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Residential
Fellowship
2001:
James W. Cook, Assistant Professor of History and Director
of American Studies at Butler University. "Cracks in the White
Republic: Race, Culture, and Transgression in the U.S. North, 1780-1865,"
is a study of interracial "cultures" that emerged in the
United States between the dawn of emancipation and the Civil War.
Dr. Cook argues that "in the broadest sense, I am writing a
book about interracial 'transgressions': a cultural history of the
people, places, and relationships which in one way or another violated
the early Republic's emerging racial caste system."
2001:
Wiliam Ralph Heath, Professor of English, Mount Saint Mary's
College. "William Wells's Path" is an historical novel
that uses the life of Wells, (an interpreter, Indian agent, and
acculturated member of the Miami tribe who served both Native American
communities and the federal government during the tumultuous conquest
of the Northwest Territory by the United States), to illuminate
his times and capture the meaning of a crucial period.
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