juster and Lisa MacFarland, eds., The Power of
Faith:
Explorations in Race and and Gender in American
Protestantism
(Cornell Univ. Press, 1996); The Murder of Helen
Jewett (New
York: Knopf, 1998, Vintage 1999)
Other Publications: The American Promise
(Bedford
Books, 1998, 2000, 2001)
Web Page:
http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/cohen-txt.htm
[Updated 2005]
COKINOS, CHRISTOPHER
Fellowship: Artist 98, "Research American attitudes
toward and
representations of now-extinct bird species and
subspecies"
(creative writer, Manhattan, Kansas)
Education: Indiana, B.A., 86; Washington
Univ., M.F.A.,
91
Current Position: asst. prof. of English, Utah
State
Fellowship Publications: Hope Is the Thing with
Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds (2000)
Web Page:
http://websites.usu.edu/english/Document/index.asp?Parent=1881
[Updated 2005]
COLE, PHYLLIS B.
Fellowship: Peterson 04-05, "Feminist Writers and the
Periodical Press in Antebellum America" (prof. of English and
American Studies, Penn State Delaware County)
Education: Oberlin, B.A.; Harvard, M.A., Ph.D.
[Updated 2005]
COLEMAN, DAWN
Fellowship: NEMLA 06-07, "Preaching and the Rise of the
American Novel" (asst. prof. of English, Tennessee)
Education: California at Los Angles, B.A., 93; Harvard, M.T.S., 97;
Stanford, Ph.D., 04
[Updated 2006]
CONGER, VIVIAN BRUCE
Fellowship: Hiatt 89-90, "Being Weak of Body but Firm of
Mind
and Memory: Widowhood in Colonial America,
1630-1750." (Ph.D. cand.
in history, Cornell)
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Ithaca
Web Page:
http://faculty.ithaca.edu/vconger/
[Updated 2005]
CONRAD, BARBARA D.
Fellowship: K-12, 94, "American
Music" (history teacher,
California High School, San Ramon, California)
Education: Oregon, B.A., 55; California State at
Hayward,
M.S., 80
Current Position: retired
Fellowship Results: curriculum unit on early music
and its
relation to history for a U.S. History class
Other: IISEA Fellow to Japan; Fulbright-Hays fellow
to Nigeria;
U. of California-Berkeley fellow to Germany and
Virginia; curriculum
consulor for Extended Education
[Updated 1997]
COOK, JAMES W.
Fellowship: Tracy 01-02, "Cracks in the White
Republic" (asst. prof. of history and American studies, Butler)
Education: Princeton, B.A., 88; California at
Berkeley, Ph.D., 96
Current Position: assoc. prof. of history and
American culture, Michigan
Other Publications:
"From the Age of Reason to the Age of Barnum," Winterthur
Portfolio,
30: 4 (Fall 1995);
Of Men, Missing Links, and Nondescripts, Freakery: Cultural Spectacles
of
the Extraordinary Body, (New York: New York University Press, 1996);
"Mass Marketing and Cultural History," American Quarterly, 51: 1
(March 1999);
The Arts of Deception: Playing With Fraud
in the Age of Barnum, (Harvard University Press, 2001);
"Dancing Across the Color Line: A Story of Mixtures and Markets in New
Yorks Five Points," Common-place, 4.1 (October 2003);
The Colossal P.T. Barnum Reader,
(Urbaba: University
of Illinois Press, 2005).
Web Page:
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/history/facstaff/facultydetail.asp?ID=51
[Updated 2005]
COOK, JONATHAN A.
Fellowship: Peterson 98-99, "The Apocalyptic Imagination
in
the American Renaissance"
Education: Harvard, B.A.; Columbia, M.A.,
88; M.Phil., 91;
Ph.D., 93
Current Position: adj. prof. at Northern Virginia
Comm. College,
Alexandra, VA
Other Publications: "New Heavens, Poor Old
Earth: Satirical
Apocalypse in Hawthorne's Moses from an Old Manse",
ESQ:
A Journal of the American Renaissance 39 (Fourth Quarter
1993):
209-51; "'Prodigious Poop': Comic Context and Psychological
Subtext
in Irving's Knickerbocker History," Nineteenth-Century
Literature
49 (March 1995): 483-512; Satirical Apocalypse: An
Anatomy of
Melville's "The Confidence-Man" (Greenwood
Press,1996); "The
Typological Design of Melville's 'The Apple-Tree
Table.'" Texas
Studies in Literature and Language 40 (Summer
1998): 121-41;
"Parke Godwin" in Antebellum Writers in New York and the
South,
ed. Kent Ljungquist, Dictionary of Literary Biography
(Detriot:
Gale Research, forthcoming)
Address: 2730 Chain Bridge Road, NW, Washington, DC
20016;
jonathancook[at]columbiabooks.com
[Updated 2001]
COOKE, NYM
Fellowship: Hiatt 82-83, "Lives of the
Psalmodists"
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 92-93, "Sacred Music in New
England, 1720-1780: From Ritual Towards Art"
Education: Harvard, A.B., 74; Michigan, M.A., 80,
Ph.D., 90
Current Position: teacher, Eagle Hill School
Fellowship Publications: "Itinerant Yankee Singing
Masters
in the Eighteenth Century," in Itinerancy in New
England
and New York (Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife,
Annual
Proceedings, 1984), pp.16-36; "American Psalmodists
in
Contact and Collaboration,1770-1820" (Ph.D. diss.,
Michigan,
1990)
Other Publications: "William Billings inthe
District
of Maine, 1780," American Music 9 (fall
1991); "Sacred
Music," in Encyclopedia of the North American
Colonies (Char
Scribner Sons, 1993); Awake to Joy!/Christmas Carols
forPart-Singing
(Toad Hill Music, 1995; 3rd printing, 1997); "William
Billings:
Representative American Psalmodist?, The Quarterly
Journal of
Music Teaching and Learning 7 (Spring 1996); Timothy
Swan:
Psalmody and Secular Songs (A-REditions,
1997); "Sacred
Music to 1800," in The Cambridge History of American
Music
(Cambridge Univ. Press, 1998); "Sacred Music," in
Encyclopedia
of New England Culture (Yale Univ. Press,
forthcoming)
Address: Eagle Hill School, 242 Old Petersham Road,
Hardwick, MA, 01037; 290 Wine Road, New Braintree, MA
01531; ncooke@ehs1.org
Web Page:
www.ehs1.org
[Updated 2006]
COOLEY, NICOLE
Fellowship: Artist 99, The Afflicted Girls: A book of
poetry
about the Salem Witch Trials (asst. prof. of English,
Queens College, City Univ. of
New
York)
Education: Brown, B.A., 88; Iowa, M.F.A., 90; Emory,
Ph.D.,
96
Current Position: assoc. prof. of English, Queens College, City
Univ. of New York
Fellowship Publications:
"Archival, Testimony: Poetry and the Salem Witch
Trials," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 110
(2000):
269-72;
The Afflicted Girls (Louisiana
State Univ.
Press, 2004) [chosen as one of the best poetry books of 2004 by Library
Journal
Other Publications: Resurrection (Louisiana State University
Press, 1996) [winner of the 1995 Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of
American Poets]
Address: Dept. of English, Queens College, CUNY,
65-30 Kissena Blvd., Flushing,
NY 11367-1597
Web Page:
http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/171
[Updated 2006]
CORMAN, CATHERINE A.
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 00-01, "Reading, Writing, and
Removal: Native
American Literacies, 1820-1851" (asst. prof. of
history, Harvard)
Education: Pomona, B.A., 84; Yale, M.A.,
M.Phil.,
93, Ph.D., 98
Current Position: non-resident fellow at the Charles Warren Center
for Studies
in American History, Harvard
Other Publications: Positively ADD: Real Success Stories to
Inspire your Dreams with Edward M. Hallowell, M.D. (New York: Walker
& Company, 2006)
Web Page: http://www.catherinecorman.com
[Updated 2006]
CORNELL, SAUL A.
Fellowship: Hiatt 87-88, "The Political Thought and
Culture
of the Antifederalists" (Andrew W. Mellon Fellow,
Pennsylvania)
Education: Amherst, B.A., 82; Univ. of Sussex,
81; Pennsylvania,
M.A., 83, Ph.D., 89
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Ohio
State
Fellowship Publications: "Aristocracy Assailed: The
Ideology
of Backcountry Anti-Federalism," Journal American History
76
(1990): 1148-72; The Other Founders: Anti-Federalism and
the
Dissenting Tradition in America (OIEAHC & Univ. of North
Carolina
Press, 1999)
Other Publications: "Observations on the `Late
Remarkable
Revolution in Government': Samuel Bryan and Aedanus Burke's
Unpublished
History of the Ratification Struggle in
Pennsyvania," Pennsylvania
Magazine of History and Biography (1988); "The Changing
Historical
Fortunes of the Anti-Federalists," Northwestern Univ. Law
Review
(1989); "Politics of the Middling Sort: The Bourgeois
Radicalism
of Abraham Yates, Melancton Smith and the New York
Antifederalists,"
in Paul Gilje and William Pencak eds., New York in the
Age of
the Constitution, (1992); "Early American History in a
Post-Modern
Age," William and Mary Quarterly 50
(1993) 329-341
Web Page:
http://history.osu.edu/people/person.cfm?ID=4
[Updated 2005]
CORRIGAN, JOHN
Fellowship: R.A. 90-91, "Reason, Passion, and Religion
in the
Eighteenth Century" (asst. prof. of religious studies,
Virginia)
Education: Chicago, Ph.D., 82
Current Position: Edwin Scott Gaustad prof. of
religion and
prof. of history, Florida State; dir., Institute for the
Study
of Emotion; Co-Ed., Journal of Southern Religion
Fellowship Publications: "`Habits from the Heart': The
American
Enlightenment and Religious Ideas about Emotion and
Habit," Journal
of Religion 73 (1993): 183-99; (co-author) Religion
in America
(Macmillan, 1998); Business of the Heart: Religion and
Emotion
in the Nineteenth Century (Univ. of California Press,
2001)
Other Publications: The Hidden Balance: Religion
and the
Social Theories of Charles Chauncy and Jonathan Mayhew
(New
York: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1987); The Prism of
Piety: Catholic
Congregational Clergy at the Beginning of the
Enlightenment
(New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1991); (with Winthrop
Hudson) Religion
in America (New York: Macmillan, 1991); Jews,
Christians,
Muslims (Prentice Hall, 1997); Reading in Judaism,
Christianity,
and Islam (Prentice Hall, 1998); Emotion and
Religion
(Greenwood, 2000);
ed. Religion and Emotion: Approaches and
Interpretations (Oxford, 2004)
Address: Religion Dept., M05 Dodd Hall, Florida State
University,
Tallahassee, FL 32306-1520
Web Page:
http://www.fsu.edu/~religion/People/Faculty/Dr_John_Corrigan.html
[Updated 2005]
COTLAR, SETH
Fellowship: Peterson 97-98, "In Paine's
Absence: The Europeanization
of American Political Thought,
1787-1803." (Ph.D. cand. in
history, Northwestern)
Education: Brown, B.A., 90; Northwestern, Ph.D.,
00
Current Position: asst. prof., Willamette
Fellowship Publications: In Paine's Absence
TheTran-Atlantic
Dynamics of American Popular Political Thought, 1789-1804
(Ph.D..
Diss., Northwestern Univ., 2000); "Radical Conceptions of
Property
Rights and Economic Equality in the Early Republic: The
Trans-Atlantic
Dimension" Explorations in Early American Culture
v. 4 (2000),
191-219; "Joseph Gales and the Making of the Jeffersonian
Middle
Class" in Peter Onuf, Jan Lewis, and James Horn, eds.,
Thomas
Jefferson and the Revolution of 1800 (forthcoming,
Univ. of
Virginia Press); "Re-thinking the Alien and Sedition Acts as
a Trans-Atlantic
Event," in David Waldstreicher, Jeffrey Pasley, an Andrew
Robertson,
eds., Beyond the Founders: New Approaches to the
Political History
of thet Early American Republic (forthcoming, Univ. of
North
Carolina Press)
Address: History Dept., Willamette University, 900
State
Street, Salem, OR 97301
Web Page:
http://www.willamette.edu/cla/history/cotlar_s.htm
[Updated 2005]
COUNTRYMAN, EDWARD
Fellowship: Haven 83-84, "Liberty, Liberalism, and the
Making
of Republican America" (senior lecturer, Warwick)
Education: Manhattan, B.A., 66; Cornell, M.A., 67,
Ph.D.,
71
Current Position: prof. of American history, Southern
Methodist
Fellowship Publications: The American Revolution
(1985);
"`To Secure the Blessings of Liberty': Language, Capitalism,
and
the Revolution," in Alfred F. Young, ed., Beyond the
American
Revolution (DeKalb: Northern Illinois Univ. Press,
1993)
Other Publications: A People in Revolution: The
American
Revolution and Political Society in New York
(1981); The
People's American Revolution (1984); contributor to
The British
Film Institute Companion to the Western
(1988); co-author, vol.1,
Who Built America (1989); "The Uses of Capital in
Revolutionary
America: The Case of the New York Loyalist
Merchants," William and Mary Quarterly (1992); co-author, A New
History of New
York State (forthcoming); "Indians, the Colonial Order,
and
the Social Significance of the American
Declaration," William and Mary Quarterly (1996); Americans: A
Collision of Histories (New York: Hill & Wang, 1996; paperback,
1997; British edition, London, I.B. Tauris, 1997)
Web Page:
http://faculty.smu.edu/ecountry/
[Updated 2005]
COUTO, NANCY VIEIRA
Fellowship: Artist 95, "Book of Poems and Prose
Pieces
on America Vesspucci" (tent. titled Amcan Escapade)
(Poet
and freelance ed./consultant, Ithaca, NY)
Education: Bridgewater State, B.S.,64; Cornell,
M.F.A., 80
Fellowship Results: readings from American
Escapade
at Cornell (10/10/96) and Book & Bowl, Ithaca, NY
(4/6/96);
Poems in the Letters of the Mohawk Alphabet, in The
Bookpress
Quarterly 2, no. 2
Other: The Face in theWater (Univ. of
Pittsburg Press,
1990); Gettysburg Rev. Award for 1994 in the Field of
Poetry; Agnes
Lynch Starrett , Univ. of Pittsburg Press, 1989
Address: 508 Turner Place, Ithaca, NY
14850; nvcouto[at]juno.com
[Updated 2001]
CRAIN, PATRICIA
Fellowship: Hiatt 92-93, "Cultures of Reading in the
American
Renaissance" (Ph.D. cand. in English and comparative
literature,
Columbia)
Fellowship: AAS-ASECS 97-98, "The Story of
A: Alphabetization
and American Literature from The New England Primer to The
Scarlet
Letter" (asst. prof. of English, Princeton)
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 05-06, "Spectral Literacy:
Children, Property, and Media in the Nineteenth Century United States
" (assoc. prof. of English, Minnesota)
Education: Bennington, B.A., 70; Columbia, M.A.,
89; Ph.D., 96
Current Position: assoc. prof. of English, New York
Fellowship Publications: The Story of
A: Alphabetization
and American Literature from the New England Primer to the
Scarlet
Letter (Ph.D. diss., Princeton, 1996; Stanford
Univ. Press,
2000) [Modern Language Association Prize for a First
Book, 2001]
"Children of Media, Children as Media: Optical Telegraphs, Indian Pupils,
and Joseph Lancaster's 'System' for Cultural Replication" in
Lisa Gitelman and Geoff Pingree, eds., New Media,
1750-1914: Studies in Cultural Definition and Change
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003)
[Updated 2005]
CRAWFORD, RICHARD
Fellowship: U.S. Steel 72-73, "A Bibliography of
American Sacred
Music Imprints Through 1810" (asst. prof. of music,
Michigan)
Fellowship: Mellon 73-74, "A Bibliography of American
Sacred
Music Imprints Through 1810" (asst. prof. of music,
Michigan)
Education: Michigan, B.M., 58, M.M., 59, Ph.D.,
65
Current Position: Hans T. David Distinguished
University Prof Emeritus, Michigan
Fellowship Publications: American Sacred Music
Imprints,
1698-1810: A Bibliography (American Antiquarian Society,
1990)
[Vincent H. Duckles Award]
Other Publications: Andrew Law: American
Psalmodist (1968);
William Billings of Boston (1975) [Otto Kinkeldey
Award for
Musical Excellence]; The Core Repertory of Early American
Psalmody
(1984) [Irving Lowens Award of the Sonneck Society for
American
Music]; (co-ed. and contrib.) A Celebration of American
Music
(1990); (co-author) Jazz Standards on Record,
1900-1942
(1992); The American Musical Landscape
(1993); Ed.-in-chief:
Music of the United States of America (MUSA), a
national
series of scholarly editions
Web Page:
http://www.music.umich.edu/faculty/emeritus/crawford.richard.lasso
[Updated 2005]
CRESSY, DAVID
Fellowship: Daniels 80-81, "Literacy and Its Uses in
Early America"
(visiting assoc. prof. of history, Claremont
Grad. School)
Education: Cambridge, B.A., 67, M.A., 71, Ph.D.,
73
Current Position: prof. of history, Ohio State
Fellowship Publications: "The Environment for
Literacy: Accomplishment
and Context in Seventeenth-Century England and New
England," in
Daniel P. Resnick ed., Literacy in Historical
Perspective,
(Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1983); Coming
Over: Migration
and Communication between England and New England,
1620-1720
(New York: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1987)
Other Publications: Literacy and the Social
Order: Reading
and Writing in Tudor and Stuart England (New
York: Cambridge
Univ. Press, 1980); "Kinship and Kin Interaction in Early
Modern
England," Past and Present 113 (1986); Bonfire and
Bells:
National Memory and the Protestant Calendar in Elizabethan
and Stuart
England (Berkeley and Los Angeles: Univ. of California
Press,
1990); "De la Fiction dans les Archives? ou le Monstre de
1569,"
Annales E.S.C. (1993); "Purification, Thanksgiving,
and the
Churching of Women in Post-Reformation England," Past and
Present
(1993); "Literacy in Context: Meaning and Measurement in
Early Modern
England," in John Brewer and Roy Porter, eds.,
Consumption and
the World of Goods (London: Routledge, 1993); Birth,
Marriage
and Death: Ritual, Religion on the Life Cycle in Turdor and
Stuart
England (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1997);
Travesties and Transgressions in Tudor and Stuart England: Tales of
Discord and Dissension (Oxford Univ. Press, 2000);
Agnes Bowker's Cat: Travesties and Transgression in Tudor and Stuart
England (Oxford Univ. Press, 2001); Society and Culure in
Early
Modern England (Ashgate, 2003)
Web Page:
http://history.osu.edu/people/person.cfm?ID=678
[Updated 2005]
CROSBY, SARA
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 05-06, "The Female Poisoner and
Poular Print Media in New England, 1640-1860"
(recent Ph.D., Notre Dame)
Education: Alabama, B.A., 97; Notre Dame, M.A., 00
[Updated 2005]
CULLON, JOSEPH
Fellowship: Peterson 00-01, "The Work of Many
Hands: Ships and
the Economic Culture of Early New
England" (Ph.D. cand. in
history, Wisconsin at Madison)
Fellowship: Mellon Post-Dissertation 05-06, "Colonial
Shipwrights and their World: Men, Women, and Markets in Early New England"
(asst. prof. of history, Dartmouth)
Education: Cornell, B.S., 91; Wisconsin at Madison,
M.S.,
95, M.A., 98, Ph.D.
Current Position: asst. prof. of history,
Dartmouth
Web Page:
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~history/faculty/cullon.html
[Updated 2005]
CUMMINS, MAUREEN
Fellowship: Hearst Artist 00, "Heretics, Heathens,
and
Hellians; Animals,Cannibals and Savages; and Witches,
Bitches, and
Faggots" (book artist, Brooklyn, NY)
Education: Cooper Union, B.F.A., 85
Fellowship Publications: The Business is
Suffering 2003, edition of 50, 56 pages, 13"x9"
Other Publications: The Masque (Washington
Joshua
Heller Rare Books, 1996)
Exhibitions: "Marginalia" at the Ceres Gallery, New
York,
January 4 - 26, 2002;
"Book Artist as Witness" at Swathmore College Library,
January 10-February 28, 2005
Address: 543 Union Street, #40, Brooklyn NY
11215; 314 13th
Street, Brooklyn NY 11215;
maureencummins[at]earthlink.net
Web Page:
http://www.booklyn.org/artists/Maureen%20Cummins,%20High%20Falls,%20NY.php
[Updated 2005]
Letter D
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