#  Former Fellows 

 



Format of this list:  
Name (fellowship year): Project undertaken while a fellow; *Resulting Monograph* or “Resulting article.” Current institution (or “deceased” designation)

No mention of a resulting publication indicates a deficiency in our records. (Or in the case of recent fellows, that the project has not yet been brought to fruition.) Likewise the lack of an affiliation: incomplete records mean we have not been able to locate all former fellows. Please contact the Center with update information by e-mail at <cwc@fas.harvard.edu>, or by U.S. mail at: Charles Warren Center, Emerson Hall 400, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.  
  
[A](#A) | [B](#B) | [C](#C) | [D](#D) | [E](#E) | [F](#F) | [G](#G) | [H](#H) | [I](#I) | [J](#J) | [K](#K) | [L](#L) | [M](#M) | [N](#N) | [O](#O) | [P](#P) | [Q](#Q) | [R](#R) | [S](#S) | [T](#T) | [U](#U) | [V](#V) | [W](#W) | [X](#X) | [Y](#Y) | [Z](#Z)



 

**Daniel Abramson** (04-05): Obsolescence in Modern Architecture. Tufts University

**Thomas Adams** (25-26) *The Very Instant of Their Performance: Of Services--Counterfeit and Menial.* University of South Alabama  
  
**Willi Paul Adams** (75-76): I. Gouverneur Morris and the American Revolution II. German-language Press in America at the Time of Revolution. Deceased  
  
**Sune Akerman** (70-71): Immigration and the Adjustment of Different Ethnic Groups in Worcester, Massachusetts, 1890-1915. Karlstadts universitet  
  
**William R.H. Alexander** (68-69): William Dean Howells: The Realist as Humanist  
  
**David Gryson Allen** (80-81): Civil Litigation in Massachusetts Courts from 1670 to 1750 *In English Ways: The Movement of Societies and the Transferal of English Local Law and Custom to Massachusetts Bay in in the Seventeenth Century.* Allen Associates (Concord, MA)  
  
**Garland E. Allen** (81-82): History of the American Eugenics Movement; “The Eugenics Record Office at Cold Spring Harbor 1910-1940: A Study in Institutional History.” Washington University  
  
**Stephen Alter** (94-95): The Science of Language in the Nineteenth Century; *Darwinism and the Linguistic Image: Language, Race, and Natural Theology in the Nineteenth Century.* Gordon College  
  
**Luis Alvarez** (12-13): Everyday Utopia: Popular Culture and the Politics of the Possible. University of California, San Diego  
  
**Carol Anderson** (05-06): Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP and the Struggle for Colonial Liberation, 1941-1960. Emory University  
  
**Fred Anderson** (92-93): War and Revolution in the Making of the American Republic, 1750-1791; *Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754-1766.* University of Colorado, Boulder  
  
**Virginia Anderson** (92-93): Cattle and Colonization: Explorations in the History of Culture and Agriculture in Colonial New England; *Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America.* University of Colorado, Boulder  
  
**Michael Anesko** (92-93): Annotated Edition of the Extant Correspondence between Henry James and William Dean Howells; *Letters, Fictions, Lives: Henry James and William Dean Howells.* Pennsylvania State University  
  
**Christian Appy** (90-91): Conformity and the American Way of Life: Political Culture in the United States from 1945 to 1960; *Cold War Constructions: The Political Culture of United States Imperialism, 1945-1966.* University of Massachusetts, Amherst  
  
**Yehoshua Arieli** (67-68): The American Military Mind. Deceased  
  
**David Armitage** (00-01): International Thought in the Age of Revolutions, 1688-1848; *1. The Foundations of Modern International Thought* (forthcoming from Cambridge University Press) *2. The Declaration of Independence: A Global History* (forthcoming from Harvard University Press). Harvard University  
  
**Eric Arnesen** (90-91): The Black Worker: Race, Politics, and Labor in the South, 1880-1930; *Brotherhoods of Color: Black Railroad Workers and the Struggle for Equality*. University of Illinois, Chicago  
  
**Sadao Asada** (70-71): Pacific Rapprochement in the Post-World War I Period; *Japanese-American Relations between the Wars.* Doshiba University  
  
**Clarissa Atkinson** (08-09): Claudia Jones and the Long Civil Rights Movement. Cambridge, MA  
  
**Eric Avila** (04-05): Beneath the Shadows of the Freeway: Highway Construction and the Making of Race in the Modernist City. UCLA



 

**Vivek Bald** (14-15): The Bengali Harlem/Lost Histories Project.

**E. Digby Baltzell** (72-73): City of Boston and its Leadership Structure; *Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia: Two Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Class Authority.*Deceased  
  
**James M. Banner, Jr.** (74-75): Early History of Social and Humanitarian Endeavors in the United States. Washington, DC

**Nicolas Barreyre** (15-16): Public Debt, State Action, and the Transformations of American Capitalism from the Civil War to the First World War. Ecole des Hautes Etudes end Sciences Sociales

**Thomas Barrow** (70-71): Structure of Politics in Massachusetts on the Eve of the Revolution (1760-1774)  
  
**Irving Bartlett** (78-79): Edition of Newly-discovered Letters to and from Wendell Phillips; *Wendell and Ann Phillips: Community of Reform, 1840-1880.* University of Massachusetts, Boston (emeritus)  
  
**Mia Bay** (94-95): The White Image in the Black Mind: African-American Ideas about White People, 1830-1925; *The White Image in the Black Mind: African-American Ideas about White People, 1830-1925.* Rutgers University  
  
**Sven Beckert** (97-98): Merchants in the Atlantic World during the Age of Revolution. Harvard University  
  
**Stephen Behrendt** (97-98): The Eighteenth-century British Atlantic Slave-trading Community; *The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade: A History.* Victoria University, Wellington  
  
**Rosalind Beiler** (97-98): From Germany to America in the Eighteenth Century: The Transatlantic World of Caspar Wistar. University of Central Florida  
  
**Donald Bellomy** (83-84): William Graham Sumner and the Problem of “Social Darwinism” “‘Social Darwinism' Revisited.” Sogang University  
  
**Milton Berman** (68-69): The Concept of Citizenship in the Colonies and the Early Republic. University of Rochester (emeritus)  
  
**Joel Bernard** (86-87): Origins of the American Temperance Movement  
  
**Barton Bernstein** (67-68): The Truman Administration; *Politics and Policies of the Truman Administration.* Stanford University

**Robin Bernstein** (14-15): Paradoxy: Lesbians and the Everyday Art of the Impossible. Harvard University

**John Bezis-Selfa** (98-99): American Crucible: Adventurers, Ironworkers, and the Struggle to Forge Habits of Industry, 1640-1820; *Forging America: Ironworkers, Adventurers, and the Industrious Revolution.* Wheaton College  
  
**Steven Biel** (94-95): The Titanic and American Culture; *Down With the Old Canoe: A Cultural History of the Titanic Disaster.* Harvard University

**Martha Biondi** (23-24): *The Tilt Toward Internationalism: Race and Ideology in U. S. Solidarity Organizing in the 1970s.* Northwestern University  
  
**Regina Blaszczyk** (00-01): *The Color Revolution*. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2012. University of Leeds, UK.

  
**Patrick Blessing** (81-82 and 84-85): Dreamers of the Golden Dream: Urbanization and Social Change in California, 1848-1906. University of Tulsa (emeritus)  
  
**David Blight** (96-97): Reunion and Race: The Civil War in American Memory, 1870-1915; *Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory.* Yale University  
  
**Kristen Block** (09-10): Faith and Fortune: Religious Identity and the Politics of Profit in the Early Caribbean. Florida Atlantic University  
  
**Geoffrey Blodgett** (73-74): I. Conservative Reform in the Late 19th Century II. Political Attitudes of the American Novelist Winston Churchill. Deceased  
  
**Stuart M. Blumin** (71-72): Social Change in a Nineteenth-century Community (Kingston, NY); *The Urban Threshold: Growth and Change in a 19th-century American Community.* Cornell University  
  
**Margaret R. Bogue** (71-72): Foreign Business of McCormick Harvesting Machine Company and International Harvester, 1856-1970. University of Wisconsin, Madison  
  
**Nemai Sadhan Bose** (66-67): Responsibility of American Diplomacy to the Early Chinese Nationalist Movement. Deceased  
  
**Stephen Botein** (74-75): Colonial Printers; “‘Meer Mechanics' and an Open Press: The Business and Political Strategies of Colonial American Printers.” Deceased  
  
**Paul Bourke** (73-74): Usefulness of the Concept of Ideology to American Historians. Deceased  
  
**Alan Braddock** (06-07): Gun Vision: American Art and Logistical Perception, 1861-1918. Temple University

**Nicholas Bromell** (16-17): Violence, Power, and Dignity in the Political Thought of Frederick Douglass. University of Massachusetts, Amherst.  
  
**Carrie Tirado Bramen** (05-06): American Niceness. SUNY, Buffalo  
  
**Carl Brauer** (78-79): History of President Johnson's War on Poverty; “Kennedy, Johnson and the War on Poverty.” Belmont, MA  
  
**Howard Brick** (99-00): Beyond the Bourgeoisie: Theories of Capitalism and Social Development in the United States, 1920-1970; *Transcending Capitalism: Visions of a New Society in Modern American Thought* (forthcoming from Cornell University Press). Washington University  
  
**Laura Briggs** (99-00): Reproducing Empire: Discourses on Gender, Health, and Reproduction in the U.S. Imperial Project in Puerto Rico; *Reproducing Empire: Race, Sex, Science, and U.S. Imperialism in Puerto Rico.* University of Arizona  
  
**William Brock** (76-77): American Politics in the 1840s: Coming Slavery Crisis, the Conflict Between Free Soilers and Advocates of Slavery Expansion. Deceased

**Alexis Broderick** (21-22): The Tangled Connections between slavery, sexual violence and incest. University of New Hampshire  
  
**John Brooke** (86-87): Peoples on a Middle Landscape: Society and Political Culture in Central Massachusetts, 1713-1861; *The Heart of the Commonwealth: Society and Political Culture in Worcester County, Massachusetts, 1713-1861* (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989). Ohio State University  
  
**Chandos Brown** (87-88): Benjamin Silliman and the Rise of American Science. William &amp; Mary  
  
**Jayna Brown** (12-13): What It Is, What It Is’: Wattstax and the Concept of the Everyday. University of California, Riverside  
  
**Richard D. Brown** (70-71): Social and Political Life in Massachusetts; “The Emergence of Urban Society in Rural Massachusetts, 1760-1820”; “Modernization and the Modern Personality in Early America, 1600-1830: A Sketch of a Synthesis.” University of Connecticut  
  
**Vincent Brown** (02-03): Melville J. Herskovits and the Making of the African Diaspora. Harvard University  
  
**W. Elliot Brownlee** (78-79): Participation of Women in American Economic Life,1850-1930; “Household Values, Women's Work, and Economic Growth, 1800-1930.” University of California, Santa Barbara  
  
**Joan Jacobs Brumberg** (82-83): The Changing Historical Experience of Female Adolescence, 1870-1980; *Fasting Girls: The Emergence of Anorexia Nervosa as a Modern Disease.* Cornell University  
  
**Richard Buel** (66-67): Major Readjustments in Political Thought and Practice during the Revolutionary Decades; *Securing the Revolution: Ideology in American Politics, 1789-1815.* Wesleyan University (emeritus)  
  
**Andreas Burckhardt** (67-68, 68-69): The Influence of Continental Political Theorists on American Thought in the Eighteenth Century

**Charisse Burden-Stelly** (23-24): Old Left and New Left Continuities in Radical Black Thought: An Overview. Wayne State University  
  
**Zoë Burkholder** (08-09): ’Racism is Vulnerable’: Anthropological Efforts to Destabilize the Race Concept in American Public Schools, 1939-1948; *Color in the Classroom: How American Schools Taught Race, 1900-1954*. Montclair State University  
  
**Richard Bushman** (68-69): I. The Great Awakening. II. Religious and Political Ideology in the First Half of the 18th Century; *King and People in Provincial Massachusetts*. Columbia University (emeritus)



 

**Umayyah Cable** (19-20): Media Intifada: Palestine and Media Activism in the United States. University of Michigan  
  
**Peter Calvert** (69-70): Image-making in American presidential politics. University of Southampton, England

**Ballard Campbell** (76-77): State Legislation in the Midwest: Policy Conflicts in the Late Nineteenth Century; *Representative Democracy: Public Policy and Midwestern Legislatures in the Late Nineteenth Century.* Northeastern University  
  
**James Campbell** (00-01): Middle Passages; *Middle Passages: African American Journeys to Africa, 1787-2005.* Brown University  
  
**Jorge Canizares-Esguerra** (01-02): Postcolonial Nature: Nature Narratives and Nation-Building in 19th-century Latin America. *1. Puritan Conquistadors: Iberainizing the Atlantic 1550-1700* (Stanford, 2006) *2. Nature, Empire, and Nation* (Stanford, 2006) University of Texas, Austin  
  
**Christopher Capozzola** (10-11): Brothers of the Pacific: Soldiers, Citizens, and the Philippines in America’s Pacific Century. MIT  
  
**Charles Capper** (05-06): The Transcendental Moment: Liberal Romantic Intellect and America's Democratic Awakening. Boston University  
  
**Susan Carruthers** (06-07): Cold War Captives: Prisoners and Escapees in Popular Culture and Geopolitics. Rutgers University  
  
**Maria Agui Carter** (02-03): Rebel: A Latina Woman Soldier of the American Civil War (film project). Cambridge, MA

**Benedict Carton** (Spring 22): George Mason University From the Enslaved Children of George Mason to Black Lives Next Doors: Imprints of Racial Slavery and Higher Learning. George Mason University  
  
**Joan Cashin** (88-89): A Biography of Varina Howell Davis, First Lady of the Confederacy. Ohio State University

**Richard Cellini** (21-22): Slavery &amp; the Universities: What Happened to the People. The Georgetown Memory Project  
  
**William Chambers** (67-68): I. Nationalism and Popular Politics, 1815-1845; II. American Political Parties, 1776-1809. III. The Two-Party Norm in American Politics. Deceased

**Kornel Chang** (11-12): The University, the Military State, and Modernization in Postwar Korea. Rutgers University  
  
**Leslie Choquette** (93-94): Frenchmen into Peasants: Modernity and Backwardness in the Peopling of French North America in the Seventeenths and Eighteenth Centuries; *Frenchmen into Peasants: Modernity and Tradition in the Peopling of French Canada.* Assumption College  
  
**Elizabeth Clark** (93-94): The Relationship between Religion and Rights, 1830-1895. Deceased

**Gabrielle Clark** (15-16): Bound to Freedom: Temporary Labor Migrants and Repressive Liberalism under American Capitalism, 1904-2013

**Catherine Clinton** (86-87): Southern Woman and the Civil War; *Tara Revisited: Women, War and the Plantation Legend.* Riverside, CT

**Dorothy Sue Cobble** (07-08): Labor Liberalism and the Quest for Human Rights and Social Justice. Rutgers University  
  
**Peter Coclanis** (86-87, 90-91): The Shadow of a Dream: Economic Life and Death in the South Carolina Low Country, 1670-1920; *The Shadow of a Dream: Economic Life and Death in the South Carolina Low Country, 1670-1920;* and (90-91): The Creation of a World Market in Rice. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill  
  
**Marshall Cohen** (69-70): History of Social Psychology in America

**Jamie Cohen-Cole** (11-12): Cognitive Science and its Impact on Theories and Practices of Democratic Governance; *The Open Mind: Cold War Politics and the Sciences of Human Nature.* George Washington University  
  
**Phyllis Blum Cole** (80-81): Boston and the Emersons. Pennsylvania State University  
  
**Sandra Comstock** (10-11): The Rise and Demise of an American Icon &amp; Industry: Blue Jeans and US Clothing Politics Across the 20th Century. University of Western Ontario  
  
**Kathleen Neils Conzen** (75-76): Ethnic Community Formation and Cultural Change among German-Americans in Rural Minnesota; *Germans in Minnesota..* University of Chicago  
  
**Deborah Coon** (91-92): Courtship with Anarchy: The Socio-Political Foundations of William James's Philosophy. San Diego, CA

**Afua Cooper** (Spring22): Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, and Caribbean Slavery. Dalhousie University  
  
**William Cooper** (75-76): The Politics of Slavery: Politics and Parties in the South, 1828-1856; *The South and the Politics of Slavery, 1828-1856.* Louisiana State University  
  
**Nancy Cott** (85-86): Society, Politics and Gender in the U.S., 1870-1920; *The Grounding of Modern Feminism.* Harvard University  
  
**Matthew Countryman** (08-09): ’Who Needs the Bullet When You’ve Got the Ballot’: The Political Logic and Racial Iconography of African-American Mayors During the 1970’s and 1980’s. University of Michigan  
  
**Mary Crawford-Volk** (86-87): Boston's Image of the Artistic Past: Patronage, Taste, and Collecting 1870-1925 and their Relation to Cultural Change; *1.Sargent at Large* (forthcoming 2007, Yale University Press) *2. John Singer Sargent's El Jaleo* (National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1992). Belmont, MA  
  
**Simeon J. Crowther** (72-73): Comparing the Economic Development in Pennsylvania and New York From the 1780's to 1850. California State University, Long Beach  
  
**Robert Cuff** (73-74): 1. Canadian-American Relations in Wartime 2. Evolution of Modern American Organization for War; *Ties That Bind: Canadian-American Relations in Wartime from the Great War to the Cold War.* Deceased  
  
**Suzanne Cusick** (06-07): Listening for War. New York University



 

**Kathleen Dalton** (96-97): Theodore Roosevelt and War; *Theodore Roosevelt: A Strenuous Life.* Philips Andover Academy

**Ann Daly** (Spring 2023): The Democratic Machine: The Politics of Technology at the Second US Mint. Mississippi State University  
  
**Robert Dalzell** (73-74): Economic Development of Massachusetts from 1829 to 1861, Textile Industry; *Enterprising Elite: The Boston Associates and the World They Made.* Williams College  
  
**Cornelia Dayton** (01-02): Self and Sanity: Negotiating the Boundaries of Incompetency in New England, 1620-1830. University of Connecticut  
  
**John Demos** (77-78): Witchcraft in Early America; *Entertaining Satan: Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England.* Yale University  
  
**Christine Desan** (03-04): Markets and the Constitutional Order in 18th Century America. Harvard University  
  
**Rachel Devlin** (08-09): Girls on the Front Line: Gender and the Battle to Desegregate Public Schools, 1940-1954. Tulane University  
  
**Sarah Deutsch** (93-94): Women of Boston: Space, Sex, and Power in the City, 1870-1950; *Women and the City: Gender, Space, and Power in Boston, 1870-1940.* Duke University  
  
**Robert Diaz** (19-20): Intimate Proximities: Queer Filipinos and the Canadian Global City. University of Toronto

**Elizabeth Maddock Dillon** (14-15): The Early Caribbean Digital Archive \[Spring Team\]. Northeastern University

**Bruce Dorsey** (12-13): Murder in a Mill Town: A Cultural History of the New Nation. Swarthmore College  
  
**Don Harrison Doyle** (82-83): Economic Elites and Ideology in Four Southern Cities (Mobile, Charleston, Atlanta, and Nashville); *New Men, New Cities, New South: Atlanta, Nashville, Charleston, Mobile, 1860-1910.* University of South Carolina

**Holger Droessler** (25-26) *War Workers: How Noncombatants Supported and Subverted American Power from the Revolution to the War on Terror.* Worcester Polytechnic Institute  
  
**Thomas L. Dublin** (80-81): Investigation of the Economic and Social Links Joining Rural and Urban New England, 1820-1880; *Transforming Women's Work: New England Lives in the Industrial Revolution.* SUNY, Binghamton  
  
**Kathryn Dudley** (99-00): Economic Representation and the American Middle Class. Yale University  
  
**Colleen Dunlavy** (03-04): The Corporation as a Democratic Polity in the Nineteenth Century. University of Wisconsin, Madison  
  
**Robert Dykstra** (78-79): Frontier Violence in Perceptions of the American West; *Bright Radical Star: Black Freedom and White Supremacy on the Hawkeye Frontier.* SUNY, Albany



 

**Carville Earle** (77-78): Comparative Economics of Slavery and Free Labor in Ante-bellum America. Deceased

**Andrew Elrod** (25-26): *Spreading the Open Shop: Non-Union Construction, Energy Decontrol, and the Inversion of Political Legitimacy in the New Deal Order.*  Jain Family Institute  
  
**Michael Elliott** (99-00): Culture and Narrative in the Age of Realism; *The Culture Concept: Writing and Difference in the Age of Realism.* Emory University  
  
**Richard E. Ellis** (72-73): The Transition from Jeffersonian to Jacksonian Democracy: The Legal, Economic, Political, and Psychological Impact of the Panic of 1819; *The Union at Risk: Jacksonian Democracy, States' Rights, and the Nullification Crisis.* SUNY, Buffalo  
  
**David Engerman** (00-01): Modernization Theory in Global Perspective; *Modernization from the Other Shore: American Intellectuals and the Romance of Russian Development.* Brandeis University  
  
**Paul Erickson** (85-86): The Role of Romanticism in Nineteenth-Century American Politics. Deceased  
  
**Philip Ethington** (91-92): City Fathers: Rebuilding the Public Household in the Progressive Era. University of Southern California



 

**Seth Fein** (14-15): Our Neighborhood: Washington's TV Cold War in Latin America in the Sixties. Columbia University

**Mordechai Feingold** (01-02): Amateurs and Scientists: Historical Reflections on the Advent of Professionalization. California Institute of Technology

**Garrett Felber** (17-18): Black United Front Politics and the Police State. University of Mississippi

**Devin Fergus** (22-23): The Inconveniences of Capitalism: Race and Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers*.* University of Missouri  
  
**Louis Ferleger** (91-92): Labor, Technology, and Southern Progress. Boston University  
  
**Jason Ferreira** (19-20): Beyond the Shadows of the Twilight: Excavating the Dialectics of Early Black Consciousness at San Francisco State, 1960-1965

**Kendra Field** (16-17): "Things to be Forgotten": African American Family Histories, Silences, and the Historical Profession. Tufts University  
  
**Peter Filene** (73-74): Sex Roles in 20th-century America; *Him/Her/Self: Sex Roles in Modern America.* University of North Carolina  
  
**David Filvaroff** (66-67): Study of the Background of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (with Raymond Wolfinger); “The Origin and Enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.” SUNY, Buffalo  
  
**Leon Fink** (98-99): The Mayans of Morganton: Localism and Worker Identity Within the Global Marketplace; *The Maya of Morganton: Work and Community in the Nuevo New South.* University of Illinois, Chicago

**Pierre-Christian Fink** (22-23)**:** Neither Political nor Technical: Hyman Minsky’s Failed Attempts to Propose Regulation of the Postwar Money Market. Hebrew University Jerusalem  
  
**Ellen Fitzpatrick** (87-88): American Women Social Scientists in the Early Twentieth Century; *Endless Crusade: Women Social Scientists and Progressive Reform* ; and (93-94): “Thinking for the Masses”: American Historical Writing, 1920-1945; *History's Memory: Writing America's Past, 1880-1980.* University of New Hampshire  
  
**David Flaherty** (71-72): Criminal Justice in Early America, Court of Assize in Eighteenth-century Massachusetts; *Criminal Justice in Provincial Massachusetts: The Court of Assize and General Gaol Delivery, 1700-1710.* David H. Flaherty Inc. Privacy and Information Policy Consultants  
  
**Claude Fohlen** (75-76): 1. Franklin D. Roosevelt's Foreign Policy; United States during Roosevelt's administration 2. Economic and Social Changes in the United States from 1945 to the Present; *L'Amerique de Roosevelt*   
  
**Ron Formisano** (79-80): Massachusetts Political Parties and Voters, 1790s-1840s; *The Transformation of Political Culture: Massachusetts Parties, 1790s-1840s* . University of Kentucky  
  
**Tony A. Freyer** (81-82): The Impact of Government on American Antebellum Economic Development, With Emphasis on the Local Level; *Producers versus Capitalists: Constitutional Conflict in Antebellum America.* University of Alabama  
  
**Alice Friedman** (04-05): American Glamour and the Evolution of Modern Architecture. Wellesley College  
  
**Michael Frisch** (76-77): Steps and Missteps in Recent American Social History; 1."American Urban History as an Example of Recent Historiography" (History and Theory, XVIII/3, 1979) 2."Urban Theory, Urban Reform, and American Political Culture in the Progressive Period" (Political Science Quarterly 97/5, 1982). SUNY, Buffalo  
  
**Marisa Fuentes** (09-10): Buried Urban Landscapes: Enslaved Women Historically Confined in the Colonial Atlantic World. Rutgers University

**Joseph Fronczak** (18-19): Gangster for Capitalism: Smedley Butler Abroad in the Age of Empire. Princeton University



 

**Donna Gabaccia** (00-01): Constructing Economies: The American Construction Industry and the Wider World; “Constructing North America.” University of Minnesota

**Jay Garcia** (14-15): Motley Archives: Multimedia Afterlives of American Literature, 1900-1940 \[Fall Term\]. New York University  
  
**Molly Geidel** (18-19): International Development and Documentary Film from the New Deal to the Cold War. University of Manchester

**Lily Geismer** (15-16): From Yippies to Yuppies: Public Policy and the Market from Great Society to the Clinton Foundation. Claremont McKenna College

**Henry A. Gemery** (82-83): A Comparative Study of Free Labor Mobility: England and the Colonies in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries; “European Emigration to North America, 1700-1880: Numbers and Quasi-Numbers.” Colby College (emeritus)  
  
**Gary Gerstle** (87-88): Beyond Republicanism: The Language and Imagery of Politics in Twentieth-Century America; *Working-Class Americanism: The Politics of Labor in a Textile City, 1914-1960.* University of Maryland  
  
**Pierre Gervais** (03-04): Examining the Industrial Revolution: Technical Progress or Collapse of a Pre-industrial Political Economy? L'Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales  
  
**Jessica Gienow-Hecht** (00-01): Music and Diplomacy: German-American Cultural Relations, 1870-1920. Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität  
  
**John Gilkeson** (90-91): The Domestication of “Culture” in America, 1920-1960. Arizona State University  
  
**Saverio Giovacchini** (02-03): The Rise of Atlantics: The Creation of Euro-American Cinema and Popular Culture after World War II. University of Maryland

**Martin Giraudeau** (15-16): Inclined Plans: On the Mechanics of Capitalism. London School of Economics

**Petra Goedde** (95-96): GIs and Germans: Culture, Gender, and American Foreign Relations, 1945-1949 *GIs and Germans: Culture, Gender, and American Foreign Relations, 1945-1949.* Temple University

**Jeffrey Gonda** (16-17): "As Much Right to Live in a House as Anybody": Black Women and the Fight for Housing Integration in the 1940s. Syracuse University.

**Kelly Goodman** (25-26): *Education Unionism and the Political Economy of School Finance.* West Chester University  
  
**Ralph Goodwin** (66-67): Analysis of the Conflicts of Interest Manifested in the Extended Political Struggle Which Shaped Post-Civil War Indian Policy; “Righting the Century of Dishonor: Indian Reform as a Reaffirmation of Conservative Values.” Dallas, TX  
  
**Dayo Gore** (10-11): Engendering and Internationalizing the Long Black Freedom Struggle: African American Women and Transnational Politics. University of Massachusetts, Amherst  
  
**Arthur A. Goren** (69-70): Ethnic Group Life in New York City in the 1920's, Particularly Among Jews and Italians. Columbia University (emeritus)  
  
**Eliga Gould** (97-98): Civil Society in the Eighteenth-Century British Atlantic; *Zones of Law, Zones of Violence: The American Revolution and the Legal Geography of the Atlantic World* (forthcoming from Harvard University Press). University of New Hampshire

**Jeffrey Gould** (16-17): An Act of Faith: Documentary Filmmaking and History. Indiana University  
  
**Susan Gray** (90-91): Family, Land, and Credit: Yankee Communities on the Michigan Frontier, 1830-1860; *The Yankee West: Community Life on the Michigan Frontier.* Arizona State University  
  
**George D. Green** (69-70): The Causes of the Depression of 1929 and Later. University of Minnesota  
  
**Nancy L. Green** (90-91 and 91-92): A Comparative Social History of Immigrants in the Garment Industry: New York and Paris, 1880-1980; *Ready-to-Wear and Ready-to-Work: A century of Industry and Immigrants in Paris and New York.* L'École des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales  
  
**Cheryl Greenberg** (93-94): The Politics of Alliance: Blacks and Jews, 1930-1955; *Troubling the Waters: Black-Jewish Relations in the American Century.* Trinity College  
  
**Kenneth Greenberg** (87-88): The History of American Dueling; *Honor and Slavery: Lies, Duels, Noses, Masks, Dressing as a Woman, Gifts, Strangers, Humanitarianism, Death, Slave Rebellions, the Proslavery Argument, Baseball, Hunting and Gambling in the Old South.* Suffolk University  
  
**Philip Greven** (66-67): Demographic Study of Andover, MA in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries; *Four Generations: Population, Land, and Family in Colonial Andover, MA.* Rutgers University (emeritus)  
  
**David Grimsted** (67-68): Political and Legal Implications of Riots During the 1830s and 1840s. University of Maryland  
  
**Robert Gross** (79-80): The Transcendentalists and their World: Agriculture and Society in Concord, 1750-1850. University of Connecticut  
  
**Paul Groth** (04-05): Learning Modernity: Blue Collar Homes, Work, and Leisure in the American City after 1870. University of California, Berkeley  
  
**Carl J. Guarneri** (81-82): Full-scale Study of American Fourierism; *The Utopian Alternative: Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America.* Saint Mary's College of California

**Catherine Gudia** (13-14): Curating the City: The Framing of Los Angeles. \[Spring Semester\] University of California, Riverside

**Allen Guelzo** (94-95): Freedom of the Will: The Problem and Its People in American Thought. Gettysburg College  
  
**Thomas Guglielmo** (08-09): Race War: World War II and the Crisis of American Democracy. George Washington University  
  
**Joshua Guild** (09-10): Shadows of the Metropolis: Urban Space and the Transformation of Black Communities in Postwar New York and London. Princeton University  
  
**Philip F. Gura** (80-81): The Mind of the Connecticut Valley before the Great Awakening; *The Wisdom of Words: Language, Theology, and Literature in the New England Renaissance.* University of North Carolina



 

**David Hall** (73-74): 1. Connections between American and English Intellectuals in the Mid-19th Century 2.Edition of Jonathan Edward's Writing on the Nature of the Church. Harvard University  
  
**Françoise Hamlin** (07-08): ‘The Story Isn’t Finished’: Continuing Histories of the Civil Rights Movement. Brown University  
  
**David Hancock** (97-98): The Madeira Wine Trade, 1703-1807; *Oceans of Wine* (forthcoming). University of Michigan  
  
**Jussi Hanhimaki** (93-94): The Origins of Détente: America, Russia, and European Neutrality, 1945-1962; *Containing Coexistence: America, Russia, and the “Finnish Solution.”* Graduate Institute of International Studies (Geneva)  
  
**Jonathan Hansen** (00-01): To Make Democracy Safe for the World; *The Lost Promise of Patriotism: Debating American Identity, 1890-1920.* Harvard University  
  
**Karen V. Hansen** (12-13): Encounter on the Great Plains: Scandinavian Immigrants and Dakota Indians, 1890-1930. Brandeis University  
  
**J. William Harris** (88-89): Social and Economic Change in the South, 1880-1940: A Comparative Local Study; *Deep Souths: Delta, Piedmont, and Sea Island Society in the Age of Segregation.* University of New Hampshire  
  
**John F.C. Harrison** (72-73): British and American Social Movements from 1780 to 1850; Millennialism and Popular Culture in America; *The Second Coming: Popular Millenarianism, 1780-1850.* Cheltenham, UK  
  
**Nathan Hatch** (77-78): Federalism in the Early Republic, Impact of the Revolution on Popular Religion. University of Notre Dame  
  
**Irene Hecht** (71-72): 1.Demographic Analysis of the Virginia Muster of 1624-25 2. Migration to Massachusetts as Reflected in the Material Collected by Charles Banks in ‘Planters of the Commonwealth.' American Council on Education

**Gretchen Heefner** (18-19): To win wherever we fight: America Military Engineers and Extreme Environments during World War Two. Northeastern University  
  
**Rebecca Herman** (18-19): The Global Politics of Anti-Racism: A View from the Canal Zone, 1940-1955. University of California, Berkeley  
  
**Nicole Guidotti-Hernandez** (19-20): Suicide and Racial Capital in the Latinx World, 1880-1917. Emory University

**Eric Herschthal** (24-25): *Carbon Conscripts: Slavery and the Origins of Climate Change.* University of Utah  
  
**Patricia S. Hills** (82-83): “The Partisan Eye”: Painting and Social Concern in 1930s America; *Social Concern and Urban Realism: American Painting of the 1930s.* Boston University  
  
**Martha Hodes** (12-13): Mourning Lincoln: Personal Grief and the Meaning of the American Civil War. New York University  
  
**Dirk Hoerder** (74-75): Crowd Action from 1780 to the 1830s; *Crowd Action in Revolutionary Massachusetts, 1765-1780.* University of Bremen  
  
**Kristin Hoganson** (96-97): The “Manly” Ideal of Politics and the Imperialist Impulse: Gender, U.S. Political Culture, and the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars; *Fighting for American Manhood: How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars.* University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign  
  
**L. James Holt** (68-69): The Anti-statist Element in the American Political Tradition  
  
**James Horn** (89-90): “In forraign plantacons”: The Transfer of English Society to the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake; *Adapting to a New World: English Society in the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake.* Colonial Williamsburg Foundation  
  
**Daniel Horowitz** (69-70): American Conceptions of Industrialization, 1830-1910. Smith College

**Daniel W. Howe** (70-71): The Political Thought of American Whigs in the Nineteenth Century; *The American Whigs; an Anthology.* UCLA (emeritus)

**John Howe** (68-69): Definitions of “Republicanism,” 1776 Onward. St. Paul, MN

**Nicholas Howe** (13-14): The Secular Eye: Landscape, Law, and the American Religious Imagination. Williams College

**Natalie E.H. Hull** (86-87): History of the American Law Institute, 1923-1983; *Roscoe Pound and Karl Lewellyn: Searching for an American Jurisprudence.* Rutgers University  
  
**William Hutchison** (66-67): Interpretations of Early Developments in the Modernist Impulse in American Protestantism; *American Protestant Thought: the Liberal Era.* Deceased

**Forrest Hylton** (16-17): What is (Native) American History? Reflections form the Edge of Empires, Nation-States, and Disciplines. Northwestern University.



 

**Yoshimitsu Ide** (67-68): Reconciliation between the North and South in Late-19th Century History  
  
**Allan Isaac** (19-20): Dying in Diaspora. Rutgers University

**Samantha Iyer** (24-25): *The Geography of Hunger in Post-World War II Los Angeles.* Fordham University



 

**Nicolas Jabko** (22-23): The Federal Reserve and the Changing Politics of Money, 1980 - 2020. Johns Hopkins University

**Walter Jackson** (89-90): American Intellectuals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1968. North Carolina State University  
  
**Meg Jacobs** (03-04): Inflation, The Permanent Dilemma: Postwar Politics and the American Middle Class. MIT

**Trevor Jackson** (22-23) From Commodity Gluts to General Gluts’: Crises of Overabundance in Atlantic Economies, 1602 - 2008. George Washington University  
  
**David Jaffee** (89-90): Artisan Entrepreneurs in the Rural North: The Commercialization of Culture in the Countryside, 1760-1860; “People of the Wachusett: Greater New England in History and Memory” “The Village Enlightenment in the Rural North, 1760-1860” “Peddlers of Progress and the Transformation of the Rural North, 1760-1880” “The Ebenezers Devotion: Pre- and Post-Revolutionary Consumption in Rural Connecticut.” Graduate Center, CUNY; and (12-13): Envisioning Nineteenth-Century New York: New York as Cultural Capital, 1840-1880.  
  
**Sheyda Jahanbani** (10-11): ’The Poverty of the World’: Rediscovering the Poor at Home and Abroad, 1935-1980. University of Kansas  
  
**Sydney James** (79-80): Changing Patterns of Institutions in Colonial Rhode Island; *The Colonial Metamorphoses in Rhode Island: A Study of Institutions in Change.* Deceased  
  
**Maartje Janse** (07-08): “‘Anti Societies Are Now All the Rage’: Jokes, Criticism, and Violence in Response to the Transformation of American Reform, 1825–1835.”

**Michael Jirik** (21-22): Abolition and Academe: Struggles for Black Freedom and Equality in Higher Learning. Carleton College

**Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones** (71-72): American Society and War, 1865 to 1920  
  
**Ann Johnson** (01-02): Engineering the Nation: The Development of American Engineering Communities and their Practices. University of South Carolina  
  
**Patricia Johnston** (99-00): Representation, Religion, and Ethnicity in Nineteenth-Century Elite and Popular Arts; “A Critical Overview of Visual Culture Studies” “Social Tensions in an Ideal World: Samuel F.B. Morse's Gallery of the Louvre.” Salem State College  
  
**Manfred Jonas** (77-78): Two Centuries of German-American Relations; *The United States and Germany: A Diplomatic History.* Union College  
  
**Douglas Jones** (78-79): Poverty and Dependency in Early New England. Iowa State Historical Society  
  
**Winthrop Jordan** (67-68): Research topic not on record. University of Mississippi  
  
**Peniel Joseph** (08-09): Stokely Carmichael: Race, Democracy, and Postwar America, 1941-1969. Brandeis University



 

**Carl Kaestle** (74-75): Rural-Urban Differences in Massachusetts Public Schools, 1830-1880. *Education and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts* (Cambridge University Press, 1980). Brown University  
  
**Laurie Kahn-Leavitt** (02-03): Little-Known Stories of Women in History: A Film Series. Blueberry Hill Productions (Watertown, MA)

**Sarah Luria** (13-14): Block Stories: Field Guide to Where You Live. College of the Holy Cross

**Magana Kabugi** (23-24): *Turning Darkness into Day: Fisk University and the Challenge of Black Higher Education in the Post-Civil Rights Era.* Fisk University

**Laura Kalman** (94-95): The Crisis of Legal Liberalism and the Turn to History; *The Strange Career of Legal Liberalism.* University of California, Santa Barbara  
  
**Jane Kamensky** (04-05): The Exchange Artist: A Story of Paper, Bricks, and Ash in Early National America. Brandeis University  
  
**Barry Karl** (66-67): The Career of Charles Merriam; *Charles E. Merriam and the Study of Politics.* University of Chicago (emeritus)  
  
**Stanley Katz** (66-67): I. Anglo-American Politics in Colonial New York. II. Comparative Study of the Development of Equity Law as Administered in the American Colonies and the English High Court of Chancery; 1. *Newcastle's New York: Anglo-American Politics, 1732-53* 2. “Politics of Law in Colonial America: Controversies over Chancery Courts and Equity Law in the 18th Century.” Princeton University  
  
**Morton Keller** (67-68): I. Thomas Nast. II. American Political Institutions, 1865-1900; 1. *The Art and Politics of Thomas Nast* 2. *Affairs of State: Public Life in Late Nineteenth Century America.* Brandeis University (emeritus)

**Paul Kershaw** (15-16): Arrested Development: Postwar Growth Crisis and Neoliberal Development in the U.S. and Mexico.

**Steven Kesselman** (73-74): Intellectual Development of Rexford Tugwell and Thurman Arnold; Impact of Changing Social Perceptions. National Park Service

**Joseph F. Kett** (69-70): The Discrimination of Stages in the Human Life-Cycle in 19th-century America. University of Virginia  
  
**Daniel J. Kevles** (81-82): History of Social Uses of Genetics in Britain and the United States; *In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Uses of Human Heredity.* Yale University  
  
**Alexander Keyssar** (85-86): Voting Rights and Practices of the Working Class. Harvard University

**Sohaib Khan** (22-23): Secularizing the Shari’a? Deobandi-Muslims and the Making of an Islamic Corporation in South Asia. Yale University  
  
**Denise Khor** (19-20): Owned, Controlled, Operated by Japanese: Racial Uplift and Japanese American Film Production, 1912-1920. University of Massachusetts Boston  
  
**Kevin Kim** (18-19): Never Again Enter Upon Such Crusades. University of California, Los Angeles   
  
**Sung Bok Kim** (80-81): Hardships and Deprivations Brought on by the Revolution. SUNY, Albany  
  
**David Kinkela** (10-11): Opening Pandora’s Box: DDT and the American Century. State University of New York, Fredonia  
  
**Amy Kittelstrom** (05-06): The Religion of Democracy: William James and Practical Idealism in Evolutionary America and Beyond. Harvard University  
  
**Christina Klein** (99-00): Cold War Orientalism: Globalization and the Cultural Politics of Anti-Racism, 1945-1961; *Cold War Orientalism: Asia in the Middlebrow Imagination, 1945-1961.* MIT

**Jennifer Klein** (25-26): *Wastelands: The Economic Geography of Waste, Coercion, and Incarceration in Southeast Louisiana.* Yale University  
  
**Willem Klooster** (97-98): The Loopholes of Atlantic Mercantilism; “Guerre et Contrebande dans le Monde Atlantique.” Clark University

**Sam Klug** (23-24): “*The Colonial Analogy and the Political Economy of Black Power.”* Loyola University, Maryland

**Andrew Konove** (22-23): The Prelude to Our Dissolution: Paper Money and National Sovereignty in Mexico’s First Empire (1822- 1823). University of Texas at San Antonio  
  
**Janice Knight** (90-91): Orthodoxies in Massachusetts; *Orthodoxies in Massachusetts: Rereading American Puritanism.* University of Chicago  
  
**Thomas Knock** (95-96): “Come Home, America”: George McGovern and American Politics and Foreign Policy. Southern Methodist University  
  
**Jurgen Kocka** (69-70): The History of White Collar Employees in the United States; *White Collar Workers in America, 1890-1940: A Social-Political History in International Perspective.* Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung  
  
**Paul Koistinen** (74-75): Political Economy of Warfare in America: Civil War Years; *Beating Plowshares Into Swords: The Political Economy of American Warfare, 1606-1865.* North Hills, CA

**Julilly Kohler-Hausmann** (17-18): Mandate My Ass: Vanishing Voters, Voter Fraud, and the Battles of Shape the Electorate in the Postwar United States. Cornell University  
  
**Peter Kolchin** (75-76 and 84-85): American Slavery and Russian Serfdom: Patterns of Resistance to Bondage in 19th-century Russia and the United States; *Unfree Labor: American Slavery and Russian Serfdom*. University of Delaware  
  
**Albrecht Koschnik** (07-08): Civic Culture in the Making: Institution-Building in America, 1730-1850.  
  
**Paul Kramer** (09-10): An Imperial Polity: Remaking Race in Global America. Vanderbilt University

**Daniel Kryder** (07-08): Policing Movements: Authority and Democracy in Modern America. Brandeis University  
  
**Allan Kulikoff** (79-80): Migration within the American South from the Revolution to the Civil War. University of Georgia  
  
**Scott Kurashige** (08-09): From Civil Rights to a Revolution of Values. University of Michigan



 

**Benjamin W. Labaree** (68-69): The Decision for Independence at the Grass-roots Level and in the Continental Congress; *Empire or Independence, 1760-1776: A British-American Dialogue on the Coming of the American Revolution* . Williams College (emeritus)  
  
**Naomi Lamoreaux** (88-89): Family Affairs: Banks, Kinship Networks, and Economic Development in New England, 1784-1904; *Insider Lending: Banks, Personal Connections, and Economic Development in Industrial New England*. UCLA

**John Larson** (15-16): Commodifying Nature and Naturalizing Greed: Meditations on the Roots of an American Culture of Exploitation. Purdue University  
  
**Marisol LeBron** (19-20): Policing Life and Death: Race, Violence, and Resistance in Puerto Rico. University of Texas at Austin

**Chana Lee** (21-22): Enslaved at the University of Georgia. University of Georgia

**Rebecca Lemov** (17-18): Pre-Crime at the UCLA Violence Center, 1969-1973. Harvard University

**Jill Lepore** (96-97): The Name of War: Waging, Writing, and Remembering King Philip's War; *The Name of War: King Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity*. Harvard University  
  
**David Levin** (76-77): I.Cotton Mather: The Young Life of the Lord's Remembrancer, 1663-1702 II. Cotton Mather's Declaration of the Merchants and Gentleman and Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence; *Cotton Mather: The Young Life of the Lord's Remembrancer, 1663-1703*. Deceased  
  
**Susan Levine** (98-99): The Creation of a National School Lunch Program: Class and Politics in a Consumer Society; *Fixing Lunch: Food and Politics in Twentieth Century America* (forthcoming from Princeton University Press). University of Illinois, Chicago  
  
**Barry Levy** (92-93): Half the Children: Fatherless and Motherless Children in Early Massachusetts, 1630-1820. University of Massachusetts, Amherst  
  
**Beth Levy** (06-07): World War and the Changing Face of Race in American Music Criticism. University of California, Davis  
  
**Patricia Limerick** (83-84): Research topic not on record. University of Colorado, Boulder  
  
**Kenneth A. Lockridge** (69-70): The Extent of Literacy in Colonial New England and Charitable Impulse in Colonial New England; *Literacy in Colonial New England: An Enquiry into the Social Context of Literacy in the Early Modern West*. University of Montana

**Peter L'Official** (14-15): Urban Legends: Representing the South Bronx in Ruin and Reality. Harvard University  
  
**Toussaint Losier** (17-18): Shades of Attica: Criminal Sentencing Reform and the Illinois Prison Movement at the Dawn of Mass Incarceration. University of Massachusetts, Amherst

**David Lubin** (06-07): The Look of War: How Modern Warfare from Gettysburg to Baghdad Has Altered Our Ways of Seeing. Wake Forest University  
  
**W. Scott Lucas** (92-93): Campaigns of Truth: British and American Propaganda and Psychological Warfare Since 1945; *Freedom's War: The US Crusade against the Soviet Union, 1945-1956*. University of Birmingham  
  
**Elizabeth Lunbeck** (87-88): Psychiatry in the Age of Reform: Doctors, Social Workers, and Patients at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital, 1900-1925; *The Psychiatric Persuasion: Knowledge, Gender and Power in Modern America.* Vanderbilt University  
  
**Geir Lundestad** (78-79): American Policy toward Scandinavia from 1945 to 1949; *America, Scandinavia, and the Cold War, 1945-1949*. Norwegian Nobel Institute  
  
**Paula Lupkin** (04-05): Manhood Factories: YMCA Architecture and the Making of Modern Urban Culture, 1865-1929. Washington University



 

**Roy MacLeod** (76-77): Relation between Science, the “Research Ideal,” and the Social Role of the American University, 1840-1919. University of Sydney

**Noam Maggor** (15-16): The United States as a Developing Nation: Revisiting the Political Economy of the Great American West

**Neil Maher** (13-14): Ground Control: How the Space Race Scrubbed Revolution. Rutgers at Newark/New Jersey Institute of Technology

**Pauline Maier** (74-75): Leaders of the Early Revolutionary Years, Samuel Adams and Thomas Young; *The Old Revolutionaries: Political Lives in the Age of Samuel Adams*. MIT

**Simeon Man** : (24-25) *Antimilitary Struggles for Genuine Security in the Pacific.* University of California, San Diego  
  
**Peter Mancall** (91-92): Alcohol and Empire: Indians, Colonists, and the Liquor Trade in British America; *Deadly Medicine: Indians and Alcohol in Early America*. University of Southern California  
  
**C. Roland Marchand** (67-68): World Peace Movement during the Progressive Era; *The American Peace Movement and Social Reform, 1898-1918*. Deceased

**Rebecca Marchiel** (15-16): Neighborhoods First: The Urban Reinvestment Movement in the Era of Financial Deregulation, 1966-1989

**Joan Mark** (79-80): A Biography of Alice C. Fletcher; *A Stranger in Her Native Land: Alice Fletcher and the American Indians*. Harvard University  
  
**Anna Maria Martellone** (79-80): The “Teutonic Doctrine” in the United States and “White” Africa, 1948-1968. Università degli Studi di Firenze  
  
**Lisa Materson** (07-08): For the Freedom of Her Race: Black Women and Electoral Politics, 1877-1932. University of California, Davis  
  
**Saje Mathieu** (18-19): Out of Africa, I Called My Sons: The Politics of Black Enlistment and Engagement during the Great War. University of Minnesota  
  
**Fred Matthews** (75-76): Relations between Psychiatry and Popular Thought in the United States. York University  
  
**Allen Matusow** (70-71): Domestic Policies of the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations; *Unraveling of America: A History of Liberalism in the 1960s*. Rice University

**Carlota McAllister** (16-17): Like Animals: Grace, History, and the Terror of Imperial Reason. York University  
  
**Joseph McCartin** (03-04): The PATCO Strike, the Crisis of Public Employee Unionism, and the Decline of the U.S. Labor. Georgetown University  
  
**Timothy McCarthy** (07-08): Creating Equality: Black Protest, Abolitionism, and the Emergence of American Democracy. Harvard University  
  
**Robert A. McCaughey** (72-73): The Professionalization of American Academic Life: The Nineteenth-Century Harvard Faculty as a Case Study; *The Transformation of American Academic Life: Harvard University 1821-1892*. Barnard College, Columbia University  
  
**Drew McCoy** (83-84): James Madison and the Republican Legacy; *Last of the Fathers: James Madison and the Republican Legacy*. Clark University

**Victor McFarland** (18-19): Machines in Motion: The United States, Saudi Arabia, and Oil, 1967-1973. University of Missouri  
  
**William McLoughlin** (68-69): New England Dissent: The Baptists and the Separation of Church and State, 1630-1833; *New England Dissent 1630-1833, Vol. I &amp; II*. Deceased  
  
**Martha McNamara** (04-05): “The relish for landscape”: Representing New England's Built Environment, 1790-1840. University of Maine  
  
**Jal Mehta** (11-12): The Chastened Dream: Social Science, Social Policy, and Social Progress from the Progressives to the Present. Harvard University

**Elsa Barraza Mendoza** (Spring 22): Property of the College: Enslaved People and the Origins of Jesuit Universities in America. Georgetown University  
  
**Robert Mennel** (77-78): Nineteenth-century Reform Schools. University of New Hampshire (emeritus)

**Simon Middleton**(22-23): Inventing Money in Early Pennsylvania. College of William and Mary

**Christopher Miller** (84-85): American Missionaries in the Antebellum Period. University of Texas, Pan-American

**Max Mishler** (25-26) *Vile Capitalists, Salesmen of Death….the Dope Pusher: Narco-Capitalism in the Age of Black Power.* University of Toronto  
  
**Gregg Mitman** (11-12): America’s Rubber Empire: Ecology, Disease, and Commerce in the Making of Firestone Plantations Company. University of Wisconsin  
  
**Gunter Moltmann** (72-73): 1. American Diplomatist Ambrose Dudley Mann (1801-1889) and His Missions to Europe 2. German-American Relations from 1776 to the Present. Deceased  
  
**Regina A. Morantz-Sanchez** (82-83): “Natural Guardians of the Race”: Women Physicians in American Medicine, 1840-1980; *Sympathy and Science: Women Physicians in American Medicine*. University of Michigan  
  
**Philip Morgan** (87-88): The World of an Anglo-Jamaican in the Eighteenth Century. Princeton University  
  
**David J.S. Morris** (70-71): Attitudes toward Crime and Law Enforcement in Boston, New York and Philadelphia from 1880-1930

**Kathryn Morse** (13-14): The View from Here: Picturing America's Environmental Past. Middlebury College

**Kevin Mumford** (08-09): Brother Redeemers: Race, Sexual Revolution, and Black Gay History. University of Iowa  
  
**John Munro** (10--11): The Anticolonial Front: Cold War Imperialism and the Struggle against Global White Supremacy, 1945-1960. Simon Fraser University  
  
**Donna Murch** (17-18): When you Think Crack Don't Think Black, Think White CIA. Rutgers University  
  
**Teresa Murphy** (89-90): Moral Authority and Family Structure in the Ten Hour Movement of New England, 1830-1850; *Ten Hours Labor: Religion, Reform, and Gender in Early New England*. George Washington University  
  
**John Murrin** (78-79): Relations between Britain and the American Colonies from the Initial Settlements to the War of 1812; “Magistrates, Sinners, and a Precarious Liberty: Trial by Jury in 17th-century New England”; “Trial by Jury: The Virginia Paradox.” Princeton University (emeritus)



 

**Premilla Nadasen** (25-26): *Racial Capitalism, Social Reproduction, and the Politics of Life and Labor.* Barnard College/Columbia University

**Timothy Naftali** (95-96): The Evolution of American National Security Institutions. The Miller Center of Public Affairs  
  
**Philip Nash** (95-96): The Other Missiles of October: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and the Jupiters in Europe, 1957-1963; *The Other Missiles of October: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and the Jupiters, 1957-1963*. Pennsylvania State University, Shenango  
  
**Anjali Nath** (19-20): A Thousand Paper Cuts: U.S. Empire and the Bureaucratic Life of War. University of California, Davis  
  
**Sydney Nathans** (88-89): The Long Emancipations: A Black Community After Slavery, 1865-1920. Duke University (emeritus)  
  
**Adam Nelson** (11-12): Empire of Knowledge: Nationalism, Internationalism, and Scholarship in the Early United States. University of Wisconsin  
  
**Scott Nelson** (10-11): The First Great Depression: The Panic of 1873 and its Aftermath. College of William and Mary

 (24-25): *Tragedy of the Bottoms: Georgia geography, Black urban politics and the hidden violence of Redemption.* University of Georgia   
  
**Charles Neu** (71-72): Evolution of American Policy toward Japan from the 1940's to the Present; *The Troubled Encounter: The United States and Japan*. Brown University (emeritus)  
  
**Kathy Newman** (99-00): Critical Mass: Advertising, Audiences and Consumer Activism in the Age of Radio; *Radio Active: Advertising and Consumer Activism, 1935-1947*. Carnegie Mellon University

**Simon Newman** (Spring 22): British Universities Profiting from Slavery. Georgetown University  
  
**Stephen Nissenbaum** (76-77): 1. Career of Nathaniel Hawthorne 2. Introduction to the Salem Witchcraft papers (in collaboration with Paul Boyer) *; The Salem Witchcraft Papers: Verbatim Transcripts of the Legal Documents of the Salem Witchcraft Outbreak of 1692* ; and (94-95): The Battle for Christmas; *The Battle for Christmas*. University of Massachusetts, Amherst  
  
**Gregory Nobles** (85-86): Merchants and the Transformation of Rural New England, 1700-1815; “The Rise of Merchants in Rural Market Towns: A Case Study of Eighteenth-Century Northampton, Massachusetts.” Georgia Institute of Technology  
  
**Thomas Noer** (79-80): The United States and ‘white' Africa, 1948-1968; *Cold War and Black Liberation: The United States and White Rule in Africa, 1948-1968*. Carthage College  
  
**Mary Beth Norton** (74-75): Diaries of Women Who Lived Between 1750 and 1800; *Liberty's Daughters: the Revolutionary Experience of American Women, 1750-1800*. Cornell University

**Ellen Nye** (22-23): Turning Global Money into Imperial Coinage: Reasserting Ottoman Monetary Sovereignty at the End of the Seventeenth Century. Yale University



 

**Alice O'Connor** (03-04): The Problem of Wealth in the Affluent Society. University of California, Santa Barbara  
  
**Mary Odem** (91-92): The Regulation of Adolescent Female Sexuality in the Early Twentieth Century. Emory University  
  
**Agnes Birgitta Oden** (69-70): Emigration from Urban Areas in Sweden. University of Lund

**Amy Offner** (16-17): The Strange Career of Education Reform: Businessmen, Behavorists, and the Path from the War of Poverty to No Child Left Behind. University of Pennsylvania  
  
**Angelo Olivieri** (72-73): Italian Emigration to the United States from the 1880's to World War I  
  
**Kenneth Osgood** (18-19): Implausible Deniability: The Great Campaign to Manufacture Consent in Cold War America. Colorado School of Mines

**Cynthia Ott** (15-16): Indian National Parks: The Recent History of Environmental Protection on American Indian Lands. St. Louis University



 

**Nell Irvin Painter** (76-77): 1. American Views of Blood, Class, and Civilization in the South at the Turn of the 20th Century 2. Hosea Hudson, A Negro Communist in Brimingham, Alabama in the 1930s and 1940s; *The Narrative of Hosea Hudson, His Life as a Negro Communist in the South* . Princeton University (emeritus)  
  
**Katherine Pandora** (01-02): The Children's Republic of Science in 19th-century America; *Lessons in Natural Knowledge for the Rising Generations of a New Nation*. University of Oklahoma

**Traci Parker** (23-24): *“Beyond Loving: Love, Sex, and Marriage in the Black Freedom Movement.”* University of Massachusetts Amherst  
  
**Susan Parrish** (01-02): Performances of Curiosity: Natural History in Colonial British America; *American Curiosity: Cultures of Natural History in the Colonial British Atlantic World*. University of Michigan

**Marc Parry** (21-22): America’s War Over the Memory of Slavery  
  
**F. Robert Pascoe** (82-83): The Social History of Italian Migration to North America. Victoria University, Melbourne (emeritus)

**Chad Pearson** (Spring 2026): *Anti-Klan Rioting and the Traditions of Working-Class Solidarity.* University of North Texas  
  
**Gunther Peck** (09-10): Trafficking in Race: The Rise and Fall of White Slavery, 1700-2000. Duke University   
  
**Ann Pellegrini** (12-13): Excess and Enchantment: Queer Performance Between the Religious and the Secular. New York University  
  
**Richard H. Pells** (70-71): American Culture and Social Thought in the 1930's; *Radical Visions and American Dreams: Culture and Social Thought in the Depression Years*. University of Texas, Austin  
  
**Bradford Perkins** (69-70): American Diplomatic History and the American Response to Revolutions. University of Michigan (emeritus)  
  
**Michael Perman** (79-80): Analysis of the Impact of Reconstruction on the Southern Political System; *The Road to Redemption: Southern Politics, 1869-1879*. University of Illinois, Chicago  
  
**Jon A. Peterson** (76-77): Origins of Modern American City Planning, 1840-1917; *The Birth of City Planning in the United States, 1840-1917*. CUNY (emeritus)  
  
**Mark Peterson** (97-98): A Christian Athens: Boston in the Atlantic World, 1660-1776. University of Iowa  
  
**Kimberley Phillips** (06-07):‘And We Return Trembling’: Black Cultural Production, War, and Civil Rights. College of William and Mary  
  
**Sarah Phillips** (10-11): The Price of Plenty: Global Burdens and American Agricultural Abundance. Boston University  
  
**Kathryn Preyer** (66-67): An Investigation of the Problem of Federal Jurisdiction over Common Law Crimes in the Early National Period. Deceased  
  
**Francis Paul Prucha** (70-71): American Indian Policy from 1860-1900; *American Indian Policy in Crisis: Christian Reformers and the Indian, 1865-1900*. Marquette University (emeritus)  
  
**Bettye Hobbs Pruitt** (82-83): Study of the Socio-Economic Structure of Massachusetts Towns on the Eve of the Revolution; “Self-sufficiency and the Agricultural Economy of 18th-century Massachusetts.” Portsmouth, NH



 

**Michael Ralph** (14-15): The Domestic Industry Database. New York University

**David Rankin** (77-78): Free People of Color in New Orleans from 1850 to 1870. University of California, Irvine  
  
**Suzanna Reiss** (09-10): Policing for Profit: US Imperialism and the International Drug Economy. University of Hawai'i Manoa  
  
**Susan M. Reverby** (17-18): The Charges are Criminal The Case is Political: The Resistance Conspiracy Case. Wellesley College  
  
**David J. Reynolds** (80-81): The American Occupation of Britain, 1942-1945; *Rich Relations: The American Occupation of Britain, 1942-1945*. Cambridge University  
  
**Edward Rhodes** (89-90): An Uncertain Voyage: U.S. Naval Force Posture and the Pursuit of Global Maritime Hegemony, 1950-1986. Rutgers University  
  
**Douglas Riach** (76-77): Reactions of the Irish to American Slavery  
  
**Heather Richardson** (98-99): Northern Republicans and the ‘Negro Question' 1861-1901. MIT

**Lukas Rieppel** (15-16): Assembling the Dinosaur: Science, Museums, and American Capitalism, 1870-1930

**Janet Riesman** (86-87): The Commercial Revolution in America, 1690-1830

**Olav Riste** (67-68): Norwegian-Allied Relations during World War II; *Norway in the Alliance, 1940-45.* Institutt for Forsvarsstudier  
  
**Takeo Rivera** (19-20): Racial Masochism: Asian America and the Perversities of Racial Form. Boston University

**Cherie Rivers** *(24-25): Sustenance.* University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

**J.T. Roane** (23-24): *“The Grounded Prophet: On June Jordan’s Intellectual Thought and Political Vision”* Rutgers University  
  
**Jon Roberts** (83-84): Protestant Response to Darwinism in America; *Darwinism and the Divine in America*. Boston University  
  
**Jonathan Rosenberg** (00-01): “How Far the Promised Land?”: World Affairs and the American Civil Rights Movement from the First World War to Vietnam; *“How Far the Promised Land?”: World Affairs and the American Civil Rights Movement from the First World War to Vietnam*. Hunter College  
  
**Jesper Rosenmeier** (70-71): 1. Study on W.Bradford of Plymouth Plantation 2. Biography of Cotton Mather. Tufts University  
  
**Daniela Rossini** (95-96): Woodrow Wilson and Italy in 1917-1919: Diplomacy and Propaganda; *Il mito Americano nell' Italia della Grande Guerra*. Third University of Rome  
  
**Margaret Rossiter** (72-73): 1. Women Scientists Active in the United States before 1920 2. American Agricultural Societies from 1785; 1. *Women scientists in America: Struggles and Strategies to 1940* 2. *The Emergence of Agricultural Science: Justus Liebig and the Americans, 1840-1880*. Cornell University  
  
**Edward Rugemer** (09-10): Struggles Over Slavery: a Comparative History of Jamaica and South Carolina From their Origins to 1838. Yale University  
  
**Richard Ryerson** (78-79): Townshend Revenue Act Crisis in America, 1766-1773. David Library of the American Revolution  
  
**Goran Rystad** (66-67): Popular Support and Contemporary Interpretation of Turn-of -the-Century American Expansionism; *Ambiguous Imperialism: American Foreign Policy and Domestic Politics at the Turn of the Century*. Lunds Universitet



 

**Aaron Sachs** (13-14): Melville and Mumford: The Modern Environment, Everyday Trauma, and the Art of Rediscovery. Cornell University

**Neal Salisbury** (88-89): The First Americans: Indians in North America to 1783; “Native People and European Settlers in Eastern North America, 1600-1783.” Smith College

**Lauret Savoy** (24-25) *On the River’s Back: Searching for Generations in the Land.* Mount Holyoke University  
  
**Karen Sawislak** (98-99): The ‘Labor Problem' in America, 1880-1905. San Francisco, CA  
  
**Ronald Schatz** (03-04): Collective Biography of John Dunlop, Clark Kerr, and Other NWLB Staff. Wesleyan University  
  
**Mark Schmeller** (05-06): Invisible Sovereign: Imagining American Public Opinion. Northeastern Illinois University  
  
**Stuart Schrader** (17-18): Policing Revolution: Riot Control Training in Transnational Context.   
  
**Bruce Schulman** (96-97): The Strange Death of American Public Life: Politics and Culture in the Post-Vietnam Era; *The Seventies: The Great Shift in American Culture, Politics, and Society*. Boston University  
  
**Thomas Schwartz** (85-86 and 88-89): John J. McCloy and the American High Commission in Postwar Germany; *America's Germany: John J. McCloy and the Federal Republic of Germany*. Vanderbilt University

**Douglas Seefeldt** (14-15): The Mountain Meadows Massacre in American Memory. Ball State University  
  
**Micol Seigel** (17-18): Violence Work: Policing and State Power. Indiana University  
  
**Robert Shalhope** (89-90): Bennington and the Green Mountain Boys: Political Culture in Vermont, 1760-1820; *Bennington and the Green Mountain Boys: The Emergence of Liberal Democracy in Vermont, 1760-1850*. University of Oklahoma  
  
**Henry David Shapiro** (71-72): 1. Discovery of Appalachia 2. Questionnaires about 1900 American scientists of the Mid-Nineteenth Century; *Appalachia on Our mind: the Southern Mountains and Mountaineers in the American Consciousness*. Deceased  
  
**Martin J. Sherwin** (81-82): J. Robert Oppenheimer: A Political Biography; *American Prometheus: the Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer*. Tufts University  
  
**Elichi Shindo** (77-78): American-Japanese Relations in the Twentieth Century. Tsukuba National University  
  
**David Sicilia** (92-93): Selling Power: Marketing and Monopoly at Boston Edison, 1886-1929 (forthcoming from UNC Press). University of Maryland  
  
**Nina Silber** (96-97): Nurturing the Nation: American Women and Patriotism, 1876-1918; *Daughters of the Union: Northern Women Fight the Civil War*. Boston University

**Nina Silber** (16-17): Slaves of the Depression: The Language of Enslavement in 1930s America. Boston University  
  
**Richard C. Simmons** (68-69): Documents of the Massachusetts Revolution, 1689-1692  
  
**Manisha Sinha** (07-08): Redefining Democracy: African Americans and the Movement to Abolish Slavery, 1775-1865. University of Massachusetts  
  
**Torbjorn Sirevag** (70-71): Politics and War in the New Deal, 1939-1945. University of Oslo  
  
**Harvard Sitkoff** (79-80): The Emergence of Civil Rights as a National Issue during World War II. University of New Hampshire  
  
**Jeffrey Sklansky** (05-06): The Rise and Fall of the Money Question in the Nineteenth-Century United States. Oregon State University  
  
**Judith Smith** (02-03): Black and White in Color: Hollywood Film Representation of Racial Citizenship, 1949-1963. University of Massachusetts, Boston  
  
**Barbara M. Solomon** (68-69): History of American Women. Deceased  
  
**Mark Solovey** (11-12): The Politics-Patrons-Social Science Nexus, from the War in Vietnam to the War on Terror; 1. *Cold War Social Science 2. Shaky Foundations.* University of Toronto  
  
**Fred Somkin** (67-68): Expatriation in the U.S. 1789-1868 and Congressional Protection of Naturalized Americans Abroad. Cornell University (emeritus)

**Robyn Spencer Antoine** (23-24): *“Onward to the World Revolution:” Black women and girls and the movement against the US war in Vietnam**.*** Wayne State University

**Abby Spinak** (15-16): Liquidating the Countryside: Electricity, Democracy, and the Moral Confusion of American Rual Development

**Anne Whiston Spirn** (04-05): The Once and Future City: The Mill Creek Neighborhood of West Philadelphia. MIT  
  
**Sarah J. Stage** (80-81): Women and the Progressive Impulse; *Rethinking Home Economics: Women and the History of a Profession* (Cornell University Press, 1997) Arizona State University  
  
**Lisa Stampnitzky** (11-12): Disciplining Terror: How Experts and Others Created ‘Terrorism. University of Oxford  
  
**Eric Stange** (02-03): 1. Documentary Film on the French and Indian War 2. Making History: How We Create Our Images of the Past; *The War That Made America*. Spy Pond Productions (Arlington, MA)  
  
**Peter Stanley** (75-76): 1. History of Philippine-American Relations 2. Interpretative History of American-East Asian Relations from 1784 to the Present; I. *A Nation in the Making: the Philippines and the Unites States, 1899-1921.* Pomona College  
  
**Richard Steckel** (93-94): Nutrition, Health, and Mortality of American Slaves; *The Backbone of History: Health and Nutrition in the Western Hemisphere* (Cambridge University Press). Ohio State University  
  
**Robert Steinfeld** (03-04): Judicial Review, Property Rights, and the Expansion of American Suffrage Prior to the Civil War. SUNY, Buffalo  
  
**Jerome Sternstein** (68-69): Biography of Senator Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island. Brooklyn College, CUNY (emeritus)  
  
**Jeffrey Stewart** (11-12): The Knowledge Revolution of 1968. University of California at Santa Barbara

**Timothy Stewart-Winter** (17-18): The Fall of Walter Jenkins: Antigay Policing and the Boundaries of the Carceral State in the 1960s. Rutgers University  
  
**Charles E. Strickland** (68-69): History of the Socialization of the Child; *Victorian Domesticity: Families in the Life and Art of Louisa May Alcott*. Emory University, emeritus  
  
**Ellen Stroud** (04-05): Dead as Dirt: An Environmental History of the Urban Corpse. Oberlin College



 

**Peter Temin** (76-77): 1. Ethical Drug Regulation in the United States during the Twentieth Century 2. Economics of Slavery Refuting Recent Claims about the Efficiency of Slaves (with Paul David); II. *Taking Your Medicine: Drug Regulation in the United States*. MIT  
  
**John Thomas** (69-70): Joint Study of the Thought of Henry George, Edward Bellamy, and Henry Demarest Lloyd. Brown University (emeritus)  
  
**Heather Ann Thompson** (17-18): State-Building, Carcerality, and the Fate of Racial Justice and Economic Equality in Postwar America. University of Michigan

**Shatema Threadcraft** (16-17): North American Necropolitics and Gender: On #BlackLivesMatter and Black Femicide. Rutgers University

**Christopher Todd** (22-23): Slavery and Sacred Property: Black Baptist Mission Building and the Creation of a New Afro Jamaican Political Subject During the Age of Revolutions. The University of North Texas  
  
**Christopher Tomlins** (84-85): Form and Function of the Law of Employment in America in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century; *Law, Labor and Ideology in the Early American Republic*. American Bar Foundation  
  
**Kyla Wazana Tompkins** (12-13): Consider the Recipe: Time, Form and the Everyday. Pomona College  
  
**Charles Trout** (78-79): A Biography of James Michael Curley  
  
**Nancy Bernkopf Tucker** (88-89): Sino-American Relations during the Eisenhower and Kennedy Years; *China Confidential: American Diplomats and Sino-American Relations, 1945-1996*. Georgetown University  
  
**James Turner** (79-80): The Historical Origins of Agnosticism in Victorian America; *Without God, Without Creed: The Origins of Unbelief in America*. University of Notre Dame  
  
**William Tuttle** (72-73): History of Racial Violence in America and Other Forms of Collective Violence 2. W.E.B. Du Bois; *W. E. B. Du Bois*. University of Kansas



 

**Leslie F.S. Upton** (68-69): American Attitudes to Loyalists in the 1780s  
  
**Aladar Urban** (73-74): Early Phases of Army Organization on the Patriot Side during the American Revolution  
  
**Paul Uselding** (78-79): History of Mechanical Technology in Antebellum America. Marshall University



 

**Alden Vaughan** (73-74): History of Indian-white relations in British America. Clark University  
  
**Cyrus Veeser** (03-04): Monopoly Practices in a Liberal Age: Concessions and U.S.-Latin American Economic Relations, 1880-1910. Bentley College  
  
**Martha H. Verbrugge** (81-82): Women, Health, and Education in the Nineteenth-century; *Able-Bodied Womanhood: Personal Health and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century Boston*. Bucknell University  
  
**Laurence Veysey** (74-75): American Cultural Institutions in the Late-nineteenth and Early-twentieth Centuries. Deceased  
  
**Alexander Von Hoffman** (93-94): Homes for the People: A History of Urban Housing Reform in the United States. Harvard University



 

**Helena Wall** (88-89): “To Fix the Boundaries of Sorrow”: The Precariousness of Life in Early America. Pomona College  
  
**Alice Walters** (01-02): Objectifying Nature: Science, Culture and Commerce in Britain and America, 1740-1830. Murray State University

**Jackie Wang** (23-24): *“The Carceral Laboratory: The Rise of High-Tech Prisons and Police”* University of Southern California  
  
**Jessica Wang** (11-12): Science and State Power: Political Economies of Knowledge in the United States, 1890-1960. University of British Columbia

**Jessica Wang** (19-20): The Mediterrantean Fruit Fly in the Global Arena: Animals, Governance, and the America Globalism in Early Twentieth-Century Hawai'i. University of British Columbia  
  
**John William Ward** (79-80): Corruption and Political culture in Twentieth-century Massachusetts. Deceased  
  
**Gerald Warden** (75-76): 1. Anglo-American Legal Reforms in the Seventeenth Century 2. Property Transfers in Boston, 1692-1775  
  
**Susan W. Ware** (82-83): A Biography of Molly Dewson; *Partner and I: Molly Dewson, Feminism, and New Deal Politics:* and (07-08): A Sporting Chance: Billie Jean King, Title IX, and Sports Feminism. Cambridge, MA  
  
**Sam Bass Warner** (73-74): Implications for Historical Analysis of a New System for Dividing the Continental United States into Metropolitan Areas; *Measurements for Social History*. MIT  
  
**Sara Warner** (12-13): SCUM: Valerie Solanas and the Art of the Chronic. Cornell University  
  
**John J. Waters** (70-71): 1. Psychological Study of James Otis 2.The Historiography of the New England Town; *The Otis Family: in Provincial and Revolutionary Massachusetts*. University of Rochester  
  
**Duncan B. Waterson** (69-70): The Entrepreneur in the United States and Australia in the Late Nineteenth Century. Macquarie University (emeritus)  
  
**Stephen Webb** (71-72): 1. The Army and British Imperialism: Officer Corps and Anglo-American Politics 2. James Stuart and the English Empire; *The Governors-General: The English Army and The Definition of the Empire, 1569-1681* ; and (74-75): 1.The End of Mercantilism 2. The Phases of Anglo-American History 3. The Military Origins of the First English Empire 4. The Governors-General; *1676, The End of American Independence*. Syracuse University  
  
**Donald Weber** (84-85): Rhetoric and History in Revolutionary New England; *Rhetoric and History in Revolutionary New England*. Mount Holyoke College  
  
**Nancy Weiss Malkiel** (76-77): Blacks and the New Deal; *Farewell to the Party of Lincoln: Black Politics in the Age of F.D.R.* Princeton University  
  
**Robert Wells** (74-75): American Demographic History, Influence of Population in American History; *Revolutions in Americans' Lives: A Demographic Perspective on the History of Americans, Their Families, and Their Society*. Union College

**Teona Williams** (24-25) *After the Storm: Black Feminist Ecological Worldmaking at the end of the World.* Rutgers University  
  
**Joel R. Williamson** (81-82): “The Souls of White Folk”: The Evolution of Southern White Culture. University of North Carolina (emeritus)

**Christopher Willoughby** (21-22) Collected Without Consent: How Capitalism, Imperialism, and Slavery Created Harvard Medical School’s Racial Skulls. The Pennsylvanian State University  
  
**R. Jackson Wilson** (75-76): Washington Irving; Culture and Society in the U.S. since 1800; *Figures of Speech: American Writers and the Literary Marketplace, Benjamin Franklin to Emily Dickinson*. Smith College (emeritus)  
  
**Lisa Wilson** (91-92): Manhood in Puritan New England; *Ye Heart of a Man: The Domestic Life of Men in Colonial New England*. Connecticut College  
  
**Patrick Wolfe** (09-10): Settler Colonialism and the American West, 1865-1904. La Trobe University. Deceased  
  
**Raymond Wolfinger** (66-67): Study of the Origin and Enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (with David Filvaroff); “The Origin and Enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.” UC, Berkeley  
  
**Peter Wood** (74-75): Intercultural History of the Southeast during the Late Eighteenth Century; “The Changing Population of the Colonial South: An Overview by Race and Region, 1685-1790.” Duke University  
  
**Sharon Wood** (98-99): Wandering Girls and Leading Women: Citizenship and Sexuality in Urban Public Life, 1875-1910; *The Freedom of the Streets: Work, Citizenship, and Sexuality in a Gilded Age City*. University of Nebraska  
  
**James E. Wright** (80-81): Relationship Between Local Values and Political Federalism: New Hampshire Progressivism, 1880-1914; *The Progressive Yankees: Republican Reformers in New Hampshire, 1906-1916*. Dartmouth College  
  
**David Wyman** (69-70): Volume Two of a History of U.S. Policy toward Refugees from Nazism, 1942-45; *The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945*. Amherst, MA



 

**Craig Yirush** (05-06): Forming American Political Theory: Rights, Law and Sovereignty in the Early Modern British Atlantic, 1685-1784. UCLA  
  
**Cynthia Young** (09-10): Afterburn: Race and Culture After 9/11. Boston College

**Jasmin Young** (23-24): *“A Turn towards Black Self Determination.”* University of California, Riverside  
  
**Harvey Young** (12-13): Virtually Black: Race and New Media. Northwestern University



 

**Natalie Zacek** (Spring 22) The Price of Knowledge: British Universities and Slavery. University of Manchester

**Rafia Zafar** (95-96): We Wear the Mask: Transcending the Text in Early African American Literature; *We Wear the Mask: African Americans Write American Literature, 1760-1870*. Washington University  
  
**Cynthia Zaitzevsky** (85-86 and 86-87): The Model Housing Movement in the United States, 1850-1929: Social Reform and Architectural Innovation. Newton, MA  
  
**Susan Zeiger** (06-07): War Brides and Yank Soldiers: Intercultural Marriage and U.S. International Relationships in the Twentieth Century. Regis College  
  
**Andrew Zimmerman** (10-11): A Global History of the American Civil War. George Washington University  
  
**Dragan Zivojinovic** (71-72): The United States and the Vatican policies 1914-1918  
  
**Rebecca Zurier** (99-00): Picturing the City: The Ashcan School, the Mass Media, and the Imaging of Modern New York; *Picturing the City: Urban Vision and the Ashcan School*. University of Michigan