Directory of Fellows and
Research Associates, 1972-Present
E
EASTMAN, CAROLYN
Fellowship: Peterson 97-98, "A Nation of
Speechiers: Oratory,
Print, and the Making of Gendered American Public,
1780-1850"
(Ph.D. cand. in history, Johns Hopkins)
Fellowship: Last 08-09, "Learning to See: Gender in the
Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World" (asst. prof. of history, Texas at
Austin)
Education: California at Santa Cruz, B.A., 88; New
Hampshire, M.A., 96; Johns Hopkins, Ph.D.
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Texas at
Austin
Fellowship Publications: "A Nation of
Speechiers": Oratory,
Print, and the Making of Gendered American Public,
1780-1830
(Johns Hopkins, 2001)
Web Page:
https://webspace.utexas.edu/eastmanc/index.html
[Updated 2008]
ECHOLS, PAUL C.
(Died, Fall 1994)
Fellowship: Daniels 78-79, "The Development of Revival
Music
in the U.S.: 1820-1860" (Ph.D. cand., New York Univ.)
Education: Duke, B.A., 66; New York, Ph.D.
Other Publications: Articles on hymnody,
nineteenth-century
American religious and musical figures, in New Grove
Dictionary
of American Music' "Romance of the Rose," a medieval
pageant,
1994
[Updated 1994]
EISENSTADT, PETER
Fellowship: Haven 84-85, "Weather and Weather Prediction
in
Colonial America" (Ph.D. cand. in history, New York
Univ.)
Education: New York Univ., Ph.D., 90
Current Position: editor in chief, Encylopedia of New
York State
Fellowship Publications: "Weather Prediction in
Seventeenth-Century
Massachusetts Almanacs," in Barbara Karsky and Elise
Marienstras,
ed., Travail et loisir dans les soci.tes
pre-industrielles
(Nancy, France, 1991)
Other Publications:
managing ed., The Encyclopedia of New York City;
ed., The Encyclopedia of New York State (Syracuse Univ.
Press, 2005)
[Updated 2005]
EDELSTEIN, SARI
Fellowship: Peterson 08-09, "The Novel & The News:
Women and the Politics of U.S. Print Culture Before 1900"
(Ph.D. cand. in English, Brandeis)
Education:
[Updated 2008]
ELKINS, KIMBERLY
Fellowship: Hearst 07 "A novel about the lives of
Laura Bridgman, Julia Ward Howe, and Sarah Wight set between 1829 and
1876" (fiction writer, New York City)
Education: Duke, B.A., 87; Florida State, M.A., 03
[Updated 2007]
ERICKSON, PAUL
Fellowship: Peterson 98-99, "Welcome to Sodom: The
Cultural
Work of the American City-Mysteries Novel,
1840-1860" (Ph.D. cand.
in American civilization, Texas at Austin)
Education: Chicago, B.A., 92; Texas at Austin, M.A.,
97; Ph.D. 05
[Updated 2007]
ERHARD, KATHARINA
Fellowship: Ebeling 04-05, "An Empire in Many Respects
the Most Interesting in the World': Choreographies of Empire in Early
American Plays" (Ph.D. cand. in American studies, Univ. of
Regensburg)
Education: Brown, M.A., 00; Univ. of Regensburg, M.A., 02
[Updated 2005]
EUSTACE, NICOLE
Fellowship: Peterson 08-09, "War Ardor: Sex and
Sentiment in the War of 1812" (asst. prof. of history, New York)
Education: Yale, B.A., 94; Pennsylvania, Ph.D., 01
Other Publications:
"Vehement Movements: Debates on Emotion, Self, and Society during the
Seven Years. War in Pennsylvania," Explorations in Early American
Culture 2001 5: 79-117;
"'The Cornerstone of a Copious Work':
Courtship, Love, and Power in Eighteenth-Century Philadelphia,"
Journal of Social History 2001 34(3): 517-546.
[Updated 2008]
EVELEV, JOHN
Fellowship: Botein 96-97, "'Tolerable Entertainment:'
Herman
Melville, the Literary Profession, and the Cultural Life of
Antebellum
New York" (Recent Ph.D. in English, Duke)
Education: Bowdoin, B.A., 87; Duke, M.A., 90, Ph.D.,
95
Current Position: asst. prof. of English,
Univ. of Missouri-Columbia
Fellowship Publications:
"'Made in the
Marquesas': Typee, Tattooing
and Melville's Critique of the Literary
Marketplace," Arizona
Quarterly 48:4 (1992); "The Contrast: The Problem of
Theatricality
and Political and Social Crisis in Postrevolutionary
America," Early
American Literature 31:1 (1996);
"'Every One to His
Trade': Literary Form and Professional Ideology in
Mardi," American Literature (June 2003): 305-33
Web Page:
http://www.missouri.edu/~engwww/people/evelev.html
[Updated 2005]
EVERTON, MICHAEL J.
Fellowship: Reese 03-04, "Moral Vampires and the Blood
of Genius:
Vocational Ethics in Early American Literary
Culture" (recent Ph.D. in English, North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Education: James Madison, B.A., 95; Tennessee at Knoxville, M.A.,
97; North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Ph.D., 03
Current Position: asst. prof. of English, Simon Fraser
Fellowship Publications: "The Courtesies of Authorship: Hannah
Adams and Authorial Ethics in the Early Republic," forthcoming in
Legacy, 2003.
Address: English Dept., Simon Fraser University, 8888 University
Dr., Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6 Canada;
meverton[at]sfu.ca
[Updated 2005]
Letter F
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