2002–2003 Fellowships in the Humanities

Long-Term Fellowships

ANNETTE KADE FELLOW IN FRENCH OR GERMAN STUDIES IN THE MIDDLE AGES OR RENAISSANCE

J. Michael Raley
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Chicago
Freedom of Association and the Devotio moderna: A Case Study in the Medieval Theory of Rights

LLOYD LEWIS / NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOW

Richard John
Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois at Chicago
Making Connections: Electrical Communications in Industrial America, 1844-1919

MELLON POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH FELLOWS

Eduardo de Jesús Douglas
Assistant Professor of Art History, University of California, Riverside
In the Palace of Nezahualcoyotl: History, Land and Painting in Early Colonial Tetzcoco

Chad Heap
Assistant Professor of American Studies, George Washington University
Sexuality, Race and Commercial Leisure in Chicago and New York, 1890-1940

Amelia Sandy
Assistant Professor of English, Marquette University
Allegory and the Ethics of Agency in Renaissance Romance

MELLON FOUNDATION / NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOW

Helen Thompson
Assistant Professor of English, Northwestern University
Ingenuous Subjection: Fraternal Patriarchy, Feminine Agency, and the English Domestic Novel, 1740-1814

MONTICELLO COLLEGE FOUNDATION FELLOW

Bethel Saler
Assistant Professor of History, Haverford College
The Frontiers of State Formation: Colonialism, Gender and the Making of Wisconsin, 1776-1854

NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOWS

Judith Anderson
Professor of English, Indiana University
Renaissance Metaphor and Culture

Carole Levin
Professor of History, University of Nebraska
Dreaming the English Renaissance/Renaissance Dreams

Lisa Voigt
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, University of Chicago
Border-Crossing and Captivity in Colonial Latin American Writing

ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION FELLOW IN THE HUMANITIES

Maureen Konkle
Assistant Professor of English, University of Missouri
Indian Territory/Oklahoma Native Writing: Tradition and Transition, 1840-1940

SPENCER FOUNDATION FELLOW

Daniel K. Gullo
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Chicago
Reading, Writing and Community Formation at Fifteenth-Century Montserrat

Short-Term Fellowships

AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR EIGHTEENTH CENTURY STUDIES FELLOWSHIP

Susan Nelson
Ph. D. Candidate in History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Looking for a Fight: Quarrels over Female Nature in Eighteenth-Century France

AUDREY LUMSDEN-KOUVEL FELLOWSHIP

Suzanne Magnanini
Assistant Professor of French and Italian, University of Colorado at Boulder
Gender, Genre, and Monstrosity in the Fairy Tales of Straparola and Basile

LESTER J. CAPPON FELLOWS IN DOCUMENTARY EDITING

Jean Brink
Professor of English, Arizona State University
"Rival Friendship": An Edition of a Seventeenth-Century Arcadian Romance

Maureen Mazzaoui
Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
A Critical Edition of Giacomo Castelvetro's Treatise on History

CENTER FOR GREAT LAKES CULTURE / MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY FELLOWS

Brian Page
Associate Professor of Geography, University of Colorado at Denver
Fashioning Regions, Re-Fashioning Nature: Cities, Hinterlands and Environmental Change in the Historical Midwest

Silvana Siddali
Assistant Professor of History, Illinois State University
"Land Too Dear for Purchase": Geography, Statehood, and Politics in the Old Northwest

COMMITTEE ON INSTITUTIONAL COOPERATION GRADUATE STUDENT FELLOWS

Jason E. Eden
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Minnesota
Gender and Cosmology among Puritans and Indians of Martha's Vineyard, 1620-1750

Brad Jarvis
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Minnesota
The Brothertown Indians: Land and Identity in the Early Republic

Brad Martin
Ph.D. Candidate in History, Northwestern University
Landscapes of Power: Native Peoples, National Parks, and the Making of a Modern Wilderness in the Hinterlands of North America, 1955-1985

Rebecca McNulty
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Education for Empire: Manual Labor, Civilization, and the Family in Nineteenth-Century American Missionary Education

Kathleen Thomas
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Minnesota
"Their Habits were Startling": Strategies and Ethnic Identities of Mixed-Heritage Families in the Fur-Trade Culture of the Great Lakes Region

Kerry Wynn
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Embodied Interactions: Eastern Oklahoma as Colonial Context, 1880-1940

ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION FELLOWS IN THE HUMANITIES

William J. Bauer
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Oklahoma
Native American Labor on the Round Valley Indian Reservation, 1880-1945

Clifford Long-Siouxand Karyl Denison Robb
Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation
Northen Cheyenne Sun Dance: Comparing Today's Practice with Documentation of the Early and Mid 1990s

Stephanie Penn
Adjunct Faculty, Bacone College, Osage Reservation
What Were They Thinking?: 19th Century American Religious Thought and Osage Indian Missions

SOUTH CENTRAL MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION FELLOW

Eric Anderson
Associate Professor of English, Oklahoma State University
Criminal Narratives of the American South

NEWBERRY LIBRARY SHORT-TERM FELLOW IN THE HISTORY OF CARTOGRAPHY

Philip Steinberg
Assistant Professor of Geography, Florida State University
Origins of the Territorial State in Early Modern Marine Cartography

ARTHUR WEINBERG FELLOW

Larry Tye
Independent Scholar
Rising from the Rails: Pullman Porters and the Birth of the Black Middle Class

NEWBERRY LIBRARY SHORT-TERM RESIDENT FELLOWS

Darlene Abreu-Ferreira
Assistant Professor of History, University of Winnipeg
Views from the Top: Women and Society in Early Modern Portuguese Tracts

Mark Bayer
Ph. D. Candidate in English, Ohio State University
The Jacobean Theatrical Marketplace

Kathryn Benton
Ph. D. Candidate in History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
What About the Women in the "White Man's Camp"? Gender, Nation, and the Reconstruction of Race in Cochise County Arizona, 1853-1942

Robert Bonner
Assistant Professor of History, Michigan State University
Slavery and Empire in the Louisiana Borderlands, 1760-1820

Tricia Bracher
Independent Scholar
The Life and Works of Esther Inglis

Gail Danvers
Lecturer in American Studies, King's College London
Contact, Conflict and Culture Dislocation on the Anglo-Iroquois Frontier

Roxanne Dávila
Assistant Professor of Romance and Comparative Literature, Brandeis University
Inventing the Maya: Travelers, Explorers, and Scholars in Mesoamerica

Marty Gould
Ph.D. Candidate in English, University of Iowa
Role Britannia: Theatricality and Empire in the Victorian Period

Tamar Herzig
Ph. D. Candidate in History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Women and the Savonarolan Reform Movement in Northern Italy, c. 1490-1565

William Kitchens
Associate Professor of Visual Arts, Loyola University New Orleans
The Art and History of the Book

Rhonda Knight
Visiting Assistant Professor of English, University of Toledo
Building Walls, Constructing Community: The "Kildare Poems" and the Hiberno-English Pale

Smita Lahiri
Ph. D. Candidate in Anthropology, Cornell University
Contradictory Convergences: Superstition and Modernity in the Colonial Philippines

Jason Martinek
Ph.D. Candidate in History, Carnegie Mellon University
Mightier than the Sword: Working-Class Reading, Educational Politics, and Socialists' Printed Culture of Dissent, 1884-1917

Annette McLeod
Ph. D. Candidate in Anthropology, University at Albany
Church People: Native Management of Social Boundaries in Late Colonial Tecamachalco, Mexico

Andrew Miller
Ph.D. Candidate in History, Johns Hokins University
Indian-Settler Relations in Northern New England, 1675-1725

Martha Patterson
Assistant Professor of English, Spring Hill College
Imagining the American New Woman, 1895-1914

Gordon Sayre
Associate Professor of English, University of Oregon
The Indian Chief as Tragic Hero: Native American Resistance and Imperial Literary Forms

Sarah White
Professor Emerita of French and Italian, Franklin and Marshall College
The Passion of Julia Newberry

David Wright
Ph. D. Candidate in Social Sciences, El Colegio de Michoacán Description of Otomí
Manuscripts for the Handbook of Middle American Indians


Special Awards and Fellowships

ASSOCIATED COLLEGES OF THE MIDWEST FACULTY FELLOWS

Gilberto Gomez-Ocampo, Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Wabash College
James Fisher, Professor of Theater, Wabash College
Fall 2002 Seminar: Confluence of Cultures: Histories and Fictions of the Americas

FRANCES C. ALLEN FELLOWSHIPS

Laurie Arnold
Ph.D Candidate in History, Arizona State University
Who Were the Bands that Became the Colville Indians?

Linda Juneau
M.A. Student in Anthropology, University of Montana
Early Christian History of the Blackfeet Tribe

Alyssa Mt. Pleasant
Ph.D. Candidate in the American Indian Program, Cornell University
Buffalo Creek: Social History of an Iroquois Community

BRITISH ACADEMY EXCHANGE FELLOWS

James Diedrick
Professor of English, Albion College
Exile in Bohemia: Mathilde Blind and the Culture of Late Victorian London

Lisa Sanders
Visiting Assistant Professor of Literature, Hampshire College
Consuming Fantasies: Labor, Leisure, and the London Shopgirl, 1880-1914

David Spadafora
Professor of History, Lake Forest College
This Enlightened Age: Religion and the Secular in Eighteenth Century Britain

COMMITTEE ON INSTITUTIONAL COOPERATION FACULTY FELLOW

Susan Sleeper-Smith
Associate Professor of History, Michigan State University
Invented Traditions, Contested Identities: A Study of Indian Images and the Invention of the Democratic State

ÉCOLE DES CHARTES EXCHANGE FELLOWS

Charlotte Bauer-Smith (to the École des Chartes)
Ph.D. Candidate in Art History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Visual Constructions of Corporate Identity and "Exempla" for the University of Paris, 1200-1500

Clément Meunier (to the Newberry Library)
École des Chartes
The Genesis and Diffusion of the Tridentine Missal

NEWBERRY LIBRARY UNDERGRADUATE SEMINAR FACULTY FELLOWS

Regina Buccola
Assistant Professor of English, Roosevelt University
Robert Bucholz
Associate Professor of History, Loyola University Chicago
Spring 2003 Seminar: Constructing the Queen: Elizabeth I in Political Pamphlets, Poetry, Personal Correspondence, Portraiture, Plays, Pulp Fiction, and Motion Pictures

WEISS/BROWN PUBLICATION SUBVENTION

Allen J. Frantzen
Professor of English, Loyola University Chicago
Bloody Good: Chivalry, Sacrifice, and World War I: A Study in Heroic Masculinity

Katherine A. McIver
Professor of Art and Art History, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Art and Music in the Early Modern Period: Essays in Honor of Franca Trinchieri Camiz

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