BOSTON UNIVERSITY (5)

Karin Goldstein, “From Pilgrims to Poverty: Biography of an Urban Renewal Neighborhood in Plymouth, Massachusetts.”  Laura Driemeyer, “Rising from the Ashes: The Transformation of 19th Century Building Culture in Charlestown, Massachusetts.”  Johnny Lew, “Travels in a World Economy: Varieties of Subjectivity in Travel Writing, 1492-1666.”  Paul Schmitz, “D’Agostino Supermarkets, from Pushcart to Product: Family and Ethnicity as Cultural Currency.”  John Tessitore, “Whitmania: The Poetics of Free Religion.”

BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY (7)

Kent Bean, “Policing the Border of Identity at the Mormon Miracle Pageant.”  Maria DeRose, “Searching for Wonder Women: Examining Women’s Non-Violent Power in Feminist Science Fiction.”  Timothy Shawn Elizondo, “The Consumption of Masculinity One Object at a Time.”  Meredith Rae Guthrie, “Somewhere In-Between: Tween Queens and the Marketing Machine.”  Stephanie Tuszynski, “IRL (In Real Life): Breaking Down the Binary of Online Versus Offline Social Interactions.”  Scott Walter, “White Is and White Ain’t” Representations and Analyses of Whiteness in the Novels of Chester Himes.”  Marilyn Yaquinto, “Policing the World: American Mythologies and Hollywood’s Rogue Cop Character.”

BROWN UNIVERSITY (6)

Charlotte Biltekoff, “Hidden Hunger: Eating and Citizenship from Domestic Science to the Fat Epidemic.” Jonna Eagle, “Making a Spectacle of Himself: White Masculinity, Melodrama, and Sensation in the American Cinema, 1898-1999.”  Christin Lee Hancock, “Sovereign Bodies: Women, Health Care, and Federal Indian Policy, 1890-1980.”  James Owen Ross, “The Impact of the Nineteenth-Century Public Health Movement Upon American Architecture: Theories of Disease, Ventilation and Sunlight, 1840-1944.”  Carla Tengan, “Cultivating Communities: Japanese-American Gardeners in Southern California, 1910-1980.”  Susanne Wiedemann, “Transnational Encounters with ‘Amerika’: German Jewish Refugees’ Identity Formation in Berlin and Shanghai, 1939-1949.”

CLAREMONT GRADUATE UNIVERSITY (1)

Denise Campbell, “Quilting a Culture: Theories of Aesthetics, Representation, and Resistance in African-American Quiltmaking.”

EMORY UNIVERSITY (7)

Terry Easton, “Temporary Work, Contingent Lives: Race, Immigration, and Transformations of Atlanta’s Daily Work, Daily Pay.”  Martin Halbert, “New Models for Research Libraries in the Digital Age.”  George Johnston, “Drafting Culture: A Social History of Architectural Graphic Standards.”  Emily Satterwhite, “Locally Colored: Popular Fiction of Appalachia and Geographies of Reception.”  Katherine Skinner, “‘That We All Be Free’: Music and Social Change.” Susannah Koerber, “Signs of the Times: Context and Connection in Southern Conservative Evangelical Protestant and Midwestern Roman Catholic Grassroots Art Environments.”  Lynnell Thomas, “Race and Erasure in New Orleans Tourism.”

GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY (2)

Brian Fiinegan, “Secular Pilgrimages: Cultural and Economic Influences of the United States in Chile during the Cold War and its Aftermath.”  Paul Gardullo, ” ‘No Deed but Memory’: Slavery in the Cultural Imagination.” 

HARVARD UNIVERSITY (3)

Mark Hanna, “The Pirate Nest: The Impact of Piracy on Newport, Rhode Island, and Charles Town, South Carolina, 1670-1730.”  Sara Schwebel, “History, Memory, and Myth: Children’s Literature and Classroom Conceptions of the Past.”  Laura Serna, “We’re Going Yankee: American Films, Mexican Nationalism, Transnational Cinema, 1917-1935.”

UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI’I - MANOA (2)

David Mayeda, “Re-Conceptualizing Risk: Adolescents in Hawaii Talk About Rebellion and Respect.”  Jane Yi, “Asian-American Literature in the Age of Globalization: Rethinking Race, Ethnicity and Nationalism in the U.S.”

INDIANA UNIVERSITY (7)

Nathan Carroll, “Public Access, Private Archives: How DVDs Disrupted Film History.”  Victoria Elmwood, “Playing Defense: Countercultural American Men’s Autobiography Between the Atomic Bomb and the Reagan Era.”  Suzanne Enck-Wanzer, “Site Unseen: Women’s Agency in Contemporary American Constructions of Domestic Violence.”  Elizabeth Kuebler-Wolf, “‘The Perfect Shadow of His Master’: Pro-slavery Ideology in American Visual Culture, 1780-1920.”  Jonathan Nichols-Pethick, “Open Up: The American Television Police Drama, 1981-2000.”  Kara Vuic, “Officer, Nurse, Women: Defending Gender in the U.S. Army Corps in the Vietnam War.”  Karen S. York, “American Portrait Cameo Cutting: An Alternate Apprenticeship in Relief Sculpture, 1830-1870.”

UNIVERSITY OF IOWA (1)

William Bryant, “Whole System, Whole Earth: The Convergence of Technology and Ecology in Twentieth Century American Culture.” 

UNIVERSITY OF IOWA (Women’s Studies) (3)

Bianca Rizzoli, “Fan and Journalist Discourses on the Music of Queen: An International Perspective.”  Jessica Share, “Circuit City: The Construction of Lesbian and Gay Identities at the Dinah Shore and White Parties in Palm Springs, California.”  Jill Duquaine-Watson, “Single-Mother College Students in the Post-Welfare Reform U.S.”

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS (3)

Ray Pence, “First and Foremost a Scientist: Lee Meyerson and Changing Definitions of Disability.”  Gwyneth Mellinger, “Members of the Club: A Genealogy of the American Society of Newspaper Editors’ Diversity Initiative.”  Chico Herbison, “Dappin’, Dyin’, and Signifyin’: Depictions of African-American Soldiers in Vietnam War Films.”

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK (7)

Gilda Anroman, “Environment and Disease in Philadelphia, 1690-1807: A Health Crisis Revised.”  Darwin Fishman, “Shadow Politics in the Rich Light of Day: Black Youth, Political Socialization, and One Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Area High School.”  Bruce Johansen, “Imagined Pasts, Imagined Futures: Race, Politics, Memory and the Revitalization of Downtown Silver Spring.”  Laurie Kendall, “When We Say ‘Michigan’: Narrating Home, Family, Community, and the Sacred at the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival.”  Robert Schoeberlein, “Mental Illness in Maryland: Public Perception, Discourse, and Treatment, From the Colonial Period to 1964.”  Craig Seymour, “‘Searching’ for Luther Vandross: The Politics and Performance of Studying and African-American Icon.”  Neela Vaswani, “What Falls Between.”

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN (9)

Dolores Ines Casillas, “Sound in Practice: The Politics of Spanish-Language Radio in the United States, 1922-2004.”  Paul Ching, “Managing in the New Economy: A Revolutionary Status Quo.”  Lisa Harris, “In-Vitro Fertilization in the United States: A Clinical and Cultural History.”  Robin Li.  Katrina Mann, “‘Ambassadors of Goodwill’: American Race Relations and Global Geopolitics in Postwar Racial Problem Films.”  Jennifer Moon, “Cruising and Queer Counterpublics: Theories and Fictions.”  Michele Morales, “Persistent Pathologies: The Odd Coupling of Alcoholism and Homosexuality in the Discourses of Twentieth Century Science.”  Shani Mott, “Masquerade Narrative: Writing Race and Imagining Democracy in American Literature, 1930-1955.”  Carla Vecchiola, “Detroit’s Rhythmic Resistance: Electronic Music and Community Pride.”

MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY (4)

Monique Chism, “Hear Our Voices: The Intersections of Race, Class, and Gender in a Mixed-Income Community in Chicago.”  Susan Rose Dominguez, “The Gertrude Bonin Story: From Yankton Destiny into American History.”  Elizabeth Fairhead, “Essential Nature: Bartram’s Garden and Natural History in Philadelphia, 1790-1825.”  Jennifer Stevens, “Consuming the Past: The Nature and Dynamic of the Popular American Historical Consciousness.”

UNIVERISTY OF MINNESOTA (3)

Scott Laderman, “Witnessing the Past: History, Tourism, and Memory in Vietnam, 1930-2002.”  David Patrick Monteyne, “Shelter from the Elements: Architecture and Civil Defense During the Early Cold War.”  Dierdre Murphy, “The Look of a Citizen: Representations of Immigration in Nineteenth-Century Painting and Popular Press.” 

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA (Women’s Studies) (1)

Sam Bullington, “From the ‘Rainbow Nation’ to the ‘New Apartheid’: Sexual Orientation and HIV/AIDS in Contemporary South African Nation Building.”

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY (2)

Kimani Paul-Emile, “Drug Regulatory Regimes and the Art of Governance.”  Eric Tang, “Unsettled: On the Postcolonial Presence of Southeast Asian Refugees.” 

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK - BUFFALO (1)

Kyle Wegner, “Children of Aztlan: Mexican-American Popular Culture and the Post-Chicano Aesthetic.”

PURDUE UNIVERSITY (2)

Kenya Davis-Hayes, “Lessons of Place: The Creation of Physical and Curricular Segregation in Chicago Between 1910 and 1925.”  Angela Hilton, “Motherhood on Trial: Black Mothers with Incarcerated Sons Negotiating the Criminal Justice System in African-American Literature.”

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO (Ethnic Studies) (6)

Lilia Fernandez, “Latina/o Migration and Community Formation in Postwar Chicago: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Gender, and Politics, 1945-1975.”  May Chuan Fu, “Keeping Close to the Ground: Politics and Coalition in Asian-American Community Organizing, 1969-1977.”  Sandra Angeleri, “Women Weaving the Dream of the Revolution in the American Continent.”  Antonio T. Tiongson, Jr., “Filipino Youth Cultural Politics and DJ Culture.”  Julietta Hua, “The Object of ‘Rights’: Third World Women and the Production of Global Human Rights Discourse.”  Ashley Lucas, “Performing the (Un)Imagined Nation: The Emergence of Ethnographic Theatre in the Late Twentieth Century.”

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA (1)

Laura Barraclough, “Rural Urbanism: Land Use, Activism and the Cultural Politics of Spatial Exclusion.”

*STANFORD UNIVERSITY (1)

Marisol Negron, “Hecho in Nuyorican: The Creation, Circulation, and Consumption of Salsa in 1970s New York.”

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS - AUSTIN (5)

Pauline Adema, “Festive Foodscapes: Iconizing Food and the Shaping of Identity and Place.” Cary Cordova, “The Heart of the Mission: Latino Art and Identity in San Francisco.”  Paul Erickson, “Welcome to Sodom: The Cultural Work of City-Mysteries Fiction in Antebellum America.”  Joel Huerta, “Red, Brown, and Blue: A History and Cultural Poetics of High School Football in Mexican America.”  Ray Sapirstein, “Out from Behind the Mask: The Illustrated Poetry of Paul Laurence Dunbar and Photography at Hampton Institute.”  Pio Schurti, “Reception and Function of American Culture in Switzerland after World War II.” Michael Scully, “The Never-Ending Revival: Rounder Records. The Folk Alliance and the Marketing of America’s Musical Traditions,” Alice Shukalo,  “Communing With the Gods: Bodybuilding, Masculinity, and U.S. Imperialism, 1875-1900.” Kim Simpson, “Hit Radio and the Formatting of America in the Early 1970s.”

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON (Women’s Studies) (2)

Serena Maurer, “Dreaming Americans: Race, Gender, Nation and State in the Yakima Borderlands.”  Mae Henderson, “Fractured Mothering: African-American Mothers at the Crossroads of Expectation and Reality.”

WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY (1)

Allyson Wolf, “The Significance of Women’s Dress and Appearance as Forms of Strategic Resistance from the 19th Century Through Contemporary Social Movements.”

COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY (6)

Antonio Bly, “Breaking with Tradition: Slavery Literacy in Early Virginia, 1680-1780.” Toby Chieffo-Reidway, “Nathaniel Jocelyn: In the Service of Art and Abolition.”  Jennifer Luff, “Judas Exposed: Labor Spies in the United States.”  Ywone Edwards Ingram, “Medicating Slavery: African-American Motherhood, Health Care, and Cultural Practices in the African Diaspora.”  Leni Sorenson, “Absconded: Fugitive Slaves in the Daybook of the Richmond Police Guard, 1834-44.”  James Spady, “Like the Spider from the Rose: Colonial Knowledge Competition and the Origins of Non-elite Education in Georgia and South Carolina.”