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1 DAVID FARBER History Department, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS, 66045 215-908-0100, [email protected] EDUCATION 1979 University of Michigan, B.A. with high honors and distinction, History and English 1981 University of Chicago, M.A. with honors, American history 1985 University of Chicago, Ph.D., American History TEACHING POSITIONS Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professor, History, University of Kansas, July 2015 - Professor, History, Temple University, July 2004 –June 2015 Professor, History, University of New Mexico, January 1997 - June 2004 Assistant Professor, History, Barnard College, Columbia University, July 1990 - December 1996 Visiting Assistant Professor, History, Barnard College, Columbia University, July 1989 - June 1990 Visiting Assistant Professor, History, University of Kansas, January 1988 - May 1989 Assistant Professor, History, University of Hawaii, August 1986 - December 1987 BOOKS Crack: Rock Cocaine, Street Capitalism, and the Decade of Greed, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2019, 214 pages Beyond Pearl Harbor: A Pacific History, co-edited with Beth Bailey, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2019 (cloth, paperback, and e-book), 224 pages Everybody Ought to Be Rich: The Life and Times of John J. Raskob, Capitalist, New York: Oxford University Press, 2013; xiv, 361 pages The Rise and Fall of Modern American Conservatism, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010; paperback, 2012; x, 296 pages What They Think of US: International Perceptions of the United States Since 9/11, editor, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007; 206 pages The Fifties Chronicle, co-lead writer and co-head consultant with Beth Bailey, Chicago: Publications International, 2006; 480 pages America in the 1970s, co-edited with Beth Bailey, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004 (cloth and paperback); vi, 246 pages Taken Hostage: The Iran Hostage Crisis and America’s First Encounter with Radical Islam, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004; paperback, 2006; 9 th paperback printing, 2016, viii, 212 pages The Sixties Chronicle, lead writer and head consultant, Chicago: Publications International, 2004; 480 pages The Conservative Sixties, co-edited with Jeff Roche, New York: Peter Lang Publishers, 2003; vi, 211 pages Sloan Rules: Alfred P. Sloan and the Triumph of General Motors, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002; paperback, 2005; xii, 292 pages; 法伯著 ; 王庆华, (Chinese language edition), Beijing: Democracy and Construction Publishing House, 2004 The Columbia Guide to America in the 1960s, co-authored with Beth Bailey and contributors, New York: Columbia University Press, 2001; paperback, 2003; xii, 508 pages The Age of Great Dreams: America in the 1960s, New York: Hill and Wang, 1994 (cloth and paperback), 34th paperback printing, 2018; 296 pages The '60s: From Memory to History, editor, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1994

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DAVID FARBER History Department, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS, 66045 215-908-0100, [email protected] EDUCATION 1979 University of Michigan, B.A. with high honors and distinction, History and English 1981 University of Chicago, M.A. with honors, American history 1985 University of Chicago, Ph.D., American History TEACHING POSITIONS Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professor, History, University of Kansas, July 2015 - Professor, History, Temple University, July 2004 –June 2015 Professor, History, University of New Mexico, January 1997 - June 2004 Assistant Professor, History, Barnard College, Columbia University, July 1990 - December 1996 Visiting Assistant Professor, History, Barnard College, Columbia University, July 1989 - June 1990 Visiting Assistant Professor, History, University of Kansas, January 1988 - May 1989 Assistant Professor, History, University of Hawaii, August 1986 - December 1987 BOOKS Crack: Rock Cocaine, Street Capitalism, and the Decade of Greed, New York: Cambridge University

Press, 2019, 214 pages Beyond Pearl Harbor: A Pacific History, co-edited with Beth Bailey, Lawrence: University Press of

Kansas, 2019 (cloth, paperback, and e-book), 224 pages Everybody Ought to Be Rich: The Life and Times of John J. Raskob, Capitalist, New York: Oxford

University Press, 2013; xiv, 361 pages The Rise and Fall of Modern American Conservatism, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010;

paperback, 2012; x, 296 pages What They Think of US: International Perceptions of the United States Since 9/11, editor,

Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007; 206 pages The Fifties Chronicle, co-lead writer and co-head consultant with Beth Bailey, Chicago:

Publications International, 2006; 480 pages America in the 1970s, co-edited with Beth Bailey, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004

(cloth and paperback); vi, 246 pages Taken Hostage: The Iran Hostage Crisis and America’s First Encounter with Radical Islam,

Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004; paperback, 2006; 9th paperback printing, 2016, viii, 212 pages

The Sixties Chronicle, lead writer and head consultant, Chicago: Publications International, 2004; 480 pages

The Conservative Sixties, co-edited with Jeff Roche, New York: Peter Lang Publishers, 2003; vi, 211 pages

Sloan Rules: Alfred P. Sloan and the Triumph of General Motors, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002; paperback, 2005; xii, 292 pages; 戴维 法伯著 ; 王庆华, 维 瑾维 (Chinese language edition), Beijing: Democracy and Construction Publishing House, 2004

The Columbia Guide to America in the 1960s, co-authored with Beth Bailey and contributors, New York: Columbia University Press, 2001; paperback, 2003; xii, 508 pages

The Age of Great Dreams: America in the 1960s, New York: Hill and Wang, 1994 (cloth and paperback), 34th paperback printing, 2018; 296 pages

The '60s: From Memory to History, editor, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1994

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(cloth and paperback); 333 pages The First Strange Place: The Alchemy of Sex and Race in WWII Hawaii co-authored with Beth

Bailey, New York: Free Press, 1992; paperback, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994; 270 pages

Chicago '68, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988; paperback, 1994; xxi, 304 pages

BOOK SERIES EDITOR Beth Bailey and David Farber, “CounterCultures,” University of New Mexico Press, 2001 - 2007 JOURNAL ARTICLES, REVIEW ESSAYS, AND BOOK CHAPTERS “Barry Goldwater and 1964,” Journal of Arizona History, forthcoming Winter 2020, 8 pages in

manuscript “Trump’s Republic,” ANU Historical Journal, forthcoming, 32 pages in manuscript Co-authored with Beth Bailey, “Introduction: December 7/8, 1941,” in Beyond Pearl Harbor: A

Pacific History, co-edited with Beth Bailey (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, in press, 2019), 1-8.

Co-authored with Beth Bailey “The Attack on Pearl Harbor . . . and Guam, Wake Island, Philippines, Thailand, Malaya, Singapore, and Hong Kong: December 7/8, the Pacific World, American Empire, and the American Political Imaginary,” in Beyond Pearl Harbor: A Pacific History, co-edited with Beth Bailey (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2019), 19-38.

“The Chicago 8 Conspiracy Trial: Blind Justice in Polarized Times,” Social Education 83:3 (May/June 2019), 142-146

“America First and International Trade Policy in the Early Cold War,” Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, September 2018, 39-41.

“Moral Capitalism in the Age of Great Dreams: The Grateful Dead’s Struggle to Craft Right Livelihoods,” The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics, and Culture 10:1 (Spring 2017), 63-93.

“American Conservatism: a Historical Approach,” American Studies Quarterly (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences), written in English and translated into Chinese by Jiao Jiao and Xi Wang, October 2016, 211-225. Reprinted in Remin University Reprint Series of Newspaper and Journal Articles (2018).

“Self-Invention in the Realm of Production: Craft, Work, and Community in the Sixties-Era American Counterculture,” Pacific Historical Review, August 2016, 408-442.

Co-authored with Ben Klein, “El Rito and the Power of Place in Sixties America,” in Irwin Klein and the New Settlers of New Mexico, ed. Benjamin Klein (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2016), 31-38, 165-166.

Co-authored with Beth Bailey, “The Counterculture Through the Looking Glass,” Groovy Science: Science, Technology, and American Counterculture, eds. David Kaiser and Patrick McCray (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016), 391-395.

“Fighting (Against) the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Understanding the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, eds. Beth Bailey and Richard Immerman (New York: New York University Press, 2015), 194-219.

“Le conservatisme américain : un processus politique à la recherche d'une idéologie” (American Conservatism as Political Process and Not as an Essential Idea), Politique Américaine 23, Fall 2014, 111-137 (written in English, translated and published in French).

"John Raskob’s Conservative Vision of Financial Self-Management," Journal of Policy History 26:1 (January 2014), 1-26.

“Foreword—When Innocence Must Become Experience,” Thai Stick: Surfers, Scammers, and the Untold Story of the Marijuana Trade, by Peter Maguire and Mark Ritter (New York:

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Columbia University Press, 2013), vii-x. “Building the Counterculture, Creating Right Livelihoods,” The Sixties: A Journal of History,

Politics, and Culture, May 2013, 1-24; “Batir La Contre-Culture, Créer Des Modes De Vie Justes: La Contre-Culture Au Travail,” revised, translated by Caroline Rolland-Diamond, Culture et contre-culture: Geneses, Pratiques, Conceptualisations, editor Caroline Rolland-Diamond (Paris: Syllepse, 2015), 493-519. “Top Ten” downloaded article, Taylor & Francis Journals, 2014.

“The Politics of Southern Student Activism,” Rebellion in Black and White: Southern Student Activists in the 1960s, eds. David Snyder and Robert Cohen, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013, 313-322.

"Democratic Culture, Social Change Movements and the International Sixties," in The Transnational Sixties: The United States, Japan, and Western Europe, ed. Daizburo Yui, Tokyo: Sairyusha, 2012, 35-49 [written in English; translated and published in Japanese]

“The Radical Sixties,” Reviews in American History 39, December 2011, 712-717. “The Art of Rebellion: Brett Morgen’s Chicago Ten,” The Sixties: The Journal of History, Politics,

and Culture 1:2 (December 2008), 239-41. “Foreword - Frontier Politics,” The Political Culture of the New West, ed. Jeff Roche, Lawrence:

University Press of Kansas, 2008, ix-x. “What They Think of US,” Amerika Taiheiyo Kenkyu (Tokyo), 8 (2008), 75–86. “People are Not Decades,” Historically Speaking 9:3, January-February 2008, 15-16. “American Nationalism in the Age of Empire,” University of Tokyo Center for Pacific and American

Studies 8:1 (September 2007), 5-6 (in English), 6-7 (translated and summarized in Japanese).

“The Risky Gamble,” Diplomatic History,” January 2007, 159-162. “The Histories They are A-Changin’: Sources for Teaching about the Movements of the Sixties,”

co-authored with Beth Bailey, OAH Magazine of History, October 2006, 8-13. “Street Heat in Chicago: Political Violence in the Sixties Era,” Tales of Two Cities/Stadtgeschichten:

Hamburg and Chicago, Claudia Schnurmann and Iris Wigger, eds. (Berlin: LIT Verlag, 2006), 229-240.

“Thinking and Not Thinking about Race in the United States,” Modern Intellectual History 2:3 (November 2005), 433-446.

“The Torch has Fallen,” America in the 1970s, Beth Bailey and David Farber, eds., Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004, 9-27.

“Conservative Democracy in the 1960s,” The Conservative Sixties, Jeff Roche and David Farber, eds., New York: Peter Lang Publishers, 2003, 8-20 (expanded and revised from Mid-America 81:3).

“The Intoxicated State/Illegal Nation: Drugs and the Counterculture,” Imagine Nation: American Cultural Radicalism in the 1960s, eds. Peter Braunstein and Michael Doyle, New York: Routledge, 2001; 17-40.

“Intellectuals and Democracy,” American Literary History 12:4 (Fall 2000), 794-801. “New Histories of the American Sixties,” Guest Editor, “The Sixties Issue,” Mid-America: An

Historical Review 81:3 (Fall 1999), 227-231. “Democratic Subjects in the American Sixties: National Politics, Cultural Authenticity, and

Community Interest,” “The Sixties Issue,” Mid-America: An Historical Review 81:3 (Fall 1999), 319-332.

“New Wave Sixties Historiography,” Reviews in American History, June 1999; 298-305. “History After The Geographic Turn,” co-authored with Timothy Moy and Virginia Scharff,

Rethinking History 3:1 (1999); 85-93. “Contracting Leftism and the Revolting Masses in Post-World War II America,” American

Quarterly 50:2 (June 1998); 432-439. "'The Harlem Hellfighters' and World War II America," co-authored with Beth Bailey, True Stories

From the American Past, second edition, ed. William Graebner, New York: McGraw-Hill,

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1997; 175-192. "Stationed in Paradise: Tourist Culture and State Power in World War II Hawaii," co-authored

with Beth Bailey, Pacific Historical Review, November 1996; 641-660. "Political Culture and the Therapeutic Ideal," Reviews in American History, December 1995; 681-

686. "War Stories," Reviews in American History, June 1995; 317-322. "Prostitutes on Strike: The Women of Hotel Street During World War II," co-authored with Beth

Bailey, in Women's America: Refocusing the Past, eds. Linda Kerber and Jane De Hart, New York: Oxford University Press, fourth edition, 1995, fifth edition, 1999, sixth edition 2003, ninth edition 2019; 431-440 (reprinted in Japanese-language brief edition, Dome Publisher, Tokyo, Japan, 2002) (excerpted and revised from Radical History 52).

"The Dream of Global Desire/The Marlboro Man Goes to Hong Kong,” Borderlines: Studies in American Culture, June 1994; 327-340.

"The Silent Majority and Talk About Revolution," The Sixties: From Memory to History, ed., David Farber, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1994; 291-316.

"The 'Double-V' Campaign in WWII Hawaii: African-Americans, Racial Ideology, and Federal Power," co-authored with Beth Bailey, Journal of Social History, June 1993; 817-843.

"The Anti-War Movement and the Counterculture," Give Peace a Chance: Exploring the Vietnam Antiwar Movement, eds., Melvin Small and William Hoover, Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1992; 7-21.

"Hotel Street: Prostitution in Hawaii During World War II," co-authored with Beth Bailey, Radical History 52 (Winter 1992); 54-77.

"Welcome to Chicago," Chicago History, Spring and Summer 1988; 62-77.

OTHER WORK

“Book Notes: Crack, A Playlist,” Largehearted Boy, Largeheartedboy.com, forthcoming, October 10, 2019

“What Anti-Trump activists Can Learn from Chicago ’68,” Theconversation.com, Salon.com, goveexec.com, July 2016.

Co-authored with Lynette Matson, “The Diggers and the American Counterculture,” Bedford Digital Collections for History: Primary Sources and Projects, Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2014 (digitial—13 pages).

“A Monument to Democracy: The Civl Rights Act of 1964,” Insights on Law and Society 14:2 (Winter 2014), p. 25.

Political Passion and the Sixties Era, FDL Book Salon, commissioned opening essay and invited moderator, FDL.org, May 2013.

“Raskob: The Page 99 Test,” The Page 99 Test, website sponsored by The Campaign for the American Reader, commissioned essay, May 2013.

“Raskob: The Movie,” My Book, The Movie, website sponsored by The Campaign for the American Reader, commissioned essay, April 2013.

“Hotel Street,” co-authored with Beth Bailey, Homeward Bound, ed. Erich Weiss (Philadelphia: Sailor Jerry Ltd: 2010), 51-73 with illustrations.

“Barry Goldwater on the Civil Rights Act: The Antecedent to Rand Paul,” History News Network, May 24, 2001.

“Hotel Street: World War II Hawaii,” Inked, April 2008, 48-51. “Taken Hostage,” A History of Our Time, eds. Beth Bailey, William Chafe, and Harvard Sitkoff, New

York: Oxford University Press, 2007, 312-324 (excerpted from Taken Hostage, 2004). “1968,” Encyclopedia of Chicago History, ed. James Grossman, Chicago: University of Chicago

Press, 2004. “January 14, 1967: The Human Be-In,” Days of Destiny, eds. Alan Brinkley and James McPherson,

The Society of American Historians, New York: Dorling Kindersley, 2001, 402-417. “Vietnam as a Cultural Crisis,” The Encyclopedia of American Cultural History, volume III, eds.

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Mary Kupiec Cayton and Peter Williams, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2001, 183-191.

“Calvin Coolidge,” The Reader’s Companion to the American Presidency, ed. Alan Brinkley, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2000; 345-353.

“Youth Culture, Political Violence, and Murder in Recent American History,” 49th Parallel: An Interdisciplinary Journal of North American Studies (United Kingdom - E-Journal) 1:4 (January 2000), 4 pages.

“Alfred P. Sloan of General Motors: Corporate Citizenship and Civil Society in the New Deal Era,” Working Paper Series, Aspen Institute Nonprofit Sector Research Fund, Washington D.C., 1999; 51 pages.

“Street Heat in Seattle,” TomPaine.com: A Journal of Opinion (e-journal), December 2, 1999, 4 pages.

“The Anti-War Movement,” “The New Left,” “Protest Movements in the 1960s,” “The Weathermen,” “Tom Hayden,” “Abbie Hoffman,” “Chicago 7,” “The 1968 Democratic Convention,” “Eugene McCarthy,” “Students for a Democratic Society,” Microsoft Encarta Multimedia Encyclopedia (CD), Redmond, Washington: Microsoft, 1998, 53 pages.

“Chicago ‘96: No News is Good News?” The Midwesterner, November 1996; 33-38. “Chicago ‘68/Chicago ‘96,” The Midwesterner, September 1996; 26-32. “The ‘60s: Myth and Reality,” Chronicle of Higher Education, Dec. 7, 1994; B1-2. "Chicago '68: Fighting the Last War," Chicago Tribune, August 1988; 16. "Chicago '68," University of Chicago Magazine, Summer 1988; 6-11, 28-31. "Keeping Your Plate Clean on Capitol Hill," Arrival, Spring 1987; 42-45. "Forging National Reconciliation," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, January 1987; 12. "Dynamite: The People's Weapon," Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village Herald 13:1

(1984); 36-43. Corporate Philanthropy: An Annotated Bibliography, Chicago: Donors Forum of Chicago, 1982; viii, 58 pages. REVIEWS “Acid Matters: LSD and the Counterculture,” The Sixties, November 2017 “A Well-Ordered Account of Chaos,” Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign

Relations Review, September 2015 “The Counterculture Rocks,” H-Sixties, April 2015 Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, Barry Goldwater and the Remaking of the American Political

Landscape, Pacific Historical Review, November 2014 Bryan Thrift, Conservative Bias, in Florida Historical Quarterly, Fall 2014

Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, Sunbelt Capitalism, in Political Science Quarterly, Summer 2014 “Social Change Partnerships and American Indian Activism in the Sixties,” H-Sixties, July 2013 “The International Thurgood Marshall,” Diplomatic History, January 2013 Thomas Borstelmann, The 1970s, in Journal of American History, December 2012 Judith Stein, Pivotal Decade, in American Historical Review, April 2012 “National Museum of Jewish American History,” Journal of American History, June 2011, 146-150 The Shock of the Global: The 1970s in Perspective, Niall Ferguson, Charles S. Maier, Erez Manela,

and David J. Sargent, editors, in Journal of American History, March 2011 “The Boys Are Back in Town: The Politics of National Security,” H-Diplo/ISSF Roundtable Review

of Julian Zelizer, The Arsenal of Democracy, H-Diplo/ISSF II:2 (January 2011) “Roundtable on Why SDS Failed,” H-Sixties, June 2008 Sally H. Clarke, Trust and Power: Consumers, the Modern Corporation, and the Making of the

United States Automobile Market, in American Studies 48:2 (Summer 2007) Kazuo Wada and Tsunehiko Yui, translated by Edmund Skrzypczak, Courage and Change: The

Life of Kiichiro Toyoda, in Business History Review, spring 2006

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Martin Torgoff, Can’t Find My Way Home: America in the Great Stoned Age, 1945-2000, in The Historian, March 2006

Frank Kusch, Battleground Chicago: The Police and the 1968 Democratic National Convention, in Journal of American History, March 2006

Barry Shank, A Token of My Affection: Greeting Cards and American Business Culture, in Enterprise and Society, September 2005

“Our Ford,” Chicago Tribune Book Review, July 31, 2005 Richard Miller, The Messman Chronicles: African Americans in the U.S. Navy, in Journal of

Southern History, May 2005 “Paradise Lost” Chicago Tribune Book Review, May 1, 2005 “His Own Private Iran: Foucault and Khomeini,” Bookforum, April/May 2005 “Steal These Books,” Bookforum, December 2003, 32-3 “Ford Country,” Boston Globe, September 20, 2003 “Bill Clinton’s Rogers Park Tough Guy,” Chicago Tribune Book Review, September 7, 2003 Mansel Blackford, Trouble in Paradise, in Journal of American History, June 2002 “Radical on the Run,” Chicago Tribune Book Review, August 26, 2001. Mary Dudziak, Cold War Civil Rights, H-Net, August 2001 “Zuni and the American Imagination,” Chicago Tribune Book Review, May 20, 2001 Hal Rothman, Devil’s Bargains: Tourism in the Twentieth Century West, in Pacific Historical

Review, August 2000 David Hammond, Reporting Vietnam: Media and Military at War, in Pacific Historical Review,

May 2000 Rebecca Klatch, A Generation Divided: The New Left, The New Right, and the 1960s, in New

Mexico Historical Review, April 2000 Leon Litwack, Trouble in Mind: Black Southerners in the Age of Jim Crow, in American Historical

Review, December 1999 Spike Lee, Summer of Sam (film), Journal of American History, December 1999 (with Beth Bailey) “1964,” in Chicago Tribune Book Review, May 9, 1999 James Williamson, Federal Antitrust Policy During the Kennedy-Johnson Years, in Journal of

American History, June 1996 Marty Jezer, Abbie Hoffman, in American Studies, Spring 1996 Roger Biles, Richard J. Daley: Politics, Race and the Governing of Chicago, on H-Net, December

1995 William H. Chafe, Never Stop Running: Allard Lowenstein and the Struggle to Save American

Liberalism, in Journal of Interdisciplinary History, June 1995 Roy Rosenzweig, Steve Brier, and Josh Brown, Who Built America? CD-ROM, The Oral History

Review, 1995 Howard Rabinowitz, Race, Ethnicity, and Urbanization, in Political Science Quarterly, Summer

1994 Roger Daniels, Prisoners Without Trial: Japanese Americans in World War II, in The Historian,

Summer 1994 Lewis Gould, 1968: The Election that Changed America, in Journal of American History, March

1994 Elizabeth Buck, Paradise Remade: The Politics of History and Culture, in American Studies, Fall

1993 (with Beth Bailey) David L. Schalk, War and the Ivory Tower: Algeria and Vietnam, in American Historical Review,

December 1992 Edmund Morgan, The 60's Experience, American Studies, Spring 1992 Irving Bernstein, Promises Kept: John F. Kennedy's New Frontier, in American Historical Review,

February 1992 Making Sense of the '60s (documentary film), in Journal of American History, December 1991 Second Thoughts: Former Radicals Look Back at the Sixties, David Horowitz and Peter Collier,

eds., in American Studies, Summer 1990

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David De Leon, Everything is Changing, in American Studies, Fall/Winter 1988-1989 (issued June 1990)

David Burner, John F. Kennedy and a New Generation, in American Historical Review, April 1990 Kim McQuaid, The Anxious Years, in Journal of American History, March 1990 Melvin Small, Johnson, Nixon, and the Doves, in Presidential Studies, Fall 1989 David Caute, The Year of the Barricades, in Journal of American History, March 1989 James Miller, Democracy is in the Streets, in Journal of American History, December 1988 Michael R. Belknap, Federal Law and Southern Order, in American Studies, Summer 1988 "Investing in the Fringes," in Foundation News, August 1983 INVITED LECTURES AND PRESENTATIONS “The Age of Great Dreams and the Moon Landing,” Keynote Address, "A Voyage Around the Moon

- on the 50th anniversary of the arrival of Apollo 11 to the Moon," University of the Azores, Ponta Delgado, October 30, scheduled

“After 1968,” 42nd Costa Lecture, Department of History, Ohio University, Athens, October 2019, scheduled

“Woodstock Nation,” Back to the Garden: Photographs of the 1969 Woodstock Festival, Lawrence Arts Center, Lawrence, Kanas, August 2019

“Woodstock Nation,” keynote lecture, 1969: When Woodstock changed the World, Hudson River Valley Institute and Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY, June 2019

“Trump’s Republic: An American History,” Allan Martin Public Lecture, School of History, Australian National University, Canberra, May 2019

“Crack and Capitalism,” Departmental Seminar—Allan Martin Lecturer, School of History, Australian National University, Canberra, May 2019

“Crack and Capitalism,” Department of History Lecture Series, University of Missouri, Columbia, March 2019

“The American Sixties,” International Scholars Program, School of Law, University of Tokyo, December 2018

“1968 and the Crisis of Political Legitimacy,” 1968: 50 Years Later, Americanist Study Group, Keio University, Tokyo, December 2018

“Radical Solidarity: Scope and Scale,” 1968: The Local and the Global, Africana Studies and Watson Institute, Brown University, Providence, November 2018

“1968,” The Jolyon Pitt Girard Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence Keynote Lecture, Cabrini University, Radnor, Pennsylvania, November 2018

“Chicago in 1968: The Local and the National,” The Global ’68 Symposium, Center for Catholic Intellectual Heritage, Loyola University, Chicago, October 2018

“Chicago ’68 and the Media,” The Media and the 1968 Chicago Democratic Convention—Then and Now, Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University, Chicago, June 2018

“America First and International Trade Policy in the Cold War Era,” America First Symposium, 2018 Stevenson Conference, Miller Center, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, April 2018

“Chicago ‘68: Fifty Years Later,” Nightviews Speaker Series, Francis Parker School, Chicago, March 2018

“The American Sixties: The History of the Future,” Morning Ex, Francis Parker School, Chicago, March 2018

“Resistance, Activism and the Problem of Results: Thinking About 1968,” keynote address, Missouri Valley History Conference, Omaha, Nebraska, March 2018

“The American Sixties” and “Modern American Conservatism and the Problem of Populism,” International Scholars Program, School of Law, University of Tokyo, December 2017

“The Sixties: From Memory to History,” Making Sense of the Sixties, Renesan Institute and the New Mexico Historical Society, Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 2017

“From Innocence to Experience: LSD, the Counterculture and Sustainable Lives,” Revisiting the Summer of Love, Rethinking the Counterculture, Northwestern University’s Center for

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Civic Engagement and the California Historical Society, San Francisco, July 2017 “The Iran Hostage Crisis and Radical Islam,” The 1970s—Activism and Voices of Change, National

Auto Museum, Reno, Nevada, April 2017 “President Trump and Modern American Conservatism,” KU in Wichita, KU Alumni Association

and Hall Center for the Humanities, Wichita, Kansas, March 2017 "The ‘90s is When the '80s Gets Real,” Nineties Conference, Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana,

March 2017 “President Trump and Right-Wing Populism in America,” Looking Back At the Post-World War II

Era from 2016, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, March 2017 “Thinking Productively: Big Questions, Specific Topics, and Words on the Page,” Proseminar with

Beth Bailey, ANZAC Postgraduate and Early Career Scholar Conference, United States Study Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia, July 2016

“Black Power: Working the Interstices of Radical Activism and Insider Politics,” Luncheon Keynote Address, Policy History Conference, Nashville, TN, June 2016

“American Conservatism: Fear and Anger in the Making of the Modern Republican Party,” Insitut für Demokratieforschung, University of Gottingen, Gottingen, Germany, May 2016

“Modern American Conservatism,” Distinguished Professor Inaugural Lecture, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, April 2016

“The Uneasy State of American Conservatism,” keynote address, Third Annual Kaw Valley History Conference, Lawrence KS, April 2016

Panelist, “The Role of the Southern University in Navigating a Tumultuous World,” SEC Workshop: Civility on Campus, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, February 2016

“The Uneasy State of American Conservatism,” History of Medicine Lecture Series, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada, October 2015

“Chicago 68 and the Conspiracy Trial,” Summer Teachers Institute – Federal Trials and Great Debates, American Bar Association Division for Public Education and the Federal Judicial Center’s History Office, Washington, DC, June 2015

“Modern American Conservatism,” Chongqing University, Chongqing, China, May 2015 “Modern American Conservatism,” Institute of American Studies, Northeast Normal University,

Changchun, Jilin, China, May 2015 “Modern American Conservatism,” Institute of American Studies, Chinese Academy of Social

Sciences, Beijing, China, May 2015 “Modern American Conservatism,” Department of History, Peking University, Beijing, China, May

2015 “Conservatism in the United States: A Historical Approach,” keynote address, Conference on

American Conservatism, Atlantische Akadmie and the Political Science Division of the German Society for American Studies, Lambrecht, Germany, November 2014

Manuscript Workshop: Jeffrey Engel, “President George H.W. Bush and the End of the Cold War,” Miller Center, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, May 2014

“Everybody Ought to be Rich: John Raskob,” Wilmington Club, Wilmington Delaware, March 2014 “Internationalizing the American State: The United States and the Global War on Terrorism,”

Centre d’études Nord-Américaines, L'École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris, France, December 2013

“Historicizing American conservatism,” Seminar on Comparative Conservatisms, Université Paris-Diderot, December 2013

“American Conservatism as Political Process and Not as an Essential Idea,” Sciences Po Lyon, Lyon France, December 2013

“John J. Raskob: Pierre S. du Pont’s Right-Hand Man and Capitalist Extraordinaire,” Hagley Center for Business, Technology and Society, Wilmington, Delaware, November 2013

“Fighting (Against) the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,” The Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq Workshop, Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy and the Army War College,

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Temple University, Philadelphia, October 2013 “The Capitalist Idea Man,” The Union League of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, September 2013 “The Catholic Capitalist: John Raskob,” Saint Thomas More: The Catholic Chapel and Center at

Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, September 2013 “Everybody Ought to be Rich: John J. Raskob, Capitalist,” The Gunn Library and Museum,

Washington, Connecticut, September 2013 “The Education of a Philanthropist: John Raskob,” Raskob Foundation for Catholic Activities,

Claymont, Delaware, September 2013 “Black Power: Working the Interstices of Radical Activism and Insider Politics,” Symposium 1: America at the Crossroads of Race and Politics: The 1960s to the Present, Japanese Association of American Studies, Tokyo, Japan, June 2013 “New Directions in the History of American Conservatism,” Americanist Study Group, University

of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, May 2013 Commentator, “Review of American Studies in China,” Symposium on the Internationalization of

American Studies, University of Tokyo, May 2013 “John J. Raskob, Capitalist,” Archmere Academy, Claymont, Delaware, May 2013 “American Democracy and Social Change Movements in the Sixties Era,” MEMORIAL: Historical,

Educational, Human Rights and Charitable Society, Moscow, Russia, December 2012 “American Conservatives and the 2012 Election,” Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud

Center for American Studies and Research, American University of Beirut, December 2012

John J. Raskob: The Catholic Capitalist,” Annual Lecture, St. Thomas More Society of the Diocese of Wilmington, Theatre N at Nemours, Wilmington, November 2012

“The Jazz Age Capitalist,” Lees Seminar, Department of History, Rutgers University, Camden, October 2012

“Citizen Soldiers and the Military’s Controversial Role in Cold War Education,” Dr. Strangelove’s America: A Symposium on Cold War Film, sponsored by the Center for Force and Diplomacy, the Hertog Foundation, and the Army War College, Temple University, Philadelphia, September 2012

“John J. Raskob, Capitalist,” Quill and Grill, Wilmington Club, Wilmington Delaware, April 2012 “Building the Counterculture,” Colloque international: “Culture et contre-culture: genèses,

pratiques, conceptualization,” Université Paris Ouest Nanterre, Paris, France, March 2012 “The Making of Modern American Conservatism,” Clare College, Cambridge University,

Cambridge, United Kingdom, November 2011 “The 1968 Democratic National Convention,” keynote, Illinois History: A Summer Institute,

American History Teachers’ Collaborative, Champagne, Illinois, July 2011 “Modern American Conservatism” and “The Modern Presidency,” Illinois School District U-46,

Teaching American History, Elgin, Illinois, June 2011 "Democratic Culture, Social Change Movements and the International Sixties," International

Symposium on the 1960s, Institute of American and Canadian Studies, Sophia University, Tokyo, December 2010

“A Short History of Conservatism,” Thinking Allowed Series, Princeton Public Library, Princeton NJ, May 2010.

“Abbie Hoffman: Myth, Memory, and History in the American Sixties,” School of Historical Studies, University of Melbourne, Australia, April 2010

“American Politics in the Age of Obama,” Trinity College, University of Melbourne, Australia, April 2010

“The Vietnam War and the American Anti-War Movement,” History Department undergraduate lecture, University of Utrecht, Netherlands, March 2010

Respondent, “Henry Ford and the Tribal Twenties,” Center for the History of Business, Technology, and Society, Hagley Library, Wilmington, DE, December 2009

“The Iran Hostage Crisis,” with Mark Bowden, Center for Force and Diplomacy, Temple University, Philadelphia, December 2009

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“Anti-Bush,” Les années Bush en question (2000-2008), Colloque international, Université Lyon II, IEP de Lyon, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, October 2009

“Making Sense of the American Sixties,” Virginia Historical Society Teachers Institute, Teaching American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia, August 2009

“A New Generation of Leaders,” Inspirational Address, Commencement, Temple University, Philadelphia, May 2009

“Sloan Rules: Alfred P. Sloan, General Motors, and the Challenges of Corporate Capitalism,” The Paul G. Haaga, Jr, Lecture on American Entrepreneurship, Huntington Library, Los Angeles, March 2009

“Conservatives, Liberals, and the 2008 Election,” Modern America Workshop, Princeton University, November 2008

“1968 and the Art of Rebellion,” What Remains? 1968 in the European and American Imaginary, Croft Institute for International Studies, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi, October 2008

“Modern American Conservatism,” Southern Louisiana Teachers Institute, Teaching American History, Nichols State University, Thibodaux, Louisiana, October 2008

“America in the 1960s,” Virginia Historical Society Teachers Institute, Teaching American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia, August 2008

“Participatory Democracy in Chicago 1968,” American History Matters Summer Institute, Teaching American History, Harold Washington Library, Chicago, July 2008

“The United States and the Middle East,” Homewood-Flossmoor American History Consortium – Teaching American History, Newberry Library, Chicago, July 2008

“Baptism by Blood: American Nationalism and the Sixties Generation,” Rethinking American Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Tokyo, Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Science, Japan, March 2008

“Making Sense of the Sixties,” Contemporary Issues, West Chester University, West Chester, Pennsylvania, February 2008

“Anti-Americanism in the post 9/11 World,” Rethinking American Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Tokyo, Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Science, Japan, September 2007

Final Comment, Symposium, 40th Anniversary of the Center for Pacific and American Studies, University of Tokyo, September 2007

“The Center Cannot Hold: America in the 1970s,” Homewood-Flossmoor American History Consortium – Teaching American History, Newberry Library, Chicago, May 2007

“Visions of American Empire,” University of Tokyo, Japan, March 2007 “American Nationalism in the Age of Empire: Power, Order, and Security,” Rethinking American

Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Tokyo, Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Science, Japan, March 2007

“The Sixties: Youth Culture, Counterculture, and the Politics of Culture,” Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona Beach, Florida, March 2007

“Inventing Iraq,” Iraq War Teach-In, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, October 2006 “Perspectives on the United States,” American Studies: A Regional Project for the Near East,

International Visitor Leadership Program, Philadelphia, October 2006 “An American Americanist’s Perspective on European Americanists,” Rethinking American

Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Tokyo, Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Science, Japan, March 2006

“John Raskob and American Life in the 1920s,” Raskob Foundation for Catholic Activities, Wilmington, August 2005

“John Raskob: An American Life,” Hagley Library and Museum, Wilmington, May 2005 “American Empire – Comments,” Rethinking American Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Tokyo,

Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Science, Japan, March 2005

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“The Iran Hostage Crisis,” World Affairs Council of Northern California, San Francisco, February 2005

“Universities are Strange Places,” Commencement Address, College of Liberal Arts, Temple University, February 2005

“Democracy in the Streets,” Tales of Two Cities/Stadtgeschichten, Department of History, University of Hamburg, Germany, December 2004

“The Iran Hostage Crisis,” The 25th Anniversary of the Iran Hostage Crisis, Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, Canada, sponsored by The Centre for the Study of the United States and the Toronto Initiative for Iranian Studies, November 2004,

“The Whole World is Watching: The United States in 1968,” College of New Jersey, sponsored by the International Studies Program, the U.S. Studies Program, the Asian Studies Faculty, and the Center for Social Justice, November 2004

“Taken Hostage,” Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C., Sponsored by the International Cold War History Project and the Middle East Program, November 2004

“The American Sixties and the Writing of National Narratives,” Conference on the Domestic Cold War – the Soviet Union and the United States, Saratov State University, Saratov, Russia, sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment, June 2004

“What They Think of US: International Perceptions of the United States,” Rethinking American Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Sapporo, Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Sciences, Japan, March 2004

“American Nationalism: A Response,” Rethinking American Studies in Japan in a Global Age, Tokyo, Japan, Research Project for the Promotion of Humanities and Social Science, Japan, February 2004

“Researching and Writing Sloan Rules,” Open Doors: Regional Scholars and Writers Series, Albuquerque, University of New Mexico General Library, October 2002

“The Politics of Liberalism in the United States During the Sixties Era,” American Politics Study Group, Tokyo, Japan, sponsored by the OAH-JAAS short-term residency and the American Politics Study Group, June 2002

“Politics in The United States: 1960-2000,” seminars (two) for Tokyo-area Americanist Graduate Students and faculty, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan, sponsored by the OAH-JAAS short-term residency, June 2002

“The Democrats and Party Reform, 1964-1980,” two lectures in the American Party Politics Graduate Seminar, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan, sponsored by the OAH-JAAS short-term residency, June 2002

“The Sixties Era in the United States,” two lectures in the American Politics Undergraduate Seminar, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan, sponsored by the OAH-JAAS short-term residency, June 2002

“The Civil Rights Movement in the United States,” International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan, June 2002

Faculty Writing Workshop: “Alternative Narratives,” and Student Workshop: “How to Write About Sex, Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll,” College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, April 2002

“American Foreign Policy and the Terrorist Crisis,” University of New Mexico Faculty Forum - “Attack on America,” Albuquerque, September 19, 2001

“The Monterey Pop Festival: From Memory to History,” Monterey Pop Revisited, Monterey, California, sponsored by Monterey History and Art Association, Cultural Council for Monterey County, Monterey International Pop Festival Foundation, California Council for the Humanities, Pebble Beach Company and Armanasco Public Relations, Inc., June 2001

“Narratives of Democracy in the United States: Organic Exceptionalism, Movement Politics, Competing Interests, and Transnational Forces,” Democracy in a New Millennium, Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique, Paris, France, March 2001

“The 1960s as American History,” luncheon speaker, Phi Alpha Theta Southwest Regional Conference, Albuquerque, New Mexico, April 2000

“The Sixties From a Twenty-First Century Perspective,” The Age of Aquarius: America in the

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Sixties, New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities and the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, April 2000

Discussion co-leader, Hair and American theater in the 1960s, The Age of Aquarius: America in the 1960s, New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities, Rodney Theater, Albuquerque, New Mexico, April 2000

“Sloan Rules: The Corporate Imaginary and the American Body Politic,” Cultural Studies Colloquium, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, March 2000

“The Sixties Legacy,” keynote address, Annual Meeting of the Association for the Study of Connecticut History, Fairfield, Connecticut, November 1999

“Teaching the Sixties,” Connecticut Council on Social Studies, Fairfield, Connecticut, November 1999

“Sixties Historiography and Sixties History for Undergraduates,” Faculty Summer Seminar, The Sixties Project at Fairfield University, Fairfield University, Fairfield, Connecticut, July 1999

“Democratic Subjects in the American Sixties: National Politics, Cultural Authenticity and Community Interest,” Global Democracy: Politics and Culture Since 1968, University of California, Berkeley, sponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies, Institute of International Studies, and Townsend Center for the Humanities, December 1998

“1968: The Implosion of the American Story,” Elizabeth Evan Baker Lecture Series, Contemporary History Institute, Baker Peace Studies Program, and College of Communication, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, October 1997

“The Sixties,” Ronald E. McNair Visiting Scholar Series, Chaminade University, Honolulu, Hawaii, March 1997

“Teaching the Sixties,” Hawaii Council for History Education, Honolulu, Hawaii, March 1997 “Writing the Sixties,” Graduate Seminar in Historical Methods, History Department, New York

University, November 1996 Featured Speaker, “Individualism and Community in the United States: American Studies

Perspectives, Old and New,” American Studies Association of Indonesia National Conference, Jakarta, Indonesia, June 1996 [All presentations in Indonesia during 1996 were jointly sponsored by the United States Information Service and the host institution]

“American Politics and Politicians,” Universitas Nacional, Jakarta, Indonesia, June 1996 “The 1996 Presidential Election and Recent American Political History,” Andalas University,

Padang, Sumatra, Indonesia, June 1996 “The 1996 Presidential Election,” University of Diponegoro, Semerang, Java, Indonesia, June 1996 “History, Memory, and the Role of the Scholar,” Faculty of Letters, University of Indonesia, Depok,

Java, Indonesia, May 1996 Historical Methods and Theory, Lecture Series (4), Graduate Program, Department of History,

University of Indonesia, Depok, Java, Indonesia, March - April 1996 Guest Lectures in 20th Century American History (6), Department of History, University of

Indonesia, Depok, Java, Indonesia, February-May, 1996 “America in the 1960s,” Darma Persada University, Jakarta, Indonesia, April 1996 "Election '96: The American Electorate," Who Runs America? A Lecture Series, The American

Studies Center of the University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia, March 1996 "The United States in the 1960s: Sites of Change," History Lecture Series, Department of History,

University of New Mexico, November 1995 “Hawaii During World War II,” Fireside Talk, Arizona Memorial, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, June 1993 "African Americans in Hawaii During World War II," Columbia University Center for Social

Science, Seminar on American Society and Politics, New York City, April 1992 “Teaching the Sixties: Using Stories to Reveal Interpretations,” Sayre History Symposium,

Lexington, Kentucky, February 1991 "Riot in the Streets," Chicago Historical Society, Chicago, November 1988 "Celebrate Chicago '68?" Symposium on the 20th Anniversary of the 1968 Democratic

Convention, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, August 1988

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"Voice(s) of Conflict/The 1960s," Department of History Lecture Series, State University of New York, Buffalo, March 1988

Moderator, Chicago '68 + 20 Conference, Chicago, August 1988 "Corporate Citizens: The National Association of Manufacturers and the Post-War Dream of a

Cash Flow Polity," Center for Business, Technology and Society, Hagley Library, Wilmington, January 1988

"Federalism in the Twentieth Century: The or These United States?" Hawaii Bar Association, Bicentennial Conference on the United States Constitution, Honolulu, December 1987

CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS

“The Night Shift: Cook County’s Night Drug Courts,” Crack and Criminality Panel (session organizer), Policy History Conference, Tempe, Arizona, May 2018

Workshop co-director, “The Attack on Pearl Harbor: A Pacific History,” an international workshop sponsored by the Center for Military, War, and Society Studies, University of Kansas, December 2016

“A Pacific Nation? Race, Space, and Place in the Aftermath of the Pearl Harbor Attacks,” coauthored with Beth Bailey, “The Attack on Pearl Harbor: A Pacific History,” an international workshop sponsored by the Center for Military, War, and Society Studies, University of Kansas, December 2016

Chair, “A Racialized Peace in a Post-war World,” Waging Peace conference, New Orleans LA, September 2016

“Pearl Harbor and Pacific History,” Panel on Pearl Harbor Attack: 75th Anniversary, Pacific Coast Branch-American Historical Association annual conference, Kona, Hawaii, August 2016.

“A New Age of Craftsmanship: Homebuilding in the Counterculture,” Aquarius Redux: Rethinking Architecture’s Counterculture, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia, July 2016

Discussant, Keynote Lecture by Felicity Scott, “Outlaw Territories,” Aquarius Redux, University of Sydney, July 2016

Chair and commentator, Panel on Hijackings and Foreign Policy, Society for Historians of American Foreign Policy, San Diego, CA, June 2016

Chair and commentator, Panel on Hippies, Business, and Technology, Organization of American Historians annual meeting, April 2016

“Money and Politics: John Raskob, the Liberty League, and the New Deal,” Panel on Political Elites and Biography, Policy History Conference, Columbus, Ohio, June 2014

Chair and commentator, Panel on the Civil Rights Act at 50: New Evidence, New Interpretations, Policy History Conference, Columbus, Ohio, June 2014

Commentator, Panel on Economics and Expertise, Policy History Conference, Columbus, OH, June 2014

“Rethinking the Counterculture,” Panel on The Sixties Counterculture, Organization of American Historians annual meeting, Atlanta, GA, April 2014

Commentator, Plenary Session on The 1964 Election at 50, Organization of American Historians Annual Meeting, Atlanta, GA, April 2014

“Craft, Beauty, and Self-Worth in the American Counterculture, 1964 to 1975,” A Hands-on Approach: The Do-It-Yourself Culture and Economy in the 20th Century, German Historical Institute, Washington, D.C., April 2014

“Politics and Policy from the Capitalist's Point of View: The Case of John Raskob,” Panel on Presidents and Political Operatives, Policy History Conference, Richmond VA, June 2012

Chair and commentator, Panel on Conservatives and the New Deal State, Policy History Conference, Richmond VA, June 2012

Commentator, Panel on Marketing the Market, Business History Conference, March 2012 “John Raskob: Capitalist Intellectual in Jazz Age America,” United States Intellectual History

Conference, New York, November 2011 Chair and Commentator, Neo-Liberal Realignments: Panel on Configuring Pasts, Places, and

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Publics in the 1970s, American Studies Annual Conference, November 2010 Chair and Commentator, Panel on Media and Voter Mobilization in the 1972 Election, Policy

History Conference, Columbus, Ohio, June 2010 Commentator, Panel on Education and Social Protest: Anglo-American Examples, History of

Education Society Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, October 2009 “William Buckley: Building a Conservative Political Culture,” Panel on Representing Religion in American Public Culture, Annual Meeting of the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association, Honolulu, July 2007

Chair and Commentator, Panel on Class and Culture in Postwar America, Organization of American Historians annual conference, April 2007

Chair and commentator, Panel on Conservative Women, Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Philadelphia, January 2006

Moderator, “Interpreting Recent History,” American Association for State and Local History annual meeting, Pittsburgh, September 2005

Conference Organizer and moderator, What They Think of US: International Perceptions of the United States and the War on Terror, The Society of Fellows in the Humanities, College of Liberals Arts, Temple University, March 2005

Chair and Commentator, Panel on the Jewish Business Tradition in the U.S. and Israel, Jews and American Business conference, The Feinstein Center for Jewish History, Philadelphia, October 2004

“Conservatives and Civil Rights,” Panel on Why the South Was Lost, Policy History Conference, St. Louis, May 2004

“Making Foreign Policy in Hard Times with a Weak Hand,” Panel on the 1970s, Policy History Conference, St. Louis, May 2004

Chair and Commentator, Panel on Workers, Voters, and Viewers, Organization of American Historians annual conference, Boston, April 2004

“National Leadership in the 1970s,” Panel on the 1970s, Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association, annual conference, August 2003

“The Politics of Marijuana in New Mexico,” Panel on Drug Wars Across Cultures and Nations (session organizer), Organization of American Historians annual conference, April 2002

“Sloan Rules,” Panel on Auto America: The Auto Industry, Corporate Power, and American Political Culture, Organization of American Historians annual conference, Los Angeles, April 2001

Moderator, Panel on Writing the West into U.S. History Textbooks,” Western History Association annual meeting, San Antonio, October 2000

“Corporate Citizens: General Motors and the Boundaries of Public Life,” Panel on Businessmen and Their Publics, Business History Conference, Palo Alto, March 2000

Commentator, Panel on Performative Protest in the 1960s and Early 1970s, American Historical Association annual meeting, Chicago, January 2000

Chair and Commentator, Panel on New Interpretations of the 1960s (session organizer), Organization of American Historians annual meeting, Toronto, April 1999

“The Creation and Legacy of the Sixties,” Focus on Teaching Day Session - Teaching the Sixties Experience, Organization of American Historians annual meeting, Indianapolis, April 1998

Chair and Commentator, Panel on Americans' Visions of the Pacific and East Asia, Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Maui, Hawaii, August 1995

"Narrative Closure and Disclosure - Alfred Sloan of General Motors: The Public Face of Private Enterprise," Narrating Histories Workshop, The Division of the Humanities and Social Sciences, California Institute of Technology, April 1994

Commentator, Panel on Race, Ethnicity, and Public Policy in North America, Organization of American Historians annual meeting, Anaheim, April 1993

"The Harlem Hellfighters and Racial Boundaries During World War II," (session organizer)

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Organization of American Historians annual meeting, Chicago, April 1992 "African Americans in Hawaii During World War II," (session organizer) Pacific Coast Branch of

the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Hawaii, August 1991 "Alfred Sloan's Dreams of a Corporate Polity," Organization of American Historians annual

meeting, Louisville, April 1991 "Cars Are Us? Alfred Sloan and the American Body Politic," Barnard College Faculty Works-In-

Progress Seminar, New York City, March 1991 "Narrative Tactics," American Historical Association annual meeting, New York City, December

1990 "Hotel Street, 1941-1945: The Vice District as Theater and Sewer," co-authored with Beth Bailey,

Modes of Inquiry for American City History, Journal of Urban History and Chicago Historical Society, Chicago, October 1990

"The Anti-War Movement and the Counterculture," The Vietnam Antiwar Movement in America, University of Toledo and the Council on Peace Research in History, Toledo, May 1990

"The Pepsi Generation/The Production of the Youth Market," Mid-America American Studies Association Annual Conference, Omaha, April 1989

"The Silent Majority and Talk About a Revolution," Bringing Class Back In: A Working Conference, American Sociological Association Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline and the Department of Sociology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, April 1989

"Corporate Citizens/The Marlboro Man Goes to Hong Kong," (session organizer) American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Cincinnati, December 1988

"Between The Dream and Desire: Herbert Hoover and the Making of American Individualism," Tenth Mid-America Conference on History, Lawrence, September 1988

"The Mastery of Youth in the 1960s," Youth and Youth Movements, 1800 to the Present, United States Research Group, International Commission on the History of Social Movements and Social Structures, November 1987

Chair and Commentator, Panel on America in the 1960s, Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association, Honolulu, August 1986

"Power Fetish/Free City: Political and Cultural Adventurism in the 1960s," Workshop on Political and Cultural Practice, University of Chicago, February 1984

FELLOWSHIPS, AWARDS, AND HONORS Alan Martin Lecturer, School of History, Australian National University, May 2019 Elected Member, Society of American Historians, 2019 - Foreign Scholars Program, School of Law and Political Science, University of Tokyo, December

2018 Jolyon Girard Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence, Cabrini University, Philadelphia, November

2018 Foreign Scholars Program, School of Law and Political Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan,

December 2017 Visiting Professor, Sciences Po Lyon, Lyon, France, November-December 2013 Everybody Ought to Be Rich, The 2013 “Best of the Best” Business Book in the Category of

Leadership, Strategy + Business Magazine Issue 73 (Winter 2013) Visiting Scholar, Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud Center for American Studies and

Research, American University of Beirut, December 2012 The Rise and Fall of Modern American Conservatism, 2010 Choice Outstanding Academic Title,

American Library Association Visiting Scholar, School of Historical Studies, Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne, April 2010 Taken Hostage, selected by the American Library Association as “The Best of the Best from

University Presses,” 2005 2004 General Library Faculty Acknowledgment Prize, College of Arts and Sciences, University of

New Mexico

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Sloan Rules, 2003 Herbert Hoover Prize for the best book on any topic in American History: 1914-1964, Herbert Hoover Library Association

Sloan Rules, 2003 Cugnot Award for the most outstanding book in the field of automotive history published in 2002, Society of Automotive Historians

Columbia Guide to America in the 1960s selected by the American Library Association as “The Best of the Best from University Presses,” 2002

Columbia Guide to America in the 1960s, 2001 Choice Outstanding Academic Book, American Library Association

Organization of American Historians - Japanese Association for American Studies Short-term Residency in Recent American Political History, Keio University, Mita Campus, Tokyo, June 2002

Fulbright Scholar Program, Senior Lecturer, Department of History and American Studies Program, University of Indonesia, Jakarta, January 1996 - June 1996

American Council of Learned Societies, Senior Research Fellowship, September 1992 - June 1993 Barnard College, Special Assistant Professor Leave, September 1992 - June 1993 Chicago 68, 1988 Choice Outstanding Academic Book, American Library Association American Council of Learned Societies, Research Fellowship for Recent Recipients of the Ph.D.,

July - December 1988 American Historical Association, Congressional Fellow, September 1985 - August 1986 Harry Barnard Fellow, University of Chicago, 1984 - 1985 University Fellow, University of Chicago, 1982 - 1983 Hutchinson Fellow, University of Chicago, 1981 - 1982 WORKSHOPS National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute, "American Wars in Asia: A Cultural

Approach," Mansfield Center, University of Montana, Missoula, June 15-July 30, 1995 National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar, "Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century

Biography: Theory, Practice, History," Directed by James E.B. Breslin, University of California, Berkeley, June 20-August 12, 1994

GRANTS\STIPENDS Summer Research Award, Temple University, Summer 2014

Summer Research Award, Temple University, Summer 2011 Longwood Foundation, research grant, 2004-2005 Raskob Foundation, summer stipends and research grant, 2004-2006 History Department, University of New Mexico, special research grant, 2000-2001 Aspen Institute Nonprofit Sector Research Fund, summer stipend and research grant, 1998 University of New Mexico, Research Assistance Grant, 1997 Barnard College, faculty research grants, 1994-1996, 1993-1994, 1992-1993 and January 1991 Barnard-Columbia Center for Leadership in Urban Public Policy, research grant, 1994-1995 Barnard College, Mellon Curriculum Reform Grant, 1994-1995 John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, research grant, Summer 1993 American Council of Learned Societies, grant-in-aid, Summer 1989 Center for the History of Business, Technology, and Society, Hagley Museum and Library, grant-

in-aid, January 1988 Herbert Hoover Presidential Library Foundation, grant-in-aid, August 1987 COURSES TAUGHT GRADUATE SEMINARS Democratic Practices U.S. Political History U.S. Historiography II/20th Century US History

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Race and Ethnicity in Twentieth Century U.S. History Recent U.S. History: Democracy and American Society Political Culture in Twentieth-Century America Conformity and Dissent in Post-War America America in the 1960s The Politics of Identity in the Twentieth-Century United States City Life in the United States Dissertation Colloquium UNDERGRADUATE SEMINARS Modern American Conservatism Honors Seminar: Thesis Completion Honors Seminar in Historical Methods and Theory Senior Capstone Course: The American Sixties Race and Ethnicity in 20th Century U.S. History Politics in 20th Century America Senior Research Seminar in American History Drug Wars Elites in Twentieth Century America Recent American Political and Cultural History American Historiography: Methods and Theory The New Deal and the Modern State Shaping the Modern City, 1820-1990 The American Counterculture UPPER LEVEL LECTURE COURSES Race in Twentieth-Century America The Vietnam War Era America in the 1960s The American Civil Rights Movement, 1877 - present U.S. 1960-2008 U.S. 1946 to the present U.S. 1920 to 1960 U.S. 1929 to 1945 U.S. 1898 to 1932 SURVEYS U.S. 1865/1877 to the present World History - To 1500 World History - From 1500 to the present DISSERTATION STUDENTS Current, Ashley Neale, “Richard Nixon and the National Security State” Current, Brian Carnaby, “’We Start Again’: the Search for Alternative Cultural Zones in Youth

Music Movements in Post-Sixties, Post-Urban, and Post-Industrial Detroit, 1971-1991” Current, Gary Alexander, “The Democratic Party in the 1980s and 1990s” 2017 Alexander Elkins, “Street Sovereignties: Police, Law, and the Urban Uprisings of the 1960s”

(University of Michigan and Lecturers Employee Organization) 2011 Matt Johnson, “The Origins of Diversity: Managing Race at the University of Michigan, 1963-

2003” (Texas Tech) 2010 Abigail Perkiss, “Racing the City: Intentional Integration and the Pursuit of Racial Justice in

Post-WWII America” (Kean University) 2009 Kate Scott, “Reining in the State: Civil Society, Congress, and the Movement to Democratize

the National Security State, 1970-1978” (U.S. Senate Historical Office) 2007 Lincoln Bramwell, “Wilderburbs: Nature, Culture and the Rise of Rural Development in the

Rocky Mountain West, 1960-2000” (Chief Historian, U.S. Forest Service)

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2007 Amy Scott, “Inventing the New City: The Rise of Lifestyle Politics, Hip Capitalism, and Micropolitan Urbanism in the Republic of Boulder, 1958-1995” (Bradley University)

2005 David Key, “Progressivism and Imperialism in the American Southwest, 1880-1912” (Tusculum College)

2005 Jeff Sanders, “Seattle and the Roots of Urban Sustainability: Inventing Ectopia” (Washington State University)

2001 Robert Williams, “’Saving Radiance’: United States Broadcasting Reforms, ETV, and the Invention of National Public Television” (Champlain College)

2001 Jeff Roche, “Cowboy Conservatism: Politics on the High Plains, 1933-1972” (College of Wooster)

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE MANUSCRIPT REFEREE American Studies American Quarterly Bedford/St. Martins Blackwell Publishers Brandywine Press Cambridge University Press Columbia University Press Contours Cornell University Press D.C. Heath and Company Diplomatic History Dorsey Press Harvard University Press Historical Journal (UK) Journal of American Studies (UK) Journal of American History Journal of Contemporary History (UK) Journal of Policy History Journal of the American Academy of Religion Journal of Urban History Mid-America Macmillan Press Ltd. (UK) Oxford University Press Pacific Historical Review Palgrave/St. Martins Press Routledge Rowman & Littlefield Rutgers University Press Scholarly Resources Signs The Sixties: a Journal of History, Politics and Culture The Social History of Alcohol and Drugs: An interdisciplinary journal Temple University Press University of California Press University of Chicago Press University of Massachusetts Press University of Missouri Research Board University of New Mexico Press University of North Carolina Press

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University of Oklahoma Press University of Pennsylvania Press University of Wisconsin Press University Press of Kansas Yale University Press OUTSIDE REFEREE TENURE AND/OR PROMOTION 1997-2017 37 reviews RECENT GRANT OR PRIZE COMMITTEES/EDITORIAL BOARDS Member, Richard Nixon Presidential Library Foundation Research Grant Committee, 2019- Editorial Board, Counterculture Studies, 2018 - Editorial Board, Journal for the Study of Radicalism, 2017 - Editorial Board, Journal of Policy History, 2014 - Editorial Board, The Sixties: The Journal of History, Politics, and Culture, 2007- Editorial Board, H-Net Sixties 2005 – Editorial Board, Book Series, Studies and Texts in the Grateful Dead, University of California

Press, 2014 - 2017 Advisory Committee, Center for the History of Business, Technology, and Society, Hagley Museum

and Library, 2013-2015 National Endowment for the Humanities, Public Presentation Grants, modern U.S. history panel,

2012 Feinstein Center for American Jewish History, Summer Fellowship Prize Committee, 2011 American Council of Learned Societies, Senior Scholar Fellowship finalist panel, 2007-2008 Hawley Prize Committee, Organization of American Historians, 2005-2006 National Endowment for the Humanities, Documentary film major grants, December 2005 National Endowment for the Humanities, Documentary film consultation grants, Spring 2004

SELECTED MEDIA APPEARANCES, CONSULTING, AND PUBLIC HISTORY Production Option (serial drama), The First Strange Place, Stephen Kronish—Three Putt

Productions, August 2019-August 2020 Member, Scientific Board, International Conference: "A Voyage Around the Moon - on the 50th

anniversary of the arrival of Apollo 11 to the Moon," University of the Azores, Ponta Delgado, summer and fall 2019

Sole Guest (one hour), “Woodstock,” American History TV and C-SPAN Washington Journal, August 2019

Featured Interview (30 minutes), “KPR Presents: Woodstock, Fifty Years Later,” KPR, August 2019

Consultant, Back to the Garden: Photographs of the 1969 Woodstock Festival, Lawrence Arts Center, spring-summer 2019

History Graduate Student Workshop Leader, School of History, Australian National University, May 2019

Featured Interview, “Taken Hostage,” Book TV, C-Span 2, first aired December 2018 Consultant and narrator, “Chicago 68,” augmented reality project, Chicago Historical Museum,

August 2018 (online and at museum) On-camera featured commentator, “Decades Presents: 1968 The Democratic National

Convention,” “Through the Decades with Bill Kurtis,” Decades TV, first aired August 2018 Postal Service Consultant, 1969 stamp issuance—Woodstock and Apollo Moon Lading, 2018

(stamps to be issued in 2019) “Trump in Historical Context,” Lawrence Rotary, Lawrence, Kansas, May 2017 “Roundtable on the Counterculture,” C-SPAN 3, airdate February 2017 “Alfred P. Sloan: Decision Maker,” Peter Drucker Institute,

http://www.drucker.institute/monday-issue/the-fine-art-of-making-the-right-decision/,

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January 2017 Film option, The First Strange Place, Stephen Kronish, Three Putt Productions, 2011-2016 75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor Attack, TRT World (Turkey), December 2016 Guest, “Iran Hostage Swap,” Nick Taliaferro Show, WURD—Philadelphia, January 2016 Consultant, Richard Nixon Presidential Library Exhibit, Richard Nixon Presidential Library,

summer 2015-summer 2016 Historical Consultant and On-Camera Contributor, “One Giant Leap,” 43 Films/American Hero

Channel, Winter 2014-Spring 2015—initial airdate August 2015 On-Air Contributor, “Reclaiming MLK Day,” WHYY News, January 2015 Historical coordinator and promotion, 50 Year Anniversary: “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,”

Eastern State Penitentiary (WHYY and KYW local radio interviews), January 2013, January 2014, and January 2015

“The Presidency: George H.W. Bush and the End of the Cold War,” C-SPAN, July 2014 “The American Counterculture,” C-SPAN, April 2014 “Re-Thinking the Election of 1964,” C-SPAN, April 2014 “Raskob,” “Conversations with Jeff Schechtman,” KVON-NPR Sonoma, June 2013

Script consultant, “1964,” American Experience, WGBH Boston, May-June 2012 On-camera guest, Philadelphia Primary Election coverage, FOX29 (Philadelphia), two

appearances, May 2011 On-camera guest, Obama and Libya segment, FOX29 (Philadelphia), March 2011 On-Camera appearance, Thirtieth Anniversary of the Return of the Americans held in Iran, Fox

News Channel, January 2011 Lecturer, The Vietnam War Era Anti-War Movement, C-Span 3, first viewing, December 25, 2010,

(C-Span video library: http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/WarMov) Featured guest, The Rise and Fall of Modern American Conservatism, “New Books in History,”

newbooksinhstory.com (podcast), November 2010 On-camera guest, Pre-Election and Election Night Coverage, FOX29 (Philadelphia), six

appearances, October and November 2010 On-camera commentator, “The Barrel of a Gun,” directed by Tigre Hill, (premiere Merriam

Theater, Philadelphia September 2010) Featured guest, “Modern American Conservatism,” Joy Cardin Show, Wisconsin Public Radio, June

2010 “It’s Good to be Back,” Inside Story, podcast with Peter Clarke, Melbourne, Australia, April 2010 Guest, 30th Anniversary of the Iran Hostage Crisis, Radio Austria International with Joanna King,

November 2009 Consultant, “1968,” Minnesota Historical Society, Minneapolis, 2009-2010 Commentator, “The American Dream,” American RadioWorks (distributed nationally on public

radio stations), May 2009 Guest, “Culture of Debt Driven by Cars,” Marketplace, National Public Radio, March 2009 Featured Guest, President Obama, Congress, and the Economic Crisis, Radio Times, WHYY

Philadelphia Public Radio, February 2009 Featured Guest, Chicago 1968, Eight Four Eight, Chicago Public Radio (WBEZ), August, 2008 Featured Guest, General Motors: Alfred Sloan vs. Rick Wagoner, “The Business News with

Howard Green,” BNN (Canada) July 2008 On-camera commentator, “Time to Stir: Columbia 1968,” Sticking Place Films (London), directed

and produced by Paul Cronin, 2008 (premiere Columbia University, April 2008 and Walter Reade Theater, Lincoln Center, May 2008)

On-camera commentator, “Hori Smoku Sailor Jerry: The Life of Norman Keith Collins,” directed by Erich Weiss and produced by Steven Grasse, 2008 (premiere South By Southwest Film Festival, Austin, March 2008; Philadelphia Film Festival, April 2008).

Sole Guest, What They Think of US, “Book Bound,” Irish Radio, March 2007 Featured on-camera commentator, “The Final Report: The Iran Hostage Crisis,” National

Geographic Channel, October 2006

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Speaker, John Raskob and Catholic Philanthropy, Raskob Foundation for Catholic Activities, Wilmington, September 2006

Speaker, “John Raskob,” Wilmington Rotary Club, June 2006 Featured Guest, Iran and the United States, “HistoryCenter,” History Channel, January 2006 Interviewer, Irenee du Pont, Pierre du Pont Oral History Project, Longwood Gardens, April 2005 Sole Guest, Iran Hostage Crisis, “It’s Your World – with Jane Wales,” KQED, San Francisco, April

2005 Interviewer, Alfred Chandler, Pierre du Pont Oral History Project, Longwood Gardens, December

2004 Featured Guest, Iran Hostage Crisis, “Talk of the Nation,” NPR, November 2004 Featured Guest, Iran Hostage Crisis, “World Today,” BBC, November 2004 Featured Guest, The New Mexico Democratic Party Caucus, “In Focus,” KNME-TV, Albuquerque,

February 2004 Featured Guest, Governor Bill Richardson and the New Mexico State Legislature, “In Focus,”

KNME-TV, Albuquerque, February 2003 Featured Guest, Alfred Sloan, “The Morning Show with Fred Martino,” WGVU (NPR), Grand

Rapids, December 2002 Featured Guest, Alfred Sloan, “The Todd Mundt Show,” NPR, nationally syndicated, December

2002 Featured Guest, Alfred Sloan, “Morning Edition- Detroit hosted by Craig Fahle,” WDET (NPR),

Detroit, November 2002 Featured Guest, Election Wrap-Up, “In Focus,” KNME-TV, Albuquerque, November 2002 Consultant and on-camera commentator, “Sex and World War II America,” Greystone

Communications, A&E and the History Channel, air date July 2002 Sole Guest with Beth Bailey, The Sixties, “The Exchange with Laura Kinoy,” New Hampshire

Public Radio, (two one-hour shows), February 1 and 8, 2002 Featured Guest, “The Baby Boomer Generation,” Talking History, OAH sponsored radio program

broadcast nationally on various NPR stations, December 10, 2001 Consulting exhibit text writer, “Monterey Pop Revisited,” museum exhibit, Monterey History

Center, Monterey, California, June 2001-January 2002 Featured on-camera commentator, “‘Look Out Haskell, It’s Real’: The Making of Medium Cool,”

Sticking Place Films (London), world premiere, Edinburgh International Film Festival, August 19, 2001

On camera-commentator for local presentation of “The American Presidency,” KNME-PBS, Albuquerque, April 2000

Content Consultant, Creating America: A History of the United States, (middle-school textbook), McDougal Littell, 1999

Guest, “The Kennedy Legacy,” Richard Daylan Show, BBC-Radio, Great Britain, November 1998 Taped Interview, “President Clinton in Historical Perspective,” Voice of America, India,

September 1998 On-camera commentator, “The Chicago 7,” television documentary, CBS News Production,

February 1998 (air date on the Learning Channel, May 1998) Guest, “The Sixties,” Morning Show with Kai Laxwell, KHNR-AM (CNN Honolulu affiliate), March

1997 Guest Appearances (3), 1996 Democratic Convention Coverage, CTTV (Chicago Tribune Cable

Network), August 1996 Consultant, America in the 1960s Documentary Project, Frontline (PBS), Fall 1995 Humanities Consultant, "A Sixties Story About Marshall Bloom," film project, Green Mountain

Post Films, August 1995 On-camera commentator, "Chicago '68," television documentary, David Grubin Productions for

The American Experience, May 1995 (air date on PBS November 1995) Guest, "The 1996 Democratic National Convention," Sheryl Corley Show, WBEZ (NPR Chicago

affiliate), May 1994

22

Guest, "Growing Up With Richard Nixon," Charlie Rose Show, WNET and public television affiliates, New York, April 1994

Participant, Black History Month Exhibition Opening, 369th Regiment Historical Society, New York, January 1994

On-camera commentator, "Dear Jackie," television documentary BBC-2 and A&E, November 1993 Guest, "Hawaii Spectrum," KFIV (Honolulu Fox Television Affiliate), February 1993 Commentator and guest appearances, The 1960s and the 1968 Democratic National Convention,

national and local radio and television, (15 appearances) 1988 Presidential election commentary (four essays), "Morning Edition - Kansas," KANU-Public Radio,

Lawrence, Kansas, Fall 1988 Principal Humanities Scholar, "Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement," NAACP -

Hawaii Chapter and the Hawaii Committee for the Humanities, Honolulu, HI, November 1986 - July 1987

UNIVERSITY SERVICE University of Kansas Member, Distinguished Professor Committee, university-wide, Fall 2018 - Member, Faculty Evaluation Board, History Department, Spring 2019 Mentor, University Scholar, Fall 2018-Spring 2019 Presenter, Red Hot Research, The Commons, September 2018 Chair, Hall Distinguished Professor of History Search Committee, Fall 2017 Member, Sabbatical Committee, Fall 2017 Panelist, “Student Rights on College Campuses,” The Commons and KU Student Senate,

September 2017 Member, Governance Committee, History Department, 2016 – 2018 Member, CLAS Special Committee on Rethinking the Doctorate in the Humanities, 2016-2017 Member, CLAS Research Grant Committee, 2016-2017 Member, Fellowship Selection Committee, Hall Center for the Humanities, Fall 2015 Member, History Department Undergraduate Committee, Fall 2015 – 2016 Member, CLAS Tenure and Promotion Committee, 2015-2016 Temple University Director of Graduate Studies, History Department, July 2014 – June 2015 Member, Undergraduate Committee, History Department, 2013 – 2014 Member, Sabbatical Committee, College of Liberal Arts, 2014- 2015 Speaker, “1964 to 2014: Barry Goldwater and the Enduring Power of the Conservative Coalition,”

Dissent in America Teach-In, October 2014 Member, Graduate Council, History Department, 2011-2013 Member, Advisory Board, Myer and Rosaline Feinstein Center for American Jewish History, Fall

2006 – Spring 2014 Panel moderator and sponsor, TURF Conference, Spring 2013 Member/Co-chair/Chair, Promotion Committee, College of Liberal Arts, Fall 2010 –2013 Judge, Best Paper in U.S. History, Barnes Club Graduate Student History Conference, Temple

University, March 2012 Member, Department Chair Selection Committee, History Department, Spring 2011 Judge, Best Paper in U.S. History, Barnes Club Graduate Student History Conference, Temple

University, March 2011 Speaker, Conservatives and the 2010 Election, Teach-In – Dissent in America, November 2010 Chair, U.S. History Non-Tenure Track Search Committee, Summer 2010 Speaker, “Persepolis and the Consequences of the Iranian Revolution," Teach-In – Dissent in

America, February 2010 Member, Personnel Committee, History Department, Fall 2005 – Fall 2009

23

Board Member, Center for Humanities at Temple, College of Liberal Arts, 2004 – 2009 Chair, Tenure and Promotion Case, History Department, Spring 2009 Member, American Jewish History Search Committee, History Department, Fall 2008-Spring

2009 Member, Graduate Fellows Search Committee, Center for Humanities at Temple, CLA, Spring

2009 Speaker, “Race in the Race,” Forum on the 2008 Presidential Election, October 2008 Speaker, “Social Change Politics and Electoral Politics,” Dissent in America Teach-In, October

2008 Member, Graduate Council, College of Liberal Arts, Fall 2005 – Spring 2008 Member, External Fellow Search Committee, Center for Humanities at Temple, CLA, Spring 2008 Member, Graduate Fellow Selection Committee, Center for Humanities at Temple, CLA, Spring

2008 Director of Graduate Studies, History Department, July 2005 – June 2007 Chair, Graduate Program Council, History Department, Fall 2005 – June 2007 Chair, African American History Search Committee, Spring 2007 Member, Tenure and Promotion Case, History Department, Fall 2005 Member, History Department Chair Selection Committee, Fall 2005 Member, University Promotion and Tenure Committee, 2004-2005 Speaker, Teach-In – Dissent in America, March 2005 Member, Graduate Program Council, History Department, 2004-2005 Chair, Graduate Admissions Committee, History Department 2004-2007 Member, Transnational Search Committee, History Department, Fall 2004 University of New Mexico (selected) Member, Carnegie Foundation Initiative on the Doctorate, History Department, 2003-2004 Chair/Member, Sabbatical Committee, History Department, 2003-2004, 2001-2002 Moderator, “UNM’s International Students Speak,” International Studies Institute and Office of

International Programs, February 2004 Chair/Member, Third-Year Review Cases, History Department, Fall 2003, Fall 2002, Fall 2001 Member, Salary Committee, History Department, Fall 2002, Fall 1997 Member, Ad Hoc Committee on Departmental Governance, Fall 2002 Mentor, Research Opportunity Program, Special Projects, Office of Student Affairs, Summer 2002,

summer 1998 Member, Post-Tenure Review Policy Committee, History Department, Spring 2002 Co-Chair, Visiting Lecture Series, History Department, Fall 2001-Spring 2002 Advisory Committee, Cultural Studies Program, Fall 2001 - Spring 2002 Member, U.S. History Search Committee, Fall 2000-Spring 2001 Chair, Credentials Committee, History Department, Fall 2000-Spring 2001 Member, Special Committee on Departmental Family Leave Policy, History Department, Fall 2000 Chair, Tenure and Promotion Case, History Department, Summer 1999-Spring 2000 Chair, Chicana/Chicano History Search Committee, History Department, Fall 1999-Spring 2000 Member, College of Arts and Sciences Senior Promotion and Tenure Committee, Fall 1999-Spring

2000 Director, History Department Dissertation Group, Fall 1999-Spring 2000 Chair, Special Committee on Faculty Salaries, History Department, Fall 1999- Spring 2000 Member, Faculty Senate University Curricula Committee, August 1997 - May 2000 Member, Latin America Search Committee, Department of History, Fall 1997-Spring 1998 Barnard College, Columbia University (Selected) Director and Founder, Willen Seminar: the Barnard College Faculty Social Science Works-in-

Progress Seminar, January 1991 - May 1992, September 1993 - December 1995 Member, Committee on Urban Studies, Columbia University, July 1989 - December 1996

24

First and Second Year Student Advisor, September 1990 - July 1992, September 1993 - June 1995 Chair, American History Search Committee, Spring 1992 University of Hawaii (Selected) History Department Graduate Student Placement Officer, July 1987 - December 1987 History Department Faculty Secretary, August 1986-June 1987 RELATED WORK EXPERIENCE Senior Staffer, Congressman Sandy Levin, United States House of Representatives, Washington,

D.C., American Historical Association Congressional Fellow, September 1985-August 1986

Researcher, Project on the History of Philanthropy and Public Policy, University of Chicago, September 1981 - June 1984

Director, Corporate Philanthropy Project, Chicago Donors’ Forum, June 1981 - October 1981