Howard Foundation Fellows, 2003-2004

Thirteen scholars, representing the fields of History, History of Science, and Political Science, were awarded Howard Fellowships for 2003-2004. The fellows and their projects were:

Karen J. Alter, Assistant Professor, International Relations, Northwestern University, In the Shadow of International Law: International Courts and Negotiations over Compliance with International Law.

D. Graham Burnett, Assistant Professor, History of Science, Princeton University, Knowledge of Leviathan: Science, Technology, and the Meanings of Whales, 1787-1987.

Deborah Cohen, Assistant Professor, European History, Brown University, Household Gods: A History of the British and their Possessions, 1840s-1940s.

Michelle Egan, Assistant Professor, Comparative Politics, American University, Single Markets: Economic Integration in Europe and the United States.

Edward Gibson, Associate Professor, Comparative Politics, Northwestern University, Powers of the Periphery: Territory and Politics in the Nation-State (Latin America and the United States).

David J. Hancock, Associate Professor, European History, University of Michigan, Oceans of Wine, Empires of Commerce: Madeira Wine and the Self-Organization of the Atlantic Market Economy, 1640-1815.

Elizabeth D. Heineman, Associate Professor, European and Women’s History, University of Iowa, Sexual Consumer Culture in the Federal Republic of Germany.

Sara G. Lipton, Associate Professor, European History, SUNY, Stony Brook, Preaching, Art and Piety in the High Middle Ages (1150-1300).

John D. Majewski, Associate Professor, American History, UC Santa Barbara, Southern Leviathan: Economic Policy and the Origins of the Confederate State.

Jeffrey P. Moran, Associate Professor, History of Science, University of Kansas, The Scopes Trial and American Popular Belief: Race, Religion, and Science in the Trenches.

Jonathan Sadowsky, Associate Professor, History of Science, Case Western Reserve University, Electroconvulsive Therapy and the Questions of Progress in Medical History.

Miguel Tinker Salas, Associate Professor, Latin American History, Pomona College, “Petrolandia”, Oil and the Forging of the Nation, the Construction of Citizenship in Venezuela, 1920-1960.

Caroline Winterer, Assistant Professor, Cultural History, San Jose State University, The Mirror of Antiquity: Female Classical Figures in America, 1770-1900.