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Conference Papers (Conference 1)

Gender, War and Culture: From Colonial Conquest, Standing Armies and Revolutionary Wars to the Wars of Nations and Empires (1650s1910s)

Friday and   Saturday, 2122 February
2014

 

Friday, 21 February 2014

Panel II and III: Gendering the History of Early Modern and Revolutionary Warfare

Panel II:

1. Consolidating States, Professionalizing Armies, and Controlling Violence in the Long-term Aftermath of the Thirty Years War (PDF)
PETER H. WILSON (University of Hull, Department of History)

2. War and Gender in Colonial and Revolutionary Central and South America and the Caribbean (PDF)
CATHERINE DAVIES (University of Nottingham, Department of Spanish, Portuguese & Latin American Studies)

3. War and Gender in Colonial and Revolutionary North America (PDF)
SERENA ZABIN (Carleton College, Department of History) 

Comment 1: Kristen Neuschel (Duke University, Department of History) (PDF)

Comment 2: Wayne Lee, UNC-Chapel Hill (Department of History) (PDF)

 

Panel III:

4. Gender, Slavery and Sovereign Statecraft in the Age of Revolutionary Wars (PDF)
ELIZABETH COLWILL (University of Hawai’i at Manoa, Department of American Studies)

5. Society, Mass Warfare and Gender during the European Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (PDF)
ALAN FORREST (University of York, Department of History)

6. Citizenship, Mass Mobilization and Masculinity in Transatlantic Perspective (1770s1850s) (PDF)
STEFAN DUDINK (Radboud University Nijmegen, Institute for Gender Studies)

7. Army Women and Female Soldiers: History, Perception and Memory in a Transatlantic Comparison, 17701900 (PDF)
THOMAS CARDOZA (Arizona State University, Barrett, The Honors College) 

Comment 1: Jay M. Smith (UNC-Chapel Hill, Department of History) (PDF)

Comment 2: Peter H. Wilson (University of Hull, Department of History)  (PDF)

Saturday, 22 February 2014

Panel IV and V: Gendering the History of the Wars of Nations and Empires

Panel IV:

1. Mobilization for War: Gender, Culture and Propaganda in Nineteenth-century Europe and the United States (PDF)
ROBERT NYE (Oregon State University, Department of History)

2. Gender and the Wars of Nation-building in Europe, 1830s1870s (PDF)
MARK STONEMAN (German Historical Institute, Washington D.C.)

3. Gender and the Wars of Nation-building and -keeping in the Americas, 1830s1870s (PDF)
AMY S. GREENBERG (Penn State University, Department of History)

Comment 1: Lloyd Kramer (UNC-Chapel Hill, Department of History)  (PDF)

Comment 2: Mischa Honeck (German Historical Institute, Washington D.C.) (PDF)

Panel V:

4. Gender, Imperialism and Militarism in Western Societies, 1870s1910s (PDF)
MICHAEL GEYER (The University of Chicago, Department of History)

5. Imperial Conquest, Violent Encounters and Changing Gender Relations: The Social Impact of Colonial Warfare, 1830s1910s (PDF)
ANGELA WOOLLACOTT (Australian National University, School of History)

6. White Warriors? Imperial Struggle, Race and the Making of ‘White Men’ during the Long Nineteenth Century (PDF)
MARILYN LAKE (The University of Melbourne, Department of History)

7. New Modes of Warfare, the Violated Body and the Gendering of Professional Military Medical Care (PDF)
JEAN QUATAERT (Binghamton University SUNY, Department of History)

Comment 1: Susan Thorne (Duke University, Department of History) (PDF)

Comment 2: Fitz Brundage (UNC-Chapel Hill, Department of History) (PDF)