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61. Thimerosal
Since the 1930’s, thimerosal has been used as a preservative to prevent growth including studies from the us, Denmark, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
http://cerhr.niehs.nih.gov/genpub/topics/thimerosal-ccae.htm
home about CERHR news CERHR chemicals ... contact us CERHR: Thimerosal in Vaccines
Thimerosal in Vaccines History in vaccines
Thimerosal is a mercury-containing compound that kills or prevents the growth of microorganisms. Since the 1930’s, thimerosal has been used as a preservative to prevent growth of bacteria and fungi in vaccines ( FDA 2005 ). One of the breakdown products of thimerosal is ethylmercury, an organic form of mercury. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Modernization Act of 1997 called for the FDA to review and assess the risk of all mercury-containing food and drugs, including vaccines ( CDC 1999 ). The FDA noted that due to immunization, a 6-month old infant could potentially be exposed to cumulative levels of ethylmercury exceeding Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) guidelines for safe intake of methylmercury, a related mercury compound that has been more thoroughly studied than ethylmercury ( CDC 2003 ). It is not known if toxicity for ethylmercury is the same as that for methylmercury, but in conducting safety evaluations, the FDA assumes that the two chemicals have equal toxicity (

62. AEGiS-AFP News: US-AIDS: AIDS Virus Leapt From Ape To Man In 1930s: Study - Febr
point in the 1930s, us researchers said in a study based on computergeneratedmutations. us-AIDS AIDS virus leapt from ape to man in 1930s study
http://www.aegis.com/news/afp/2000/AF000203.html
US-AIDS: AIDS virus leapt from ape to man in 1930s: study
Agence France-Presse - Tuesday, February 3, 2000 SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 3 (AFP) - The AIDS virus, which has devasted millions of lives, migrated from a chimpanzee to a human at some point in the 1930s, US researchers said in a study based on computer-generated mutations. The study by the National Laboratories at Los Alamos, New Mexico, and Northwestern University contradicts a controversial theory by British scientist Edward Hooper, who believes AIDS was transmitted in Africa in the 1950s by polio vaccines infected with HIV, the virus that is a precursor to AIDS. The oldest known human blood sample carrying the HIV virus dates from 1959. By carefully reproducing the genetic sequencing of the HIV virus in powerful mainframe computers, the US researchers traced the genealogy of the AIDS-carrying virus. They concluded that it was transmitted by a chimpanzee which was eaten by a human in the 1930s. The study was presented Wednesday at a conference here on AIDS and opportunistic infections. Since it first appeared, the AIDS virus has infected 50 million people around the world and has so far claimed 16 million lives.

63. Homeownership Alliance - Studies & Reports
Each year, the Homeownership Alliance issues white papers, studies, Americans since the 1930s and continues to hold sway over adjustable rate mortgages.
http://www.homeownershipalliance.com/studies/index.php
June 2004 - Homeownership Alliance Poll Shows Most Americans See Homeownership As Sound Investment for Families and Communities (PDF) A majority of Americans believe owning their own home leads to personal financial security, improved school performance for their children and greater community involvement, according to a recent poll of 1000 adults commissioned by the Homeownership Alliance. The poll also finds that homeowners as a whole are more likely to vote. View the News Release Download the Study June 2004 - Homeownership Often Begins with a Banking Relationship and a Credit History (PDF) View the News Release Download the Study June 2004 - America's Home Forecast: The Next Decade for Housing and Mortgage Finance (PDF) Written by the nation's top housing and mortgage economists, this study takes an unprecedented long-term look at the industry and produces forecasts for the next 10 years.This study also includes the latest information on minority homeownership. View the News Release Download the Study November 2003 - Mortgage Finance Innovation and the Achievement of Homeownership: The Role of the Fixed-Rate Mortgage (PDF) This white paper, written by Stuart Gabriel, Ph.D., explains how the fixed-rate mortgage has made homeownership possible for millions of Americans since the 1930s and continues to hold sway over adjustable rate mortgages.

64. American Studies Staff
Her primary interests are in British and us fiction and poetry of the He teaches on the Politics strand of the American studies course in Part 1,
http://www.rdg.ac.uk/american/ASgeneral/staff2.html
JONATHAN BELL. BA (Oxford), MPhil, PhD (Cambridge) email: J.W.Bell@rdg.ac.uk
Joined the History Department in 2000. He is currently working on a book based on his PhD research into the impact of Cold War imagery on the development of domestic politics and social change in the United States in the late 1940s. Part of this work has already been published in an American university textbook. He has also started a project on the California Democratic Council in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1998-9 he was a visiting research fellow at the University of Maryland, College Park. His main interests lie in the interaction of politics and society in the United States between the 1920s and the 1960s. Return to staff list A/S home page NICOLA BRADBURY. MA (Oxford), MA (McGill, Canada), DPhil (Oxford) email: N.A.L.Bradbury@rdg.ac.uk
A member of the English Department, who contributes to the 'Writing America' modules in Year 2. Her primary interests are in British and US fiction and poetry of the nineteenth and early twentieth-century, with special reference to Henry James. She is the author of Henry James: The Later Novels (1980) and A Critical and Annotated Bibliography of Henry James (1986). She has recently been appointed Editor of

65. Internet Public Library: United States Culture
The 1930s in America were a time of unparalleled contradiction and complexity . Provides a rich resource in American studies which includes a listing
http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/soc40.85.00/
dqmcodebase = "/javascript/"
Subject Collections

Business

Computers

Education
... United States Culture This collection All of the IPL Advanced Cultural aspects of life in the United States.
Resources in this category:
You can also view Magazines Associations on the Net under this heading.
About.com: Southern U.S. Cuisine
http://southernfood.about.com/
AdFlip
http://www.adflip.com/
"adflip.com is the world's largest searchable database of classic print ads. You can search by category, by decade, even by year. The 'what are you looking for' search box allows you to type in a brand name and even a specific model name. We won't guarantee that you will always get a match, but you may be surprised at what is lurking deep in our archives." Ads date back to the 1940's and feature all types of products. A great resource if you need ads, but don't want to destroy magazines to get them.
America in the 1930s
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~1930s/home_1.html
"The 1930s in America were a time of unparalleled contradiction and complexity. Encapsulated loosely on one end by Black Tuesday of the Great Depression and on the other end by the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the years between 1929 and 1941 were characterized by what Terry Cooney calls 'Balancing Acts,' a dance between big government and various regional movements, with the depths of the Depression and the height of the Modern Age thrown in for good measure. Despite its cultural richness, the 1930s remain nearly invisible in contemporary discussions of America's artistic, cultural, political, economic, and social development. This site is an attempt to shed light on that decade and emphasize its importance in American thought and culture. We have elected to view the 1930s through the lenses of its films, radio programs, literature, journalism, museums, exhibitions, architecture, art, and other forms of cultural expression. "

66. National Park Service: Expansion Of The NPS In The 1930s (Preface)
Online Book cover to Admin History NPS Expansion 1930s Harry Butowsky,Historian, WASO, supplied us with his study on nomenclature and the supporting
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/unrau-williss/adhi0.htm
NPS Expansion: 1930s
MENU Contents Foreword Preface pre-1933 Reorganization New Deal Recreation ... Appendix
Expansion of the National Park Service in the 1930s:
Administrative History Preface
The following study, which examines one of the most significant decades in the development of the National Park Service, is one of the first in what will be a series of administrative histories of the National Park Service. Initiated by NPS Chief Historian Edwin C. Bearss, the administrative history program will result in studies that will not only be of importance to managers in the Service, but will be of interest to the general student as well. Any study is the result of the combined efforts of a number of people, and this one is no exception. Edwin C. Bearss initiated the program, gave us the project, and was a source of encouragement throughout preparation of the project. Barry Mackintosh, NPS Bureau Historian, provided general administrative oversight of the project. Harry Butowsky, Historian, WASO, supplied us with his study on nomenclature and the supporting documentation for it. Ben Levy, senior historian in the Washington office, helped us to find material on the NPS Advisory Board and shared his insights into the Historic Sites Act of 1935. Gerald Patten, Assistant Manager, and Nan V. Rickey, Chief, Branch of Cultural Resources, Mid-Atlantic/North Atlantic Team, Denver Service Center, provided encouragement for the project and released us from team-related work so that we could work on it.

67. THE 1930s, GREAT DEPRESSION (20TH C US HISTORY) (e-Book, ETexts
nnnneBooks 20th c us The 30s, Great Depression, New Deal, Franklin Roosevelt America in the 1930s web; w/timeline (course syllabus)
http://www.digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010histus20-30sdepressiona.asp
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68. Leo Marx: Believing In America
Though I was not present at the creation of American studies, I arrived on the And back in the mid1930s, members of the founding generation probably
http://www.bostonreview.net/BR28.6/marx.html
CURRENT ISSUE table of contents FEATURES new democracy forum new fiction forum poetry fiction ... archives ABOUT US masthead mission rave reviews contests ... advertising SERVICES bookstore locator literary links subscribe Search this site or the web Powered by FreeFind
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Believing in America An intellectual project and a national ideal Leo Marx
The tempest bursting from the waste of Time
that new we all The Uses of Literacy believe did were It was introduced without fanfare, almost casually, as a strictly local experiment in interdisciplinary teaching and research. If a theory was implicit in this modest curricular innovation, it was a rationale for interdisciplinarity the Virgin Land: The American West as Myth and Symbol So much for the currently received view of the Great Divide. I have presented something of a caricature, but that of course is my point. To my mind, most accounts of the BD project routinely advanced by AD scholars are caricatures. A plausible explanation lies, I believe, in the animating idea of the American studies project.

69. History Of Time Use
A number of small studies were carried out in through the 1930s and 1940s in theUnited Kingdom, and in 1938, the audience research department of the BBC
http://www.stmarys.ca/partners/turp/pages/history.htm
Your browser does not support script A Brief History of Time....Use Research: The earliest published accounts of time use are thought to be How Working Men Spend Their Time (Bevans, 1913) and Round About a Pound a Week (Pember-Reeves, 1913). The former was published in the United States, the latter in the United Kingdom. During the second decade of this century, time use research emerged in Europe in conjunction with early studies of living conditions of the working class in response to pressures generated by the rise of industrialization. In the United States, household time-allocation studies date from 1915. In most of these studies, respondents were asked to estimate how much time they allocated to various activities. The bulk of pre-World War II time use diaries originated in the Soviet Union, Great Britain and the United States. Germany and France were also responsible for a number of others. The first sophisticated study was undertaken in the Soviet Union in 1924 for use in governmental and communal planning. In 1923, the first ever time-budget study in Japan was done in Osaka. In the United States, work began on time-use studies in the 1920's as economists used them to study farm and rural women. Work also began in the 1920's on a program to study household output in terms of time use. Since that time, there has been extensive work focusing on household time use in the United States. Later in the 1930s, Sorokin And Berger, in their

70. 1930s Dust Bowl May Have Been Once Common
Events like the great Dust Bowl of the 1930s, immortalized in The Grapes the 1930 s Dust Bowl decade, according to sediment core studies by the team.
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/climate-04zzg.html
EARTH OBSERVATION
1930s Dust Bowl May Have Been Once Common
NOAA collection Portland OR (SPX) Aug 02, 2004
Events like the great Dust Bowl of the 1930s, immortalized in "The Grapes of Wrath" and remembered as a transforming event for millions of Americans, were regular parts of much-earlier cycles of droughts followed by recoveries in the region, according to new studies by a multi-institutional research team led by Duke University. Some of those prehistoric droughts in the northern Great Plains of what is now the United States also lasted longer than modern-day dry spells such as the 1930's Dust Bowl decade, according to sediment core studies by the team. The group's evidence implies these ancient droughts persisted for up to several decades each. At their heights, prairie fires became uncommon because there was too little vegetation left to burn. The ages of charcoal deposits suggest instead that prairie fires occurred during intervening wet periods, with each wet-dry cycle lasting more than a century each. A report on the research will be delivered at a session at 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 4, in Meeting Room D136 of the Oregon Convention Center during the Ecological Society of America's 2004 annual meeting in Portland.

71. Timeline Of Critical Paradigms
Examines literature from groups traditionally seen as marginal to us culture (Native, 1930s Marxist criticism is a Formalist whipping boy that helps
http://www.sou.edu/English/IDTC/timeline/uslit.htm
Timeline of Major Critical Theories in US
Download an Adobe Acrobat version of this page so you can print it. Warren Hedges Southern Oregon Univeristy
Four Highly Influential Paradigms
  • Each Successive Paradigm Complicates and Incorporates Elements of Previous Paradigms
  • Structuralism proper actually only comes the US in the late 70s. But it epitomizes the importance most theories of the time placed on a single deep structure to explain literature and culture. Jungian or myth-based criticism identified the structure as "archetypes." Second wave feminism looked to gender difference. Psychoanalysis to the Oedipus complex. Marxism to material conditions, etc.
ca ca
Formalism
ca ca
Deep Structure Models
ca
Post Structuralism
Cultural Studies
  • Aims to explicate the formal properties of the artwork.
  • Politics, artist's life, etc. secondary.
  • There is a limited number of great works (the canon).
  • Great art expresses "universal" themes
Structuralism proper exemplifies these trends)
  • Aims to uncover the "deep structure" beneath the text.

72. Droughts Like The Great Dust Bowl Of The 1930s May Have Been Unexceptional In Pr
of the 1930s May Have Been Unexceptional in Prehistoric Times, New Study Suggests.Sediment core studies imply some prehistoric dry spells in northern
http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/2004/08/dustbowl_0804.html
Browse By Subject:  Campus News Duke in the News Medminute News Releases News Tips Opinion Police News Archived Stories Alumni Arts Business Campus News/Working at Duke Computing and Technology Divinity and Religious Life Duke and Durham Education and Training Engineering Environment and Earth Sciences Events Faculty Health and Medicine Humanities and Social Sciences International Law Natural Sciences Philanthropy and Development Public Policy Research Sports and Athletics Students Showcase Hurricane Katrina Relief Forty-seven undergraduates, 17 graduate students from five universities in New Orleans have accepted Duke's offer of enrollment Droughts Like the Great Dust Bowl of the 1930s May Have Been Unexceptional in Prehistoric Times, New Study Suggests Sediment core studies imply some prehistoric dry spells in northern Great Plains lasted several decades Monday, August 2, 2004 Print This Page Durham, N.C. Events like the great Dust Bowl of the 1930s, immortalized in "The Grapes of Wrath" and remembered as a transforming event for millions of Americans, were regular parts of much-earlier cycles of droughts followed by recoveries in the region, according to new studies by a multi-institutional research team led by Duke University. Some of those prehistoric droughts in the northern Great Plains of what is now the United States also lasted longer than modern-day dry spells such as the 1930's Dust Bowl decade, according to sediment core studies by the team.

73. 1930s In Print
1930s hypertexts, comics, books, people. studies the cigarette tag as theroot of modern advertising. Slang in the Great Depression
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~1930s/PRINT/printindex.html
1930's In Print Advertising Books Comics ... Sports Advertising The Art of Persuasion: American Graphic Design Comes of Age
The transformation of modern European design ideas by American designers. The Ad Machine in Action: Cigarettes and Art in Advertising
Studies the cigarette tag as the root of modern advertising. Slang in the Great Depression
A look at the slanguage of the 1930's, complete with a first-cited dictionary, and the slang of the New Deal, the Soda Jerk, the Hobo, the Teenager, Advertisting, Radio, Jazz Culture, and Drug Culture. back to top Books Blue Plate Special: An Anthology of 30s Prose
This collection has crime fiction, some real event reportage, strikes and riots as well as humor. Like a good square meal, it has a little bit from every group. Put them all together and you have a wholesome taste of the decade. The Tradition of the Mountains
An analysis of the southern Appalachian Mountains in literature. Ideological Conflicts: Absalom Absalom and Gone with the Wind
A comparison of two books about the South, one a high modernist text by William Faulkner which few read at the time, the other the broadly popular fiction by Margaret Mitchell.
The complete text of this important work by Zora Neale Hurston includes extensive editorial and critical commentary, images and biographies.

74. Allardyce, Barnett, Publishers / AB Fable Violin, Music, Literary
AB FABLE RECORDING AND BULLETIN VIOLIN IMPROVISATION studies The AffinityCD of the 1930s Onyx Club Boys recordings with AB’s now outof-date notes is
http://www.abar.net/
A B
ALLARDYCE, BARNETT, PUBLISHERS
ALLARDYCE BOOK
AB FABLE RECORDING AND BULLETIN: VIOLIN IMPROVISATION STUDIES
AB FABLE ARCHIVE
14 MOUNT STREET, LEWES, EAST SUSSEX BN7 1HL ENGLAND UK
DOMESTIC TELEPHONE/FAX 01273 479393
INTERNATIONAL TELEPHONE/FAX + 44 1273 479393
email ab

or visit our UK trade or USA or Danish trade and retail distributors shown below
Our catalogue is divided into categories for literature books / music books / CDs Scroll to pink page corrections and additions to the journal Fable Bulletin: Violin Improvisation Studies Scroll to blue page photos link Scroll to silver page link to other violin sites Look at our book and CD releases below and email your order or questions Please include recognizable here appropriate subject heading You will receive an invoice or reply showing how much and how to pay Payment can be made in your currency in various easy ways including Creditcard via PayPal Please do not send payment until you receive our invoice or reply Students, writers, musicians may be eligible for a discount on some multiple book orders If you order from on-line or in-store retailers let us know if you experience difficulty Fable Bulletin: Violin Improvisation Studies is available only direct from England UK trade distribution for CDs retail customers should contact AB direct not our trade distributor DISCOVERY RECORDS Devizes / Tel: 01380 728000 / Fax: 01380 722244 sales@discovery-records.com

75. Catholic Studies - A Selected Bibliography
Published since 1930. Quarterly. As of January 2000 , indexes 145 BaltimoreTheological studies, 1940 . (BX801.T342). us Catholic Historian.
http://www.library.nd.edu/colldev/subject_home_pages/catholic/ames_bibl.shtml
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University Libraries
University of Notre Dame
Info for students faculty visitors , or friends Search ND Libraries catalog Law Library catalog e-Journal Locator encyclopedia dictionary Search this site for navigation Getting Help Library Services Inside ND Libraries Research Tools ... Catholic Studies
CATHOLIC STUDIES:
A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compiled by Charlotte Ames, Subject Librarian for Catholic Studies
University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana
Biographies Dictionaries and Directories Encyclopedias Indexes ... Serials
Bibliographies
Catholic Women Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical Sourcebook. Mary R. Reichardt, editor. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001. 424 p. (Ref. PN471.C382001) Consists of entries for sixty-four authors, arranged alphabetically. Each entry, written by a scholar in the field, provides a brief biography of the author; a critical examination of her major themes, particularly as they relate to Catholic and women’s issues; a summary of critical reception of her works; and a bibliography of selected primary and secondary works. Among Catholic women authors included are Madre Castillo, Annie Dillard, Julian of Norwich; Clare Booth Luce, Edna O’Brien, Katherine Anne Porter, and Thérèse of Lisieux, among others. Ellis, John Tracy.

76. M.A. Program In Liberal Studies
CUNYGraduate Center Liberal studies MA Program. MALS 77300 History of theCinema II 1930s to the Present Wednesdays, 630-930 pm, 3 credits
http://web.gc.cuny.edu/Liberalstudies/courses_sp05.html
Spring 2005 Courses
MALS 70800 Transformations of Modernity, 1914-present
Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m., 3 credits
Professor Rachel M. Brownstein
The theme of this course is changes—change from an earlier time, and nostalgia and anxiety about future change; changing place, and with it the changing sense of self or identity; and changes in human relationships and in the forms of expression. We will pay some attention to how “modernity” is defined by the new Museum of Modern Art, but for the most part we will read and discuss prose fiction in English, and the changes in literary form.
Among the books we will read are: Kafka, The Metamorphosis
Wharton, The Custom of the Country
Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway Forster, A Passage to India
Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby Ellison, Invisible Man
Naipaul, A House for Mr. Biswas

77. WWW-VL: History: United States History: 1930-1939 | 1930s History; 30's, Great D
The Glass Steagall Act 1930 s Division of Financial Power, History us 1940sHistory Documents for the Study of American History 1930s documents
http://vlib.iue.it/history/USA/ERAS/20TH/1930s.html
WWW-VL: HISTORY: USA: 1930-1939
Click here for
WWW-VL: History: United States History
WWW-VL: History: W3 Search Engines
Bibliography
Documents Getting Through the Great Depression ... Chronological Listing of Events

78. UMBC Library-- Albin O. Kuhn Library Subject Guides-- Africana Studies
Indexes us, Canadian, British, and other European dissertations and theses; Bibliographic Guide to Black studies. Boston, usA GK Hall, 1975.
http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/subjectguides/AFRICANA-SG.php3
text only
catalog
usmai Research Port ... Home Albin O. Kuhn Library Subject Guides > Africana Studies
General and Multidisciplinary Databases
  • Academic Search Premier
    Coverage: varies. Provides full-text for over 3,400 scholarly journals covering the social sciences, humanities, education, sciences, and more. Funded by the Maryland Digital Library (MDL).
  • MasterFILE Premier
    Coverage:
    varies. Indexes 3,100+ magazines covering general subjects. Includes full-text for over 1,000 journals.
  • PsycINFO
    Coverage:
    1887 - present. Indexes 1,300 Psychology journals from nearly 50 countries. Also includes abstracts for dissertations, books and book chapters. Same coverage as PsycLit.
  • Social Services Abstracts
    Coverage:
    1980 - present. Indexes and abstracts current research focused on social work and human services, including social welfare, social policy, community development, crisis intervention, gerontology, poverty and homelessness. Includes Social Work Abstracts
  • Sociological Abstracts Coverage: 1963 - present. Indexes/abstracts journals in sociology, social work, and other social sciences. Includes Sociological Abstracts, IRPS, and SOPODA. Replaces Sociofile.
Biographical, Geographical, and Historical Databases

79. SPEEDING UP THE AGING PROCESS
Since the days of World War II when the us prevailed by building the world s b) Mouse studies have shown that fluoride can cause a rather rare liver
http://www.cyberclass.net/flourideaging.htm
SPEEDING UP THE AGING PROCESS - FLUORIDE: THE AGING FACTOR They called it "Das Dorf der jungen Greise", the village where people age before their time. In 1978, the German magazine "Stern" reported on this village of Kizilcaoern, Turkey, describing it as a place where even the young looked and felt old. At the age of 30 they would look like old men, their facial skin was wrinkled, muscle tone weakened with walking difficulties.
There were numerous premature births, with babies stillborn after four or five months of gestation.
Dr. Yusef C. Ozkan and his colleagues at the Medical faculty of the University of Eskisehir suspect that the cause of all this suffering is to be sought in the high content of fluorides. The medical people say that the fluoride content of the water is 5.4 parts per million. Similar symptoms have been reported elsewhere. Dr. Frada and co-workers from the University of Palmero reported that the people in the Sicilian village of Acquaviva Platani experienced a premature hardening of the arteries and premature senility, as well as an increase in mortality which Dr. Frada attributed to the 5 parts per million fluoride found in their drinking water. Similar findings have been found in certain areas of India where fluoride levels are high.
FLUORIDE AND PREMATURE SKIN WRINKLING
Fluoride at levels as low as 1 part per million in the drinking water give rise to an irregular formation of collagen in the body. Collagen, which makes up about a third of our bodies, is a major component of skin, ligaments, tendons, muscles, cartilage, bones and teeth.

80. Wesleyan University - American Studies Program
Professor of History Patricia Hill specializes in 19thcentury us cultural, Associate Professor of English and Women s studies Indira Karamcheti is an
http://www.wesleyan.edu/americas/amst/faculty.html
AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM Center for the Americas American Studies Program Latin American Studies Program
Majoring in American Studies
...
Cutler, Jonathan

Hill, Patricia R.
    Professor, American Studies
    phill@wesleyan.edu

    Office Hours: Fall Semester 2005: Wednesdays 2:40-4:00 or by appointment at x2374. Center for the Americas 209.
Professor of History Patricia Hill specializes in 19th-century U.S. cultural, women's, and religious history. Her study, The World Their Household, examines the ways in which the Protestant mission movement worked to produce cultural transformations abroad while reflexively transforming American culture. She has participated in recent regional and national discussions focusing on internationalizing the American Studies curriculum.
Karamcheti, Indira
Associate Professor of English and Women's Studies Indira Karamcheti is an important new voice in the field of postcolonial literature. Her broad ranging interests in the geographics of marginality encompasses Caribbean and African-American literatures. Kauanui, J. Kehaulani

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