Difference between revisions of "News"

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'''American Historical Association Annual Meeting: Globalizing Historiography'''
 
'''American Historical Association Annual Meeting: Globalizing Historiography'''
  
NEW YORK CITY, NY: Dates: January 2-5, 2009
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NEW YORK CITY, NY: Dates: January 2-5, 2009
  
 
OutHistory.org Advisors Meeting Planned. All welcome.  (Keep posted for details.)
 
OutHistory.org Advisors Meeting Planned. All welcome.  (Keep posted for details.)

Revision as of 11:30, 6 June 2008

OutHistory.org Makes News

Data and Documents First Published on OutHistory.org

Americans in Württemberg Scandal, 1888

Politics: Pastor Schlegel, Berlin/New York, August 1903; "an organization of his uranian colleagues”


Forthcoming Events

ALMS Conference, NEW YORK CITY, MAY 8-10, 2008

Conference of GLBT Archives, Libraries, Museums, and Special Collections (ALMS)

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK GRADUATE CENTER

CLAGS will host an extraordinary international conference focusing on GLBT Archives, Libraries, Museums, and Special Collections (ALMS) and the archivists, librarians, researchers, artists, activists, and volunteers who work with them. This will be the 2nd ALMS conference since 2006 to explore the construction, use, organization, reflection, and preservation of queer archival material, collections, and research. For details see: http://web.gc.cuny.edu/clags/glbtalms/

Friday, May 9, 11 am-12:15 pm, Rm C204-5

Building Queer Communities, Building Queer Websites: New Digital Resources from CLAGS

  • Sarah Chinn, CLAGS
  • Lynley Wheaton, CLAGS, OutHistory.org
  • Jonathan Ned Katz, OutHistory.org
  • Nomvuyo Nolutshungu,IRN


American Historical Association Annual Meeting: Globalizing Historiography

NEW YORK CITY, NY: Dates: January 2-5, 2009

OutHistory.org Advisors Meeting Planned. All welcome. (Keep posted for details.)

Discuss Globalizing OutHistory.org; teachers, students and the site; users and the site, and much more.

Website: www.historians.org/annual/proposals.htm

The AHA and its members have drawn inspiration from the historical scholarship of colleagues in other lands from the very beginnings of the organization. In 1885, the year following its foundation, the AHA extended its first honorary membership to Leopold von Ranke, and it has since added another 88 honorary foreign members to its rolls. In keeping with this tradition, the theme for the 2009 annual meeting will be Globalizing Historiography. This theme encourages AHA members to expand and interrogate the boundaries of their discipline by examining the relationship of professional historical scholarship in the American historical community with professional historical scholarship as practiced elsewhere.

One of the great strengths of American historical scholarship over the past four decades has been its remarkable ability to enlarge the scope of its concerns in response to the changing demographic patterns of recruitment into the historical profession. The receptivity of the American historical profession to new influences both foreign and domestic has led to increasing concern with issues of diaspora, migration, and immigration, tied to older concerns with race and ethnicity, and to the emergence of the new field of transnational history. It has also involved recognition that many of the conventions and analytical categories of the discipline of history, as practiced in the United States, were originally created in a global context (for instance, of imperialism and colonialism), and are thus already deeply implicated in perceptions of global interactions and exchanges. The 2009 annual meeting offers an opportune moment to renew and deepen AHA members' commitments to fruitful awareness of the global context in which we work, and to a certain extent have always worked, by explicitly Globalizing Historiography.

The chosen theme for the 2009 annual meeting might take historians in multiple, distinct yet overlapping directions as they formulate plans for potential sessions. For some it may prompt efforts to rescue history from the nation by framing national histories in larger, and more appropriate, contexts. For others it may support programs already underway to internationalize historical understanding by bringing perspectives of scholars from different lands to bear on national histories. For yet others, it may provoke a challenge to the very legitimacy of the discourse of "globalization," or its relevance to historiography. It will certainly invite consideration of the nature of modern historical scholarship in light of differing national and cultural traditions of historical thought and practice. To what extent do AHA members share the thematic, theoretical, methodological, and analytical concerns of their colleagues in other lands? To what extent do such concerns diverge, and how might the perspectives of professional historians beyond North America challenge and enrich the work of AHA members? To what extent do particular national and cultural traditions hamper communication and understanding among professional historians in different lands? How do the shifting, and (arguably) ever more intensively global, contexts in which we live and work inflect the work of historians, both here and abroad? How does one approach and write the history of "premodern" societies in light of the new perspectives generated by transnational and global history? Are the theoretical and methodological principles of historiography sensitive to the changing global conditions within which the writing of history takes place and if not, should they be? Can, or should, historiography be truly globalized? These are but a fraction of the questions we hope to raise through the chosen theme, Globalizing Historiography.

Past Events

Bringing Us All Together:

The 101st Annual Meeting of the Organization of American Historians

Friday, March 28 to Monday, March 31, 2008

Hilton New York West 53rd Street and Avenue of the Americas

The one-hundredth and first annual meeting of the Organization of American Historians will be held in New York City, answering a call to bring us all together. The last generation or so of scholarship in American history has excavated the experiences and concerns of a wide array of Americans. Our field now advances a far more expansive definition than ever before of what it means to live an American life. We not only know about people of many genders and races, we see class and region as integral dimensions of American identity. Scholars writing in languages other than English and living outside the United States are also valued members of the community of American historians.

For more information: http://www.oah.org/2008/