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No. 12 |
Summer 2008 |
Contributors to Issue #12 of the SHCY Newsletter
Adriana Silvia Benzaquén is an Associate Professor in the
Department of History at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax
(Canada). She is the author of Encounters with Wild Children: Temptation
and Disappointment in the Study of Human
Nature (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2006). Her current research project is a study of John Locke’s “science
of childhood.” Email: adriana.benzaquen@msvu.ca
Simon J. Bronner is Distinguished Professor of American
Studies and Folklore and director of the American Studies doctoral program at
Penn State Harrisburg. Among his contributions to the history and culture of
childhood and youth are the books American
Children's Folklore (winner of the Opie Prize) and Piled Higher and Deeper: Folklore of Student Life (a third edition
is scheduled for publication next year). He is also the editor of the Encyclopedia of American Folklife in 4 volumes and Material Worlds book series for the University Press of Kentucky. Email: sbronner@psu.edu
Emily D. Cahan a Professor of Psychchology
in the Department of Human Development at Wheelock College in Boston. She
has written numerous articles and chapters on the history of developmental
psychology. Most recently she has become interested in the ways in which
the history of childhood intersects with scientific representations of
childhood. Email: ecahan@rcn.com
Miroslava Chavez-Garcia is an Associate Professor in the
Chicana/o Studies Program at the University of California, Davis. She is
the author of Negotiating Conquest:
Gender and Power in California, 1770s-1880s (University of Arizona Press,
2004). She has published several articles on youth, race, and science and
is currently at work on a manuscript on youth of color in California
reformatories, 1890s to 1940s. Contact Miroslava at chavezgarcia@ucdavis.edu
Rebecca de Schweinitz is an assistant
professor of history at Brigham Young University where she teaches classes in
U.S. Women's History, African American History, and the History of Children and
Youth. Her book, If We Could Change the World: Young People and America's
Long Struggle for Racial Equality is forthcoming from the University of
North Carolina Press (Spring 2009). She can be reached at rld@byu.edu
Paula S. Fass is the Margaret Byrne Professor of
History at the University of California, Berkeley and President of the Society
for the History of Children and Youth. She is the author of many books
about the history of childhood, the most recent Children of a New World; Society, Culture, and Globalization (New
York University Press, 2007), and editor of the Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood in History and Society (Thompson
Gale, 2004). Email: psfass@berkeley.edu
Stephen Gennaro is a cultural historian of youth and
media. He has a PhD in Communications from McGill University in Montreal
and is currently teaching in the Children's Studies Department at York
University in Toronto, Canada. Steve has over 10 years of teaching
experience at all levels from nursery school to graduate studies and has been
developing curriculum for public school boards and private institutions for
close to 15 years. Steve's email: sgennaro@yorku.ca
Mona Gleason is an associate
professor in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British
Columbia. Her teaching and research focuses on the history of children,
education, and the family. She is the author of Normalizing the Ideal: Psychology, Schooling, and the Family in Postwar
Canada (University of Toronto Press, 1999), co-editor, with Adele Perry,
of Rethinking Canada: The Promise
of Women's History, 5th Edition (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2006)
and is currently writing a history of children's medical treatment in English
Canada over the twentieth century. Mona’s email: mona.gleason@ubc.ca
Janet Golden is Professor of History
at Rutgers University. She is
writing, with Lynn Weiner, a history of babies in modern America and is the
co-editor of the recently (2008) published Healing
the World's Children: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Child Health in the
Twentieth Century. She is also a Newsletter editor. Contact Janet at jgolden@camden.rutgers.edu
Amy Harris is an assistant professor of British and
European history at Brigham Young University. She is currently revising her dissertation (Berkeley, 2006)
about the history of siblings in eighteenth-century England into a book
manuscript. Contact her at: amy.harris@byu.edu
Kathleen W. Jones is an Associate Professor of History at Virginia Tech, on leave 2007-2008 at the National Humanities Center. She is the author of Taming the Troublesome Child; American Families, Child Guidance, and the Limits of Psychiatric Authority (Harvard University Press, 1999). Her current project is a history of youth suicide in the United States, 1870 to the present. She also edits the Newsletter and can be reached at kjwj@vt.edu
Daniel T. Kline is Associate Professor and Coordinator of
the Graduate Program in English at the University of Alaska Anchorage. His
research concerns children, violence, and sacrifice in late-medieval England,
and he has recent chapters concerning medieval children in the Cambridge Companion to Medieval Women's
Writing (2003), Translating Desire in
Medieval and Early Modern Literature (2005), Essays on Medieval Childhood: Responses to Recent Debates (2007),
and Cultural Studies of the Modern Middle
Ages (2007). He edited Medieval
Children's Literature (Routledge, 2003) and also author of The Electronic Canterbury Tales http://www.kankedort.net Contact Dan
at afdtk@uaa.alaska.edu
Laura L. Lovett is an Associate Professor in the
Department of History at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and a
founding co-editor of the Journal of the
History of Childhood and Youth. She is the author of Conceiving the Future: Pronatalism, Reproduction, and the Family in the
United States, 1890-1938 and is currently researching the history of
non-sexist early childhood education. Email: lovett@history.umass.edu
Sean Martin is Associate Curator for Jewish History
at the Western Reserve Historical Society in Cleveland, Ohio. He is the author
of Jewish Life in Cracow, 1918-1939.
His current research focuses on the history of Jewish child welfare
associations in interwar Poland. Sean is the Newsletter editor for "Websightings." Contact
him at seanmartin1@juno.com
Jacob Middleton is a historian of education and
occasional writer of popular history. He has a particular interest in violence
as an aspect of the school experience. Email: jake@vacantspace.fsnet.co.uk
Jon Pahl is Professor of the
History of Christianity in North America at The Lutheran Theological Seminary
at Philadelphia, and has served as Visiting Professor of Religion at Temple and
Princeton Universities. He's the
author of two books on the history of young people and religion in America, and
a forthcoming book on religion and violence in American history. Jon is also
the book review editor for the Journal of
the History of Childhood and Youth. Contact Jon at jpahl@ltsp.edu
David M. Pomfret is Associate Professor
of Modern European History at the University of Hong Kong. He is the author of
books and articles on the comparative history of youth and childhood in modern
Britain and France. He is currently working on a comparative study of youth in
empire. With Nancy Zey, David compiles the Newsletter's "News from the Field" column. He
can be contacted at pomfretd@hkucc.hku.hk
Heloísa Helena Rocha
Pimenta is PhD in History of Education for São Paulo University,
Brazil. She is professor in the
Faculty of Education at the University of Campinas(UNICAMP), and participates
in the Management Committee of Center of Education Memory of UNICAMP. She is a member of the Brazilian
Society of History of Education and of the SHCY. She develops research on the
process of spreading of the elementary school in Brazil, between the end of
19th century and the earliest decades of 20th century, examining, more
specifically, the relationships between hygiene and the school education. Email: heloisah@unicamp.br
Dirk Schumann, Professor of History at
Jacobs University, Bremen, has accepted the position of Christian-Gottlob-Heyne
Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at the University of Göttingen and
will start teaching there in October 2008. He has most recently co-edited (with
Paul Betts and Alon Confino) Between Mass
Death and Individual Loss: The Place of the Dead in Twentieth-Century Germany (New York: Berghahn Books, 2008) and is currently working on a project on
education and discipline in Germany and the U.S. since 1945. Email: d.schumann@jacobs-university.de
Gleb Tsipursky is currently writing a dissertation
entitled "Pleasure, Power, and the Pursuit of Communism: The Komsomol
Campaign to Organize Soviet Youth Leisure, 1955-1964" at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. While specializing in Soviet history, he seeks
to engage scholars in other regions and fields in a broader dialogue that
reflects his thematic interests, including childhood and youth, identity
formation, state-society relations, and comparative cultural studies. Email: tsipursk@email.unc.edu
Colleen A. Vasconcellos is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the
Department of History at the University of West Georgia. In addition to being
co-editor of the SHCY Newsletter,
Colleen is also an editor of H-Africa and H-Caribbean and an Advisory Board
member of H-Childhood. Email: cvasconc@westga.edu
Nancy Zey is Assistant Professor in History at Sam
Houston State University. In May 2007, she completed her PhD in History
from the University of Texas at Austin, with a dissertation entitled
"Rescuing Some Youthful Minds: Benevolent Women and the Rise of the
Orphan Asylum as Civic Household in Early Republic Natchez." She has
recently authored two publications relating to the history of children:
"Children of the Public: Poor and Orphaned Minors in the Southwest
Borderlands," in James Marten, ed., Children
and Youth in a New Nation, New York University Press (forthcoming) and
"'Every Thing but a Parent's Love': The Family Life of Orphan Asylums in
the Lower Mississippi Valley," in Craig Thompson Friend and Anya Jabour,
eds., Southern Families:
Perspectives on Domesticity in the Old South, University of Georgia Press
(forthcoming). Since 2006, she has served as a list editor for
H-Education. Contact Nancy at nancyzey@gmail.com
© Society for the History of Children and Youth, 2008 |