The Organization of American Historians and the Writing and Teaching of American History
Edited by Richard S. Kirkendall
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: The Institutional and Political History of the MVHA-OAH
Chapter 1: The Rise of a Modern and Democratic Learned Society- Stanley N. Katz (Princeton University)
Chapter 2: The Mississippi Valley Historical Association, 1907-1952- Michael Kammen (Cornell University)
Chapter 3: From the MVHA to the OAH, 1951-1981-Richard S. Kirkendall (University of Washington)
Chapter 4: The OAH in Troublesome Times, 1980-2000- Arnita Jones (American Historical Association)
Chapter 5: One Hundred Years of History: Extraordinary Change, Persistent Challenges- William Chafe (Duke University)
Part II: The MVHA-OAH and the Fields of History
Chapter 6: The Most Appropriate Subjects- William E. Leuchtenburg (University of North Carolina
Chapter 7: Persistence of Political History- James T. Patterson (Brown University)
Chapter 8: The Continental Empire and the Global Power- Richard S. Kirkendall
Chapter 9: Economic History and American Historians: From Integration to Segregation in One Century- Gavin Wright (Stanford University)
Chapter 10: The Battle for Military History: Success or Failure?- Edward M. Coffman (University of Wisconsin)
Chapter 11: The Challenges to Traditional Histories- Joan Hoff (Montana State University)
Chapter 12: Social History and Intellectual History- James T. Kloppenberg (Harvard University)
Chapter 13: The Long and Influential Life of Social History in the Review and the Journal- Stephanie Shaw (Ohio State University)
Chapter 14: The MVHR, the JAH, and Intellectual History: From Margin to Mainstream- David A. Hollinger (University of California, Berkeley)
Chapter 15: Immigration and the Tattered Narrative of Progressive History- John Bodnar (Indiana University)
Chapter 16: The Slow Rise to Prominence of African American History- Arvarh Strickland (University of Missouri) and Richard S. Kirkendall
Chapter 17: Woman's History: From Neglect to Prominence and to Integration- Alice Kessler-Harris (Columbia University)
Chapter 18: The Presence of Native American History- Frederick E. Hoxie (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Chapter 19: The Wild One: Environmental History as Red-Headed Stepchild- Karl Brooks (University of Kansas/ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)
Chapter 20: The History That Dare Not Speak Its Name- Kathy Peiss (University of Pennsylvania)
Chapter 21: How Disciplinary Change Happens- Thomas Bender (New York University)
Part III: Editing the Journal Chapter 22: A Learned Journal Adjusts to Change- Lewis C. Perry (St. Louis University)
Chapter 23: Editing and the Challenges of Specialization, Audiences, Sites of Practice- David Thelen (Indiana University)
Chapter 24: Putting Together American History- Joanne Meyerowitz (Yale University)
Chapter 25: Becoming the Editor- Edward T. Linenthal (Indiana University)
Part IV: The MVHA-OAH and the Teaching of History
Chapter 26: The Shouldering of Responsibilities- Gary B. Nash (University of California, Los Angeles)
Chapter 27: The MVHA and Teaching: A Strained Relationship- Ron Briley (Sandia Preparatory School, Albuquerque, New Mexico)
Chapter 28: Why a Focus on Teaching Day?- Marjorie Bingham (St. Louis Park High School, Minnesota)
Chapter 29: The OAH and the Community College Professoriate- Charles A. Zappia (San Diego Mesa College)
Chapter 30: The Recent Years-Timothy N. Thurber (Virginia Commonwealth University)
Chapter 31: A Plea for Equality- Leon Litwack (University of California, Berkeley)
Part V: The MVHA-OAH and Public History
Chapter 32: Public History: Past and Present- Spencer Crew (George Mason University)
Chapter 33: Historians in the Federal Government- Donald A. Ritchie (U.S. Senate Historical Office)
Chapter 34: Discovering Public History in an Unlikely Place: University of California, Santa Barbara, 1976 and After- Otis L. Graham, Jr. (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
Chapter 35: Public History and the Academy: A Continuum of Practice- Marla R. Miller (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
Part VI: Presidential Memories
Chapter 36: The Sitting President Looks On -- Uncomfortably- Richard White (Stanford University)
Chapter 37: The Transformation of the Annual Meeting- Richard W. Leopold
Chapter 38: The Warm Memories of a Life Member- Carl Degler (Stanford University)
Chapter 39: The Third Woman in the Presidency- Anne Firor Scott (Duke University)
Chapter 40: The OAH in Philadelphia: The Musical- Leon Litwack
Chapter 41: History's Public Function- Eric Foner (Columbia University)
Chapter 42: The OAH in St. Louis: The Protest- David Montgomery (Yale University
Afterword- Katherine Mandusic Finley (Organization of American Historians)
Notes on Contributors
The Officers, 1907-2010