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Contributors
Michael B. Gross is associate professor of history, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC. He is author of The War against Catholicism: Liberalism and the Anti-Catholic Imagination in Nineteenth-Century (University of Michigan Press, 2004), winner of the John Gilmary Shea Book Prize of the American Catholic Historical Association. He is currently studying images of hell, religious revival, and peasant culture in nineteenth-century Germany.
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John Hepp is associate professor of history at Wilkes University, where he teaches American urban and cultural history with an emphasis on the period 1850–1940. His first book, The Middle Class City: Transforming Space and Time in Philadelphia, 1876–1926, was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press in 2003. He has a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina.
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Russell A. Kazal is assistant professor of history in the Department of Humanities, University of Toronto at Scarborough, and a member of the graduate faculty in the Department of History, University of Toronto. He is the author of Becoming Old Stock: The Paradox of German-American Identity (Princeton University Press, 2004). His current research examines the emergence of popular notions of ethnic pluralism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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Mary L. Kelley is assistant professor of history at Lamar University in Beaumont. She was a Fulbright Scholar to Germany and is the author of The Foundations of Texan Philanthropy (Texas A&M University Press, 2004) and numerous scholarly articles. She is working on an edited volume on social and cultural topics in twentieth-century Texas as well as a book on modern Texas women.
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Kate Sampsell Willmann is an intellectual historian currently on the faculty of Georgetown University's Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service in Doha, Qatar. Since completing a Ph.D. from Georgetown University in 2002, she has taught at Ankara's Bilkent University, Bradley University, and the United Arab Emirates University in Al Ain. Her article is based on her book manuscript, "If I Could Tell This Story in Words...: Lewis W. Hine and the Intellectual History of the Social Document," currently under review with the University of Mississippi Press. A graduate of the University of Baltimore School of Law, she has practiced as an attorney in Baltimore.
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Rob Schorman is associate professor of history at Miami University. His book, Selling Style: Clothing and Social Change at the Turn of the Century (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003), explored the intersection of fashion, advertising, and gender in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His article is part of a project that examines advertising from 1890 to 1930 from the perspectives of some of its leading practitioners.
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| David Traxel is professor of history at the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia. Recent books include Crusader Nation: The United States in Peace and the Great War, 1898–1920 (Knopf, 2006), and 1898: The Birth of the American Century (Knopf, 1998). |
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