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Contributors
Peter H. Argersinger is professor of history at Southern Illinois University and the immediate past president of SHGAPE. Among his publications on American political and rural history are Structure, Process, and Party (1992) and three books on Populism, including The Limits of Agrarian Radicalism (1995). He is also the coauthor of The American Journey (2009) and Twentieth-Century America: A Social and Political History (2005). He is currently finishing a book on the politics of apportionment during the 1890s. His essay is a revision of his presidential address to SHGAPE, delivered in March 2008.
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Theresa Ann Case is an associate professor of history at the University of Houston–Downtown, where she teaches U.S. women's history and working-class history. She is currently finishing a book manuscript entitled, "The 'Great Southwest Strike' and Free Labor on the Southwestern Railways, 1865–1892," and writing an essay on ambivalent strikebreakers on the railways.
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Ruth Crocker is professor of history and director of the Women's Studies Program at Auburn University. A former member of this journal's editorial board, she published Social Work and Social Order (1992), a study of race, class, and gender in the midwestern settlement movement, and Mrs. Russell Sage: Women's Activism and Philanthropy in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era (2006), which was reissued in paperback in fall 2008.
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