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Bryan Ganaway <GanawayB@cofc.edu> College of Charleston |
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Address: | Dept of History, College of Charleston Maybank Hall 330, 66 George Street Charleston, SC 29424 United States |
Primary Phone: | 843-953-3916 |
Fax Number: | 843-953-6349 |
Web Page: | https://www.cofc.edu/~history/ |
List Affiliations: | Former List Editor for H-German Reviewer for H-Childhood Reviewer for H-German |
Reviews: | Sexual Discourse and the Production of Reality in Soviet Russia, 1921-1928 untitled untitled untitled untitled untitled untitled untitled untitled Origins of Remembrance Regions and Identity Toys and Production: Work or Play? How Surprising Was World War I? Honecker's Children |
Interests: | Archaeology Childhood and Education European History / Studies Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies Military History Oral History Women, Gender, and Sexuality |
Bio: EDUCATION Ph.D. 2003, Department of History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign M.A. 1997, Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. B.A. 1995, with honors thesis, Department of History, University of Miami. ACADEMIC POSITIONS • Assistant Professor, College of Charleston, July 2010 to present • Visiting Assistant Professor, College of Charleston, August 2006 to July 2010 • Assistant Professor, Presbyterian College, August 2003 to July 2006 BOOKS •Toys, Consumption and Middle-class Childhood in Imperial Germany, 1871-1918 (Peter Lang, October 2008) RECENT ARTICLES •“Engineers or Artists? Toys Class and Technology in Wilhelmine Germany,” Journal of Social History (forthcoming, December 2008) •“Consuming Masculinity: Toys and Boys in Wilhelmine Germany,” Edinburgh German Yearbook, Vol. II, (September 2008) RECENT SCHOLARLY PAPERS •“Thinking Trans-nationalism in the German Context: The Case of W. E. B. Du Bois” - The Southeast German Studies Workshop, March 2008 •Comment on panel “National and Transnational Construction of German Identity” – German Studies Association Annual Conference, October 2007 •Comment on panel “Everyday Empire in the Kaiserreich” – German Studies Association Annual Conference, September 2006 •“Cultivating Citizens: Toys, the Family and National Identity in Imperial Germany” – German Studies Association Annual Conference, September 2006 COURSES TAUGHT • College of Charleston HIS 101: Early Western Civilization HIS 102: Modern European History HIS 103: World History I HIS 104: World History II HIS 241: WWII HON 120: Honors Western Civilization to 1660 • Presbyterian College Freshman Seminar: American Collective Memory of WWII HIS 111: World Civilization to 1660 HIS 112: World Civilization from 1660 HIS 362: England as Trans-National Empire, 1689-present HIS 366: Modern Russia HIS 367: Modern Germany HIS 376: Social Theory HIS 377: 19th Century Europe HIS 378: 20th Century Europe HIS 382: Survey of African History HIS 450: Seminar in History and Memory HIS 450: Seminar – History of the Future: Fantasy Fiction and European Dreams of Dominance |