urban history association the urban history newsletter...selection of benjamin looker’s a nation...
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Fall 2016 (Volume 48, Number 2)
The Urban History Newsletter
Urban History Association
Inside this issue:
UHA Award Winners 6 - 11
Executive Director
Report
12
UHA Biennial Meeting
RFPs
13
In Memoriam 14 - 15
UHA at AHA and OAH 16 - 17
Announcements 18 - 22
Bibliographies 23 - 33
New Membership Fees 34
THE URBAN HISTORY NEWSLETTER
Editor,Editor,Editor,
UHA Newsletter, UHA Newsletter, UHA Newsletter,
Patrick R. PotyondyPatrick R. PotyondyPatrick R. Potyondy
Chicago Conference is UHA’s Largest
The largest-ever conference of the
Urban History Association took
place at the Corboy Law Center on
the Water Tower Campus of Loyola
University Chicago, from Thursday,
October 13, to Sunday, October 16,
2016. UHA President Timothy Gil-
foyle, professor and past chair of
history at Loyola, hosted the four-
day event. This Eighth Biennial
Conference of the UHA—“The
Working Urban”—included more
than 150 panels,
plenaries, and
roundtables, at-
tracting 722 urban
historians, writers,
scholars, and jour-
nalists from across
the United States
and around the
world.
In addition to the
daytime program-
ming, conference
participants en-
joyed the opportunity to socialize
and network during receptions over
the course of three evenings. Thurs-
day’s opening night reception took
place among the second-floor galler-
ies of the Chicago History Museum,
located in the city’s Gold Coast
neighborhood at the southern end of
Lincoln Park. The site of Friday’s
reception was the stage of the
Frank Gehry-designed Pritzker Mu-
sic Pavilion in Millennium Park, a
vantage point just east of the Loop
offering fantastic views of the Chica-
go skyline. On Saturday, conference
attendees gathered for a final even-
ing reception in the lobby of the new-
ly-constructed Schreiber Center on
Loyola’s Water Tower Campus.
Later Saturday evening, 170 guests
attended the sold-out Gala Banquet
in Kasbeer Hall on the fifteenth floor
of the Corboy Center. The banquet
was notable for the record-number
(11) of UHA past presidents in at-
tendance, as well as a record-
number of graduate students (44).
These two numbers indicate the or-
ganization’s rich history and healthy
prospects for the coming years. The
banquet also included an awards
ceremony in which the UHA recog-
nized fourteen individuals for excel-
lence in urban history scholarship
during the previous two years.
(Continued on next page)
UHA President-Elect Richard Harris (top left) and UHA President Timothy Gilfoyle (top right) are joined by 10 former UHA presidents
PAGE 2 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
ments were spearhead by Gil-
foyle, former UHA membership
secretary and Vice President for
Research and Academic Pro-
grams at the Newberry Library,
Brad Hunt, and Loyola Universi-
ty Chicago Ph.D. candidate Chel-
sea Denault. In addition, the 30-
member Local Arrangements
Committee offered expert guid-
ance and support.
N.D.B. Connolly, the Herbert
Baxter Adams Associate Profes-
sor of His-
tory at
Johns Hop-
kins Uni-
versity, and
Donna
Murch, As-
sociate Pro-
fessor of
History at
Rutgers
University,
co-chaired
the 11-
member
Program
Committee.
With the
committee’s assistance, Connolly
and Murch conceptualized the
conference theme (“The Working
Urban”), solicited proposals from
around the world, and scheduled
panels, roundtables, and plena-
ries covering two and a half days
of programming.
During a two-year period, eight
all-volunteer award committees
solicited nominations, reviewed
submissions, and voted on best
scholarship winners for the Ken-
neth Jackson Award for best
book (North American), the
Award for Best Book in Non-
North American urban history,
the Arnold Hirsch Award for
The evening ended with Timo-
thy Gilfoyle’s presidential ad-
dress on the topic of his most
recent research: “Singer's In-
vention, Inventing Singer: The
Sewing Machine and the City.”
Dissertation workshops, histori-
cal tours, and a book exhibit
also provided opportunities to
advance urban history during
the conference. Fourteen disser-
tation workshops paired estab-
lished scholars in one-on-one
conversations with
graduate students
working on their
dissertations. Guid-
ed tours led by ex-
perts on Chicago
history explored a
variety of locations,
including: Chica-
go’s South Side; the
future site of the
National Public
Housing Museum;
Hull-House, UIC,
and the Near West
Side; the churches
of Pilsen; and Mexi-
can Chicago. Final-
ly, the conference book exhibit,
which ran all-day on Friday and
Saturday in Kasbeer Hall, in-
cluded displays from thirteen
university presses and one
trade press.
In sum, the Eighth Biennial
Conference of the UHA demon-
strated a field of study and a
professional organization that
are healthy, vibrant, and grow-
ing.
Such growth and success relies
on the selfless work of dedicated
volunteers and the generous
support of institutions and
foundations. Local arrange-
best article, the Michael Katz
Award for best dissertation, and
the Raymond Mohl Award for
best conference paper by a grad-
uate student.
UHA Executive Director Timo-
thy Neary, Associate Professor
of History at Salve Regina Uni-
versity, and UHA Membership
Secretary Cindy Lobel, Associ-
ate Professor of History at Leh-
man College/City University of
New York, developed and over-
saw the conference registration
process and provided logistical
support in a multitude of other
areas. They were ably assisted
by Robin Parsons of Parsons
Marketing Concepts, who de-
signed the new UHA website
(http://www.urbanhistory.org/)
and trained Neary and Lobel on
the use of the organization’s
new Wild Apricot software.
Chelsea Denault led a team of
more than twenty undergradu-
ate and graduate student volun-
teers, who staffed the onsite
registration table, placed sign-
age throughout the Corboy Cen-
ter, provided AV support for
panel sessions, and responded
to the inevitable series of mini-
crises which arise when running
such a conference.
The friendly and professional
assistance of Loyola University
Chicago’s Conference Services,
Aramark Catering, Information
Technologies, and Campus Se-
curity made the Water Tower
Campus a wonderful place to
hold a conference.
Matthew Roth expertly de-
signed and edited the 66-page
(Continued on next page)
“The Eighth Biennial
Conference of the UHA
demonstrated a field
of study and a
professional
organization that are
healthy, vibrant, and
growing.”
PAGE 3 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Conference Photos
Book Exhibit
Gala Banquet David Goldfield, editor of the Journal of Urban History
UHA President-Elect Richard Harris (left) with UHA President Timothy Gilfoyle (right)
Lila Corwin Berman (right) discusses Parish Boundaries by John McGreevy (seated, left)
conference program, and Greg Bear designed its
cover art.
Finally, the generosity of a number of confer-
ence sponsors allowed the UHA to host two
unique offsite evening receptions and reimburse
100 percent the to-and-from Chicago travel ex-
penses of 66 graduate students on the confer-
ence program. The UHA would like to offer its
sincere thanks and heartfelt gratitude to Loyola
University’s College of Arts and Sciences, Grad-
uate School, Department of History, and Center
for Urban Research and Learning, as well as
the College of Arts and Letters at the Universi-
ty of Notre Dame, the Chicago History Muse-
um, the Minow Family Foundation, the Univer-
sity of Chicago Press, and the Society for Amer-
ican City and Regional Planning History.
PAGE 4 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Conference Photos
Millen
niu
m P
ark Re
cep
tion
UHA President Timothy Gilfoyle (left) recognizes Nathan Connolly and Donna Murch for their hard work as Program Committee Co-Chairs
Poster Session UHA Board Meeting
PAGE 5 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Conference Photos
Saturday Night Reception Saturday Night Reception
Saturday Night Reception UHA Volunteers
Past UHA President Thomas Sugrue (right) comments on the work of Camilo Vergara (seated, left)
PAGE 6 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Co-Winner of the UHA Kenneth Jackson Award for
Best Book (North American) Published in 2015
The Kenneth Jackson Prize award committee is pleased to announce its
selection of Nancy H. Kwak’s A World of Homeowners: American Power
and the Politics of Housing Aid (University of Chicago Press) as co-
winner of the 2016 Kenneth Jackson Prize for the Best Book in North
American Urban History published in 2015.
Nancy Kwak’s book A World of Homeowners addresses one of the most
compelling issues of the 21st century, that of housing policy. She underscores
how the American ideal and realization of home ownership, unique in the
modern world, affected a wide range of groups both inside and outside the
nation. She uses meticulous and
sweeping research to show how
the tentacles of housing policy
affected the poor, the
disenfranchised, and the
underprivileged. She convincingly
reveals the circuit of exchange
relating to the ideas, models, and
policies of homeownership
between the United States and the
world, both as an instrument in
the struggle against Soviet
communism and as a trajectory for
post-colonial developing nations.
Her complex story aims to
understand the heart of the
American dream of achieving
decent shelter, while documenting
how American-influenced housing
policies promulgated by United
States international aid agencies
metastasized with differing results
and varying degrees of success in
countries across the world with
very different cultures.
PAGE 7 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Co-Winner of the UHA Kenneth Jackson Award for
Best Book (North American) Published in 2015
The Kenneth Jackson Prize award committee is pleased to announce its
selection of Benjamin Looker’s A Nation of Neighborhoods: Imagining
Cities, Communities, and Democracy in Postwar America (University
of Chicago Press) as co-winner of the 2016 Kenneth Jackson Prize for the
Best Book in North American Urban History published in 2015.
“Neighborhood” as a notion of how people comfortably dwell in cities emerged
as an enduring theme spanning much of the twentieth century. Benjamin
Looker offers a sweeping view of how this most basic envisioned component of
American cities was promulgated, dissected, and reconfigured in the service of
various socioeconomic agendas beginning in the years of prosperous optimism
at the end of World War II until the
political upheavals of the Reagan era
in the 1980s. Remarkable in its scope
and ambition, Looker’s work
explicates the contested idea of
neighborhood as reflected in popular
culture, city planning, politics,
literature, television, and sociology.
He leads the reader through the
notion of neighborhood as it was lived,
imagined, and wielded rhetorically
over the forty-year period of the book.
He demonstrates how the pursuit of
the neighborhood ideal transformed
communities and in turn was
transformed by larger sociopolitical
forces. As the notion of neighborhood
has once again become a focal point in
urban upheavals during the current
period, his book is most timely in
providing the foundation for a greater
understanding of how we live now and
how we might proceed to address some
recalcitrant issues of urban life.
PAGE 8 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Co-Winners of the Arnold Hirsch Award for the Best
Scholarly Article on Urban History Published in 2015
Nicolas Kenny, “City Glow: Streetlights, Emotions, and Nocturnal Life, 1880s-1910s,”
Journal of Urban History (April 2015).
In his article “City Glows: Streetlights, Emotions, and Nocturnal Life, 1880s-1910s” Nicolas Kenny brings
together two seemingly unconnected fields of research—urban history and the history of emotions—to produce a
truly innovative and captivating account of the emotional effects of modern lighting on city dwellers’ lives.
Comparing the introduction of modern street lights in the cities of Montreal and Brussels, Kenny examines
petitions written by city residents to their respective city government about the lack of street lighting to analyze
the meanings attached to light by the authors of these petitions. While bringing modern lighting systems to city
streets was certainly a technical accomplishment worth of scholarly investigation, the effects of those lights on
the life of city dwellers and tourists are even more fascinating. Bright lights at night created spaces for residents
and visitors to enjoy. Light was quickly identified with morally acceptable enjoyment. It provided order and
offered safety. Spaces left in the dark, by contrast, were associated with prostitution and criminal life. Soon city
governments found themselves under pressure to expand the street light system into the last dark corners. Light
and light posts became symbols for the protection of moral life. As Kenny concludes, studying the creation of
modern infrastructures simply as technological accomplishments proves insufficient. Street lights and mass
transportation are elements of city life. Urban dwellers do not just live around them. They develop emotional
relationships to these integral parts of urban life. Identities and Emotions are shaped by these relationships.
Becky M. Nicolaides and James Zarsadiaz, “Design Assimilation in Suburbia: Asian
Americans. Built Landscapes, and Suburban Advantage in Los Angeles’s San Gabriel
Valley since 1970,” Journal of Urban History (November 2015).
In recent years, scholarly concern to render a more diverse—and therefore historically honest—account of
American suburbia has focused our attention on places where immigrant and ethnic identity is expressed visibly
in the landscape. This research agenda has yielded such important theoretical concepts as the “ethnoburb” and
recuperated the agency of immigrant actors in the revitalization of urban and suburban space. Yet in this
important article Nicolaides and Zarsadiaz remind us that places of ethnic invisibility—where Anglo design
aesthetics have persisted in the face of profound demographic change—are equally deserving of our attention
because they point to the enduring availability of American design traditions as spatial and ideological resources
through which immigrants claim a place in American social life. Integrating histories and theories of
suburbanization, Asian immigration, and globalization with first-rate empirical research, Nicolaides and
Zarsadiaz develop the concept of “design assimilation” to account for suburban places where “newcomer
acceptance of long-standing design traditions is an integral part of the local social dynamic.” They investigate two
such suburbs in Los Angeles’s San Gabriel Valley, both of which have been deeply affected by changes to
immigration policy since 1965: the affluent neighborhood of San Marino and the middle-class suburbs of Walnut
and Diamond Bar. The research setting in the San Gabriel Valley is important because this is the very place
where the concept of the “ethnoburb” has been most thoroughly developed. Yet, as the authors show, the existence
of the ethnoburb is what makes design assimilation suburbs not only possible, but constitutive of a suburban
region that is highly variegated by neighborhood-specific constellations of ethnicity, class, landscape aesthetics,
and everyday politics. Through vivid stories rooted in their investigation of city council files, homeowners
association records, and 22 oral histories, amongst other sources, Nicolaides and Zarsadiaz show that Asian
Americans who reside in design assimilation suburbs visit ethnoburbs for their ethnic retail and social needs even
as they reject ethnoburbs as places to live—and that these decisions help them find community and acceptance
amongst their Anglo American neighbors. The result is a deeply textured and nuanced portrait of the globalizing
suburb, one that shows the diversity of immigrant suburbs as well as their relationships to each other, and that
does justice to all of the subtle and not-so-subtle choices that immigrants make about collectively inhabiting and
producing suburban space.
PAGE 9 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Dylan Gottlieb, Princeton University
“Hoboken is Burning: Yuppies, Arson, and Displacement in Post-Industrial New
York”
Several excellent studies have enlightened urban historians about the artists, musicians, academics, and other brownstoners who moved into declining big city neighborhoods during the late 1960s and early 1970s, but little work exists on the second wave of gentrification after the real estate market underwent a dramatic shift in the late 1970s. Dylan Gottlieb’s gracefully written, deeply researched paper explains how arson, displacement of a mostly Puerto Rican population, and condominium conversion transfigured Hoboken, New Jersey, a square-mile city of 45,000 just across the Hudson River from New York City. Gottlieb shows how white collar professionals, mostly employed in Manhattan finance and business service firms, moved into Hoboken to take advantage of the short commute to work. The story underscores the role of arson as a tool of displacement in gentrification, further explaining the postindustrial transformation of New York City and other big cities during the 1970s and 1980s.
Raymond Mohl Best Graduate Paper Award at the Eighth Biennial Conference
Peter Constantine Pihos, “Policing, Race, and Politics in Chicago,”
University of Pennsylvania, 2015.
Peter Pihos’s “Policing, Race, and Politics in Chicago” grapples with many of the most pressing political and
historiographical issues of our time with exceptional acuity and unusual narrative elegance. Chicago police
officer and political activist Renault Robinson and the highly influential Afro-American Patrolmen’s League sit
at the center of Pihos’s story. These officers’ embrace of Black Power politics amid an attempt to remake
Chicago’s police department and its relationship with black Chicagoans in the 1960s, 1970s, and beyond helped
transform Chicago’s political landscape. The story of their efforts, as Pihos deftly shows, complicate a wide
range of narratives about modern U.S. history, from the federal government’s role in punitive policing to civil
rights activists’ transition from “protest to politics.” Fundamentally, Pihos’s work is a testimony to the power of
urban history, underscoring how deeply researched, well-told stories about the city can shed light on pivotal
national trends.
Andrew Robichaud, “The Animal City: Remaking Human and Animal Lives in
America, 18200-1910,” Stanford University, 2015.
As Andrew Robichaud noted American cities were once full of a variety of domesticated, semi-domesticated, and
undomesticated species of animals. By the early twentieth century, however, the range of human-animal
relationships and the geography of certain animal populations in cities were utterly transformed. Robichaud's
elegantly written and painstaking researched dissertation reveals how changing relationships between human
and animal populations re-made urban space, social life, and economies. He deftly reconstructs how human-
animal relationships, centered around food, labor, companionship, and entertainment, intersected in unexpected
ways with infrastructure, industrial development, urban planning, and social and legal reform. The
dissertation creatively combines approaches drawn from urban and environmental history with those from new
digital history methodologies, and makes a compelling case for taking non-human actors seriously as agents of
historical change.
Michael Katz Award for Best Dissertation Completed in 2015
Katz Award Honorable Mention
PAGE 10 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Award Winners
Nancy H. Kwak, Co-winner of the Kenneth Jackson Best Book Award (North America)
Benjamin Looker, Co-winner of the Kenneth Jackson Best Book Award (North America)
Nicolas Kenny, Co-Winner of the Arnold Hirsch Award for Best Scholarly Article
Becky M. Nicolaides & James Zarsadiaz, Co-Winners of the Arnold Hirsch Award for Best Scholarly Article
Andrew Robichaud, winner of the Michael Katz Best Dissertation Award
Dylan Gottlieb, winner of the Raymond Mohl Best Graduate Paper
PAGE 11 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Previous Award Winners
N.D.B. Connolly, Co-winner of Kenneth Jackson Best Book Award (North America), 2014
Marta Gutman, Co-winner of Kenneth Jackson Best Book Award (North America), 2014
Alexander Martin, Co-Winner of Best Book (Non-North American), 2013-2014
Ato Quayson, Co-Winner of Best Book (Non-North American), 2013-2014
Chloe Taft, Katz Award Winner for Best Dissertation completed in 2014
A. K. Sandoval-Strausz, Winner of the Arnold Hirsch Award for Best Scholarly Article, 2014
PAGE 12 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Executive Director Report
The UHA enjoyed its largest-ever
biennial conference in October
2016, with 722 registrants attend-
ing the four-day event at the Wa-
ter Tower Campus of Loyola Uni-
versity Chicago. The conference
included more than 150 sessions,
as well as historical tours, disser-
tation workshops, two evening re-
ceptions, a book exhibit, and a ga-
la banquet (see cover story, pages
1-3).
Organizing and hosting such an
event is a monumental undertak-
ing. I want to extend my special
thanks to outgoing UHA President
Timothy Gilfoyle, who directed
local arrangements, as well as Pro-
gram Committee co-chairs Nathan
Connolly and Donna Murch. Their
leadership and hard work, as well
as that of so many others too nu-
merous to list here by name, made
the Eighth Biennial a success.
Moreover, I want to thank all the
volunteers—graduate students,
tour guides, dissertation mentors,
award committee members, local
arrangement committee members,
and so many others—who gener-
ously donated their time, energy,
and enthusiasm. I also want to
thank our sponsors, who provided
crucial financial and in-kind assis-
tance. Last, but certainly not least,
I want to thank those of you who
participated in the conference—
either on the program or as at-
tendees. You are the most im-
portant part of the equation!
Thank you.
I am happy to report that the
UHA is financially healthy. The
large number of conference regis-
trations coupled with President
Gilfoyle’s outstanding fundraising
for the conference ($37,500), al-
lowed to the UHA to reimburse
the transportation expenses to and
from the conference for 66 gradu-
ate students who were on the pro-
gram. The leadership of the UHA
believes that this is a good invest-
ment in the organization’s future.
Even after reimbursing the gradu-
ate students, a healthy conference
revenue remained, which will be
used to cover UHA operating ex-
penses and strengthen financial
reserves.
Membership Secretary, Professor
Cindy Lobel, reports that as of De-
cember 31, 2016, the UHA has 596
active members. This number does
not include 267 non-members who
registered for the most recent con-
ference. In January 2017, they will
receive one free year of UHA mem-
bership. We hope many of them,
after a year, will decide to renew
and become regular members. In
this way, we hope to assist in
growing UHA membership.
The 2016 UHA elections, held in
September and October, resulted
in a new President, President-
Elect, and seven Directors to the
Board—President: Richard Harris,
McMaster University; President-
Elect: Heather Ann Thompson,
University of Michigan; Board Di-
rectors: Julio Capó, Jr., University
of Massachusetts-Amherst; Brod-
wyn Fischer, University of Chica-
go; Elizabeth Hinton, Harvard
University; Elaine Lewinnek, Cali-
fornia State University-Fullerton;
Andrew Needham, New York Uni-
versity; Anthony Pratcher, Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania; and Lena
Suk, University of Louisiana at
Lafayette.
The UHA would like to thank out-
going President Timothy Gilfoyle,
as well as the seven outgoing
Board Directors for their service:
Mauricio Castro, Purdue Universi-
ty; Themis Chronopoulos,
Swansea University; Lily Geismer;
Claremont McKenna College; Paul
Gleye, North Dakota State Univer-
sity; Andrew Highsmith, Universi-
ty of California, Irvine; Michelle
Nickerson, Loyola University Chi-
cago; and Anton Rosenthal, Uni-
versity of Kansas.
If you plan to attend the 2017
AHA in Denver (January 5-8),
please see “The UHA at the AHA”
on page 16 for a listing of UHA-
sponsored sessions. And if you
plan to be at the 2017 OAH in
New Orleans, I invite you to at-
tend the annual UHA luncheon,
where Professor Craig Colten of
Louisiana State University will
speak on “Exporting Risk: New
Orleans, Commerce, and Flood
Water Diversion.” The luncheon is
on Saturday, April 8, 2017, 12:30-
2:00. Tickets are $50 and may be
purchased from the OAH when
registering for the conference:
http://www.oah.org/meetings-
events/2017/luncheons/
Finally, even as the UHA enjoys
the success of the Eighth Biennial
Conference in Chicago, planning
has already begun for the Ninth
Biennial Conference to be held on
the campus of the University of
South Carolina in Columbia,
South Carolina, in the fall of 2018.
Jessica Elfenbein (University of
South Carolina) is chairing local
arrangements. The co-chairs of the
Program Committee are LaDale
Winling (Virginia Tech) and
Elaine Lewinnek (California State
University-Fullerton). We hope to
see you in Columbia in 2018!
— Timothy B. Neary
UHA Executive Director
Salve Regina University
The Board of Directors of the Urban History Association (UHA) is soliciting sep-
arate Requests for Proposals from interested institutions and parties to stage
the Eleventh Biennial UHA Conference in 2022 and the Twelth Biennial UHA
Conference in 2024. Information on past conferences is available at: http://
www.urbanhistory.org/conference
Ideal proposals should include the following information:
Name of the primary sponsoring institution or institutions with relevant con-
tact addresses, email, and telephone numbers;
Names of potential secondary sponsors to assist funding the conference;
Possible location of rooms for concurrent panels (approximately 100 total) on
Friday and Saturday (4 different time slots between 8:30 am and 4pm), and
Sunday morning;
Possible location for a book exhibit to accommodate 10-15 publishers;
Possible open space for informal gathering and networking;
Potential conference hotels with price ranges;
Potential space for receptions as well as a gala dinner to accommodate
150-200 people;
Any innovative ideas for the conference program.
Please submit proposals via email to Timothy Neary, Executive Director,
Urban History Association, [email protected]
PAGE 13 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Urban History Association
Biennial Meetings
Request for Proposals, 2022 and 2024
In Memoriam:
Louise Carroll Wade
PAGE 14 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
On February 17, our friend
and colleague, professor
emerita Louise Carroll Wade,
passed away, just a few days
before eighty-eighth birth-
day.
Louise grew up in Toledo,
Ohio. She held a B.A. from
Wellesley College and earned
a Ph.D. from the University
of Rochester. She had been
married to Richard Wade, an
eminent urban historian at
the University of Chicago. Af-
ter their divorce, she came
west to Eugene, driving here
in 1975 in a bright gold VW
Beetle that announced her
presence for some years
thereafter.
At the University of Oregon,
Professor Wade taught a
wide variety of courses in
American history, notably in
the fields of labor, social and
urban history. As a teacher of
both undergraduates and
graduate students she was
known for her careful prepa-
ration, infectious enthusiasm
in the classroom, and concern
for her students’ success.
Before her arrival at the Uni-
versity of Oregon, she had
published Graham Taylor:
Pioneer for Social Justice
1851-1938
(University of Chicago Press,
1964). In 1987, Chicago's
Pride: The Stockyards, Pack-
ingtown, and Environs in the
Nineteenth Century appeared.
A meticulous study of living
and working conditions, it
challenged long-standing ste-
reotypes about this iconic
Chicago setting.
She soon followed the book
with an influential article
that counterpoised her re-
search on Packingtown and
the Stockyards with the Up-
ton Sinclair’s portrait in The
Jungle and suggested that
Sinclair’s novel worked better
as fiction and propaganda
than as reliable history. De-
spite the range of her teach-
ing, urban history was her
primary scholarly concern.
Although Chicago had been
the focus of much of her re-
search, her definition of the
field was wide enough to en-
compass Eugene, and she had
done substantial research on
this city’s history. She com-
plemented her book projects
with many articles and book
reviews.
Soon after her retirement,
Louise Wade endowed the
Benjamin H. Carroll and
Louise L. Carroll Visiting
Professorship in Urbaniza-
tion, named in honor of her
parents. Rotating among the
History, Political Science and
Geography Departments, it
has brought eminent senior
and promising junior scholars
of cities to campus to teach
undergraduates and gradu-
ate students alike and to de-
liver public lectures on topics
in urban studies. The Carroll
Professorship has been a val-
ued institution on campus
since it was instituted in
2000.
Louise Wade’s scholarship,
teaching and service to the
University of Oregon and the
profession reflected her char-
acter. Louise was forthright
and direct but always good
humored and gracious. She
will be sorely missed, and her
contributions to the Depart-
ment and the University will
remind us always of a valued
colleague and dear friend.
— Daniel Pope
Professor Emeritus
Department of History
University of Oregon
In Memoriam:
Mark S. Foster
PAGE 15 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Mark S. Foster, Professor
Emeritus, University of Colo-
rado Denver, (May 2, 1939 -
October 21, 2016) was a pro-
lific scholar of twentieth-
century American history,
authoring eleven books, plus
dozens of articles. Among his
most well-known books are
From Streetcar to Superhigh-
way: American City Planners
and Urban Transportation
1900‑1940 (1981); Henry J.
Kaiser: Builder in the Modern
American West (1989); and
Castles in the Sand: The Life
and Times of Carl G. Fisher
(2000).
Foster taught at the Univer-
sity of Colorado Denver for
thirty-three years, beginning
in 1972 at what was then a
young campus, and retiring
in 2005, having helped the
university grow toward ma-
turity. His dynamic teaching
and intense dedication trans-
formed many students into
enthusiastic historians. He
loved nothing more than
sharing his excitement and
apparently infinite
knowledge about history with
everyone—students and col-
leagues, as well as friends in
any setting.
That excitement about histo-
ry combined with Foster’s av-
id sportsmanship to produce
three scholarly books and
many articles on the history
of baseball in Colorado. The
combination also energized
decades of participation in
nineteenth-century vintage
baseball. In addition, that
blend of historian and sports-
man animated countless
guest lectures in which Fos-
ter wore his vintage baseball
uniform, alternating between
the voice of an 1870s-era gen-
tleman with decidedly illiber-
al attitudes and his histori-
an’s voice.
Foster earned his B.A. in Phi-
losophy at Brown University
in 1961. At the University of
Southern California, he
earned a Master’s degree in
1968 and a Ph.D. in 1971,
both in American history. His
research and teaching won
numerous honors at CU Den-
ver, including Teacher of the
Year in 1983 and Researcher
of the Year in 2001, plus the
University of Colorado Medal
in 2007.
Contributions are welcome to
the Mark Foster Scholarship
in History Fund at the Uni-
versity of Colorado Denver. If
interested, please visit:
www.giving.cu.edu/
markfoster
— Pamela W. Laird
Professor
University of Colorado
Denver
UHAUHAUHA---Sponsored Sessions at the AHASponsored Sessions at the AHASponsored Sessions at the AHA
PAGE 16 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
“Whither Neoliberalism? An Interdisci-
plinary Conversation on Neoliberal-
ism’s Role in the City and Its Place in
Historical Scholarship”
Friday, January 6, 2017: 1:30pm—3:00pm
Colorado Convention Center, Mile High Ball-
room 4c
Chair: Margaret O'Mara, University of Washing-
ton
Speakers:
Brent Cebal, University of Richmond
Lily Geismer, Claremont McKenna College
Rachel Guberman, American Academy of
Arts and Sciences
Stephanie Mudge, University of California,
Davis
“Rewriting Busing: New Histories of
School Desegregation”
Friday, January 6, 2017: 8:30am—10:00am
Hyatt Regency Denver, Centennial Ballroom
H76
Chair: Mark R. Brilliant, University of Califor-
nia, Berkeley
Panelists:
Matthew Delmont, Arizona State University
Ansley T. Erickson, Teachers College, Colum-
bia University
Brett V. Gadsden, Emory University
Tom I. Romero II, University of Denver
“Local Spaces, Global Ties: Urbaniza-
tion in 20thCentury Latin America”
Saturday, January 7, 2017: 10:30am—12:00pm
Colorado Convention Center, Mile High Ball-
room 4c
Chair: Ernesto Capello, Macalester College
Panelists:
Jennifer Hoyt, Berry College
Leandro Benmergui, Purchase College, State
University of New York
Shawn W. Miller, Brigham Young University
Andra Brosy Chastain, Yale University
Comment: Brodwyn M. Fischer, University of
Chicago
“Race, Space, and the Law in
Metropolitan Context”
Sunday, January 8, 2017: 9:00—10:30am
Sheraton Denver Downtown, Plaza Ballroom
D304
Chair: Walter Greason, Monmouth University
Panelist:
Walter Greason, Monmouth University
Julian Chambliss, Rollins College
David E. Goldberg, University of Pittsburgh
at Johnstown
The UHA at the OAHThe UHA at the OAHThe UHA at the OAH
PAGE 17 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
UHA Roundtable
“New Histories of Gentrification,” April 7, 2017, 9:00-10:30am Since sociologist Ruth Glass coined “gentrification” in 1964, the term has denoted racial change, class transfor-
mation, and architectural rehabilitation in American cities. Yet as a simple label that describes a complicated
process, gentrification has also created both physical and rhetorical spaces of contested meaning, often obscuring
as much as it reveals. Is gentrification good for cities or bad? Does it symbolize the renaissance of urban places
or new kinds of urban crisis? Sorting out these meanings has long been the province of sociologists, geographers,
and urban theorists. Only in the last decade have historians turned an eye to gentrification, accepting its ambi-
guity but also seeking to understand it as a process with deep roots, diverse actors, and complex consequences.
In recent and forthcoming works, urban historians have uncovered a story that cannot be understood through
binaries of winners and losers, or insider and outsiders. In doing so, they have given a multifaceted history to
the most recent period of urban change. This round table offers an opportunity for historians working on such
questions to discuss these new histories of gentrification and the insights they offer on a process that is still very
much underway, even as Glass’s term is a half-century old. The scholars assembled here take historical studies
of gentrification in new directions by focusing on the role of universities, community organizations, historic
preservation, artists, and affordable housing, among other aspects. They will discuss different ways of approach-
ing the history of gentrification, the varied histories that result, and the methodological challenges of this field.
Chair: Aaron Shkuda, Princeton University
Panelists:
Francesca Ammon, University of Pennsylvania
Davarian Baldwin, Trinity College, Connecticut
Brian Goldstein, University of New Mexico
Suleiman Osman, George Washington University
Annual UHA Luncheon at the OAH “Exporting Risk: New Orleans, Commerce, and Flood Water Diversion”
Craig E. Colten
Carl O. Sauer Professor
Louisiana State University
Saturday, April 8, 2017, 12:30-2:00 PM From its founding, New Orleans has hunkered down behind ever-growing levees built to a
blockade to the annual risk of Mississippi River floods. To protect its commercial infrastruc-
ture, the city has supported efforts to divert flood waters through natural and human made
floodways and impose new risks on rural residents. In the face of rising sea levels and a subsid-
ing shore, the city is supporting current state efforts to restore the coast. This position, once
again, is forcing non-urban residents to adapt to changing conditions. The situation in Louisi-
ana offers a glimpse into the larger urban-rural conflicts that will accompany climate change. More at
http://www.oah.org/meetings-events/2017/luncheons/
UHA board meeting at the OAH
in New Orleans will be on
Saturday, April 8, 2017 9:00—11:00 AM
ANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTS
PAGE 18 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Present Of f icers and Directors
President: Timothy Gilfoyle / Loyola University Chicago
President-Elect: Richard Harris / McMaster University
Executive Director: Timothy Neary / Salve Regina University
Editor of the Journal of Urban History: David Goldfield / University of North Carolina-Charlotte
Membership Secretary: Cindy R. Lobel / Lehman College, CUNY
Directors:
Through December 31, 2018: Anna Alexander / Georgia Southern University; Alison J. Bruey / Uni-
versity of North Florida; Shane Ewen / Leeds Beckett University; Brian Goldstein / University of
New Mexico; Carola Hein / Delft University of Technology; Kristin Stapleton / University of Buffalo,
SUNY; Lawrence J. Vale / Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Through December 31, 2017: Davarian Baldwin / Trinity College; Martha Biondi / Northwestern Uni-
versity; Nathan Connolly / New York University; Rebecca Madigan / University of Glasgow; Cathe-
rine McNeur / Portland State University; Todd Michney / University of Toledo; Donna Murch / Rut-
gers University
Through December 31, 2016: Mauricio Castro / Purdue University; Themis Chronopoulos / University
of East Anglia; Lily Geismer / Claremont McKenna College; Paul Gleye / North Dakota State Univer-
sity; Andrew Highsmith / University of California-Irvine; Michelle Nickerson / Loyola University
Chicago; Anton Rosenthal / University of Kansas
A full list including past officers and directors can be found at:
http://www.urbanhistory.org/Officers-and-directors and
http://www.urbanhistory.org/Past-Leadership
VOLUNTEER NEEDEDVOLUNTEER NEEDEDVOLUNTEER NEEDED
Consider volunteering to become the next
editor of the Urban History Association’s
biannual newsletter.
If interested, please contact Timothy Neary at
Advanced graduate students are encouraged to apply. You may contact Patrick
Potyondy with any questions at [email protected]
ANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTS
PAGE 19 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Temple University Press adds a new editor to the
Urban Life , Landscape and Policy Series
Temple University Press is pleased to announce the addition of Davarian L. Baldwin, Paul E. Raether Distin-
guished Professor of American Studies at Trinity College, to the Urban Life, Landscape and Policy (ULLP) se-
ries editorial team. Baldwin, the author of Chicago’s New Negroes: Modernity, the Great Migration, and Black
Urban Life, joins current series editors David Stradling and Larry Bennett. Zane Miller, founding editor of the
series, passed away earlier this year.
Series co-editor David Stradling observed, “When Zane passed away, we couldn’t really imagine how he could be
replaced. He was, after all, the founding editor of the series, and he shaped it in every way possible. We set out
to find a scholar who could provide the essential aspects of editing that Zane embodied: he was a great mentor
to both young and established authors; and, he was a tremendous advocate for urban history. We immediately
thought of Davarian, whose work has been innovative and influential—and right at the heart of our field. Da-
varian is a natural mentor, and I know he will be an essential contributor to the continued vibrancy of our se-
ries.”
Baldwin was honored to be asked to join the editorial team. He acknowledged, “Zane Miller was a major figure
in the field, and it’s humbling to play a part in a series he founded. Zane was very adamant about the ULLP
series being an opportunity to not just put out great books but to mentor young authors navigating the publish-
ing process, and that is a signature element of the series that I definitely want to continue.”
He added, “What I liked about the series is that while most people in urban studies fall on one side of what has
become a pretty rigid divide between the social sciences and the humanities, ULLP brings together the built
environment, policymaking, and everyday life all in once series. With so many people calling this the ‘Urban
Century,’ there’s no better place for me to be in academia than in a series that deals with urban affairs with
such a wide-ranging approach. I now seek to make sure that books in the ULLP series maintain a critical
breadth and historical depth that keeps the series at the cutting edge of the field. It’s exciting to be working
with scholars whose work I’m familiar with and know, and to see they are excited to take the series in new di-
rections. I’m very honored to play a role in that.”
Larry Bennett echoes the enthusiasm, “I am so delighted that Davarian Baldwin is joining the Urban Life,
Landscapes, and Policy editorial team. Davarian’s work represents a provocative amalgam of urban history and
social commentary. I look forward to his both soliciting and reviewing historical texts that fall within that amor-
phous but nevertheless key category, mainstream urban history, but also, bringing to the series a sensibility
that will attract authors whose interests touch on race and cultural topics, international urbanism, and more
contemporary discussions of cities, culture, and policy.”
Baldwin emphasized, “Like Larry and David, I pay attention to historical and contemporary urban studies. At
the same time, I hope to bring a new orbit of colleagues and interests with focus on the intellectual and cultural
landscape of urban life with particular attention to urban race relations and African American life, all with an
eye to their global context.”
A historian, cultural critic, and social theorist of urban America, Baldwin’s work largely examines the landscape
of global cities through the lens of the African Diasporic experience. In addition to teaching and writing, he
serves on the Executive Board of the Urban History Association, the Editorial Board for the Journal of Urban
History, and was appointed a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians.
The editors in the ULLP series seek proposals that analyze processes of urban change relevant to the
future of cities and their metropolitan regions, and that examine urban and regional planning, envi-
ronmental issues, and urban policy studies, thus contributing to ongoing debates.
ANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTS
PAGE 20 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
GERMAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION ANNUAL CONFERENCE
The German Studies Association (GSA) will hold its 41st Annual Conference in Atlanta,
Georgia (USA), 5-8 October 2017.
The Program Committee cordially invites proposals on any aspect of German, Austrian, or Swiss studies, in-
cluding (but not limited to) history, Germanistik, film, art history, political science, anthropology, musicology,
religious studies, sociology, and cultural studies. Proposals for entire sessions, for interdisciplinary presenta-
tions, and for series of panels are strongly encouraged (though we discourage thematic series of more than four
panels). Individual paper proposals are also welcome. The call for seminar proposals has been distributed sepa-
rately.
Please see the GSA website for information about the submission process for ‘traditional’ papers, sessions, and
roundtables, which will open on January 5, 2017. All proposals must be submitted online; paper forms are not
used. The deadline for proposals is February 15, 2017.
Please note that presenters must be members of the German Studies Association. Information on member-
ship is available on the GSA website (www.thegsa.org).
For more information, visit the GSA website, where previous conference programs and a detailed list of sub-
mission guidelines may be found (www.thegsa.org), or contact members of the 2017 Program Commit-
tee:https://thegsa.org/conference/current.html
Kenneth T. Jackson, past president and founder of the Urban History Association, received
Columbia University’s Alexander Hamilton Medal for distinguished service on Novem-
ber 17th. The Hamilton Medal is the university’s highest honor and has been awarded since 1947.
Jackson is director of the Herbert H. Lehman Center for the Study of American History and is
the Jacques Barzun Professor of History and the Social Sciences at Columbia, where he has
chaired the Department of History. He is general editor of the Columbia History of Urban Life
and was editor-in-chief of the Dictionary of American Biography 1990–96 and of Scribner’s Ency-
clopedia of American Lives 1996–2005. His best known publication, Crabgrass Frontier: The Sub-
urbanization of the United States (1985), won the Francis Parkman and the Bancroft Prizes.
Jackson is editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia of New York City. He has been leading New York
City all-night bicycle rides, three-hour walking tours and all-day bus trips for decades. At Colum-
bia, he teaches urban, social and military history.
In 1989, the College presented him the Mark Van Doren Award for Teaching. In 1999, the Socie-
ty of Columbia Graduates presented him a Great Teacher Award.
Kenneth Jackson is a past president of the Organization of American History. As well, he is a na-
tionally recognized advocate for advancing history education at the pre-baccalaureate level.
Timothy Neary, UHA Executive Director and Salve Regina University associate professor of
history, had his book, Crossing Parish Boundaries: Race, Sports, and Catholic Youth in
Chicago, 1914-1954, published by the University of Chicago Press in October 2016 as part of the
Historical Studies of Urban America series.
Martin V. Melosi, Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen
University Professor and Director of the Center for
Public History, received the “Distinguished Scholar
Award” for 2016 at the American Society for
Environmental History conference in Seattle on April
2. The award recognizes an individual “who has
contributed significantly to environmental history
scholarship” over a career. Melosi is only the eighth
recipient of the award, which is the highest honor in
the field. He has written or edited nineteen books and
more than 100 articles and book chapters. His The
Sanitary City (2000) won the top prize in four
different fields of study, and he has been a visiting
scholar/fellow in France, Germany, Finland, and
China, and also held the Fulbright Chair in American
Studies at the University of Southern Denmark.
ANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTS
PAGE 21 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
The American Catholic Historical Association
awarded Bill Issel, Professor of History Emeritus,
San Francisco State University, and the 2015-2016
John E. McGinty Chair in History at Salve Regina
History, the 2017 Distinguished Scholar Award. The
award is bestowed on the scholar who, in the opinion
of the committee making the selection, has during a
long career made a significant impact on the
understanding of Catholic history. The award is not
for one book or any single piece of scholarship, but for
a sustained series of contributions which have
fundamentally animated the research of others
besides being significant in their own right.
Seventy-five years after the work's completion, historian John D. Buenker presents
this Federal Writers Project city guide of Milwaukee, Wis., a time capsule-style look at
the city of Milwaukee of the 1930s, neighborhood by neighborhood, building by
building. Buenker's thoughtful introduction provides historical context, details the
FWP's development of this guide, as well as Milwaukee's political climate leading up to,
and during, the 1930s. Next, essays on thirteen "areas," ranging from Civic Center to
Bay View, delve deeper into the geography, economy, and culture of old Milwaukee's
neighborhoods. Simulated auto tours take readers to locales still familiar today,
exploring the city's most celebrated landmarks and institutions. With a calendar of
annual events and a list of public services and institutions, plus dozens of photographs
from the era, Milwaukee in the 1930s, provides a unique record of a pre-World War II
American city.
The UHA will be seeking an
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
for the five-year term beginning January 1,
2020, and ending December 31, 2024.
Anyone interested in learning more about
the position should contact Tim Neary,
current UHA Executive Director, at
ANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTSANNOUNCEMENTS
PAGE 22 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
17th NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PLANNING HISTORY
Society for American City & Regional Planning History
Westin Cleveland Downtown
Cleveland, Ohio
October 26-29, 2017
We are pleased to announce the Call for Papers for the 17th National Conference on Planning History. In order
to submit a proposal, please complete the online submission form found at http://sacrph.org/conferences-2017
Call for Papers: SACRPH cordially invites scholars and practitioners to present papers and talks on all aspects
of urban, regional, and community planning history and their relationship to urban and metropolitan studies.
Particularly welcome are papers, talks, roundtables, and sessions addressing the theme of Theory and
Practice in Planning History. What is the relationship between the ideas shaping metropolitan development
and the history of the built environment?
SACRPH is an interdisciplinary organization dedicated to promoting humanistic scholarship on the planning of
metropolitan regions. SACRPH members include historians, practicing planners, geographers,
environmentalists, architects, landscape designers, public policy makers, preservationists, community
organizers, students, and scholars from across the world. SACRPH publishes a quarterly journal, The Journal of
Planning History, hosts a biennial conference, and sponsors awards for research and publication in the field.
The Program Committee welcomes proposals for complete sessions (of three or four papers) and for individual
papers. We also encourage submissions that propose innovative formats and that engage questions of teaching
and learning, digital information, and publishing. Proposals must be submitted by February 25, 2017 via
the online submission form included below.
Each proposal must include the following:
For individual paper submissions: a 100-word abstract
For individual paper submissions: a one-page CV, including address, phone, and e-mail (PDF or Word)
For panel submissions: a single document (PDF or Word) including cover page (indicating lead contact, with telephone and email, and the names—if available—of the session Chair and Commentator); a one-paragraph overview of the session’s themes and significance, plus a description of the format (panel, roundtable, workshop); a 100-word abstract for each proposed paper; and a one-page CV for each participant, including address, phone, and e-mail
For all submissions: four key words identifying the thematic emphases of the topic
Please format required attachments with a standard 12-point font and 1.25-inch side margins. Do not include
illustrations. Inquiries may be directed to Program Committee co-chairs: Julian Chambliss, Professor of History,
Rollins College, Florida; or David Freund, Associate Professor of History, University of Maryland, College Park.
All Power to the People. Oak-land Museum of California, Oct. 8, 2016 - Feb. 12, 2017. Art in Focus: Relics of Old Lon-don. Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Conn., May 11 - Aug. 14, 2016. The Battle of Brooklyn. New-York Historical Society, New York, Sept. 23, 2016 - Jan. 8, 2017. Bedlam: The Asylum and Be-yond. Wellcome Collection, London, UK, Sept. 15, 2016 - Jan. 15, 2017. Black Suburbia: From Levit-town to Ferguson. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Li-brary, New York, Oct. 1 - Dec. 31, 2015. By the People: Designing a Bet-ter America. Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York, Sept. 30, 2016 - Feb. 26, 2017. Celebrating 300 Years at the Warner House. Discover Ports-mouth Center, Portsmouth, N.H., June 1 - Sept. 2, 2016. A Civic Utopia: Architecture and the City in France, 1765-
1837. The Courtauld Gallery, London, UK, Oct. 8, 2016 - Jan. 8, 2017. Gay Gotham: Art and Under-ground Culture. Museum of the City of New York, Oct. 7, 2015 - Feb. 26, 2017. House Housing: An Untimely History of Architecture and Real Estate. Center for Architecture, New York, July 12 - Aug. 27, 2016. In the South Bronx of America: Photographs by Mel Rosenthal. Museum of the City of New York May 7, 2016 - Oct. 16, 2016. Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem. Art Institute Chicago, May 21 - Aug. 28, 2106. Mapping a Growing Nation: From Independence to State-hood. Library of Congress, North Gallery, Thomas Jefferson Building, Sept. 1 - ongoing. Martha Cooper: NYCasitas. Hi-ARTS Gallery, New York, Mar. 24 - May 28, 2016. Mierle Laderman Ukeles: Maintenance Art. Queens Muse-um [New York], Sept. 18, 2016 - Feb. 19, 2017. New York at Its Core. Museum of the City of New York Nov. 18, 2016 - ongoing. Stolen Heart: The Theft of Jew-ish Property in Berlin’s Historic City Center, 1933-1945. Center
for Jewish History, New York, Mar. 29 - Dec. 31, 2016. Truman Capote’s Brooklyn: The Lost Photographs of David Attie. Brooklyn (N.Y.) Histori-cal Society, July 20, 2016 - July 2017. Wayward Eye: The Photog-raphy of Denise Scott Brown. Palazzo Mora, Venice, Italy, May 13 - Nov. 27, 2016. Weegee’s Bowery. ICP Gallery at Mana Contemporary, Jersey City, N.J. May 1 - Aug. 5, 2016.
~ Matthew Gordon Las-ner, UHA Bibliographer for exhibitions and me-dia, is associate professor or urban studies, Department of Urban Policy & Planning, Hunter College. His research focuses on housing in the U.S. He is author of High Life: Con-do Living in the Suburban Cen-tury.
Benoist S. (2016), Une histoire personnelle de Rome. Des ori-gines au VIème siècle de notre ère, Paris, Presses Universi-taires de France. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 23 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
EXHIBITIONS
AND MEDIA
FRENCH
BOOKS
Chabrol M., Collet A., Giroud M., Launay L., Rousseau M., Ter Minassian H., (2016), Gen-trifications. Paris, Editions Amsterdam. Charmes E. & Bacqué M.-H. (2016), Mixité sociale et après ? Paris, Seuil. Chauvel L. (2016), La spirale du déclassement : Essai sur la société des illusions, Paris, Seuil. Chollet M. (2016), Chez soi : une odyssée de l’espace domes-tique, Paris, La Découverte. Demoulin J. (2016), La gestion du logement social, Paris, Presses Universitaires de Rennes. Escaffre F. & Jaillet M.-C. (2016), Une trajectoire métro-politaine : Toulouse, Paris, Le Moniteur. Ghorra-Gobin C. & Reghezza-Zitt M. (ed.) (2016), Entre local et global. Les territoires dans la mondialisation, Paris, Editions Le Manuscrit. Guilluy Ch. (2016), Le crépus-cule de la France d’en haut, Paris, Flammarion. Iogna-Prat D. (2016), Cité de Dieu, Cité des hommes. L’église et l’architecture de la société, Paris, Presses Universitaires de France.
Le Goix R. (2016), Sur le front de la métropole : une géogra-phie suburbaine de Los Angeles, Paris, Publications de la Sor-bonne. Lenne F. (2016), Ailleurs. Archi-tectes français à l’export, Paris, La Découverte. Lussault M. & Mongin O. (ed.) (2016), Cultures & créations dans les métropoles-monde, Pa-ris, Hermann.
~ Cynthia Ghorra-Gobin, UHA Bibliographer for French books, is CNRS-CREDA, University of Sorbonne Nouvelle- Paris 3, visiting pro-fessor UC Berkeley, spring se-mester, 2015.
Demschuk, Andrew. “Mausoleum for Bach?: Holy Relics and Urban Planning in Early Communist Leipzig, 1945-1950.” History and Memory 28:2 (Fall 2016): 47-88. Hess, Cordelia. “The Writing on the Barn: Content and Materiali-ty in Contested Documents of Northern German Towns.” A Journal of Germanic Studies 52:2 (May 2016): 155-72. Kholodilin, Konstantin. “War, housing rents, and free market: Berlin's rental housing during
World War I.” European Re-view of Economic History 20:3 (August 2016): 322-44. Kohl, Sebastian. “Urban Histo-ry Matters: Explaining the Ger-man–American Homeowner-ship.” Housing Studies 31:6 (September 2016): 694-713. Richter, Hedwig. “Transnational Reform and De-mocracy: Election Reforms in New York City and Berlin around 1900.” Journal of the Gilded Age & Progressive Era 15:2 (April 2016): 149-75. Sammartino, Annemarie. “Mass Housing, Late Modernism, and the Forging of Community in New York City and East Berlin, 1965-1989.” American Histori-cal Review 121:2 (April 2016): 492-521. Smelyansky, Eugene. “Urban Order and Urban Other: Anti-Waldensian Inquisition in Augsburg, 1393. German His-tory 34:1 (March 2016): 1-20.
Arnold, Jörg. The Allied Air War and Urban Memory: The Legacy of Strategic Bombing in Germany. Cambridge: Cam-bridge University Press, 2016. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 24 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
GERMAN
ARTICLES
GERMAN
BOOKS
Barnstone, Deborah Ascher. Beyond the Bauhaus: Cultural modernity in Breslau, 1918-33. Ann Arbor: University of Mich-igan Press, 2016. Rubin, Eli. Amnesiopolis: Mo-dernity, Space, and Memory in East Germany. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016. Seipp, Adam. The Ordeal of Peace: Demobilization and the Urban Experience in Britain and Germany, 1917–1921. Lon-don and New York: Routledge, 2016. Ward, Simon. Urban Memory and Visual Culture in Berlin: Framing the Asynchronous City, 1957-2012. Amsterdam: Am-sterdam University Press, 2016.
~ Ute Chamberlin, UHA Bibliographer for Ger-man books and articles, is Assistant Professor of German History at Western Illinois Uni-versity in Macomb, Illinois. Her area of specialization is women and gender history. Her research interests are focused on women in the urban context of Imperial and Weimar Germany, in terms of education, charity, social work, and municipal politics, particularly in the Ruhr Valley. Fraser, Valerie. “Latin America in Construction: Architecture 1955-1980.” Journal Of The Society Of Architectural Histo-rians 74, no. 4 (December 2015): 515-516.
Cornejo, Tomás. "REPRESENTACIONES POP-ULARES DE LA VIDA URBA-NA: CIUDAD DE MÉXICO, 1890-1930." Historia Mexicana 65, no. 4 (April 2016): 1601-1651. Duarte, Adriano Luiz. "The Right to the City in Two Mo-ments: The Bus and Tram Riots in São Paulo City in 1947 and 2013." Historical Materialism 24, no. 3 (September 2016): 147-183. Ibarra, Macarena. "Hygiene and public health in Santiago de Chile's urban agenda, 1892–1927." Planning Perspectives 31, no. 2 (April 2016): 181-203. Lozano, José Carlos, Philippe Meers, and Daniel Biltereyst. "La experiencia social histórica de asistencia al cine en Monter-rey (Nuevo León, México) du-rante las décadas de 1930 a 1960." Palabra Clave 19, no. 3 (September 2016): 691-720. Trostel, Katharine G. "Memoryscapes: Urban Palimp-sests and Networked Jewish Memory in the Works of Tununa Mercado and Karina Pacheco Medrano." Partial Answers: Journal Of Literature And The
History Of Ideas 14, no. 2 (June 2016): 377-391. van Lindert, Paul. "Rethinking urban development in Latin America: A review of changing paradigms and policies." Habi-tat International 54, (May 3, 2016): 253-264. .
Davids, René. Shaping Terrain: City Building in Latin America. Gainesville, Florida: University of Florida Press, 2016. Doyle, James A. Architecture and the Origins of Preclassic Maya Politics. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2016. Drago Quaglia, Elisa. Alfonso Pallares: sembrador de ideas. México, D.F.: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Arquitectura, 2016. Esteban Maluenda, Ana. La ar-quitectura moderna en Latino-américa: antología de autores, obras y textos. Barcelona: Edi-torial Reverté, 2016. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 25 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
LATIN
AMERICAN
ARTICLES
LATIN
AMERICAN
BOOKS
Hernández Gálvez, Alejandro. Habitar La Ciudad. Ciudad de México: Arquine, 2016. Pohl, John M. D., and Claire L. Ly-ons. Altera Roma: Art and Em-pire from Mérida to México. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2016. Rodríguez Manzo, Fausto E., Gerardo G. Sánchez Ruiz, and Elisa Garay Vargas. La ciudad de México: visiones críticas desde la arquitectura, el urban-ismo y el diseño. Cuidad de México: Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Azca-potzalco, 2016. Sluis, Ageeth. Deco Body, Deco City: Female Spectacle and Mo-dernity in Mexico City, 1900-1939. Lincoln, Nebraska: Univeristy of Nebraska Press, 2016.
~ Maria A. Loftin, Latin America Articles and Books Bibliographer, is a doctoral candidate in the Histo-ry of Ideas program at the Uni-versity of Texas at Dallas. Her dissertation focuses on the built environment and consumerism in Mexico City and Monterrey in the post-Revolutionary era.
Baics, Gergely. “The Geography of Urban Food Retail: Location-al Principles of Public Market Provisioning in New York City, 1790-1860.” Urban History 43:3 (2016): 435-53. Baics, Gergely and Leah Meis-terlin. “Zoning Before Zoning: Land Use and Density in Mid-Nineteenth-Century New York City.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 106:5 (2016): 1152-75. Beyer-Purvis, Amanda. “The Philadelphia Bible Riots of 1844: Contest over the Rights of Citizens.” Pennsylvania History 83:3 (2016): 366-93. Crouch, Christian Ayne. “The Black City: African and Indian Exchanges in Pontiac’s Upper Country.” Early American Stud-ies 14:2 (2016): 284-318. Field, Kendra and Daniel Lynch. “‘Master of Ceremonies’: The World of Peter Biggs in Civil War-Era Los Angeles.” Western Historical Quarterly 47:4 (2016): 379-406. Kiechle, Melanie. “Navigating by Nose: Fresh Air, Stench Nui-sance, and the Urban Environ-ment, 1840-1880.” Journal of Urban History 42:4 (2016): 753-71.
Mach, Andrew. “‘The Name of Freeman is Better Than Jesuit’: Anti-Catholicism, Republican Ideology, and Cincinnati Politi-cal Culture, 1853-1854.” Ohio Valley History 15:4 (2015): 3-21. Neidenbach, Elizabeth C. “‘Refugee from St. Domingue Living in This City’: The Geog-raphy of Social Networks in Testaments of Refugee Free Women of Color in New Orle-ans.” Journal of Urban History 42:5 (2016): 841-62. O'Brassill-Kulfan, Kristin. “Vagabonds and Paupers: Race and Illicit Mobility in the Early Republic.” Pennsylvania Histo-ry 83:4 (2016): 443-69. Pitock, Toni. “Commerce and Community: Philadelphia's Ear-ly Jewish Settlers, 1736-76.” Pennsylvania Magazine of His-tory and Biography 140:3 (2016): 271-303. Reichard, Ruth D. “A ‘National Distemper’: The National Hotel Sickness of 1857, Public Health and Sanitation, and the Limits of Rationality.” Journal of Planning History 15:3 (2016): 175-90. Salvucci, Linda K. and Richard J. Salvucci. “The Lizardi Broth-ers: A Mexican Family Busi-ness and the Expansion of New Orleans, 1825-1846.” Journal of Southern History 82:4 (2016): 759-88. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 26 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
U.S. ARTICLES
PRE-1865
Scherr, Arthur. “To ‘Alarm the Publick Mind’: A Reexamina-tion of Pamphlets and Newspa-pers in Philadelphia and the Early Republic.” Pennsylvania History 83:3 (2016): 297-336. Scott, Sean A. “‘The Glory of the City is Gone’: Perspectives of Union Soldiers on New Orle-ans during the Civil War.” Loui-siana History 57:1 (2016): 45-69. Smith, Matthew D. “The Spec-ter of Cholera in Nineteenth-Century Cincinnati.” Ohio Val-ley History 16:2 (2016): 21-40. Storey, Margaret M. “A Con-quest of Manners: Gender, So-ciability, and Northern Wives’ Occupation of Memphis, 1862-1865.” Ohio Valley History 15:1 (2015): 4-20.
Arkaraprasertkul, Non. “The Social Poetics of Urban Design: Rethinking Urban Design through Louis Kahn’s Vision for Central Philadelphia (1939-1962).” Journal of Urban De-sign 21:6 (2016): 731-45. Bates, Jason L. “Consolidating Support for a Law ‘Incapable of Enforcement’: Segregation on Tennessee Streetcars, 1900-1930.” Journal of Southern His-tory 82:1 (2016): 97-126. Beisaw, April M. “Water for the
City, Ruins for the Country: Ar-chaeology of the New York City Watershed.” International Jour-nal of Historical Archaeology 20:3 (2016): 614-26. Brody, Jason. “How Ideas Work: Memes and Institutional Materi-al in the First 100 Years of the Neighborhood Unit.” Journal of Urbanism 9:4 (2016): 329-52. Brooks, Emily. “Marijuana in La Guardia’s New York City: The Mayor’s Committee and Federal Policy, 1938-1945.” Journal of Policy History 28:4 (2016): 568-96. Brown, Nancy. “Challenging Economic Borders: Fort Wayne, Indiana, and Chemnitz, Germa-ny.” Indiana Magazine of Histo-ry 112:1 (2016): 1-32. Bunk, Brian D. “Boxer in New York: Spaniards, Puerto Ricans, and Attempts to Construct a His-pano Race.” Journal of Ameri-can Ethnic History 35:4 (2016): 32-58. Butler, Jon. “God, Gotham, and Modernity.” Journal of Ameri-can History 103:1 (2016): 19-33. Cimino, Eric C. “Safeguarding the Innocent: Travelers’ Aid at the Panama-California Exposi-tion, 1915.” Journal of San Die-go History 61:3-4 (2015): 455-74. Engstrand, Iris and Matthew Schiff. “San Diego Invites the World: The 1915 Exposition, A Pictorial Essay.” Journal of San Diego History 61:2 (2015): 337-50.
Ennis, Ron W. “Bethlehem Steelworkers, the Press, and the Struggle for the Eight-Hour Day.” Pennsylvania History 83:3 (2016): 337-65. Ervin, Keona K. “Breaking the ‘Harness of Household Slav-ery’: Domestic Workers, the Women’s Division of the St. Louis Urban League, and the Politics of Labor Reform during the Great Depression.” Interna-tional Labor and Working-Class History 88 (2015): 49-66. Ervin, Keona K. “We Rebel: Black Women, Worker Theater, and Critical Unionism in War-time St. Louis.” Souls: A Criti-cal Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society 18:1 (2016): 32-58. Gollner, Philipp. “How Men-nonites Became White: Reli-gious Activism, Cultural Pow-er, and the City.” Mennonite Quarterly Review 90:2 (2016): 165-93. González, Sergio M. “Interethnic Catholicism and Transnational Religious Con-nections: Milwaukee's Mexican Mission Chapel of Our Lady of Guadalupe, 1924-1929.” Jour-nal of American Ethnic History 36:1 (2016): 5-30. Hering, Katharina. “Voice of the Voteless: The District of Columbia League of Women Voters, 1921-1941.” Washing-ton History 28:1 (2016): 3-13. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 27 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
U.S. ARTICLES
1865-1945
Hirsch, Susan E. “Ethnic and Civic Leadership in the Progres-sive Era: Charles H. Wacker and Chicago.” Journal of Amer-ican Ethnic History 35:4 (2016): 5-31. Howell, Thomas. “Kansas City's Crusader: Leon Birkhead and the Fight against Fascism.” Mis-souri Historical Review 110:4 (2016): 237-59. Jett, Brandon. “‘The Most Mur-derous Civilized City in the World’: Patterns of Homicide in Jim Crow Memphis, 1917-1926.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 74:2 (2015): 104-27. Kohl, Sebastian. “Urban History Matters: Explaining the German-American Homeownership Gap.” Housing Studies 31:6 (2016): 694-713. Kubie, Oenone. “Reading Lewis Hine's Photography of Child Street Labour, 1906-1918.” Journal of American Studies 50:4 (2016): 873-97. Logan, John R. and Hyoung-jin Shin. “Birds of a Feather: Social Bases of Neighborhood For-mation in Newark, New Jersey, 1880.” Demography 53:4 (2016): 1085-1108. Parra, Carlos Francisco. “Lessons in Americanization: Educational Attainment and In-ternal Colonialism in Albuquer-que Public Schools, 1879-1942.” New Mexico Historical Review 91:2 (2016): 163-200. Shertzer, Allison, Randall P. Walsh, and John R. Logan.
“Segregation and Neighborhood Change in Northern Cities: New Historical GIS Data from 1900-1930.” Historical Methods 49:4 (2016): 187-97. Sinclair, Heather M. “White Plague, Mexican Menace: Mi-gration, Race, Class, and Gen-dered Contagion in El Paso, Texas, 1880-1930.” Pacific His-torical Review 85:4 (2016): 475-505. Sterba, Christopher M. “Transcultural San Francisco: Andrew Furuseth, Olaf Tve-itmoe, and the Forgotten Scandi-navian American Experience.” Pacific Historical Review 85:1 (2016): 72-109. Wilson, Charla. “Why the Y? The Origin of San Diego YMCA’s Clay Avenue Branch for African Americans.” Journal of San Diego History 62:3-4 (2016): 303-22. Wiltse, Jeff. “Cities are Alive with the Sound of Music: Saengerfest and the Transfor-mation of Urban Public Music in Nineteenth-century America.” American Nineteenth Century History 16:3 (2015): 269-96.
Abramson, Samuel. “Disorder at the Derby: Race, Reputation, and Louisville's 1967 Open
Housing Crisis.” Ohio Valley History 15:2 (2015): 28-48. Addie, Jean-Paul D. “On the Road to the In-Between City: Excavating Peripheral Urbani-sation in Chicago’s ‘Crosstown Corridor.’” Environment and Planning A 48:5 (2016): 825-43. Botein, Hilary. “Labor Unions and Race-conscious Housing in the Postwar Bay Area: Housing Projects of the International Longshoremen’s and Ware-housemen’s Union and the United Automobile Workers.” Journal of Planning History 15:3 (2016): 210-29. Bradford, Anita Casavantes. “‘Let the Cuban Community Aid Its Haitian Brothers’: Mon-signor Bryan Walsh, Miami’s Immi-grant Church, and the Making of a Multiethnic City, 1960-2000.” U.S. Catholic Historian 34:3 (2016): 99-126. Campo, Daniel. “Historic Preservation in an Economic Void: Reviving Buffalo’s Con-crete Atlantis.” Journal of Planning History 15:4 (2016): 314-45. Castro, Mauricio F. “Object Lesson: ‘All the Help I Needed, I Got Here’: Miami’s Freedom Tower and the Freedom Tower’s Miami.” Buildings & Landscapes 23:1 (2016): 16-28. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 28 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
U.S. ARTICLES
POST-1945
Chatelain, Marcia. “The Miracle of the Golden Arches: Race and Fast Food in Los Angeles.” Pa-cific Historical Review 85:3 (2016): 325-53. Debnam, Jewell C. “Mary Moultrie, Naomi White, and the Women of the Charleston Hos-pital Workers’ Strike of 1969.” Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and So-ciety 18:1 (2016): 59-79. Dinces, Sean. “‘Nothing but Net Profit’: Property Taxes, Public Dollars, and Corporate Philan-thropy at Chicago's United Cen-ter.” Radical History Review 125 (2016): 13-34. Dorman, Jacob S. “Dreams De-fended and Deferred: The Brooklyn Schools Crisis of 1968 and Black Power’s Influ-ence on Rabbi Meir Kahane.” American Jewish History 100:3 (2016): 411-37. Fernández, Delia. “Rethinking the Urban and Rural Divide in Latino Labor, Recreation, and Activism in West Michigan, 1940s-1970s.” Labor History 57:4 (2016): 482-503. Goldstein, Brian D. “‘The Search for New Forms’: Black Power and the Making of the Postmodern City.” Journal of American History 103:2 (2016): 375-99. Hannan, Conor. “‘We Have Our Own Struggle’: Up Against the Wall Motherfucker and the Avant-Garde of Community Action, the Lower East Side, 1968.” The Sixties: A Journal of
History, Politics, and Culture 9:1 (2016): 115-44. Howell, Ocean. “The Merchant Crusaders: Eichler Homes and Fair Housing, 1949-1974.” Pa-cific Historical Review 85:3 (2016): 379-407. Janecky, Peter R. “Opposing Forces: The ‘Open Housing’ De-bate among Citizens, the Daily Press, and the Mayor in Milwau-kee, 1967-1968.” Journal of Ur-ban History 42:5 (2016): 919-37. Kornberg, Dana. “The Structural Origins of Territorial Stigma: Water and Racial Politics in Metropolitan Detroit, 1950s-2010s.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 40:2 (2016): 263-83. Littlejohn, Jeffry L. and Charles H. Ford. “Booker T. Washington High School: History, Identity, and Educational Equity in Nor-folk, Virginia.” Virginia Maga-zine of History and Biography 124:2 (2016): 134-62. Lowery, Bryce C. “Planning for Private Consumption and Col-lective Beauty: Regulating Out-door Advertising in Los Ange-les, 1881-2014.” Journal of Planning History 15:3 (2016): 191-209. Mallios, Seth and Breana Camp-bell. “On the Cusp of an Ameri-can Civil Rights Revolution: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Final Visit and Address to San Diego in 1964.” Journal of San Diego History 61:2 (2015): 375-410.
Matthews, Glenna. “Toward the Rebirth of Downtown San Jose: Postwar Sprawl and Redevelop-ment in a Silicon Valley City.” Pacific Historical Review 85:3 (2016): 354-78. Moon, Krystyn. “The Alexan-dria YWCA, Race, and Urban (and Ethnic) Revival: The Scot-tish Christmas Walk, 1960s-1970s.” Journal of American Ethnic History 35:4 (2016): 59-92. Moten, Crystal M. “‘Fighting Their Own Economic Battles’: Saint Charles Lockett, Ethnic Enterprises, and the Challenges of Black Capitalism in 1970s Milwaukee.” Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Cul-ture, and Society 18:1 (2016): 106-25. Neuman, Nichole. “Images of Germanness and L.A.’s Mid Twentieth Century German-Speaking Community.” Jewish Culture and History 17:1-2 (2016): 152-68 Owen, Lance. “How the Mall Made Walnut Creek: Retail Planning Dynamics in a Cali-fornia Suburb, 1950-2015.” Journal of Planning History 15:4 (2016): 290-313. (Continued on next page)
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 29 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Rocksborough-Smith, Ian. “‘I Had Gone in There Thinking I Was Going to Be a Cultural Worker’: Richard Durham, Os-car Brown, Jr. and the United Packinghouse Workers Associa-tion in Chicago.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 109:3 (2016): 252-99. Sammartino, Annemarie. “Mass Housing, Late Modernism, and the Forging of Community in New York City and East Berlin, 1965-1989.” American Histori-cal Review 121:2 (2016): 492-521. Schmitt, Brooke Johnson. “Tourmaline Canyon: Surfers vs. Homeowners during the 1960s.” Journal of San Diego History 62:3-4 (2016): 273-302. Shanabruch, Charles. “Moral Imperatives and Political Reali-ties: Edward Marciniak and the Fight to End Chicago's Dual Housing Market.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical So-ciety 109:1 (2016): 71-101. Sperb, Jason. “The End of De-tropia: Fordist Nostalgia and the Ambivalence of Poetic Ruins in Visions of Detroit.” Journal of American Culture 39:2 (2016): 212-27. Steffes, Tracy L. “Managing School Integration and White Flight: The Debate over Chica-go’s Future in the 1960s.” Jour-nal of Urban History 42:4 (2016): 709-32.
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 30 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Toloudis, Nicholas. “Teachers Unions Conflict in New York City, 1935-1960.” Labor History 56:5 (2015): 566-86. Verbrugge, Martha H. and Drew Yingling. “The Politics of Play: The Struggle over Racial Segre-gation and Public Recreation in Washington, D.C., 1945-1950.” Washington History 27:2 (2015): 56-69. Vitale, Patrick. “Cradle of the Creative Class: Reinventing the Figure of the Scientist in Cold War Pittsburgh.” Annals of the Association of American Geog-raphers 106:6 (2016): 1378-96. Weinzimmer, David. “The San Diego Trolley: The Little Light Rail That Could.” Journal of Planning History 15:3 (2016): 246-65. White, George, Jr., “The Color of Money: African Americans, Economic Development, and Identity in Kentucky.” Register of the Kentucky Historical Socie-ty 114:2 (2016): 161-87. Whittemore, Andrew H. and Mi-chael J. Smart. “Mapping Gay and Lesbian Neighborhoods Us-ing Home Advertisements: Change and Continuity in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitan Statistical Area Over Three Dec-ades.” Environment and Plan-ning A 48:1 (2016): 192-210.
A big thank you to
everyone who
made this season’s
newsletter possi-
ble, especially Tim
Neary!
Yamashita, Wendi. “The Coloni-al and the Carceral: Building Re-lationships Between Japanese Americans and Indigenous Groups in the Owens Valley.” Amerasia Journal 42:1 (2016): 121-38.
~ Todd M. Michney, U.S. Articles Bibliographer, is Visiting Assistant Professor in the School of History and Soci-ology at the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he teaches courses in 20th century United States history and is a research associate at the Center for Urban Innovation. His book, Surrogate Suburbs: Black Upward Mobility and Neighborhood Change in Cleveland, 1900-1980 (University of North Carolina Press), is due out in March 2017 .
Ade, George. The Old-Time Sa-loon: Not Wet – Not Dry, Just History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016. Baics, Gregory. Feeding Go-tham: The Political Economy and Geography of Food in New York, 1790-1860. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016. (Continued on next page)
U.S. BOOKS
Boustan, Leah Platt. Competi-tion in the Promised Land: Black Migrants in Northern Cit-ies and Labor Markets. Prince-ton: Princeton University Press, 2016. Brown, Adrienne R.; Valerie Smith; and Kim Lane Scheppe-le, eds. Race and Real Estate. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016. Burns, Peter F. and Matthew O. Thomas. Reforming New Orle-ans: The Contentious Politics of Change in the Big Easy. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016. Cline, David P. From Reconcili-ation to Revolution: How the Student Interracial Ministry Took Up the Cause of Civil Rights. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2016. Cowan, Aaron. A Nice Place to Visit: Tourism and Urban Revi-talization in the Postwar Rust-belt. Philadelphia: Temple Uni-versity, 2016. deLeon, Cedric. The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor De-mocracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago. Ithaca: Cornell Uni-versity Press, 2016. Deverell, William and Tom Sit-ton. Water and Los Angeles: A Tale of Three Rivers, 1900-1941. Oakland: University of California Press, 2016. Dietrich-Ward, Allen. Beyond Rust: Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial Amer-ica. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 2016.
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 31 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Duneier, Mitchell. Ghetto: The Invention of a Place, The Histo-ry of an Idea. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2016. Erby, Kelly. Restaurant Repub-lic: The Rise of Public Dining in Boston. Minneapolis, MN: Uni-versity of Minnesota Press, 2016. Falck, Zachary J.S. Weeds: An Environmental History of Metro-politan America. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2016. Flamm, Michael W. In the Heat of the Summer: The New York Riots of 1964 and the War on Crime. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 2016. Gilbert, Kenyatta R. A Pursued Justice: Black Preaching from the Great Migration to Civil Rights. Baylor, Texas: Baylor University Press, 2016. Golub, Aaron. Bicycle Justice and Urban Transformation: Bik-ing for All? New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, 2016. Griffiths, Alison. Carceral Fan-tasies: Cinema and Prison in Early Twentieth-Century Ameri-ca. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2016. Harold, Claudrena. New Negro Politics in the Jim Crow South. Athens, GA: University of Geor-gia Press, 2016. Hodges, Adam J. World War I and Urban Order: The Local Class Politics of National Mobi-
lization. New York, NY: Pal-grave Macmillan, 2016. Hood, Clifton. In Pursuit of Privilege: A History of New York City’s Upper Class and the Mak-ing of a Metropolis. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2016. Iarocci, Louisa. The Urban De-partment Store in America, 1850-1930. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2016. Issel, Bill. Baptized on the Fourth of July: A Catholic Boy-hood in San Francisco, 1944-1951. (Berkeley: Minuteman Press, 2016). Johnson, Rashauna. Slavery’s Metropolis: Unfree Labor in New Orleans During the Age of Revolutions. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2016. Jonnes, Jill. Urban Forests: A Natural History of Trees in the American Cityscape. Viking, 2016. Kanigel, Robert. Eyes on the Street: The Life of Jane Jacobs. New York: Knopf, 2016. Kinney, Rebecca. Beautiful Wasteland: The Rise of Detroit as America’s Postindustrial Frontier. Minneapolis: Universi-ty of Minnesota Press, 2016. (Continued on next page)
Note:
The Canada
bibliography will
hopefully return in a
future newsletter.
Larsen, Kristin E. Community Architect: The Life and Vision of Clarence S. Stein. Ithaca: Cornell University, 2016. Leyda, Julia. American Mobili-ties: Geographies of Class, Race, and Gender in US Cul-ture. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2016. Maly, Michael T. and Heather M. Dalmage. Vanishing Eden: White Construction of Memory, Meaning, and Identity in a Ra-cially Changing City. Philadel-phia: Temple University Press, 2016. Milroy, Elizabeth. The Grid and The River: Philadelphia’s Green Places, 1682-1876. Uni-versity Park, PA: The Pennsyl-vania State University Press, 2016. Naison, Mark and Bob Gumbs. Before the Fires: An Oral His-tory of African American Life in the Bronx From the 1930s to the 1960s. Bronx, NY: Fordham University Press, 2016. Neary, Timothy B. Crossing Parish Boundaries: Race, Sports, and Catholic Youth in Chicago, 1914-1954. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016. Nelson, R.J. Dirty Waters: Con-fessions of Chicago’s Last Har-bor Boss. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016. Nicolaides, Becky M. and An-drew Wiese. The Suburb Read-er. New York: Routledge, Tay-lor, & Francis Group, 2016.
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 32 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
Plunz, Richard. A History of Housing in New York City. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2016. (Revised edition.) Rabig, Julia. The Fixers: Devo-lution, Development, and Civil Society in Newark, 1960-1990. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016. Roberts, Kyle. Evangelical Go-tham: Religion and the Making of New York City, 1783-1860. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016. Sattler, Julia. Urban Transfor-mations in the U.S.A.: Spaces, Communities, Representations. Bielefeld: Transcript, 2016. Scribner, Campbell F. The Fight for Local Control: Schools, Sub-urbs, and American Democracy. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016. Seligman, Amanda I. Chicago’s Block Clubs: How Neighbor-hoods Shape the City. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016.
Smith, Andrea L. and Anna Ei-senstein. Rebuilding Shattered Worlds: Creating Community by Voicing the Past. Lincoln: Uni-versity of Nebraska Press, 2016. Spirou, Costas and Dennis R. Judd. Building the City of Spec-tacle: Mayor Richard M. Daley and the Remaking of Chicago. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016. Starecheski, Amy. Ours to Lose: When Squatters Became Home-owners in New York City. Chica-go: University of Chicago Press, 2016. Teaford, Jon C. The Twentieth-Century American City: Prob-lem, Promise, and Reality. Balti-more: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016. Vergara, Camilo José. Detroit is No Dry Bones: The Eternal City of the Industrial Age. Ann Ar-bor: University of Michigan Press, 2016. Weaver, Timothy P.R. Blazing the Neoliberal Trail: Urban Po-litical Development in the Unit-ed States and the United King-dom. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 2016. Webster, Nancy and David Shirley. A History of Brooklyn Bridge Park: How a Community Reclaimed and Transformed New York City’s Waterfront. New York, NY: Columbia Uni-versity Press, 2016. (Continued on next page)
Williams, Charles Louis; Kida-da E. Williams; and Keisha N. Blain, eds. Charleston Syllabus: Readings on Race, Racism, and Racial Violence. Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 2016. Wolfinger, James. Running the Rails: Capital and Labor in the Philadelphia Transit Industry. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016. Wojcik, Pamela Robertson. Fantasies of Neglect: Imagining the Urban Child in American Film and Fiction. New Bruns-wick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2016.
~ Katie Schank, UHA U.S. Books bibliographer, is a Visiting Fellow at Emory Uni-versity's Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Differ-ence. Her research interests are focused on the built environ-ment, race, and visual culture. She is currently working on a manuscript about the central role that images and representa-tions played in the history of Atlanta public housing.
BIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIESBIBLIOGRAPHIES
PAGE 33 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
***
A humongous thank you, as usual,
to this issue’s bibliography
volunteers:
Ute Chamberlin,
Cynthia Ghorra-Gobin,
Matthew Lasner,
Maria Loftin, Todd Michney, and
Katie Schank.
***
CANADA CANADA CANADA
BIBLIOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY VOLUNTEER NEEDEDVOLUNTEER NEEDEDVOLUNTEER NEEDED
The UHA is looking for a volunteer to com-
plete the Canada books and articles bibliog-
raphy for its newsletter. If interested,
please contact
Timothy Neary at [email protected]
PAGE 34 THE URBAN HISTORY NE WSLETTER FALL 2016 (VOLUME 48, NUMBER 2)
To become a member of the UHA, please register online at
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Membership Options for 2017
Questions? Contact UHA Membership Secretary, Professor Cindy Lobel at [email protected] or 718-960-8288.
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lie outside of North American histo-
ry. In addition, the association wel-
comes scholars from any field who
are interested in the history of the
city in any period and geographical
area. Our membership also includes
scholars from the fields of American
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ism, ethnic studies, anthropology,
and political science.
The Association supports a variety
of activities to enhance the visibility
of the study of the history of the
city. The Association has published
the Urban History Newsletter each
year in March and October since
1989. The newsletter includes arti-
cles of interest about the activities
of members of the association, re-
ports on conference attended by
member so the association, confer-
ence announcements, member mile-
The Urban History Association was
founded in Cincinnati in 1988 for
the purpose of stimulating interest
and forwarding research and study
in the history of the city in all peri-
ods and geographical areas. It is
affiliated with the International
Planning History Society.
Today the association includes more
than 500 members worldwide.
While the majority of members are
from the United States and Canada,
the association also includes mem-
bers from Austria, Australia, the
Dominican Republic, the United
Kingdom, France, Israel, the Neth-
erlands, Japan, Germany, Hong
Kong, and New Zealand. Our ranks
include university faculty, archi-
tects, archivists, civil servants, edi-
tors, independent scholars, museum
professionals, planner, public histo-
rians, and secondary school teach-
ers. The association has made a
particular effort to reach scholars
and professionals whose interests
stones and news, reports on re-
search in progress, teaching, and
museum exhibits, as well as news
on the activities of the association.
The association launched its first
biennial urban history conference in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on Sep-
tember 26-28, 2002. Since 1990 the
Association has awarded annual
prizes for the best book in North
American urban history and the
best dissertation and best article in
urban history from the previous
year. Every two years it awards a
prize for the best book in non-North
American history. Members receive
discounted subscriptions to the
Journal of Urban History, Planning
Perspectives (UK), and Urban His-
tory (UK). The Association also
maintains a presence on the inter-
net. The official website for mem-
bers, which features back issues of
the newsletter, links to H-Urban,
links to other urban history web
sites, syllabi exchanges, conference
announcement, and news.
About the Urban History Association
The Urban History Association
Find us on the web:
http://www.urbanhistory.org/
Note to members: you can use the UHA Newsletter to
announce your books and other professional projects!