Annual Meeting

Annual Meeting Program: Changes and Corrections

AHA Staff | Dec 1, 2001

Editor's Note: Please note the following corrections to the annual meeting program, as updated until November 14, 2001. Page numbers refer to the Program; please see the Program for additional details.

AHA Program Committee Sessions

Lisbeth Haas (Univ. of California at Santa Cruz) has changed the title of her paper to "Historical Subjects Denied on the 'Frontier' and in the 'Borderlands'." She will present the paper at the session "Revisiting the Frontier: Freedom, Diaspora, and the Discourses of Minority History," sponsored by the AHA Committee on Minority Historians, scheduled on Friday, January 4, 9:30-11:30 a.m in the Pare 55's Pare Ballroom I (p. 74).

Session 20, "Imperial Self-fashioning: Communication, Social Order, and the Stability of Empire," scheduled for Friday, January 4, 9:30-11:30 a.m., has been cancelled (p. 81).

Edwin Barber (W.W. Norton & Co.) will not be a panelist on the session "Book Publishing for Historians: A Roundtable." The session, scheduled on Friday, January 4, 2:30-4:30 p.m., is sponsored by the AHA Professional Division, and will be chaired by Peter Stansky (Stanford Univ.). Panelists are Tim Duggan (HarperCollins Publishers), Sydelle Kramer (Francis Goldin Literary Agency), Monica McCormick (Univ. of California Press), Joyce Seltzer (Harvard Univ. Press), and Sam Stoloff (Francis Goldin Literary Agency) (p. 95).

David Atwill (Univ. of Denver) has changed the title of his paper to "Islam, Ethnic Corridors, and State Transgressions in Nineteenth-Century South-West China." He will present the paper at the session "(De)Limiting the Empire Islam, Ethnicity, and Education in the Borderlands of the Qing and Ottoman Empire," scheduled on Saturday, January 5, 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the Nikko's Carmel I (p. 145).

Michelle Murphy (Univ. of Toronto) replaces Gregg Mitman (Univ. of Minnesota) as chair and comment on the session, "Reconceptualizing Spaces: Geographies of the Imperial Age in Europe and the Americas," scheduled on Saturday, January 5, 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the Pare 55's Raphael Room (p. 146).

Dian Million (Univ. of California at Berkeley) replaces Amy Lonetree (Univ. of California, Berkeley) on the session "Approaching the Frontier Paradigm in American Indian History," scheduled on Saturday, January 5, 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the St. Francis's Elizabethan Room C. Her presentation is titled "Persistence and Strategy: The Nooksack Homestead Act Participation Revisited" (p. 149).

John Stauffer (Harvard Univ.) replaces Mark Rennell (Harvard Univ.) on the session, "Democratic Aesthetics: Pubic Spaces, Public Places, and Civic Values in the Twentieth-Century United States," scheduled on Sunday, January 6, 9:30-10:30 a.m. in the Hilton's Union Square 15. His presentation is titled "The Art of Reform: Black Picture Makers from Douglass to DuBois" (p. 169).

Michael Molasky's new affiliation is Univ. of Minnesota at Twin Cities. Prof. Molasky is the commentator on Session 115, "Fantasy Islands: The Making of 'Okinawa' in Twentieth-Century Political and Economic Discourse," scheduled in the Hilton's Union Square 13 on Sunday, January 6, 8:30-10:30 a.m (p. 170).

Affiliated Society Sessions

Mary Elaine Hegland's new affiliation is Santa Clara Univ. Hegland is the chair of the Coordinating Council for Women in History Session 6, cosponsored with the Association for Middle East Women's Studies, "Martyrs and Exemplars: Making Meanings in the Middle East and South Asia," scheduled in the St. Francis's Essex Room on Saturday, January 5, 2:30-4:30 p.m. Sita Raman (Santa Clara Univ.) will not be a panelist in this session (p. 159).

John Morello (DeVry Institute of Technology) is presenting a paper at Session 3 of the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, "Morals, Memory, and Marketing: Selected Presidential Case Studies," scheduled for Saturday, January 5, 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the St. Francis's Oxford Room. In addition to correcting the spelling of his last name, the exact title of his paper is "Hard Cash, Soft Sell: GOP Fundraising and the Election of Harding" (p. 161).

Douglas Karsner 's correct affiliation is Bloomsburg Univ. of Pennsylvania. Prof. Karsner is delivering the paper "Cyber Research and the Atomic Bomb" at the World History Association's Session 2, "Accentuating the Positive, Eliminating the Negative: Utilizing Technology to Enhance the Learning Experience and Reduce Geographic and Cultural Barriers," scheduled on Friday, January 4, 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the Hilton's Franciscan Room C (p. 116).

Wayne Lee (Univ. of Louisville) replaces Amy Johnson (Berry Coll.) as commentator at the World History Association's Session 2, "Accentuating the Positive, Eliminating the Negative: Utilizing Technology to Enhance the Learning Experience and Reduce Geographic and Cultural Barriers," scheduled on Friday, January 4, 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the Hilton's Franciscan Room C (p. 116).

Erratum: Please note that the book exhibitor in booth 101 (listed on page 222 of the Program) is Ohio University Press and not Ohio State University Press.


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