
I won’t be going to the annual meeting of the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic in Philadelphia this year, but if were going I would try to check out these sessions:
Session 5: BEYOND THE “EVANGELICAL THESIS”: RADICAL RELIGION IN THE EARLY REPUBLIC
PRESIDING:Susan Juster, University of Michigan
Joseph Smith: The Anti-”sectarian” Crusader
Max Mueller, Harvard University,
Domestic Order and Spiritual Authority in the Society of Universal Friends
Paul B. Moyer, The College at Brockport: State University of New York
Native Spirits, Shaker Visions: Speaking with the Dead in the Early Republic
Erik R. Seeman, University at Buffalo
COMMENT: Johann N. Neem, Western Washington University; Susan Juster
Session 11: FAITH, POLITICS, AND LAW AFTER THE FOUNDING
PRESIDING: Christopher Grasso, College of William and Mary
The African Supplement: Corporate Law, Race, and Religion in Early National Philadelphia
Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania
The Founders Speak: Spiritualist Visitations from the Revolutionary Generation in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Ryan K. Smith, Virginia Commonwealth University
The Myth of American Religious Coercion: The New Nation’s Un-official Religious Establishment and Its Paradoxes
Chris Beneke, Bentley University
COMMENTS: Mary Kupiec Cayton, Miami University; Christopher Grasso
Session 15: ROUNDTABLE: OPPORTUNITIES AND OUTCOMES—PHILADELPHIA’S PLACE IN EARLY AMERICA
PRESIDING: Roderick A. McDonald, Rider University; Michelle Craig McDonald, Richard Stockton
PANELISTS
COMMENT: Michael Zuckerman, University of Pennsylvania
PRESIDING: Rosemarie Zagarri, George Mason University
Citizens of the World? American Consuls and the Problem of Citizenship, 1789-1832
Creating a Hierarchy of Heathenism: American Missionaries Map the World, 1790-1840
Commercially Informed: The Political Consequences of the Early American Consular Network in Asia
COMMENT: Christine Heyrman, University of Delaware; Rosemarie Zagarri
PRESIDING: Dee Andrews, California State University, East Bay
A Nation of Circuits: Methodist Mobility and the Winning of the Frontier
Political Movement: Jews, Citizenship, and Difference in 1850s Europe and America
To “become the pride of your patrons and the boast of religion”: Reputation, Law, and Gender in Ministerial Recruitment in the Early National Chesapeake
Roy Rogers, The Graduate Center, CUNY
COMMENT: Eric R. Schlereth, University of Texas, Dallas; Dee Andrews
Session 51: THE BOOK TRADES, GENTILITY, AND THE NEW ENGLAND FAMILY
PRESIDING: Karin Wulf, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
Gentility, Genealogy, and the New England Family Register
The Juvenile Miscellany and the Genteel Child Reader in New England
Phillis Wheatley in the 1830s: Northern Gentility and the Effacement of Slavery
COMMENT: Beth A. Salerno, St. Anselm College; Karin Wulf
PRESIDING: Kathleen Sprows Cummings, University of Notre Dame
Elijah Lovejoy: Publishing, Faith, and Abolitionism in Early Nineteenth Century St. Louis
Our Country, Our Women: Anti-Convent Propaganda and the Massachusetts Know-Nothing Party
“Reviving a Spirit of Controversy”: The Anti-Catholic Origins of American Religious Freedom, 1787-1792
Nicholas Pellegrino, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
COMMENT: Katie Oxx, St. Joseph’s University; Kathleen Sprows Cummings
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