Thursday, November 19, 2009

Call for Papers!

The James A. Barnes Club, Temple University's graduate student history organization, is pleased to announce the Fifteenth Annual Barnes Club Graduate Student Conference.

The Barnes Club Conference will be held on Saturday, March 27, 2010, from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM at Temple University's Center City Campus, 1515 Market Street in downtown Philadelphia. In the past, the Barnes Club Conference has become one of the largest graduate student conferences on the East Coast, drawing participants from across the nation and around the world.

Proposals from graduate students for individual papers and/or panels are welcome on any topic, time period, or approach to history. The panels will include two or three paper presentations at twenty minutes each. Cash prizes will be awarded to the best papers in American, European, World, and military history. The registration fee is $40 for presenters and attendees. A continental breakfast, lunch, and pre- and post-conference receptions are included.

Please submit a one-page abstract that outlines your original research and a current C.V. no later than January 15, 2010. Please do not send complete papers at this time; only abstracts will be accepted. The Barnes Club Conference Committee will notify applicants by February 5, 2010. Final drafts of papers and registration fees are due no later than March 5, 2010. Electronic submission is required.

In addition to paper presentations, the conference will feature a keynote address by Yale historian Glenda Gilmore, author of the recent book Defying Dixie. Furthermore, this year’s presenters will have the opportunity to publish their work in an online journal produced by the Barnes Club. Finally, we will continue a successful program of workshops and round-table discussions.

For more information about the James A. Barnes Club and the Barnes Club Graduate Student Conference, please check our blog at http://barnesclub.blogspot.com, or contact us at jabconf@temple.edu.

--

Lindsay Helfman, Brenna O’Rourke, & Dan Royles
Chairs, James A. Barnes Club Conference
Temple University, Department of History

934 Gladfelter Hall, 1115 W. Berks Street
Philadelphia, PA 19122

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Ten Tech Tips for Teaching, Researching, and Learning about the Past

On October 13 Dr. Seth Bruggeman shared his interest in tech-savvy teaching and scholarship with the Temple community.

Click the link for excellent tips.

http://astro.temple.edu/~scbrug/digitalresources.html

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Quizzo at The Bards this Thursday!

Come out to The Bards this Thursday for a rousing round of Quizzo with your fellow Barnes Clubbers! Johnny Goodtimes' questions start at 10:15, but get there earlier to enjoy a round of beers and come collegial commiseration.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Faculty-Student Picnic

The 2009 Faculty-Student Picnic in Fairmont Park was a grand success! We had a spectacular turn out including a mixture of new and old students as well as a sizable contingent of faculty. The day included a closely fought faculty vs. students softball game won by...well, nevermind, it's all in how you play the game. Thanks to everyone who attended, brought food, and helped with set-up and tear down.








New Faces


Old Hands


For Kessler, mighty Kessler, was advancing to the bat...


Ben 'the Bullet' Brandenburg









A special 'thank you' to all the faculty who attended and put on such an amazing display of competitive athleticism:


(click to enlarge)

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Fall BBQ

Date: Sunday, September 13
Time: 12:30-3:00pm
Location: Lemon Hill baseball diamond in Fairmont Park
Bring your family, a lawn chair, a baseball glove or two, and just perhaps the desire to take a swing in a friendly softball match. As before, this will be a potluck event. The Club will provide burgers, bratwurst, and drinks. We ask that you bring a snack, side dish, or dessert.

Please RSVP to jabgrad@temple.edu by Friday, September 11 to let us know if you are coming. For those of you attending the 3:30pm World History Workshop at Callowhill Street, it is a 7 minute drive or 30 minute walk. For questions or concerns please contact jabgrad@temple.edu or Ben Brandenburg at 612.220.0478.

Directions: Take Kelly Drive and turn north at Poplar Drive (at Boathouse Row) Street parking is readily available next to the baseball diamond. Google directions can be found using this address: 2992-3100 Poplar Dr, Philadelphia, PA‎

View Larger Map

Saturday, April 4, 2009

James A. Barnes Conference Winners

International and World History
1. Sheetal Chhabria, Columbia University, "The Social Meanings of Poor Housing in 19th Century Bombay"

2. Carla Stephens,Temple, "The People Organized: Mozambican Liberation and American Activism"

American History
1. Paul D. Naish, CUNY Graduate Center, The Threefold Veil of Darkness: Crypto-Criticism of the American Revolution and Conflicted Thoughts on U.S.-Mexican Relations in Timothy Flint’s Francis Berrian

2. David Keenan, Northwestern, Federalist No. 10 Reconsidered: The Early US Congress and the Origins of American Lobbying, 1789-1801

European History
1. Larissa Kopytoff, NYU, "Qu’ranic Schools and French Médersas: Education and Political Authority in Colonial French West Africa"

2. You-Sun Crystal Chung, University of Michigan, "Unlikely Alliances: A Mathematician, a Clerk, a Solicitor, a Detective Novelist and the British Empire"

Russell F. Weigley-U.S. Army Heritage Center Foundation Awar
1. Earl J. Catagnus, Jr., Temple University, “Innovation and Adaptation in the U.S. Army Infantry, 1930-1941”

2. Christopher Golding, Temple University, “British Combined Operations of the Napoleonic Wars: The Battle of Copenhagen and the Walcheren Expedition”

Saturday, March 14, 2009

14th James A. Barnes Conference Schedule

FRIDAY, March 20, 2009

5:00-5:10 PM-Welcoming Remarks
Room 320

5:15-6:15 Professional Development

Session A – A Mock Interview and Discussion
Room 320
Dr. Andrew Isenberg, Chair, Department of History, Temple University
Dr. Andrew McKevitt, Temple University

Session B – Practical Tips for Publishing
Room 322
Dr. David Farber, Temple University
Mick Gusinde-Duffy, Senior Acquisitions Editor, Temple University Press

Light refreshments will be served following presentations

SATURDAY, March 21, 2009

8:00 – 8:25 AM – CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Room 308

8:25 – 8:35 AM – WELCOME AND OPENING REMARKS
Room 308
Abigail Perkiss, President, James A. Barnes Club
Benjamin Brandenburg, Alex Elkins, Susan Brandt, Chairs, Conference Committee

8:40 – 10:20 AM – SESSION A

ENCOUNTERS IN THE GLOBAL CONTEXT
Room 307
Chair: Dr. Travis Glasson, Temple University
Commentator: Wendy Wong, Temple University

Tsione Wolde-Michael, Harvard University, Ethiopia in the American
Imagination: The Debate on Race, Citizenship, and Nationhood, 1775-1861

Paul D. Naish, CUNY Graduate Center, The Threefold Veil of Darkness: Crypto-Criticism of the American Revolution and Conflicted Thoughts on U.S.-Mexican Relations in Timothy Flint’s Francis Berrian

Dael Norwood, Princeton University, Fighting the Opium War at Home: John Quincy Adams, the American China Trade, and Antebellum Political Ideology

Eric Connon, Central Michigan University, Spies, Secrets, and Slaves: The Espionage Campaigns of Nineteenth-Century Anti-Slave Trade Operations


MANAGING POPULATIONS
Room 306
Chair: Dr. Howard Spodek, Temple University
Commentator: Richard McAlexander, Temple University

Nelly de Freitas, Sorbonne, Where to go? Insular Population Growth and Control: The Madeira Island Case, 1850-1900

Sheetal Chhabria, Columbia University, The Social Meanings of Poor Housing in Nineteenth Century Bombay, 1870-1890

Dewen Zhang, SUNY-Stony Brook, Mother of China’s Future Citizen’s: Wu Jufang and Refugee Children Relief during the Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1934

Fang Zhou, Georgia Institute of Technology, Foreign Influences and Employment Opportunities: Comparative Developments of Shanghai and New York City’s Public Transportation Systems During the Late 19th to Early 20th Centuries

THE WEST AND THE WORLD, 1940S-1980S
Room 321
Chair: Dr. Drew McKevitt, Temple University
Commentator: Debbie Sharnak, International Center for Transitional Justice

Carla R. Stephens, Temple University, The People Organized: Mozambican Liberation and American Activism

Jared Michael Phillips, University of Arkansas, Toward a Better World: LBJ, Niebuhr, and American Human Rights, 1964-1966

Matthew Shannon, UNC Wilmington, American Foreign Policy and Iranian Student Dissent in the Age of global Protest: 1967-1969

Alexandre Moreli Rocha, Sorbonne, Rising to Superpower: The Evolution of American Policy Towards Portugal at the End of WWII

REVOLUTION AND REPUBLIC
Room 325
Chair: Brenna S. O’Rourke, Temple University
Commentator: Brenna S. O’Rourke, Temple University

Kenneth Owen, The Queen’s College, University of Oxford, “Would a mob in England, France, or Holland have behaved in the same manner?”: Political Violence in Revolutionary Pennsylvania

David Keenan, Northwestern University, Federalist No. 10 Reconsidered: The Early U.S. Congress and the Origins of American Lobbying, 1789-1801

Aaron Sullivan, Temple University, Freedom in the Occupied City: Runaway Slaves in Philadelphia

Melissah J. Pawlikowski, Ohio State University, Soldier Up: Social and Economic Mobility in America’s War for Independence
RELIGION, POLITICS, AND ETHICS IN CENTRAL EUROPEAN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY
Room 315
Chair: Dr. Kathleen Biddick, Temple University
Commentator: Paul Matzko, Temple University

James Chappel, Columbia University, Theologico-Political Enmity: Carl Schmitt and Erik Peterson in Weimar Germany

Simon Taylor, Columbia University, Leo Strauss’s Zionist Synthesis

Isabel Gabel, Columbia University, Fear and Trembling: Hans Jonas, Hans Blumenberg, and the Problem of Genetic Engineering for Secular Ethics

Leszek Murat, SUNY Albany, Devils with Aureole: Institutionalized Atheism of the Security Service Officers in Communist Poland (1944 - 1989)

PRIVACY AND SOVEREIGNTY
Room 314
Chair: Robert Deal, Temple University
Commentator: Abigail Perkiss, Temple University

Michael Conforti, Fordham University, Searching for the ‘Self’ in Strange Places: Privacy and English Common Law in the 1760s

Michael DeMarco, Temple University, Sodomy, Fornication, and Adultery Laws in Nineteenth-Century Virginia and New Jersey: A Legal and Social Analysis

Nancy Morgan, Temple University, The Significance of the “William Penn” essays on Worcester v. Georgia

Matt McDonough, Kansas State University, “A Salubrious Climate”: The Acquisition of the Oregon Territory 1840-1846

10:25 AM– 11:55 AM– SESSION B

CONSTRUCTING IMPERIALISM
Room 315
Chair: Dr. Harvey Neptune, Temple University
Commentator: Carla Stephens, Temple University

Amando Boncales, Northern Illinois University, The United States’ Image Construction in the Colonial Philippines

You-Sun Crystal Chung, University of Michigan, Unlikely Alliances: A Mathematician, a Clerk, and the British Empire

NARRATIVES OF POWER IN THE SOUTHWEST
Room 307
Chair: Dr. Barry Joyce, University of Delaware
Commentator: Dana Dorman, Temple University

Lindsey Baker, University of Delaware, Finally, Carson did not cut down the Navajo Peach Trees: Power, Stewardship, and Interpretation in the American Southwest

Christine Croxall, University of Delaware, For Whom and By Whom? Power, Identity and Stewardship in Hopi and Navajo Rituals

Amanda Guidotti, University of Delaware, Syzygy and Transubstantiation: New Approaches
to Native Identity in the Modern Southwest

THE GREAT WAR AND THE INTERWAR PERIOD IN MILITARY HISTORY
Room 321
Chair: Dr. Jay Lockenour, Temple University
Commentator: Chris Golding, Temple University

Jon Hendrickson, Ohio State University, Admiral Troubridge and the Royal Navy’s Foremost Unwritten Rule

Nathaniel Weber, Texas A&M University, Sympathy for the Shocked: The Acceptance of Shell-Shock by Great Britain, 1914-1922

Aaron R. Linderman, Texas A&M University, Baptism in Confusion: Britain’s Pre-War Heritage of Irregular Warfare and How it Influenced World War II

Earl J. Catagnus, Jr., Temple University, Innovation and Adaptation in the U.S. Army Infantry, 1930-1941

DISEASE, TECHNOLOGY, AND NATURE
Room 325
Chair: Dr. Andrew Isenberg, Temple University
Commentator: Lawrence Kessler, Temple University

Ji-Hye Shin, Rutgers University, Asian Immigrants and Trachoma in the American Frontier, 1897-1910

Craig A. Rigdon, University of Montana, Fire on the Great Plains: The Cultural Origins of North America's Grasslands

AMERICA IN THE EIGHTIES
Room 306
Chair: Dr. Beth Bailey, Temple University
Commentator: David Lee, Temple University

David Bassano, University of Albany-SUNY, From “Our Man” to “Our Enemy”: The United States and Manuel Noriega

Daniel Royles, Temple University, Queering the Constitution: AIDS Activism in Philadelphia

Lindsay Helfman, Temple University, Moving On: Debating Urban Crisis and Renewal in the Aftermath of MOVE


SALVATION IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE
Room 314
Chair: Dr. Rita Krueger, Temple University
Commentator: Ryan Johnson, Temple University

Ken Kurihara, Fordham University, Wonder and Theologian: Christoph Irenaus and his works on Wunderzeichen

Kathleen Manning, Rutgers University, In the Company of Miserable Virgins: Education and Salvation in Sixteenth-Century Rome

12:00 – 12:45 PM – LUNCH
Room 308
A light lunch will be served for all registered attendees

12:50 – 1:50 PM KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Room 320
Dr. Thomas Sugrue, Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Professor of History and Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania, “Jim Crow's Last Stand: The Unfinished Struggle for Racial Equality in the North”

2:00 – 3:45 PM – SESSION C

SLAVERY AND EMANCIPATION POLITICS
Room 307
Chair: Andrew Diemer, Temple University
Commentator: Andrew Diemer, Temple University

Gregory R. Jones, Kent State University, In a Pall of Gloomy Clouds: Sectionalism in Southeastern Ohio in the 1850s

James Finelli, University at Albany, The Leading Colored Men Care More for Churches Than Schools: The Virginia Freedman’s Bureau, and the Independent Black Church

RACE AND REFORM IN AMERICA
Room 314
Chair: Dr. Bryant Simon, Temple University
Commentator: Timothy Cole, Temple University

Charles Lewis Nier, III, Temple University, Tell Them, We’re Rising: Credit Discrimination and African American Home Ownership in Philadelphia during the Great Migration, 1910-1960

Ezra Tessler, Columbia University, Progressive Reform and the County Jail: The Rise and Fall of the Essex County Jail Mutual Welfare League

Joshua Farrington, University of Kentucky, Farewell to the Party of Nixon: Black Voters, Southern Strategies, and the 1960 Presidential Election

Alex Elkins, Temple University, Remaking Whiteness, Remaking America: The White Ethnic Revival of the 1970s




COLONIAL AND POSTCOLONIAL AFRICA
Room 315
Chair: Dr. Benjamin Talton, Temple University
Commentator: Martin Clemis, Temple University

Daren E. Ray, University of Virginia, Framing and Negotiating Jurisdictional Sovereignty: British Consolidation of Legal Pluralism in the Zanzibar Protectorate, 1839-1908

Larissa Kopytoff, New York University, Qu’ranic Schools and French Medersas: Education and Political Authority in Colonial French West Africa

Jesse Bucher, University of Minnesota, Nudity and Steve Biko’s Body in South African Political Debate

THE BRITISH MILITARY AND IMPERIAL CRISIS
Room 306
Chair: Dr. Gregory J.W. Urwin, Temple University
Commentator: Ryan Johnson, Temple University

Chris Golding, Temple University, British Combined Operations of the Napoleonic Wars: The Battle of Copenhagen and the Walcheren Expedition

Charles Robert Heaton, Texas A&M University, The Failure of Enlightenment Military Doctrine in Revolutionary America: The Piedmont Campaign and the Fate of the British Army in the Deep South

CONFLICT AND PUBLIC PERCEPTION
Room 325
Chair: Dr. Petra Goedde, Temple University
Commentator: Kelly Shannon, Temple University

Blake Whitaker, Texas A&M University, Shades of Racism: The African Soldiers in Minority Rule Regimes

Daniel I. Johnson, Texas A&M University, Hard or Hopeless: Cyprus in Britain’s Public Eye, 1955-1959

GENDER IN MODERN RUSSIA
Room321
Chair: Dr. Vladislav Zubok, Temple University
Commentator: Daniel Royles, Temple University

Anna Biel, University at Albany, Sacrifice in the Name of Sacred Duty: the Collective Image of the Decembrist Wives in Russian Culture

Masha Kowell, University of Pennsylvania, The Soviet Woman Authored As Producer: Women in Dziga Vertov’s Three Songs of Lenin


3:50 – 4:25 PM – AWARDS CEREMONY
Room 320
Please join us for the presentation of the Russell F. Weigley Award for Military History and the James A. Barnes Club Awards for American, European, and International and World History.

2009 Conference Committee
Abigail Perkiss, President, James A. Barnes Club
Benjamin Brandenburg, Conference Chair
Susan Brandt, Conference Chair
Alex Elkins, Conference Chair

Special Thanks to the 2009 Conference Sponsors

Temple University James A. Barnes Club
Temple University Department of History
Temple University College of Liberal Arts
Temple University – Center City
The US Army Heritage Center Foundation

Special Thanks to the 2009 Award Committees

Russell F. Weigley – U.S. Army Heritage Center Foundation Award
Dr. Gregory J. W. Urwin, Temple University, Chair
Lorraine Luciano, Army Heritage Center Foundation
Lt. Col. Martin W. Andresen, USA (Ret.), U.S. Army Military History Inst., Carlisle Barracks, PA
Dr. Bobby A. Wintermute, Queens College – City University of New York
Martin Clemis, Temple University
John Castaldo, Temple University

James A. Barnes Club Award for American History
Benjamin Brandenburg, Temple University, Chair
Dr. Andrew Isenberg, Temple University
Matt Johnson, Temple University
Henry N. Buehner, Temple University

James A Barnes Club Award for European History
Christopher Golding, Temple University, Chair
Dr. Rita Krueger, Temple University
Brad Mollmann, University of Miami of Ohio

James A. Barnes Club Award for International and World History
Kelly Shannon, Temple University, Chair
Dr. Petra Goedde, Temple University
Dr. Andrew McKevitt, Temple University
David Atkinson, Boston University

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

American Jewish History Job Talks

There will be three more job talks in the next couple of weeks
for the position in American Jewish History. Here are the
details:

Feb. 10 -- 3:00PM – Lila Corwin Berman (Penn State) – “Exit
City: Jews, Race,and the Politics of Migration”

Feb. 18 – 3:00PM – Tony Michels (University of Wisconsin at
Madison) – “Red Jews: The Ethnic Origins of American Communism”

Feb. 19 3:00PM – Kirsten Fermaglich (Michigan State) "Fixing
the Family Name: Jewish families, class mobility, and name
changing in New York, 1930-1960"

All in the Weigley Room

Monday, February 9, 2009

Barnes Conference Info Extravaganza

Final drafts of papers and registration fees are due no later than March 9, 2009. Electronic submission is required. Cash prizes will be awarded to the best papers in four categories. Twenty to thirty page papers will be given preference, but seven to ten page presentation papers will be considered. You are not required to submit a twenty to thirty page paper.

Please mail the registration fee of $20 by March 9, 2009 to our mailing address listed below. The registration fee is $25 at the door. A continental breakfast, lunch, and post-conference reception are included.

We are pleased to announce Saturday's keynote lecture given by Thomas Sugrue, author of the widely acclaimed The Origins of the Urban Crisis (1996). It won the prestigious Bancroft Prize in History, the President's Book Award of the Social Science History Association, the Philip Taft Prize in Labor History, the Urban History Association Prize for Best Book in North American Labor History, and was selected as a Choice Outstanding Book. His most recently published work is Sweet Land of Liberty: The Forgotten Struggle for Civil Rights in the North (2008).

SCHEDULE
We have attached a tentative conference schedule. Please review, and if you would like to change your paper title, please inform us at: jabconf@temple.edu. The final schedule will be emailed to you on March 12.

PANEL DETAILS/TIMING SESSIONS
As you draft your paper or comments, please keep in mind that a session can be frustrating if there is not sufficient time left for questions and discussion. So please be considerate and limit the length of your presentation. Papers should not be longer than 15 minutes each (7-10 double-spaced pages). Each panel presentation is followed by commentary by a graduate student and then Q&A. Faculty members from Temple University or other universities in the region will moderate every panel.
LOCATION
The Barnes Club Conference will be held on Saturday, March 21, 2009, from 7:30 AM to 4:30 PM at Temple University's Center City Campus, 1515 Market Street in downtown Philadelphia (http://www.temple.edu/tucc/). All conference events will take place on TUCC's third floor.

TRANSPORTATION
There are several options for the ride from Philadelphia International Airport to Center City. If you opt to take a taxi, expect to pay a flat rate of about $25. Shuttles are also available. The Lady Liberty Shuttle, 215-724-8888, charges $8. The train is another option. You can take the R1 SEPTA line from the airport to Suburban Station for approximately $7. Suburban Station, located at 16th Street and John F. Kennedy Boulevard, is three blocks from the Club Quarters. The web page for train schedules and other public transportation information in the Philadelphia area is: www.septa.org

If you are coming from another area close to Philadelphia, please check www.septa.org to see the train lines. There are connecting trains from NJ Transit, which connect to SEPTA trains in Trenton and will take you to Center City Philadelphia. Again, exit the train at Suburban Station, which is right next to TUCC. Amtrak is also available. All Amtrak trains will arrive at 30th Street Station. You can then take any SEPTA line from 30th Street Station to Suburban Station, or you can hail a cab. TUCC is about 15 blocks from 30th Street Station.

If you are driving to the conference and staying at the Club Quarters, the hotel will validate your parking for the Parkway Garage at Liberty Place, which is across the street from the hotel. The validation is worth 15% off of the daily charge. With the validation, you will be charged $19 per day. If you are driving to the conference and are not staying overnight, please see the following web site for parking options. Prices tend to be approximately $10-15 per day on weekends: http://www.temple.edu/tucc/contact_parking.htm
LODGING
For the sake of convenience and proximity to TUCC, we have reserved a block of rooms at the Club Quarters, 1628 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103. (215)282-5000 www.clubquarters.com

We have blocked a limited number of rooms at the Club Quarters hotel located at 1628 Chestnut Street in Philadelphia. The rates are $129 per night. If you would like to reserve a room, please call Club Quarters Members Services during business hours at 212-575-0006 before February 20, 2009. Please identify yourself as part of the Temple University Barnes Club Conference and use group code TEM320.

Crowne Plaza (215)561-7500
Holiday Inn Express (800)564-3869
Marriott Courtyard (215)496-3200
Radisson Plaza-Warwick (215)735-6000

A/V REQUESTS
For purposes of scheduling, we will need any additional A/V requests by March 9. We will be unable to field A/V requests after this date.

ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS
For questions about conference registration or A/V requests, contact susan.brandt@temple.edu.

Many thanks, and we look forward to seeing you in March at the conference. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions.

Benjamin Brandenburg, Susan Brandt, & Alex Elkins
Chairs, James A. Barnes Club Conference
jabconf@temple.edu

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Colonial Latin American History Job Talks

Please make every effort to attend all three job talks in
the colonial Latin American history search. Observing lots of
job talks is the best way to learn how to do one yourself.
The talks are as follows:

Tamara Walker (Ph.D. Univ. Michigan; post-doctoral faculty
Univ. Pennsylvania), SLAVERY, HONOR, AND DRESS IN
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY LIMA, PERU Thursday, Jan 22, 3:00, GH 914
(Weigley Room)

Sylvia Sellers-García (ABD, University of California,
Berkeley),DOCUMENTS FROM AFAR: MAIL ROUTES AND CONCEPTIONS OF
DISTANCE IN COLONIAL GUATEMALA Monday, Jan 26, 3:00, GH 914
(Weigley Room)

Mónica Ricketts (Ph.D. Harvard University; Asst. Prof. of
History, Univ. of Long Island), STRUGGLES FOR POWER AND
EQUALITY IN THE HISPANIC WORLD, 1760-1830 Thursday, Jan 29,
3:00, GH 914 (Weigley Room)