Directory of Fellows and
Research Associates, 1972-Present
H
HA, POLLY
Fellowship: Peterson 06-07, "The Decalogue and
Formation of Denomination" (research fellow in
history, Cambridge)
Education: Yale, B.A., 02
[Updated 2006]
HABERMAN, ROBB
Fellowship: Legacy 04-05, "Magazine Production and
the
Economics of the
Print Trade in Post-Revolutionary America" (Ph.D. cand. in
history, Connecticut)
Education: Alabama at Tuscaloosa, B.A., 92; Georgia State, M.A., 98
[Updated 2005]
HACKENBERG, MICHAEL
Fellowship: Boni 86-87, "The Subscription
Publishing
Phenomenon";
"William Still's Selling of The Underground Railroad in
Philadelphia";
"The Firm of Deming and Francis in Wethersfield, CT";
"The
Career
of Robert Sears of New York" (asst. prof. of
librarianship,
Chicago)
Education: Wichita State, B.A., 69; California
at
Berkeley,
M.L.S., 73, Ph.D., 83
Current Position: partner, Bolerium Books, San
Francisco
Other Publications: "Hawking Subscription Books in
1870: A Salesman's
Prospectus from Western Pennsylvania," PBSA 78
(1984); (ed.
and author) "The Subscription Publishing Network in
Nineteenth-Century
America," in Getting the Books Out: Papers of the
Chicago
Conference
on the Book in 19th-Century America (Washington,
DC: Library
of Congress, 1987)
[Updated 1997]
HADDEN, SALLY E.
Fellowship: Peterson 94-95, "Slave Patrols of
the
Old South"
and "Newspapers as Disseminators of Legal
information"
(assoc. prof. of history, Toledo)
Education: North Carolina at Chapel Hill, B.A.,
84; Harvard
M.A., 85, Ph.D. 93; Harvard Law, J.D. 89
Current Position: asst. prof. of history and
law,
Florida
State
Fellowship Publications: "Colonial and
Revolutionary
Era
Slave Patrols in Virginia," in Michael Bellesiles, ed.,
Lethal
Imagination (New York Univ. Press, 1998); Slave
Patrols:
Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas
(Harvard
Univ.
Press, 2001)
Other Publications: "The War of 1812," in John
Findlay and
Frank Thackeray, eds., Events that Shaped Nineteenth
Century
America (Greenwood Press); "James Madison,"in John
Findlay and
Frank Thackeray, eds., Statesmen who Changed
theWorld
(Greenwood
Press, 1993); "Redefining the Boundaries of Public
History: Mystic
Seaport Goes Online and On Board with Amistad," OAH
Newsletter
(May 1998); Thomas Ruffin and State v. Mann," in Christ
Waldrep
and Donald Nieman,eds., Race and Criminal Justice in
the
Nineteenth-Century
(Univ. of Georgia Press, 1999)
Web Page:
http://mailer.fsu.edu/~shadden/
[Updated 2005]
HAGEDORN, NANCY L.
Fellowship: Peterson 87-88, "Mediating the Exchange
of
Cultures:
Interpreters among the Iroquois,
1664-1775" (Ph.D. cand. in
history, William & Mary)
Fellowship: Peterson 98-99, "Interpreters Among
the
Iroquois,
1664-1775" (asst. prof. of history, St.
John's)
Education: Cincinnati, B.A., William & Mary,
Ph.D.,
95
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, SUNY
Fredonia
Fellowship Publications: "`Faithful, Knowing,
and
Prudent':
Andrew Montour as Interpreter and Cultural Broker,
1740-1772," in
Margaret Connell Szasz, ed., Between Indian and
White
Worlds:
The Cultural Broker (Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma
Press,
1994);
"'A Friend to go Between Them': Interpretators Among
the
Iroquois,
1664-1775," (Ph.D. diss., William & Mary, 1995)
Other Publications: "`A Friend to Go Between
Them': The Interpreter
as Cultural Broker during Anglo-Iroquois Councils,
1740-70," Ethnohistory
35 (1988): 60-80; (with James M. Gaynor) Tools:
Working
Wood
in Eighteenth-Century America (Williamsburg:
Colonial
Williamsburg
Fdn., 1993); "Broker of Understanding: Interpretors as
Agents of
Cultural Exchange in Colonial New York," New York
History
(October 1995), 279-408 [Honorable Mention Award in
Kerr
History
Prize Competition of New York Historical Association,
1996]
Web Page:
http://www.fredonia.edu/department/history/hagedorn.asp
[Updated 2005]
HAGENBUCH, GARY L.
Fellowship: K-12 95, "To Develop a Curriculum Unit
Based
upon
Worcester,1825-1850" (Grade 6, West Tatnuck
School,
Worcester,
MA)
Education: Worcester State, B.A., 68, M.Ed. 72,
C.A.G.S.,87;
Assumption, M.A., 75; Harvard, M.Ed., 89
Current Position: grade 5, Thorndyke Road
School,
Worcester
Fellowship Results: developing a curriculum unit
focusing on
Worcester in the 1830s; workshops on local history
museum
resources
Other: History teacher of the year - Worcester
Public
Schools
(1984); Hiatt Fellowship -Harvard Grad. School. of
Ed. (1989); Thomas
Green Public Service Award-WMRB (1991)
Address: 119 Monadnock Rd., Worcester, MA
01609; glhagenbuch[at]yahoo.com
[Updated 2001]
HALE, MATTHEW
Fellowship: Legacy 00-01, "Neither Britons nor
Frenchmen: The
Creation of American Nationality,
1789-1815" (Ph.D. cand. in
American history, Brandeis)
Education: Middlebury, B.A., 93, Brandeis, Ph.D.,
02
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Mississippi
State
Web Page:
http://www.msstate.edu/dept/history/hale.html
[Updated 2005]
HALEY, MEGAN
Fellowship: Peterson 96-97, "Pest Control
Strategies
and
Their Social Implications in the Chesapeake Area,
1600-1800"
(Ph.D. cand. in American studies, William &
Mary)
Education: Wellesley, B.A., 90; William &
Mary,
M.A., 93
Current Position: curator, the Stonewall Jackson
House
[Updated 1997]
HALL, DAVID D.
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 81-82, "History of Popular
Culture
in Colonial New England" (prof. of history, Boston
Univ.)
Fellowship: Mellon Dist. Scholar-in-Residence
04-05,
"A New History of Puritan America" (Bartlett Professor of
New
England Church History, Harvard Divinity School)
Education: Harvard, B.A., 58; Yale, Ph.D.,
64
Current Position: prof. of American religious
history, Harvard
Divinity School
Fellowship Publications: "The Uses of Literacy
in New
England,1600-1850,"
in William L. Joyce et al., ed., Printing and
Society in
Early
America (Worcester: AAS, 1983); "A World of
Wonders: The
Mentality
of the Supernatural in Seventeenth-Century New
England," in
David
D. Hall and David G. Allen eds., Seventeenth-Century
New
England
(Boston, 1984); Worlds of Wonder, Days of
Judgment: Popular Religious
Belief in Early New England (New York: Knopf,
1989) [co-winner
of 1991 Merle Curti Prize]
Other Publications: The Faithful Shepherd: A
History of
the New England Ministry in the Seventeenth Century
(Chapel
Hill, 1972); Puritanism in Seventeenth-Century
Massachusetts
(1968); co-ed., with John Murrin and Thad Tate,
Saints and
Revolutionaries: Essays on Early American History
(1983); Witch-hunting
in New England, 1638-1692: A Documentary History
(Boston, 1990)
Web Page:
http://www.hds.harvard.edu/faculty/hall.html
[Updated 2005]
HALL, MICHAEL G.
Fellowship: Daniels 75-76, "The Diaries of
Increase
Mather"
(prof. of history, Texas)
Education: Princeton, A.B., 49; Johns Hopkins,
Ph.D.,
56
Current Position: prof. emeritus, Texas at Austin
Fellowship Publications: co-author, with William
Joyce, "Three
Manuscripts of Increase Mather," Proceedings of
the
American
Antiquarian Society 86 (1976); co-author, with
William
Joyce,
"The Half-Way Covenant of 1662: Some New
Evidence,"
Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 87
(1977); The
Last American Puritan: The Life of Increase Mather
(1988)
Other Publications: ed., The Autobiography of
Increase Mather,"
Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society
72
(1961);
Edward Randolph and the American Colonies,
1776-1703
(Chapel
Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1960); co-ed.,
with
Lawrence
Leder and Michael Kammen, The Glorious Revolution in
America
(Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1964)
Web Page:
http://www.utexas.edu/courses/hall/
[Updated 2005]
HALTMAN, KENNETH
Fellowship: Peterson 93-94, "The Invention of
Ethnographic Portraiture"
(Postdoctoral fellow in the history of art, Bryn
Mawr)
Education: Wesleyan, B.A., 80; Yale, M.A., 85,
Ph.D.,
92
Current Position: assoc. prof. of art history and
American
studies, Michigan State
Other Publications: "Private Impressions and Public
Views: The
Long Expedition Sketchbooks of Titian Ramsay Peale,
1819-1820,"
Yale Univ. Art Gallery Bulletin
(1989): 38-53; "Between Science
and Art: Titian Ramsey Peale's Long Expedition
Sketches,
Newly Discovered
at the State Historical Society of
Iowa," Palimpsest: Journal
of the Iowa State Historical Society 74
(1993): 62-81; "Titian
Ramsay Peale: Specimen Portraiture, or Natural History
as
Family
History" in The Peale Family: Creation of A Legacy,
1770-1870,
ed. Lillian B. Miller, exh. cat., (Abbeville Press w/
The
Natl.
Port. Gall, 1996): 186-201, 294-295; "The Poetics of
Geologic Reverie:
Figures of Source and Origin in Samuel Seymour's
Landscapes
of the
Rocky Mountains," Huntington Library Quarterly
(Fall
1997);
forty-three art. and bio. ent. in The New
Encyclopedia of
the American West, ed. Howard R. Lamar (Yale
Univ. Press, 1998);
Earth and Reveries of Will, Gaston Bachelard
(Paris,
Josi
Corti, 1997), critical translation with notes (The
Dallas
Institute
of Humanities and Culture, forthcoming); Figures in
A
Western
Landscape: Expeditionary Art and Science in the Early
Republic
(Princeton Univ. Press, forthcoming)
Web Page:
http://www.art.msu.edu/people/haltman.html
[Updated 2005]
HALTTUNEN, KAREN
Fellowship: Peterson 87-88, "Murder and the Gothic
Imagination
in American Culture" (assoc. prof. of history and
American
culture, Northwestern)
Fellowship: R.A. 88-89, "Murder and the Gothic
Imagination
in American Culture" (assoc. prof. of history and
American
culture, Northwestern)
Fellowship: Peterson 95-96, "Jacob's Pillows:
Natural
History
and Memory in the Making of New England" (prof. of
history,
California at Davis)
Fellowship: Mellon Dist. Scholar-in-Residence
99-00,
"Jacob's
Pillows:
Natural History and Memory in the Making of New
England" (prof.
of history, California at Davis)
Education: Brown, B.A., 73; Yale, Ph.D., 79
Current Position: prof. of history, Southern
California
Fellowship Publications: "`Domestic
Differences': Competing
Narratives of Womanhood in the Murder Trial of Lucretia
Chapman,"
in Shirley Samuels, ed., The Culture of Sentiment:
Race,
Gender,
and Sentimentality in 19th-Century America (New
York: Oxford
Univ. Press, 1992); "Early American Narratives: The
Birth of
Horror,"
in Richard Fox and Jackson Lears, eds., The Power of
Culture:
Critical Essays in American History (Chicago: Univ.
of
Chicago
Press, 1993); Murder Most Foul! The Killer and the
American Gothic
Imagination (Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press,
1998); "Mountain Christenings: Landscape and Memory in
Edward Hitchcocks New England," in Peter Benes, ed., New England
Celebrates: Spectacle, Commemoration, and Festivity (Boston
University
Scholarly Publications, 2002)
Other Publications: Confidence Men and
Painted
Women:
A Study of Middle-Class Culture in America,
1830-1870
(1983);
"Gothic Imagination and Social Reform: The Haunted
Houses of
Lyman
Beecher, Henry Ward Beecher, and Harriet Beecher
Stowe," in
Eric
Sundquist ed., New Essays on `Uncle Tom's Cabin,'
(1986);
"The Domestic Drama of Louisa May Alcott," Feminist
Studies 10
(1984): 233-54
Web Page:
http://www.usc.edu/assets/college/faculty/profiles/2786.html
[Updated 2005]
HAMILTON, CYNTHIA
Fellowship: Peterson 01-02, "Representations of the
Freedmen
1861-76" (senior lecturer, Manchester
Metropolitan)
Education: Wheaton, A.B., 71; Sussex, D.Phil.,
84
[Updated 2001]
HAMILTON, WILLIAM B.
Fellowship: Daniels 79-80, "Preachers and
Professionalism"
(Ph.D. cand. in history, Yale)
[Updated 1997]
HANCOCK, DAVID J.
Fellowship: AAS-ASECS 03-04, "Oceans of Wine,
Empires of Commerce: Madeira Wine and the Self-Organization of the Atlantic
Market Economy, 1640-1815"
Education: William & Mary, A.B., 80; Yale, A.M., 83; Harvard,
A.M., 84, Ph.D., 90
Current Position: prof. of history, Michigan
Fellowship Publications: Oceans of Wine (Yale University
Press,
2008)
Other Publications: Citizens of the World (1995);
Commission Merchants, Slave Traders and Absentee Planters of the
Late-Seventeenth Century (2002)
Address: hancockd[at]umich.edu
Web Page:
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/history/facstaff/facultydetail.asp?ID=72
[Updated 2008]
HANDSMAN, RUSSELL G.
Fellowship: Peterson, 93-94, "Challenging the
Silences in
New England History: John Milton Earle and the Indian
People
of
Massachusetts" (independent scholar, Litchfield,
CT)
Education: Franklin & Marshall, B.A., 70;
American,
Ph.D.,
76
[Updated 1997]
HANSEN, KAREN V.
Fellowship: Peterson 88-89, "The Social
Dimension
of Laborers'
Lives, 1810-60" (Ph.D. cand. in sociology,
California
at Berkeley)
Education: California at Santa Barbara, B.A.,77,
M.A., 79;
California at Berkeley, Ph.D., 89
Current Position: prof. of sociology &
women's and gender studies,
Brandeis
Fellowship Publications: "`Helped Put in a
Quilt': Male
Intimacy and Men's Work in Nineteenth-Century New
England,"
Gender and Society 3 (1989): 334-54
Other Publications: "Women's Unions and the
Search for
Political Identity," Socialist Review 86
(1986): 67-95;
"Feminist Conceptions of Public and Private: A
Critical
Analysis,"
Berkeley Journal of Sociology 32
(1987):105-28;
Women,
Class, and the Feminist Imagination
(Philadelphia: Temple Univ.
Press, 1990); A Very Social Time: Crafting Community
in
Antebellum
New England (Berkeley and Los Angeles: Univ. of
California Press,
1994); (ed. w/Anita I.Garey) Families in the
U.S.: Kinship and
Domestic Politics (Temple Univ. Press, 1998);
"'No
Kisses
Is Like Youres': An Erotic Friendship between Two
African-American
Women during the Mid-19th Century" Gender
History 7,
no.
2 (August 1995); Not-So-Nuclear Families: Class, Gender,
and Networks of Care (Rutgers University Press, 2005)
Address: Brandeis University, Sociology, MS071, Waltham, MA,
02454-9110; khansen[at]brandeis.edu
Web Page:
http://www.brandeis.edu/departments/sociology/hansen.html
[Updated 2006]
HANSON, CHARLES PARKER
Fellowship: Peterson 91-92, "From the Quebec Act to
the
French
Alliance:Anti-Catholicism in Revolutionary New
England" (Ph.D.
cand. in history, California at Berkeley)
Education: Harvard, A.B., 82; California at
Berkeley,
M.A.,
89; California at Berkeley, Ph.D., 1993
Current Position: U.S. history dept. chair, Menlo
School
Fellowship Publications: A Necessary Virtue:
The
Reconfiguration
of Religious Differences in Revolutionary New
England
(Univ.
Press of Virginia, 1998)
Web Page:
http://sun.menloschool.org/%7Echanson/
[Updated 2005]
HARLEY, JOHN BRIAN
(Died, Dec. 20, 1991)
Fellowship: Daniels 76-77, "Maps in
Eighteenth-Century
North
American Libraries" (reader in geography,
Exeter)
Education: Birmingham (England), B.A., 55,
Ph.D., 60,
D.Litt.,
85
Fellowship Publications: "Atlas Maker for
Independent
America,"
Geographical Magazine 49 (1977): 766-71
Other Publications: Co-author, with Barbara
Petchenik
and
Lawrence Towner, Mapping the American Revolutionary
War (Chicago:
Univ. of Chicago Press, 1978); co-author, with David
Woodward, The
History of Cartography, vol.1 (Chicago: Univ. of
Chicago
Press,
1987); vol. 2, book 1, Cartography in the
Traditional
Islamic
and South Asian Societies (Chicago: Univ. of
Chicago
Press,
1992)
[Updated 1992]
HARRIS, MICHAEL H.
Fellowship: U.S. Steel 72-72, "Book Traders and
Books in
the
Ohio Valley, 1800-1850" (asst. prof. of library
science, Kentucky)
Education: North Dakota, B.A., 63; Illinois,
M.S.L.S., 64;
Indiana, Ph.D., 71
Current Position: prof. emeritus, Kentucky
Fellowship Publications: "Books Stocked by Six
Indiana General
Stores, 1800-1850," Journal of Library History 9
(1974);
"Subscription Book Sales on the Frontier," American
Book
Collector
26 (1976); "Books! Books! Books! The Estate Auction as
a
Source
of Books in Frontier Southern Indiana,
1800-1850," Proof
5 (1977): 15-26; co-author with Wayne Cutler, Justin
Winsor: Scholar-Librarian
(1980); "`Spiritual Cakes upon the Waters': The
Church
as a
Disseminator of the Printed Word on the Ohio Valley
Frontier
to
1850," in Michael Hackenberg, ed., Getting the Books
Out
(Washington:
Library of Congress, 1987), pp. 98-120; The Age of
Jewett: Charles
Coffin Jewett and American Librarianship, 1841-1868
(Littleton,
CO: Libraries Unlimited, 1975)
Other Publications: Into the Future: The
Foundations of
Library and Information Services in the Post Industrial
Era
(Ablex, 1993)
Web Page:
http://www.uky.edu/CommInfoStudies/SLIS/svitae.htm
[Updated 2005]
HARRISON, CANDICE L.
Fellowship: Peterson 06-07, "The Politics of Exchange
in Philadelphia's Public Markets, 1770-1859" (Ph.D. cand. in
history, Emory)
Education: Emory, B.A., 99; M.A., 05
[Updated 2006]
HARTHORN, STEVEN P.
Fellowship: Botein 02-03, "James Fenimore Cooper
and the American Literary Market, 1838-1851" (Ph.D. cand. in English,
Tennessee at Knoxville)
Education: Calvin, B.A., 94; Tennessee, M.A.,
96, Ph.D., 05
Current Position: asst. prof. of English,
Williams Baptist
Fellowship Publications: James Fenimore
Cooper, Professional Authorship, and the American Literary Marketplace,
1838-1851 (diss., 2005)
Current Position: Williams Baptist College, Dept. of
English, P.O. Box 3654, Walnut Ridge, AR 72476
[Updated 2007]
HATCH, NATHAN O.
Fellowship: Daniels 77-78, "From Revolution to
Reaction"
(asst. prof. of history, Notre Dame)
Education: Wheaton, B.A., 68; Washington, M.A.,
72,
Ph.D.,
74
Current Position: Provost, Notre Dame
Other Publications: "The Christian Movement
and the
Demand
for a Theology of the People," Journal of
American
History
(1980); co-ed., with Mark A. Noll, The Bible in
America
(1982); co-ed., with Harry S. Stout, Jonathan
Edwards and
the
American Experience (New York: Oxford, 1988);
The
Democratization
of American Christianity (New Haven: Yale Univ.
Press,
1989);
ed., The Professions in American History, (Notre
Dame, 1988)
Web Page:
http://www.nd.edu/~history/faculty/profiles/hatchno.shtml
[Updated 2005]
HATCHER, JEFFREY
Fellowship: Artist 95, "Sockdology, a Play about
the
Actors
in the Play Our American Cousin" (playwright,
Minneapolis,
MN)
Education: Denison, B.A., 80
Fellowship Works: Sockdology
Other Works: Stage Beauty (distributed by
Lions Gate Films, 2004)
[Updated 1997]
HAULMAN, KATE (CATHERINE A.)
Fellowship: Peterson 99-00, "Dress Display and the
Politics
of Fashion in Eighteenth Century
America" (Ph.D. cand. in history,
Cornell)
Education: Florida State, B.A., 94; Southern
Methodist, M.A.,
96; Cornell, M.A., 98, Ph.D. 02
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, Ohio State
Fellowship Publications:
"A Short History of the High Roll: Big Hair, Eighteenth-Century Style,"
Common-place 2 (October 2001); "Room in Back: Before
and Beyond the Nation in Women's/Gender History," in Journal of Women's
History, 15 (Spring 2003)
Web Page:
http://history.osu.edu//people/person.cfm?ID=2203
[Updated 2006]
HAWLEY, ELIZABETH HAVEN
Fellowship: Reese 02-03, "American Publishers of
Indecent Books,
1840-1890" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Georgia Institute
of
Technology)
Education: Baylor, B.A., 87; Georgia Institute
of
Technology,
M.A., 01, Ph.D. 05
Fellowship Publications: "Mechanical Fingerprints and the
Technology of
Nineteenth-Century
American Erotica," University of Toronto Quarterly 73
(2004): 1036-50
Web Page:
http://www.prism.gatech.edu/~gt9037a/wElizabeth%20Haven%20Hawley.htm
[Updated 2006]
HAYNES, APRIL
Fellowship: Hench 00-10, "Riotous Flesh: Confronting Gender and Sexuality through Grahamite Health Reform, 1830-1860"
Education: San Francisco State University, B.A.; California at Santa Barbara, M.A., Ph.D., 09
[Updated 2009]
HEADLEY, JANET
Fellowship: Drawn to Art 02-03, "Structure in Urban
Space: Public
Monuments in Boston, 1825-1897" (assoc. prof. and
chair of art history,
Loyola)
Education: Delaware, B.A., 74; Temple, M.A.,
77; Maryland,
Ph.D., 88
[Updated 2005]
HEBEL, UDO J.
Fellowship: Peterson 00-01, "Forefather' Day
Orations
and Celebrations
between the American Revolution and the Civil
War" (chair,
American studies, Univ. of Regensburg, Germany)
Education: Mainz, Ph.D., 88; habilitation Mainz,
95
Current Position: prof. and chair of American
studies, Univ.
of Regensburg, Germany
Fellowship Publications:
"The Rise and Fall of New England Forefathers' Day as a
Site of National American Memory," Sites of
Memory in American Literatures and Cultures. ed. Udo J.
Hebel (Heidelberg: 2003): 141-192;
"Forefathers' Day Orations, 1769-1865: An Introduction
and Checklist," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 110
(2000): 377-416
Other Publications:
"Survival Without Seasickness: Cotton Mather's Miniature Anthology of
Sea Deliverance Narratives in Magnalia Christi Americana." The
Sea and the American Imagination. ed. Klaus Benesch, Jon-K Adams,
Kerstin Schmidt (Tuebingen: Stauffenburg, 2004): 15-36;
"Historical Bonding With an
Expiring Heritage: Revisiting the Plymouth Tercentenary
Festivities
of 1920/21,"
Celebrating Ethnicity and Nation: American Festive
Culture from
the Revolution to the Early Twentieth Century.
ed. Geneviève
Fabre, Jürgen Heideking, Kai Dreisbach (New
York: Berghahn,
2001):
257-297; "Advocating a 'Peaceable Condition': On
Rhetorics
of Peace
and Order in Seventeenth-Century New England,"
American
Studies
and Peace. ed. Dorothea Steiner and Thomas
Hartl. (Frankfurt:
Lang, 2001): 127-136; "The Negotiation of Puritan New
England and
Some Seventeenth-Century Origins of an American
Rhetoric of
Cultural
Contradistinction," Negotiations of America's
National
Identity.
ed. Roland Hagenbüchle and Josef Raab
(Tübingen: Stauffenburg, 2000):
1: 95-136; "New England Forefathers' Day Celebrations
Between the
American Revolution and the Civil War," Ceremonies
and
Spectacles:
Performing American Culture. ed. Teresa Alves et
al. (Amsterdam:
VU Univ. P, 2000): 111-143; "'A Stranger in a Strange
Land': Some
Account of the Fore Part of the Life of Elizabeth
Ashbridge
(1774)
and the (Inter) Cultural Inscription of American
Autobiographical
Writing," Early America Re-Explored: New Readings in
Colonial,
Early National, and Antebellum Culture. ed. Klaus
H. Schmidt
and Fritz Fleischmann (New York: Lang, 2000): 183-200;
ed.,
The
Construction and Contestation of American Cultures and
Identities
in the Early National Period (Heidelberg: Winter,
1999); "The
Forefathers' Day Celebrations of 1802 and the Enactment
of
Federalist
Constructions of the American Republic," The
Construction
and
Contestation of American Cultures and Identities in the
Early National
Period. ed. Udo J. Hebel. (Heidelberg: Winter,
1999): 303-330;
"'A Proper Recollection of These Things': New England
Forefathers'
Day Orations 1769-1820 and the National Consecration of
a
Colonial
Past," Remembering the Individual/Regional/ National
Past.
ed. Waldemar Zacharasiewicz (Tübingen:
Stauffenburg,
1999): 31-58;
"Those Images of Jealousie": Identitäten und
Alteritäten
im puritanischen
Neuengland des 17. Jahrhunderts (Frankfurt: Lang,
1997); "Sanctioned
Images: Court Orders, Legal Codes, Synodal Resolutions,
and
the
Cultural Contestation of Seventeenth-Century Puritan
New
England,"
The Historical and Political Turn in Literary
Studies. ed.
Winfried Fluck. [REAL: Yearbook of Research in
English
and American
Literature 11] (Tübingen: Narr, 1995): 43-74;
ed.,
Transatlantic
Encounters (Trier: WVT, 1995); "'The Events of that
sad
Catastrophe,
Anno 1692': A Note on Contemporary Representations of
the
Salem
Witchcraft Persecutions," Die Salemer
Hexenverfolgungen: Perspektiven-Kontexte-Repräsentationen
1692-1992. ed. Winfried Herget. (Trier: WVT,
1994): 263-275
Web Page:
http://www.uni-regensburg.de/Universitaet/Forschungsbericht/aktuell/phil4/prof23b.htm
[Updated 2008]
HEINZER, HOLLY
Fellowship: Peterson 00-01, "On the Move: The Means
and
Meanings
of Travel in Northeastern America,
1750-1850" (Ph.D. cand.
in history, Yale)
Education: Haverford, B.A., 95
[Updated 2000]
HELD, BEVERLY ORLOVE
Fellowship: Hiatt 80-81, "American
Festivals--The
Early Republican"
(Ph.D. cand. in history, Michigan)
Education: Pennsylvania, B.A., 72, M.A.,
74; Michigan, Ph.D.,
87
Current Position: lecturer in history, San
Francisco
State
[Updated 1997]
HELLER, LEE ELLEN
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 89-90, "The Novel as Popular
Literature:
American Fiction in the 18th and 19th
Centuries" (asst. prof. of
English, Mercer)
Fellowship: R.A. 94-95, "The Uses of Fiction:
Novel
Reading
and American Culture, 1720-1860" (asst. prof. of
English, Mercer)
Education: Scripps, B.A., 80; Brandeis, M.A.,
82,
Ph.D.,
88
Current Position: educational consultant
Fellowship Publications: "Frankenstein and the
Cultural
Uses
of Gothic," in Johanna M. Smith ed., Frankenstein: A
Case
Study
in Contemporary Criticism (New York: Bedford
Books/St. Martin's
Press, 1991)
Other Publications: "Cultural Criticism in the
Classroom:
Authority and Transcendent Truth after
Poststructuralism," in Emory
Elliott ed., College Literature
(1990); Instructor's Manual
for vol. 1 of The Prentice-Hall Anthology of American
Literature,
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1991);
"Frankenstein
and
the Cultural Uses of Gothic," in Johanna M. Smith, ed.,
Frankenstein:
Case Studies in Contemporary Criticism
(Boston: Bedford/St.
Martin's Press, 1992); "Recovering the Victorian
Periodical," Nineteenth-Century
Prose 20 (1993): 42-51 [rev. essay]; "Conceiving
the
`New' American
Literature," Early American Literature 29
(spring
1994):
83-91 [rev. essay]
[Updated 1997]
HELWIG, TIMOTHY WADE
Fellowship: Peterson 05-06, "Race, Nativism, and the
Making of Class in Antebellum City-Mysteries"
(Ph.D. cand. in English, Maryland)
Education: Gettysburg, B.A., 92; Miami Univ. of Ohio,
M.A., 97
[Updated 2005]
HENDERSON, H. JAMES
Fellowship: Daniels 76-77, "Political Culture in
Virginia and
Massachusetts, 1775-1800" (prof. of history,
Oklahoma
State)
Education: Boston, A.B., 50; Columbia, M.A., 57,
Ph.D., 62
Current Position: retired
Fellowship Publications: "The Continental
Congress
and the
Nationalization of American Politics," in Robert
Detwiler
and Ramon
Ruiz, eds., Liberation in the Americas (San
Diego,
1979);
"Taxation and Political Culture: Massachusetts and
Virginia,
1760-1800,"
William and Mary Quarterly 3rd ser., vol. xlvii
(Jan. 1990):
90-114
Other Publications: Party Politics in the
Continental
Congress (1974)
[Updated 1997]
HENDLER, GLENN
Fellowship: NEMLA 02-03, "Riot Acts: Gender, Race,
and
Public
Violence in Nineteenth-Century American
Literature" (assoc. prof.
of gender studies, Notre Dame)
Education: Brown, B.A., 84; Northwestern, Ph.D.,
91
Current Position:
assoc. prof. of English and dir. of the American Studies Program, Fordham
Web Page:
http://www.fordham.edu/academics/programs_at_fordham_/
english/faculty/english_faculty/glenn_hendler_28553.asp
[Updated 2009]
HENRETTA, JAMES A.
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 84-85, "Law and the
Creation
of
the Liberal State in America, 1770-1870" (prof. of
history,
Boston)
Education: Swarthmore, B.A., 62; Harvard, M.A.,
63,
Ph.D.,
68
Current Position: Priscilla Alden Burke prof. of
history,
Maryland
Fellowship Publications: "The Rise and Decline
of
Democratic
Republicanism: Political Rights in New York and the
Several
States,"
Albany Law Review (1989); reprinted in A
Usable
Past:
Rights in the State Constitutional Tradition
(1991); "The
Slow Triumph of Liberal Individualism: Law and Politics
in
New York,
1780-1850," in Richard O. Curry and Eugene
Goodheart
eds.,
American Chameleon: Individualismin U.S. History
(1991);
"The Nineteenth-Century Revolution in Civil
Liberties: From
`Rights in Property' to `Property in Rights',"
This
Constitution
(Fall, 1991); "Rethinking the State Constitutional
Tradition,"
Rugers Law Journal 22 (Fall, 1991); "The First
'Contract
with
America'," Wilson Quarterly 20 (Winter,
1996): 34-42; "The
Strange Birth of Liberal America," New York
History
77 (April,
1996): 151-176; "Martin Van Buren: From Politician to
Statesman,"
in Alan Brinkley and David Dyer, eds., The Reader's
Companion
to the American Presidency (Houghton Mifflin:
Boston,
2000),
111-122; co-ed. (with Jrgen Heideking),
Republicanism
and Liberalism
in America and the German States, 1750-1850
(Cambridge
Univ.
Press, 2001)
Other Publications co-author, with David Brody,
Elliott Brownlee,
and Susan Ware, America's History (1st ed.,
1987, 2nd
rev.
ed.,1992, 3rd ed., 1986); The Origins of American
Capitalism
(1991); co-ed. The Transformation of Early American
History
(1991); co-author, with Gregory H. Nobles, Evolution
and
Revolution:
American Society, 1600-1820 (Lexington, MA: D.C.
Heath
&
C, 1987)
Web Page:
http://www.history.umd.edu/Faculty/JHenretta/
[Updated 2005]
HERRINGTON, ELDRID
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 03-04, "Civil War, Revision,
and
Self-Representation"
(asst. prof. of English, Univ. College, Dublin)
Education: Princeton, B.A., 93; Boston Univ., M.A., 95;
Cambridge,
M.Phil., 96, Ph.D., 00
[Updated 2003]
HERZOGENRATH, BERND
Fellowship: Ebeling 03-04, "Cotton Mather's
Conception
of the
Body" (lecturer in English, Cologne)
Education: Aachen, B.A., 91, Ph.D., 97
Other Publications:
An Art of Desire. Reading Paul Auster(1999);
Web Page:
http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/englisch/berressem/herzogenrath/
[Updated 2005]
HEYRMAN, CHRISTINE L.
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 79-80, "The Culture of
Charity: Merchants,
Ministers, and the Social Order of New
England,1680-1740" (asst.
prof. of history, California at Irvine)
Education: Macalester, B.A., 71; Yale, Ph.D.,
76
Current Position: prof. of history,
Delaware
Fellowship Publications: "Spectres of
Subversion,
Societies
of Friends: Dissent and the Devilin Provincial Essex
County,
Massachusetts,"
in David D. Hall, John M. Murrin, and Thad Tate eds.,
Saints
and Revolutionaries: Essays in Early American
History,
(New
York: Norton, 1983); Commerce and Culture: The
Maritime
Communities
of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690-1750 (New York:
Norton,
1984)
Other Publications: A Model of Christian
Charity: The
Rich and the Poor in Colonial New England,
1630-1730
(1977);
(co-author) Nation of Nations: A Narrative History
of the
American
Republic (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1990; 2nd ed.,
1994); Southern
Cross: The Beginnings of the Bible Belt (New
York: Knopf, 1998)
Web Page:
http://www.udel.edu/History/hist/text/heyrman.html
[Updated 2005]
HIJAR, KATHERINE
Fellowship: AHPCS 04-05, "Sex, Violence, and Sport
in
American Popular Print Culture, 1820-1880" (Ph.D. cand., Johns
Hopkins)
Education: California at Berkeley, B.A., 01; Johns Hopkins, M.A., 03, Ph.D., 08
Current Position: asst. prof. of history, California State, San Marcos
Fellowship Publication: "The Pin-Up, the Piano, and the Parlor: American Sheet Music, 1840-1860,"
Imprint, Autumn 2005.
[Updated 2009]
HINSLEY, CURTIS M.
Fellowship: Peterson 86-87, "Anthropology in
Boston,
1860-1920"
(assoc. prof. of history, Colgate)
Education: Princeton, B.A., 67; Wisconsin at
Madison,
M.A.,
71, Ph.D., 76
Current Position: prof. of history, Northern
Arizona
Fellowship Publications: "Zunis and Brahmins:
Cultural
Ambivalence
in the Gilded Age," in G. W. Stocking, ed., History
of
Anthropology
6: Romantic Motives: Essays on Anthropological
Sensibility,
169-207; "Revising and Revisioning the History of
Archaeology: Reflections
on Region and Context," in Andrew L. Christensen, ed.,
Tracing
Archaeology's Past: The Historiography of
Archaeology
(Carbondale:
Southern Illinois Univ. Press, 1989), 79-96;
"Collecting
Cultures
and Cultures of Collecting: The Lure of the American
Southwest,
1880-1915," Museum Anthropology 16
(1992): 12-20; "The Museum
Origins of Harvard Anthropology, 1866-1915," in Clark
A. Elliott
and Margaret Rossiter, eds., (Bethlehem, PA: Lehigh
Univ. Press,
1992): 121-45; "In Search of the New World Classical,"
in
Elizabeth
Boone, ed., Collecting the Pre-Columbian Past
(Washington:
Dumbarton Oaks, 1993), 105-21
Other Publications: Savages and Scientists:
The
Smithsonian
Institution and the Development of American
Anthropology,
1846-1910 (Washington: Smithsonian Institution
Press,
1981),
paperback ed, with new pref., Publications as The
Smithsonian and
the American Indian: Making a Moral Anthropology in
Victorian
America (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press,
1994)
[Updated 1997]
HINZ-BODE, KRISTINA
Fellowship: Ebeling 06-07, "America's Cultural
Deficits: A Transatlantic Debate and Its Reflection in American
Literature" (asst. prof. of English and romance languages, Kassel)
Fellowship: Ebeling 07-08, "America's Cultural
Deficits: A Transatlantic Debate and Its Reflection in American
Literature" (asst. prof. of English and romance languages, Kassel)
Education: Jena, M.A., 97
[Updated 2006]
HIRSHBERG, CHARLES A.
Fellowship: Baron 05, "Vistas of Destiny: Thomas Wentworth Higginson
in Worcester" (writer, New York City)
Education: Hampshire, B.A.
[Updated 2005]
HOBSON, HALLIE S.
Fellowship: Hearst 01-02, "Watchnight, a play on
the eve
of
Emancipation" (playwright, Atlanta, GA)
Education: Yale, B.A., 95
Current Position: development associate, Meredith Monk
[Updated 2005]
HOCHMAN, BARBARA
Fellowship: NEMLA 01-02, "Uncle Tom's Cabin and
the
Reading
Revolution" (senior lecturer of foreign
literatures and
linguistics,
Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev)
Education: Bard, B.A., 67; Rutgers, M.A., 73,
Ph.D.,
82
Current Position: assoc. prof. and chair, dept. of foreign
literatures and linguistics, Ben Gurion
Fellowship Publications:
"Little Known Documents: Introductory
Essay: Harriet
Beecher Stowe," PMLA 118 (2003): 1320-24
Other Publications:
Getting at the Author: Reimagining Books and Reading in the Age of
American Realism (Univ. of Massachusetts Press, 2001); "Highbrow/Lowbrow:
Naturalist Writers and the Reading Habit" in Twisted From the Ordinary:
American Literary Naturalism ed. Mary E. Papke (University of
Tennessee
Press, 2003); "Stowe's House and Home Papers: A Neglected Source for
Gilman's`Yellow Wallpaper'" American Literary Realism 37.1 (Fall,
2004);
"Uncle Tom's Cabin in the National Era: An Essay in Generic Norms and the
Contexts of Reading" Book History Vol. VII, 2004: 143-170; "Uncle
Tom's
Cabin at the Columbian Exhibition" Libraries and Culture 41.1
(2006)
82-108
Address: Ben Gurion University, Dept of Foreign Literatures and
Linguistics, Beersheva, 84105, Isreal
Web Page:
http://cmsprod.bgu.ac.il/Eng/humsos/
Templates/StaffMemberENG.aspx?NRMODE=
Published&NRORIGINALURL=%2fEng%2fhumsos%
2fdepartments%2fflit%2fFaculty%2fLiterature%
2fbhochman%2ehtm&NRNODEGUID=%
7b3EAD9238-BF1B-45DE-86D0-CABFAA8BF437%
7d&NRCACHEHINT=Guest
[Updated 2005]
HODGES, GRAHAM RUSSELL
Fellowship: Peterson 99-00, "David Ruggles: Black
Apostle of
Freedom" (prof. of history, Colgate)
Education: City College of New York, B.A., 73,
M.A.,
74;
New York Univ., Ph.D., 82
Other Publications:
The New York City Cartmen, 1650-1860 (New York
Univ. Press, 1986);
Black Itinerants of the
Gospel: The Narratives of John Jea and George White (Madison House
Publishers, 1993);
"Pretends to be Free": Fugitive Slave Advertisements from Colonial and
Revolutionary New York and
New Jersey (Garland Publishing Company, 1994);
The Black Loyalist Directory: African Americans in Exile After the American
Revolution (Garland Publishing, Inc., 1996);
Slavery and Freedom in the Rural North: African
Americans in Monmouth County, New Jersey (Madison House, 1997);
Slavery, Freedom, and Culture (M.E. Sharpe, 1998);
Root and Branch: African Americans in New York and East Jersey,
1613-1863 (Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1999)
Web
Page:
http://www.colgate.edu/DesktopDefault1.aspx?tabid=684&pgID=3400&vID=3&dID=1&fID=289
[Updated 2005]
HOEFLICH, MICHAEL
Fellowship: Reese Fellowship 01-02, "The Material
Culture of Nineteenth Century American Law: (prof. of law and
history, Kansas School of Law)
Education: Haverford, B.A., 73; Cambridge, M.A.,
76; Yale Law, J.D., 79
Fellowship Publications: "Roman Law and Forensic Oratory in
Antebellum America," 120 Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung fur
Rechtsgeschichte 189 (2003); "Translation and the Reception of Foreign
Law
in Antebellum America," 50 American Journal of Comparative Law 753
(2003)
Other Publications:
Roman & Civil Law & the Development of Anglo-American Jurisprudence
(1997)
Web Page:
http://www.ku.edu/cgiwrap/kulaw/faculty/hoeflich.php
[Updated 2005]
HOLTON, WOODY
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 99-00, "Republics of Hope
and the Empire of Despair: A Social Interpretation of the United
States Constitution" (asst. prof. of history, Bloomsburg)
Education: Virginia, B.A., 81; Duke, Ph.D.,
90
Current Position: assoc. prof. of history, Richmond
Fellowship Publications: "`From the Labours of Others': The War
Bonds
Controversy and the Origins of the Constitution in New England,"
William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 61 (April 2004): 271-316;
"Did Democracy Cause the Recession That Led to the Constitution?"
Journal of American History, XLII (September 2005), 442-69.;
"An 'Excess of Democracy'—Or a Shortage? The Federalists' First
Adversaries,"
Journal of the Early Republic, XXV (Fall 2005), 339-82; "Divide
et Impera: The Tenth Federalist in a Wider Sphere," William and Mary
Quarterly, 3rd Series, LXII (April 2005), 175-212 [Selected by a
panel
of distinguished scholars for reprinting in the Organization of American
Historians' Best American History Essays 2006]; Unruly
Americans and the Origins of the Constitution (New York: Hill and
Wang, 2007) [Finalist, National Book Award; Finalist, George Washington Book Prize]
Other Publications:
Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the
American Revolution in Virginia (Univ. North Carolina Press, 1999)
[2000 Merle Curti
Award in American Social History, Organization of American Historians;
2000 Fraunces Tavern Book Award, Fraunces Tavern Museum];
Abigail Adams: A Life (Free Press, 2009) [Bancroft Prize, 2010]
Web Page:
http://history.richmond.edu/faculty/Holton_Woody.html
[Updated 2010]
HOMESTEAD, MELISSA J.
Fellowship: Peterson 96-97, "Imperfect
Title: Nineteenth-Century American Women Authors and Literary
Property." (Pd.D. cand., Pennsylvania)
Fellowship: Mellon Post-diss., 00-01 (asst.
prof. of English, Oklahoma)
Education: Smith, B.A., 85; Pennsylvania, M.A., 87, Ph.D. 98
Current Position: assoc. prof. of English,
Nebraska-Lincoln
Fellowship Publications: "'Every bodysees the
theft': Fanny Fern and Literary Proprietorship in Antebellum
America," New England Quarterly (June 2001); "'When I Can Read My
Title Clear': Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Stowe v. Thomas Copyright
Infringement Case," Prospects (2002);
"Behind the Veil?: Catharine Sedgwick and Anonymous Publication," in
Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Critical Perspectives (Northeastern
University Press, 2003);
"The Publishing History of Augusta Jane Evans Macaria: Unwriting Some Lost
Cause Myths," Mississippi Quarterly 58.4 (2005): 665-702;
American Women Authors and Literary Property, 1822-1869
(Cambridge Univ. Press, 2005)
[Updated 2007]
HOMSHER, BETSY
Fellowship: Peterson 98-99, "The Diaries of
Sally
Ripley
Stearns" (Ph.D. cand. in history, California at
Santa
Barbara)
Education: San Francisco State, B.A., 91, M.A.,
94
Current Position: Central Connecticut State
Web Page:
http://www.history.ccsu.edu/Fac_courses/Homsher_courses.htm
[Updated 2005]
HOOPES, JAMES
Fellowship: AAS-NEH 83-84, "Consciousness in
New
England"
(prof. of history, Babson)
Education: Bowling Green, B.A., 65; Wisconsin,
M.A.,
69;
Johns Hopkins, M.A., 71, Ph.D., 73
Fellowship
Publications: Consciousness
in New England (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1989)
Other Publications: Van Wyck Brooks: In
Search of
American
Culture (1977); Oral History: An Introduction
for
Students
(1979); Peirce on Signs: Writings on Semiotics by
Charles
Sanders
Peirce (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press,
1991); The Wrong Turn of Pragmatic Liberalism
(Ithaca: Cornell, 1998);
False Prophets: The Gurus Who Created Modern Management and Why Their
Ideas are Bad for Business Today (Perseus Books, 2003)
Web Page:
http://www3.babson.edu/Academics/Divisions/ahhs/facultyprofile.cfm?pageid=11926
[Updated 2005]
HOROWITZ, HELEN LEFKOWITZ
Fellowship: Mellon Postdoc. 99-00, "Sexual
Representation
and Censorship in the United States, 1830-80"
(Sylvia
Dlugasch
Bauman prof. of American studies, Smith)
Education: Wellesley, B.A., 63; Harvard, M.A.,
65,
Ph.D.,
69
Fellowship Publications: Rereading Sex: Battles
over Sexual
Knowledge and Suppression in Nineteenth-Century America (Alfred
A. Knopf, 2002) [Merle Curti Social History Award, 2003]
Other Publications: Culture and the City:
Cultural
Philanthropy
in Chicago from the 1880s to 1917 (Lexington, KY.:
The
Univ.
Press of Kentucky, 1976; Chicago, Univ. of Chicago
Press,
1989,
paperback); Alma Mater: Design and Experience in the
Women's
Colleges from their Nineteenth Century Beginnings to
the
1930s.
(New York: Knopf 1984, Beacon Press, 1986, Univ. of
Massachusetts
Press, 1993); Campus Life: Undergraduate Cultures
from
the end
of the Eighteenth Century to the Present, (New
York,
Knopf 1987,
Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1988, paperback);
The
Power
and Passion of M. Carey Thomas, (New York, Knopf,
1994);
"Another `American Cruikshank' Found: John H.
Manning and the New York Sporting Weeklies," Proceedings of the
American
Antiquarian Society 112 (2002): 93-126
Web Page:
http://www.smith.edu/history/fac_hhorowitz.htm
[Updated 2005]
HOUSE, KAY SEYMOUR
Fellowship: Daniels 77-78, "Editing Cooper's
The
Pilot"
(prof. of English, San Francisco State)
Education Illinois, B.A., 45; Washington, M.A.,
46; Stanford,
Ph.D., 63
Current Position: ed.-in-chief, Works of James
Fenimore Cooper
Fellowship Publications: ed., James Fenimore
Cooper's
The
Pilot (Albany: State Univ. of New York Press,
1986; Library
of America, 1991); "Cooper's Indians after Yet
Another
`Century
of Dishonor,'" Letterature d'America
(Rome: Univ. of
Rome, 1983); ed., James Fenimore Cooper's
Satanstoe
(State
Univ. of New York Press, 1990); "The James
Fenimore
Cooper
Collections at the American Antiquarian Society,"
in
Serendipity
and Synergy: Collection Development, Access, and
Research
Opportunities
at the American Antiquarian Society in the McCorison
Era
(American
Antiquarian Society, 1993)
Other Publications: "Four North American Writers
and
Their
Terrain," in Letterature d'America (Univ. of
Rome,
January
2001)
Address: PO Box 158, Payson, IL 62360-0158
[Updated 2001]
HOWE, JOHN
Fellowship: ASECS 02-03, "The Social Politics of
Verbal
Discourse
in Revolutionary Boston" (prof. emeritus,
Minnesota)
Education: Otterbein, B.A., 57; Yale, M.A., 59,
Ph.D., 62
[Updated 2002]
HSUEH, VICKI
Fellowship: Peterson 04-05, "Hybrid
Constitutionalism: Negotiating Constitutions and Cultures in the
Proprietary Colonies, 1625-1690" (asst. prof. of political
science, Western Washington Univ.)
Education: Williams, B.A., 95; Johns
Hopkins, M.Phil. 99, Ph.D., 03
[Updated 2005]
HUANG, NIAN-SHENG
Fellowship: Peterson 05-06, "The Poor in Early
Massachusetts, 1630-1830"
(assoc. prof. of history, California State, Channel Islands)
Education: Teachers Universiry of Inner Mongolia,
P.R. China, B.A., 82; Tufts, M.A., 83; Cornell, M.A., 87, Ph.D., 90
Web Page: http://www.csuci.edu/academics/faculty/bios/huang1.html
[Updated 2005]
HUDSON, ANGELA PULLEY
Fellowship: Peterson 04-05, "Indians, Slaves, and
Surveyors on the Federal Road, 1790s-1840s" (Ph.D. cand. in American
studies, Yale)
Education: Auburn, B.A., 96; Georgia, M.A., 99; Yale,
M.A., 03
[Updated 2005]
HUGHES, AMY
Fellowship: Last 09-10, "'Thoughts Bodied Upon the Stage': Sensationalism and Reform in Nineteenth-Century America, 1842-1867"
(asst. prof. of theater, Brooklyn College)
Education:
[Updated 2007]
HUGHES, JENNIFER A.
Fellowship: Last 07-08, "Telling Laughter: A Cultural
History of American Humor, 1830-1900" (Ph.D. cand. in English, Emory)
Education: Cornell, B.A., 01; Virginia, M.A., 03
[Updated 2007]
HUNTER, PHYLLIS A.
Fellowship: Peterson 92-93, "Ship of Wealth: New
England
Merchants,
Colonial Capitalism, and the Rhetoric of
Money" (Ph.D. cand. in
American studies, William & Mary)
Education: Harvard, B.A., 65; South Florida,
M.A.,
90; William
& Mary, Ph.D., 96
Current Position: assoc. prof. of history, North
Carolina
at Greensboro
Fellowship Publications: "Ship of Wealth:
Massachusetts Merchants, Foreign Goods, and the Transformation of Anglo-America,
1670-1760" (Ph.D. diss., College of William & Mary);
Purchasing Identity in the Atlantic World: Massachusetts Merchants,
1670-1780 (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 2001)
Other Publications: "From Puritan Son to Worldly
Gentleman:
The Life of Jeremiah Dummer" in The Human Tradition
in
Urban
History, ed. Roger Biles (Scholarly Resources
Books,
2001);
"Containing the Marvelous: Instructions to Buyers and
Sellers" in
Expertise Constructed: Didactic Literature in The
British
Atlantic
World 1500-1800 ed. Natasha Glaisyer and Sara
Pennell
(Ashgate,
2002). Book reviews in Virginia Magazine of History
and
Biography,
Gender and History, The Book, Journal of Southern
History,
William and Mary Quarterly, and North Carolina Historical
Quarterly
Web Page:
http://www.uncg.edu/%7Epwhunter/
[Updated 2005]
HUNTLEY-SMITH, JEN A.
Fellowship: Botein 98-99, "'The Genius of
Civilization': The
Publishing Industry and the Creation of Western
Regional
Identity,
1848-1900" (Ph.D. cand. in history, Nevada at Reno)
Education: Lewis & Clark, B.A., 85; M.A.T.,
87; Nevada at Reno, M.A., Ph.D., 00
Current Position: visiting asst. prof., Nevada at
Reno
Fellowship Publications: Publishing the "Sealed
Book": James
Mason Hutchings and the Landscapes of California Print
Culture,
1849-1885(Univ. of Nevada at Reno, 2000)
Other Publications: "'The Genius of
Civilization': The Material
Culture of Print Technology in the Nineteenth-Century
American West"
Western Technological Landscapes, Halcyon v. 20
(Reno: The
Nevada Humanities Committee, 1998) p. 37
Web Page:
http://www.unr.edu/cla/history/huntley-smith.htm
[Updated 2005]
HURLEY, NATASHA
Fellowship: Last 08-09, "The Child of Circulation in
American Literature: The Case of Robinson Crusoe" (postdoctoral fellow,
Alberta)
Education: Mount St. Vincent, B.A., 05; Western
Ontario, M.A., 96; Rutgers, Ph.D.
[Updated 2008]
HUTCHISON, COLEMAN
Fellowship: Botein 05-06, "Occasioning Verse and
Volume" (Ph.D. cand. in English, Northwestern)
Education: Vanderbilt, B.A., 99; Northwestern, M.A.,
02
[Updated 2005]
HYNES, JENNIFER
Fellowship: Tracy 97-98, "Nineteenth-Century Women
and
the News:
The Case of Elizabeth Stoddard" (visiting
instructor in
English,
West Virginia)
Education: Texas A&M, B.S., 88, M.A., 92;
South
Carolina,
Ph.D., 96
Current Position: Owner-Lohman
Letters/Independent
Scholar
Fellowship Publications: "Bringing to Print 'Our
lady
Correspondent':
Elizabeth Stoddard's Daily Alta California
Columns" (Modern
Language Association, Toronto, Ontario, Dec. 1997)
Address: 264 Timberland Circle, Kingsport, TN
37664; lletters[at]datarecall.net
[Updated 2001]
Letter I
|
Introduction to Directory
An Important Announcement to AAS Fellows~
New book? New job?
Please
us your updated information
and assist us in keeping this directory
current.
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