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(See page in backof book)
CORNELL UMVERSTY PRESS ITHACA AND LONDON
Program of the
Ninety-Third Annual Meeting
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
DECEMBER 28-29-30
1978
SAN FRANCISCO
WILLIAM J. BOUWSMASATHER PROFESSOR OF HISTORY, UNIVERSITY Of CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION400 A Street SE, Washington, DC 20003
OFFICERS
President.’ WILLIAitI J. BouwsMA, University of California, BerkeleyPresident-elect: JoHN HOPE FRANKLIN, University of ChicagoExecutive Director: MACK THOMPsON
Editor: OTTO PFLAr\’zE, Indiana LlniversityAssistant Executive Director: EDrvIuT\ZD H. WORTHY, JR.
Controller: JAMES H. LEATHERw000
COUNCIL
WILUAMJ. BOuws1A CHARLES GiasoxJOHN HOPE FRANKLIN MACK THo!IPSoN, cx officio
NANCY L. R0ELKER, Vice-President AARREN I. Susr’.i.x, Vice-PresidentResearch Division (1978) Teaching Division (1979)
Boston University Rutgers University
OTIS A. PEASE, Vice-President
Professional Division (1980)University of Washington
ALLAN G. BoGuE (1979) STANFORD E. LEHrtBERG (1978)
University of Wisconsin University of Minnesota
J0HNJ. JOHNSON (1979) EtiLIAxA P. NOETHER (1978)Stanford University University of Connecticut
MICHAEL K.sIIEN (1979) NORMA L. PETERSON (1978)Cornell University Adams State College
PACIFIC COAST BRANCH OFFICERS
President.’ DONALD W. TREADGOLD, University of WashingtonVice-President: ROBERT I. BURNS, University of California, Los AngelesSecretary-Treasurer: JOHN A. SCHUTz, University of Southern California
Managing Editor: NoRRIs HuNDLEY, University of California, Los Angeles
PLANNING AND ARRANGEMENTS, 1978 ANNUAL MEETING
Committee on the Program
Chair: THotAsJ. PRE5SLY FAY D. METCALFUniversity of Washington Boulder High School
co-chair: Roaix W. Wtxxs NELL IRvIN PAINTERYale University University of Pennsylvania
EUGENE L. AsHER ROBERT A, SKOTHEIMCalifornia State University, Whitman CollegeLong Beach STANLEYJ. STEIN
JEROME M. CLUEB Princeton UniversityUniversity of Michigan FREDERIC E. WAKEMAN
WILLIAM H. MCNEILL University of California,University of Chicago Berkeley
Committee on Local Arrangements
Chair: BRUCE A. GLAsRUD JOsEPH E. ILLICKCalifornia State University. San Francisco State UniversityHayward CARoLYN LOUGEE
Chair Emeritus: C. EUGENE MCCARLEY Stanford UniversitySan Francisco RICHARDJ. ORSI
DAVID T. BAILE\’ California State University,University of California, HaywardBerkeley LINDA P0P0F5KY
VICTOR CHEN Mills CollegeChabot College WILLIAM C. REUTER
RoBERT W. CHERNY California State University,San Francisco State University Hayward
FRANK D. GILLIARD MICHAEL SVANEvIKCalifornia State University, Skyline CollegeHayward MARIANNA SHELDON
BERTRAM GORDON Mills CollegeMills College JUDITH M. STANLEY
DAVID GRIFFIN California State University,Pacific Medical Center Hayward
THOMAS M. WENDELLSanJose State University
Treasurer: Professional services rendered by Touche, Ross & Co., San Francisco
AHA Editorial StaffEileen Gaylard Kristen CarpenterToby McDowell Colleen Rainey
GENERAL INFORMATION
HEADQUARTERS: All sessions will be held at the San Francisco Hilton Mason and Q’Farrell
Streets, and the St. Francis hotel at Union Square T’he hilton will serve as the headquarters
hotel, it it imrrediately next to the downtown airport terminal, where hoses travel to and from
the San Francisco International .irport every few minutes. Registration, locator files, informa
tion booths, bulletin boards. and meal ticket sales will be maintained in the lobby of the Hilton.
The headquarters of the Local \rraneements Committee the -\HA staff office, and the Press
room will be in suites 448-450 on the fourth floor of the Hilton. Fhe Job Register will be located
in the Grand Ballroom at the St. Francis.In addition to the Hilton and St Francis, blocks of rooms have been reserved at the fairmont
and King George hotels. Members who have not yet reserved hotel accommodations should send
their reservation forms contained in the September \‘pwstetler) without delay to the AH
flouting Bureau, c/o San Francisco Convention & \ isitors Bureau, 1390 Market Street, Suite
260. San francisco, C\ 94102.
GROUP FLIGHTS: \rrangemcnts have been made to provide reduced rate group flightsarriving in San Francisco on December r and returning December 30 from Atlanta, Boston,Baltimore, Chicago also a departure on the 26th). Dallas/Fort Worth. Denser, New’ Orleans,Ness ark New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis. Salt Lake City, and Seattle 2 he travel agent willform the groups Early reservations a mut A limited numkr of uper-sas’er seats are atailablefrom most cities for members svhu svish to extend their stay in San Francisco.
Information and reservation forms may be obtained from C,len Roe I ravel, 194 Scotch Road,Trenton, NJ 08628 (609-883-3353).
AHA REGISTRATION: Members are urged to preregister at the reduced rate of 815 (non-members $25. students and unemployed $5). form enclosed. Registration at the meeting will be$20 (nonmembers 835, students and unemployed S). Registration desks at the Hilton will beopen during the following hours:
Wednesday. December27 12noon 9:00p.m.Thursday, December28 800a.m. 6:OOp m.Friday, December29 8.30 am. 4 00 p m
A registration desk still also be in operation at the St. Francis on December 27 and 28.
BUSINESS MEETING: Resolutions for the business meeting will be handled as follows: (I)resolutions signed by twenty-five members of the association will he accepted until December15; (2) resolutions received by November 1 will take precedence and will be published in theDecember \esestelter: (3) resolutions must be no more than three hundred words in length.
Resolutions should be sent to the executive director at the \HA central office, with one copyto the parliamentarian, Paul K. Conkin, I)epartment of History, University of Wisconsin,Madison, WI 53706
VOTING CARDS: Voting cards vvill be included in the preregistration packet and will also begiven out to members registering at the meeting.
LOCATOR FILES: fhe bc ator files will be adjacent to the AH \ registration desks in the lobbyof the hilton
INFORMATION DESK AND BULLETIN BOARDS: These will be located in the registration area at the hilton Information about the annual meeting, San Francisco, and the AmericanHistorical Association, will be available. The bulletin boards will serve both as informal messagecenters and as a place to announce special meetings, changes, etc.
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JOB REGISTER: The job register, located in the Grand Ballroom at the St. Francis, will be in
operation during the following hours:Wednesday, December27 2:00 p.m.—6:OO p.m.Thursday, December28 9:00 am.—6:00 p.m.Friday, December29 9:00 a.m,—6:00 p.m.Saturday. December30 9:00 a.m.—12 noon
AFFILIATED SOCIETIES: Garden Lane on the ballroom floor of the Hilton has been reservedfrom 4:30—6:30 p.m. on December28 for affiliated societies to display materials and to meet withmembers of the profession. There will be a cash bar.
WOMEN HISTORIANS’ CENTER: A room where women historians can gather and allhistorians may obtain information on women’s history groups will be maintained throughout theannual meeting in the Vista Room at the Hilton. It will be open during the following hours:
Wednesday, December27 7:00 p.m.—l0:00 p.m.Thursday, December28 7:35 a.m.—l0:00 p.m.Friday, December29 7:45 a.m.— 10:00 p.m.Saturday, December30 9:00 a.m.—l2 noon
EXHIBITORS: The exhibits are located in the Hilton Plaza and Franciscan Room at theHilton, and will be open during the following hours:
Wednesday, December27 3:00 p.m.—7:O0 p.m.Thursday. December28 9:00 a.m.—6:00 p.m.Friday, December29 9:00 a.m.—6:00 p.m.Saturday, December30 9:00 a.m.—12 noon
CHILD CARE: A child care center, staffed by competent personnel. will be in operation at theHilton Hotel, The location will be announced on bulletin boards in the registration areas, Thecenter will be open for children (through the fifth grade) of regIstrants at the meeting, at acharge of $1.25 per hour. Hours of the center are as follows:
Wednesday, December27 5:00 p.m.—10:00 p.m.Thursday, December28 9:00 a.m.— 10:00 p.m.Friday, December29 9:OOa.m._lO:OOp.m.Saturday, December30 9:00a.m.— 1:00p.m.
To preregister, write to the Local Arrangements Chairman, Bruce A. Glasrud, Department ofHistory, California State University, Hayward. CA 94542, no later than December 5.
MEAL MEETINGS: All luncheons on Thursday. December 28, and Friday, December 29. arescheduled for 12:15 p.m. Tickets for the luncheons (except those sponsored by organizationswho sell their own tickets) will be available from the meal ticket cashiers at the AHA registrationdesks at the Hilton and St. Francis. All payments must be made in U.S. currency, by cash, ortraveler’s cheque.
After clearance of room allocation with the Local Arrangements Chairman, all other arrangements for meal meetings must be conducted directly between the organization and thehotel.Hotel officials are as follows:
Frank Karliner. Director of food Daniel McCall, Director ofand Beverages Catering
San Francisco Hilton St. Francis HotelMason and O’Farrell Streets Powell and Geary StreetsSan Francisco, CA 94102 San Francisco, CA 94119(415-771-1400 ext. 231) (415-397-7000 ext. 126)
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SCHEDULE Of LUNCHEON MEETINGS
Thursday, December 28Conference on Slavic and East European History
Modern European Histery Section
Phi Alpha ThetaPolish American Historical Association
U.S. Commission on Military History
Friday, December 29American Catholic Historical Association
American Society for Reformation Research
Conference on Asian HistoryConference on Latin American History
Society for Historians of American foreign Relations
Society for the History of Discoveries
Society for Spanish and Portuguese Studies
GROUP MEETINGS AND REUNIONS: The historical societies and groups which ar
ranged special meetings or receptions and notified the AHA are listed below. Groups that have
not yet notified the AHA should send their requests for room space by November 15 to Bruce A.
Glasrud, Department of History. California State University, Hayward, CA 94542. not to the
hotet; they should specify date, inclusive hours, attendance forecast, equipment desired, and
telephone number of official of their organization who can clear details. When cleared with the
Local Arrangements Chairman, refreshments and other arrangements will be made final be
tween the hotel and the organization directly. Room arrangements made at the time of the
annual meeting should be reported at once to the Local Arrangements Committee for posting on
the bulletin hoards.
GROUP MEETINGS AND SPECIAL FUNCTIONS
AHA Committee on Women HistoriansThursday, Dec. 28. 7:15—9:00 am., meeting/coffee. Hilton. Vista Room
Friday, Dec. 297:45—9:00 am., meeting of black women historians, Hilton, Vista Room
9:30 am., session: Integrating Women’s History into the College History Curriculum
(seep. 53 for details)2:30 p.m. workshop: Updating the Rose Report (see p. 68 for detailsi
Academy of American Research: Historians of Medieval Spain
Friday, Dec. 29, St. Francis. Victorian Room
8:30 am., business meeting;9:30—1 1:30 am., session, Alfonso X (The Vise) King of Castile: Cultural, juridical and
Political Considerations. Chair: Manuel larquez-Sterling. Plymouth State College.
University of New Hampshire: Instruments, Instrumentalists and Instrumentation in
Las (anttgas de Santa Maria,” Roger ‘Tinnell, Plymouth State College, University of New
Hampshire: “Some Considerations in Editing Alfonsine Juridical Texts,” Robert A.
McDonald, University of Richmond: “Alfonso X. Infante Sancho. the Cortes and the
Hermandades.” Joseph F. O’Callaghan. fordham University
American Association for the Study of Hungarian History
Thursday, Dec. 28, 5:00—7:00 p.m., business meeting, Hilton, Teakwood Suite
American Catholic Historical AssociationWednesday. Dec. 2”. 8:Ot) p.m.. executive council meeting, Hilton. Whitney Room
Thursday, Dec. 289:30 am., St. Francis, California Room East, joint session with the AHA: Religion in
Renaissance Rome, 1450—1527 (see p. 28 for details)
2:30 p.m.. St. Francis. California Room East. joint session with the Society for Italian
Historical Studies: The Church and fascist Italy. Chair: Alan J. Reinerman. Boston
College; “Don Sturzo’s Vision of the Role of the Church in Post-Fascist Italy, Francisj.
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Murphy, Boston College; “Catholic Youth under Fascism,” Albert C. O’Brien, SanDiego State University; “Catholic Social Values in Fascist Italy, 1922—1940,” GeneBernardini, San Jose State University; comment: Elisa Carrillo, Marymount College,Tarrytown4:43 p.m.. St. Francis. Yorkshire Room, business meeting5:30 p.m.. St. Francis. Elizabethan Room B, social hour
Friday, Dec. 299:30 a.m., St. Francis, California Room East, joint session with the American Society ofChurch History, The Medieval Christian Community: Structures and Life. Chair:Robert I. Burns, S.J., University of California, Los Angeles; “A Medieval MediterraneanDiocese: Barcelona at Mid-Fourteenth Century,” Jocelyn Hillgarth. University of Toronto: “Franciscan Structure and Life in Medieval Catalonia: Unlocking Lost Archives,”Jill Webster. University of Toronto; “Micro-Community: Families Dissolving. TheUrgel-Moncada Divorce (126 l).”James A. Brundage, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; “Macro-Community: North Africa, Egypt and Frankish Greece—Latin ChristianFailure in the Fourteenth Century,” Archibald Lewis, University of Massachusetts,Amherst12:15 p.m.. St. Francis, California Room East. Presidential luncheon (see p. 64 fordetails)2:30 p.m.. St. Francis, California Room East, joint session with the Conference on LatinAmerican History: Comparative Administration and Methodology in the CaliforniaMissions, Chair: G. Micheal Riley, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, “Jesuit Missions, 1697—1767,” Charles W. Polzer, S.J., Southwestern Mission Research Center,Tucson, Arizona; comment: Ignacio del Rio Chavez, Instituto de Investigaciones Histdricas. Universidad Nacional Autdnoma de Mexico: “Franciscan Missions, 1768—1833,”Francis Guest, O.F.M.. Santa Barbara Mission Archive Library; comment: FranciscoMorales, O.F.M.. Academy of American Franciscan History
Saturday, Dec. 309:00 am., St. Francis, California Room East, session, Gold-Rush Metropolis: Vigilantesand Victims. Chair: Sister Catharine Julie Cunningham, S.N.D., College of Notre Dame,Belmont, CA; “Religion, Politics, and Vigilantism in Gold-Rush San Francisco, 185 1—1856.” Robert NI. Senkewicz, S.J.. University of Santa Clara; “Social and CulturalBackground of the Victims of Vigilantism,” Patrick .1. Blessing, University of Tulsa;comment: Richard NI. Brown. University of Oregon; Moses Rischin. San Francisco StateUniversity1:00 p.m., Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4, session, Backgrounds of the Second VaticanCouncil’s Declaration on Religious Liberty. Chair: Most Rev. Marlc Hurley, Bishop ofSanta Rosa; “The John Carroll Precedents: The Catholic Modus Vivendi,”Sister MarieCarolyn Klinkhamer, OP., Norfolk State College; “The Daniel O’Connell Position.”Maurice O’Connell, Fordham University; “The Murray Breakthrough: The Maturation of American Catholic Theory,” Sister Joan Bland, S.N.D., Trinity College; comment: John T. Noonan, Jr., University of California, Berkeley
American Committee for Irish StudiesThursday, Dec. 28, 2:30—4:30 p.m.. session, Hilton, Tamalpais Room
American Committee on the History of the Second World WarThursday, Dec. 28. 5:00—7:00 p.m.. Hilton, Walnut Suite, business meeting, principalagenda Item: Development of a World War 11 Research Materials Guide
American Society for Environmental HistoryFriday, Dec. 29, 5:00—7:00 p.m., meeting, Hilton, Toyon Suite
American Society of Church HistoryWednesday, Dec.27, 7:30—10 p.m.. Hilton, Walnut Suite, Council meetingThursday. Dec. 28
9:30—11:30 am., St. Francis, Elizabethan Room C, session, Community beyond Nationand Race. Chair: Albert J. Raboteau, University of California. Berkeley: “Barriers andBridges: Racial Commentary in Ecumenical Perspective,” Ronald C. White, Jr.,Whitworth College; “John R. NIott: Building a World-Wide Community,” C. HowardHopkins, Claremont, CA; comment: James M. Phillips, San Francisco TheologicalSeminary
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9:3u-.l 130 am., Sr Francis, Elizabethan Room D, workshop: Community and the Early
Church (based on John Gager’s Kingdom & Gsminunity) Leader: Samuel Leuchli, Temple
L’nwersity:30 3:30 p m., St. Francis, Elizabethan Room C, session Community & Religious
Rhetoric in Nem England. Chair: Donald M. Scott, North Carolina State T:niversity,
Raleigh; “The Connecticut Clergy and the Standing Order, 1760—1818: A Reas
sessment,” Richard D. Shiels, Ohio State University “‘Peace and Good Order’: The
New Hampshire Clergy and the Struggle for Social Stability, U84—1812,” Douglas H.
Sweet, Columbia l.’niversity; comment’ Charles E. Clark, University of New Hampshire.
Mark A. Noll, Wheaton College, II,
1:30—3:30 p.m., St. Francis. Elizabethan Room D. workshop, Parishes as Micro-Com
munities (based on Timothy ‘Tackett’s Priest and Paris/i tn Eig/tteenth—Centtin france).
Leader: Robert M. Kingdon, University of Wisconsin, Madison
4:00 3:15 p.m , St. Francis, Elizabethan Room C, annual bustness meeting
3:30—0:15 p.m.. St. Francis. Elizabethan Room C, President’s Address. Chair: Brian A.
Gerrish. University of Chicago, president-elect; “George Berkeley and New World
Community ‘‘ Edvv ‘S. Gaustad, University of California, Riverside
6:30 7.30 pm , St. Francis, Elizabethan Room D, reception
Friday. Dec. 29, 9:30 11:30 am,, St. Francis, California Room East, joint session with the
American Catholic Historical Association (see p. 6 for details)
9:30 11:30 am., St. Francis, Elizabethan Room F, session Broken Churches, Broken
Nation: The Fragility of Community in Mid-Nineteenth Century America. Chair: Wil
liam A. Clehsch. Stanford University “Scenario for Secession: Denominational Sehisms
and the Coming of the Civil War.” C. C. Goen, Wesley Theological Seminary: “In Quest
of the Beloved Community: Black Christians in Antebellum America,” Lawrence N.
Jones, Iloward University; comment: Robert T. handy, Union Theological Seminary
2:30—4.30 pm St. Francis, Elizabethan Room 3. joint session with the AHA: Christian
Community in Western History (see p. 74 for details)
2:30—4:SOp.m., St. Francis, Elizabethan Room D, session, Utopian Communities Old &
New. Chair: Catherine Albanese, Wright State University; “Nesv Utopian Communities
in America.” Stephen Berk, California State University, Long Beach, “Paradise Plant
ers,” Robert S. Fogartv, Antioch College; comment: John F. Wilson, Princeton Univer
sity7:30—930 p m., St. Francis, Elizabethan Room C joint session with American Society
for Reformation Research. Pew & Pulpit: Geneva & England. Chair: Walter L. Moore,
Florida State University: “Pevv & Pulpit: Geneva,” William Monter, Northwestern
University; “The Triumph of the Pew: The Case of England,” Paul Scarer, Stanford
Lniversity: comment Jill Raitt, Duke University; Brooks Graebner, Duke University
Friday, Dec 29. :30 9:30 p.m.. St. Francis, Elizabethan Room D, joint session with the
North America Patristics Society
Saturday. Dec. 309:30—1 130 am., St Francis, Elizabethan Room C, session, Sectarian Cultures in the
.\mcrican Vest. Chair: Eldon C. Ernst. American Baptist Seminary of the West; “from
Frontier Activism to Neo-Victorian Domesticity: Mormon Women in the 19th and 20th
Centuries,’’ Lavvrence Foster, Georgia Institute of Technology; “Perils of the Enchanted
Ground, The Acculturation ctf Seventh-day Adventists on the Pacific Coast,” Jonathan
Butler. Loma Linda University: comment. Jan Shipps, Indiana University-Purdue Uni
veroitv , Indianapolis9:30-11:30 am., St. Francis, Elizabethan Room H, session, Native American Commu
nities and the Impact of Christianity. Chair Henry W. Bowden, Douglass College,
Rutgers University : ‘‘Dakota l\Iissions and the Hazlewood Republic.” Bruce P. Forbes,
Macalaster College: “Region. Religion and Community’: The Mystery of San Xavier del
Bac,” Richard E. SVentz, Arizona State University: comment: James P. Ronda, Youngs
town State University, Charles W Polzer, S.J., L niv’ersitv of Arizona
Austrian HistoriansFriday, 13cc. 29, 9:30 a.m St. Francis, Olympic Room, session, Problems of Post Empire:
The Case of Austria. Chair. Klemens von Klemperer, Smith College; “Frustration and
Violence: ‘i icnna Students 1918—1923,’’ John Haag. University of Georgia: “The Kralik
7
Circle and the Problem of Austrian Identity,” David Large, Yale University; “Hans Eibl:The Religious Nature in a Psychopolitical Idiom,” Richard Geehr, Bentley College; comment: The Audience
Bibliography Association of HistoriansThursday, Dec. 28, 5:00—7:00 p.m., Hilton, Rosewood Suite, panel session, People andMachines: Trends in Historical Research and Bibliographyfriday, Dec. 29, 7:30—9:00 am., Hilton, Rosewood Suite, organizing meeting for thecreation of a bibliography association, ll persons interested in historical bibiliography andin the relationship of library resources and methodologies to history are invited to attend,Preliminary information can be obtained from Warren F. Kuehl. Department of History,University of Akron, Ohio 44325.
Committee on History in the Classroomfriday. Dec. 29, 7:30—9:00 a.m.. breakfast meeting. Hilton. Diablo Room
Conference Group for Central European HistoryFriday, Dec. 29
8:00—9:00 p.m.. business meeting. Hilton. Continental Ballroom 89:00—10:00 p.m.. Therabend, Hilton. California Room
Conference on Faith and HistoryFriday, Dec. 29, 7:30—9:00 am., breakfast meeting, Hilton, Continental Ballroom 9
Conference on Latin American HistoryWednesday. Dec. F’. 8:00—10:00 p.m.. general committee meeting. Hilton. Teakwood SuiteAll sessions at the St. Francis:Thursday, Dec. 28
2:30 p.m., joint session with the AHA, Comparative Perspectives on Rural Labor inModern Spanish America (see p. 40 for details)4:30—6:00 p.m.. Oxford Room, Mexican Studies Committee Meeting. Presiding: WilliamH. Beezley, North Carolina State University; The Mexican Revolution: Recent Research; discussion coordinator: W. Dirk Raat, State University College of New York,fredonia. Essex Room, Caribe-Centro America Studies Committee Meeting. Presiding:Richard Nlillett. Southern Illinois Universitv Current Research on Cuba, Jaime Suchlicki, University of Miami7:30—9:00 p.m., cocktail hour, California Room West
Friday, Dec. 2912:15—2:00 p.m., luncheon-business meeting (see p. 64 for details)2:30 p.m.. California Room East. joint session with the American Catholic HistoricalAssociation (see p. 6 for details)4:30—6:00 p.m., Elizabethan Room A, Andean Studies Committee Meeting. Presiding:Mark A: Burkholder, University of Missouri, St. Louis; Current Dissertation Researchon the Andean Region6:00—7:30 p.m.. Elizabethan Room B, Brazilian Studies Committee Meeting. Presiding:Stuart B. Schwartz, University of Minnesota; Recent Research on Brazil. CaliforniaRoom East, Chile-Rio de Ia Plata Studies Committee. Presiding: Samuel L. Baily,Rutgers College, Rutgers University; Recent Dissertations in Chile-Rio de Ia PlataHistory.
Saturday, Dec. 30, 8:00—9:30 am.. Victorian Room, Gran Colombian Studies CommitteeMeeting. Presiding: j. Leon Helguera, Vanderbilt University: The Historical Community inthe Gran Colombian Countries: An Open Roundtable Discussion
Coordinating Committee on Women in the Historical Profession, Conference Group onWomen’s History, Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, West Coast Association ofWomen Historians
Thursday, Dec. 28, 7:00—9:00 p.m.. cocktail party, Hilton, Cypress RoomFriday, Dec. 29, 11:45 a.m.—2:00 p.m., CCWHP/CGWH business meeting, Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
Forest History SocietyFriday. Dec. 29. 9:30—11:30 a.m., meeting, St. Francis, Parlor B
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Historians Film CommitteeThursday, Dec. 28, 5 :00-.7 00 pm., Hilton, Diablo Room, annual meeting and workshop onHistory Students as Filmmakers, Workshop will include comments by Steven Schoenherr,University of San Diego, screening of Harry Truman: The Man and The Myth, and discussionwith historian-filmmaker David DeWitt,
Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces in SocietyThursday, Dec. 28, 5:00—7:00 p.m., session, Hilton, Continental Ballroom 9
Leo Baeck InstituteWednesday, Dec. 27, 5:00—7:00 p.m., meeting, reception and exhibit (Archives), Hilton,Continental Ballroom 1, 2, 3Thursday, Dec. 28, 2:30 p.m., joint session with AHA: Religion & Secularization in German Society during the 19th & 20th Centuries (see p. 82 for details)
Mormon History AssociationFriday, Dec. 29, 5:00—7:00 p.m., meeting, Hilton, Continental Ballroom 7
Medieval Academy of AmericaFriday, Dec. 29, 5:00—7:00 p.m., reception, Hilton, Shasta Room
Polish American Historical AssociationTuesday, Dec. 26, 7:00 p.m., Hilton, Toyon Suite, meeting of the Executive Board andAdvisory CouncilWednesday, Dec. 27
9:00 am., Registration, Hilton, Rosewood Suite9:30 a.m., Hilton, Rosewood Suite, opening of annual meeting and welcome by thepresident, Joseph W. Wieczerzak of Bronx Community College, NY, followed by generalbusiness meeting chaired by the president2:30 p.m., Hilton, Rosewood Suite, session, Some Aspects of Polish American History.Chair: Anthony F. Turhollow, Loyola Marymount University; panelists: “Many Facesof Clio: Approaches to Polish American History,” Bernadine Pietraszek, DePaul University; “The Role of Church History in the U.S.,” Robert F. Trisco, Catholic University ofAmerica; Outlook at the Study & Understanding of Polish American History,” RichardWolniewicz, USAF Academy; “Observations on Polish American History in the Making,” Anthony F. Kroll, Pasadena, CA; comment: The Audience.
Thursday, Dec. 289:00 am., St. Francis, Victorian Room, session, Poles in the American West, Chair:Doyce B. Nunis, Jr., University of Southern California; “California as Seen by HenrykSienkiewicz,” Ellen K. Lee, South Laguna, CA; “The Poles in Colorado,” Stanley L.Cuba, Kosciuszko Foundation; comment: Thomas Napierkowski, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Center; Gene H. Zygmont, Torrance, CA12:15 p.m., luncheon (see p. 34 for details)2:30 p.m., St. Francis, Victorian Room, session, U.S. Immigration Policies and theImmigrant Poles
Quantification Committee of the Conference Group for Central European HistoryThursday, Dec. 28, 8:00—10:00 p.m., workshop, Hilton, Whitney Room
Societas/Conference Group for Social & Administrative HistoryFriday, Dec. 29, 9:30—11:30 am., St. Francis, Oxford Room, workshop, Secret Societies andTerrorism in Europe. Chair: Werner Braatz, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh; participants: Hsi-Huey Liang, Vassar College; Konrad Jarausch, University of Missouri; MartinMiller, Duke University; Edtar Newman, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces; AlanSpitzer, University of Iowa; Frykar Calhoun, University of California, Berkeley
Society for Historians of American Foreign RelationsWednesday, Dec. 27, 8:00—10:30 p.m., Council meeting, Hilton, Diablo RoomThursday, Dec. 28
4:00—5:00 p.m., editorial board, St. Francis, Parlor B5:00—7:00 p.m., reception, St. Francis, Georgian Room
Friday, Dec. 297:30—9:00 am., Guide editors, coffee/rolls, St. Francis, Olympic Room12:15—2:00 p.m., luncheon, Holiday Inn, Union Square
9
Society for Historians of the Early American Republicfriday, Dec. 29, 5:00—7:00 p.m., meeting, Hilton, Walnut Suite
Society for Italian Historical StudiesThursday, Dec. 28, 2:30 p.m., St. Francis, California East, joint session with the AmericanCatholic Historical Association (see p. 5 for details)Friday, Dec. 29
5:00—5:45 p.m., business meeting, Hilton, Rosewood Suite5:45 p.m., social hour, Hilton, Teakwood Suite
Study Group on Labor and Working Class HistoryThursday, Dec. 28, 5:00—7:00 pi session, Hilton, Lassen Room
Western Society for French HistoryThursday, Dcc. 28, 5:00—7:00 p.m., cocktail party, Hilton, Toyon Suite
Women’s Labor History Film ProjectFriday, Dec. 29, 7:00 p.m., film session, Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
10
SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS- is ii cist> tory :n pro!? cionof intel: rigs, the papers given here art tnt, nded sote/ for th hear: n of thosflrt sent and ‘hould not he lape—recordrd or othensise reproduced n it/tout the on tent of the author. Recorthngor reproducing a paper t:rlhs:tt con tent ma) encountet legal djfficuit’es
Wednesday, December 27
hilton AIIA I caching Division Wh) Study history> 7:30 pm.California Room
Hilton Can Comparative HistoD Be Defined> 8:30 p.m.Imperial Ballroom
Thursday, December 28 —
Room — 9:30a.m. 2:30 p.m.
Hilton 1 lots Has “Comparatis e I listory Is sere an InterdisciplinaryContinental Been Practiced? Comparatise Method:’ (351Ballroom 4 Immanuel ‘\ allertein & The
1fodern II ‘vtld 5t ‘tern ( I
Hilton Promoting Feminism: American World History: New ResponstbilitCalifornia Room & British Women’s Eftorts, (36)
1873-1914 (2)
Hilton Teaching History with Games Techniques for Studying OralContinental (3) History (37)Ballroom I
Hilton The City & Civilization An Teaching the Holocaust.Continental Urban Interdisciplinary Strategies & Materials forBallroom 2 Approach to Teaching Western Teaching a Sensitive Subject (38)
Civilization (4)
Hilton Comparative Politic:tl Philosophy: History & the General EducationContinental Walter Lippmann & Curriculum (39)Ballroom 3 Raymond Aron (3)
Hilton Psychohistory & Psvchobiog- Film as Document: TheContinental raph in the Ancient and Documentary Film & HistoricalBallroom 3 Modern Worlds :6) Scholarship (40)
Hilton Landed Elites Defend Their American Enterprise in ForeignContinental Systems of Unfree Labor, Markets: Russia. Mexico, & theBallroom 6 Prussia, Russia, & the US. (7) Middle East (41)
Hilton Quantitative Data: Probletsis of Race as a Political ‘vehicle:Continental ‘5 alidity & Reliability in Policymaking itt Brttain &Ballroom 7 1 caching & Research (8) the U.S. (42)
Hilton Conservative Sensibility in an Keys to the Learning ofilistoryContinental Age of Democratic Assertion (SHE) (43)Ballroom 8 (9)
Hilton What isa federal Historian? Historical Research OpportunitiesContinent:tl :10) in the “Military History ResearchBallroom 0 Centers (AMI) (14)
Hilton The British Labor Movement Indian-White Marriage & theCypress Room & Political Poster: Two Views Role of Mixed-Bloods in the
of the I 940o ( I 1 ) Western Fur Trade: Canadian &American Perspectives (45)
11
Thursday, December 2$
Room 9:30 a.m. — 2:30 p.m.
Hilton New Perspectives on Anti- Religious Identity & SocialDiablo Room masonry: New York, Strife in British India (46)
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania(12)
Hilton The Post-Warjewish Experience The Closing of the MedievalImperial Ballroom in Comparative Perspective (13) Frontier, circa 1300: Jubilee for a
Thesis (47)
Hilton Soldiers of the Sea: Commen- Comparative Studies of familyLassen Room taries Pertaining to Britain’s Education Strategies (48)
Royal Marines & the U.S.Marine Corps (14)
Hilton Native Americans & Western Identity & Adaptation: TheRosewood Suite Hemisphere Imperialism (15) Impact of Assimilation on Central
EuropeanJewry (49)
Hilton Historians & Anthropology— Comparative Perspectives on RuralShasta Room Nomads: A Case Study in Labor in Modern Spanish
Interdisciplinary Cooperation America (CLAH (50)(16)
Hilton Work & Work Regimes in Religion & Secularization inTamalpais Room 18th- and 19th-Century German Society during the 19th
France fl) & 20th Centuries (LBI) (page 82)
Hilton Tocqueville & the Prospects for New Views on I 8th-CenturyTeakwood Suite Democratic Culture: France & Politics (51)
America (18)
Hilton 19th-Century Wealth & Poverty:Whitney Room The Netherlands & ItsNeighbors (52)
Hilton The German Party System & The Economic Determinants of theToyon Suite Voting Behavior during the Occupational & Domestic Roles
Weimar Republic, 1918—33 ( 19) ofWomen: A ComparativeStudy (53)
Hilton Defining Academic Standards Bureaucracies in Modern Society:Walnut Suite for the Secondary School History A Comparative Perspective (54)
Curriculum: An Exploration ofSome of the Issues (20)
Hilton The Reign of Russia’s TsarWhitney Room Philosophe. Alexander I:
Fulfillment or Failure ofEnlightened Absolutism? (21)
St. Francis American Intellectuals & Afro- From Punishment to ReorientaBorgia Room American Culture in the Mid- tion—Aspects of Reform: The
20th Century (22) Reverse Course in U.S. OccupationPolicy for Germany (ACHWW)(55)
St. Francis Religion in Renaissance Rome,California Room East 1450—1527 (ACHA) (23)
St. Francis Radical Historiography in The Egalitarian Impulse & theCalifornia Room West Bourgeois Society (24) Attendant Quest for Exclusivity:
Edmund Morgan’s Hypothesis. Tested (56)
Thursday, December 28
Room
St FrancisColonial Room
St. FrancisFli7abethan Room A
St. FrancisElizabethan Room B
St FrancisElizabethan Room C
St. FranciSEssex Room
St. FrancisGeorgian Room
St. FrancisKent Room
St. FrancisOlympic Room
St Fr tncisOxford Room
St. FraneLWindsor Room
St. FrancisYorkshire Room
Teaching the Holocaust.Comparative .\pproachcs to aScnsitise Subject C:HC: 23’
Quantitative \nalvsis of County—level Data in 18th-, 19th- &20th-Cent ut’, China c26)
Problems Fc ing 20th-CenturyLiberation Mm ements: ColonialPolicy. Internal Opposition. &Collaboration (2’)
Indigenous Ideas of Rule &Resource Allocation in ModernSouth Asia (28
‘I he Role of the Historian inRemedial Programs (30)
Earle I Oth-Centure Citie in,\mertca & Africa (31)
I. rhanization & the Growth ofEthnic Polit its (32)
‘The formation of an .\mcricanImage of China (335
Local Demographic Studies of9th-Centur5 Brazil (34
Teaching Demonstrations and Workshopssee Iopcal Index for se’sion uumbcrs
Collective Violence (57)
Russia s Impact on the IndustrialRevolution in Great Britain: TheSignilh ance of InternationalCommerce (8)
Progressivism Compare cl: UrbanGrmt t h & Political Reform inCanada & the U S. (591
From Yellose Peril to White Peril:Perspectives on Japan a Place inBritcsin’s Imperial Experience(60)
In Defense of Property: Thecriua n Intl u trio I Elite, 11)1 6 3(1611
Patron & Client Relations & Classin I 9th—C,enturs Municipal Politicsin France & Algeria :631
Famil Empires & RegionalEconomic evelopment during thePstjtrittts, Efexico, 1876 1910 (64)
Finding the Fixed in the Flux AMethodological Question &Pt actical Apprtiiic hey (65
.\rmi,s .\s Social I nstitut ins ‘61
China on North American MindsCIIA) (67)
9:30 am. 2:30 p.m.
Area Studies FleIp or I lindi ante The Reconstruct ion of Westernto Comparative Insights? (29) Europe after Tsm World Wars (62)
12:15 p.m. Luncheons (pConference on Slavic and East European Histore
Modern European History SectionPhi Alpha ThetaPolish \mcrican Historical Association
C S Commission on Elilitare History
4:45 p.m. Presentations of Recent Doctoral Research pp. ‘C’ C’Twentieth-C’enture ,\merican HistoryEarls .‘\merican HistoryBritish HistoreAsian HistoryModern European HistoryNiediesal and Early Modern European history
9:00 p.m. General Meeting of the American Historical Association (p s2
13
Friday, December29
Room- 9:30 am. 2:30 p.m.
Hilton Can “Comparative History BeContinental Defined? (68)Ballroom 4
Hilton Southern Republicans during Les Toscans et Leurs Famittes byCalifornia Room Reconstruction (69) David Herlihy & Christiane
Klapisch: An Overview & Discussion (99)
Hilton Integrating Women’s History Using Mystery as a Device forContinental into the College History Inquiry Teaching (100)Ballroom 1 Curriculum (70)
Hilton History Day & History fair: Two Multi-Media ApproachesContinental Revivifying History in & out of to the Teaching of WesternBallroom 2 School (71) Civilization: “The Amiens
Cathedral & “Louis XIV” (101)
Hilton Teaching History with Video- Storm of Fire: World War IIContinental tape (72) & the Destruction ofBallroom 3 Dresden (102)
Hilton The Student as Researcher,Continental Learning History by Using theBallroom 4 Academic Library (103)
Hilton Ethnic Labor Conflict in The Copyright Law of 1976 (1 04)Continental California Q”3)Ballroom 5
Hilton Zionism in the U.S. (AJHS Structure & Performance: TheContinental (74) Task of Economic History (1 05)Ballroom 6
Hilton Puritanism in England & Teaching the Urban Experience:Continental America: Comparative Perspec- Boston as a Case Study (1 06)Ballroom 7 tives (75)
Hilton Sexuality, families, & Politics Popular Culture Sources for theContinental in Europe & America (76) Historian: Science Fiction & theBallroom 8 Detective Story (107)
Hilton Populism in Latin America (77) Updating the Rose Report (108)ContinentalBallroom 9
Hilton Criminality & Social Values Prostitution, Culture. & Society:Cypress Room (78) A Comparative View
(109)
Hilton Applied History & Publi The Regional Dimensions of theDiablo Room History: A Panel Discussion (79) Mexican Revolution (110)
Hilton Stereotypes in Modern Popular Comparative Chicano HistoryImperial Ballroom Culture (80) (111)
Hilton The Muscovite Service Elite in Career Choice, Mobility, &Lassen Room Comparative Perspective (81) Educational Background in the
U.S. & france during the 19thCentury (112)
14
Friday, December 29
Room
HiltonRosewood Suite
HiltonShasta Room
HiltonTeakss ood Suite
Hiltonlamalpais Room
HiltonToyon Suite
HiltonWhitne Room
St. FrancisBorgia Room
St. francisColonial Room
St. FrancisElizabethan Room A
St. FrmcisElizabethan Room B
Si. francisEssex Room
St. FrancisGeorgian Room
St. FrancisKent Room
9:30 a.m.
Intellectuals & Politics (82)
The Western Work Ethic inAfrica: Theory & Practice
‘Imperialism”in Theory &Practice (84)
Fthnicity & ResidentialStability (All IA) (85)
Evolution of the ImperialPresidency: Two Aspects ofExecutive .\uthoritv 186)
Filth & Pblitics in the Ageof Sanitary Reform (88)
Peoples ol the fhircl Worldin lhe Great Vs ar )89)
Fascism, .\nti-fascism, & \Var:The Italian-American Experience, 1920 44 (92)
narchists, Radicals. & theAuthorities. The Politics ofRepression in Eci rope & America1890—1920 t3
Project American HistoryStudent Initiated Learning --APanel Discussion with Slides (94)
The Press & Politics in ModernI3ritain (CBS) (05)
fise Evolution of Family Law inEngland & ‘umerica (96)
2:30 p.m
Ritual, Radicalism, & Protest:English Working Class Culturein the 19th Century ) 113
Out of the Cloister/Out of theVorld: Varieties of N fonasthFxperience in the High MiddleAges (114)
Lincoln (I H)
British & ,\merican Perspectives& Interests at the Paris PeaceConference of 1919(116
Disease Discrimination by Sex &Rate The Impact on Females &Blacks (I H;
Planning I listory: A Comparative\ien of a Historiographicalfrontier (I 18)
Social Des iance in HistoricalPerspective The C 5 &Australia (119)
Comparative Role Modcls inAnglo-American Imperialism.l80 1914 (121)
Pcpular Belief in N loclernEngland: Ness \pprnaches to theSocial History of Religion (I 2)
Christian Community in WesternHistory (1\SCH) (123)
Wool Merchants & Shippers inI labshnrg Spain & Italy (124
The fraditional PhD in theCommunity Colleges: Problems,Promise & Possible Alternatives
National Consciousness inNiediesal & Early NlodernEastern Europe I 26
II lEon Crosscurrents in Medieval
Walnut Suite History: the 12th Century (8)
St. Francis The Founding of Conservative 1 hi Problem of .\uihority in
California Room West Parties (90) European & American SocialScience, I t)R( 40 . 120
Alternative Careers orHistorians 9l
15
Friday, December 29Room 9:30 a.m. 2:30 p.m.
St. Francis Conservatism & Enlightenment inOlympic Room France & Germany (127)
St. Francis Witchcraft & Spirit Possession inOxford Room Early Modern France (128)
St. Francis Comparative Perspectives onVictorian Room Indochina during World War II(SHAFR) (129
St. Francis Studies of the Ming-Ch ‘ing Comparative Experience in ChinaWindsor Room Polity: Beyond Structure & Missions: American Missionariestoward Comparison (97) & Chinese Converts (130)
St. Francis An Anatomy of the Middle Science & Technology in NewYorkshire Room — Eastern Coup d’Etat (98) World Agriculture (AHS) (131)
Teaching Demonstrations and Workshops(see Topical Index for session numbers
12:15 p.m. Luncheons (pp. 61—63)American Catholic Historical AssociationAmerican Society for Reformation ResearchConference on Asian HistoryConference on Latin American HistorySociety for Historians of American Foreign RelationsSociety for the History of DiscoveriesSociety for Spanish and Portuguese Studies
4:45 p.m. Business Meeting of the American Historical Association (p. 77)
16
Saturday, December30
Room 9:00 am.
Hilton How I-las Comparatise History” Been Practiced?
Continental William H. \lcNeiIl and Plagues ass! Pesptss t 32)Ballroom 6
Hilton Popular Polities in England & America in the Late 18th Century
California Room (1331
Hilton Quantitative Esidence in Survey Classes \ Strategy (134)
ContinentalBallroom I
Hilton The I listorical Study of Utopianism as a Reflection
Continental ofSocietv (135)Ballroom 2
Hilton The Oral History Experience in High School:
Continental Teaching & Learning (136)
Ballroom 3
Hilton Ideology & Imperialism in Europe before World ‘5 ar 1(1 37)
ContinentalBallroom 4
Hilton Ideas In & About the Cits fl38
ContinentalBallroom 5
Hilton judicial Reviess: A Comparative Approach t\SLII/SCHS (1391
ContinentalBallroom 7
Hilton Strategies of Ethnic Women in Periods of Economic Depression
Continental (140)Ballroom 8
I lilton Anglo-American Diplomacy in the Post-World War 11 Era (141)
ContinentalBallroom 9
Hilton The First World War & Social Conflict: A Comparative
Cypress Room Perspective (142)
Hilton Haile Sellassie I: Man, Myth, Monarch (l43
Diahlo Room
Hilton Richard Nixon t144)Imperial Ballroom
HiltonRosewood Suite
Hilton Thejesuits to China & the Dutch in Japan:
Shasta Room A Reassessment (146)
hilton Resistanic Theory: A Comparison Before & After
Tamalpais Room the Reformation (147)
Hilton Ethnic Scapegoats & Gilded Age Politics (148)
Teakwood Suite
Hilton Promoting I Iisto0 through State Associations (149
Tovon Suite
17
Saturday, December 30
Room 9:00 a.m.
Hilton International Migration: Germany, Europe, & theWalnut Suite US, (CGCEH) (150)
Hilton Crime in Pre-Revolutionary Russia (1 51)Whitney Room
St. Francis Anti-Semitism in the West: Three Case Studies (1 52)Borgia Room
St. Francis The New Monarchs & their Parliaments (ICRRPI) (1 53)California Room West
St. Francis A Comparative Perspective on the InternationalColonial Room Diffusion of Technology (154)
St. Francis Radical Ideas in Restoration England (1 55)Elizabethan Room A
St. Francis A Comparative Analysis of Social Evolutionary Theory & ItsElizabethan Room B Relation to Darwinism (156)
St. Francis Economic Change & the Formation of Peasantry in 18th-CenturyEssex Room China & Bolivia (1 57)
St. Francis Responses to Collaboration in Europe (1 58)Georgian Room
St. Francis Bourbon Reforms: Colonial Economic Policy,Kent Room l”59—lSO$ (159)
St. Francis Colonized Africans in New World Colonies:Oxford Room The British & Their Slaves (160)
St. Francis Uses of Family Reconstitution Techniques inWindsor Room Historical Analysis (161)
KEY TO ABBREVIATIONSGroups meeting jointly with the AHA
AHS Agricultural History Society (131)ACHA American Catholic Historical Association (23)ACHSWW American Committee on the History of the Second World War (55)AIHA American Italian Historical Association (85)AMI American Military Institute (44)AIRS American Jewish Historical Society (74)ASCH American Society of Church History (123)ASLH American Society for Legal History (139)CHA Canadian Historical Association (67)CRC Committee on History in the Classroom (25)CGCEH Conference Group for Central European History (150)CLAH Conference on Latin American History (50)CBS Conference on British Studies (95)ICRRPI International Commission for the History of Representative
and Parliamentary Institutions (1531LBI Leo Baeck Institute (145)SRAFR Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (129)SHE Society for History Education (43)SCRS Supreme Court Historical Society (139)
18
Wednesday, December 27
Theme Session
8:30 p.m.
CAN “COMPARATIVE HISTORY” BE DEFINED?Hilton, Imperial Ballroom
CHAIR; C. Vann Woodward, Yale University
PARTICIPANTS; Cyril Black. Princeton UniversityN laurice N landeihaum. Johns Hopkins UniversityPeter Gay, Yale University
7:30 p.m.
AHA TEACHING DIVISION: WHY STUDY HISTORY?Hilton, California Room
CHAIR; Warren 1. Susman, VicePresident, Teaching Division,Rutgers University
Niembers of the Teaching Division;
Marcia L. Colish, Oberlin CollegeN lichael Kammen, Cornell UniversityCarolyn Lougee, Stanford UniversityHarold I). Woodman, Purdue University
19
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.Theme Session
HOW HAS “COMPARATIVE HISTORY” BEEN PRACTICED?1. IMMANUEL WALLERSTEIN AND THE MODERN WORLD
S$TEMHilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAIR: Lewis W. Spitz, Stanford UniversityPARTICIPANTS: Jan de Vries, University of California, Berkeley
Robert P. Brenner, University of California, Los AngelesCOMMENT: Immanuel Wallerstein, State University of New York,
Binghamton
2. PROMOTING FEMINISM AMERICAN AND BRITISHWOMEN’S EFFORTS, 1873-1914Hilton, California Room
CHAIR: Joan N. Burstyn, Douglass College, Rutgers UniversityThe Association for the Advancement of Women and the NineteenthCentury Women’sMovement, 7873—1914
Karen J. Blair, California Institute of TechnologyCollege and the Early TuentzethC’entury British Woman
Jane Weinstein Berman, State University of New York,Buffalo
.iargaret ,iacDonatd: A Socialist PilgrimageAlice Gilmore Vines, University of Dayton
COMMENT: Sally Gregory Kohlstedt, Syracuse UniversityJoan N. Burstyn
3. TEACHING HISTORY WITH GAMESHilton, Continental Ballroom 1
CHAIR: Gordon R. Mork, Purdue University‘Spzegeldorf’: Appeals in Weimar Germany
Gregory A. Sprague, Loyola University of Chicago‘England and the Outbreak of the American Revolution’: Crisis Game
Norman Baker, State University of New York, BuffaloCOMMENT: Charles F. Mullett, University of Missouri, Columbia
James Dielil and David Pace, Indiana UniversityGordon R. Mork
20
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11 :3t) am.
Demonstration Session
4. THE CITY AND CIVILIZATION: AN URBANINTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO TEACHINGWESTERN CIVILIZATIONHilton, Continental Ballroom 2
CHAIR: Thomas Arafe, Rust College
PARTICIPANTS: Barbara S. Ricks and John Cranston, Rust College
COMMENT: Karl Roider, Louisiana State University
5. COMPARATIVE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY:WALTER LIPPMANN AND RAYMOND ARONHilton, Continental Ballroom 3
CHAIR: Stanley Shapiro, Wayne State University
Walter Ltppmann and Raymond Aron: The Critique of Pure freedomGary S. Larsen, Princeton University
I I Walter Li,bpmann: The t ncertatnty PrincipleStephen J. Whitileld, Brandeis University
COMMENT: H. Stuart Hughes, University of California, San Diego
friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
6. PSYCHOHISTORY AND PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY IN THE
ANCIENT AND MODERN WORLDSHilton, Continental Ballroom 5
CHAIR: Thomas W. Africa, State University of New York,Binghamton
St. Augustine’s Ginversion and Erik Erzkson ‘s PsychohistoryLawrence j. Daly, Bowling Green State University
Generationat Revott and Psychological Regeneration in Turn_of_the_Gentury Vienna:
The Case of Otto Rank (7824— 7939)Dennis B. Klein, University of Rochester
Pcychohistory and Reoolution: A Gntique of Some Recent Psychohistoricat Studies of
RevolutionariesLawrence Kaplan, City College, City University of
New York
CoMMENT: Conalee Levine-Shneidman. New York University
.1. Lee Shneidman, Adelphi University
21
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am,
7. LANDED ELITES DEFEND THEIR SYSTEMS OFUNFREE LABOR: PRUSSIA, RUSSIA, AND THEUNITED STATESHilton, Continental Ballroom 6
CHAIR: Eugene D. Genovese, University of RochesterIn Defense of Servitude: A Comparison of American Prostave’ and Russian Pro_SerfdomArguments, 1760—1860
Peter Koichin, University of New MexicoSouthern Ptanters and Prussian junkers: A Comparative Perspective on the AntebettumPlanter Ctass and its Conservative ideology
Shearer Davis Bowman. University of California, BerkeleycoMMENT: Daniel Field. Syracuse University
George M. Fredrickson, Northwestern University
8. QUANTITATIVE DATA: PROBLEMS Of VALIDITY ANDRELIABILITY IN TEACHING AND RESEARCHHilton, Continental Ballroom 7
CHAIR: Thomas Alexander, University of Missouri, ColumbiaResearch Problems in Ethnocuttural Voting Studies
Paul J. Kleppner, Northern Illinois UniversityTeaching Challenges and Rewards in Community Demography Projects
Jerome J. Nadeihaft, University of Maine. OronocoMMENT: Erik Austin, Inter-university Consortium for
Political and Social ResearchKathleen Conzen, University of Chicago
9. CONSERVATIVE SENSIBILITY IN AN AGE OFDEMOCRATIC ASSERTIONHilton, Continental Ballroom $
CHAIR: Stow Persons, University of Iowa14”hig Beliefs and Democratic Ballots: Political Persuasions of the Unelevated
Lewis 0. Saum, University of WashingtonNoah Webster and the Specter of Abandon
Richard Rollins, University of Southern CaliforniaWIng Humor: Gentlemanly Adjustment to Ungentlemanly Democracy
David A. Grimsted, University of MarylandCOMMENT: Daniel Walker Howe, University of California, Los Angeles
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
10. WHAT IS A FEDERAL HISTORIAN?Hilton, Continentat Ballroom 9
Arranged in cooperation with the Federal Resource Group, National
Coordinating Committee for the Promotion of History
cHAIR: Paul.
Scheips, U.S. Army Center of Military History
An Archn’ist Charles M. Dollar, National Archives and Records Service
A Historicat EditorNathan Reingold, Joseph Hear)’ Papers, Smithsonian
Institution
A 1-listoric PreservattomstF. Ross Holland, National Park Service
A Althtary HistorianJohn T. Greenwood, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
A .lluseum C,tratorAudrey B. Davis, National Museum of History and
Technology
cOMMENT: The Audience
11. THE BRITISH LABOR MOVEMENT AND POLITICAL
POWER: TWO VIEWS OF THE 1940sHilton, Cyprus Zoom
cHAIR: A. M, Gollin, University of California, Santa Barbara
Ctement Attee and (,abmet Reform, 1931—51,Jerry H. Brookshire, Middle Tennessee State University
Labor’s Secret Propaganda II ar against Communism: The Origins of the Information
l?esearch DepartmentPeter Weiler, Boston College
coMMENT: Barbara Malament, Queens College, City University of
New York
23
Thursday, December 28: 9:3O11:3O a.m.
12. NEW PERSPECTIVES ON ANTIMASONRY:NEW YORK, MASSACHUSETTS, PENNSYLVANIAHilton, Diablo Room
CHAIR: William G. Shade, Lehigh UniversityAntimasons and Masons: Massachusetts and Vew York
Ronald P. formisano, Clark UniversityThe Antimasonic Imputse: Sociat Sources of Electorate and Etite in Genesee County..‘vw York Kathleen Smith Kutolowski, State University College
of New York, Brockport
“Z’ealots and Pragmatists, Hokum and Concrete Pledges”: A Comparison of the Anti-masonic Performers and Promises in JVew York and Pennsylvania
Robert 0. Rupp, Syracuse UniversityCOMMENT: James L. Crouthamel, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
13. THE POST-WAR JEWISH EXPERIENCE INCOMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVEHilton, Imperial Ballroom
CHAIR: Julius Weinberg, Cleveland State UniversityThe Reconstruction of the French-Jewish Community
David H. Weinberg, Bowling Green State UniversityThe Reconstruction of the Dutch..Jewish Community
Joel fishman, Netherlands State Institute forWar Documentation, Amsterdam
Holocaust Victims in America: The German-Jewish ExperienceMichael N. Dobkowski, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
COMMENT: Bernard J. Weiss. Duquesne University
24
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
14. SOLDIERS OF THE SEA: COMMENTARIESPERTAINING TO BRITAIN’S ROYAL MARINESAND THE UNITED STATES MARINE CORPSHilton, Lassen Room
CHAIR: Russell Zguta, University of Missouri, Columbia
An Ingredient of Naval Power: The Organ iation and Administration of the Marine
Forces in Engtand, 1748—1770, and the United States, 1798- 7815Alfred J. Macmi, University of Maine, Orono
Officer of Royal Marines, 7974: Representative of the Status Quo or Reflection of
Social Cf2ange?Donald F. Bittner, U.S. Marine Corps Command and
Staff College
The Evolution of the United States Marine Gorps as a Military Elite in the
Twentieth GenturyDennis E, Showalter, Colorado College
CoMMENT: Allan R. Millett, Ohio State University
J. Kenneth McDonald, George Washington University
15. NATIVE AMERICANS AND WESTERN HEMISPHEREIMPERIALISMHilton, Rosetvood Suite
CHAIR: Jorge Kior de Alva, San Jose State University
Native Americans and the Portuguese Government in the Eighteenth CenturyRobin L. Anderson, Arkansas State University
Wounded Knee 1890 to 11 Wounded Knee 1973: A Study in United States ColonialismRoxanne Dunbar Ortiz, California State University,
Hayward
United States Jndzan Policy and the Origins of American ImperzalzsmWalter L, Williams, University of Cincinnati
COMMENT: J. Mutero Chirenje, University of RhodesiaJorge Klor de Alva
25
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—l1:30 am.
16. HISTORIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGY—NOMADS:A CASE STUDY IN INTERDISCIPLINARY COOPERATIONHilton, Shasta Room
CHAIR: John M. Smith, Jr., University of California. BerkeleyAnthropologists and Historical Iodets, Historians, and Anthropotogicat .11odds
William Irons, Pennsylvania State UniversityH’hat It,as a Tribe? A Comparison of the Huns and Ottomans
Rudi Paul Lindner, University of MichiganCoMMENT: Joseph Fletcher, Jr., 1-larvard University
Emrys Peters, Manchester CollegeJohn M. Smith, Jr.
17. WORK AND WORK REGIMES IN EIGHTEENTH-AND NINETEENTH-CENTURY FRANCEHilton, Tamalpais Room
CHAIR: David H. Pinkney, University of WashingtonLabor Discibline in the Montgoher Paper Mills, 1761— 1806
Leonard Rosenband, Princeton UniversityH ork and [age-Setting in the Lilte Textile Industr1: Batteurs de (oton in the 1850s
William Reddy, Duke UniversityThe Making of a Labor Aristocracy: The Dockworkers of Marseilles in the,\neteenth Century
William H. Sewell, Jr.. Institute for Advanced StudyCOMMENT: Joan W. Scott, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
18. TOCQUEVILLE AND THE PROSPECTS FORDEMOCRATIC CULTURE: FRANCE AND AMERICAHilton, Teakwood Suite
CHAIR: Joseph N. Moody. Boston CollegeThe Silences of Tocqueville on Schooling and Gdture
Edward T. Gargan, University of Wisconsin, MadisonTocquevitle as Prophet: Democratic Education in France and the United Statessince the 1930s
Paul A. Gagnon. University of Massachusetts, BostonTocquezille’s Expectations: Democracy and C’ulture in France and the United States
Arthur D. Kaledin, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCOMMENT: Doris S. Goldstein, Yeshiva University
James T. Schleifer, College of New Rochelle
26
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
19. THE GERMAN PARTY SYSTEM AND VOTING
BEHAVIOR DURING THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC, 1918-33Hilton, Toyon Suite
CHAIR: Hans W. Gatzke, Yale University
The Dissolution of the Bourgeois Party System in the Weimar Republic
Larry Eugene Jones, Canisius College
The Mittelstnde and jVationat Socialism.’ An Analysis of liiddte class Voting
Patterns in the Weimar RepublicThomas Childers, University of Pennsylvania
COMMENT: Charles F. Sidman, University of Florida
Peter Merkl, University of California, Santa Barbara
20. DEFINING ACADEMIC STANDARDS FOR THE
SECONDARY SCHOOL HISTORY CURRICULUM:
AN EXPLORATION OF SOME OF THE ISSUESHilton, Walnut Suite
Arranged in cooperation with the College Board History Academic Advisory
Committee
CHAIR: Henry R. Winkler, University of Cincinnati
is There a Problem of Standards and, If So, Whose Is it?
E. Daniel Eckberg, Lindbergh High School, Minnesota
Structure and Sequence in the History GurriculumPeter N. Stearns, Carnegie-VIelIon University
Knowledge and Skills in the History CirriculumHarry N. Scheiber, University of California, San Diego
History [‘is-d-l ‘is the Other Social StudiesJonathan Harris, Paul D. Schreiber High School, New York
COMMENT: The Audience
27
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
21. THE REIGN OF RUSSIA’S TSAR PHILOSOPHE,ALEXANDER I: FULFILLMENT OR FAILURE OFENLIGHTENED ABSOLUTISM?Hilton, Whitney Room
CHAIR: Allen McConnell, Queens College, City University ofNew York
The Atexandrine Reform of the Universities: Successful failureJames T. Flynn, College of the Holy Cross
The Jewish Polozhenie of 1604: Stillborn ReformJohn Klier, fort Hays State University
Ret igwn under Alexander I: Social ferment and Official PolicyDaniel L. Schlafly. Jr., St. Louis University
COMMENT: George L. Yaney, University of Maryland
22. AMERICAN INTELLECTUALS AND AFRO-AMERICANCULTURE IN THE MID-TWENTIETH CENTURYSt. Francis, Borgia Room
CHAIR: St. Clair Drake, Stanford UniversityBlack Intellectuals and Race: A lain Locke and the American Dilemma
Jeffrey C. Stewart, Tufts UniversityA’Ielville J. Herskovits and the Study of Afro-American Culture
Walter A. Jackson. Harvard UniversityCOMMENT: John Cell, Duke University
23. RELIGION IN RENAISSANCE ROME, 1450-1527St. Francis, California Room fast
Joint Session with the American Catholic Historical AssociationCHAIR: Eric W. Cochrane, University of ChicagoRhetoric and Relgion at the Papal Court
John W. O’Mailey, University of DetroitRoma Triumphans: Triumphs in the Thought and Ceremonies of Renaissance Rome
Charles L. Stinger, State University of New York, BuffaloInczpiat ludicium a Domo Dci: Lateran t’ as a Roman Reform Synod
Nelson H. Minnich, Catholic University of AmericaCOMMENT: Paolo Prodi, University of Rome and Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars
28
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—1 1:30 am.
24. RADICAL HISTORIOGRAPHY IN BOURGEOIS SOCIETYSt. Francis, California Room West
CHAIR: Barton J. Bernstein, Stanford University
American Leftist HistoriansPeter Novick, University of Chicago
In Gomparative PerspectiveGeorg G. Iggers, State University of New York, Buffalo
25. TEACHING THE HOLOCAUST: COMPARATIVEAPPROACHES TO A SENSITIVE SUBJECTSt. Francis, Colonial Room
Joint Session with the Committee on History in the Classroom
CHAIR: Donald S. Detwiler, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
The Holocaust in 11 ‘est European EducationSiegfried Bachmann, Georg Eckert Institute for International
Textbook Research, Brunswick, Germany
The Hotocaust in the Teaching of German History in AmericaGerald R. Kleinfeld, Arizona State University
Trie Treatment of the. Hotocaust in East European Communist Ideotog)’ and
flistoriography Erich Goldhagen, Russian Research Center,Harvard University
cOMMENT: Howard Morley Sachar, George Washington UniversityThe Audience
This session is accompanied by a demonstration session on Teaching theHolocaust: Strategies and Materials for Teaching a Sensitive Subject, sched
uled for Thursday 2:30 p.m. (see session number 38)
26, QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF COUNTY-LEVELDATA IN EIGHTEENTH-, NINETEENTH-, ANDTWENTIETH-CENTURY CHINASt. Francis, Elizabethan Room A
CHAIR: Roy Hofheinz, Jr., Harvard University
C’ount)’-Levet Poputation Data in Eghteenth- and .Vineteenth-Gentury ChinaGil Rozman, Princeton University
County-Level Economic Data in Twentieth-Century ChinaDavid Deal, Whitman College
coex: Susan B. Hanley, University of Washington
29
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
27. PROBLEMS FACING TWENTIETH-CENTURY LIBERATIONMOVEMENTS: COLONIAL POLICY, INTERNALOPPOSITION, AND COLLABORATIONSt. Francis, Elizabethan Room B
CHAIR: J. Bowyer Bell, Institute of War and Peace,Columbia University
Messati Hadj and Opposition to the F.L.N., 1954—1962Allan Greenberg, Curry College
Ethnicity, Elitism, and Opposition to the PAIGç, 7956— 7976Judson Lyon, Fayetteville State University
Nationalism and Unionism in Iretand, 1976— 1927Arthur Mitchell, University of South Carolina, Allendale
The Ltoyd George Government and the Anglo-Irish War, 1919—1921Martin Seedorf, Big Bend Community College
COMMENT. j. Bowyer Bell
28. INDIGENOUS IDEAS OF RULE AND RESOURCEALLOCATION IN MODERN SOUTH ASIASt. Francis, Essex Room
CHAIR: Thomas R. Metcalf, University of California, Berkeley‘A Course of Waste/itt Extravagance’: Patterns of ‘Gentry ‘ Expenditure and the ImperialResponse in Punjab
Emily Hodges, University of California, BerkeleyLand, Gifts, and Dependency in Bengal
John R. McLane, Northwestern UniversityCharity’ and Largess: Strategies for Local Legitimacy in British South India
Pamela G. Price, University of Wisconsin, MadisonCOMMENT: The Audience
30
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 a.m.
29. AREA STUDIES: HELP OR HINDRANCETO COMPARATIVE INSIGHTS?St. Francis, Georgian Room
CHAIR: Leslie Koepplin, University of California, Los Angeles
African StudiesRay A. Kea, Johns Hopkins University
(Janathan StudiesRichard A. Preston, Duke University
East Asian StudiesMichael Dalby, University of Chicago
Southeast Asian StudiesChristopher Gray, Yale University
CoMMENT: Warren Ilchman, ford FoundationLeslie Koepplin
Demonstration Session
30. THE ROLE OF THE HISTORIAN IN REMEDIALPROGRAMSSt. Francis, Kent Room
ShannonJ. Doyle, University of Houston, Downtown College
31. EARLY NINETEENTH-CENTURY CITIES IN AMERICA
AND AFRICASt. Francis, Olympic Room
CHAIR: Charles M, Glaab, University of Toledo
Social Structures and the Potential for Urban Change: Boston and Charleston
in the 1830sWilliam and Jane Pease, University of Maine, Orono
Dar Es Salaarn, East Africa in the Nineteenth (JenturyDavid H. Anthony, University of Wisconsin
COMMENT: E. Dighy Baltzell, University of PennsylvaniaCharles M. Glaab
31
Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
32. URBANIZATION AND THE GROWTH OfETHNIC POLITICSSt. Francis, Oxford Room
CHAIR: Paula Benkart, St. Joseph’s CollegeNew Migrants and Otd Urbanites: The Croatian Struggte for Datmatian Towns,1867—1900 Robert J. Donia, Ohio State University, LimaTflis: Urbanuation and Ethnic Politics, 1860—1917
Ronald Suny, Oberlin Collegeimmigration, Ethnicity, and Urban Politics: American Cities in the Late Nineteenth andEarty Twentieth Centuries
Joseph Barton, Northwestern UniversityCOMMENT: Elizabeth Pleck, University of Michigan
Paula Benkart
33. THE FORMATION OF AN AMERICAN IMAGEOF CHINASt. Francis, Windsor Room
CHAIR: Hilary Conroy, University of PennsylvaniaThe Mercantile Origins of American C7zzna Policy, 1784— 7841
Jacques ‘I. Downs, St. Francis CollegeThe Northeastern Connection. American Board Missionaries and the Formation ofAmerican Opinion toward China, 7830— 1860
Murray Rubinstein, Baruch College, City University ofNew York
The Decorative Arts of the Old China Trade: Their influence in America to 1846Jonathan Goldstein, Cherry Hill High School East,
New JerseycOMMENT: Yen-Ping Hao, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
32
‘Thursday, December 28: 9:30—11:30 am.
34. LOCAL DEMOGRAPHIC STUDIES OFNINETEENTH-CENTURY BRAZILSt Francis, Yorkshire Room
cHAIR: Joseph L. Love, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Stave Manumission and the Growth of Stave and Free-Gotored Populations in Paraty,
1789—1822 James P. Kiernan, Library of Congress
Slave Marruge and Family Patterns: The Coffee Regions of Bra,d, 1850—88
Robert W. Slenes, University of ColoradoPedro Carvaiho de Mello, Instituto de Pesquisas Sociais
e Económicas, Rio de Janiero
Ciyward Migration and Poputatwn Structure. Recife, 1790— 1920Bainbridge Cowell, Jr., Yale University
COMMENT: Elizabeth Anne Kuznesof, University of Kansas
33
Thursday, December 28: 12:15—2:00 p.m.
LuncheonsCONFERENCE ON SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN HISTORYHilton, Walnut Suite
PRESIDING: Roman Szporluk, University of Michigan
Jewish Prisoners of War in the Soviet Union during World War IIGeorge Barany, University of Denver
MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY SECTIONHilton, Continental Ballroom 8
p RESIDING: Theodore S. Hamerow, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The Limits and Dwisions of British HistoryJ. G. A. Pocock, Johns Hopkins University
PHI ALPHA THETAHilton, Teakwood Suite
pRESIDING: Doyce B. Nunis, Jr., University of Southern California
Academic Detente: An American History Professor in MoscowElbert B. Smith, University of Maryland
POLISH AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONSt. Francis, Oxford Room
pRESIDING: Anthony F. Turhollow, Loyola Marymount University,Los Angeles
Links and Roots: Another Look at America’s ‘Pre-Ethnic’ Polish Exile ImmigrantsJoseph W. Wieczerzak, Bronx Community College,
New York
U.S. COMMISSION ON MILITARY HISTORYHilton, Rosewood Suite
PRESIDING: John E. Jessup, Colonel, USA, (ret’d)
TopIc: Relations between the Armed Forces and Society
The Introduction of the Ironclad Warship and the Development of RussianHeavy Industry
Jacob W. Kipp, Kansas State University
34
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
Theme Session
35. IS THERE AN INTERDISCIPLINARY COMPARATIVEMETHOD?Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAIR: William 0, Aydelotte, University of Iowa
The comparative Method in Political ScienceWilliam Flanigan, University of MinnesotaNancy Zingale, College of St. Thomas
What Historians CYioose to compareRaymond Grew, University of Michigan
The C’omparatwe Method in Anthropological Perspective5. A. Hammel, University of California, Berkeley
COMMENT: John McCarthy, University of California, Berkeley
36. WORLD HISTORY: NEW RESPONSIBILITYHilton, California Room
cF1AIR: R. R. Palmer, University of Michigan
The Twentieth-century World coitrse.’ The Denver ExperienceRobert E. Roeder, University of Denver
Preparing the Gourse: The Agony and the EcstasyRobert F. Byrnes, Indiana University
COMMENT: frank A. Kierman, Jr., Rider CollegeAbraham Ascher, Brooklyn College, City University of
New York
Workshop
37. TECHNIQUES FOR STUDYING ORAL HISTORYHilton, Continental Ballroom 1
Grace Jordan Mcfadden, University of South Carolina
35
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
3$. TEACHING THE HOLOCAUST: STRATEGIES ANDMATERIALS FOR TEACHING L SENSITIVE SUBJECTHilton, Continental Ballroom 2
CHAIR: Deborah Lipstadt, University of WashingtonWorking with Undergraduates
Richard Hunt, Harvard UniversityA Fitmic Approach
Carlos E. Cortes, University of California, RiversideProbing Historicat Themes, Concepts, and Vatue Dilemmas
Eleanor Blumenberg National Education Director,Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith
Eyewitness AccountsMarta Cordell, Holocaust survivor
COMMENT: The AudienceThis demonstration reinforces Teaching The Holocaust: Comparative Approaches To A Sensitive Subject, ajoint session of the Committee on Historyin the Classroom and the AHA, scheduled for Thursday, 9:30 am. (session25).
39. HISTORY AND THE GENERAL EDUCATION CURRICULUMHilton, Continental Ballroom 3
CHAIR: C. Frederick Rudolph, Jr., Williams CollegeIs History an Essential Part of Programs for General Education? Answers Pastand Present David B. Potts, Union CollegeCOMMENT: Laurence Veysey, University of California, Santa Cruz
Donald King, Whitman CollegeJames Jankowski, University of ColoradoJohn Farnsworth, State University College of New York,
Utica/ Rome
40. FILM AS DOCUMENT: THE DOCUMENTARYFILM AND HISTORICAL SCHOLARSHIPHilton, Continental Ballroom 5
CHAIR: Patrick Griffin, California State University, Long BeachPARTICIPANTs: William T. Murphy, Motion Picture Archivist, National
Archives and Records ServiceF. J. Gladstone, WGBH-TV, Boston, and executive
producer, NOVA
Matt Von Brauchitsch, producer-writer, producer ofDecades of Decision
Anthony Potter, producer of the series Between theWars, Alan Landsburg Productions
36
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 pm.
41. AMERICAN ENTERPRISE IN FOREIGN MARKETS:
RUSSIA, MEXICO, AND THE MIDDLE EASTHilton, Continental Ballroom 6
CHAIR: Michael Hunt, Colgate University
Internationat Harvester in Russia: The Washington-St. Petersburg Connection
Fred V. Carstensen, University of Virginia
Amencan Enterprise, American Government and the Sisal Industn’ of Dicat3n, Mexico,
7876— 7940Diane Roazen. University of Chicago
American Enterprise and lIiddle East Oil: 7939—45Michael B. Stoff, Yale University
COMMENT: Robert F. Smith, University of Toledo
42. RACE AS A POLITICAL VEHICLE: POLICYMAKINGIN BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATESHilton, Continental Ballroom 7
CHAIR: William Chafe, Duke University
Race and Town Ptannutg in Britain: The Development of the London County C’ouncit’s
Urban Renewal ProgrammePatricia L. Garside, Polytechnic of North London
Hitchhiking to I ‘isibditv: Sex Provisions in Civil Rights Legislation in the i960s
Thomas Morain, Iowa State University
COMMENT: Kenneth Young, University of Kent, CanterburyDeren Frasor, University of Bradford
43. KEYS TO THE LEARNING OF HISTORYHilton, Continental Ballroom 8
Joint Session with the Society for History Education
CHAIR: Walter Ehrlich, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Moral Dimensions: Some Implications of Lawrence Kohlberg’s Research for the
Teaching of HistoryLinda Rosenweig, Carnegie-Mellon Education Center
Attitudes and Development as factors in the Learning of I-Iistory: The Work of
William Perry Charles W. Connell, West Virginia University
COMMENT: Leo F. Solt, Indiana UniversityGlenn M. Linden, Southern Methodist University
37
Thursday, December 28; 2:30—4:30 p.m.
44. HISTORICAL RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES IN THE“MILITARY” HISTORY RESEARCH CENTERSHilton, Continental Ballroom 9
Joint Session with the American Military Institute
CHAIR: Irving B. Holley, Duke UniversityThe Army’s Military History Institute and the New Dimensions of Military History
Benjamin franklin Cooling, U.S. Army Military HistoryInstitute
Opportunities for Research in the Naval Historical Center CollectionsDean C. Allard, Naval Historical Center
The A1’arine Carps Historical ArchivesHenry I. Shaw, Jr., History and Museums Division,
U.S. Marine Corps..Iititary Documentation: Underused Historical Resources
Lloyd H. Cornett, Albert F. Simpson HistoricalResearch Center, U.S. Air Force
COMMENT: The Audience
45. INDIAN-WHITE MARRIAGE AND THE ROLE OFMIXED-BLOODS IN THE WESTERN FUR TRADE:CANADIAN AND AMERICAN PERSPECTIVESHilton, Cypress Room
CHAIR: Arthur Ray, York University‘The Cstom of the Country’: Intermarriage and Race Prejudice in the WesternGreat Lakes Region
Jacqueline Peterson. Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History,Newberry Library
Marriage Patterns of the Trappers and Traders during the Lean Yearsof the fur Industry
William R. Swagerty and Harvey L. Carter,Colorado College
The Place of A’Iixed Bloods in the Labor Force of the Hudson’s Bay CompanyCarol Judd, Parks Canada. Ottawa
COMMENT: John Elgin Foster, University of Alberta
38
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
46, RELIGIOUS IDENTITY AND SOCIAL STRIFE
IN BRITISH INDIAHilton, Diablo Room
CHAIR: Frank Conlon. University of Washington
Cnfiict among Alustims: .7V’w Sects and New StrategiesBarbara Daly Metcalf, University of Pennsylvania
C½an ging Perceptions of Self-Identity: Religious Riots in North Intha
$andria B. Freitag, University of California, Berkeley
Ointrot and Cmmumty in the .?vorth Indian Gountryside: The 1893 Riots
Anand Yang, University of Utah
CoMMENT: Kenneth W. Jones, Kansas State University
47. THE CLOSING Of THE MEDIEVAL FRONTIER,
CIRCA 1300: JUBILEE FOR A THESISHilton, Imperial Ballroom
CHAIR: Edward M. Peters, University of Pennsylvania
The Church of the Irish Frontier in the Late Middle AgesW. R. Jones, University of New Hampshire
The Militia Cmponent in the Mititaiy Forces of the Teutonic Knights along the
Medienat Baltic FrontierRaymond Schmandt, St. Joseph’s College
The European Frontier in the Fourteenth Century: Contracting or Changing?
James Muldoon, Rutgers University, Camden
COMMENT: Archibald R. Lewis, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Edward M. Peters
48. COMPARATIVE STUDIES OF FAMILY
EDUCATION STRATEGIESHilton, Lassen Room
CHAIR: Louise A. Tillv, University of Michigan
Changing Education Strategies among Migrant Generations: Italian Immigrants in New
Fork, 19t)0- 1950Miriam Cohen, Vassar College
Schooling for the Peasant Child: Family Strategies and State Plans in France and
Germany, 1750—1250Mary Jo Maynes, University of Minnesota
coexr: Louise A. Tilly?viark J. Stern, University of Pennsylvania
39
Thursday, December 28: 2:30-430 p.m.
49. IDENTITY AND ADAPTATION: THE IMPACT OFASSIMILATION ON CENTRAL EUROPEAN JEWRYHilton, Rosewood Suite
cHAIR: Werner T, Angress, State University of New York,Stony Brook
Theodor Lessing and the Problem of Jewish Self-HatredLawrence Baron, St. Lawrence University
The Flexible ,Yatwnat Identi ties of Bohemian JewryWilma A. Iggers, Canisius College
Immigration and Assimilation of J iennese Jewry, 1880— 19HWalter R. Weitzmann, State University College of New
York, PotsdamcoMMENT: Stephen M. Poppel, Bryn Mawr College
50. COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON RURAL LABORIN MODERN SPANISH AMERICAHilton, Shasta Room
Joint Session with the Conference on Latin American HistoryCHAIR: Tulio Halperin-Donghi, University of California, BerkeleyDebt Peonage in Spanish America: A Comparatwe Overview
Arnold J. Bauer, University of California, DavisThe Mobility of Labor in Nineteenth-&ntury Mexican Agriculture
John H. Coatsworth, University of ChicagoLabor Contracting in Late Vineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Rural Peru: TheEnganche System Reexamined
Peter F. Kiaren, George Washington UniversitycOMMENT: Robert C. Padden. Brown University
51. NEW VIEWS ON EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY POLITICSHilton, Teakwood Suite
CHAIR: Henry L. Snyder, University of KansasLaw and Politics in the House of Lords, 7675— 1770
Allen Horstman, Albion CollegeCourt l47ig Thought. The Missing Crux
Reed S. Browning, Kenyon CollegeJohn Sawbridge and ‘Popular Politics’ in Late Eighteenth-Century London
Carla H. Hay, Marquette UniversityPopular Politics and Reform in Eighteenth-Century ,Vewcastte
Thomas Knox, Bowling Green State UniversityCOMMENT: Henry L. Snyder
40
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
52. NINETEENTH-CENTURY WEALTH AND POVERTY:
THE NETHERLANDS AND ITS NEIGHBORSHilton, Whitney Room
CHAIR: Richard Unger, University of British Columbia
ireland and Hottand: A Gomparative Study of industrial Failure
Joel Mokyr, Northwestern University
Poverty and Economy in the Athertands and France: 1815—50
Frances Gouda, University of Washington
COMMENT: Harold R. C. Wright, McGill University
53. THE ECONOMIC DETERMINANTS Of THE
OCCUPATIONAL AND DOMESTIC ROLES Of
WOMEN: A COMPARATIVE STUDYHilton, Toyon Suite
CHAIR: June E. Hahner, State University of New York, Albany
Nineteenth-Century Rural Economic Ghange and the Out-Migration of Women: A
Goin/Jarison of Three Bourbonnais Agricultural Regions
Nancy E. Fitch, Hampshire College
The impact of the Labor Market on Jl7omen in Nineteenth-Century c½ile
Ann Hagerman Johnson, University of California, Davis
COMMENT: Francesca Miller, University of California, Davis
Gay Gullickson Carens, Skidmore College
54. BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN SOCIETY:
A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVEHilton, Walnut Suite
CHAIR: Gordon Craig, Stanford University
African Bureaucracies: The Post-Colonial Experience
Gaston V. Rimlinger, Rice University
,iiodern American Bureaucracies in the Twentieth Gentury
Louis Galambos, Johns Hopkins University
Bureaucracy and State Control in Latin AmericaMark B. Rosenberg, Florida International University
COMMENT: Reinhard Bendix, University of California, Berkeley
41
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
55. fROM PUNISHMENT TO REORIENTATION—ASPECTS OfREFORM: THE REVERSE COURSE IN UNITED STATESOCCUPATION POLICY FOR GERMANYSt. Francis, Borgia Room
Joint Session with the American Committee on the History of the SecondWorld War
CHAIR: Willard A. Fletcher, University of DelawareFrom Prosecution to Clemency for War Criminals
John Mendelsohn. National Archives and Records ServiceFrom Information Controt to Aledia Freedom
Robert Wolfe, National Archives and Records ServiceGerman Public Views on Changug US. Occupation Policy
Richard L. Merritt, University of IllinoisCOMMENT: Earl F. Ziemke, University of Georgia
56. THE EGALITARIAN IMPULSE AND THE ATTENDANTQUEST FOR EXCLUSIVITY: EDMUND MORGAN’SHYPOTHESIS TESTEDSt. Francis, California Room West
CHAIR: Allan Bloom, University of TorontoSpartan Slavery, Spartan Freedom
Paul A. Rahe, Cornell UniversityCitzenship in Classical Athens: Empire, Privilege, and Prejudice
Brook Manville, Yale UniversityRace and Democracy in Antebellum Providence
Robert J. Cottrol, Emory UniversityCOMMENT: Elizabeth Fox Genovese, University of Rochester
Allan Bloom
42
‘Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 pm.
57. COLLECTIVE VIOLENCESt. Francis, Colonial Room
CHAIR: Charles Tilly, University of Michigan
Political Protest and Violence in the 1960s: A Retrospective and Comparative View
of the United StatesTed Robert Gurr, Northwestern University
The Paradox of American Violence RevisitedHugh Davis Graham, University of Maryland
Baltimore County
CoMMENT: Robert Brent Toplin, University of North Carolina,
WilmingtonCharles Tilly
Copies of these papers will be available at the meeting.
58. RUSSIA’S IMPACT ON THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
IN GREAT BRITAIN: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF
INTERNATIONAL CO MMERCESt. Francis, Elizabethan Room A
CHAIR: Donald W. Treadgold, University of Washington
Russia’s impact on the Industrial Revolution in Great Britain during the Second Hal/of
the Eighteenth Gentuiy: The Signcance of international Commerce
Herbert H. Kaplan, Indiana University
COMMENT: Peter Mathias, All Souls College, University of Oxford
Arcadius Kahan, University of Chicago
59. PROGRESSIVISM COMPARED: URBAN GROWTH AND
POLITICAL REFORM IN CANADA AND THE
UNITED STATESSt. Francis, Elizabethan Room B
CHAIR: Kenneth T. Jackson, Columbia University
Variations on a Gonservattve Theme: Ganadian Reform in the Progressive Era
John C. Weaver, McMaster University
Suburban Power: Spatial Growth and the Politics of Reform in the Progressive Era
Michael P. McCarthy, State University of New York,
Stony Brook
COMMENT: Alan F. J. Artibise, University of Victoria
43
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
60. FROM YELLOW PERIL TO WHITE PERIL:PERSPECTIVES ON JAPAN’S PLACEIN BRITAIN’S IMPERIAL EXPERIENCESt. Francis, Elizabethan Room C
CHAIR: Walter Gourlay, Michigan State UniversityReexamining Thai Dangerous Divergence of Interest and Ideal’: Japan’s Rote in theEarly Evolution of the British Empire-Commonwealth
Robert J. Gowen, East Carolina UniversityJapan and British Impenatism in the Far East, 1933—J2
William Roger Louis, University of Texas, AustinCOMMENT: James B. Crowley. Yale University
Robert A. Huttenback. University of California,Santa Barbara
61. IN DEFENSE OF PROPERTY: THE GERMANINDUSTRIAL ELITE, 1918-50St. Francis, Essex Room
CHAIR: Thomas Nipperdey, University of MunichConflicts within German Industry and the Collapse of the Weimar Republic
David Abraham, Princeton UniversityThe Role of German Business in Na.i Schemes for the Reorgani.ation of the EuropeanEconomy during World War II
Jean Freymond, University of GenevaThe Rehabilitation of Ruhr Industrialists in the Post- Ti ‘orld War II Social Contract
Leah Zell, Harvard UniversityCOMMENT: Ulrich Nocken, University of DUisseldorf
62. THE RECONSTRUCTION OF WESTERN EUROPEAFTER TWO WORLD WARSSt. Francis, Georgian Room
CHAIR: Carl E. Schorske, Princeton UniversityThe Two Post- War Eras and the Condition of Stability in Twentieth-Century Europe
Charles S. Maier, Duke UniversityCOMMENT: Leonard Krieger, University of Chicago
Richard E. Kuisel, State University of New York,Stony Brook
44
Thursday, December 2$: 2:30-4:30 pm.
63. PATRON AND CLIENT RELATIONS AND CLASS
IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY MUNICIPAL POLITICS
IN FRANCE AND ALGERIASt. Francis, Kent Room
CHAIR: David C. Riggs, University of Toronto
Potiticat Parties and Class Struggles in Toulouse, France, 1830— 70
Ron Aminzade, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Patronage Politics and Political Corruption in Colonial Algeria: Bone, 1870—1919
David Prochaska, University of California, Berkeley
Patron and Client Retations and Class in NineteenthCentuiy Municipal Politics: The
Canton of Apt (Vauctuse)Peter Simoni, Laurentian University
COMMENT: Lynn A. Hunt, University of California, Berkeley
64. FAMILY EMPIRES AND REGIONAL ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT DURING THE PORFIRIATO,
MEXICO, 1876—1910St. Francis, Olympic Room
CHAIR: Stanley R. Ross, University of Texas, Austin
The Economic Empire of the Terraas family of ChihuahuaMark Wasserman, Rutgers University
Family Elites in a Boom and Bust Economy: The Molinas and Peons of
Poijirian TucatánAllen Wells, State University of New York, Stony Brook
Porfirian Sonora: Economic CoilegialityStuart Voss, State University College of New York,
Plattsburgh
COMMENT: Charles Harris, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces
Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Washington University
65. FINDING THE FIXED IN THE FLUX:
A METHODOLOGICAL QUESTION AND
PRACTICAL APPROACHESSt. Francis, Oxford Room
CHAIR: Judith M. Hughes, University of California, San Diego
Simone Well and Mohandas Gandhi: A Gomparative StudyTerry M. Perlin, Miami University
Historical Linguistics and the Comparative Method of Marc Bloch
Lawrence D. Walker, Illinois State University
COMMENT: Richard Teichgraeber, Stanford University
45
Thursday, December 28: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
66. ARMIES AS SOCIAL INSTITUTIONSSt. Francis, Windsor Room
CHAIR: Martin Berger, Youngstown State UniversityThe Military Profession as a Social Class in the Sixteenth Century:A Comparative Framework
Ellery S. Schalk, University of Texas, El PasoVeterans’ Policy in France from the Revolution to the Restoration
Isser Woloch, Columbia UniversityClasses Populaires: Social Mobility— The French Army Cadres, 7848—95: A Study ofSocial Mobility via the Army in Nineteenth-Century France
Terry W. Strieter, Murray State UniversityCoMi1ENT: Charles J. Wrong, University of South Florida
67. CHINA ON NORTH AMERICAN MINDSSt. Francis, Yorkshire Room
Joint Session with the Canadian Historical AssociationCHAIR: John C. Kendall, California State University, FresnoChina in American Eyes: Public Opinion and China Policy, 7958—68
James E. Reed, Harvard UniversityCanadian Recognition of China: An Incident in Canadian-American Relations
John English, University of WaterlooCOMMENT: James C. Thomson, Jr., Harvard University
46
Thursday, December 28: 4:45 p.m.
PRE,ENTATIONS Of RECENT DOCTORAL RESEARCH
TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICAN HISTORYHilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAIR: Walter Johnson, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Contours of Pubtic Potwy, 1939— 1945Richard N. Chapman, Wells College
(dissertation, Yale University)
The Society and Economy of Wartime Michigan, 1939-1945
Alan Clive, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
(dissertation, University of Michigan)
.omng and Resident iat Segregation: A Social and Physicat History, 7970—10
Barbara Flint, University of Washington(dissertation, University of Chicago)
Prychotogy and Social Order: An Intellectual Biography of Hugo Mflnsterberg
Matthew Hale, Jr., Washington, D.C.(dissertation, University of Maryland)
The American Legal Profession and the Organiationat Society, 1890—1930
Wayne K. Hobson, California State University, Fullerton
(dissertation, Stanford University)
The Dependent Child in Mississippi: A Social History 7900— 7972
Thomas E. Williams, Ohio State University
(dissertation, Ohio State University)
COMMENT: Walter Johnson
47
Thursday, December 28: 4:45 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS Of RECENT DOCTORAL RESEARCHEARLY AMERICAN HISTORYHilton, Continental Ballroom 5Arranged in consultation with the Institute of Early American Historyand Culture
CHAiR: Sydney V. James, University of Iowafamily Experience and Kinship in Eighteenth-Century Chesapeake Society
Daniel Blake Smith, University of Kentucky(dissertation, University of Virginia)
Labor and Indentured Servants in Colonial PennsylvaniaSharon Salinger(dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles)
Massachusetts Politics in War and Peace, 1676—1776William Pencak(dissertation, Columbia University)
The Development of Stave Cutture in Eighteenth-Century Plantation AmericaPhilip D. Morgan, The Flinders University of
South Australia(dissertation, University of London)
Break Every Yoke: American Evangelicals against Slavery, 1770— 1808James David Essig(dissertation, Yale University)
A Calculating People: The Origins of a Quantitative Mentality in AmericaPatricia Cline Cohen, University of California,
Santa Barbara(dissertation, University of California, Berkeley)
Gonversion and Accountability in New England’s Second Great AwakeningWilliam Breitenbach, Institute of Early American
History and Culture(dissertation, Yale University)
COMMENT: Gary B. Nash, University of California, Los Angeles
48
Thursday, December 28: 4:45 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS OF RECENT DOCTORAL RESEARCH
BRITISH HISTORYHilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Arranged in consultation with the Conference on British Studies
CHAIR: Peter Stansky, Stanford University
Pressure Groups and Liberat Poti tics, 1870— 1880Patricia A. Auspos(dissertation, Columbia University)
Democracy in St. Pancras, 1779—1856Roger Draper(dissertation, Harvard University)
The Gommittees and Legislation of the Rump Fartiament, 1648—1653:
A Quantitatwe StudyWilliam B. Bidwell(dissertation, University of Rochester)
British Administrators in EgyptWilliam M. Welch, Jr.(dissertation, University of Oxford)
COMMENT: Peter Stansky
49
Thursday, December 28: 4:45 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS Of RECENT DOCTORAL RESEARCHASIAN HISTORYSt. Francis, California Room East
cHAIR: Kenneth B. Pyle, University of WashingtonDaimyo Domain and Retainer Bonds in the Seventeenth Cent ury: A Study of Inst itutionatDevelopment in Echien, To/tori and Ma/sue
Ronald J. DiCenzo, Oberlin College(dissertation, Princeton University)
The Japanese Generat Election of 1942: A Study of Political Institutions in WartimeEdward J. Drea(dissertation, University of Kansas)
The Ordering of the Heavens and the Earth in Early Ch’ing ThoughtJohn B. Henderson, Louisiana State University(dissertation, University of California, Berkeley)
The Korean frontier zn America: Immigration to Hawaii, 7896—1910Wayne Patterson, St. Norbert College(dissertation, University of Pennsylvania)
A History of Surabaya 1944—1950William H. Frederick, Ohio University(dissertation, University of Hawaii)
COMMENT: Kenneth B. Pyle
50
Thursday, December 28: 4:45 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS OF RECENT DOCTORAL RESEARCH
MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORYSt. francis, California Room West
Arranged in consultation with the Modern European History Section
CHAIR: Edward E. Malefakis, Columbia University
San Quirico: A Case Studj’ of/he Crisis oft/ic Maezadria in Rurat Pistota, 1900—1960
Gerard Innocenti(dissertation, Bryn Mawr College)
Fithlishing and the Formation of a Reading Public in Eighteenth-Century Russia
Gary j. Marker, Oberlin College(dissertation, University of California, Berkeley)
Be(gthn II Yorkers in Roubaix, France in the ,Vineteenth CenturyJudy Anne Reardon, Catholic University(dissertation, University of iviaryland)
The Lithuanian Peasantry of Tra;is-,Vemen Lithuania, 1807—1864: A Stud)’ of Social,
Economic, and Cultural ChangeSaulius A. Suziedelis, South Oklahoma City junior College
(dissertation, University of Kansas)
Regeneration and Pacijication: Modernization and the Agents of Social Control in Spain,
1895—1917 Diana Velez, Georgia Institute of Technology
(dissertation, Princeton University)
COMMENT: Edward E. Malefakis
51
Thursday, December 28: 4:45 p.m.
PRESENTATIONS OF RECENT DOCTORAL RESEARCHMEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN HISTORYSt. Francis, Olympic Zoom
CHAIR: Gavin I. Langmuir, Stanford UniversityThe Montcadas, 1000— 1230: The History of a Medieval Catatan Noble family
John C. Shideler(dissertation, University of California, Berkeley)
Pope Gregory IX and the CrusadeRichard T. Spence(dissertation, Syracuse University)
Community and Piety Between Renaissance and Counter Reformation: FlorentineConfratermties, 1250-1600
Ronald F. E. Weissman University of Maryland(dissertation, University of California, Berkeley)
A Study of Florentine Burial Practices and Ceremonies, 1350— 1500Sharon T. Strocchia(dissertation, University of California, Berkeley)
COMMENT: John Benton, California Institute of Technology
Thursday, December 28: 9:00 p.m.
GENERAL MEETING Of THE AMERICAN HISTORICALASSOCIATIONHilton, Imperial Ballroom
PRESIDING: Mack Thompson, American Historical AssociationAward of Prizes: Herbert Baxter Adams Prize
George Louis Beer PrizeAlbert J. Beveridge AwardAlbert B. Corey PrizeJohn H. Dunning PrizeJohn K. Fairbank PrizeHoward R. Mararro PrizeJames Harvey Robinson PrizeWatumull Prize
Presidential Address: The Renatssance and the Drama of Western HistoryWilliam J. Bouwsma, University of California, Berkeley
52
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
Theme Session
6$, CAN “COMPARATIVE HISTORY” BE DEFINED?
Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAIR: Charles Gibson, University of Michigan
Comparative Study; A Necessity, Not a Genre of History
Sylvia L Thrupp, University of Michigan
COMMENT: Bernard S. Cohn, University of Chicago
Victoria E, Bonnell, University of California, Berkeley
69. SOUTHERN REPUBLICANS DURING RECONSTRUCTION
Hilton, California Room
CHAIR: Harold M. Hyman, Rice University
Scatawags and the Beginning of Congressional Reconstruction in the South
Richard L. Home, Washington State University
Sectionat Legislative Behavzor and Reconstruction; A Roll-Gall Anatysis of Southern
Republicans in the House gI Representatives during the 1870s
j. Kent Folmar, California State College, Pennsylvania
COMMENT: Allen W. Trelease, University of North Carolina,
Greensboro
Demonstration Session
70. INTEGRATING WOMEN’S HISTORY INTO THE
COLLEGE HISTORY CURRICULUMHilton, Continental Ballroom 1
CHAIR: Martha Tolpin, Higher Education Resource Services,
Wellesley College, and Wheaton College
Afro-Amerzcan and Third World GoursesRosalyn Terborg-Penn, Morgan State University
The Western Cizitiation SurveyAbby Kleinbaum, Borough of Manhattan Community
College, CUNY, and Institute for Research in History
The American History SurveyPeter Filene, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
coMMENT: Martha TolpinThe Audience
53
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
Demonstration Session71. HISTORY DAY AND HISTORY FAIR: REVIVIFYINGHISTORY IN AND OUT OF SCHOOLHilton, Continental Ballroom 2
CHAIR: Walter Kelly, Chicago State UniversityPARTICIPANTS: Arthur Anderson and David Ruchman,
co-directors. Chicago Metro FairDavid D. Van Tassel, project director, Regional HistoryDay, NEH Youth Project: Case Western Reserve
UniversityCoMMENT: The Audience
Demonstration Session72. TEACHING HISTORY WITH VIDEOTAPEHilton, Continental Ballroom 3
CHAIR: Robert V. Schnucker, Society for History Education,Northeast Missouri State University
Instructional ideotape Technology in the History Gtassroom at the Secondary LevelRobert A. Kirsch, Lake Forest High School, IllinoisStudent-Produced Videotape Programs on the Coltege Level
George R. Nielsen, Concordia Teachers CollegeThe Working Relationship between the History Teacher, History Student,and Media Special:st
Richard C. Richter, Concordia Teachers CollegeCOMMENT: The Audience
73. ETHNIC LABOR CONFLICT IN CALIFORNIAHilton, Continental Ballroom 5CHAIR: Richard Peterson, College of the RedwoodsThe Filipino Labor Union.’ Ethnic Conflict and a Minority California UnionHoward A. DeWitt, Ohlone CollegeA Union Ghaltenges Racism: The IL H7U and Discrimination against Japanese-Americans during World War II
Harvey Schwartz, University of California, DavisCoMMENT: August C. Radke, Western Washington University
James Kluger, Pima College
54
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
74. ZIONISM IN THE UNITED STATESHilton, Continental Ballroom 6
joint Session with the american Jewish Historical Society
CHAIR: Moses Rischin, San Francisco State University
Zontsm in the .7Vew ZionBenj amin Halpern, Brandeis University
Decline and Triumph, 7921—18Arthur Hertzberg, Columbia University
A Gause in Search of ItselfMelvin I. Urofsky, Virginia Commonwealth University
coMMENT: The Audience
75. PURITANISM IN ENGLAND AND AMERICA:
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVESHilton, Continental Ballroom 7
cHAIR: Robert Middlekauff, University of California, Berkeley
Covenant: The Protopuritan ConstructionMichael McGiffert, College of William and Mary,
editor, It ‘ittiam and Mary Quarterly; Institute ofEarly American History and Culture
The Puritan Gonversion Experience: Image and Reality
j. William T. Youngs, Jr., Eastern Washington University
cOMMENT: Sacvan Bercovitch, Columbia UniversityStephen foster, Northern Illinois University
76. SEXUALITY, FAMILIES, AND POLITICS IN
EUROPE AND AMERICAHilton, Continental Ballroom B
cHAIR: Anne Douglas, Columbia University
Familial Practices and Political Attitudes in Eighteenth-Century franceRoderick Phillips, University of Auckland
Spinsters and Spinsterhood in England and the lint ted States, 1850—80Patricia Otto Klaus, Yale University
Capitalism and Feminism in the United States, Italy. and Sweden, 1870— 1970
Donald B. Meyer, Wesleyan University
cOMMENT: Sharon Harley, University of the District of ColumbiaDaniel J. Walkowitz, New York University
55
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am,
77. POPULISM IN LATIN AMERICAHilton, Continental Ballroom 9
CHAIR: Peter H. Smith, University of Wisconsin, MadisonArgentina David Tamarin, University of WashingtonBrai1 Michael L. Conniff, University of New MexicoMexico Jorge Basurto. Universidad Nacional Autánoma de MexicoCoMMENT: Paul Drake, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Alistair Hennessy, University of Warwick
7$. CRIMINALITY AND SOCIAL VALUESHilton, Cypress Room
cHAIR: Doris Daniels, Nassau Community College,City University of New York
Women in Prison: Vatues, Theories, and PracticesClarice Feinman, Trenton State College
Pioneers in Prison: Inmates and Administrators during the founding Fears of the FederatReformatory for Women at Aiderson, West Virginia, 1925—30
Claudine Schweber, State University of New York,Buffalo
Institutionalization and Sociat Policy in the Late v’ineteenth century: The Cise ofOntario’s juvenile Delinquents
Susan Houston, York UniversitycoMMENT: Estelle freedman, Stanford University
Steven L. Schlossman, Radcliffe Institute
79. APPLIED HISTORY AND PUBLIC HISTORY:A PANEL DISCUSSIONHilton, Diablo Room
CHAIR: Arnita A. Jones, National Coordinating Committeefor the Promotion of History
PARTIcIPANTs: Joel Tarr, Carnegie-Mellon UniversityWesley Johnson, University of California, Santa BarbaraJames C. Williams, Gavilan CollegeJames McCurley, Carnegie-Mellon University
COMMENT: Keith Berwick, Pepperdine University
56
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
80. STEREOTYPES IN MODERN POPULAR CULTUREHilton, Imperial Ballroom
CHAIR: Ray Browne, Popular Culture Association
Amos ‘n’ Andy, 7951—54: The AAAGP versus BSAl-Tony Gilmore, University of Maryland
The San Francisco “Ittustrated WASP” and Chinese Labor in the 7870sRichard Fitzgerald, Laney College
COMMENT: Edward Bleier, Warner Brothers
81. THE MUSCOVITE SERVICE ELITE INCOMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVEHilton, Lassen Room
CHAIR: C. Bickford O’Brien, University of California, Davis
The Seventeenth-Century Moscow Service Elite in Chmparative Perspective
Robert Owen Crummey, University of California, Davis
Provincial Service Elite in Comparative PerspectiveRichard Hellie, University of Chicago
COMMENT: Ann M. Kleimola, University of Nebraska
$2. INTELLECTUALS AND POLITICSHilton, Rosewood Suite
CHAIR: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Wesleyan University
Kierkegaard’s PoliticsBruce Kirmmse, Connecticut College
The Antipolitics of Freidrich NietzschePeter Bergmann, University of California, Berkeley
COMMENT: Michael Plekon, Baruch College, City University of
New YorkOliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
57
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
$3. THE WESTERN WORK ETHIC IN AFRICA:THEORY AND PRACTICEHilton, Shasta Room
CHAIR: Lewis H. Gann, Hoover Institution on War, Revolutionand Peace
The ‘J’iative Question’ and the Imposition of German Rote in East AfricaMartin Reuss, U.S. Department of the Army
Economic Change and the Structure of H ‘ork in Ctonzat SenegalMartin A. Klein, University of Toronto
coMMENT: Wayne Patterson, Saint Norbert CollegeRobert 0. Collins, University of California, Santa Barbara
84. “IMPERIALISM” IN THEORY AND PRACTICEHilton, Teakwood Suite
cHAIR: John S. Galbraith, University of California, Los AngelesScrapping Theories of Imperialism
Norman Etherington, University of AdelaideThe Reluctant Imperialist: The United States and the Congo Question, 1883—86
Richard A. Olaniyan. University of IfeTraditional Religion and Political Expansion in Nineteenth-Century West Africa: TheCase of Asante, the Dente Oracle, and the British
Donna Maier, University of Northern IowaCOMMENT: Martin Skiar, associate editor, In These Times, Chicago
Suzanne Miers, Ohio University
85. ETHNICITY AND RESIDENTIAL STABILITYHilton, Tamalpais Room
Joint Session with the American Italian Historical Association
cHAIR: Ronald H, Bayor, Georgia Institute of TechnologyPatterns of Housing Choice: Some Sources of Change in a New Fork Little Italy,7880—1930 Donna R. Gabaccia, University of MichiganBoarding and Belonging in Toronto’s Immigrant Neighborhoods, 7890— 7930
Robert F. Harney. University of TorontoCOMMENT: George E. Pozzetta. University of Florida
58
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
86. EVOLUTION OF THE IMPERIAL PRESIDENCY:TWO ASPECTS OF EXECUTIVE AUTHORITYHilton, Toyon Suite
CHAIR: Richard S. Kirkendall, Indiana University
The Presidency and the Intelligence Community, 1936—76Athan Theoharis, Marquette University
The Brzcker Amendment Challenge, 795 1—57Joseph May, Youngstown State University
COMMENT: Alonzo L. Hamby, Ohio University
87. CROSSCURRENTS IN MEDIEVAL HISTORY:THE TWELFTH CENTURYHilton, Walnut Suite
CHAIR: Robert L. Benson, University of California, Los Angeles
Sacred Kingship in Rus’ and the West in the Twelfth Centur)Ellen S. Hurwitz, Lafayette College
The Twelfth_Century Byzantine Cultural Penetration into Europe: Three Varu’ties of
Political UtilizationHenry R. Huttenbach, City College, City University
of New York
coMMENT: Patrick Geary, Princeton University
88. fILTH AND POLITICS IN THE AGEOF SANITARY REFORMHilton, Whitney Room
CHAIR: Barbara G. Rosenkrantz, Harvard University
Working Class Housing in Paris, 1856- 7902Ann-Louise Shapiro, Brown University
The Wasteland: Garbage in the Nineteenth-Century American CityJudith Walzer Leavitt, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The :lloscow .emstvo and Workers’ Health in the 1880sNancy M. frieden, Marymount Manhattan College
COMMENT: James H. Cassedy, National Library of Medicine
59
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
89. PEOPLES OF THE THIRD WORLD IN THE GREAT WARSt. Francis, Borgia Room
CHAIR: John Tricamo, San Francisco State UniversityWarriors to Fight the Kaiser: American Indian Soldiers in 11 ortd War 1, 1977—18
David L. Wood, California State University, NorthridgeWe Were the Avant-garde: Kande Kamara and the West African Experience in France,79/4—78 Joe Lunn, University of WisconsinBlack National Guardsmen in World War I
Charles Johnson, Jr., Howard UniversityCOMMENT: florette Henri, Centerport, New York
90. THE FOUNDING OF CONSERVATIVE PARTIESSt. Francis, California Room West
CHAIR: J. B. Conacher, University of TorontoThe Exemplary Peelites
Peter Marsh, Syracuse UniversityThe Rise and fall of the Whig Party in the United States: A Comparative Perspective
Michael Holt, University of VirginiaTories, Conservatives, and Liberal-Conservatives in Canada, 1837—56
George Metcalf, University of Western OntarioCOMMENT: Seymour Martin Lipset, Stanford University
91. ALTERNATIVE CAREERS FOR HISTORIANSSt. Francis, Colonial Room
CHAIR: Lawrence A. Harper, University of California, BerkeleypARTICIpANTs: Arnold Milton Paul, University of California, Santa Barbara,
Attorney at LawWilliam Z. Slany, associate historian, U.S. Department of
StateRussell Merritt, Communication Arts Department.
University of Wisconsin, MadisonCorinne Gilb, Wayne State UniversityA. frank Bray, presiding justice, California Appellate
Court, first District, (ret’d)Marjorie Lightman, Institute for Research in History,
New York
60
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
92. FASCISM, ANTI-FASCISM, AND WAR: THEITALIAN-AMERICAN EXPERIENCE, 1920-44St. Francis, Elizabethan Room A
CHAIR: A. William Salomone, University of Rochester
Carlo Tresca and Italian-American Anti-Fascism, 1920—40Nunzio Pernicone, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
Italian-Americans and the Enemy Alien Issue, 1940—42Philip V. Cannistraro, Florida State University
The Politics of Relief: Italian-Americans and the Reconstruction of itai}, 1913—44James E. Miller, National Archives and Records Service
COMMENT: Massimo Salvadori, Smith College
93. ANARCHISTS, RADICALS, AND THE AUTHORITIES:THE POLITICS OF REPRESSION IN EUROPE ANDAMERICA, 1890-1920St. Francis, Elizabethan Room B
cHAIR: Rudolph J. Vecoli, University of Minnesota
The international Anti-Anarchist Conference of 1898Richard Bach Jensen, University of Minnesota
The Drive against Radicals and Immigrants in New rork, 1918—20Jay M. Pawa, State University College of New York,
0neonta
COMMENT: Joseph Giovinco, California State College, Sonoma
94. PROJECT AMERICAN HISTORY: STUDENT INITIATEDLEARNING—A PANEL DISCUSSION WITH SLIDESSt. Francis, Essex Room
PARTICIPANTS Kathleen A. Kraus, Kathleen Woods Masalski, and twostudents, Hopkins Academy, Hadley, Massachusetts
61
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
95. THE PRESS AND POLITICS IN MODERN BRITAINSt. Francis, Georgian Room
Joint Session with the Conference on British StudiesCHAIR: Richard Lyman, Stanford UniversityThe Press and Pubtic Opinion: W. T. Stead and the ‘jVew Journalism” in LateVictorian England
Joseph 0. Baylen, Georgia State UniversityThe Press and Part)’ Phitosophy: “The Observer “and Conservative Thought, 1974— 72
John Stubbs, L’niversity of WaterlooThe Press and Electoral Organt.ation: The fleet Street- J1estminster Vexus
Stephen Koss, Columbia UniversityCOMMENT: Richard Lyman
96. THE EVOLUTION OF FAMILY LAW IN ENGLANDAND AMERICASt. Francis, Kent Room
CHAIR: David M. Kennedy, Stanford UniversityThe Legal Origins of Modern Adoption
Jamil S. Zainaldin, Northwestern UniversityFrom Contract to Status: Changing Legal Conceptions of Marriage in‘Vineteenth-Century America
Michael Grossberg, Brandeis UniversityCoMMENT: John R. Wunder, Texas Tech University
Lawrence Friedman, Stanford University Law School
97. STUDIES OF THE MING-CH’ING POLITY: BEYONDSTRUCTURE AND TOWARD COMPARISONSt. Francis, Windsor Room
CHAIR: Hok-Lam Chan, University of WashingtonExamination: The Social and Political Dynamics
Jerry Dennerline, Pomona CollegeThe Abortiveness of Plural Polities in Seventeenth-Century China
John E. Wills, Jr., University of Southern CaliforniaCOMMENT: A. Lloyd Moote, University of Southern California
Sheldon Rothblatt, University of California, Berkeley
62
Friday, December 29: 9:30—11:30 am.
98. AN ANATOMY OF THE MIDDLE EASTERN COUP D’ETATSt. Francis, Yorkshire Room
CHAIR: George Lenczowski, University of California, Berkeley
A iJthtary Approach to Turkish Politics: Atatlirk’s Legislative Coup of l5Aprit 1923
Michael M, Finefrock, College of Charleston
Rea Shah and Iran, 1925: The Militaiy MindDonald N. Wilber
Egypt, 1952: Anatomy of a Coup/RevolutionRichard H. Dekmejian, State University of New
York, Binghamton
The 1958 Coup in Iraq: Qassim and the Emergence of the Military EraPhebe A. Marr, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
COMMENT: Edward N. Luttwak, Johns Hopkins University
63
Friday, December 29: 12:15—2:00 p.m.
Luncheons
AMERICAN CATHOLIC HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONSt. Francis, California Room East
PRESIDING: Joseph N. Moody, Boston College—St. John’s Seminary
in Search of Unity: American Catholic Thought, 1920—60Philip Gleason, University of Notre Dame
AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR REFORMATION RESEARCHHilton, Teakwood Suite
Presidential Address: Gattinara Erasmus and the Probtem of EmpireJohn Headley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
CONFERENCE ON ASIAN HISTORYHilton, Toyon Suite
pREsIDING: Grant K. Goodman, University of Kansas
Life and Thought of the Commoner in Traditional AsiaWolfram Eberhard, University of California, Berkeley
CONFERENCE ON LATIN AMERICAN HISTORYSt. Francis, California Room West
PRESIDING: James R. Scobie, University of California, San Diego
El Cambiante Papel del intelectuat en Ia Realidad LatinoamericaJuan Antonio Oddone, Universidad Autdnoma
Metropolitana-Iztapalpa
SOCIETY FOR HISTORIANS OF AMERICAN FOREIGNRELATIONSHoliday Inn, Union Square
PRESIDING: Paul A. Varg, Michigan State University
Culture and Power: intercultural Dimensions of International RelationsAkira Iriye, University of Chicago
The business meeting will follow.
64
Friday, December 29: 12:15—2:00 p.m.
SOCIETY FOR THE HISTORY Of DISCOVERIESBohemian Club
PRESIDING: Ursula S. Lamb, University of Arizona
Perspective on the Seas, 1550—1950Josef W. Konvitz, Michigan State University
SOCIETY FOR SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE STUDIESHilton, Rosewood Suite
pREsIDING: Charles R. Haistead, Washington College
The Agrarian Problem in Spain. forty Years LaterEdward E. Malefakis, Columbia University
65
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m
99. LES TOSCANS ET LEURS FAMILLES BYDAVID HERLIHY AND CHRISTIANE KLAPISCH:AN OVERVIEW AND DISCUSSIONHilton, California Room
Joint Session with the Society for Italian Historical StudiesCHAIR: James M. Powell, Syracuse UniversityTuscan Politics and the Administration of the C’atasto of 1427
Edward Muir, Syracuse UniversityDemography and the Economy
Myron Gutmann, University of Texas, AustinWomen and the Family
Susan M. Stuard, State University College of New York,Brockport
COMMENT: David Herlihy, Harvard UniversityChristiane Klapisch, Ecole des Hautes Etudes, Paris
Demonstration Session100. USING MYSTERY AS A DEVICE FOR INQUIRY
TEACHINGHilton, Continental Ballroom 1
Clair W. Keller, Iowa State University
Demonstration Session101. TWO MULTI-MEDIA APPROACHES TO THE
TEACHING OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION: “THEAMIENS CATHEDRAL” AND “LOUIS XIV”Hilton, Continental Ballroom 2
CHAIR: Andrew Lossky, University of California, Los AngelesThe facade of Amiens Cathedral
William Cook, State University College of New York,Geneseo
Louis XIV Ross Martin, Santa Ana CollegePaul Sonnino, University of California, Santa Barbara
COMMENT: The Audience
66
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
Demonstration Session
A NEW HISTORICAL FILM
102. STORM Of FIRE: WORLD WAR II AND THE
DESTRUCTION OF DRESDEN(Cadre films)Hilton, Continental Ballroom 3
CHAIR: R. C. Raack, California State University, Hayward
COMMENT: Peter C. Rollins, Oklahoma State University
Demonstration Session
103. THE STUDENT AS RESEARCHER: LEARNING
HISTORY BY USING THE ACADEMIC LIBRARYHilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAIR: Evan Ira Farber, Lilly Library, Eariham College
pARTICIpANTs: Richard Hume Werking, University of Mississippi and head,
Reference Department, University Library
Elizabeth frick, University of Colorado at
Colorado Springs Library
CoMMENT: The Audience
104. THE COPYRIGHT LAW OF 1976Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Arranged in cooperation with the AHA Research Division
CHAIR: Melvin Nimmer, University of California Law School,
Los Angeles
PARTICIPANTS: Leon F. Seltzer, Stanford University Press
James Smith, Winterthur Museum
Paul T. Heifron, Library of Congress
COMMENT: The Audience
105. STRUCTURE AND PERFORMANCE: THE TASK OF
ECONOMIC HISTORYHilton, Continental Ballroom 6
CHAIR: Kenneth NI. Stampp, University of California, Berkeley
Structure and Performance: The Task of Economic History
Douglass C. North, University of Washington
COMMENT: Fred Bateman, Indiana Lfniversity
William N. Parker, Yale UniversityMans Vinovskis, University of Michigan
67
Friday, December29: 2:30—4:30 pm.
106. TEACHING THE URBAN EXPERIENCE BOSTONAS A CASE STUDYHilton, Continental Ballroom 7
PARTIcIPANTs: Allen M. Wakstein, Boston CollegeDonald M. Jacobs, Northeastern UniversityJames Lazerow, Brandeis UniversityConstance Burns, Boston CollegeRob Hollister, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
COMMENT: The Audience
107. POPULAR CULTURE SOURCES FOR THE HISTORIAN:SCIENCE FICTION AND THE DETECTIVE STORYHilton, Continental Ballroom $
cHAIR: R. Gordon Kelly, University of MarylandDetective Fiction: Some Varieties of Historicat Experience
fred Erisman, Texas Christian UniversityScience Fiction: A ,Atew Frontier for History Teachers
B. Lee Cooper, Newberry CollegeCOMMENT: Russel B. Nye, Michigan State University
Stephen J. Kneeshaw, School of the OzarksCopies of these papers will be available at the meeting.
Workshop108. UPDATING THE ROSE REPORT
Hilton, Continental Ballroom 9
cHAIR: Mary 0. F urner, Northern Illinois UniversityAHA Committee on Women Historians
pARTICIPANTs: Joan Hoff Wilson, Arizona State University,chair, Coordinating Committee on Womenin the Historical Profession
D’Ann Campbell, OAH Committee on Women Historians,and Newberry Library
Patricia Albj erg Graham, National Institute of EducationCOMMENT: The Audience
6$
friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
109. PROSTITUTION, CULTURE, AND SOCIETY:
A COMPARATIVE VIEWHilton, Cypress Room
CHAIR: Carl N. Degler, Stanford University
‘The Revott of Women’: The Femmist Reszstance to the State Regutation of Frostitution
n Mid- Victorian BritainJudith R. Walkowitz, Rutgers University
Prostitution: Symbol of an AgeRuth Rosen, University of California, Davis
COMMENT: Martha Vicinus, Indiana University
Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, University of Pennsylvania
110. THE REGIONAL DIMENSIONS Of THE MEXICAN
REVOLUTIONHilton, Diablo Room
CHAIR: Michael C. Meyer, University of Arizona
Yucatdn Gilbert Joseph, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Sonora Hector Aguilar Camin, Instituto Nacional de Antropologla
e Historia
Coahuita Douglas W. Richmond, University of Texas, Arlington
COMMENT: Linda Hall, Trinity University
William H. Beezley, North Carolina State University
111. COMPARATIVE CHICANO HISTORY
Hilton, Imperial Ballroom
CHAIR: Juan Gdmez-Quiiones, University of California. Los Angeles
The Eormatwn of Mexican ..Veighborhoods in Iucson, Houston, and Ghtcago
Francisco A, Rosales, University of Houston
C’hicanos in the American City: A C’omparative Perspective
Alberto Camarillo, Stanford University
COMMENT: Howard R. Lamar, Yale University
Pedro Castillo, University of California, Santa Cruz
69
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 pm.
112. CAREER CHOICE, MOBILITY, AND EDUCATIONALBACKGROUND IN THE UNITED STATES AND FRANCEDURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURYHilton, Lassen Room
CHAIR: Robert Fox, University of LancasterFaculty Types and Academic Disciplines: A Comparison of Origins and Career Patternsamong American Facutty in the Late .Vineteenth-Century University
Alan Creutz, University of MichiganCareer Choices, Mobility, and Educational Background: High School Students in SecondEmpire France
Patrick J. Harrigan, University of WaterlooTechnicat High Schools and the Training of Technicians for Industry in France,1850—1914 C. Rod Day, Simon Fraser UniversityCOMMENT: John Weiss, Cornell University
113. RITUAL, RADICALISM, AND PROTEST: ENGLISHWORKING CLASS CULTURE IN THENINETEENTH CENTURYHilton, Rosewood Suite
CHAIR: Richard Price, Northern Illinois UniversityThe General Rising of 1820
F. K. Donnelly, University of AlbertaFactory Town Infidels: Vew Light on the English ‘11’orking Class Vanguard”Robert Glen, University of VermontGuy Fawkes Day and Its Modern Fate: Popular Ritual, c’onfiict, and Social Solidarityon the South Coast, 1800- 1900
Robert D. Storch, University of Wisconsin, JanesvilleCOMMENT: Richard Price
70
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 pm.
11%. OUT Of THE CLOISTER/OUT OF THE WORLD;
VARIETIES OF MONASTIC EXPERIENCE IN
THE HIGH MIDDLE AGESHilton, Shasta Room
CHAIR: Bernard McGinn, University of Chicago
The Vision of the Monk of Eynsham: Historical Truth, Heavenly Truth, and Scoffers in
the Twelfth CentuiyNancy F. Partner, State University College of New York,
Purchase
The Monk as LawyerJames Brundage, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
A nthony of Padva, Peter Martyr, and the Early Gharacter of the i’iienthcant Orders
John Tuthill, University of California, Berkeley
coMMENT: Bernard McGinn
115. LINCOLNHilton, Teakwood Suite
CHAIR: Robert V. Bruce, Boston University
Honest Abe Lincoln?: The Canvergence of His Private and Public Careers in the Late
1850s Gabor S. Boritt, Memphis State University
Lincoln’s Reconstruction Program: A ReappraisalStephen B. Oates, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
coMMENT: Don E. fehrenbacher, Stanford University
Mark E. Neely, Jr., L. A. WarrenLincoln Library and v1useum
116. BRITISH AND AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES AND
INTERESTS AT THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE
OF 1919Hilton, Toyon Suite
cHAm: David F. Trask, U.S. Department of State
The Wilsonian ‘Revolution’ in American Foreign Policy, 7916—20
Lawrence E. Gelfand, University of Iowa
The British Delegation at the Peace ConferenceF, Russell Bryant, University of Alabama
British and American Economic Interests at the Peace Conference
Edward B. Parsons, Miami University, Hamilton
coMMENT: Seth Tiliman, American Enterprise Institute for Public
Policy Research
71
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
117. DISEASE DISCRIMINATION BY SEX AND RACE:THE IMPACT ON FEMALES AND BLACKSHilton, Walnut Suite
CHAIR: Alfred W. Crosby, University of Texas, AustinWomen’s Diseases before 7900
Edward Shorter, University of TorontoThe African Gonnection: Slavery, Disease, and Racism
Kenneth F. Kiple, Bowling Green State UniversityCOMMENT: Ronald L. Numbers, University of Wisconsin, Madison
118. PLANNING HISTORY: A COMPARATIVE VIEWOF A HISTORIOGRAPHICAL FRONTIERHilton, Whitney Room
CHAIR: John Hancock, University of WashingtonPlanning History in the United States
David R. Goldeld, Virginia Polytechnic Institute andState University
Planning History in GermanyJohn R. Mullin, Michigan State University
Planning History in the United KingdomAnthony Sutcliffe, University of Sheffield
Planning History in JapanShunichi Watanabe, University of Tokyo
COMMENT: John Hancock
119. SOCIAL DEVIANCE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE:THE UNITED STATES AND AUSTRALIASt. Francis, Borgia Room
CHAIR: David B. Tyack, Stanford UniversityDetaining the ‘Mentally’ Deviant: California and the Insane, 1870—1930
Richard W. fox. Yale UniversityPsychotic Delusions as a Key to Historical Gultures: Tasmania, 1830— 1940
John C. Burnham, Ohio State UniversityCOMMENT: Nathan G. Hale, Jr., U:niversity of California, Riverside
Gert H, Brieger, University of California, San Francisco
72
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
120. THE PROBLEM Of AUTHORITY IN EUROPEAN
AND AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE, 1900-40
St. Francis, California Room West
CHAIR: Fritz Ringer, Boston University
The Soczatiation of Authorilv and the Ditemmas of American Liberalism: Charles
Cootey, George Herbert Mead, and Tatcott Parsons
John P. Diggins, University of California, Irvine
Trthat Exemplars: Changing Images of Political Authority in British A nthropology,
1900—40 Henrika Kuklick, University of Pennsylvania
The Grounding of Moral Authority: Sociat versus Rational Determination in French
Thought, 1900—40W. Paul Vogt, State University of New York, Albany
CoMMENT: John Schar, University of California, Santa Cruz
Fritz Ringer
121. COMPARATIVE ROLE MODELS IN ANGLO-AMERICAN
IMPERIALISM, 1870—1914St. Francis, Colonial Room
CHAIR: A. P. Thornton, University of Toronto
Imperial Concepts in Anglo-American Liberalism
Edward W. Mendelsolin, University of Oxford
South Africa Shula Marks, University of London
Stanley Trapido, University of Oxford
Egypt and Central AfricaRobert L. Tignor, Princeton University
CoMMENT: A. E. Campbell, University of Birmingham
G. N. Uzoigwe, University of Michigan
Stanley Wolpert, University of California, Los Angeles
73
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
122. POPULAR BELIEF IN MODERN ENGLAND:NEW APPROACHES TO THE SOCIALHISTORY OF RELIGIONSt. Francis, Elizabethan Room A
cHAIR: James Obelkevich, Princeton UniversityWhat Was Popular Retigion in the Eighteenth Century?
Thomas W. Laqueur, University of California, BerkeleyThe Social Origins of the Decline of Religion in Urban Engtand, 1870—1930:A New Exptanation
Jeffrey L. Cox, University of IowaThe Dect me of the C’hurch of England in the Count’side, 1875—1914
Harry Keiner, University of Connecticut
COMMENT: James Obelkevich
123. CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY IN WESTERN HISTORYSt. Francis, Elizabethan Room B
Joint Session with the American Society of Church HistoryCHAIR: John von Rohr, Seattle Pacific UniversityTrue Church or Anti-Church: Heretics’ Concepts of Themselves
Jeffrey B. Russell, California State University, SacramentoCommunitas Fidetium—Commurutas Mundi
Francis Oakley, Williams CollegeCOMMENT: Jane Dempsey Douglass, School of Theology, Claremont
Graduate School
124. WOOL MERCHANTS AND SHIPPERS IN HABSBURGSPAIN AND ITALYSt. Francis, Essex Room
CHAIR: David R. Ringrose, University of California, San DiegoSpanish Wool Exports in the Late Sixteenth Century
Carla Rahn Philips, University of MinnesotaWool Production, Prices, and Markets in Seventeenth-C’entury Puglia
John A. MarinoSpain’s Northern Alerchant Marine in the Sixteenth c’entury
William D. Phillips, San Diego State UniversityCOMMENT: David R, Ringrose
74
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
125. THE TRADITIONAL PhD IN THE COMMUNITY
COLLEGES: PROBLEMS, PROMISE, AND POSSIBLE
ALTERNATIVESSt. Francis, Georgian Room
CHAIR: C. Warren Hollister, University of California, Santa Barbara
Teaching in the Community College: is the Traditional PhD Necessary and Functional?
Fred Roach. Jr., Kennesaw Junior College
Some Non-Traditional Doctoral Programs and the Community College Teacher
William Lyon, Northern Arizona University
The PhD and Research in the C’ommunity CollegeBradley Smith, Cabrillo College
coMMENT: The Audience
126, NATIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS IN MEDIEVAL AND
EARLY MODERN EASTERN EUROPESt. Francis, Kent Room
CHAIR: Wayne S. Vucinich, Stanford University
National Consciousness in Bohemia/Moravia and Germany before the Sixteenth &ntury
Karl Bosi, University of Munich
Pavao I?itter t’itezovié and the Origins of &oat Nationalism
Ivo Banac, Yale University
The Cncept of the Russian Land and National Consciousness in Medieval Russia
Charles J. Halperin, Indiana University
Jewish Nattonal Consciousness in Early Eighteenth-Century Poland
Gershon D. Hundert, McGill University
COMMENT: Dimitrije Djordjevic, University of California, Santa
Barbara
127. CONSERVATISM AND ENLIGHTENMENT IN FRANCE
AND GERMANYSt. Francis, Olympic Room
CHAIR: Keith Baker, University of Chicago
Liberalism and Repression in the Thought and Program of the ideologues
Thomas Kaiser, University of Arkansas
Sociat Cnseruatism in the Late German Enlightenment: Debate over Theory
and Practice John Knudsen, Weilesley College
The Counter-Revolutionary Enlightenment: Social Theory in the French Rightwing
Press 1795—1800Jeremy D. Popkin, University of Kentucky
COMMENT: Peter Reill, University of California, Los Angeles
75
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
128. WITCHCRAfT AND SPIRIT POSSESSION IN EARLYMODERN FRANCESt. Francis, Oxford Room
CHAIR: Richard Golden, Clemson UniversityWitchcraft Trials and Absotute Monarchy in Atsace
Joseph Klaits, Oakland UniversityWitchcraft and Ecclesiastical Potitics in Earty Eighteenth-Century Provence:The Cathe’re-Gzrard Affair
B. Robert Kreiser, University of RochesterCOMMENT: Orest Ranum, Johns Hopkins University
129. COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON INDOCHINA DURINGWORLD WAR IISt. Francis, Victorian Room
Joint Session with the Society for Historians of American ForeignRelations
CHAIR: Jules Davids. Georgetown UniversityAnglo-American Perspectives: A Comparison, 1940—45
John J. Sbrega, J. S. Reynolds Community CollegeThe American Perspective: The Department of State, 1940—45
David H, White, The CitadelThe French Viewpoint, 7940—45
Robert W. Sellen, Georgia State UniversityCOMMENT: Thomas C. Paterson, University of Connecticut
130. COMPARATIVE EXPERIENCE IN CHINA MISSIONS:AMERICAN MISSIONARIES AND CHINESE CONVERTSSt. Francis, Windsor Room
CHAIR: Suzanne Wilson Barnett, University of Puget SoundThe Nineteenth-Century China Missionary: Changes in Perspective
Barbara Welter, Hunter College, City University ofNew York
The A’fisszonary Audience: Chinese Christian Converts in the jVineteenth CenturyDaniel H. Bays, University of Kansas
COMMENT: Evelyn Sakakida Rawski, University of PittsburghRobert Strayer, State University College of New
York, Brockport
76
Friday, December 29: 2:30—4:30 p.m.
131. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN NEW WORLD
AGRICULTURESt. Francis, Yorkshire Room
Joint Session with the Agricultural History Society
CHAIR: James H. Shideler, University of California, Davis
Changing Attitudes toward Agricultural Science and Technology in the
United States, 1875—90Margaret W. Rossiter, University of California,
Berkeley
The Adoption of High-Yielding Grain Varieties in the Lesser Developed Nations
Dana G. Dairymple, U.S. Department of Agriculture and
Agency for International Development
COMMENT: Allan L. Olmstead, University of California, Davis
Philip Raup, University of Minnesota
Friday, December 29: 4:45 p.m.
BUSINESS MEETING OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL
ASSOCIATIONHilton, Imperial Ballroom
PREsIDING: William J. Bouwsma, University of California, Berkeley
Report of the Executive Director (see p. 100)
Mack Thompson
Report of the EditorOtto Pflanze
Report of the Nominating CmmitteeRobert I. Rotberg, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Reports of the Vice-Presidents:
Teaching DivisionWarren I. Susman, Rutgers University
Professional DivisionOtis A. Pease, University of Washington
Research DivisionNancy L. Roelker, Boston University
Other Business
PARLIAMENTARIAN:
Paul K. Conkin, University of Wisconsin, Madison
77
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
Theme SessionHOW HAS “COMPARATIVE HISTORY” BEEN PRACTICED?
132. WILLIAM H. McNEILL AND PLAGUES AND PEOPLESHilton, Continental Ballroom 6
CHAIR: Frederick F. Cartwright, King’s College Hospital MedicalSchool, London
PARTICIPANTS: Philip D. Curtin, Johns Hopkins UniversityCharles E. Rosenberg, University of PennsylvaniaDavid Musto, Yale University
COMMENT: William H. McNeill, University of Chicago
133, POPULAR POLITICS IN ENGLAND AND AMERICAIN THE LATE EIGHTEENTH CENTURYHilton, California Room
CHAIR: Robert W. Smith, University of OregonVoters and toting in Provincial America
Robert J. Dinkin, California State University, FresnoThe Political Nation and Political Awareness in the Reign of George III
John A. Phillips, University of California, RiversideCOMMENT: Edward M. Cook, Jr., University of Chicago
Robert W. Smith
Workshop134. QUANTITATIVE EVIDENCE IN SURVEY CLASSES:
A STRATEGYHilton, Continental Ballroom 1
Robert A. Wheeler, Cleveland State University
135. THE HISTORICAL STUDY Of UTOPIANISMAS A REFLECTION OF SOCIETYHilton, Continental Ballroom 2
CHAIR: W. Warren Wagar, State University of New York,Binghamton
Reflections: European Utopias and SocietyRichard Bienvenu, University of Missouri
American Utopianism and the Real WorldHoward Segal, University of Michigan
CoMMENT: Michael Fellman, Simon Fraser UniversityMartin Jay, University of California, Berkeley
78
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
Workshop
136. THE ORAL HISTORY EXPERIENCE IN HIGH
SCHOOL: TEACHING AND LEARNINGHilton, Continental Ballroom 3
CHAIR: Sherna Gluck, Oral History Resource Center, California
State University, Long Beach
PARTICIPANTs: Dan Ryan. Lakewood High School, Long Beach
Joanne Weinhoff, Long Beach Polytechnic High School
Student, Lakewood High School, Long Beach
Student, Long Beach Polytechnic High School
COMMENT: The Audience
137. IDEOLOGY AND IMPERIALISM IN EUROPE
BEFORE WORLD WAR IHilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAIR: Peter Duignan, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution
and Peace
Italy Claudio C. Segre, University of Texas, Austin
France William B. Cohen, Indiana University
Germany Woodruff ID. Smith, University of Texas, San Antonio
COMMENT: John Flint, Dalhousie University
138. IDEAS IN AND ABOUT THE CITYHilton, Continental Ballroom 5
CHAIR: Wilson Smith, University of California, Davis
Intellectual Life and the American GilyThomas Bender, New York University
The Origins of the Suburban Idea in FngtandRobert Fishman, Rutgers University
COMMENT: John William Ward, Amherst College
79
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
139. JUDICIAL REVIEW: A COMPARATIVE APPROACHHilton, Continental Ballroom 7Joint Session with the Supreme Court Historical Society and the AmericanSociety for Legal History
CHAIR: Charles Cullen, The Papers of John MarshattThe Rule of Law and Judiciat Review in the Marshall Court, 1801— 15
Herbert A. Johnson, University of South Carolina, ColumbiaGuardians of the Constitution in Germany
Gerhard Casper, University of Chicago Law SchoolCOMMENT: Gerald Gunther and William Cohen, Stanford University
Law School
140. STRATEGIES OF ETHNIC WOMEN INPERIODS OF ECONOMIC DEPRESSIONHilton, Continental Ballroom $
CHAIR: Louise Carroll Wade, University of OregonChicanas in the Depression: A Case Study
Louise Año Nuevo Kerr, Loyola UniversityA Case Study of Black Women in the Bright Leaf and White Women in the Cotton Mill
Dale Newman, University of PittsburghThe Response of Black and White Women in the Rural South to ProlongedUnemployment
Lucia F, Dunn, Northwestern UniversityCOMMENT: Raymond Wolters, University of Delaware
Jean Scarpaci, Towson State UniversityCopies of these papers will be available at the meeting.
141. ANGLO-AMERICAN DIPLOMACY IN THEPOST-WORLD WAR II ERAHilton, Continental Ballroom 9
CHAIR: Lawrence Wittner, State University of New York, AlbanyAnglo-American Committee of Inquiry
Leonard Dinnerstein, University of ArizonaAnglo-American Planning for the Future of Germany
Carolyn Eisenberg, State University of New York,Stony Brook
The Marshall Plan: Cornerstone of European Union or Stop-Gap Measure?Paula Louise Scalingi, Florida State University
COMMENT: Lloyd C. Gardner, Jr., Rutgers UniversityRobert Schuizinger, University of Colorado
80
Saturday, December 30: 9:00-11:00 am.
142. THE FIRST WORLD WAR AND SOCIAL CONFLICT:
A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVEHilton, Cypress Room
CHAIR: Henry Cord Meyer, University of California, Irvine
Peasants in Rhinetand-l’Vestphatza: Al arket Behavior and Potiticat Consciousness
Robert Moeller, University of California, Berkeley
From Welfare C’apztatism to the American Ptan: The First World War and Automobile
Workers at FordStephen Meyer, University of Wisconsin Center, Bariboo
Ben Tittett and the Dockers: The Social Origins of Patriotic Labor
Jonathan Schneer, Boston College
Skilled Metal lVorkers and the European Strike Wave of 7917-19: Craft Control,
Technical c½arge, and City LifeJames E. Cronin, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
CoMMENT: Jon Amsden, Columbia University
143, HAILE SELLASSIE I: MAN, MYTH, MONARCHHilton, Diablo Room
CHAIR: Donald N. Levine, University of Chicago
Haile Sellassie, The AlanJohn H. Spencer, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
Haile Seltassie, The MythWilliam Steen, Washington, D.C.
Haile Sellassie, The MonarchHarold G. Marcus, Michigan State University
COMMENT: Patrick Gilkes, British Broadcasting Corporation
Haggai Erlich, Tel Aviv University; Concordia
University, Montreal
144. RICHARD NIXONHilton, Imperial Ballroom
CHAIR: John Higham, Johns Hopkins University
Nixon: The Child in the ManFawn Brodie, University of California, Los Angeles
COMMENT: Allen Weinstein, Smith CollegeRobert E. Burke, University of Washington
81
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
145. RELIGION AND SECULARIZATION IN GERMANSOCIETY DURING THE NINETEENTH ANDTWENTIETH CENTURIESHilton, Tamalpais Room
Joint Session with the Leo Baeck Institute
CHAIR: Fritz Stern. Columbia UniversityThe Religious Parameters of Wissenschaft: Al ay Jews Teach at Prussian LJnwerszties(18J7—54)? Ismar Schorsch, Jewish Theological Seminary of AmericaSociat Class and Secutariataon in Imperial Germany
Vernon Lidtke, Johns Hopkins UniversityReligious Education and the Principle of Separation of State and Church in theWeimar Repubtic
Geoffrey field, State University College of New York,Purchase
COMMENT: Fritz Stern
146. THE JESUITS IN CHINA AND THE DUTCHIN JAPAN: A REASSESSMENTHilton, Shasta Room
CHAIR: Donald Lach, University of ChicagoThe Jesuit Impact on Chinese Thought Reexamined
John U. Young, University of Hong KongDutch Studies in 7afJan Reexamined
Grant K. Goodman, University of KansascoMMENT: Silas H. L. Wu, Boston College
James R. Bartholomew. Ohio State University
147. RESISTANCE THEORY: A COMPARISON BEFOREAND AFTER THE REFORMATIONHilton, Tamalpais Room
CHAIR: Ralph E. Giesey. University of IowaThe Discours Politiques in Huguenot Political Thought
Sarah H. Madden, University of IowaResistance Theory during the War of the Public Good: The Role of the Burgundian Court
Paul Saenger, Northwestern University LibraryThe Confession of Magdeburg and the Development of the Modern Theory ofResistance
Cynthia Grant Shoenberger, Illinois Institute ofTechnology
COMMENT: J. H. M. Salmon, Bryn Mawr College82
Session 145 has beenrescheduled for Dec. 28,2:30 p.m. Tamalpais Room.
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—] 1:00 am.
148. ETHNIC SCAPEGOATS AND GILDED AGE POLITICS
Hilton, Teakwood Suite
CHAIR: Claus-M. Naske, University of Alaska
Wittiam ‘Fg_Iron’ Ketty and the Rhetoric of Race
Michael Greco, University of Houston, Clear
Lake City
The AIore Letter and the Preszdentzat Election of 1820Ted Hinckley, San Jose State University
COMMENT: Dwight Smith, Miami UniversityRoger Daniels, University of Cincinnati
149. PROMOTING HISTORY THROUGH STATE
ASSOCIATIONSHilton, Toyon Suite
cHAIR: Henry Bausum, Virginia Military Institute; co-editor,
“Teaching History Today,” AHA Newsletter
PARTICIPANTS: Raymond G. Hebert, Thomas More College; editor,
Kentucky Association of Teachers of History Newsletter
Wilfred C. Platt, Jr., Mercer University; president,
Georgia Association of Historians
Benjamin W. Wright, Jr., Central Virginia Community
College; president, Virginia Society of History Teachers
COMMENT: Edmund H, Worthy, Jr., American Historical Association
150. INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION: GERMANY, EUROPE, AND
THE UNITED STATESHilton, Walnut Suite
Joint Session with the Conference Group for Central European History
CHAIR: Otto Pflanze, Indiana University
Internatwnal Migration: Germany in the Eighteenth Century
Hans Fenske, University of freiburg
German Emigration to the United States and Continental Immigratwn to Germany,
1879—1929 Klaus J. Bade, University of Erlangen
American-German Migration in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centurzes
Gfinter Moltmann, University of Hamburg
coMMENT: Mack Walker, Johns Hopkins University
83
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
151. CRIME IN PRE-REVOLUTIONARY RUSSIAHilton, Whitney Room
CHAIR: Reginald E. Zelnik, University of California, BerkeleyCrime in the City or Urban Crime: Eghteenth-Century St. Petersburg
George E. Munro, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityCrime in Pre-Reform Rural Russia
Steven Hoch, Trinity CollegeCrime and Revolt in the Era of Great Reforms in Russia, 1856—69
Alan Kimball, University of OregonCOMMENT: Reginald E. Zelnik
152. ANTI-SEMITISM IN THE WEST: THREE CASE STUDIESSt. Francis, Borgia Room
CHAIR: Phyllis Albert, Harvard UniversityFrench Anti-Semitism during the Second Empire
Natalie Isser, Pennsylvania State UniversityThe Boer War and the Issue of Jewish Responsibility
Claire Hirshfield. Pennsylvania State UniversityNational Nihilism and Anti-Semitism in the American Socialist Movement
Eugene Orenstein, McGill UniversityCoMMENT: Daniel Swetchinski, University of Arizona
153. THE NEW MONARCHS AND THEIR PARLIAMENTSSt. Francis, California Room WestJoint Session with the International Commission for the History ofRepresentative and Parliamentary InstitutionsCHAIR: Elizabeth Read Foster, Bryn Mawr CollegeEngland: The Tudors and Their Parliaments
Stanford E. Lehmberg, University of MinnesotaCastile: Charles V and the Cortes
Charles Hendricks, U.S. Army Center of Military HistoryLanguedoc: The Crown and the Provincial Estates, 1515—60
James E. Brink, Texas Tech UniversityCOMMENT: Gordon Grimths, University of Washington
84
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—i 1:00 am.
154. A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE ON THE
INTERNATIONAL DIFFUSION OF TECHNOLOGYSt. Francis, Colonial Room
cnarn: Rondo Cameron, Emory University
Confucius versus the Dynamo: The Transfer of Technology to China in the
Nineteenth centuryShannon R. Brown, University of Maryland
Baltimore County
The Transfer of Computer Technology to the t SSR, 7948— 78S. E. Goodman, University of Virginia
The Roles of aibatsu in Prewar Japan’s Rapid Adoption of Western Technology
Kozo Yamamura, University of Washington
COMMENT: John B. Rae, Harvey Mudd College
155. RADICAL IDEAS IN RESTORATION ENGLANDSt. francis, Elizabethan Room A
CHAIR: Richard Schlatter, Rutgers University
The Entering ltedge of Self-Interest in the Economic liritings of Restoration England
Joyce 0. Appleby, University of California, Los Angeles
Civil Religion and Radical Politics: Stub be to BlountJames R. Jacob, John Jay College, City University of
New York, Institute for Research in History
COMMENT: Lois G. Schwoerer, George Washington University
Quentin Skinner, Institute for Advanced Study
Corinne C. Weston, Lehman College and Graduate
Center, City University of New York
156. A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF SOCIAL
EVOLUTIONARY THEORY AND ITS RELATION
TO DARWINISMSt. Francis, Elizabethan Room B
CHAIR: Cynthia Eagle Russett, Yale University
The British Roots of Social DarwinismMichael Ruse. University of Guelph
Liberal Social Darwinism in Germany and France, 1870—90Niles R. Holt, Illinois State University
Darwinisrn and Social Darwmism circa 1900Peter J. Bowler, University of Winnipeg
COMMENT: Cynthia Eagle Russett
85
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
157. ECONOMIC CHANGE AND THE FORMATION OfPEASANTRY IN EIGHTEENTWCENTURY CHINAAND BOLIVIASt. Francis, Essex Room
cHAIR: John Cole, University of Massachusetts, AmherstEconomic Decline and Agrarian Society in Eighteentli-Cntury Cchabamba
Brooke Larson, New School for Social Research7atanese Liberalism and the Right of Revolution. commoner Rebellionin the Ieji Period
Roger Bowen, Colby CollegecoMMENT: John Cole15$. RESPONSES TO COLLABORATION IN EUROPE
St. Francis, Georgian Room
cHAIR: Robert 0. Paxton. Columbia University‘Les prisons de Ia Quatrieme’: The Purge of Vichyites and Collaborators in theFormation of the Postwar French Radical Right
Bertram NI. Gordon, Mills CollegeResponse to CWlaboration in Norway
John NI. Hoberman. Harvard UniversityThe Theme of Postwar Punishment in the Belgian Undeiground Press
Werner Warmbrunn, Pitzer CollegecoMMENT: Robert 0. Paxton159. BOURBON REFORMS: COLONIAL ECONOMIC
POLICY, 1759—1808St. Francis, Kent Room
CHAIR: John J. TePaske, Duke UniversityBourbon Finance and Mutitar Policy in .7’iuevo Espaia, 1759— 7812
Christon Archer, University of CalgaryTrade and Treasury: The Colonial Pol%y of Charles IV
Jacques A. Barbier, University of OttawacoMMENT: William Callahan, University of Toronto
Allan Kuethe, Texas Tech University
86
Saturday, December 30: 9:00—11:00 am.
160, COLONIZED AFRICANS IN NEW WORLDCOLONIES: THE BRITISH AND THEIR SLAVESSt. Francis, Oxford Room
cHAIR: Michael Craton, University of Waterloo
Choice and Conflict: Eghteenthcentury South Garotina Planters and Their SlavesDaniel Littlefleld, Louisiana State University
Properties Dearly Earned’: Plantation Alanagement in Eig/iteenth-Centun’ JamaicaEmma Lapsansky, Temple University
Social Control in a Plantation Society (Barbados)Gary Puckrein, Connecticut College
coMMENT: Michael Craton
161. USES OF FAMILY RECONSTITUTION TECHNIQUESIN HISTORICAL ANALYSISSt. Francis, Windsor Room
cHAIR: Katherine A. Lynch, University of Utah
Economic Development, the Moderniatzon of ahies, and Fertility Decline: A family
Reconstitution Study of Hingham, Massachusetts in the Late Eighteenth and JVineteenth
C’enturies Daniel Scott Smith, University of Illinois, ChicagoCircle and Newberry Library
Literacy and Family Life during the first Industrial RevolutionDavid Levine, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education
Reconstitution of the Canadian Population of the French RegimeHubert Charbonneau, André LaRose, Bertrand Desjardins,
Pierre Beauchamp, and Jacques Légaré, Université deMontréal (paper read by Bertrand Desjardins)
COMMENT: J. Dennis Willigan, University of Utah
87
TOPICAL INDEX TO THE SESSIONS
(Numbers are session numbers except where noted)
Africa 29, 31, 83. 121, 143, 160Agriculture 131Algeria 63,American Indians 15, 45Ancient 6. 56Anthropology 16Asia 28, 129. 154, p.Audiovisual 37, 40. 72, 94, 102Balkan 32. 126Brazil 34Byzantine 87Canada 29, 59, 67, 78, 90China 26. 33. 67. 97, 130, 146. 154. l5Commerce 41Comparative 1, 5, 6, 7, 13, 14, 24. 25, 29, 31,
35, 48, 50, 52, 53, 54, 59, 63, 68, 75, 76, $1,96, 111, 118, 119, 121, 124, 129, 132, 139,142. 146. 14”. 156. 15”, pt9
Cultural 80. 19”. 109. 113Diplomatic 116, 129, 141Eastern Europe 32. 126Economic 41. 52. 53. 58. 61. 64. 99. 105. 124.
157, 159Education 48Elites 7, 61, 81Europe 25. 62. 76. 82, 126. l3’, 150. 158.family 48, 64. ‘6, 96. 99, 161France 17, 18. 63, 101, 112, 12”, 128, 152. 153Cermany 19, 61, 127, 145, 150Great Britain 11. 42, 51. 58, 75, 96. 95. 113.
116, 122, 123, 133, 153, 155, 160, p. 49Historical Profession 10, 44, 79, 91. 125, 149Historiography 24, 118Imperialism 15, 27, 60, 84, 121, 13, 160India 46Intellectual 5. 22. 82, 120, l2. 156Ireland 27Italy 99, 124Japan 60, 146, 154Jews 13. 21. 25. 38, 49. ‘4. 145, 152Labor 7, 11, 17, 50, 73, 113, 140Latin America 34, 50, 64, 77, 157Legal 96. 104. 139Medical 117
Medieval 4”. 87, 114. 126Mexico 41, 64, 110Middle East 41, 98Military 14, 44. 55, 66Netherlands 52, 146Oral 37, 136Peasants 142, 157Political 2, 5, 9, 11, 17, 18, 19. 27, 32, 42, 51,
54. 56. 59. 63, 69, 76. ‘“. 82. 86, 88, 90. 93.9. 115, 120. 121, 133, 135. 14, 148, 153,155, 156
Psychohistory 6, 144Publishing 104Quantitative 8, 26. 134Reformation 147Religion 17, 23, 46, 75, 114, 122, 123, 128,
130. 145, 146Renaissance 23Russia “, 21, 41, 58. 81, 126, 151, 154Science & Technology 131, 154Sexuality 76Social 2. 26. 34. 45. 57, 66, 7$, 85. 109. III.
112. 113. 117. 119, 122. 135. 140, 142, 145.151, 160
Spain 124, 153, 159Teaching 3. 4. 8. 20. 25. 29. 36. 37. 38. 39. 43.
94. 103. 106,10”. 118, 125. 134. 136. l49.p.19
Teaching Demonstrations 4, 30, 70, 71, 72,00. 101. 102. 103
Third World $3. 89United States 2. 9. 12, 33, 41. 42, 57, 59, 74,
75, 76, 78, 84. 86, 94, 116, 150Colonial 1$, p. 48l90—1900”, 31. 68. 69, 90, 112, 115, 130,133. 14820th Century 22, 73, 78, $0, 92, 144, 152,
Urban 4, 31, 32, 42, 106, 138, 151Violence 57Women 2, 53. 0. 99, 108. 109, 117, 140Workshops 37, 108. 134, 136World War I 62, 89, 142World War 1155, 62. 92. 102. 129. 158
88
INDEX Of PARTICIPANTS
Numbers are session numbers except where noted)
Abraham, David 6 IAfrica, Thomas W. 6Albert, Phyllis 152Alexander, Thomas 8Allard, Dean C. 44Aminzade, Ron 63Amsden. Jon 142Anderson, Arthur 73
Anderson, Robin L. ISAngress, Werner T. 49Anthony, Das’id H. 31Appleby. Joyce 0. 155Arafe, Thomas 4Archer, Christon 159
Artibise, Alan F. J. 59Ascher, Abraham 36Auspos. Patricia A. p. 49Austin, Erik 8Aydelotte, William 0. 33
Bachmann, Siegfried 25Bade. Klaus ISOBaker, Keith 127Baker, Norman 3Baltzell, E. Digby 31Banac, Ivo 126Barbier. Jacques A. 159Barany. George p. 34Barnett, Suzanne Wilson 130Baron, Lawrence 49Bartholomew, James R. 146Barton, Joseph 32Basurto. Jorge 77
Bateman, Fred 105Bauer, Arnold J. 50Bausum, Henry 149Bavlen. Joseph 0. 95Bayor, Ronald H. 85Bays, Daniel H. 130Beauchamp, Pierre 161Beezley, William H. 110Bell, ,J Bowyer 27Bender. Thomas 138Bendix, Reinhard 54Benkart, Paula 32Benson, Robert L. 87Benton, John p. 52Bercovitch. Sacuan 75Berger, Martin 66Bergmann, Peter 82Berman, Jane Weinstein 2Bernstein, Barton J. 24Berwick, Keith 79Bidwell, William B. p. 49Bienvenu, Richard 135
Bittner, Donald F. 14Black, Cyril p. 19Blair, Karen ,J. 2Bleier, Edward 80Bloom, Allan 56Blumenberg, Eleanor 38Bonnell, Victoria E. 66Boritt, Gabor S. 115BosI, Karl 126Bowler, Peter J. 156Bowman, Shearer Davis 7Bray. A. Frank 91Brenner, Robert P. 1Brieger, Gert H. 119Brietenbach, William p. 48Brink, James A. 153Brodie. Fawn 144Brookshire. Jerry H. IIBrown, Shannon R. 154Browne, Ray 60Browning, Reed S. 51Bruce, Robert V. 115Brundage. James 114Bryant, F. Russell 16Burke, Robert E. 144Burnham, John C. 119Burns. Constance 106Burstyn, Joan N. 2Byrnes, Robert F. 36
Callahan, William 159Camarillo, Alberto IllCamin. Hector Aguilar 110Cameron, Rondo 154Campbell, A. E. 121Campbell, D’Ann 108Cannistraro, Philip V. 92Carens, Gay Gullickson 53Carstensen. Fred V. 41Carter, Harvey L. 45Cartwright, Frederick F. 132Casper, Gerhard 139Cassedy, James H. 68Castillo, Pedro 111Cell, John 22Chafe, William 42Chan. Hok.Tam 97Chapman, Richard N. p. 47Charbonneau, Hubert 161Childers, ‘Thomas 19Chirenje, J, Mutero 15Clive, Alan p. 47Coatsworth, John H. 50Cochrane. Eric XV. 23
Cohen, Miriam 48
89
Cohen. Patricia Cline p. 48Cohen, William 139Cohen. William B. I3Cohn, Bernard S. 68Cole, John 157Collins Robert 0. 83Conacher, J. B. 90Conlon. frank 46Connell, Charles W. 43Conniff, Michael L. 77Conroy, Hilary 33Conzen, Kathleen 8Cook, Edward M., Jr. 133Cook, William 101Cooling, Benjamin franklin 44Cooper, B. Lee 107Cordell, Marta 38Cornett, Lloyd H. 44Cortes, Carlos E. 38Cottrol, Robert j. 56Cowell. Bainbridge Jr. 34Cox, Jeffrey L, 122Craig, Gordon 54Cranston, John 4Craton. Michael 160Creutz, Alan 112Cronin, James E. 142Crosby, Alfred W. 117Crouthamel, James L. 12Crowley, James B. 60Crummey, Robert Owen 81Cullen, Charles 139Curtin, Philip D. 132
Dalby, Michael 29Dalrymple, Dana G. 131Daly, Lawrence J. 6Daniels, Doris 78Daniels, Roger 148Davids. Jules 129Davis, Audrey B. 10Day, C. Rod 112Deal, David 26de Alva, Jorge KIor 15Degler, Carl N. 109Dekmejian. Richard H. 98de Mello, Pedro Carvalho 34Dennerline, Jerry 97Desjardins, Bertrand 161Detwiler, Donald S. 25de Vries, Jan 1DeWitt, Howard A. 73DiCenzo, Ronald J. p. 50Diehl, James 3Diggins, John P. 120Dinkin, Robert J. 133Dinnerstein, Leonard 141Djordjevic. Dimitrije 126Dobkowski. Michael N. 13
Dollar. Charles M. 10Donia, Robert J. 32Donnelly, f. K. 113Douglas. Anne 76Douglass. Jane Dempsey 123Downs, Jacques M. 33Doyle. Shannon J. 30Drake. Paul 77
Drake, St. Clair 22Draper, Roger p. 49Drea, Edward J. p. 50Duignan, Peter 137Dunn, Lucia f. 140
Eberhard, Wolfram p. 64Eckberg, E. Daniel 20Ehrlich, Walter 43Eisenberg, Carolyn 141English, John 66Erisman, Fred l0Erlich. Haggai 143Essig, James David p. 48Etherington. Norman 84
Farber. Evan Ira 103Farnsworth, John 39Fehrenbacher, Don E. 115Feinman, Clarice 78Fellman, Michael 135fenske, Hans 150field, Daniel 7field, Geoffrey 145filene, Peter 70Finefrock, Michael M. 98fishman, Joel 13Fishman, Robert 138Fitch, Nancy E. 53Fitzgerald, Richard 80Flanigan. William 35fletcher, Joseph Jr. 16fletcher. Willard A. 55flint, Barbara p. 47Flint. John 137Flynn. James T. 21Folmar, J. Kent 69Formisano, Ronald P. 12Foster, Elizabeth Read 153foster, John Elgin 45Foster, Stephen 75fox, Richard W. 119F ox, Robert 112Frasor, Deren 42frederick, William H. p. 50fredrickson, George M. 7freedman, Estelle 78Freitag, Sandria B. 46Freymond, Jean 61Frick. Elizabeth 103Frieden. Nancy NI. 88
90
Friedman, Lawrence 96
Furner, Nlarv 0. 108
Gabaccia, Donna K. 85Gagnon, Paul A. 18Galambos, Louis 54Galbraith, John S. 84Gelfand, Lawrence E. 116Gann, Lewis H. 83Gardner, Lloyd C., Jr. 141Gargan. Edward ‘F. 18Garside. Patricia L. 42Gatzke, Hans W. 19Gay, Peter p. 19Gears’. Patrick 87Genovese, Elizabeth Fox 56Genovese, Eugene D. 7
Gibson, Charles 68Giesey, Ralph E. 147Gilb. Corinne 91Gilkes, Patrick 143Gilmore, Al-Tony 80Giovinco, Joseph 93Glaab, Charles NI. 31Gladstone, F. .1. 40Gleason, Philip p. 64Glen, Robert 113Gluck, Sherna 136Golden, Richard 128Goldfield, David R. 118Goldhagen. Erich 25Goldstein, Doris S. 18Goldstein, Jonathan 33Gollin. A. NI. IIGömez-QuiOones, Juan IllGoodman, Grant K. 146, p. 64Goodman, S. E. 154Gordon, Bertram NI. 158Gouda, Frances 52Gourlay. Walter 60Gowen, Robert J. 60Graham, Hugh Davis 57Graham, Patricia Albjerg 108Gray. Christopher 29Greco, Michael 148Greenberg, Allan 27Greenwood, ,John T. 10Grew. Raymond 35Griffin. Patrick 40Griffiths, Gordon 153Grimsted, David A. 9Grossberg, Michael 96Gunther, Gerald 139Gurr, Ted Robert 5Gutmann, Myron 99
Hahner. June F. 53Hale, Matthew Jr. p. 47
Hale, Nathan G., Jr. 119
Hall, Linda 110Halperin. Charles ,J. 126Halperin-Donghi. Tulio 50Halpern, Benjamin 74Halstead, Charles R. p. 65Hamby, Alonzo L. 86Hamerow, Theodore S. p. 34Hammel, E. .‘\. 35Hancock, john 118Flanley, Susan B. 26Han, Yen-Ping 33Harley. Sharon 6Harney, Robert F. 85Harper, Lawrence A. 91Harrigan, Patrick ,J. 112Harris, Charles 64Harris, Jonathan 20Hay, Carla H. 51Headley, John p. 64Heifron. Paul T. 104Hellie. Richard 81Henderson, John B. p. 50Hendricks, Charles 153Ilennessy. Alistair 77Henri. Florette 89Hebert. Raymond G. 149Hcrlihy, David 99Hertzberg, Arthur 74Higgs. David C. 63Fligham, John 144Hincklev, Ted 148Hirshficld, Claire 152Hoberman, John M. 158Hobson, Wayne K. p. 4’Hoch Steven 151Hodges, Emily 28I1ofheinz, Roy, Jr. 26Holland, F. Ross 10Hollister. Rob 106Hollister, C. Warren 125Holley, Irving B. 41Holmes, Oliver Wendell Jr. 82Holt. Michael 90Holt, Niles R. 156Horstman, Allen SIHouston, Susan 78Howard, Thomas 83Hosve. Daniel Walker 9Hu-DeHart, Evelyn 66Hughes. H. Stuart 5Hughes, Judith M. 65Hume, Richard L. 69Hundert, Gershon 13. 126
Hunt, Lynn A. 63Hunt, Michael 41Hunt, Richard 38Hurwitz, Ellen S. 87Huttenbach. Henry K. 8’
Huttenback, Robert A. 60
91
Hyman, Harold M. 69
Iggers, Georg G. 24Iggers, Wilma A. 49Ilchman, Warren 29Innocenti, Gerard p. 51Iriye, Akira p. 64Irons, William 16Isser, Natalie 152
Jackson, Kenneth T. 59Jackson, Walter A. 22Jacob, James R. 155Jacobs, Donald NI. 106James, Sydney V. p. 48Jankowski, James 39Jay, Martin 135Jensen, Richard Bach 93Jessup, John E. p. 34Johnson, Ann Hagerman 53Johnson, Charles, Jr. 89Johnson, Herbert A. 139Johnson, Walter p. 47Johnson, Wesley 79Jones, Arnita A. 79Jones, Kenneth W. 46Jones, Larry Eugene 19Jones, W. R. 47Joseph, Gilbert 110Judd, Carol 45
Kahan, Arcadius 58Kaiser, Thomas 127Kaledin, Arthur D. 18Kaplan, Herbert H. 58Kaplan, Lawrence 6Kea, Ray A. 29Keiner, Harry 122Keller, Clair W. 100Kelly, R. Gordon 107Kelly, Walter 72Kendall, John C. 67Kennedy, David NI. 96Kerr, Louise Año Nuevo 140Kierman, frank A., Jr. 36Kiernan, James p. 34Kimball, Alan 151King, Donald 39Kiple, Kenneth F. 117Kipp, Jacob W. p. 34Kirkendall, Richard S. 86Kirmmse, Bruce 82Kirsch, Robert A. 70Klaits. Joseph 128Klapisch, Christiane 99Klaren, Peter F. 50Klaus, Patricia Otto 76Kleimola, Ann M. 81Klein, Dennis B. 6
Klein, Martin A. 83Kleinbaum, Abby 70Kleinfeld, Gerald R. 25Kleppner. Paul J. 8Klier, John 21Kluger, James 73Kneeshaw, StephenJ. 107Knox, Thomas 51Knudsen, John 127Koepplin, Leslie 29Kohlstedt, Sally Gregory 2Kolchin, Peter 7Konvitz, Josef W. p. 65Koss, Stephen 95Kraus, Kathleen A. 94Kreiser, B, Robert 128Krieger, Leonard 62Kuethe, Allan 159Kuisel, Richard F. 62Kuklick, Henrika 120Kutolowski, Kathleen Smith 12Kuznesof, Elizabeth Anne 34
Lach, Donald 146Lamar, Howard R. IllLamb, Ursula S. p. 65Langmuir, Gavin I. p. 52Laqueur, Thomas W. 122Lapsansky, Emma 160LaRose, .André 161Larsen, Gary S. 5Larson, Brooke IV’Lazerow, James 106Leavitt, Judith Walzer 88Légaré, ,Jacques 161Lehmberg, Stanford E. 153Lenczowski. George 98Levine, David 161Levine, Donald N. 143Levine-Shneidman, Conalee 6Lewis. Archibald R. 47Lidtke. Vernon 145Lightman, Marjorie 91Linden. Glenn M. 43Lindner, Rudi Paul 16Lipset, Seymour Martin 90Lipstadt, Deborah 38Littleheld, Daniel 160Lossky, Andrew 101Louis, William Roger 60Love, Joseph L. 34Lunn, Joe 89Luttwak, Edward N. 98Lyman, Richard 95Lynch, Katherine A. 161Lyon, Judson 27Lyon, William 125
Madden. Sarah H. 147
92
Maier. Charles S. 62Maier, Donna 84Malament, Barbara 11Malefakis, Edward E. pp. 51, 65Mandelbaum, Maurice p. 19Manville, Brook 56Marcus, Harold G. 143Marker, GaryJ. p. 51Marks, Shula 121Marini, Alfred j. 14Marino, John A. 124Mart, Phebe A. 98Marsh, Peter 90Martin, Ross 101Masalski. Kathleen Woods 94Mathias, Peter 58May, Joseph 86Maynes, Mary Jo 48McCarthy, john 35McCarthy, Michael P. 59McConnell, Allen 21McCurley, james 79McDonald, J. Kenneth 14Nlcfadden, Grace Jordan 37McGiffert, Michael 75McGinn, Bernard 114MeLane, John R. 28McNeill, William H. 132Mendelsohn, Edward W. 121Mendelsohn, John 55Merkl, Peter 19Merritt, Richard L. 55Merritt, Russell 91Metcalf, Barbara Daly 46Metcalf, George 90Metcalf, Thomas R. 28Meyer, Donald B. 76Meyer, Henry Cord 142Meyer, Michael C. 110Meyer, Stephen 142Middlekauff, Robert 75Miers, Suzanne 84Miller, Francesca 53Miller, James E. 92Millett, Allan R. 14Minnich, Nelson H. 23Mitchell, Arthur 27Mueller, Robert 142Mokyr, Joel 52Moltmann, GOnter 150Moody, Joseph N. 18, p. 64Moote, A. Lloyd 97Morain, Thomas 42Morgan, Philip D. p. 48Mork, Gordon R. 3Muir, Edward 99Muldoon, James 47Mullett, Charles F. 3Mullin, John R. 118
Munro, George E. 151Murphy, William T. 40Musto, David l32
Nadelhaft. Jerome J. 8Nash, Gary B. p. 48Naske, Claus-M. 148Neely, Mark E., Jr. 115Newman, Dale 140Nielsen, George R. 70Nimmer, Melvin 104Nipperdey. Thomas 61Nocken, Glrich 61North, Douglass C. 105Novick. Peter 24Numbers, Ronald L. 117Nunis, Doyce B., Jr. p. 34Nyc, Russel B. 107
Oakley, Francis 123Oates, Stephen B. 115Obelkevich, James 122O’Brien, C. Bickford 81Oddone, Juan Antonio p. 64
Olaniyan, Richard A. 84Olmstead. Alan L. 131OMalley. John W. 23Orenstein, Eugene 152Ortiz, Roxanne I)unbar 15
Pace, David 3Padden, Robert C. 50Palmer, R. R. 36Parker, William N. 105Parsons, Edward B. 116Partner, Nancy F. 114Paterson, Thomas G. 129Patterson. Wayne 83, p. 50Paul, Arnold Milton 91Pawa, Jay M. 93Paxton, Robert 0. 158Pease, Jane 31Pease, William 31Pencak, William p. 48Perlin, Terry M. 65Pernicone. Nunzio 92Persons, Stow 9Peters, Edward M. 47Peters. Emrys 16Peterson, Jacqueline 43Peterson, Richard 73Pflanze, Otto 150Philips, Carla Rahn 124Phillips. John A. 133Phillips, Roderick 76Phillips. William 1). 124Pinkney, David H. 17Platt, Wilfred C., Jr. 149Pleck, Elizabeth 32
93
Plekon, Michael 82Pocock, J. G. A. p. 34Popkin Jeremy D. 127Poppel, Stephen 49Potter. Anthony 40Potts, David B. 39Powell. James M. 99Pozzetta George E. 85Preston, Richard A. 29Price, Pamela G. 28Price, Richard 113Prochaska, David 63Prodi. Paolo 23Puckrein. Gary 160Pyle, Kenneth B. p. 50
Raack, R. C. 102Radke, August C. 73Rae. John B. 154Rahe. Paul A. 56Ranum, Orest 128Raup, Philip 131Rawski, Evelyn Sakakida 130Ray, Arthur 45Reardon, Judy Anne p. 51Reddy, William I”Reed. James E. 67Reill, Peter 127Reingold, Nathan 10Reuss, Martin 83Richmond, Douglas W. 110Richter, Richard G. 7QRicks, Barbara S. 4Rimlinger, Gaston \ . 54Ringer, Fritz 120Ringrose, David R. 124Rischin, Moses 74Roach, Fred Jr. 125Roazen. Diane 41Roeder, Robert E. 36Roider. Karl 4Rollins, Peter C, 102Rollins, Richard 9Rosales, Francisco A. 111Rosen, Ruth E. 109Rosenband. Leonard ITRosenberg, Charles E. 132Rosenberg, Mark B. 54Rosenkrantz, Barbara G. 88Rosenweig, Linda 43Ross, Stanley R. 64Rossiter, Margaret V. 131Rothblatt, Sheldon 9’Rozman. Gil 26Rubenson, Sven 143Rubinstein, ?vlurray 33Ruchman, David 72Rudolph, Frederick 39Rupp, Robert 0. 12
Ruse, Michael 156Russell, Jeffrey B. 123Russett, Cynthia Eagle 156Ryan, Dan p. 136
Sachar, Howard Morley 25Saenger. Paul 147Salinger, Sharon p. 48Salmon,J. H. M. 147Salomone, A. William 92Salvadori, Massimo 92Saum. Lewis 0. 9Sbrega.Johnj. 129Scalingi. Paula Louise 141Scarpaci, Jean 140Schalk, Ellery 5. 66Schar. John 120Scheiber. Harry N. 20Scheips. Paul J. 10Schlafly, Daniel L., Jr. 21Schlatter, Richard 155Schleifer, James T. 18Schlossman, Steven L. 78Schmandt, Raymond 47Schneer. Jonathan 142Schnucker. Robert V. “0Schorsch, Ismar 145Schorske, Carl E. 62Schulzinger, Robert 141Schwartz, Harvey 73Schweber, Claudine 78Schwoerer. Lois G. 155Scohie. James R. p. 64Scott. Joan V.Seedorf, Martin 27Segal. Howard 135Segre, Claudio G. 137Sellen. Robert W. 129Seltzer, Leon E. 104Sewell. William H.. Jr. lShade, William G. 12Shapiro, Ann-Louise 88Shapiro, Stanley 5Shaw, Henry I., Jr. 44Shideler, James H. 131Shideler, John C. p. 52Shneidman, J. Lee 6Shoenberger, Cynthia Grant 147Shorter, Edward 117Showalter, Dennis E. 14Sidman, Charles F. 19Simoni, Peter 63Skinner. Quentin 155Sklar, Martin 84Slany, William Z. 91Slenes, Robert W. 34Smith, Bradley 125Smith, Daniel Blake p. 48Smith, Daniel Scott 161
94
Smith. Dwight 148Smith, Elbert B. p. 34Smith, James 101Smith, John M., Jr. 16Smith, Peter H. 77Smith, Robert F. 41Smith, Robert W. 133Smith, Wilson 13$Smith, Woodruff D. 137Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll 100Snyder, Henry L. 51Sob. Leo F, 43Sonnino, Paul 101Spence. Richard p.$2Spencer, John H. 143Spitz, Lewis V. ISprague, Gregory A. 3.Stampp. Kenneth NI. 105Stansky. Peter p. 49Stearns, Peter N. 20Steen, William 143Stern, Fritz 145Stern, Mark 4$Stewart, Jeffrey C. 22Stinger, Charles L. 23Stoff, Michael B. 41Storch, Robert D. 113Strayer, Robert 130Stricter, Terry W. 66Strocchia, Sharon T. p. 52Stuard, Susan M. 99Stubbs. John 95Sony, Ronald 32Sutcliffe. Anthony 118Suziedelis, Saulius A. p. 51Swagerty, William R. 45Swetchinski, Daniel 152Szporluk, Roman p. 34
Tamarin. DavidTarr. Joel 79Teichgraeber, Richard 65TePaske, JohnJ. 159Terborg-Penn, Rosalyn 70Theoharis, Athan $6Thomson, James C., Jr. 67Thornton, A. P. 121Thrupp, Sylvia L. 68Tignor, Robert L. 121Tiliman, Seth 116‘Tillv, Charles 57Tillv, Louise .\ 48Tolpin. Martha 70Toplin. Robert Brent 57Trapido. Stanley 121Trask. David F. 116Treadgold. Donald W. 58Trelease Allen W. 69Tricamo, John 89
Turhollow, Anthony F. p. 34Tuthill. John 114Tyack, David 119
Unger, Richard 52Urofsky, Melvin 1. 74Uzoigwe, C. N. 121
Van Tassel, David H. 72Varg, Paul A. p. 64Vecoli. Rudolph J. 93Velez, Diana p. 51Veysev. Laurence 39Vicinus. Martha 109Vines, Alice Gilmore 2Vinovskis. Macis 105\‘ogt. tN. Paul 1 21)Von Brauchitsch. Matt 40von Rohr, John 123Voss, Stuart 64Vucinich. tVa ne S. 126
Vade, louise Carroll 140Wagar, Warren 135Wakstein, Allen M. 106Walker, Lawrence H. 65Walker, Mack 150Walkowitz, Daniel J. 76Walkowitz, Judith R. 109Wallerstein, Immanuel 1Ward, John William 13$Warmbrunn, Werner 15$Wasserman, Mark 64Watanabe. Shunichi 118Weaver, John C. 59Veiler, Peter IIWeinberg. David H. 13Weinberg. Julius 13Weinhoff, Joanne 136Weinstein. Allen 144Weiss, Bernard J. 13\Veiss, John 112Weissman, Ronald F. E. p. 52Weitzmann, Walter R. 49Welch, William M., Jr. p. 49Wells, Allen 64Welter, Barbara 130Werking, Richard Hume 103Weston, Corinne C. 155Wheeler, Robert A. 134White, David H. 129Whitheld. Stephen ,]. 5Wieczerzak. Joseph W. p. 34Vilber, Donald N. 9%Williams. James C. 9Williams, Thomas F. p. 47
Williams, Walter L. 15Willian, J. Dennis 161Wills, John I.. Jr. 9”
95
Wilson, Joan Hoff 108Winkler, Henry R, 20Wittner, Lawrence 141Wolfe, Robert 55Woloch, Isser 66Wolpert, Stanley 121Wolters, Raymond 140Wood, David L. 89Woodward, C. Vann p.Worthy, Edmund H., Jr. 149Wright, Benjamin W., Jr. 149Wright, Harold R. C. 52Wrong, Charles J. 66Wu, Silas H. L. 146Wunder, John R. 96
Yamamura, Kozo 154Yaney, George L. 21Yang, Anand 46Young, John D. 146Young, Kenneth 42Youngs, J. William T., Jr. 75
Zainaldin, Jamil 5. 96Zell, Leah 61Zelnik, Reginald E. 151Zguta, Russell 14Ziemke, Earl F. 55Zingale, Nancy 35
96
EXHIBITORS
Exhtbitors and Ex/ubttors and
Rep resentat us’s Booth Representatives Booth
ABC-CIio Press 4. 5 Congressional Information Service 88
Eric H. l3oehm Dennis Gunnarson
Joyce Duncan FalkCornell University Press 61
AHM Publishing Corp. 17 Bernard Kendler
Harlan Davidson The Dorsev Press 75
American Historical Association 38 John FreemanSteve Patterson
American University Press Services 32, 33Florence Conn Doubleday & Company, Inc. 91
Barbara Monteiro Earl Moree
Archon Books/The Shoe String Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. 62
Press, Inc. 80James Thorpe Ill
Encyclopaedia Britannica 84Duncan Campbell
Diantha Thorpe
Leo Baeck Institute, Inc. 78 facts on File Publications 90
Mike SchlainFred Grothel
Ballantine/Vintage University Presses of Florida 107
Nancy BergmanClay L. MorganLynn Morgan
Barnes & Noble 3Homer Dickens forum Press, Inc. 21
Erhy ?sl. YoungBasic Books 2
Bart DeCastro Greenwood Press, Inc. 47
Martin Kessler Dan Farrell Davis
Beauchesne-.America 87 Harper & Row College Division 3
F. Ellen Weaver MaryLou MosherDon Davidson
The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc. 89 Susan Nclle
Brigham Young University Press 108 Harper Torchbooks &IL Kent Horslcy Harper Trade 67, 68, 69
University of California Press 4445 Cynthia Merman
Main HenonHugh Von Dussen
Sharon Ponsford Harcourt Brace jovanovich, Inc. 63
Cambridge University Press 51, 52 College Dept.
Paul Wehn ma PoherAdrienne Herell
The University of Chicago Press 71, 72
Doug Mitchell Harvard University Press 40, 41Aida Donald
Clearwater Publishing Co., Inc. 29 Joan KimballNorman A. RossJohn Chodes D.C. Heath & Co. 64
Michael P. Wagner Ann KnightJames Hamann
Columbia University PressBernard Gronert Hill & Wang/Octagon Books 110
The Combined Book Exhibit 36, 37 Hoover Institution Press 46
Janet Malinowski Mickey C. Hamilton
97
Exhibitors and Exhi/ntors andRepresentatives Booth Representatives Booth
Houghton Muffin Co. 39 National Archives & Records Service 60Karen Kruger
University of Nebraska Press 30Judy DvorakJerr Matsumoto New American Library, Inc. 65, 66Marlene DeLeon Jonathan Plant
Humanities Press Inc. 7 University of New Mexico Press 31Simon Silverman Lois BursackJane Harvey
New Viewpoints 48University of Illinois Press 20 Stephen Beitler
Richard WentworthFrank Williams University of North Carolina Press!August Meier Institute of Early American History
and Culture 59Imported Publications Inc. 15 Malcolm Call
Sig Eioenscher Johanna GrimesGrace Eisenscher Thad W. Tate
Joy Dickinson BarnesIndiana University Press 81Robert Cook w. W. Norton & Company Inc. 18, 19Janet Rabinowitch James L. Mairs
Ethelbert Nevin IIInter..university Consortium forlIenry F SmithPolitical & Social Research 83Flarrv L ShawErik Austin
Carolyn L. Geda Ohio State University Press 31Wcldon KefauverInternational film Bureau Inc. I
James P. fitzwater Ohio University Press/Penn State
International Publishers Co., Inc. 16University Press 12
Patricia FitchLouis DiskinSam Gold John M Pickering
University of Oklahoma Press 43Institute for ScientificSteve T RiceInformation 1 1 I Luther WilsonEugene Kapaloski
Oxford University Press 22, 23, 24The Johns Hopkins University Press 55 Sheldon MeyerJane C. Gottfredoon Nancy LaneHenry Y. K. Tom Craig Zelinske
Kraus-Thompson Organization Ltd. 53 Stephen judgeHans GtilickMarion Sader
Penguin Books 73, 74Little, Brown & Co—College Div. 82William T. Ethridge Penn State University Press/OhioCarol A. Reichstetter University Press 12
Patricia FitchLongman Inc. 28 John M. PickeringEd ArtinionAndrew McLennan Prentice Hall Inc. 26
Brian WalkerLouisiana State University Press 25 Gordon Johnson
Leslie F. Phillahaum Janio Hartley
Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. 9 Presidio Press 79Clark Baxter Si BeerCraig Anderson Adele HorowitzVicki Sawyer Joan Griffin
98
Exhttntors and Lh,/ntors (100
Rq.vesereatues Booth 1?eprcsentatues Booth
Princeton University Press 56, 57 Stanford University Press 34, 35
Gail Filion J. 0. Bell- Nancy R. Watt
Random House/Alfred A. Knopfl)avicl Fotlmer University of Tennessee Press
James KopenhoeferRowman & Littlefield 14
Jim feather Texas A&M University Press 58
Rutgers University Press 42 Lloyd 0. Lyman
University of Texas Press 109
Barbara Burn ham
St. Martin’s Press 10
Bertrand Lummus University Press of America 106
Charles Briel Jameo F. Lyons
Scbocken Books 0 Viking Press/Penguin Books 3.
Pearl GreenbergLeon King John Wiley and Sons, Inc. 76
Wayne Anderson
Scholarly Resources 54
Daniel C 1-lelmotadter University of Wisconsin Press 13
]. Davis Patterson Jerry .-\. NlinnirhNancy I ,cazer
Scott, Foresman & Co.Carl Tyson Yale University Press 6, 7
Earl Karn Eclsvarcl Fripp
99
REPORT OFTHE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, 1977-78
At the last business meeting in Dallas, December 29, 1977, I reported to you aboutaffairs of the association during the first half of fiscal year 1977—78. That mid-yearreport appears in the Annual Report for 1077, which is available on request from theWashington office. The vice-presidents’ written reports of the activities of theirrespective divisions will be available at the annual meeting, and the reports of theeditor of the American Historical Review, the controller and the auditors appear elsewhere in the program. The vice-presidents, the editor and other officers of theassociation will be present at the business meeting to answer questions about theirresponsibilities. In this report I will focus on selective subjects for which I have specialresponsibility and on matters that have not been reported on elsewhere or thatdeserve additional emphasis.
I. The Ninety-Second Annual Meetmg in DallasDewey W. Grantham and Hans A. Schmitt, co-chairs of the 1977 Program
Committee, have written a detailed report about the program which has beenpublished in the April issue of the Newsletter. There is no need, therefore, for me todiscuss the program in detail. From all reports, the committee admirably fulfilled itspromise of offering a program that expressed “the broad range and variety of historywhile giving full scope to the professional and teaching aspects of the discipline.”
The conclusion of co-chairs Grantham and Schmitt that “the task confrontingeach year’s committee is extraordinarily complicated, difficult, and demanding,” isone that only those of us who are intimately involved in the annual meeting can fullyappreciate. We also agree that the annual meeting is one of the most important of theassociation’s activities, and that we should make every effort to see that it serves thepurposes of the association. In their report, the co-chairs made a number of recommendations about the organization and substance of future annual meetings which,on the basis of their experience, would improve the program and the meeting. Theirrecommendations. and those of previous program committee members, are underreview in my office and will provide the basis for a special report to the Council at itsDecember 27, 1978 meeting.
It. International ActivitiesThe pace of the development of contacts with foreign scholars has quickened.
Plans for U.S. participation in the next congress of international historical sciences inBucharest in 1980 are well advanced, thanks to the work of the Committee onInternational Historical Activities, chaired by Robert forster, Johns Hopkins University.
The AHA was one of the first to propose the International Congress of HistoricalSciences and has taken a leading part in all of the congresses. In 1975 it was the hostfor the meeting in San Francisco at which, for the first time, an American (BoydShafer, former executive secretary of the AHA) was the presiding officer. GordonCraig, Stanford University, succeeded Boyd Shafer as vice-president and member ofthe ICHS Bureau, and we will be working closely with him as our plans mature.
These international congresses have grown in size and increased in importance inrecent years. foreign learned societies and foreign governments have generouslysupported participation of their scholars, and many countries plan to send largedelegations to the Bucharest congress. Our purpose is to support U.S. participation inthe congress commensurate in size and quality with our leading position in theinternational historical community. We intend to make participation in the congressthe centerpiece of our international activities over the next two years. We want the
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level and quality of our presence there to demonstrate the depth of the AHA’s
international commitment. We anticipate that there will be opportunities at the
congress for us to promote scholarship in other areas of the world where we have had
little or no activity. for example, we hope to make contact with African and Middle
Eastern historians through participation with them in panels at the congress; we also
hope to find opportunities to develop our relations with Polish, Romanian, Japanese,
and Latin American historical societies and scholars. I am confident that there will be
other opportunities at the congress to promote historical scholarship, and I will
encourage U.S. participants to take advantage of such opportunities.
As the official organizer of the U.S. participation in the congress, the Al-IA is
taking steps to insure that history as practiced in America will gain appropriate
recognition in Bucharest. first, we have established careful procedures for selection of
scholars to participate in the sessions in a variety of capacities. Second, we hope to
find funds to support a delegation of between thirty-five and forty scholars. Third, we
will assist other U.S. scholars in the United States and abroad to attend the congress
by arranging inexpensive travel programs and providing assistance in other ways.
Fourth, we will for the first time publish a major volume of essays assessing the
current state of scholarship in the U.S. Work on this volume is already well advanced.
Michael Kammen, Cornell University, one of our Pulitzer Prize winning members, is
the editor of History in Our Time: A Volume of Essays Prepared by the American Historical
Association on the Occasion of the XV ICHS, Bucharest, 1980. This volume will be completed
in time for distribution at the congress. We are indebted to the National Endowment
for the Humanities for a grant of 18,0O0 to assist us in the preparation of History in
Our Time.Beyond the congress in Bucharest, I should report on a number of our other
programs designed to strengthen and expand our role in international activities.
Arrangements have been recently concluded to hold a U.S-USSR historians’ collo
quium. the third in a series begun in 1972 in Moscow. The second was held at
Stanford University in 1975 following the congress in San Francisco. The third will
take place in Moscow and Central Asia in late November and early December.
Support for these colloquia has been provided by the International Research and
Exchanges Board in New York. Allen H. Kassof, executive director of IREX, Daniel
N’Iatuszewski, deputy director, and Laurel Carmichael, assistant to the directors,
have generously assisted us in organizing this series. Preliminary discussions are
being held with the Soviet Academy of Sciences for a fourth colloquium in 1979 in the
United States.A new program with the Soviet historical community includes convening two
conferences on quantitative methods and sources, one in the U.S. in 1979 and the
other in the USSR in 1980; planning an international conference to be attended by
scholars from at least ten countries around the world, during which plans will be
made to improve joint efforts in the field; and preparing a volume of essays which will
survey the sources and methods of quantitative history in the United States. This
ambitious program has been developed by a group of members headed by Theodore
Rabb, Princeton University, under the guidance of the association’s Committee on
Quantitative Research in History. The NEH has recently approved a grant of S60, 000
to support the two conferences. Additional funds for the international conference and
the preparation of the volume of essays will be sought at the appropriate time.
During the past year we have begun discussions with the officers of various
Japanese historical associations about the possibility of expanding cooperative proj
ects and exchanges between U.S. and Japanese scholars. We hope these discussions
will be sufficiently far advanced by the fall to justify a small, informal meeting in San
Francisco in December to discuss specific proposals.
These and other initiatives to promote better relations with foreign scholars and to
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encourage and facilitate research and teaching opportunities for U.S. scholars abroadand for foreign scholars in the U.S. have been undertaken with the full knowledge ofthe problems that will be encountered. We do not underestimate the difficulties, forexample, of raising funds to support our programs. of dealing with vastly differentscholarly institutional arrangements and traditions, of running the risk that ourscholarly activities will be affected by political events in this country and abroad overwhich we have no control. These and other difficulties notwithstanding we feel thatthe benefits to scholarship are substantial and that the AHA’s international activitiesshould be continued.
III. Project 87: An Interdisczhtinary Study of the Constitution by the AHA and the APSAThe Councils of the AHA and the American Political Science Association have
approved plans for the first phase (1978-1980) of Project 87. The joint committeeunder whose guidance the project is being developed is Richard B. Morris, ColumbiaUniversity and James McGregor Burns, Williams College (co-chairs); Patricia Bonomi, New York University; Kermit Hall, Wayne State University; Harold Hyman,Rice University; James Kettner, University of California, Berkeley; A. Leon Higginbotham, U.S. Court House, Philadelphia; Paul Murphy. University of Minnesota;Walter Murphy, Princeton University; Lucius Parker, Washington University. St.Louis; Joseph Cooper, Rice University; Austin Ranney, American Enterprise Institute, Washington, DC; Kenneth Prewitt, University of Chicago; Mack Thompson,AHA; and Evron Kirkpatrick, APSA.
funds for this phase have come from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation($240,000), the ford Foundation ($250000), and the National Endowment for theHumanities ($250,000, application pending). Efforts to raise additional funds forPhase I are under way.
Donald A. Robinson, Smith College, who has served as director of Project 87 thispast year, has returned to full-time teaching and research. He has been succeeded byFrancis Rosenberger, who has for mans’ years served as chief counsel and staffdirector of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The Project 8? office will be locatedin the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC.
The first competition for grants and fellowships closed on June 1. Over thirtyapplications for each of the grant categories (under $5000, and over $5000), and tenfor fellowships-in-residence, were received and are now being evaluated. Plans forscholarly conferences are well advanced and the first, “The Strategy of the AmericanConstitutional System,” will have been held in Philadelphia by the time this report ispublished.
Phase 11 of Project 87 will deal with improved ways of teaching about theconstitution in the schools, and with the production of programs for television andradio that present constitutional issues in a realistic and lively fashion. Phase III willencourage the widest public engagement in debate about constitutional issues.
The membership will be kept informed about Project 8? through the association’s,Vewsletter and periodic reports from my office.
IV. Committee on I [‘omen Historians
Joan W. Scott, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (chair); Mary 0.furner, Northern Illinois University; Sydney V. James, Jr., University of Iowa;Rosalyn Terborg-Penn, Morgan State University; Martha Tolpin. Wellesley College;Judith Babbitts (graduate student) Yale University.
a) In December I reported that the Committee on Women Historians and myoffice had developed a proposal for four summer institutes in women’s history forsecondary school teachers. Shortly after the annual meeting NEH awarded a grant of$99,844 for an institute to be conducted by the history department at Stanford
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University, June 25—July 15. The institute faculty will include: Professors Carolyn C.
Lougee and Estelle Freedman (co-directors); Carl N. Degler, Stanford University;
Professor Renate Bridenthal, Brooklyn College, CUNY; and Susan Groag Bell,
University of Santa Clara.The Stanford Summer Institute wilt offer training of the highest academic quality
designed to strengthen the position of history in the secondary curriculum. In describ
ing the program, the directors of the institute write: “The Stanford Institute will
address as large a portion as possible of the ‘Western Civilization’ or ‘World History’
courses most commonly comprising the core of secondary history curricula, surveying
within a comparative, trans-Atlantic framework selected critical issues in the history
of women in Europe and America since the seventeenth century. It will emphasize
family history as well as women’s history, introducing all students to demographic
techniques in particular and to quantitative methods in general. Workshops will focus
on oral history, demographic techniques, technology and women’s work, suffrage
movements, female education, library development, and audiovisual presentations. A
unique offering will he the study of Chicanas and the Chicano family, a topic of
special interest to secondary teachers in the far West,”
The Stanford Summer Institute is the second of the association’s institutes for the
promotion of women’s history in the secondary schools. The hrst was held at Sarah
Lawrence College in 1976. Gerda Lerner and Amy Swerdlow were assisted in the
development of the content and structure of this hrst institute by Joan Kellv-Gadol
and Emiliana P. Noether, and by a National Advisory Board of high school teachers
and leaders in the held of women’s studies. Amy Swerdlow has continued as project
director for the Stanford program.The Washington office is seeking funds for additional institutes at the University
of Minnesota, Rutgers University, and the University of North Carolina. Our goal in
this program is to introduce institute participants to some of the new historical
scholarship and methodology and show how these can he adapted for use in second
ary education; to evaluate existing curriculum materials in women’s history and
develop a diverse corpus of new and revised materials—teaching packets, lesson
plans. critical reading lists, and audiovisual materials—-for use by secondary school
teachers and students; disseminate the results of the institutes regionally and nation
ally; and create a group of secondary school teachers trained in women’s history who
will promote the introduction and diffusion of women’s history in schools across the
nation,b) The CWH has a number of matters under review relating to the status of
women in the profession; among them are new editions of the Directort of Women
Histonans and the Survival Manual, and an updating of the Rose report. I have also
asked the committee to assist in the preparation of a survey of departments of history,
being undertaken in my office.c) Last fall the CWH forwarded to the Professional Division a resolution calling
upon the association to join in a boycott of states that had failed to ratify the Equal
Rights Amendment. The Council considered the resolution at its December 27 and 30
meetings and deferred action until it had the advice of the members, which it sought
during the spring in an advisory referendum. The results of the advisory referendum
were 798 in favor of and 709 in opposition to the resolution.
At its meeting on May 25—26 the Council considered the results of this advisory
referendum, reviewed the correspondence from members, and after further discussion
tabled a motion to accept the resolution by a vote of 8 members in favor and 3
opposed.The Council then expressed its support for the proposed Equal Rights Amend
ment, In declining to support the boycott and in registering its support for the ERA
the Council recognized “(i) the possible professional implications of the proposed
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ERA for our members; (ii) the need to resolve an issue that, if allowed to continue,threatens to divert the association from its primary goal of the promotion of historicalscholarship and teaching in the interests of all members of the profession; and (iii) theimportance of such practical considerations as maintaining attendance at the annualmeeting and of the integrity of the annual program,” and the desirability of avoidingbeing drawn into costly litigation. On the basis of my mail I can report that somemembers will not be satisfied with the Council’s action, and if they follow throughwith their threats will register their dissatisfaction by dropping Out of the association.I hope that such members will think carefully before they act, and finally decide tomaintain their membership so that they can participate fully in the discussion of theassociation’s scholarly and professional activities.
V. Financat GonthiwnIn my mid-year report I noted that the financial condition of the association for
the first six months of fiscal year 1977—78 was favorable and that I was optimisticabout the second six months. Although the auditors have not quite completed theirwork as I write this report, I believe we will have a balanced budget for the thirdconsecutive year. For fiscal year 1978—79 I also believe we can maintain our soundfinancial condition and continue to support our essential research, professional, andteaching programs at a reasonable level.
If we are to avoid serious financial difficulty in the years beyond 1978—79,however, we must begin now to think about how we are going to deal with continuinghigh rates of inflation and requests for improvement of existing programs and adoption of desirable new ones. One step we must begin to think seriously about taking isan increase in membership dues. The last dues increase was January 1, 1975, whichmeans that by the time an increase could go into effect (January 1, 1980), five yearswill have elapsed. During that period inflation will have increased our operating costsby about thirty-five percent. We have avoided passing these increases on to you forsuch a long period by holding down operating costs and developing new sources ofrevenue. We cannot continue much longer to absorb such large increases in costswithout cutting programs. No other comparable learned society has been able to deferdues increases for such a long period.
At the next meeting of the Finance Committee in the spring, I will report on thelong-term financial problems the association faces and make recommendations abouthow they might be dealt with.
Membership trends: A review of association membership shows that it reached a peakin 1970 of 20,188 and declined to 15,783 by the end of 1977, a loss of 4405 members.The real loss will probably be even greater because delinquents are included in thismembership total, and some of them will not renew their membership. Another trendworth noting is the distribution of members among the dues categories:
I. $10.00 II. $20.00 III. $30.00 IV. $35.00 V. $40.00 VI. Other Total37,3% 25.8% 17.5% 14.1% 4,2% 1.1% 100%
The large percentage of members in category I shows that the association continues toattract younger scholars at a time when there is a shift of undergraduates away fromhistory into other disciplines and professional schools, a decline in the number ofgraduate students, and a dramatic increase in the number of new attractive societiesserving historians’ specialized scholarly interests.
Whatever the reasons for the large percentage of younger scholars in our membership, I believe it is a trend’we should encourage even if it requires continuing to holddues for such persons below cost. It is a good investment in the future of theassociation and the profession.
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Considering the unfavorable state of the economy, the decline in the number of
new PhDs, and the likely reduction in the number of new university positions, I am
not optimistic about our chances of dramatic increases in our membership. In the
Washington office, however, we will continue to work to encourage delinquent
members to pay their dues and to attract new members. I wish to thank all those
members who have generously cooperated with us in these programs. I will soon be
calling on many of you again for assistance.
VI. Employment of Historians—The EIB, the job Register, the Placement Survey, and the
Departmental Survey
As I have noted in previous reports, the unemployment of historians as historians
remains one of our most persistent and serious problems and one that does not yield
quickly to solution.
a) The Employment Information Bulletin
The employment statistics for 1977—78 indicate that although the total number of
positions listed in the EIB declined from the previous year, the job market did not
necessarily deteriorate. The EIB listed only 594 positions, a twenty percent decline
from the record 747 published the previous year; however, the number of permanent,
full-time positions being offered actually increased from 379 in 1976—77 to 385 last
year. Most of the loss in listings occurred in the temporary and part-time categories of
employment. Combined with the slight increase in the number of permanent posi
tions was a continuing decrease in the number of PhD degrees awarded annually. In
1976—77 only 961 degrees were awarded, the smallest number of the decade. The
higher number of firm positions and the lower number of new PhDs entering the job
market indicate a slight easing of a still critical employment situation. EIB circulation
remained steady at about 3000 copies per issue.
6) The job Register
The job register for the 1977 annual meeting was held at the Sheraton Hotel in
Dallas. More than 150 descriptions of positions were arranged by areas of special
ization on fifteen bulletin boards; in addition, photographic enlargements of the
December EIB supplement were posted, raising the total number ofjob descriptions
to about 250. Forty-four institutions took advantage of the interviewing facilities made
available by the association, and an information desk was established to coordinate
communications between candidates and institutions conducting interviews outside
the job register. Approximately 650 interviews were conducted in the job register
facilities during the four days of operation; and an estimated 500—600 people made
use of the register, a much smaller number than in previous years.
c) The Placement Survey
The first AHA placement survey of graduate departments was conducted in
September, 1977. The survey was designed to determine the number of historians
seeking employment, their success, and the nature of their positions. The results of
the first survey, in which 82.6% of the PhD-granting departments participated. were
published in the EIB and ,A/ewsletter. for every PhD awarded in 1976—77, more than
two people were in the employment marketplace. The overall success rate forjobseek
ers was slightly more than fifty percent; however, more than one-third of the positions
filled were listed as temporary. The survey also indicated that nearly one-third of the
positions were in non-teaching areas. Most placement officers and department chairs
felt that the number of those seeking employment would remain the same in 1977—78.
A second placement survey is presently underway. We hope that we will be able to
have one hundred percent participation by the PhD departments this year.
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a’) Survey of i)epartments of HistoryDevelopment of a comprehensive survey of the profession has begun in the
Washington office. The questionnaire will he sent to history departments in 1200colleges and universities across the country to gather information about size anddistribution of faculty, tenure, salary scales, employment trends, curriculum andenrollment development, and budgets. The results will give us a statistical profile ofthe profession. serve as the basis for the development of policies and programs by theAHA and other learned societies, and inform departments about their positionrelative to other departments.
In developing our survey we have drawn on the experience of other learnedsocieties such as the American Political Science Association and the AmericanAnthropological Association, which began surveys of their disciplines some years ago.and we are indebted to their staffs for assistance.
We know that participation by departments in this program will add to the heavyburden of department chairs and staff, which are often inundated by requests forinformation, but we believe that the need for reliable information about the professionis great and that the results will justify the effort.
Vii. The Promotion of History: The ,‘Vationat Coordinating Committee for the Promotion ofHistory.
The National Coordinating Committee is now a consortium of eighteen constituent members. Since July of last year six new societies have joined the NCC: theEconomic History Association, the Society for Historians of American foreign Relations, the Society for History Education, the Conference Group for Central EuropeanHistory, the Coordinating Committee on Women in the Historical Profession-Conference Group on Women’s History, and the History of Science Society. The WomenHistorians of the Midwest have added their support. In the spring of 197$ a newcategory of institutional membership was created for those associations wishing to beinformed of NCC activities but not prepared to play a major organizational role.Annual dues for institutional membership are now S 100. which currently includes theAgricultural History Society and the Georgia Association of Historians.
Constituent members officers have held three meetings during 1977—78, scheduledin conjunction with the annual meetings of the Southern Historical Association, theAHA, and the Organization of American Historians. At the spring meeting of theOAH in New York several constituent member representatives declared their willingness to explore the possibility of assessing of their members for NCC contributions. Itwas also agreed that organizational contributions would be set at a suggested rate offifty cents per active member. In the fall of 1977 the AHA, the OAH, and the SHAconducted special fund-raising drives on behalf of the National Coordinating Committee. Proceeds of that effort and other constituent member contributions amountedto S23,38l.97 as of July 1. Expenses through the same period have been $29,859.31.The AHA, OAH, and SHA are currently sponsoring a joint fund-raising drivedirected to the senior members of the historical profession. In addition, the NationalCoordinating Committee is exploring possible foundation funding for some of itsspecial programs.
The NCC has strengthened and expanded its network of resource groups organized to develop information on those areas in which historians’ skills can be or arebeing utilized. Resource groups in the areas of federal government, state, and localgovernment and business have undertaken major surveys. In March the AHA published the results of one of these as the Directory and Survey of Historical Offices andPrograms in the federal Government. An evaluation of data from the questionnaire sent tohistorians practicing in state and local government will be presented at the SHAmeeting in the fall, along with the results of the survey of new programs offered by
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history departments that is currently being conducted by Arnita Jones of the Wash
ington offIce. The Washington Area Business Resource Group has held several career
workshops and seminars for area graduate students.
Arnita Jones, several members of the resource groups, and Washington AHA staff
have served as speakers for meetings of NCC constituent members, state committees,
or at special conferences. Special sessions sponsored by the NCC have been held at
the AHA meeting in Dallas, the spring meetings of OAR, and are also scheduled for
1978—79 constituent member meetings. Eighteen special supplements have been
produced for the coordinating committee and circulated with its bimonthly NCC
Report. Ranging from such topics as CETA funding for historians, historical consult
ing, career workshops, to an analysis of federal government reorganization of its
historic preservation programs, a number of these materials have received wide
distribution through advertisement in the AHA Newstetter as well as newsletters of
other constituent members.Initially the NCC selected approximately a dozen states in which to form com
mittees of historians. Some have resulted from the efforts of individuals who have
volunteered to extend the work of the NCC to their state, and in a few cases an
existing organization has provided sponsorship. A few state committees have sent
questionnaires to establish needs and priorities before settling on one or two projects.
Several have begun to take steps toward promoting a closer relationship between
historians and those responsible for public education: elected officials, legislators. and
administrators. Those that have emphasized this approach are Minnesota, Kansas.
Wisconsin, and Ohio. Another orientation has been toward the investigation of local
employment opportunities for history graduates. A general pattern which seems to be
emerging is one of collecting data on existing placements, building contacts with
potential employers in the public and private sectors, and coordinating these activities
with planning for an eventual public conference. Currently such meetings are being
scheduled in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, and possibly others.
Several priorities exist for the immediate future. The coordinating committee will
continue to expand its work of publicizing the value and use of historians and of
promoting historical activities. Efforts are already under way to cooperate with
editors of trade, public, and association journals to this end.
Additionally, resource groups and state committees have taken steps to improve
their ability to inform those in their various communities about the work of historians
through seminars and public meetings. We need to encourage the growth of state and
regional organizations of historians.Another need is to help provide history departments with the information they
must have in order to construct new programs that will prepare students for careers in
public history, preservation, and related fields. Better ways must be found to bring
together historians who have had experience in these areas with those who will be
training the historians of the future. Finally, the National Coordinating Committee
hopes to encourage its members to offer historians practicing outside the university a
wider involvement in their organizations.Nothing gives me more pleasure than thanking the many members who have
helped me throughout the year to deal with the affairs of the association. Without
your generous contributions of advice, time, and personal interest and involvement,
the scope and quality of association activities would be much more limited than it is.
and my own sense of accomplishment would be much reduced. To the officers of the
association, to the numerous committees, to the editor and his staff, to the Board of
Trustees, and particularly to the staff in the Washington office I owe special thanks.
July 15, 1978 Mack Thompson, ExecutweDirector
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REPORT OF THE EDITORAMERICAN HISTORICAL REViEW
“The only thing wrong with the Al-fR,” a colleague told me when I assumed theeditorship, “is that few people ever read it. The scholarship displayed in its pages,” hecontinued, “is generally impeccable—solid articles well researched, precisely expressed, superbly edited, but usually meaningful only to the few who happen to beresearchers in the same field.” Actually, my friend’s remarks are a commentary onthe profession as much as on the Review. With a few exceptions. historians havebecome increasingly specialized. The result has been a steady multiplication ofmonographic studies, which have greatly increased what is known about the past butmade it increasingly difficult for anyone to master and synthesize the whole. Thelament is old: we seem to know more and more about less and less. Do historians careabout history as such or only about the areas of their research? Does the historian ofthe U.S. care about what a historian of Europe writes or vice versa? Does either careabout Africa, Asia, or Latin America? Do social historians of the “new” genre careabout “old-fashioned” political and intellectual history? Is quantitative history toremain a closed book to historians who in their formative years fled from the terrors ofmathematics and the physical sciences?
These questions bother the editors of the Review particularly, because we arecompelled to address the entire profession. Whenever we consider an article forpublication we must ask: How large a segment of the profession will it reach? Merelythose interested in Indian slavery at Engenho Sergipe or those also concerned with theeconomics of slavery as an institution? Those only interested in Weimar and Sovieteugenics or those concerned as well with problems of scientific truth and value-freejudgments in all fields of knowledge? Editors of the AHR have always had to Testlewith these questions—far more than the editors of the specialized journals. Like ourpredecessors, the present editors have solicited articles of wide scope and far-reachingimplications. But we have also attempted to heighten the impact and increase readerinterest by publishing in a few issues articles that have some thematic relationship toone another. InJune 1977 we devoted an entire issue to the U.S. bicentennial—threeessays by eminent historians and comments by others. This began a series of theme-centered issues which was continued in December 1977 with an issue on “Russia andthe West,” containing three essays in comparative history. The February 1978 issuewas devoted to Latin American history in honor of the presidency of Charles Gibson—a practice that will be continued in future years. The June and October 1978issues also have a somewhat homogeneous character. We will continue to publishheterogeneous issues in the old format (October 1977 and April 1978 are examples).In general, we expect to make the contents of the AHR less predictable than they usedto be. We would like to make the reading of history per se popular once more.
Another device to that end is the new feature, AHR forum, which began in theApril 1978 issue. Under this rubric will appear articles of special, particularlycontroversial character. In the April Forum appeared new revelations on the “Rosenberg case” written by an archivist for the Department of Energy, who had access tothe files of the Atomic Energy Commission, The essay, which built upon MichaelParrish’s examination of the judicial handling of the case in our October 1977 issue,was published close to the 25th anniversary of the executions of Julius and EthelRosenberg and became the subject of a front page, lead article in the Chicago SunTimes (republished later by the Indianapolis Star and Washington Post). The wire services(AP, UPI, and Hearst) picked up the scent and you may have seen reference to theAfIR article in your local newspapers. In June 1978 the forum contained a controversial article on U.S. imperialism followed by responses by two historians of
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contrary viewpoints and the author’s rebuttal. Similar articles for future issues are
now in the process of development and publication. Controversy may be hard on
historians, but it is good for history.Doris Goldstein’s “J. B. Bury’s Philosophy of History: A Reappraisal,” published
in the October 1977 issue, received the 1978 prize of the Berkshire Conference of
Women Historians for the best article published in 1977 by a woman historian.
“Professor Goldstein’s article,” in the words of the Award Committee, “exemplifies
the finest tradition of intellectual history in its elucidation of the complexity of Bury’s
ideas. The Review is to be congratulated for having published it.” Another top
contender for the award, according to the committee, was Lois Schwoerer’s “Propa
ganda in the Revolution of 1688—89,” published in the same issue.
A number of personnel changes have occurred during the last year. In January
Associate Professor Paul Lucas of Indiana University joined the staff as Associate
Editor. A graduate of Simpson College in Iowa (BA, 1962) and of the University of
Minnesota (PhD, 1970), Professor Lucas is an authority on U.S. colonial history. His
Vattey of Discord: church and Society along the Connecticut River, 1636—1725, published in
1976, has been described as an important revision of earlier views about social
stability and the durability of Puritan piety during the colonial period. Articles and
reviews by Professor Lucas have appeared in J4it1iam and A’Iary Quarterty, Journal of
American History, Journal of Economic History, Catholic Historical Review, and other pub
lications. His current research is on the impact of anti-Catholicism on the early
colonies, on the institutional and intellectual development of Anglo-America. and on
the creation of a revolutionary ideology. Professor Lucas has held a Woodrow Wilson
fellowship, an NDEA fellowship, and an American Council of Learned Societies
fellowship. As Associate Editor, Professor Lucas will assume primary responsibility
for book reviews but will also participate in the evaluation and editing of manuscripts
in U.S. history.Assistant Editor Gail Malmgreen has left the Review to become Coordinating
Editor of l’ictorian Studies. Her replacement is Nelson Lankford. An honor graduate of
the University of Richmond (BA, 1970) and Indiana University (MA, 1972 and PhD,
1976), Lankford has held a Woodrow Wilson (1970—71) and James Woodburn
fellowship (1970—71). His specialty is British history in the nineteenth century. He
has previously acted as coordinator for the Indiana University—Historic New Har
mony Institute and as researcher for the Indiana State Legislative History Project.
One of the purposes incidental to the establishment of the Review on a university
campus was educational—the training of graduate students through practical experi
ence in editorial work. Last year Editorial Assistant Ann Higginbotham left the
Review to become Managing Editor of Victorian Studies. In August Editorial Assistant
Kenneth Stevens will leave the Review to become Assistant Editor of The Diplomatic
Papers of Daniel Webster, published at Dartmouth College. New faces at the Review are
our secretary Susan Clark Miller (AB and MA, Middlebury College) and Editorial
Assistant Mary Jo Wagner, candidate for the PhD in U.S. history at Indiana Univer
sity. Miss Wagner has assumed responsibility for compiling the annual index.
Three members of the Board of Editors completed their three-year terms at the
end of 1977: Professors Philip Kuhn of the University of Chicago, Dewey Grantham of
Vanderbilt University and Richard Graham of the University of Texas. At its meeting
on December 27, 1977, the AHA Council approved the appointment to the board of
Professors Dauril Alden of the University of Washington, Philip Curtin of The Johns
Hopkins University, Eugene Genovese of the University of Rochester, and Marius
Jansen of Princeton University. These appointments will expand the Board of Editors
from nine to ten members. Professor Curtin will be the first member of the board in
the field of African history.Between July 1, 1977 and June 30, 1978 the Review received 183 manuscripts and
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published twenty. The number of submissions is low for a historical journal. for ourauthors this has a bright side: the ratio of acceptances is much higher than for othersimilar publications, and the possibility of getting published in the Review is correspondingly greater. At this writing the editors are still seeking good articles for 1979—80. We are particularly interested in manuscripts reflective of the interests of President-elect John Hope Franklin for the February 1980 issue. The lead time betweenacceptance and publication of an article is now nine months to one year.
During the first half of 1978 a number of calamities affected the operations of theReview. A shortage of coal owing to the miners’ strike forced Indiana University toclose during most of March, The staff of the Review continued to operate in unheatedrooms and without essential university services. Two sets of proofs also disappeared inthe U.S. mails. Special delivery letters have taken as long as eight days to arrive andfirst class letters have taken as long as six months. These natural and unnaturaldisasters contributed to delays in the publication of the December, February, April.and June issues.
July 15, 1978 Otto Pflanze, Editor
110
REPORT OF THE CONTROLLER
FOR THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1978
The total assets of the American Historical Association on June 30, 1978, amounted
to $1,329,711 as compared to $1,246,856 in 1977. This amount is the sum of the three
major funds:a) General fund—cash, temporary and permanent investments (the use of which
for the purposes of the association is controlled by a resolution of the Council
in 1960 as amended in 1975), $413,729.
b) Special Funds and Grants—temporary and permanent investments, restricted as
to the use of income and grants, $768,201.
c) Plant Fund—property and equipment, less depreciation, $147,781.
Permanent investments included in the General fund and Special funds and
Grants are carried at book value. Land and buildings of the association are carried at
cost less depreciation. For further details concerning the aforementioned funds and
income and expense statements for Fiscal year ending 30 June 1978, your attention is
directed to the auditor’s report as contained herein. All permanent investments are in
the custody of the Fiduciary Trust Company of New York, under the direction of the
association’s hoard of trustees. The fiduciary Trust Company’s report is filed at the
association’s office and is available for inspection by interested members.
The budget for 1977-78 as adopted by the Council projected a deficit of $28,571.
Total operations for the Fiscal year ended with a modest surplus of $7,097. The
increase in revenue over the preceding year of $10,533 was attributable to the
Institutional Services Program (dues), administrative fees and royalties on Writings on
American History, 7963-73. Increase in revenue over the preceding year was in part offset
by the decrease in advertising revenue. Non-operating revenue, net of federal income
tax liability, amounted to $17,822.
Operating expenses amounted to $792,428, a reduction from the projected budget
of $9,798 or 1%. Reduction of operating expenses occurred principally in the areas of
equipment rental and maintenance, publication printing and distribution, legal fees
and other controllable expense items. Slight increases in plant fund assets, fringe
benefits and travel and related meeting expense tended to reduce the overall savings
realized through reduction of the aforementioned expense items. Operating expenses
increased over the prior year by $7,776 or 1%.
Main Lafrentz & Co., certified public accountants’ audit report and supple
mentary information detail are on file and available for inspection at the association’s
office.
August 9, 1978 James H. Leatherwood, Gontroller
111
Main Lafrentz & Co. 1050 SEVENTEENTH STREET NW,certified public accountants WASHINGTON D C 20036202 4663010McLlntock MaIn Lafrentz
International
The CouncilAmerican Historical Association
We have examined the statement of assets and liabilities arising fromcash transactions of the American Historical Association as of June 30, 1976and 1977, and the related statements of revenue and expenses and changes in fundbalances for the years then ended. Our examinations were made in accordance withgenerally accepted auditing standards and, accordingly, included such tests ofthe accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances.
The Association’s policy is to prepare its financial statements on thebasis of cash receipts and disbursements, except for the recognition of depreciation on the Plant Fund’s depreciable assets; consequently, certain revenue andthe related assets are recognized when received rather than when earned, andcertain expenses are recognized when paid rather than when the obligation isincurred. Accordingly, the accompanying financial statements are not intendedto present financial position, results of operations and fund balance changesin conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
In our opinion, such financial statements present fairly the assetsand liabilities arising from cash transactions, and the recognition of depreciation, of the American Historical Association as of June 30, 1978 and 1977. andthe revenue collected, expenses paid, and changes in fund balances, on the basisof accounting previously described, which basis has been consistently applied.
August 4, 1978
112
A5RI&4il HISTORICAL ASSOCIATSOS
STATS5RT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
(AEEOEES FEND CASH TRANSACTIONS)
SENt 30, 1978 AIm 1977
ASSETS1970 1977
Cetera I Fund
Cash$ 158,574 $ 103,924
EeFasits2,425 2,425
Fernenrol Snvertmeutn, regular arereet,
at nest et FertSeEFarEee (earker value
5301,425 and 5357,5805303,230 294,500
ToteS Severe S Fund 412,729
IFerCat Funds and Ceestu
Ccvi,303,501 234,049
Tenurrery Euveerreers, at reur (marker
value 559,125 and 560,506)59,920 59,992
F ereereut Evernrneers, reRuler arreuet,
at rest ef uartirlFertus (market
value $290,355 cud $305,435)294,433 295,671
Frruaueu I Oneerrnesru, Mullen rn errruu I,
at rest (eurket relue 5128,261 end 5130,190) )Cj7 _tli5,69
Turd SFerCel Funds end Crentu 269,201 700,411
Fleer Fund
FruFrrty, Fleer end equiFeest, at rust 258,412 249,096
Arreneleted deFrrrEsrirn110,631 103,508
Terel Fleet Fred Lu? 701 145, 588
$j )
LIABILITIES 1978 1977
Ceserul FundCsrenttted FeyrrIt tuner end
ether uithhrldings$ 1,251 $ 1,155
Truest deprsirr006 587
Other291
2,05? 2,023
Fred belerrr dJLZ 2,fl4
Corel Cruere 1 Fend413,721 400,657
bend Frrdr cud Crentu
Fred Aelerrer‘68,201 700,411
Turd syrriel Funds end Crests 76)2i 7flçjI
Fleet Fred
F,,nd balanre _JsLfl j) 565
Trtet Fleet Fend147,761 jasoo
$4
These Cdeaenial statements aed arreeFarytug surer
are sebjert to the ererrutents’ rFlelrn.
113
AMERICAN MISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
STATEMENT OF REVENUE AND EXPENSES(ARISING FROM CASH TRANSACTIONS)
GENERAL FUND
YEARS ENDED J1JNE 30, 1978 AND 1977
1978 1977Operating revenue
Dues$353,444 $340,605Subscriptions to American Nistorical Review 154,952 159969Advertising
89,912 109,911Sales5,796 48,656Royalties and reprint fees40,396 14,249Registration fees24,409 39,579Rentals46,090 48,195Administrative fees20,597 5,704Other6,109 4,302
781,703 771,170Operating expenses
Salaries291,031 277819Employee benefits48,166 43,041Nouse operating expenses16,373 12,754Office supplies and expense68,252 63,024Equipment rentals and maintenance 30,066 25,131Purchases of Plant Fund assets9,316 1,400Publication printing and distribution 234,025 285,633Travel and related meeting expenses 73,294 51,417General insurance3,276 2,738Audit and legal fees9,500 12,692Dues and subscriptions3,660 3,008Executive Director Contingency Fund 656 3,121Other
,8l3 2,874
792,428 784,652Excess of operating expenses over
operating revenue10,725
Non-operating revenue (expense)Investment income (net of management fees) 22,698 30,251Gain on security sales
207 1,011Income taxes(4,883) (7,680)
17,822 23,582Excess of revenue over expenses
These financial atatements and accompanying notesare subject to the accountants’ opinion.
114
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AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
JUNE 30, 1978 AND 1977
SUMMARY OF ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Fund accounting - The Association records its transactions in threeseparate, self-balancing funds. Each fund reflects only those transactionsapplicable to its designated functional area.
General Fund - Reflects transactions related to the generaloperations of the Association.
Special Fundsand Grants - Reflects transactions under various prize funds
and special projects that are funded by contri—- butions and grants (which are restricted as to
use by the donor) and revenue generated by fundactivities and investments.
Plant Fund - Reflects transactions relating to the property,plant and equipment owned by the Association,which is purchased through transfers from theGeneral Fund and charged to operations by thatFund in the year of acquisition.
Marketable securities - Marketable securities, consisting of permanentinvestments in the Matteson Account and temporary investments, are carried atcost. Permanent investments in the Regular Account are carried at the participants’ Cost of participation in such investments.
Property, plant and equipment - Property, plant and equipment arecarried at cost, with depreciation being computed on the straight-line method.When assets are disposed of, the cost and related accumulated depreciation areremoved from the accounts, and any remaining net book value is deducted from thePlant Fund balance.
Income tax - The Association is exempt from Federal income tax underSection 50l(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Income from publication advertising and mailing list sales are subject to taxation as unrelated businessincome.
DEPRECIATION
Depreciation on Plant Fund assets, based on the rates shown below,was:
1978 1977 Rates
Buildings $4,918 $4,918 2—1/2 to 4
Furniture and equipment lOl
$7,123 $
(Continued)
116
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEIENTS
(Continued)
RETIREMENT PLAN
Eligible employees are covered by a contributory retirement plan
which is funded through the purchase of individual annuity contracts from the
Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association. The Association follows the prac—
tice of recording as expense the total premiums paid on such contracts in each
fiscal year. The net charges against revenue on account of retirement insurance
premiums for the years ended June 30, 1978 and 1977 amounted to $16,205 and
$15,641, respectively,
117
ACCOUNTANTS’ OPINION ON SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Our examinations of the basic financial statements presented inthe preceding section of this report were made primarily to form an opinionon such financial statements taken as a whole, Supplementary informationcontained in the following pages, is not considered essential for tne fairpresentation of the assets and liabilities or revenue, expenses and changesin fund balances (arising from cash transacticns) of the Association, However, the following data were subjected to the audit procedures applied inthe examination of the basic financial statements and, in our opinion, arefairly stated in all material respects in relation tc the basic financialstatements taken as a whole.
CER1IfIEO PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
Washington, D. C.August 4, 1978
118
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AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATiON
REVENUE AND EXPENSES (ARISING FRON CASH TRANSACTIONS)
COMPARED WITH BUDGET - GENERAL FUND
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1978
Over or(Under)
Act ual Budgp
Operating revenue
Dues $353,44 5331,795 $21,649
Subscriptions to American Historical
Review 154,952 150,000 4,952
Advertising 89,912 100,000 (10,088)
Sales45,794 52,000 (6,206)
Royalties and reprint fees 40,396 17,000 23,396
Registration fees 24,409 33,800 (9391)
Rentals 46,090 4556O 530
Administrative fees 20,597 15,500 5,097
Other JJ2781,703 751,635
Operating expensesSalaries 291,031 291,974 (943)
Employee benefits 48,166 46702 1,464
House operating expenses 16,373 15,625 748
Office supplies and expense 68,232 65,750 2,502
Equipment rentals and maintenance 30,066 36,150 (6,084)
Purchase of Plant Fund assets 9,316 9,316
Publication printing and distribution 234,025 253,100 (19,075)
Travel and related meeting expenses 73,294 65,525 7,769
General insurance 3276 3,276
Audit and legal fees 9,500 12,000 (2,500)
Dues and subscriptions 3,660 3,700 (40)
Executive Director Contingency Fund 656 5,000 (4,344)
Other 4,813 6,700 j1887)
792,428 8O2,,j (i,i)Excess of operating revenue over
operating expenses (operating expenses
over operating revenue) (10,725) ,(50,571) 39,846
Non-operating revenue (expenses)
Investment income (net of management fee) 22,498 22,000 498
Gain on security sales 207 207
Income taxes (4,883)
_______
j883)
22,000 (178)
Excess of revenue over, expenses (expenses
over revenue) $ 7.097 $,Zl) $8
121
AMERICAN HiSTORICAL ASSOCIATION
I NVRS tiIENIS
FIDUCIARY TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK REGOLAR ACCOCNI
JUNE 30, 1978
Face Valueor Numler Adjusted Mark,-tof Shares Go-’
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
Twelve Federal Land Banks B:nds$ 14,000 6,801/, due 10/19/78 5 13996 5 13,943
25,000 7.1011, due 1/22/79 29,039 21 81425,000 United States Treasury Note 7,8751/,
_______
due 11/15/82 25 187 21570
$64,000 6c222 63,35;
CORPORATE BONDS
American Telephone and Telegraph CompanyDebentures
$ 25,000 4—3/81/, due 4/1/85 23815 1996940,000 5-5/51/, due 8/1/95 38 922 2930025,000 General Motors Acceptance CornorationDebentures, 48751/, due 13I8l 17 841 i8 688
50,000 Idaho Power Company. Regular 1st l!orrpage.6—1/81/, due 10/1/96 48 160 3568748,000 Sears-Roebuck & Company, Sinking fondDebentures, 8-3/811, due 10/1/95 48484 47 640
25,000 Southern Bell Telephone and TelegraphCompany, Debentures, 61/. due 2004 2s 173 1 56325,000 Standard Oil Company of Caiifrnia. SinksngFund Debentures, 4-3/811, due 7/1/83 2 139 20 8i10,000 Virginia Railway Company, 1st Lien andRefunding Mortgage Series B. 31/due 5/1/95 9 541 7 550
_______
235 975 i97l78
(Conta nued)
122
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
INVESTMENTS
FIDUCIARY TRUST COMPANY OF NEW lORE REGULAR ACCOUNT
(Continued)
JUNE 30, 1978
Face Valueor Number
Adjusted Market
of Shares pgigj,on Va1g
COMMON STOCRS
421 American Telephone and Telegraph Company $ 24,597 $ 25,207
300 Caterpillar Tractor Co 16,613 16,763
900 Commonwealth Edison Company 2553O 24,300
1,000 Duke Power Co. 20,575 19,875
550 Exxon Corporation 8408 24,131
400 General Motors Corporation 22847 23,750
750 N. J. Heinz Co. 22,555 29,437
350 Interco, Inc. 14,675 15,050
100 International Business Machines 16,836 25,725
600 Lincoln National Corp. (md,) 20,280 24,750
400 Rnight-Ridder Newspaper 13,486 17,750
450 Mobil Corporation 31,777 27,788
600 PepsiCo, Inc. 14,706 17,850
500 Phillips Petroleum 14,389 16,062
300 Stauffer Chemical 1i,433 12,038
225 Union Camp Corporation
Total securities 596,410 590,517
Uninvested cash
Total investments $70
123
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIAIION
FIDUCIARY TRUST COMPANY Of NEW YORK - REGULAR ACCOUNT
PARTICIPATING FUNDS
JUNE 3O 1978
Percentage Marketioon Value
Special funds and grantsGeorge Louis Beer Prize Fund l.229 $ 8,+O9 S 8,420Albert J Beveridge Memorial Fund 23.6520 141268 139,965Albert Corey Prize Fund L4265 8:678 8,442John H. Dunning Prize Fund L0400 6,320 6,154Endowment Fund 9.5586 58.229 56.565John K. Fairbank Prize Fund L3238 7823 7,834Clarence N. Haring Prize Fund .4326 2,556 2560J. Franklin Jameson Fund .7486 4,425 4,430Littleton-Griswold Fund 8,1773 48.897 48 391Howard R. Marraro Prize Fund 975 6,025 5.785Robert L. Schuyler Prize Fund 1017 601 602Andrew D, White Fund .2032 1,,202 1202
490647 293433 290350
General Fund 50.9353 303230 30Q
100 0000 S597 663 9591.770
124
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
INVESTMENTS
FIDUCIARY TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORE - DAVID M. SLATTESON FUND
JUNE 30, 1978
face Valueor Number
Market
of SharesCoal Value
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
$ 3,000 Twelve Federal Land Banks Bonds,
______
6.8OT, due 10/19/78 S 2,999 $ 2,988
CORPORATE BONDS
$20,000 General Foods, Sinking Fund Debentures,
8-7/84, due 7/1/90 20,553 20,225
24,000 Shell Oil Company, Sinking Fund Debentures,
______
8.50%, due 9/1/2000 24,990 23,340
43,565
COMMON STOCKS
200 American Telephone and Telegraph Company 5,020 11,975
600 Central & South West Corporation 12,569 c,823
325 Duke Power Co. 6,690 6,459
236 Exxon Corporation 2,273 10,355
300 florida Power Corporation 6,750 9,037
275 Philip Morris, Inc. 14,730 18,219
450 Squibb Corporation 13,023 15,638
61,055 D8
Total securities 109,597 128,061
Uninvested cash 700 700
Total investments $L4cL42J 5128.7.61
I 25
American Historical Association
Awards and Prizes for 1979
Herbert Baxter Adams Price. The Adams Prize is awarded annuallyand in 1979 will be for an author’s first substantial book dealing with19th and 20th century European history. The prize carries a cashaward of S300.
George Louis Beer Pri.e. The Beer Prize is awarded annually for thebest work on European international history since 1895, and carriesa cash award of $300.
Albert F. Beceridge Award. The Beveridge Award is awarded annuallyfor the best book in English on American history (history of theUnited States, Canada, and Latin America), and carries a cashaward of $1000.
Atexs de Tocquezntie Price. Commencing in 1979, this prize will beawarded every five years for the best work in U.S. history publishedoutside the United States by a foreign scholar in any language.
John A. Fairbank frie in East Asian History. ThIs prize was establishedin 1968 by friends of,John K. Fairbank and is awarded in the odd-numbered years for an outstanding book in the history of Chinaproper, Vietnam, Chinese Central Asia, Mongolia, Korea, or Japan,since the year 1800. The prize carries a cash value of $500,
Leo Gershoy Award. This prize, recently established by a gift fromMrs. Ida Gershov in memory of her late husband, is awarded in theodd-numbered years to the author of the most outstanding work inEnglish on any aspect of the field of 17th and 18th century Europeanhistory. The award carries a cash amount of 81000.
Howard I?. Marraro Prcce. The Marraro Prize of $500 is awardedannually for the best work on any epoch of Italian cultural history ofItalian-American relations.
Further details may’ be obtained from the office of the executivedirector, 400 A Street SE., Washington, D.C. 20003.
127
INDEX OF ADVERTISERS
ABC-Cljo Press 4th Cover New York University Press 181
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Cambridge University Press 40—144 Oxford University Press 149—159
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Cornell University Press 184, 2d cover Princeton University Press 134—137
Croom Helm (Publisher) 214 Random House 146—148
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Greenwood Press 186—189 Peter Smith Publisher, Inc. 210
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New Viewpoints 180 Vale University Press 170, 171
128
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TThe Great RepublicA History of the AmericanPeop’eBernard Bailyn, Harvard University;David Brion Davis, Yale University;David Herbert Donald, HarvardUniversity; John L. Thomas, BrownUniversity; Robert H. Wiebe, Northwestern University; Gordon S.Wood, Brown UniversityStudent Guide, Test File, Instructors Manual Available.1977 1270 total text pages
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ATLAST.The one-volume Samuel Pepys in a
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Professor Chadwick’s study illuminates the development of liberal attitudeswithin the Roman Catholic Church, and reveals much of the personalities andmotives of such archivists as Marini and Theiner, and historians as Acton andStevenson. $13.95
THE PRINTING PRESS AS AN AGENT OF CHANGE
This wide-ranging survey, based on a massve review of relevant literature, isthe first full-scale historical treatment of the impact of printing and its importance as an agent of change,
* Volume 1 $45.00 Volume 2 $36.00 Set $75.00
Prices are tentative and subject to change
Cambridge Books are on exhibit at Booths 57 & 52
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European History
CATHOLICISM AND HISTORYThe Opening of the Vatican Archives
OWEN CHADWICK
Two VolumesELIZABETH EISENSTEIN
I 43
THE HISTORICAL JOURNALEditor: C. M. Andrew, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge
A quarterly journal concerned mainly with the period from the fifteenth centuryto the present day. Each issue contains eight or nine original articles, as wellas review articles, short communications and book reviews. Subscription toVolume 21 (1978): individuals $27.50, institutions $50.00.
THE JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORYEditors: David Birmingham, A. G. Hopkins, R. C. C. Law, and A. D. Roberts
Publishes articles, comments and reviews ranging very widely over the Africanpast from the Late Stone Age to the present. Quarterly. Subscription to Volume19 (1978): individuals $19.50, institutions $36.50.
International Journal of Middle East Studies
Journal of American Studies
Journal of Latin American Studies
The Journal of Modern African Studies
Modern Asian Studies
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JOURNALSFROM CAMBRIDGE
COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN SOCIETY AND HISTORYEditors: Raymond Grew, University of Michigan, andEric R. Wolf, City University of New York
A truly international forum of social analysis, which publishes articles, bookreviews and notes by authors from throughout the world in many disciplines—history, sociology, anthropology, political science, law, economics and thehumanities. Quarterly. Subscription to Volume 20 (1978): individuals $20.00,institutions $39.50.
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HistoryMakersat Booth 27AMERICAN VOICESA Historical ReaderRobert Marcus / David BurnerHighly readable literary selections provide a coherent survey of major
historical topics. Two volumes: August 1978, 400 pages each, ifius., paper
back, approx. $6.95 each, Instructor’s Manual
THE DEMOCRATIC EXPERIENCEA Short American HistoryFourth EditionCarl N. Degler et aLTwo volumes: September 1978, 352 & 416 pages, illus., paperback, approx.
$7.95 each Single volume: 1977, 688 pages, illus., paperback $10.50 IInstructors Manual
CIVILIZATION PAST ANT) PRESENTFifth Single-Volume EditionT, Walter Wailbank et aL1978, 958 pages, illus,, hardbound $15.95, Instructor’s Manual /
Two-volume and three-book editions, Instructor’s Manual and tests, and
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CIVILIZATION AN]) SOCIETY IN THE WESTCarolly Erickson1978, 558 pages, illus,, paperback $10.95, Instructor’s Manualand tests
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we wish to thank theseeminent scholars for
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AMERICAN HISTORY: A SurveyFifth Edition
Richard N. Current, University of North Carolina, Greensboro; T. HarryWilliams, Louisiana State University: and Frank freidel, Harvard UniversityAlfred A. Knopf/7979/880 pages hardbound/Order Codes: 32238, 32377(l,M.)/Two-volc,me paperback format/Vol. I (to 1877), 448 pages/OrderCodes: 32239, 32282 tS.G.)/Vol. (I (from 7865), 464 pages/Order Codes:32240, 32282 (SC.)
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DYNAMICS Of ASCENT: A History of the American Economy
Second Edition
W. Elliot Brownlee, University of California at Santa Barbara
Random House/January 1979/400 pages hardbound/Order Code: 32798
THE CULTURAL PATTERNS IN AMERICAN POLITICS
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HISTORY OF THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT
Frederkk Merk
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THE WESTERN EXPERIENCESecond Edition
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A HISTORY OF AFRICA
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Alfred A. l<nopf congratulates John Hope Franklin on his electionas President of the American Historical Association.Among his many distinguished contributions, John Hope Franklinis the author of From Slavery to Freedom: A History of NegroAmericans, which has been recognized as the definttive text forthe past thirty years.Professor Franklin is also past president of the United Chaptersof Phi Beta Kappa, The Southern Historical Associaton, and theOrganization of American Hstorians. He is the John MatthewsManly Distinguished Service Professor of History at the Universityof Chicago.
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“A history of Populism that will be the new standardagainst which all future efforts must be measured.”
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THE POPULiST MOMENTA Short History of the Agrarian Revoh in America
Lawrence Goodwyn, Duke Universits
Now the hook that Tin’ ,Nca’’jirkcr called “a hrst-rate job” and Tin’ .‘C’o’Thrk ‘hnjcs
Book Rez’u’o’ hailed as “a very important hook” is available in a condensedversion, Concerned with the decline of freedom in America, Coodwyn overturns three generations of historical literature on Populism to cast a radicallynen light on vhat he calls the undemocratic “proyressh’e society” of twentiethcentury America 320 pp. $1393 November, 1976)
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Oxford PaperbacksGROWING OLD IN AMERICADAVID HACKETT FISCHER, BrandeisUniversity1977 226 pp.; plates Galaxy Book 532(1978) 83.50
KARL MARXHis Life and EnvironmentFourth EditionISAIAH BERLIN, All Souls College,University of Oxford1978 320 pp. Galaxy Book 2553,95
THE AMERICANJUDICIAL TRADITIONProfiles of Leading AmericanJudgesG. EDWARD WHITE1976 461 pp. Galaxy Book 534 (1978)$4.95
UNEQUAL JUSTICELawyers and Social Change inModern AmericaJEROLD S. AUERBACH, Wellesley college1976 416 pp. Galaxy Book 490(1977)53.95
LAWYER’S LAWYERThe Life of John W. DavisWILLIAM H. HARBAUGH, University of‘drginia1973 616 pp.; plates Galaxy Book 526 (1978)86.95
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WRITERS ON THE LEFTDANIEL AARON, Harvard University1961 480 pp. Galaxy Book 512(1977)$5.95
THE INTELLECTUALVERSUS THE CITYFrom Thomas Jefferson toFrank Lloyd WrightMORTON WHITE, Institute for AdvancedStudy, Princeton; and LUCIA WHITE1962 288 pp. Galaxy Book 519(1977)53.95
THE DEMOCRATSThe Years After FDRHERBERT S. PARMET, QueensboroughCommunity College, City Universityof New York3976 384 pp.; 16 pp. of photosGalaxy Book 522 $4.95
DEEP’N AS IT COMEThe 1927 MississippiRiver FloodPETE DANIEL, University of Tennessee,Knoxville1977 174 pp.; 148 photos Galaxy Book 480$5.95
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BLACK CULTURE ANDBLACK CONSCIOUSNESSAfro-American Folk Thought fromSlavery to FreedomLAWRENCE W. LEVINE, University ofCalifornia, Berkeley1977 542 pp. Galaxy Book 530(1978)
54 95
WOMEN AND EQUALITYChanging Patterns inAmencan CultureWILLIAM HENRY CHAFE, Duke University
1977 224 pp. Galaxy Book 531 (1978)52.95
THE AMERICAN WOMANHer Changing Social, Economic,and Political Roles, 19201970WILLIAM HENRY CHAFE
1972 386 pp. Galaxy Book 406(1974)5
ADAMS AND JEFFERSONA Revolutionary DialogueMERRILL 0. PETERSON, University of
Virginia1976 160 pp. Galaxy Book 533 (1978) 52.95
THOMAS JEFFERSON ANDTHE NEW NATIONA BiographyMERRILL 0, PETERSON1970 1090 pp.; plates Galaxy Book 436(1975) 57.95
THIS SPECIESOF PROPERTYSlave Life and Culturein the Old SouthLESLIE HOWARD OWENS, University ofMichigan, Ann Arbor1976 336 pp. Galaxy Book 517(1977)$3.95
STRAIN OF VIOLENCEHistorical Studies of AmericanViolence and VigilantismRICHARD MAXWELL BROWN, College of
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1975 414 pp. Galaxy Book 513(1977)
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THE WHITE MAN’S BURDENHistorical Origins ofRacism in the United StatesWINTHROP 0. JORDAN, University of
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SCOUSBOROA Tragedy of the American SouthDAN T. CARTER, University of Maryland
1969 448 pp.; 16 pp. of photosGalaxy Book 363 (1971) 54.95
THE STRANGE CAREEROF JIM CROWThird Revised EditionC. VANN WOODWARD, Yale University
1974 256 pp. Galaxy Bc,ok 6 52.95
REHEARSAL FORRECONSTRU CTI ONThe Port Royal ExperimentWILLIE LEE ROSE, The lohns HopkinsUniversity; with an introduction by C. VANNWOODWARD, Yale University
1964 456 pp.; 1% illus. Galaxy Book 476(1976) $4.95
AMERICAN HEROINEThe Life and Legend ofJane AddamsALLEN F. DAVIS, Temple University
1973 360 pp. Galaxy Book 427(1975)53.95
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ALLIES OF A KINDThe United States, Britain, and the War Against Japan 1941-1943CHRISTOPHER THORNE1Q75 500 pp.; map’ 529.50
FROM THE DREADNOUGHT TO SCAPA FLOW, INJutland and After, May 1916-December 1916, Second Edition,Revised and EnlargedARTHUR MARDER, Un r’itv of C ifornU Irvino1Q78 384 op.; 5 pp. plioos; lb c’Hr hrt; 5 dUgrm 522.50
MUSSOLINI AND THE JEWSGerman-Italian Relations and the )eish Question in Italy, 19221tJ43MEIR MICHAELISDccumhrr I°78 328 pp. 536.00
EMPIRE TO WELFARE STATEEnglish History, 1906-1976, Second EditionT,O, LLOYD, U/n t U it0nl HCtni, tli M )dnrn lUrid)Ducni0ri 1Q78 332 pp.; 8 mp cOth 528.50 pipor 512.00
THE ORIGINS OF THE SECOND REPUBLIC IN SPAINSH[.OMO BEN—AMI. ni Hotoo ‘U1978 3tU pp. 522,0(1
OUT OF THE SHADOWSCanada in the Second World WarW.A.B. DOUGLAS nd BRERETON GREENHOUS977 23o pp.
THE CHINA STATIONWar and Diplomacy, 1830-1860GERALD S. GRAHAMDononibor U7i4 471 up.; S mop- 536.00
THE BEGINNING OF THE GREAT GAMEIN ASIA, 18281834EDWARD INGRAM1Q78 28X pp mop.
THE VOICE OF THE PASTOral HistoryPAUL THOMPSON1Q76 22 pp. cllh SI0.°3 poprr 55.30
A PARTING OF WAYSGovernment and the Educated Public in Russia, 1801-1833NICHOLAS V RIASANOVSKY, Unix nritv 9 Coliforndi, Burkrlcv977 33b pp.
TRADE WITHOUT RULERSPre-Colonial Economic Development in South-Eastern NigeriaDAVID NORTHRUP Bstdn ClUpu. (CUrl Stud’ ii Afn, (fob)Derumbur 976 272 pu.: 6 wt figs.; — mips 522.00
132
THE LOW COUNTRIES, 17801940E.H. KOSStY%ANN. (t.Afc1 !-ittt’n,93fa1’iii ti(fr’/k’)
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THE RESPONSE OF THE ROYAL ARMY TO THEFRENCH REVOLUTIONThe Role and Development of the Line Army, 1787-1793
SAMUEL E SCOTT, Wayne State University256 pp.
DEATH IN PARIS, 17951801The Records of the Basse-Geôle de a Seine, Vendémiaire Year IV-Fructidor Year X
RICHARD COBB978 144 pp. 512.00
THE POOR OF EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE,
7750-1789OLWEN H. HUFTON, Now available in paper.
1Q78 (cloth 974) 430 pp.; 8 plates paper $9.30
THE OLD EUROPEAN ORDER, 1660-1 800WI LLIAM DOYLE. Short Ox ford I iIstoru of tie’ Modem IA’rld)
978 460 pp.; 7 maps cloth $24.00 paper $12.00
THE RISE OF THE MEDICIFaction in Florence, 1420-1434
DALE KENT9715 380 pp.; frontis.; 2 tolders 536.00
THE SPANISH KINGDOMS, 1250-1516Volume II, 1410-1316: Castilian Hegemony
JN. HILLGARTH978 752 pp.
THE CHRONICLE OF BATTLE ABBEYEdited by ELEANOR SEARLE, University olCalitornia. Los Angeles
(Orfdi 4 ,Xiediez’a? lOts)February 1976 396 pp. 53b,Ot)
THE WANDERING THOUGHTS OF A DYING MANThe Life and Times of Haji Abdul Majid bin Zainuddin
Edited by WILLIAM R. ROFF, Columbia University
(Ox((t’d hi Asia Hotonci! Mt’iuiioa)978 88 pp. $19.95
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AMERICAN NEGRO SLAVERYA Modern Readerlined EditionEdited h’ ALLEN WEINSTEIN, Smith College, FRANK OTTO GATELL, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles; and DAVID SARASOHN, Reed Collee.The third edition ofthis acclaimed collection offers selections from the most important new titerature onslavery published in the last Si\ years. Thirteen readings, eight of them freshhchosen, and a fully updated hihhograph, make this an ideal single-volume introduction to the hitoriographv of sla er’c Among historians representOd are David B.Davis, Kenneth \l. Stampp, Stanley Elkins, Eugenc D, Genovcse, and Herbert C.Gutman.February 1n7Q 326 pp. paper 54. ‘O
BUENOS AIRESPlaza to Suburb, 1870—1910JAMES R, SCOBIE, Indiana Univcisity. A major contribution to the literature.One of the very best books on Aricntine social history and on urbanization toappear in recent years... a must for ans one interested in ‘how the city is built’”—Jon ninl of Soriat Histon11974 (paper 1978) 324 pp.; O phttos, 12 maps cloth $la.O5
H tables paper 54.00
THE CARIBBEANThe Genesis of a Fragmented NationalismFRANKLIN W KNIGHT, chris Hopkins L nis ersity. “For fifteen years I have anticipated that a scholar some day would is rite a successful and quality history of theCaribbean from the point of view of the Caribbean citizen himselt rather than fromthe great—pms er point of view. Franklin Knight is that scholar, and I/ic’ Caithbcioi isthat hook—Robert Carlyle Be er, College of William and Mary1978 320 pp. cloth Sl2.0 paper $4.00
A NEW HISTORY OF INDIASTANLEY WOLPERT, University of California, Los Angeles. “The writing is vivid,the causal e\planations are sound and imaginative, and the narrative floss ismaintained as in few other South Asian surve\ “—I/ic Anicricin HE for/cal Rz’u’’.“A dramatic as well as insgh tful account —I/ic Hish ry1977 448 pp.’ 10 maps cloth $12 00 paper $6.00
A HISTORY OF RUSSIAThird EditionNICHOLAS V. RIASANOVSKY, University of California, Berkeley ‘Scholarl’a readable, and handsomely produced this is the best general history of Russia inEnglish ss ritten he one of the most distinguished members of the profession.”—Paul .Avdch, Queens College, The City University of ess Sork. ‘The best available comprehensive hito0 of Russia in English .“ —George Kirchmann,Fordham University1977 782 pp.; 60 illus., 30 maps trade cdition $19.95
te\t edition Sfl.00
THE ECONOMICAND SOCIAL GROWTHOF EARLY GREECE, 800—500 B.C.CHESTER C. STARR, University of Michigan. “Professor Starr’s method is analytical
and innovative ‘\n important and challenging hook, one that will stimulate both
students and teachers of Greek histor”—T/u’ Histen l0achcr. ‘A major contribution
to the field. Thc’hest, and only, up-to-date treatment of this most important topic.”
—Michael M. Eisman, Temple University
1977 (paper, 1978) 3(11 pp.; 13 illus. cloth 512.30 paper 53.30
KARL MARX: Selected WritingsEdited by DAVID McCEI.EAN, University of Kent. “It is thoughttullv selected, the
translations are both readable and highly accurate, and tl7e coverage is generous vet
discriminating. It is a first-rate collection, probably the best of its kind.” —Sheldon
S. Wolin, Princeton University
1977 640 pp. cloth 512.00 paper 56.00
MARX’S INTERPRETATIONOF HISTORYMEl.VN RADER, Emeritus, University of Washington, Seattle. In an original and
provocative study, Melvin Rader argues that Marx used dialectical, causal, and
organic models in his theory of history, and further, that they are not incompatible,
as many of his interpreters claim. He finds an underlying consistency in Marx’s
complex vision of history and communicates this in an unusually lueid presenta
tion.January 1979 236 pp. cloth 58.00 paper 54.00
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NATIVES AND STRANGERSEthnic Groups and the Building of AmericaLEONARD DINNERSTEIN, University of Arizona; DAVID M. REIMERS \eo thrkUniversity; and ROGER L. NICHOLS, University of Arizona. A higHs readableaccount of the contributions of blacks Indians and religious and nationalminorities to America’s development, Nn[ivio aiid Stratie,i is distinguished h itsbroad coverage— from colonial times to thc present—and by its full inte9ration otminontv expenences into the mainstream ot American hitor; It emphasizesAmerica’s economic gron th and the role of minorities in that development.Januars 1979 332 pp.; 30 photos, maps clcth $1 1.95 paper 4.0O
AMERICAN VISTAS VoL I: 1607—1877Vol. II: 1877 to the PresentTh6’d EdttionEdited by LEONARD DINNERSTEIN, Enisersitv of Arizona, and KENNETH T.JACKSON, Columbia University. Thirty seven essays, to entv-erght ness to taisedition, explore a side range of fascinating themes in American histor — thePuritans and sex, historians’ changing sies,’ c,f slaser, the Eas, European Jewishmigration, the ness o oman of the to cnties, md the fifties era, to name hut a tessJanuary 197° YhI 1: 320 pp., paper 54.00 \bl. 11: 430 pp.. paper 54 -‘0
UNCERTAIN AMERICANSReadings in Ethnic HistoryEdited by LEONARD DINNERSTEIN, and FREDERIC COPLE JAHER, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign. “One of the best readers in ethnic studies I’ve seen.”—Nathan Glazer, Harvard University “Well-chosen, well-balanced selections is ithclear and useful inhcduchons.... Brings together in an accessible wa an excellentvariety of materials—Walter J Kelh; Chicago State L’niveritv1977 336 pp. paper 54,00
A CONCISE HISTORY OF THEAMERICAN REPUBLICSAMUEL ELIOT MORISON, HENRY STEELE COMMAGER, and WILLIAM F,LEUCHTENBURG. “The finest college text available The hook marvelously comhines accurate condensation of complex events and ideas is ith is riting that is apleasure to read from start to finish. 11 a student can enjos a textbook, this is themost likely candidate—Stanley Cohen University ot California Los Ange]eO,ic—eetiiiiic edition:1977 870 pp , 263 illus.; 30 maps; 3 tablesText Edition paper $12 00 Trade Edition, cloth 525 00Teti—s’olio,ie paper cdi this:Volume 1: To 38771977 428 pp.; 113 OHs.; 14 maps 8700Volume 2: Since 18651977 518 pp., 163 illus., 16 maps, 3 tables
156
THE COURSE OfMEXICANHISTORYMICHAEI C. MEYER, University ofArizona, Tutson a nO WIllIAM C.SHERMAN, Universit’ of Nebraska. inan engrossing narratie Tin C)ure afA4esi’ mi f1ictori sun. i’vs the countn. fromthe pre-Columbian period to the piesent, with a focus on social history. it skil—fully integrates analysis in an unusuallyreadable presentation, and dran s onboth classic sources and the most recent
scholarship. illustrated ith nearly 20informative photographs, painting,,charts, and maps, The LimOism 9 Mc. icmi,i
History offers the freshest and most balanced account non as ailable. It is enhanced by chapter bibliographies, a special Spanish-language bibliography, andfor ease ot reference, an appendix onMexican nilers and their dates. Forty-four chapters are arranged chronologi
calls’ under ten headings.
January’ 1979700 pp.; 250 photos, paintings
rharts and mapscloth SI6,Q paper 510.00
Contents
Part I Pre-C olumbian Mexico
Part Ii The Spanish Conquerors
Part III The Colony of Ness Spain
Part IV Reform and Re9ction: The Move to Independence
Part V Fhe Trials of Nationhood, 1824-55
Part VI Liberals and Conservatis es Search for Something
Better, 855-76Part VII The Modernization of Mexico, 1876-1910
Part VIII The Revolution: The Militan. Phase, 1610—20
Part IX The Revolution: The Constmrtive Phase, 1620 40
Part X The Revolution Shifts Gears. Mexico since 1940
Appendix Rulers of MexicoSelected Bihliograph for Those Pm ho Read Spanish
Prin’s oid puHitalioii latc’c arc sUb%’Ct to clititi,m
Visit the Oxford exhibit, booths 22, 23, and 24.
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GERMANY 1866-1945By Gordon A. Craig, Stanford University A notable addition to the acclaimed exfmi!—Iiston of Modern Europe series, this provocative hook is a rich cultural history ofGermany in its formative period as well as a discussion of the people, parties, andpressure groups that influenced German policy in domestic and foreign affairs.848 pp., 519.95. (October, 1978)
AMERICA IN VIETNAMBs’ Guenter lewy, University of Massachusetts. Amherst. “The tirst systematic analysisof the course of the war, the reasons for tim failure of American strategy and tactics, thetravail of Vietnamization, and the causes of the tinal collapse of Vietnam” (Coninientan),this pioneering book also examines the question of American “guilt.” 576 pp.; 5 illus.,518.95. (October, 1978)
BLOWING ON THE WINDThe Nuclear Test Ban Debate, 1954-1960By Robert A. Divine, University of Texas, Austin, Using contemporary sources andtormerlv inaccessible Eisenhower papers, this hook confronts both the conflict withmthe Eisenhower administration over the merits of a test ban and the scientific debateover radiation hazards caused by global fallout, 400 pp.’ $14.95. (October, 19781
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THEAMERICAN REVOLUTIONBy Morton White, The Institute for Advanced Study Princeton. Ancilvzing the mainideas that guided the American revolutionaries of 1776, this profound hook illuminatesthe theory of knowledge, the metaphysics, the philosophical theology and the ethicsupon which the Founding Fathers rested their claim to independence. 320 pp.. 513.95.(October, 1978)
SEVEN DAYS A WEEKWomen and Domestic Service in Industrializing AmericaBy David M. Katzman, University of Kansas. Through extensive use of the writings ofdomestics and contemporary intenie s, Katzman evokes the ambience ot the lives ofwomen in domestic service between the Civil War and the 1920’s, and shows howmodernization, industrialization, and urbanization radically altered the nature of dmmestic service, 352 pp.; 10 halftones, $14.96. (September, 1978)
THE LAST ROMANTICA Life of Max EastmanBy Wifliam O’Neill, Rutgers University. This revealing biography establishes Eastman’scontribution to the social history of ideas through a thorocigh examination of Eastman’sprivate papers and the dynamics behind his several political transformations. 352 pp.;10 photographs, 514.95. (October, 1978)
THE DRED SCOTT CASEIts Significance in American Law and Politics
[3) Don E. Fehrenbacher, Stanford University. Set sx ithin the context of the great legal
and political struggle over slaver that ended the war, this illuminating study of the
famed Dred Scott case casts light ox er more than a century of American history. 768 pp.;
20 maps & charts, 825.00 (October, 1978)
IN THE MATTER OF COLORRace and the American Legal Process:The Colonial PeriodBy A. Leon Higgnbotham, Jr. “An extraordinary contribution to legal and historical
scholarship b one of our most distinguished federal judges.’ — Stanle) N. Katz.
“Masterful research A monumental studs — John Blassingame. ‘An extraordi
nary volume by an extraordinary man.’’ — Marvin E. \\blfgang. 512 pp., 29 halftones,
815.00. (June, 1978)
SLAVE RELIGIONThe ‘invisible Institution” in the Antebellum South
By Albert I. Raboteau, C niversitv of California, Berkeley. Using stave narratives, black
autobiographies, folklore, trax el accounts, missionary reports, church records, and
general memoirs, this book offers a detailed description of the complex religious life of
.Amedcan slax es and depicts the influence of African religious perspectix es on Chris
tian ideolog). 400 pp.; 14 photographs, 811.95. (October 1978)
A NEW DEAL FOR BLACKSThe Emergence of Civil Rights as aNational Issue: The Depression Decade
By Harvard Sitkoff, Universit of Ness Hampshire Tracing the rising expectations of
Blacks from the beginning of the Depression to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
Sitkoff demonstrates hess the first major break in the status ot Blacks since the Eman
cipation Proclamation took place during the Depression decade. 416 pp.; 814.95.
(October, 197$)
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when the institutions and ideologies that shaped Argentine petroleumaffairs were established. Dec. About $i.oo
Class Conflict and Economic Development in Chile,195$—1973
Barbara Stattings. This account of the interplay of politics and economics throughout three successive Chilean regimes (ending with the 1973
coup) documents the vital role played by social class in determining notonly the type of economic policies followed in Latin America, but theiroutcome as well. $i8.o
Scarcity and Survival in Central AmericaEcoLoGIcAL ORIGINS OF THE SOCCER WAR. William H, Durham. Challenging the view that the 1969 conflict between El Salvador and Honduras was in response to population pressure, this study points to landscarcity, largely a product of the concentration of land holdings, as aprincipal cause of the war. Jan. About $i.oo
Manchester and São PauloPRoBLEMs OF RAPID URBAN GRowTH. Edited by John D. Wirth &Robert L. Jones. Nine papers examine similarities and differences in theforces that shaped the cities of Manchester and São Paulo, in the processproviding insights into the conditions and consequences of rapid urbanization and industrialization. $i 7.50
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177
famine in Tudor and Stuart EnglandAndrew B. Apptebp Opposing the widely held theory that epidemicdisease was responsible for the high death rates in northern England inthe early modern period, this study represents the first systematic attempt to show that the mortality crises were actually caused by famine.$1450
UntouchableAN INDIAN LIFE HIsToRY James M. freeman. This autobiography of a40-year-old untouchable, told to an American anthropologist, describesin fascinating detail what it is like to be at the bottom of Indian life, andwhat happens when an untouchable attempts to improve his condition,Illustrated, Jan, About $18,95,
The Rulers of British Africa, I87o-I9I4
L, H. Gann & Peter Duignan. Enlivened by case studies of officials fromall ranks, this history of the formative years of Britain’s empire in Africafocuses on the administrative, technical, and military personnel, both onthe scene and in London, who actually conquered, built, and governedthe British colonies, $r8.o
KurusuTHE PRICE OF PRoGRESS IN A JAPANESE VILLAGE, 1951—1975. RobertJ.Smith, Returning to the remote farming village he had first studied in1951, the author found the quality of village life drastically altered, Inthis book he explores the complex circumstances that led to such far-reaching change, $i,oo
The Development of Kamakura Rule, ii 8o -I 250
A HISTORY WITH DocuMENTs.Jeffi’ey P Mass, This study of the originsand consequences of the Jbkyil War of i zzi provides the first systematicaccount of a formative stage in the evolution of Japanese medieval justice. The book includes annotated translations of 144 pertinent documents. Jan. About $i8,o
Studies in Chinese SocietyEdited by Arthur P Wol[, Papers selected from Family and Kinship inChinese Society; The City in Communist China; Economic Organiaation in Chinese Society; The Chinese City Between Two Worlds; Religion and Ritual in Chinese Society; Women in Chinese Society; andThe City in Late Imperial China, Cloth, $17.50; paper, $6.95
Stanford University Press
178
Gracchus BabeufTHE FIRsT REVOLUTIONARY COMMUNIST. R. B. Rose. The first full-
length biography in English of a central figure in the French Revolutionand a man regarded by Marxist historians as a direct precursor of mod
ern communism, It traces Babeuf’s career from his native Picardy toParis during the critical years I 793-’-9 5. $18.50
Marx’s Theory of HistoryWilliam H. Shau’. In his attempt to “excavate what Marx’s theory Says,unpack its meaning, explore its nuances, and highlight some of its inter
nal difficulties,” the author provides an argument for the basic coherence of historical materialism and an interpretation of Marx that is atodds with current orthodoxy. $iz.o
Literature and Society in Imperial Russia, I$oo—1914
Edited by William Mitts Todd III. Ranging in topic from general discussions of literary theory to close readings of well-known literary works,these nine papers address nearly every literary movement of the period,as well as a number of major Russian writers including Pushkin,Gogol, Turgenes and Dostoevsky. $17.50
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Freedom and Its Limitations in American Life
David M. Potter. Edited by DonE. fet,renbacher. Cloth, $6.co; paper, $z.9
Society and Culture in Early Modern FranceEIGHT ESSAYS BY NATALIE ZEMON DAVIS. Cloth, $1 5.00; paper, $5.95
Studies in Chinese Society
Edited by Arthur P Wolf. Cloth, $17.50; paper, $6.BS
Women in Chinese SocietyEdited by Margery Wolf & Roxane Witke. Cloth, $iz.o; paper, $5.95
Women in Changing JapanEdited by Joyce Lebra, Joy Paulson & Elizabeth Powers. Paper, $5.95
Women in AfricaSTUDIES IN SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CHANGE. Edited by Nancy]. Hafkin & Edna
C. Bay. Cloth, $i coo; paper, $5.95
Stanford University Press
‘79
Visit Booth #48 to seeNew ViewpointsFOR YOUR COURSES IN
HISTORYVIOLENCE AND REFORM INAMERICAN HISTORYBy Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, University of EdinburghFocusing on violence in industrial relations between the1830s and the 1960s in the United States, the author
places this narrative into the broader context of violence throughout Americanhistory, and postulates the self-defeating effect of such violence upon desiredreform.September 1978, 256 pages, cloth 531-05404-7, $1250
paper 531-05613-9, $ 695
THE RISE AND FALL Of THE PLANTATION SOUTHBy Raimondo Luraghi, University of GenoaA leading European specialist in American history examines Southern historyas a part of the history of world affairs, and in so doing illuminates aspects ofthe South often overlooked by American historians. Among the subjectsconsidered are the links between the Italian Renaissance and early Americanhistory.March 1978, 192 pages, cloth 531-05396-2, $10.00
paper 531-05606-6, $ 5.95
THE GRASS-ROOTS MIND IN AMERICA:The American Sense of AbsolutesBy Conal Furay, Webster CollegeIntended for courses in social, intellectual, and cultural history, this bookexamines several mental frames of reference that are common in America—the small-town mind, the ethnic mind, the military mind, and others—andargues that such basic outlooks have endured throughout American historydespite rapid social change.December 1977, 192 pages, cloth 531-05391-1, $10.00
paper 531-05598-1, $ 5.95
FAMILY AND KIN IN URBAN COMMUNITIES, 1700-1930Edited by Tamara K. Hareuen, Clark UniversityIn this collection of essays ten outstanding urban historians relate theorganization and behavior of families within certain historical periods to theprocess of urbanization that was going on at those times. This book is useful forcourses in family, urban, and industrial history.November 1977, 288 pages, cloth 531-05388-1, $12.95
paper 531-05592-2, $ 5.95
Coming in Spring 1979HISTORY: A Workbook of Skill DevelopmentBy Conal Furay and Michael Salevouris
Li For examination copies of these books, please write toNEW VIEWPOINTS730 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10019
fl BOOKS IN HISTORYPOPULAR CULTURE INEARLY MODERN EUROPEBy PETER BURKE. Drawing on the researchof historians, folklorists and students ofliterature in 15 languages, Mr. Burke presents the popular culture of pre-industrialEurope as a whole, from Galway to the Urals,from Norway to Sicily, covering the threecenturies from the first printed broadsidesand chapbooks to the French and IndustrialRevolutions.400 pages, 16 b&w illustrations, $20.00
IRANIAN CESBy HEINZ GAUBE. Introduction by F. E.Peters, foreword by Peter Chelkowski.Hagop Kevorkian Series on NearEastern Artand Civilization. From close on-site observation and a unique combination of philological, archaeological and geographicalmethods of research, Gaube examines threeIranian cities—Herat, Isfahan and Barn—each typical of Iranian cities of its size andfunction and traces their urban developmentfrom ancient through modern times.792 pages, 90 b&w illustrations, $22.50
HISTORY OF POLISHCIVILIZATIONEssays and StudiosEdited by MIECZYSLAW GIERGIELEWICZ,Introduction by Ludwig Krzyanowskl. Thisvolume presents a wide range of Polishculture against a broad comparative background—the pagan and Christian traditionsin Polish society, the start of urban living inPoland, gradual stages of social development, alliances and clashes with the Eastand the West and the resulting formation ofthe national character. The clear, narrativestyle of the essays make them enjoyablereading for the general reader as well as theSlavic scholar.
336 pages, $16.00
ORGANIZED LABOR INLATIN AMERICAHistorical Case Studies of WorkersIn Dependent SocietiesBy HOBART A. SPALDING, JR. Usinghistorical case studies to examine organizedlabor movements in Latin America from 1850to 1960, Spalding shows convincingly whyorganized labor has not been a majorrevolutionary force within Latin Americansociety,297 pages, $15.00
To order direct, write:
A GHETTO GROWS INBROOKLYNBy HAROLD X. CONNOLLY. “Connollypresents a three-century analysis of thedevelopment and current situation of theblack ghetto in Brooklyn. Basically a historical examination, vital public policy andplanning implications are connected to thediscussion of current events and communitystructures . . . Good illustrative and graphicmaterial , , . the data are very recent . , . andConnolly writes well—Choice248 pages, 5 maps, $15.00
ARTISANS OF THE NEWREPUBLICTradesmen of New York City in theAge of Jefferson
By HOWARD B. ROCK. This is the firsttreatment of American artisans during theJeffersonian era for any city. Using a widevariety of historical materials, Rock uncovers the role that mechanics played in thepolitical process and the importance ofpolitics to the self-concept of the mechaniccommunity during the transition from a preindustrial to an industrial economy.320 pages, illustrated, $37.50
SCHOOLED LAWYERSA Study in the Clash of ProfessionalCulturesBy WILLIAM Ft. JOHNSON. New YorkUniversity Series in Education and Socialization in American History. “An excellentstudy—Library Journal“This is an intriguing and readable contribution not only to the history of legaleducation but to the history of ideas in the19th and 20th centuries.”—]. Willard Hurst
235 pages, $15.00
THE FEDERALISTS AND THEORIGINS OF THEUS. CIVIL SERVICEBy CARL E. PRINCE. “This book considersthe place, role and underlying structure ofthe Federalist Party in the American politicalexperience . . . The author has woventogether a vast amount of material andutilized new historical techniques such ascareer-line analysis, collective biography,and quantitative analysis . . . well-organized
and a worthy contribution to the earlypolitical and administrative history of theUnited States—Roland M. Baumann,Pennsylvania Magazine of History andBiography381 pages, $37.50
= NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
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181
iThese new PH texts examinemajor events in World, Europeanand American History
Visit Booth #26—see aN the P.-H titles
FTHE UNITED STATES: Brief EditionRichard Hofstadter; William Miller; Daniel Aaron—Harvard University;Winthrop D. Jordan and Leon F. Litwack—both of University ofCalifornia, BerkeleyCompletely revised and updated version of THE STRUCTURE OFAMERICAN HISTORY, 2nd Edition. Ideal short text for use in one quarter or one semester courses.384 pp. fest.) Paper $10.95
EUROPE IN THE REFORMATIONPeter J. Klassen— California State University, Fresn-oBasic undergraduate text for Reformation History courses. Detailedcoverage of the Church, and other institutions.320 pp. test.) Paper $10.95
LE
182
AMERICANS AND FREE ENTERPRISE
Henry C. Dethiolt—Texas A & M University
Concise, narrative history ot the American experience with capitalism.
The development of the American free enterprise system is treated as
an intensely historical process that reflects the values, goals, and
aspirations and culture ot the American people. Charts and graphs
condense data into a sound, con7prehensive basis or analysis.
352 pp. test.) Cloth $13.95
IRELAND: From Colony to Nation State
Lawrence ). McCaffrey— Loyola University,Chicago
Interpretation of Irish history from 1691 to the present analyzes the
social, economic, political and intellectual roots of Irish national
ism, emphasizing the connections between religious and cultural iden
tities. Discusses how the Irish Question shaped British politics and
ins 0 t u tiC n s.
224 pp. test.) Cloth $12.95 Paper $7.95
THE ANCIENT WORLD: A Social and Cultural History
D. Brendan Nagle—- University of Southern California
Analysis of the civilizations of the Ancient Near East, Greece and Rome
with special emphasis on social and cultural themes. Examines the
intermingling of politics, religion, art and literature within the social
strLictures of these civilizations. Numerous illustrations Irom American
and ELiropean museums enhance the text.
463 pp. test.) Paper $12.93
A HISTORY OF SOVIET RUSSIA
M. Ramil Dziewanowski — Boston Universits
Comprehensive, tip-to-date treatment of the histors ot Russia stresses
major historical trends. The author emphasizes the constant cx olution
ot the Communist party and ideology from the principles ot proletarian
internationalism, toward proletarian nationalism. Maps. tables illus
trations, plus bibliographies at the end ot each chapter.
400 pp. test.) Paper $12.95
WESTERN CIVILIZATION: A Brief History
Robin W. Winks—Yale University
Short, one volume history of Western Civilization places special em
phasis on the broad trends which have brought us from the past to the
present. Particular weight is given to the earlier centuries, and on the
19th and 20th centuries as two important periods for understanding
history. Looks at the way the West has interacted with Africa and Asia.
480 pp. test.) Paper $10.95
For further ,nfc,rmation, or to reserve examination copies of any of these texts,
please write: Robert fordan, Dept. 1-293, Prentice-Hall, Inc.. Englewooct Clitts.
NI 07632.Prices subject to change without notice.
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More new tit’esfrom Cornell.
The Painngs ofLucas Cranach
By MAX 1. FREDLNDER and JAKOB ROSENBERG. It was only after theoriginal German edition of this book appeared in 1932 that Cranach was restoredto his proper place as a master. This first edition in English has been brought up todate by one of the original authors, Jakob Rosenberg, the world’s leadingauthority on Cranach. A catalogue raisonnd, this magnificently illustrated book isan outstanding treatment of one of the great artists of the German Renaissance,500 black-and-white illustrations, 32 color plates. $85.00
The Dawn of Italian Painting 12501400By ALASTAR SMARt The years 1250 to 1400 in Italy constitute one of therichest and most inspiring periods in the development of European art. In thishandsome volume, a leading authority on Italian painting provides an acute andelegant introduction to the early Italian masters. A detailed bibliography is included. 183 illustrations, including 16 color plates. $14.95 paper; $29.50 cloth
The Sense of OrderA Study in the Psychology of Decorative Art
By E.H. GOMBRICH. This richly illustrated book, a companion to the author’swell-known work Art and Illusion, investigates the psychology of decorativedesign and the creation and function of formal orders. THE WiGHTsMAN LEcTuREsseries. 77 full-color 470 black-and-white illustrations. (Spring 1979) $28.50
Village on the SeineTradition and Change in Bonniëres, 1815-1974
By EVELYN BERNETTE ACKERMAN. BonniOres, a village located 43 milesnorthwest of Paris, passed with relative ease out of the rural, tradition-dominatedmatrix of the 19th century into the modern world. How did it escape the socialdifficulties that confr0hted similar towns? The author points out key factors aidingits transition and tries to reconstruct the daily lives of many individuals andfamilies. 10 illustrations. $12.50
Chronology of the Ancient WorldRevised Edition
By E.J. BICKERMAN. Revised, updated, and including an expanded bibliography, this widely used resource book provides an introduction to the basic elements and problems of ancient chronology. ASPECTS OF GREEK AND ROMAN LIFEseries. (Spring 1979) $9.95 paper
(See inside front cover)
CORNELL UNWERSTY PRESS ITHACA AND LONDON
184
]A
Historyof Western
$odetyrevitalizes western civilization!A HISTORY OF WESTERN SOCIETY presents the full spectrum of
Eutopeon development. Recent and originol reseorch in politicol,
economic, and intellectual history complements the generous study
of peoples’ life styles. Judicious quoting of primary sources, I 6-page
color insert, and engaging writing style enhance the text.
A HISTORY OF WESTERN SOCIETY
John P McKay Bennett D. Hill, and John Buckler
allot University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana
One-VolumePaperback Edition
Two-Volume Paperback Edition
Volume I: From Antiquity to the Enlightenment
Volume II: From Absolutism to the Present
Three-Volume Paperback Edition
Volume I: From Antiquity to the Reformation
Volume II: From the Renaissance to 1615
Volume Ill: From the Revolutionary Era to the Present
Student Guide/Instructor’s Manual/I 979
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TELEVISION FRAUD: The Histo—ry and Implications of the QuizShow Scandals.by Kent Anderson(Contrtb. in American History, No 72)1978 Approx 256 pages ATF’LC 77-94755 ISBN 0-313 20321-0 $1895
THE CHAiNS OF PROTECTION:The dicial Response to Women’sLabor Legislation.by Judith A Baer(Contrib in Women’s Studies, No 1)1978 x,238pages BCE’LC 77-82695 ISBN 0-8371-9785-6 $1695
ON THE EDGE OF POLITICS:The Roots ofJewish PoliticalThought in America.by William S Berlin(Contrib in Political Science, No 14)1978 Approx 216 pages BEE!LC 78-4018 ISBN 0-313-20422-5
STABILITY, SECURITY, ANDCONTINUITY: Mr. Justice Burtonand Decision-Making in theSupreme Court, 1 945-1958.by ?vlary Frances 3err(Conirib in Legal Studies, No 1)1978 tnt, 296 pages OSS?LC 77-84772 ISBN 0-8371-9798-8 $17 50
WOMEN’S STUDIES:An Interdisciplinary Collection.Edited by Kathleen O’Connor Blunhagen andWalter D Johnson(Contrib in Women’s Studies, No 2)1978 xi, 142 pages SJ’’LC77-lSllO ISBN 0-313-20028-9 511 95
ETHIOPIAN PERSPECTIVES:A Bibliographical Guide to theHistory of Ethiopia.Compiled by Clifton F Bross nPrepared under the auspices of the AfricanBibliographical Center(Special Bibliographic Series, New Series, No 5)1978 xs, 264 pages BETLC 77-89111 ISBN 0-8371-9850 X $19 50
TRANSATLANTIC REVIVALISM:Popular Evangelism in Britainand Atherica, 1790-1865.by Richard Carwardine.(Contrib. in American History, No. 75).1978. Approx. 264 pages. CTR!LC 77-94740. ISBN 0-313-20308-3. $18.95
BLACK HIGHER EDUCATIONIN THE UNITED STATES:A Selected Bibliography on NegroHigher Education and HistoricallyBlack Colleges and Universities.Compiled by Fredrick Chambers.1978. xxiv, 268 pages, CBHLC 77-91100. ISBN 0-313-20037-8. $19.95
IMMIGRANTS—AND IMMIGRANTS:Perspectives on Mexican LaborMigration to the United States.Edited by Arthur F. Corsvin,(Contrib. in Economics and Economic History,No, 17).1978. Approx. 320 pages. CIIiLC 77-81756. ISBN 0-8371-9848-8. $18.95
THE BLACK FAMILY IN THEUNITED STATES: A SelectedBibliography of Annotated Books,Articles, and Dissertations onBlack Families in America.by Lenwood G. Davis.With the assistance of Janet Sims.Foreword bi’ Lena Wright Myers.1978. xii, i32 pages. DBFLC 77-89109. ISBN 0-8371-9851-S. $1 1.95
WOMEN & MEN MIDWIVES:Medicine, Morality, and Misogynyin Early America.by Jane B. Donegan.(Contrib. in Medical History, No. 2).i978. sin, 316 pages. DMAJLC 77-87968. ISBN 0-8371-9868-2. $17.95
New Original Books in History fromGREENWOOD PRESS Booth #47
TWO NATIONS OVER TIME:Spain and the United States,1776—1977.o James Vt Cortada(Contrib in American H,sior. No 71)
$1895 1978 xi, 305 pages CTN/LC 77-94752 ISBN 0-313-203 19-9 $22 95
186
“EZRA POUND SPEAKING”:Radio Speeches of World War H.Edited by Leonard W. Doob,(Contrib. in American Studies, No. 37).1978. xv, 465 pages. DEP/
LC 77-91288. ISBN 0-313-20057-2. $29.95
THE POLITICS OF WARTIMEAID: American Economic Assistance to France and FrenchNorthwest Africa, 1940-1946.by James J. Dougherty.(Contrib. in American History, No, 71).
1978. x, 264 pages. DPW?LC 77-84770. ISBN 0-8371-9882-5. $17.50
THE “HINDERED HAND”:Cultural Implications of EarlyAfrican-American Fiction.by Arlene A. Elder.(Contrib. in Afro-American and African Studies,
No. 39).1978. Approx. 240 pages. EHH/
LC 77-95358. ISBN 0-313-20323-7. $18.95
BELIEVING SKEPTICS:American Political Intellectuals,1945-1964.by Robert Booth fowier,(Contrib. in Political Science, No. 5).
1978. xi, 317 pages, FAP?LCc7-87967, ISBN 0-313-20026-2, $19.95
REVISITING BLASSINGAME’S“THE SLAVE COMMUNITY”:The Scholars Respond.Edited by Al-Tony Gilmore.(Contrib. in Afro-Amcrican and African Studies,
No. 37).1978. Approx. 224 pages. GJB/LC 77-84765. ISBN 0-8371-9879-8. $15.95
IN PEACE AND WAR: Interpretations of American Naval History,1775—1978.Edited by Kenneth J. Hagan.(Contrib. in Military History, No. 16).
1978. xii, 368 pages, illus., tables. HPW/
LC 77-91108. ISBN’ 0-313-20039-4. $17.50
BEYOND HER SPHERE: Womenand the Professions hi AmericanHistory.by Barbara J. Harris.(Contrib. in Women’s Studies, No. 4).1978. Approx. 216 pages. DES?
LC 76-4017, ISBN 0-313-2041 5-2. $1 5.95
MANNING THE NEW NAVY:The Development of a ModernNaval Enlisted Force, 1899—1940.by Frederick S. Harrod.(Contrib. tn American History, No. 68).1978. xi, 276 pages, tItus,, tables, HEM?LC 77-82697. ISBN 0-8371-9759-7. $18.95
DOMINATION, LEGITIMATION,AND RESISTANCE: The Incorporation of the Nineteenth CenturyEnglish Working Class.by francts Hearn.(Contrib. in Labor History, No. 3).1978. viii, 309 pages. HDL?LC 77-84753. ISBN 0-8371-9847-X, $17.95
AFRO-AMERICANS ANDAFRICA: Black Nationalism atthe Crossroads.Compiled by William B. Helnsreich.Prepared under the auspices of the AfricanBibliographic Center.(Special Bibliographic Series, New Series, No. 3).1977. xxxiii, 74 pages. HAA/LC 76-56621. ISBN 0-8371-9439-3. $12.95
RECONSIDERATIONS ON THEREVOLUTIONARY WAR:Selected Essays.Edited by Don Higginbotham.(Contrib. in Military History, No, II).1978, x,217 pages. lIlA?LC 7784757. ISBN 0-8371-9846-I $16.95
THE IRON BARONS: A SocialAnalysis of an American UrbanElite, 1874—1965.by John N. Ingham.(Contrib, in Economics and Economic History,
No. 18).1978. xix, 242 pages, 1113?LC 77-83761. iSBN 0-8371-9891-7. $19.95
LAW, SOLDIERS, AND COMBAT.by Peter Karsten.(Contrib. in Legal Studies, No, 3).1978, xviii, 204 pages. KSL?LC 77-87976. ISBN 0-313-20042-1. $15.95
SOLDIERS AND SOCIETY: TheEffects of Military Service andWar on American Life.by Peter Karsten,(Grass Roots’Perspectivcs on American
History, No. 1).1978. 339 pagc-s, illus,, tables. }(AM!
LC 77-87972. ISBN 0-313-20056-4. $22.50
187
(GREENWOOD PRESSTHE OIL CARTEL CASE:A Documentary Study of AntitrustActivity in the Cold War Era.by Burton I. Kaufman.(Contrib. in American History, No. 7).1978, 217 pages. KOC!LC 77-87963. ISBN 0-313-20043-2. $18.93
RIOT, ROUT, AND TUMULT:Readings in American Social andPolitical Violence.Edited by Roger Lane and John J. Turner, Jr.(Contrib. in American History, No, 69).1978. xv, 399 pages. LRRILC 77-84782. ISBN 0-8371-9845-3. $25.00
LATIN AMERICAN WOMEN:Historical Perspectives.Edited by Asuncidn Lavrin.(Contrib. in Women’s Studtes, No. 3).1978. Approx. 352 pages. LLA!LC 77-94758. ISBN 0-313-20309-1. $22.80
AMERICAN MIDWIVES: 1860 tothe Present.by Judy Barrett Litoff,(Contrib. in Medical History, No. 1).1978. xi, 197 pages. LAM!LC 77-63893, ISBN 0-8371-9824-0. $15.95
THE CHEROKEE FREEDMEN:From Emancipation to AmericanCitizenship.by Daniel F. Littlefield.(Contrib. in Afro-American and African Studies,No, 40).1978. Approx. 312 pages. LCH/LC 78-53659. ISBN 0-313-20413-6. $18.95
THE KNIGHTS OF LABOR INTHE SOUTH.by Melton Alonza McLaurin.(Contrib. in Labor History, No. 4).1978. xi, 232 pages. MCK!LC 77-87916. ISBN 0-31 3-20033-5. $16.95
HISTORICAL STATISTICS OFCHILE: National Accounts.Compiled by Markos J. Mamalakis.1979. Approx, 296 pages. MHCIILC 78-66721. ISBN 0-313-20619-8.(Available Winter 1979)
THE LEAVENWORTH SCHOOLSAND THE OLD ARMY: Educa..tion, Professionalism, and theOfficer Corps of the United StatesArmy, 1881—1918.by Timothy K. Nenninger.(Contrib. in Military History, No. 15).i978. 173 pages. NFL.’LC 77-9l 105. ISBN 0-31 3-20017-5. $1 5.95
R.G. DUN & CO., 1841-1900: TheDevelopment of Credit.Reportingin the Nineteenth Century.by James D, Norris.(Contrib. in Economics and Economic History,No. 20).1978. Approx. 240 pages, NDC!I..C 77-95359. ISBN 0-31320326-l. $17.50
BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARYOF AMERICAN EDUCATORS.Edited by John F. Ohles,1978. 3 volumes, OHB!LC 77-64750. ISBN 0.8371-9893-3. $95.00
UNITED STATES CONGRES.SIONAL DISTRICTS, 1788-1841.by Stanley B. Parsons, Willians W. Beach, andDan Hermann.1978. xvi, 416 pages. PUS!LC 77-83897, ISBN 0-8371.9828-3. $35.00
WHEN WORKERS FIGHT: ThePolitics of Industrial Relations inthe Progressive Era, 1898-1916.by Bruno Ramirez.(Contrib. in Labor History, No. 2).1978. viii, 241 pages. RAW!LC 77-83895, ISBN 0.8371-9826-7. $17.30
SOCIAL SERVICEORGANIZATIONS.Editor-in-chief, Peter Romanofsky,Advisory editor, Clarke A. Chambers.(The Greenwood Encyclopedia of AmericanInstitutions, 2).1978. 2 volumes. RSS/LC 77-84754. ISBN 0-837l9829-l. $59.50
THE LONG SHADOW: Reflectionson the Second World War Era.by Lisle Abbott Rose.(Contrib, in American History, No. 70).
$50.00 1978. 224 pages. ROL!LC 77-84760, ISBN 0-8371-9892-5, $16.95
188
SOMALIA: A BibliographicalSurvey.Compiled by Mohamed Khalief Salad.
Prepared under the auspices of the African
Bibliographic Center.(Special Bibliographic Series, New Series, No. 4).
1977. xv, 468 pages. SSO/LC 76-51925. ISBN 0-8371-9480-6. $2250
THE RAILROAD MERGERSAND THE COMING OfCONRAIL.by Richard Saunders.(Contrib. in Economics and Economic History,
No. 19).1978. x, 389 pages. SRM/LC 77-91095. ISBN 0-313-20049-I. $25.00
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY:A Structural Approach in anAfrican Culture.by Peter R. Schnsidt.(Contrib. in Intercultural and Comparative
Studies, No. 3).1978. xi, 363 pages, illus. SSAI
LC 77-84758. ISBN 0-8371-9849-6. $27.50
CHARTING THE FUTURE: TheSupreme Court Responds to aChanging Society, 1890-1920.by John E. Semonche.(Contrib. in Legal Studies, No. 5).1979. Approx. 488 pages. SCF/
LC 77-94745. ISBN 0-313-20314-8. $25.00
TRABELIN’ ON: The SlaveJourney to an Afro-Baptist Faith.by Mechal Sobel.(Contrib. in Afro-American and African Studies,
No. 36).1978. Approx. 440 pages. STO?LC 77-84775, ISBN 0-8371-9887-9. $25.00
SCHOOLING FOR THE NEWSLAVERY: Black IndustrialEducation, 1868—1915.by Donald Spivey.(Contrib. in Afro-American and African Studies,
No. 38).1978. xii, 162 pages. SSN/LC 77-87974. ISBN 0-313-20051-3. $14.95
MENACE IN THE WEST:The Rise of French Anti-Americanism in Modern Times.by David Strauss.(Contrib. in American Studies, No. 40).
1978. Approx. 328 pages. SMW/LC 77-94748. ISBN 0-313-20316-4.
HEMISPHERIC PERSPECTIVESON THE UNITED STATES:Papers from the New WorldConference.Edited by Joseph S. Tulchin.With the assistance of Maria A. Leal,(Contrib. in American Studies, No. 36).
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Jacksonian America: Society, Personality,and Politics, Revised Edition
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HISTORICAL LEADERSAMERICAChanging TimesVolume I: Colonial Times—i 877Volume Il: 1865—PresentC. Dollar, J. Gundersen, R, Satz, H. V.Nelson, Jr., G. Reichard, A. HollandThis comprehensive text furnishes adeep, balanced account of American history, covering social andeconomic history as well as politicaland military affairs. Dollar gives youa strong basis for teaching, one thatis easily tailored to specific pedagogical goals. Featuring livelyessays and biographical sketches,time-line charts, and chapter outlines, this book is one of the mostreadable, usable texts available,carrying the reader along with ease,while delivering all the basic information for your American Historysurvey courses.Vol. 1:1979approx. 500 pp. $9.95 (tent.) paperVol.11:1979approx. 500 pp. $9.95 (tent.) paperCombined:1 979approx. 950 pp. $1 5.95 (tent.) cloth
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Plan AheadOrganization of American HistoriansNext Four Conventions
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INTELLECTUAL UFE INTHE COLONIAL SOUTH,1585-1763BY RICHARD BEALE DAVIS
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Special double issue on “The Impact of the Annales School on the Social Sciences”
Vol. I, No. 3/4, Winter/Spring 1978IMMANUEL WALLER5TEIN Anna/es as ResistanceJACQUES REVEL The Annales: Continuities and DiscontinuitiesTRAIAN STOIANOVICH Social History: Perspective of the Annales ParadigmMAURICE AYMARD Impact of the Annales School in Mediterranean CountriesHALIL INALCIK Impact of the Anna/es School on Ottoman Studies and
New FindingsKRYSZTOF POMIAN Impact of the Anna/es School in Eastern EuropeALFRED DUBUC The Influence of the Anna/es School in QuebecPETER BURKE Reflections on the Historical Revolution in France:
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H. L. WESSELING The Anna/es School and the Writing of ContemporaryHistory
ANDRE BURGUIERE The New Anna/es: A Redefinition of the Late 1960’sCHARLES TILLY Anthropology, History, and the Anna/esGEORGE HUPPERT The Anna/es School Before the Anna/esNORMAN BIRNBAUM The Anna/es School and Social TheoryFERNAND BRAUDEL En guise de conclusion
Vol. II, No. 1, Summer 1978GEORGES HAUPT Why the History of the Working-Class Movement?KATHLEEN GOUGH Agrarian Relations in Southeast India, 1750-1976M. I. FINLEY Empire in the Graeco-Roman World
SLAVERY AND CAPITALISMPAULA BEIGUELMAN The Destruction of Modern Slavery: A Theoretical IssueSIDNEY W. MINTZ Was the Plantation Slave a Proletarian?
ROMANIA: EARLY THEORISTS OF DEVELOPMENTHENRI H. STAHL Theories de C. D. Gherea sur les lois de Ia pn&ration du
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WORDS THAT MADE AMERICAN HISTORY
Thirdtdi’ior Acnaerdur U Uoiisrted
Richard N Current, John A Garraty, i” I Julius Weinberg
paper 559 pages/volume 1978 $555 voiumo
STOP BY TO SEE THE LATEST ADDITION TO THE
LIBRARY OF AMERICAN BiOGRAPHY
SAMUEL GOMPERS AND ORGANIZED LABOR IN AMERICA
Harold C Livesay, ON tuersO V 0 7/li
COMING IN 1979A TROUBLED FEAST
AMERICAN SOCIETY SINCE 1Q45i’
William E Leuchtenburg, ColumLia University
AS prices are subjects change without notice
‘On C
UTI’LE, BROWNAND COMPANY31 Beicon St’eet Boson MassachuseSs 02Bo
223
rthernPerspectives
on MexicoA New Volume in the Origins of Modern Mexico seriesJuárez and DIaz: Machine Politics in MexicoLaurc’ns Ballard PernProfessor Perry treats Porfirio DIaz and his appropriation of power in1876 to show that the liberalism of the Restored Republic was incompatible with the political and economic realities of nineteenth-centuryMexico. Approximately 500 pages, illustrations, notes (July 1978)ISBN 0-87580-058-0 $25.00
Already PublishedOutcasts in Their Own LandMexican Industrial Workers, 1906-1911Rodnc’t 0. AndersonISBN 0-87580-054-8 $15.00
the hook is s trio ig a i id will ci idu re.., Ai id better than a in book befre, itconveys the z’ision pre— rc’z’ohi tionari/ workers claimc’d they had of thc’,nsclves—John Womack1 Jr.
in the American Historical Review‘‘Outcasts in Their Own Land is a ii unpo r ta nt cmi trib, tion to the Ii istoricalI iteratu rc’ on the labor lnovt’nie? it iii Mexico and Latin America—Roderic Ai Camp
in the Journal of Developing Areas
Church Property and the Mexican Reform, 18564910Robt’r t I. K ,wivl toiiISBN 0-87580-055-6 $12.50
adds new light o,i many aspects of the sig ill/ca nec and impact of the Relo,’,nIt is an important con tribu tioi to the Ii istonj of Mexico.—Michael P. Costeloe
in the Catholic Historical Review‘‘Because of the complexities of the subject and the thoroughness with which theau thor has done his work, tins book is a superior con tribu tiomu to our knowledge ofnineteenth—century Mexico Mexiea,usts will realize that wit/il,, these pagesis all the material necessary on the subject for a long ti,,,e,
—Lowell L. Blaisdellin Inter-American Review of Bibliography
224
—on the United StatesAmerica’s Ascent: The United States
Becomes a Great Power, 1880-1914John M. Dobson
These days it is easy to see that America is no stumbling innocent in the
international arena, hut difficult to know what it is. Professor Dobson
here provides an explanation in his documentation of the conscious and
predictable plans of foreign policy makers to transform the United States
from a minor nation into a world power.
Approximately 256 pages, bibliography, notes, index (July 1978)ISBN 0’87580-070-X (Cloth) $15.00ISBN 087580523X (Paper) $4.00
Sanitation Strategy for a Lakefront MetropolisThe Case of Chicago
Louis P. Cain
Chicago’s rise from mud to metropolis has depended on solving the
interconnected problems of fresh water supply on the one hand and
sewage disposal on the other, Sanitation Strate,ip fuir a Lakefront Metropolis
examines five key episodes in the development of Chicago’s water
supply and waste disposal history, each of which led to an Important
decision that enabled the city to become a great urban center,
Approximately 250 pages, notes, bibliography, maps, tables, index(September 1978)
ISBN 0875800645 $15.00
Please drop by the Association of American University
Presses book exhibit, booths 31, 32, 33, and examine these
titles and others on display.
NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESSDeKaIb, Illinois 60115
225
Booth No.109University of Texas PressBox 7819Austin, Texas 78712
The World EconomyHistory and ProspectBy W. W. Rostow876 pages, $34.50
Islam and CapitalismBy Maxime Rod:nsonTranslated by Brian Pearce308 pages; $695, paper
Islamic Roots of CapitalismEgyot, 1760—1840By Peter GranForeword byAfaf Lutfi Al-Sayyid Marsot416 pages. $1995
The Cultural Roots of NationalSocialism(Spiesser-ideologie)By Hermann GlaserTranslated by Ernest A. Menze288 pages, $1295
Picking Up the Linen ThreadsA Study in Industrial FolkloreBy Betty Messenger287 pages, $1595
Border Boom TownCL dad Judrez snce 1848By Oscar J. Martnez263 pages, $1295
German Artist on the TexasFrontierFrearich Rohard PetrBy Will:am W. Newcomb, Jr.256 pages, $1995
Mier Expedition DiaryA Texan Pr:soner’s AccountBy Joseph 0. McCutchanEdited by Joseph Milton Nance304 oages. $1500
A Journey through TexasOr, a Saddle-Trip on theSouthwestern FrontierBy Fredeock Law OlmstedForevord by Larry McMurtry562 pages; $5 00, caper:$12.00, cloth
Four Brothers in BlueOr, Sunshne ano Shadows ot theWar of the RebellionA Story ot the Great Civil War fromBull Run to AppomatloxBy Robert Goldthwaite CarterForeword by Frank Vandiverintroduchon and index byJohn M. Carroll536 pages, $15.00
226
New from th.
South CarolinaHumanism & Liberty
Writings on Freedom from Fifteenth-Century Florence
Translated and edited by Renée Neu Watkins
Philosophy and politics are intertwined in this unique
collection of the major writings on freedom from
Medici Florence. These classics of Italian humanism
by Bruni, Alberti, Pogglo, Lorenzo de’ Medici, Poliziano,
Rinuccini, and Savonarola help us to understand the
impulses behind the quest for liberty now as then.
viii, 264 pages ISBN 0-87249-360-1 $14.95
Now in paperback Education and Culturein the Barbarian West
by Pierre RichéTranslated by John J. Contreni
With a Foreword by Richard E. Sullivan
one of this century’s most important books in
medieval history.” — JoURNAL op LIBRARY HISTORY
xl, 560 pages ISBN 0-87249-376-8 $9.95 paper
South AtlanticVolume 2 Urban Studies
Edited by Jack R. Censer, N. Steven Steinert,
and Amy M. McCandless
The second volume in this new series offers important
essays on the Old South by Franklin W. Knight, Anne
Firor Scott, George M. Prederickson, Peter H. Wood,
Herbert G. Gutman, and Elizabeth Jacoway.
xii, 324 pages ISBN 0-87249-357-1 $14.95
tTl University of South Carolina Press
t[1NIJYi Columbia SC 2920$
227
To Utah With the ‘Dragoonsand Qlimpses of Life
in c/frizona and California
1858-1859Edited h’ Harold D. Langley
“This unusually rich series of letters contains excellent portrayals of the life (hard)and the character (low’ of the enlisted men ofthe frontier army in the years before the CivilWar. The letters tell a fascinating story, full offactual detail and incisive observation that willprobably make ‘Utah’ a much-quoted source.
Langley provides complete and impeccably researched footnotes. Theillustrations are rare and notable,”
— R0BER-t M. LTLEY IN Ti-in AMERICAN WEST
Cloth, $8.50; xvi, 230 pp., maps, illustrations, bibliography, index
A MORIiON BIBLIOGRAPHY, 1830—1930: Books, Pamphlets,Periodicals and Broadsides Relating to the First Century of MormonismEdited by Chad 1. Flake, Introduction by Date L. Morgan
The only comprehensive bibliography of the first 100 years of Mormonliterature, this is without doubt the most significant research tool availableto students of Mormon history and theology as well as Western Americanhistory. Nearly 1000 pages and over 10,000 entries give access to all knownliterature that appeared between I $30, the date of the first edition of TheBook of Mormon. and 1930. the date of B. H. Roberts’ A ComprehensireHistory of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “Perhaps thesingle most important hook ever written on the Mormon church,”
— PuBuSHER5 Wsyxi,yCloth, $75.00: xxxii, 82884i pp.. iNns., appendices, references, index
THE WAR Of CONQUEST: How It Was Waged Here in MexicoThe Aztecs’ Own Story as Given to Fr. Bernardino de SahagnRendered into fodern En,’tish by Arthur /. 0 A ndersonand Charles E. Dibble
Features illustrations from the original sixteenth-century manuscriptin the Laurentian Library in Florence. published here for the first time.Cloth, $12.00 tentative; xx, 94 pp., with notes, bibliographymaps. and chronological charts
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESSSalt Lake City $4112
228
EERDMANSBAPTIST PIETY: The Last Will and Testimoiw of Obadiah Holmes
Edited and with historical inn’ochictioii by Er kvin S. Caitstacl
“A fhscinathrç account of religious lif in ear’i’ Anr’iica writ ten from ttre
underside of colornat societe,,.. Ilolnies’ oii’it atci’tats cii’r’ iritrothtced and placed in
corzte,rt hi’ Pi’ofi’ssor’ Gaustad nit/i his usual r’ir’idness of’ language and keeruu’ss of’
perception.” —Winthrop S. Flutison
Gaustails extensive historical introduction outlines the life of tire lZth—centurs
inrrrh’r C )badiah Holmes. and examines his significance fhr America’s earliest l3aptists.
Ihe holmes floctmlnents mc published here for die first time.
A Christian [Tn ii’ersih’ Press publicnnon
ISBN 0-8028-l747’’\ Paper 17h pages $4.95
THE ETHMC FRONTIER: Grotip Survival in Chicago and the Midwest
Edited rind ii9th inti’otluctton by Mcli in C. Holli and Peter ti A. Jones
“T’IrL’ roost i’crried, the most readable, and also tire roost conststeritli’ strollS
collection of essai’s air tire ethnic lnstori’ of mu’ American cit; “ —-John Ihghanr
‘‘In login ft I tii’, car isistel tli ‘ iii terc’st iio’, ii tint tonic, bitt ‘tot se, 1 ti rien to l—--—fi
splendid set of original essacs.” —Stanle; Elkins
“A first—rate collection, far more successfir 1 than roost canntpos!te i ‘olOoid’5.
The essai’s n’ill appeal to all students of’Armiericair etirruc histori’ and should .serir a.S a
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422 pages. Paper, $7.95; Cloth, $1 i .95 —Daniel Aaron
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Edited by Charles Stephenson
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MAIN STREETThe face i Urban America j
CAROLS RIFKIND
A vivid and fascinating portrait of urbanAmerica in text plus 259 photographs (from1850 to the present) as seen through itsvillages, towns, and cities, Documenting thegrowth of American building styles, life, andcommerce; exploring the roots of Americantown-building; and, showing historical,regional, and cultural similarities and variations, Carole Rifkind reveals how urbanhistory can be “read” on Main Street.
Paperback CN 663
MURRAY BOOKCHIN“In this first half of a projected two-volume opus, Bookchinproduce[sj what, when finished, may well be the first comprehensive general history of the Anarchists’ movement—itstheorists, martyrs, heroes, its internal conflicts and its interconnection with the lives of ordinary workers and peasants,”—Publishers Weekly Paperback CN 607 $5.95
The Destruction of European JewsRAUL HILBERG“Not merely is Hilberg’s book the basic book in the field, it is still thebest , , , , The work remains unsurpassed in any language for its brilliance,clarity, completeness, detail, and command of the material—MICHAEL BERENBAUM, Wesleyan University
Paperback CN 660 $8.95
Popular Culture inEarly Modern EuropePETER BURKEThe area under discussion is the whole of Europe, from Norwayto Sicily, from Ireland to the Urals. The years from 1500 to1800 have been chosen as a period long enough to reveal theless obtrusive trends, and as the best-documented centuries inthe history of pre-industrial Europe.
Paperback TB 7928 $6.95
Life in a Medieval CastleJOSEPH and FRANCES GElS
a book that helps set the record straight—and keeps the romancetoo . . . The authors allow medieval man and woman to speak for themselves through selectionsfrom past journals, songs, even account books.”—Time Paperback CN 674 $4.95
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Harper & RowPaperback Dept.70 E. 53d St., New York 70022
oo-zf1
MAIN STREETTheFace tjl,h nAinerka
(‘AROLE R1FKIND
Spanish AnarchistsThe Heroic Years 1868-1936
231
Receiit PamphletsAitli Rit \\ I II’ I ORI( U i’SO( I I If )‘\
Al-IA PAMPHLETS—narrative and critical essays, including bibliographical guides,on topics in history
311 Ancient Greece by Jlortimer chambers312 The Roman Republic by Botch S. Gruen401 The Culture of Renaissance Humanism by Wittiam F. Bouwsma403 The Reformation by Harold]. Grimm423 East European History: An Ethnic Approach by R, V. Burks427 Russia since 1917: The Once and future Utopia by George Barr Garson, Jr.501 Precolonial African History by Phths D. Curtin511 Some Approaches to China’s Past by Charles 0. Hucker513 A History of South Asia by Robert I. Crane31$ Equatorial Africa by Joseph C. Miller701 Nationalism: Its Nature and Interpreters by Boyd C. Shafer
DISCUSSIONS ON TEACHING—essays on approaches to history in the classroom1 Elements of Historical Thinking by Paul L. Ward
Pamphlets are $1,50 each; payment must accompany order, A complete list of titles isavailable upon request.
ilte \mer,cats I,’o,,rtc al \‘,so,Ia: ionPa iiipltlet ( )rdcrs p7
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Philip Greven
Tttnt
Patterns of ChildRearing, ReligiousExperience, and the Self in Early America
“It [introducesJ a new set of intellectual tools for examining the wholeof early American history. . It may just furnish a way to bring socialand intellectual history together again’
—Edmund S. Morgan, The NewYork Review of Books
“An important book [in hich] children and women are deemedsignificant, in which rituals of home are understood to be intimatelyconnected with the tactics of church and state,. .in which the speculative and imaginative powers of the historian matter’
Ann Douglas, The New York Times Book Review
431 pages e $15. Knopf
Michael Kammen
A eono YouthThe American Revolutionand the Historical Imagination
“An exhilarating discussion of the ambiguous relationships betweentraitor and patriot, revolutionary and loyalist, innovator and conservative, romantic Natural Goodness and a rational skepticism aboutthe damned human race’ —Wallace Stegner
“Brilliant essays.. Michael Kammen once again offers perspectives asfresh and vivid as the patterns he discerns in our complex revolutionarypast’ —Tames MacGregor Burns
416 pages. Illustrated. $15 e Knopf
233
from the American Historical Associationand KTO Press
a significant reference seriesWRTlNGS ON AMERCAN HSTORY:A SUBJECT BBUOGRAPHY OF ARTCLESThis important series continues for article-length literature theconcept of the original WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY.Beginning with 1962, articles from more than 400 journals havebeen classified into chronological and geographical categories and60 subject categories defined by scholars. Each publicationincludes an author index.
The original series had ceased regular publication with the 1960volume. However, WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1961,which was compiled by the National Historical Publications andRecords Commission as the last volume of the old series” will bepublished for the first time by KTO Press.
‘The continuation of the new series, along with the publication ofthe 1961 volume. . . will provide uninterrupted access to olderpublications and a current awareness function not filled by anyother reference tool. Highly recommended to research, academic,and special libraries catering to American historical research.”
—Library Journal, June 1, 1977
Immediately available:Years 1962-1976/77. Washington, D.C.; Millwood, N.Y., 1974-1977,
in 8 vols. cloth $335.00Years 1962-1973 in 4 vols. cloth $275.00Years 1973/74, 1974/75,1975/76, 1976/77 per unit cloth $ 15.00Subscriptions for 1977/78 and subsequent volumes are beingaccepted. Annual volumes from 1973/74+ are available to AHAmembers at a special price of $13.50 per volume.
Available Spring 1979:Year 1961. Millwood, N.Y., 1978. cloth $40.00
For more information or to place an order, please write or call:
ktj pressA U.S. Division of Kraus-Thomson Organization Ltd.Route 100, Millwood, N.Y. 10546 (914) 762-2200
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Receirt PamphletsAM1 Rl( \ I II’, I ( )RI( l SSO( I ‘* lit )\
AHA PAMPHLETS—narrative and critical essays, including bibliographical guides,on topics in history
lOl The American Frontier Thesis: Attack and Defense by Ray Allen Bitting/on102 American Intellectual History: The Development of the Discipline by Arthur A.
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212 The Progressive Era, 1900—20: The Reform Persuasion by George F. Mowry215 Contemporary American History: The United States since 1945 by Dewey 11’.
Grantham222 Far Western Frontiers by Harvey L. Carter240 The Indian in American History by William T. Hogan241 The Peopling of America: Perspectives on Immigration by Franklin D. Scott250 A History of the American Labor Movement by Albert A. B/urn260 Religion in America: History and Historiography by Edwin S. Gaits/ad702 American Diplomatic History in Transformation by Alexander DeGoncle
DISCUSSIONS ON TEACHING—essays on approaches to history in the classroom
2 Teaching History with film by John F. O’Connor and Martin A. Jackson
Pamphlets are $1.50 each payment must accompany order. A complete list of titlesis available upon request.rThe American Historical Association
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A History of the United States
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