Archives

Articles & Book Chapters, 2001-2005

John Charles Arnold, “Arcadia Becomes Jerusalem: Angelic Caverns and Shrine Conversion at Monte Gargano,” Speculum, vol. 75 (July, 2000), pp 567-88.

Nancy Hagedorn, “Europeans in Post-Revolutionary Iroquoia: Introduction.” New York History 84 (Fall 2003): 365-371.

David Kinkela, “The Question of Success and Environmental Ethics: Revisiting the DDT Controversy from a Transnational Perspective, 1967-1972,” Ethics, Place, and Environment 8:2, (June 2005): 159-79.

Mary Beth Sievens, “Divorce, Patriarchal Authority, and Masculinity: A Case From Early National Vermont,” Journal of Social History Vol. 37, No. 3 (Spring 2004): 651-661.

Mary Beth Sievens, “’The Fruit of my industry’: Economic Roles and Marital Conflict in New England, 1790-1830,” in Peter Benes, ed., Women’s Work in New England, 1620-1920: The Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife Proceedings (Boston, 2003), 68-77.

Mary Beth Sievens, “’The wicked agency of others’: Community, Law, and Marital Conflict in Vermont, 1790-1830,” Journal of the Early Republic Vol. 21, No. 1 (Spring 2001): 19-39.

John R. Staples, “Religion, Politics, and the Mennonite Privilegium in Early Nineteenth-century Russia: Reconsidering the Warkentin Affair,” Journal of Mennonite Studies 21 (2003), 71-88.

John R. Staples, “Die Bedeutung des Krimkrieges, der Bauernbefreiung und der Landlosenkrise für die Mennoniten an der Molotschna,” Mennonitische Geschichtsblätter 62 (December 2005).

Jacqueline Swansinger, “Patrick Hurley and the Roosevelt Administration’s Effort to Shape the Postwar Middle East” in Architects of the American Century: Individuals and Institutions in Twentieth-century U.S. Foreign Policymaking, ed. David F. Schmitz and T. Christopher Jespersen, (Imprint Publications: Chicago, 2000)

Markus Vink, “A match made in heaven? World-system analysis and Dutch Indian Ocean studies,” in: Leonard Blussé and Ernst van Veen eds., Rivalry and conflict: European traders and Asian trading networks in the 16th and 17th century. Studies in Overseas History Vol. 7. Leiden: CNWS Publications, 2005, pp. 267-314.

Markus Vink, “From port-city to world-system: Spatial constructs in Dutch Indian Ocean studies, 1500-1800,” Itinerario 28:2 (2004), pp. 45-116.

Markus Vink, “’The world's oldest trade:’ The Dutch Indian Ocean slave trade in the seventeenth century,” Journal of World History 14:2 (2003), pp. 131-177.

Markus Vink, “Between the devil and the deep blue sea: The Christian Paravas, a ‘Portuguese’ client-community in 17th-century southeast India,” Itinerario 26:2 (2002), pp. 64-98.

Markus Vink, “The temporal and spiritual conquest of the Fishery Coast: The Portuguese-Dutch struggle over the Parava community of southeast India, c. 1640-1700,” Portuguese Studies Review 9:1/2 (2001), pp. 372-397.