Publications
Publications
Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal is the only journal devoted solely to the interdisciplinary and global study of women and gender during the years 1400 to 1700.
Annual Reports

Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy
of History
"Atlantic Narratives" Special Issue
Edited by Tim Watson Atlantic
* 2010 Atlantic Studies Research Group Conference
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Eduardo Elena, Dignifying Argentina: Peronism, Citizenship, and Mass Consumption
(University of Pittsburgh Press, 2011).
*2009-2010 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow
Joel Nickels, The Poetry of the Possible: Spontaneity, Modernism, and the Multitude
(University Of Minnesota Press, 2012).
*2009-2010 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow
Mark Rowlands, Can Animals Be Moral?
(Oxford University Press, 2012).
*2010-2011 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow
Kate Ramsey, The Spirits and the Law: Vodou and Power in Haiti (University Of Chicago Press, 2011).
*2011-2012 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow
*Berkshire Conference of Women Historians Best First Book Prize
*2011-2012 Associate of Caribbean Historians Elsa Goveia Prize
Brenna Munro, South Africa and the Dream of Love to Come: Queer Sexuality and the Struggle for Freedom (University Of Minnesota Press, 2012).
*2011-2012 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow *Queer Studies Research Group
*Trans Global / Global Trans Symposium
ARTICLES
Gema Perez-Sanchez, "Transnational Conversations in Migration, Queer, and Transgender Studies: Multimedia Storyspaces" Revista Canadiense De Estudios Hispanicos 35.1 (2010): 163-84 (Trans Global/ Global Trans Symposium; Queer Studies Research Group).
Hugh M. Thomas, "Shame, Masculinity, and the Death of Thomas Becket" Speculum 87, 4 (2012): 1050-1088 (2009-10 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow).
Herman Beck, “Konflikte zwischen Deutschnationalen und Nationalsozialisten während der Machtergreifungszeit,” in Historische Zeitschrift no. 292, vol. 3 (June 2011), 645-681.
(2010-11 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow).
Tim Watson, "'Every Guy Has His Own Africa': Postwar Anthropology in Saul Bellow's Henderson the Rain King," Novel: A Forum on Fiction 46.2 (2013): 275-95. (2010-11 Center for the Humanities Faculty Fellow).





