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Catherine A. O'Donnell <codonnell@asu.edu> Arizona State University |
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Address: | P.O. Box 874302 History Department Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona 85281-4302 United States |
List Affiliations: | Former Review Editor for H-SHEAR |
Interests: | American History / Studies Intellectual History Literature Political History / Studies Religious Studies and Theology Women, Gender, and Sexuality |
Bio: Catherine O’Donnell EDUCATION Ph.D., History, 1998 University of Michigan Masters Degree, History, 1993 University of Michigan B.A, Majors in American Studies (summa cum laude) and Spanish, 1989 Amherst College PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Associate Professor of History, Arizona State University, 2008- Assistant Professor of History, Arizona State University, 2001-2008 Fellow, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and Visiting Assistant Professor of History, College of William and Mary, 1998-2000 SELECTED PUBLICATIONS , under “Catherine O’Donnell Kaplan” and “Catherine O’Donnell” Book and Articles: Men of Letters in the Early Republic: Cultivating Forums of Citizenship, published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture by the University of North Carolina Press, 2008 “Literature and Politics in the Early Republic: Views from the Bridge,” forthcoming in Journal of the Early Republic (2009) “Theft and Counter-Theft: Joseph Plumb Martin’s Revolutionary War,” Early American Literature 41 (2006): 515-534. “’He Summons Genius…to his Aid’: Letters, Partisanship, and the Making of the Farmer’s Weekly Museum, 1795-1800,” Journal of the Early Republic 23 (2003): 545-571. “Elihu Hubbard Smith and the Institutions of the Republic of Utopia,” Early American Literature 35 (2000): 294-336. Reviews and Essays: Sensibility and the American Revolution , by Sarah Knott, Journal of Southern History (forthcoming, 2009) Ars Brevis, Vita Brevis,” Reviews in American History 36 (December, 2008) “Was the Federalist Press Staid and Apolitical?” on Jeff Pasley’s “Publick Occurrences 2.0” (Commonplace.org), November 2008 After Franklin: The Emergence of Autobiography in Post-Revolutionary America, 1780-1830, by Stephen Carl Arch, Resources for American Literary Study 30 (2006): 339-342. “Old Tales in a New Narrative: Rethinking the Story of Women and the American Revolution,” Reviews in American History 33 (2005): 309-313. Gender and Morality in Anglo-American Culture, 1650-1800, by Ruth Bloch, Journal of Marriage and Family 66 (2004): 837-839. “Poetry,” Encyclopedia of the New American Nation (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2005), 534-537. Review of The Devil & Doctor Dwight: Satire & Theology in the Early American Republic, by Colin Wells, The Journal of American History, September, 2003 Comparative Review of Mary Moody Emerson and the Origins of Transcendentalism: A Family History, by Phyllis Cole, and The Remarkable Mrs. Ripley: The Life of Sarah Alden Bradford Ripley, by Joan W. Goodwin, William and Mary Quarterly, July 2000: 719-23 Review of Literary Federalism in the Age of Jefferson: Joseph Dennie and the Port Folio, 1801-1812, by William C. Dowling, William and Mary Quarterly, October 1999: 865-7 |