Thursday, April 11
Plenary Session: Freedom Struggles
Chair: Matthew Countryman, University of Michigan
Clayborne Carson, Stanford University
Barbara Ransby, University of Illinois at Chicago
Tera W. Hunter, Princeton University
Scott Kurashige, University of Michigan
The year 2013 marks the anniversaries of two major events in the history of black freedom struggles—the March on Washington’s fiftieth and the Emancipation Proclamation’s sesquicentennial. Leading scholars will offer brief reflections on the long history of black freedom movements, their significance to United States history more generally, and their relevance for today.
Early Republic Borderlands: Indian Removal, Slavery, and Non-State Actors
Friday, April 12Chair: David Waldstreicher, Temple University
“Fraught with Disastrous Consequences for our Country”: Cherokee Removal and Nullification, 1824–1839, Nancy Morgan, Temple University
Women at the Crossroads: The Legal and Political Fight to Reverse Indian Removal in Seneca, 1838–1887, Taylor Spence, Yale University
Reading Hearts, Not Books: Affective Literacy and Public Sentiment in David Walker’s Appeal, Tara Bynum,Towson University
Commentator: Matthew Dennis, University of Oregon
American Legal History [A "State of the Field" panel]
Chair: Michael Willrich, Brandeis University
Daniel Hulsebosch, New York University
Ariela Gross, University of Southern California
Andrew Wender Cohen, Syracuse University
William J. Novak, University of Michigan
Jane Dailey, University of Chicago
From Illegal Aliens to Illegal History: A Roundtable Responds to the Return of the Culture Wars in Arizona
Chair: Lorena Oropeza, University of California, DavisAge Matters: Chronological Age and the Construction of Race, Gender, and Citizenship
Lydia Otero, University of Arizona
Miroslava Chavez-Garcia, University of California, Davis
Milo Alvarez, Bard College at Simon’s Rock
Karen Leong, Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus
Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession
Chair: Leslie Paris, University of British Columbia
“Male Citizens Twenty-One Years of Age”: The Intersection of Gender, Race, and Age in Nineteenth-Century Citizenship, Corinne Field, University of Virginia
Born Dependent: The Children of Gradual Emancipation and the Laws of Poverty, Sarah Levine-Gronningsater, University of Chicago
Statutory Marriage Law and the Gendered Construction of Adulthood in the Nineteenth Century, Nicholas Syrett, University of Northern Colorado
Voting Rights and the Politics of Age in the Age of Aquarius, Rebecca de Schweinitz, Brigham Young University
Commentator: Leslie ParisNew Legal History Perspectives on African Americans, Latina/os, Asian Americans, and Native Americans
Sponsored by the OAH Committee on the Status of ALANA Historians and ALANA Histories
Chair: Charles McClain, University of California, BerkeleySaturday, April 13
Karen Tani, University of California, Berkeley
Tom I. Romero II, University of Denver
Rick Moss, African American Museum & Library at Oakland
The Capacity to Be Citizens: Mental Competency and Civil Rights in Gilded Age and Progressive America
Chair: Barbara Welke, University of Minnesota
Powers of Belief: Insanity Allegations and the Regulation of Religion in the Late Nineteenth Century, Kathryn Burns-Howard, Miami University of Ohio
Leroy Pitzer—Citizen, Voter, Lunatic, Rabia Belt, University of Michigan
Antecedent to All Other Rights: Legal Capacity and Kentucky Inheritance Disputes in the Gilded Age, Yvonne Pitts, Purdue University
Commentator: Barbara WelkeRace and Law: New Directions in Southern Legal History
Chair: David Lieberman, University of California, Berkeley
Grand Jury Presentments in Eighteenth-Century South Carolina, Sally Hadden, Western Michigan University
The Southern Roots of the Reapportionment Revolution, Charles Zelden, Nova Southeastern University
Race, Property Rights, and Negotiated Space in the American South: A Reconsideration of Buchanan v. Warley Patricia Minter, Western Kentucky University
Commentator: Karen Tani, University of California, Berkeley
Film Screening: Criminal Injustice: Death and Politics at Attica
Chair: Heather Thompson, Temple University
Christine Christopher, Independent FilmmakerDavid Marshall, Independent FilmmakerMalcolm Bell, Former New York Special Assistant Attorney GeneralMelvin Marshall, Former Attica Inmate
Mass Incarceration: New Directions in the Study of Race and Punishment in Modern American Life
Chair:Kelly Lytle Hernández, University of California, Los Angeles
Sarah Haley, University of California, Los AngelesDonna Murch, Rutgers UniversityKhalil Gibran Muhammad, Schomburg Center for Research in Black CultureHeather Thompson, Temple University
Albert Camarillo, Stanford University
Sunday, April 14
Asylum and Sovereignty in the 1970s and 1980s
Chair: Jana Lipman, Tulane University
Homefront of the Hostage Crisis: The Contested Status of Iranian Students in the US, Yael Schacher, Harvard University
Implementing Asylum: The 1980 Refugee Act and Immigration Cause Lawyers, Rebecca Hamlin, Grinnell College
Offshore Refugee Processing and the Origins of the Guantanamo Model, Jeffrey Kahn, University of Chicago
Commentator: Philip Wolgin, Center for American ProgressHistories of the US State [A "State of the Field" panel]
Chair: William J. Novak, University of Michigan
James Sparrow, University of Chicago
Rachel St. John, Harvard University
Cybelle Fox, University of California, Berkeley
Commentator: William J. Novak“What a Tangled Web We Weave”: Ideals and Realities of Religion in the American Nation
Chair: Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of PennsylvaniaIf you're attending the meeting, don't forget to check the "updates" page on the OAH website. How else would you learn about this new session?
The Invention of Religious Freedom as an American Ideal, 1789–1835, Tisa Wenger, Yale University
Reinventing Civil Liberties: The Jehovah’s Witnesses’ Street Provocations, Leah Weinryb Grohsgal, Emory University
“Without Distinction of Creed”: Military Chaplains and Religious Experimentation in the 1930s and 40s, Ronit Stahl, University of Michigan
Getting Started with Blogging, Podcasting, and Video Production: A Do-It-Yourself Guide
Saturday, April 13 at 1:45 p.m.
Nic Champaign, OAH’s media specialist will provide an overview of what is needed to start your own blog and how to produce your own podcast and video. In the blogging section, Nic will explain how to start a free blog with a custom domain name or blog with a hosting service and WordPress. The podcast and video section will cover how to produce a podcast and submit it to iTunes, and how to determine the camera that suits your needs and a few ways to edit your video on the Mac.