fyi

Stefanie Rixecker
ECOFEM Coordinator

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2002 American Historical Association Meeting, San Francisco, CA
Location: California, United States
Call for Papers Date: 2002-01-03

The 116th annual meeting of the Association will be held in San
Francisco,
January 3-6, 2002. The Program Committee welcomes proposals from all
members of the Association (academic and nonacademic), from affiliated
societies, and from scholars in foreign countries and in related
disciplines. In planning the program, the committee seeks presentations
that address the entire community of historians and provide
opportunities
to examine the larger concerns of the profession. Panels focusing on
research and teaching and on discussion of significant professional
issues,
rights, and responsibilities are welcome. Continuing the practice of
previous years, the committee encourages the participation of
established
scholars and also requests, in particular, panels on time periods,
regions,
topics, and approaches that have been underrepresented in recent AHA
meetings. As the last few meetings have indicated, those assembling
panels
and those attending them have found that comparative sessions have
worked
well both in stimulating discussion and attracting a diverse audience.

The Theme

The 2002 conference theme will be "Frontiers". The idea of the frontier
has
long been an imaginative source for American historians. We seek to
extend
its reach in a host of new directions, both spatial and theoretical. We
have in mind the exploration of intellectual as well as geographical and
physical frontiers; disciplinary frontiers are no more or less imaginary
than those involving mountains or rivers. We see frontiers as evoking
intellectual imaginings and explorings as well as a spatial awareness of
surroundings and borders, and believe this topic will add greatly to our
understanding of human effort and aspiration.

How have frontiers, whether spatial, national, or intellectual,
influenced
the evolution of historical studies? In what ways might the idea of the
frontier encourage new collaborations, new approaches to the discipline
of
history? We hope to encourage our colleagues quite literally to open up
the
idea of the frontier, a project we believe to be workable across
nations,
topics, and methodologies. We also invite reflections on the history of
frontiers (from Frederick Jackson Turner to the history of human
invention
and exploration) and on the impact of ideas of the frontier, whether
physical, intellectual, spiritual, or however else imagined.
Accordingly,
we will give weight to panels that investigate this paradigm in various
ways.

More information is available on the AHA web site. The Annual Meeting
Panel
Locator Database is now available for persons seeking to assemble panels
for the 2002 meeting. You can record your topic of interest in the
database, and search for others with similar interests.


Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Call for Papers website:
http://www.theaha.org/annual

This announcement was submitted via the H-Net Announcements Website.
Find it at: http://www.h-net.msu.edu/announce/show.cgi?ID=126347
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Dr. Stefanie S. Rixecker, Senior Lecturer
Environmental Management & Design Division
Lincoln University, Canterbury
PO Box 84
Aotearoa New Zealand
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fax: 64-03-325-3841
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