Skip to main content area
  • SITE MAP
  • |
  • MWA LOGIN
  • |
  • CONTACT US
  • |
  • HOURS
  • Search Site
  • Search Catalog

Search form



  • AAS ONLINE CONTENT
  • SHOP & SUPPORT
  • PROGRAMS & EVENTS
  • FELLOWSHIPS
  • LIBRARY COLLECTIONS
  • ABOUT

Directory of Fellows and Research Associates, 1999-Present

The American Antiquarian Society has been awarding visiting research fellowships since 1972-73. These stipend-bearing awards have enabled a diverse group of researchers to spend anywhere from one month to a full year in residence at the Society.

First Name Last Name Cycle Institution Rank Fellowship Awardedsort ascending Title of Project
David Anthony 2012-13 SIU Carbondale associate professor TRUE The Sensational Jew in Antebellum America: Conversion, Race, and the Making of Middle-Class Culture
Neil Kamil 2012-13 University of Texas at Austin associate professor TRUE Artisans of 'Inventive Genius': Atlantic Refugees, Niche Economies, and Portable Devices in the Manufacture of Polite Matter, 1640-1789
Daniel Mandell 2012-13 Truman State University professor TRUE The Lost Tradition of Equality in America, 1600-1870
Jennifer Manion 2012-13 Connecticut College assistant professor TRUE Crossing Gender: Female Masculinity in the 18th & 19th Centuries
Adam Nelson 2008-9 University of Wisconsin, Madison associate professor TRUE "Nationalism, Internationalism, and the Origins of the American University"
Jessie Morgan-Owens 2012-13 Nanyang Technological University assistant professor TRUE Letters of Light: Photographic Writing in the Literature of Abolition
Richard Bell 2007-8 University of Maryland assistant professor TRUE "Do Not Despair: Suicide, Property, and Power in the Newly United States"
Daniel Cohen 2007-8 Case Western Reserve University associate professor TRUE "Burning the Charlestown Convent: Private Lives, Public Outrage, and Contested Memory in Nineteenth-Century America"
Jeannine DeLombard 2007-8 University of Toronto associate professor TRUE "Ebony Idols: Famous Fugitive Slaves in Britain before the Civil War"
Peter Leavenworth 2007-8 University of New Hampshire PhD candidate TRUE "Accounting for Taste: The American Music Business in the Early Republic and Confrontations in Music Aesthetics, 1770-1825"
Stephen Marini 2007-8 Wellesley College professor TRUE "Migrants and Itinerants, Schools and Psalmody: Neglected Networks of Religious Culture in Revolutionary America"
Sean Kelley 2008-9 Hartwick College associate professor TRUE "Gone to Africa: A Rhode Island Slave Ship and the Making of a Diaspora"
Meredith Neuman 2008-9 Clark University assistant professor TRUE "Letter and Spirit"
Emily Pawley 2009-10 University of Pennsylvania PhD candidate TRUE 'The Balance Sheet of Nature': Calculating the New York Farm, 1825-1860
Beth Schweiger 2008-9 University of Arkansas associate professor TRUE "Reading before Literacy: The Uses of English Grammar in the Early Nineteenth Century"
Lloyd Pratt 2009-10 Michigan State University assistant professor TRUE The Freedoms of a Stranger: American and African American Literature, 1830-1860
Tanya Sheehan 2009-10 Rutgers University assistant professor TRUE Blacks and Whites: Race and Early Photographic Humor
Mary Beth Sievens 2009-10 SUNY Fredonia associate professor TRUE The Fruit of My Industry: Household Economy, the Market, and Consumer Society in New England, 1790-1865
Michael Winship 2009-10 University of Texas professor TRUE Reaching the Market: Book Distribution in the United States, 1825-1950
Elizabeth Dillon 2010-11 Northeastern University associate professor TRUE Gender, Sex, and Modernity: Geographies of Reproduction in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
Sean Harvey 2010-11 Northern Illinois University visiting assistant professor TRUE American Languages: Indians, Ethnology, and the Empire for Liberty
Joseph Adelman 2011-12 Johns Hopkins University lecturer TRUE Revolutionary Networks: The Business of Printing and the Production of American Politics, 1763-1789
Kyle Volk 2010-11 University of Montana assistant professor TRUE Tyrannies of Moral Majorities: The Minority Rights Revolution in Antebellum America
Lara Cohen 2011-12 Wayne State University assistant professor TRUE Notes from Underground: Nineteenth-Century American Print Subcultures
Lisa Wilson 2010-11 Connecticut College professor TRUE Cinderella's Family
Carolyn Eastman 2011-12 University of Texas assistant professor TRUE Gender in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World of Print
Jack Larkin 2011-12 Clark University affiliate professor TRUE David Claypoole Johnston and the Representation of American Life, 1797-1865
Yvette Piggush 2011-12 Florida International University assistant professor TRUE We Have No Ruins: Historical Fiction and American Artifacts in the Early United States, 1790-1850
Brian Luskey 2012-13 West Virginia University assistant professor Tracy Magnificent Rogue: A Swindler, Seducer, and Slaver in the Nineteenth Century
Edward Rugemer 2006-7 Boston College postdoctoral fellow Tracy The Problem of Emancipation: The United States and Britain's Abolition of Slavery
Stacey Robertson 2007-8 Bradley University associate professor Tracy "'Hearts Beating for Liberty': Women Abolitionists in the Old Northwest"
Michael Cohen 2005-6 New York University PhD. Candidate Tracy Poetic Discourses in America, 1870-1915
Peter Baldwin 2004-5 University of Connecticut assistant professor Tracy "American Night: Transforming the Nocturnal City, 1800-1930"
Sara Fanning 2004-5 University of Texas at Austin Ph.D. candidate Tracy "The Promised Land: African Americans and Haiti from the Haitian Revolution to 1830"
Benjamin Fagan 2008-9 University of Virginia PhD candidate Tracy "'Righteousness Exalteth a Nation': Practices of Black Nationalism, 1827-1860."
Steven Deyle 2009-10 University of Houston associate professor Tracy Honorable Men: Isaac Bolton, Nathan Bedford Forrest, and the Murder of James McMillan
Faye Dudden 2003-4 Colgate University professor Tracy The Favored Hour: Politics, Culture, and the New York Women's Movement, 1860-1870
Laura Murray 2010-11 Queen's University associate professor Tracy What is an Newspaper? Exchange and Citation Practices in Antebellum American Dailies
Nicolas Barreyre 2011-12 University Paris Ouest Nanterre assistant professor Tracy Of Gold and Freedman: A Sectional History of Reconstruction, 1865-1877
Mitchell Snay 2000-1 Denison University associate professor Tracy A Nation of Our Own: Ethnic Nationalism in the Era of Reconstruction
Liam Riordan 1999-00 University of Maine assistant professor Tracy Newspapers and the Local Meaning of the Nation in the Delaware Valley
Steven Harthorn 2002-3 University of Tennessee, Knoxville PhD candidate Stephen Botein James Fenimore Cooper and the American Literary Market, 1838-1851
Ann Johnson 2002-3 Fordham University assistant professor Stephen Botein Engineering Handbooks as Carriers of Knowledge into the Field
Elisa Tamarkin 2002-3 University of California, Santa Barbara assistant professor Sigety Family American Anglophilia: Deference, Devotion, and National Culture, 1820-1865
Matthew Sivils 2012-13 Iowa State University assistant professor Schiller The Rise of American Environmental Literature, 1782-1847
Molly McCarthy 2000-1 Brandeis University PhD candidate Richard F. and Virginia P. Morgan A Page, A Day: A History of the Daily Diary in America
Michael Simoncelli 1999-00 College of William and Mary PhD candidate Richard F. and Virginia P. Morgan Becoming Northern: The Clash of Regional Cultures and the Creation of a Northern Identity in Ohio, 1770-1877
Michael Hoeflich 2001-2 University of Kansas School of Law professor Reese The Material Culture of the Nineteenth Century
Joanne van der Woude 2006-7 University of Virginia PhD candidate Reese Towards a Transatlantic Aesthetic: Immigration, Translation, and Mourning in the Seventeenth Century
Nikos Pappas 2007-8 University of Kentucky PhD candidate Reese "Sacred Music Tune Index of Southern and Western Source Material (1760-1870)

Pages

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • next ›
  • last »
  • Also from AAS:
  • Common-place online journal
  • |
  • A New Nation Votes database
  • |
  • Past is Present blog
  • |
  • Teach US History online resource
Print logo American Antiquarian Society, 185 Salisbury Street, Worcester, Massachusetts 01609-1634
Tel: 508-755-5221, Fax: 508-753-3311, library@americanantiquarian.org
Share Subscribe to AAS