In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Radical History Review 81 (2001) 176-177



[Access article in PDF]

Notes On Contributors


Van Gosse, formerly the organizing director at Peace Action, teaches history at Franklin Marshall College. He is a member of Radical History Review's editorial collective.

Janet Wells Greene received her Ph.D. in 2000 from New York University and works for the Wagner Labor archives.

Albert Grundlingh is chair of the history department at the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa. He has written extensively on war and society, Afrikaner social history, and South African historiography.

Amy Kesselman is professor of women's studies at the State University of New York at New Paltz. She is the author of Fleeting Opportunities: Women Shipyard Workers in Portland and Vancouver during World War II and Reconversion (1990) and coeditor of Women: Images and Realities: A Multicultural Anthology (1995 and 1998) as well as several articles on the history of U.S. feminism. She is currently working on a book on women's liberation in New Haven, Connecticut.

David Kinkela is a graduate student at New York University and managing editor of the Radical History Review. While he enjoys his forays into musical reviews, he is currently working on his dissertation, tentatively titled "From Smog to Global Warming: The Politics of Air Pollution in Postwar America."

Phoebe S. Kropp is assistant professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania. She is currently working to revise her dissertation on the racial politics of public memory in southern California for publication with the University of California Press. Her new project concerns the construction of regional identity through the presentation of state histories in elementary school textbooks and curriculum.

R. J. Lambrose's Hanging by a Chad: An Hour-by-Hour Chronicle of the 2000 Presidential Election in Rhode Island may be found in remainder bins in supermarkets everywhere.

Diana L. Linden is completing a book manuscript on artist Ben Shahn's New Deal murals and their representations of labor, social reform, and ethnicity.

Mary Nolan is professor of history at New York University. She is the author of Visions of Modernity (1994) and is coediting a collection of essays entitled Crimes of War: Guilt and Denial in the Twentieth Century, forthcoming from the New Press.

Kavita Philip is an assistant professor at Georgia Institute of Technology. She works on such issues as race, science, colonialism, and nineteenth-century British environmentalism. She is a member of Radical History Review's editorial collective.

Jeanne F. Theoharis is an assistant professor of political science at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. She is coauthor with Athan Theoharis of "These Yet-to-Be United States": Civil Rights and Civil Liberties in Post-1945 America, to be published by Harcourt Press next year. In addition, she is coediting Freedom North, a collection of essays on black freedom struggles outside of the American South, with Matthew Countryman and Komoze Woodward (to be published in 2002 by Palgrave-St. Martin's).

Danny Walkowitz is professor of history and director of the Metropolitan Studies Program at New York University. A long-time member of Radical History Review's editorial collective, he also served as Debra Bernhardt's dissertation adviser.

...

pdf

Share