Festival
Gotham History Festival
Gotham History Festival
New York City: 1945 - 9/11, and Beyond (Roundtable)
Moderator
Mike Wallace, History, John Jay College; City University of New York; Gotham Center for New York City History
Fred Siegel, Humanities and Social Science, Cooper Union
Joshua Freeman, History, Queens College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Frank Braconi, Citizens Housing and Planning Council
Robert Fitch, Metropolitan Studies, New York University
Rosemary Scanlon, former Deputy State Comptroller for New York City
Kenneth T. Jackson, New-York Historical Society; History, Columbia University
The Gangs of New York - More than a Movie
Chair
Joshua Brown, American Social History Project; Graduate Center, City University of New York
Five Points and the Gangs of New York
Tyler Anbinder, History, George Washington University
The Jets and the Sharks Redux: Contemporary Gangs in Historical Perspective
Eric Schneider, History, University of Pennsylvania
Chinatown Gangs from the Golden Mountain to the Golden Venture
Luke Rettler, New York County District Attorney’s Office
Cycles of Reform: NYC's Public School System in Historical Perspective (Roundtable)
Diane R. Ravitch, New York University
Marilyn Pettit, University Archives and Columbia Library, Columbia University
Norm Fruchter, Institute for Education and Social Policy, New York University
Adelaide Sanford, NYC Board of Regents
Bringing the Past to Life: Historians and Documentary Filmmaking (Roundtable)
Sponsored by the Center for Media, Culture, and History, NYU
Chair
Steven Mintz, History, University of Houston
Ric Burns, Filmmaker, Steeple Chase Films
Barbara Abrash, Center for Media, Culture, and History, New York University
Orlando Bagwell, Filmmaker, Eyes on the Prize
Maria Daniels, American Experience, PBS
David Grubin, Filmmaker, LBJr Education and Social Policy, New York University
Building Sports Stadiums in New York City, Then and Now (Roundtable)
Moderator
Arnie Markoe, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Craig Coenen, Lehigh University
Jay Cross, New York Jets
Neil Sullivan, Baruch College, City University of New York
Ricahrd Sandomir, New York Times
Michael Danielson, Politics, Princeton University
Health and Wealth: Hospitals and Healthcare in New york City from Medicare to Managed Care (Roundtable)
Robert A. Padgug, Lehman College, City University of New York
Robb K. Burlage, Health Justice Ministries, National Council of Churches
Sandra Opdycke, Institute for Innovation in Social Policy, Fordham University
Howard Berliner, New School University and Health Policy Advisor, 1199
Elena Padilla, St. Barnabas Hospital
Gendering the 18th Century City
Chair
Edwin G. Burrows, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Legions of Women: Making Gender Work in Revolutionary New York
Judy Van Buskirk, History, State University of New York, Cortland
Sense and Senselessness: Learned Masculinity in Colonial New York City
Sarah Gronim, History, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Dangerous Economies: Sex and Goods in Colonial New York City
Serena Zabin, History, Carleton College
Art and Expression in Harlem in the Twentieth Century
Chair
Adele Oltman, Columbia University
Political Repression of Harlem Artists in the 1930s and 1940s
Larry A. Greene, History and African American Studies, Seton Hall University
The Landscape of Harlem: Women Artists in the Community
Patricia Laurence, Center for the Study of Women and Society, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Hip Hop, Harlem, and Intimacy
Jason Gregory King, New York University
Comment
Faith Davis Ruffins, Archives Center, Smithsonian Institution
The Old Stone House at Gowanus, Brooklyn, 1697-2001 (Roundtable)
Chair
Amy Freitag, Historic House Trust of New York City, City of New York Parks & Recreation
William Parry, Anthropology, Hunter College, City University of New York
John Gallagher, Author, The Battle of Brooklyn, 1776
Herbert Yellin, Revolutionary reenactor
Ladies and Lawyers: Private and Public Reform Politics in 19th Century New York
"We Shall Have Grand Meetings": Elizabeth Neall Gay and Women's Political Culture West New Brighton, Staten Island (1846-1865)
C. Jane Gover Covell, Independent Historian
"Considering the Gross and Scandalous Outrage of the Case": New York City in Politics, Law, and Memory in the Arguelles Case
Thomas Cox, History, State University of New York, Buffalo
Comment
Cynthia Ward, School of Continuing and Professional Studies, New York University
The Port of New York: Past Greatness and Future Prospects
Panel Organized by the South Street Seaport Museum
Containerization's First Tipping Point: The Fall of New York Port, 1965-1975
Stephen Marshall, Attorney
The Port of New York in the Age of Global Intermodalism
Arthur Donovan, U.S. Merchant Marine Academy
Taking Back the Legacy of Greatness, the Future Port of New York
Roberta Weisbrod, Paternship for Sustainable Ports
Architecture in Interwar New York City
"Colorful—Exotic—Bizarre!" The Design of New York City Night Clubs, 1915-1940
Mary Beth Betts, New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
Williamsburg Houses: New Deal Dreams and Realities
Mary Woods, History of Architecture and Urbanism, Cornell University
New Designs in New Neighborhoods: "Semitic" Synagogue Architecture in New York
Andrew Dolkart, School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University
Capital and Capitalists: The Political Economy of New York City, 1850-1950
Chair
Steve Fraser, Independent Scholar
The Monied Metropolis: New York and the Consolidation of the American Bourgeoisie
Sven Beckert, History, Columbia University
Capital of Capital: How New York Replaced London as the Center of the World Economy
Martin Kenner, History, Columbia University
Comment
James Livingston, History, Rutgers University
Studies in the History of Fashion and Beauty in New York City
Commodifying Domestic Virtues: New York Business and Home Sewing in the Early 20th Century
Sarah Gordon, History, Rutgers University
Interesting Places, These Beauty Shops: Class, Color, and Politics in Harlem Beauty Shops, 1920-1940
Tiffany M. Gill, History, Rutgers University
Comment
Elaine S. Abelson, Committee on Historical Studies, New School University
Building New Subways in New York: A 100-Year Look at Politics and Finance (Roundtable)
Organized by the Bronx County Historical Society
Moderator
Peter Derrick, Bronx County Historical Society
Sigurd Grava, Parsons Brinckerhoff, Graduate School of Architecture and Planning, Columbia University
Clifton Hood, History, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Gene Russianoff, Straphangers Campaign, New York Public Interest Research Group (NYPIRG)
William Wheeler, Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Jeffrey M. Zupan, Regional Plan Association
In Defense of Preservation (Roundtable)
Eric Allison, Preservation Planning Program, Pratt Institute
Anthony C. Wood, New York Preservation Archive Project; Historic Districts Council; Preservation League of New York State
Dorothy Minor, School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University
Moderator
Jeffrey A. Kroessler, Archives and Special Collections, College of Staten Island, City University of New York
Screening of Our Song
Comment
Jim McKay, Filmmaker
Leonard Quart, Cinema Studies, College of Staten Island and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Interpreting NYC History for Museum Exhibitions
Organized by Brooklyn Historical Society
Moderator
Ellen Snyder Grenier, The New Jersey Historical Society
Ann Meyerson, the Brooklyn Historical Society
Joan Maynard, Weeksville Society
Judy Giuriceo, Ellis Island Immigration Museum
Liz Sevcenko, Lower East Side Tenement Museum
Maxine Friedman, Historic Richmond Town
James Driscoll, Queens Historical Society
Deborah Waters, Museum of the City of New York
Robert Engel, New-York Historical Society
Comment
Paul Mattingly, Public History, New York University
The History and Culture of New York: Views From Abroad (Roundtable)
Moderator
Thomas Bender, Humanities and History, New York University
Francois Weil, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales; Ministry of Research (Paris, France)
Guenther Lenz, Humboldt Universitat (Berlin, Germany)
Margarita Gutman, Universidad de Buenos Aires (Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Comment
Mario Maffi, Universita Statale di Milano (Milan, Italy)
New Perspectives on the Movement for Civil Rights in New York City, 1945-1970
Chair
Venus Green, City College, City University of New York
The Left and the Struggle for Negro Rights in Post World War II New York City
Martha Biondi, African American Studies, Northwestern University
Paralyzing the City: Brooklyn CORE and the Politics of Rage
Brian Purnell, U.S. and African American History, New York University
Radicalism in the Late 1960s: A Chapter in the History of the Young Lords
Johanna Fernandez, History, Columbia University
Comment
Clarence Taylor, History and African-New World Studies, Florida International University
New York / Utopia: The Labor Cooperative Housing Movement, 1919-1972 Part I: Three Bronx Utopias
Panel organized by the Museum of the City of New York
Chair
Andrew Hazelton, Tsoi/Kobus & Associates, Inc.
Collectivist Suburbs: The Bronx Cooperatives as Urbanism
Richard Plunz, Architecture and Urban Design Program, Columbia University
1920s New York Socialism: The Bronx Cooperatives in Political Context
Tony Michels, History, University of Wisconsin
The Jewish Labor Movement and the Culture of Working Class New York
Daniel Soyer, History, Fordham University
Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives: Words and Images from NYC's Working People
Roundtable organized by the Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives and the Central Labor Council
Rachel Bernstein, Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, New York University
Joshua Freeman, History, Queens College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
George Andrucki, Sheetmetal Workers Local 28
Lillian Roberts, AFSCME, District Council 37
Religion in Early New York City
Confession and Constitution: Catholics and the Kohlmann Case in Early 19th Century New York
Martin J. Burke, History, Lehman College, City University of New York
Origins of Religious Pluralism in New York City
Evan Haefeli, History, Princeton University
"Who Shall Sing Best": Race, Slavery, and Religion in Early 18th Century New York City
William B. Hart, History, Middlebury College
Beyond the Ward Boss: Visions of Politics in New York City, 1860-1920
Powerful Partitions: Irish Political Culture in New York City, 1860-1920
Mary C. Kelly, Political Science, Franklin Pierce College
Comment
John Mollenkopf, Political Science, Graduate Center
Teaching New York City History (Roundtable)
Organized by New York State Archives
Vivienne Shaffer, Lefferts Homestead
Brenda Parnes, New York State Archives
Robert Forloney, Museum of the City of New York
The History of Noshing in New York City (Roundtable)
Roundtable organized by the New York Food Museum
Chair
Nancy Ralph, New York Food Museum
Suzanne Wasserman, Gotham Center for New York City History
Anne Mendelson, Independent Scholar
Annie Hauck-Lawson, Food Studies and Nutrition, Brooklyn College
The History of New York City's Water Supply (Roundtable)
Organized by South Street Seaport Museum
Madeline Rogers, South Street Seaport
Gerard Koeppel, Author, Water for Gotham: A History
Max Pfeffer, Sociology and Cornell Center for the Environment, Cornell University
Al Appleton, formerly of New York City Department of Environmental Protection
Housing in New York: Can Tenements Live with Towers? (Roundtable)
Roundtable organized by Lower East Side Tenement Museum
Harvey Epstein, Housing Committee, Community Board 13
Andrew Flamm, Lower East Side Business Improvement District
Lillian Rivera, Tenant activist
Douglas Sarini, Edison Properties
Damon Rich, Center for Urban Pedagogy
Christopher Mele, Sociology, State University of New York-Buffalo
Preserving the Lower East Side: Imagining a New Ethos of Historic Preservation (Roundtable)
Hasia Diner, Judaic Studies, New York University
Max Page, Architecture and History, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Richard Rabinowitz, American History Workshop
Highbrow, Lowbrow and Middlebrow: The Post-Civil War Audiences for Music in New York
Chair
Peter Muir, Music, Graduate Center, City University of New York
The Butcher, the Baker, the Stock Broker: The Audience for Symphonic Music, 1865
Adrienne Fried Block, Music in Gotham, Graduate Center, City University of New York
"Unpalatable Melody, Strange Harmony": The Reception of Verdi's Operas by New York City Critics and Audiences, 1855-1875
John Graziano, Music in Gotham and Music, City College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Patrons and Performers, Artists and Aficionados: The Multifaceted Musical Lives of New York's Amateurs in the 1860s
Mary Simonson, Music, University of Virginia
Breweries, Saloons and Taverns: Brewing and Drinking Life in New York City, 1840-1930
Not Just a Watering Hole: Saloons of Tenement New York City
John Michael Passalaqua, Political Science, Loyola University
Brooklyn's Golden Age of Brewing, 1890-1900
David Raubvogel, Harry Van Arsdale High School
"Vote As You Drink!" The Politics of Prohibition in New York City
Michael Lerner, Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota
Community Organizing for School Reform: The Question of Parent Agency Past and Present (Roundtable)
Moderator
Adina Back, Institute for Education and Social Policy, New York University
William W. Cutler III, History and Educational Leadership, Temple University
Norm Fruchter, Institute for Education and Social Policy, New York University
Hollyce C. Giles, School of Education, Brooklyn College; Institute for Education and Social Policy, New York University
Eva Gold, Research for Action
Elaine L. Simon, Urban Studies Program, University of Pennsylvania; Research for Action
Eric Zachary, Community Involvement Program, Institute for Education and Social Policy
New York Newspapers and the Evolution of Baseball: Henry Chadwick and the Development of Sports Journalism 1856-1890
Andrew Schiff, St. Francis College
The History of Slavery in New York City (Roundtable)
Roundtable organized by Brooklyn Historical Society
Moderator
Graham R. Hodges, History, Colgate University
Shane White, History, University of Sydney, Australia
Leslie Harris, History, Emory University
Carla Peterson, Africa and the Americas Committee, University of Maryland
Leslie Alexander, History, Ohio State University
Comment
Ira Berlin, History, University of Maryland
Illustrating the City: Artists and Everyday Life in New York (Roundtable)
Moderator
Joshua Brown, American Social History Project, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Rebecca Zurier, History of Art, and Program in American Culture, University of Michigan
Ben Katchor, Cartoonist
Peter Kuper, Cartoonist
Like Strangers: Blacks, Whites and New York City's Ocean Hill-Brownsville Crisis
Chair
The Ocean Hill-Brownsville Crisis: New York's Antigone
Jerald Podair, History, Lawrence University
Ocean Hill-Brownsville: Voices From the Past
John Rudolph, WNYC
Ocean Hill-Brownsville and the UFT
Jack Schierenbeck, United Federation of Teachers
Ocean Hill-Brownsville: The Community's View
Ronald Evans, formerly of Intermediate School 201
Radical Writers in New York City: From the New Masses to Norman Mailer
Chair
The Strange Case of Carlos Tresca
Dorothy Gallagher, Author, All the Right Enemies: The Life and Murder of Carlos Tresca and How I Came into My Inheritance And Other True Stories
Alan Brinkley, History, Columbia University
Communist Writers of the 1930s and 1940s
Sam Tanenhaus, Author, Whittaker Chambers
Kazin to Mailer
Paul Berman, Author, A Tale of Two Utopias: The Political Journey of the Generation of 1968
New York/Utopia: The Labor Cooperative Housing Movement, 1919-1972
Part II: A City of Cooperatives
Panel organized by the Museum of the City of New York
Built by Idealism: Abraham E. Kazan and the UHF Approach
Ken Wray, United Housing Foundation
City of Labor: Architect Herman Jessor and the Cooperative Housing Movement
Tony Schuman, Architecture, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Building on New York City's Inheritance
Peter Marcuse, Urban Planning, Columbia University
Hilary Botein, Urban Planning, Columbia University
Comment
Joshua Freeman, History, Queens College, City University of New York
Picturing New York: Bird's Eye Views of New York and Images of Washington Square
Homage to the Square: Picturing Washington Square, 1850-1965
Bruce Weber, Berry-Hill Galleries, New York
"A sense, through the eyes, of embracing possession" (Henry James): Bird's Eye Views of New York City, c. 1880s-1930s
Douglas Tallack, School of American and Canadian Studies, University of Nottingham, UK
The Surprise of Religion in Modern New York History
Chair
Donald Gerardi, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
What Vodou in Brooklyn Can Teach Us About Religion in New York City
Karen McCarthy Brown, Drew University
Three Reasons Why Religion Prospered in Modern New York and Failed in Urban Europe
Jon Butler, Yale University
Religion in the Making of New York's Topography
Robert Orsi, Harvard University
New York and the Culture of Silent Film
Coney Island and the Evolution of Film Culture in New York City
Brian Gallagher, English, LaGuardia Community College, City University of New York
New York City as Playground of Modernity in Silent Comedy
Kevin Hagopian, Penn State University
Comment
Charles Musser, Film Studies and American Studies, Yale University
The Garment Workers' New York: Immigrant Workers and Progressive Era Reform
New York City and the Invention of Modern Labor Relations
Richard Greenwald, History, United States Merchant Marine Academy
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire of 1911
Robert Whalen, History, Queens College (Charlotte, NC)
Nelson Rockefeller, Edward Logue, and the Politics of Urban Development
Rockefeller's Vietnam? Black Politics and Urban Development in Harlem, 1969-1974
Peter Siskind, History, University of Pennsylvania
Edward J. Logue, the New York State Urban Development Corporation and New York City
Ivan Steen, Oral History Program, State University of New York, Albany
Comment
George Lankevich, History, City University of New York
Dvorak and the Gilded Age:
Issues of Race and Cultural Identity
Joseph Horowitz, Independent Scholar; Eastman School of Music
African-American Women's Struggles and Resistance in the 19th and 20th Centuries
African-American Women and the New York City Draft Riot, 1863
Jane Dabel, History, California State University, Long Beach
Rose Schneiderman and the Struggle to Unionize African-American Laundry Workers in New York City, 1924-1927
John McGuire, History, State University of New York, Binghamton
Election Fraud, Vice, Murder, Police: How New York's Underside Shaped 20th Century American Politics and Culture
Mysteries of the City: The Lexow Committee and New York's Underside in Turn of the Century America
Daniel Czitrom, History, Mount Holyoke College
The Becker Case Again: A Murder Scandal as a Political Movement in Progressive Era New York
Allen Steinberg, History, University of Iowa
New York's Lost Children: Foundlings and Foster Care in Historical Perspective
Henry Foundling and His Friends: Abandoned Babies in 19th Century New York City
Julie Miller, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Where Have All the Foundlings Gone? The Politics of Race, Religion and Money in New York City's Child Welfare System
Nina Bernstein, New York Times; Author, The Lost Children of Wilder: The Epic Struggle to Change Foster Care
Comment
Virginia Metaxas, History and Women's Studies, Connecticut State University
Gotham's Garbage: The Free Market and the Hidden Costs of Turning Trash Into Cash
Power Flow: Organized Crime, Environmental Activism, and the Privatization of New York City's Solid Waste System, 1947-2001
Steven Corey, Urban Studies, Worcester State College
Under the Microscope: Why Hospital Waste is Gotham's Most Thoroughly Studied Garbage
Wally Jordon, New York City Medical Waste Management Study
The Garbage Behind, the Garbage Ahead
Benjamin Miller, Policy Planning for the New York City Department of Sanitation and author, Fat of the Land
Comment
Jimmy Breslin, syndicated columnist, New York Newsday
New York City Nisei and World War II (Roundtable)
Chair
Paul Mattingly, Public History, New York University
David M. Reimers, History, New York University
Daniel Inoyue, New York University
Comment
Suki Ports, filmmaker
John Kuo Wei Tchen, Gallatin, New York University
S.O.S. New York: A History of the City's Environmental Movement Since 1970
Moderator
Jim Tripp, Environmental Defense Fund
Barry Commoner, Environmentalist
Eric Goldstein, National Resources Defense Council
Mathew Gandy, Geography, University College, London
Vernice Miller, Ford Foundation
In the South Bronx of America:
Guarding Memory
Mel Rosenthal, Art, State University of New York, Empire State College
Shelley Rice, Art Historian, New York University; School of Visual Arts
Puerto Rican / Latino New York:
Resistance, Perseverance and Expression in the Decade of the 1970s
Organized by the Puerto Rican and Latino Studies Department, Brooklyn College
Chair
Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, Puerto Rican and Latino Studies, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Puerto Rican/Latino New York: Historical Perspectives
Gabriel Haslip-Viera, City College, City University of New York
The Empire Strikes Back: How Rebellion, Reform and Return Migration Transformed the New York Political Landscape
Juan Gonzalez, Brooklyn College, City University of New York; The New York Daily News
Literary Latinidad: Nueva York in the 1970s
Daisy Cocco de Fillipis, York College, City University of New York
Puerto Rican Migration and Communtiy at Mid-Century
Nilsa Olivero, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Comment
Juan Flores, Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Culture and Subculture:
Homosexuality and the Arts in New York
Queer Politics: Images of Gay Liberation in New York, 1969-1970
Ella Howard, History, Boston University
From Bethesda Fountain to Sheridan Square: Gays and Lesbians in New York's Visual Arts
James Saslow, Art, Queens College
Comment
Molly McGarry, History, University of California, Riverside
Madison Square: A Case Study in the Dynamics of Urban Public Space
Picturing Public Space: Photography and the Towers of Madison Square
Antonello Frongia, History of Architecture and Urbanism Program, Cornell University
"Dead Lay the City": Real Estate, Architectural Obsolescence, and the Ruins of New York
Nick Yablon, University of Chicago
Met Life's Metropolis
Roberta Moudry, College of Architecture, Art and Planning, Cornell University
Issues in the History of Public Health in New York City
The Living City: Making the Past Speak to the Present
Amy Fairchild, Columbia University
Martina Lynch, Columbia University
Elizabeth Robilotti, Columbia University
The Biography of Physicians and AIDS in New York: An Oral History
Ronald Bayer, Columbia University
Gerald Oppenheimer, Brooklyn College, City University of New York; Columbia University
Lead's Legacy: Dangerous Lives, Deceitful Industries
Gerald Markowitz, John Jay College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Visualizing Early National and Antebellum New York:
Black and White Republicanism
Chair and Comment
Carl E. Prince, History, New York University
Seeing the Republican City: A Visual Approach to New York in the New Nation
Howard B. Rock, History, Florida International University
David Ruggles: Black Apostle of Freedom in Antebellum New York City
Graham Hodges, History, Colgate University
Gotham City, Gotham State:
Rivals and Suitors
Chair and Comment
Peter Eidenstadt, The Encyclopedia of New York State
The Encyclopedia of New York State: Putting the State Back in the City
Peter Eisenstadt
Upstate New York as a Factor in the Rise of New York City: 1780-1950
Tod M. Ottman, Independent Scholar
Japanese Americans in NYC and NYS, 1940-1960
Greg Robinson, History, University of Quebec at Montreal
The Upstate/Downstate Divide in Recent NYS Politics: Some Personal Observations
Edward C. Sullivan, New York State Assembly
Organized Labor and Organized Crime:
Cleaning House in the Building Service Employees' Union
How Labor Racketeers Helped Build a Union
Daniel Wilk, History, Duke University
The Columnist and the Labor Racketeer: Westbrook Pegler's Unmasking of George Scalise
David Witwer, History, Lycoming College
Comments
Carl Biers, Association for Union Democracy
Andrew Wender Cohen, History, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University
Redefining the Roles of Women in the New York City Justice System
Administrative Wrangling: The Gender Politics of Police Commissioner Ellen O'Grady
Mary Jane Aldrich-Moodie, History, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
A Precinct of Their Own: The New York Police Department's Women's Precinct, 1921-1923
Dorothy Moses Schulz, Law, Police Science & Criminal Justice Administration, John Jay College, City University of New York
Strategy and Politics in the New York Campaign for Women's Jury Service: 1917-1975
Elisabeth I. Perry, History and American Studies, St. Louis University
Comment
Rosalind Rosenberg, History, Barnard College
Building, Destruction, and Re-building: The Bronx in the 20th Century
Panel Organized by the Bronx County Historical Society
Chair
Roger Wines, History, Fordham University
City Beautiful Planning in the South Bronx: From Triumph to Frustration, 1880-1940
Ray Bromley, Planning, Geography and Latin American Studies, State University of New York, Albany
Kelly Street: Life and Times of a South Bronx Neighborhood
Emanuel Tobier, Economics and Planning, Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, New York University
Morris High School and the Creation of the New York City Public High School System
Gary Hermalyn, Bronx County Historical Society
From Burning to Building: The Revival of the South Bronx, 1970-1999
James Wunsch, Historical Studies, State University of New York, Empire State College
Writing About Race, New York, 1800-1865
The 1741 "Negro Plot" Through 19th Century Historians' Eyes
Jennifer Steenshorne, History, University of California, Irvine
"Miscegenation in Earnest": Race and Sex in Presidential Politics, 1864
Debra Jackson, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Comment
Craig Wilder, History and African American Studies, Williams College
New Amsterdam/New York City as a 17th Century Atlantic Crossroads
Chair and Comment
Karen Ordahl Kupperman, History, New York University
In Pursuit of Profit: The Netherlands Trade in Colonial New York, 1664-1688
Christian Koot, History, University of Delaware
New Amsterdam
James Williams, History, Middle Tennessee State University
The Culture of Commitment in New York City, 1920-1960
Chair
Michael Denning, Yale University
The Radical Roots of America's Musical Mainstream
Marc E. Johnson, Music, Graduate Center, City University of New York
No Varsity Teams: Communist Adult Education in New York City, 1923-1956
Marvin Gettleman, Science & Society; History, Brooklyn Polytechnic University
The Depression Stage: Radical Theater in 1930s New York
Annette Rubinstein, Brecht Forum
Comment
Paul Mishler, Independent Scholar
The Fiscal Crisis of the 1970s
A Crisis of Competence: The 1977 Mayoral Election and the Political Economy of the Fiscal Crisis
Jonathan Soffer, History, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute
A Crisis in Progressive Politics: The Municipal Unions and New York City's Mid 1970s Fiscal Crisis
Michael Spear, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Liberalism and Public Opinion in New York City Since the Fiscal Crisis
Ester Fuchs, Political Science, Barnard College and Columbia University
Comment
Judith Stein, History, City College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
East Side, West Side and Downtown:
Conflict and Societal Change in New York City Landmark Spaces
Museums for the People: The Struggle for Sunday Openings in New York City, 1884-1891
Maria Iacullo, History, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Lone Survivor: The History of the Staten Island Ferry
Paul Morando, History, College of Staten Island, City University of New York
Symbolism as Legacy: Its Role in the Transformation of Times Square
Lynne Sagalyn, Finance and Economics, Columbia Business School
Comment
Elizabeth Blackmar, History, Columbia University
New York City and Its Journalism Since 1960 (Roundtable)
Moderator
Robert Snyder, Journalism and Media Studies Program, Rutgers University-Newark
Pete Hamill, New York Daily News
Les Payne, Newsday (NYC Edition)
Juan Gonzalez, New York Daily News
Somini Sengupta, New York Times
James Carey, Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
Arab-Americans in New York City: A Community of Many Worlds
Panel organized by the Museum of the City of New York
Chair
Paula Hajar, Author
New York: The Mother Colony of Arab America, 1854-1924
Philip Kayal, Sociology and Anthropology, Seton Hall University
Mary Ann Haick DiNapoli, Arab American Heritage Association
Ralph Coury, Fairfield University
New York al-Arabia, 1965-2001
Inea Bushnaq, Arab Folktales
Louis Abdulatif Cristillo, Muslims in New York Project, Middle East Institute, Columbia University
Debbie Almontasser, New York City Board of Education
Comment
Kathleen Benson, City Partners Exhibition Projects, Museum of the City of New York
Archaeology in New York City
Co-Chairs
Arthur Bankoff, Anthropology and Archaeology, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Christopher Ricciardi, Syracuse University and the Brooklyn College Archaeological Research Center
Cow Bones, Fish Scales, and Manuscripts: What People Ate in 17th Century New York
Meta Janowitz, URS Corporation; The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art
Garbage in an Archaeological Context: Is it Trash or is it Treasure?
Joan Geismar, Independent Scholar
Excavations at Rose Hill Manor: The Archaeology of 19th Century College Life in the Bronx
Allan Gilbert, Anthropology, Fordham University
Roger Wines, History, Fordham University
The Seneca Village Project: The Archaeological Study of a Community
Diana Wall, Anthropology and Sociology, City College, City University of New York
Nan Rothschild, Anthropology, Barnard University
Life on the Farm - Excavating Slavery in Brooklyn: The Hendrick I. Lott Farmstead Archaeological Project
Christopher Ricciardi, Syracuse University and the Brooklyn College Archaeological Research Center
Gentrification in New York City Since the 1950s
Gentrification in New York City: From Local Anomaly to Global Urban Strategy
Neil Smith, Center for Place, Culture and Politics; Anthropology and Geography, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Development or Displacement? The Brooklyn Academy of Music and Gentrification in Fort Greene
David Vine, Anthropology, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Gentrification of the Upper West Side of New York City
Elliot Sclar, Urban Planning, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University
Comment
Owen Gutfreund, History, Barnard College
Digital Gotham, From Barnum to Blackouts
At the Virtual Corner of Broadway and Ann Street
Ellen Noonan, American Social History Project, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Blacking Out Online: Public Memory and the 1977 Blackout
Jim Sparrow, Brown University
Comment
Tom Thurston, Institute for Learning Technologies, Columbia University
The Conservative Party and New York City Politics
Promoting Law and Order: The Conservative Party and the 1966 Civilian Review Board Referendum
Timothy Sullivan, History, University of Maryland
Politics and Planning: The Conservative Party and the South Richmond Plan
Jeffrey A. Kroessler, Archives and Special Collections, College of Staten Island, City University of New York
Comment
Richard Flangan, Political Science, College of Staten Island
Jeffrey Kraus, Political Science Department, Wagner College
Archives and Libraries:
Institutional Collections and the Sources of Cultural Memory
Chair
Jean Ashton, The Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University
The Early History of the New York Historical Society: Concepts of Research and the Historical Repository
Margaret Heilbrun, Library, New York Historical Society
The Wondrous Legacy of Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes
Gloria Deak, Author, Picturing New York: The City from Its Beginnings to the Present
Documenting Contemporary History at the New York Public Library
Robert Sink, New York Public Library
Biography and History:
Francis Cardinal Spellman's New York
Francis Cardinal Spellman and the 1949 Calvary Cemetery Workers Strike: Testing the Limits of Catholic Social Teaching
Arnold Sparr, History, Saint Francis College
Francis Cardinal Spellman and the Development of Pastoral Strategies to Respond to the Puerto Rican Migration to the Archdiocese of New York, 1948-1967
Reverend Thomas A. Lynch, Church History, Cathedral Preparatory Seminary, Saint Joseph's Seminary
Comment and Evaluation of the Career of Cardinal Spellman
Charles R. Morris, Author, American Catholic
From the Salome Myth to Striptease in New York
Striptease and Salome in New York
Rachel Shteir, Dramaturgy, DePaul Theatre School
Aida Overton Walker and Florence Mills: A Developing Tradition of African American Comediennes
David Krasner, Theatre Studies, Yale University
Little Egypt in New York
Andrew Davis, Humanities, Cooper Union
New York Seen and Heard:
The New York Photo League and Its Documentary Contexts, 1936-1954 (Roundtable)
Moderator
Suzanne Wasserman, Gotham Center for New York City History
MacDonald Moore, Vassar College
Deborah Dash Moore, History, Vassar College
Reframing Local Environmental Conflict
Chair
James Egede, Program in Environmental Psychology, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Body, Place and Protest: Reclaiming Lost Legacies
Dolores Greenberg, History, Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Political Mechanisms, Community Activism and Decisions About Water
Mirele Goldsmith, Environmental Psychology, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Environmental Networking: A Quarter Century Struggle Against Dumping Dredge
Ted Wisniewski, History, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Karen Argenti, Friends of Jerome Park Reservoir
Comment
Kerry Sullivan, Natural Resources Protective Association; Coastal Conservation Association; New York State Marine Resources Advisory Council
Parks and Politics in Modern New York City
Chair
Richard Mooney, New York Times editorial board (retired)
Parks, Politics and Pork: The Establishment of the Gateway National Recreation Area, New York's National Park
Michael Kelleher, Building Conservation Association
Park and Highway: Fort Washington and Highbridge Parks
Ross Wheeler, Long Island University
A New Life for Governor's Island
Robert Pirani, Environmental Programs, Regional Plan Association
Between Memory and History:
The Women's Movement in New York City, 1960s and 1970s (Roundtable)
Moderator
Louise Berkinow, Author, Among Women
Rosalyn Baxandall, American Studies Department, Old Westbury College, State University of New York
Phyllis Chesler, Author, Women and Madness
Michele Wallace, City College of New York, City University of New York
Comment
Mary Marshall Clark, Oral History Research Office, Columbia University
A History of Race Relations in New York City (Roundtable)
Anthony Gronowicz, History, Bronx Community College, City University of New York
Elombe Brath, Patrice Lumumba Coalition
Cleo Silvers, Local 1199
Olowale Clay, December 12th Movement
Jeff Perry, Local 300
Riot at the Opera House!
A Documentary Theater Piece
Andrew Davis, Humanities, Cooper Union
Peter Buckley, Humanities, Cooper Union
Cindy Brizzel, Humanities, Cooper Union
Gary Dawson, Theatre, Sienna College
Joseph Dorinson, History, Long Island University
Sarah M. Henry, Museum of the City of New York
Joshua Brown, American Social History Project, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Screening of
Brownsville in Black and White
Laurann Black, Filmmaker
Comment
Wendell Pritchett, Law, University of Pennsylvania
Finding History on the Streets of New York
Nathan Hale
Richard Mooney, New York Times Editorial Board (retired)
Chair
Screening of The Brave Man, Documentary on the Battle of Brooklyn
Joe McCarthy, Baltic Street Media, Inc.
The Battle for New York: the Forgotten Campaign of 1776
Barnet Schecter, Author, The Battle for New York
Dance in the Age of Anxiety:
Martha Graham, Anna Sokolow and George Balanchine
A program of films selected and introduced by Lynn Garafola, Barnard College
"Night Journey" (1960), choreographed by Martha Graham (1947) to music of William Schuman, with designs by Isamau Noguchi. Danced by Martha Graham (Jocasta), Bertram Ross (Oedipus), Paul Taylor (Tiresias), Helen Gehee (Leader of the Chorus), and other members of the Martha Graham Dance Company.
"Rooms" (1966), choreographed by Anna Sokolow (1955) to music by Kenyon Hopkins. Danced by Ze'eva Cohen (Escape), Jack Moore (Going), Jeff Duncan (Panic), Margaret Cicerska, Martha Clarke, Kathryn Posin, Ray Cook, and Chester Wolenski.
"Agon" (1960), choreographed by George Balanchine (1957) to music of Igor Stravinsky. Danced by Jillana, Francia Russell, and Todd Bolender (first pas de trois), Diana Adams and Arthur Mitchell (pas de deux), and other members of the New York City Ballet.
African Burial Ground in New York City (Roundtable)
Moderator
Marianne Davy, Information Technology, Pace University School of Law
Michael L. Blakey, The African Burial Ground Project; W. Montague Cobb Collection, Howard University
Sherrill D. Wilson, Office of Public Education & Interpretation, African Burial Ground Project
Christopher Moore, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Needle Trades: A Curse or a Blessing for Immigrants? (Roundtable)
Organized by the Lower East Side Tenement Museum
Moderator
Steve Long, Lower East Side Tenement Museum
Daniel Bender, History, New York University
Nancy Carnevale, New Jersey Historical Society
Margaret Chin, Sociology, Hunter College
Emanuel Tobier, Economics and Planning, Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, New York University
New York Radicalism:
Views from Inside and Out, 1880-1920
The German Anarchist Movement in New York City, 1880-1900
Tom Goyens, University of Leuven, Belgium
The Wall Street Explosion of 1920: The Politics of Terrorism in Post-World War I New York
Beverly Gage, History, Columbia University
Comment
Lisa Keller, History, State University of New York, Purchase
Dealing with Death:
Lynching, Capital Punishment and the NYC Museum Audience (Roundtable)
Organized by the New York Historical Society
Moderator
Kathleen Hulser, New York Historical Society
Sam Roberts, New York Times, "New York Up Close," NY1
Scott Christianson, Curator and Author, Condemned: Inside the Sing Sing Death House
From "Old World" Italian to "New World" Italian-American in New York:
Architecture and Art from the 1890s Through World War I
Panel organized by the Museum of the City of New York
Chair
"Old World" vs. "New World" Italian in the Built Environment of New York: Technique and Style in Historic Preservation
James Periconi, Windels Marx Lane & Mittendorf, LLP
Classical and Renaissance Italian Elements in New York Architecture
Rocco Leonardis, Architect
The Piccirilli Brothers: Sculpture and Carving in New York in the Early 20th Century
Bill Carroll, Riverdale Country School
Mary Shelley, Lehman College, City University of New York
The Leonardo Da Vinci Art School (1923-1940), Lower East Side
Gennaro Capacchione, Painter and sculptor
Mapping Religious Vernacular Architecture and Landscapes in Italian New York
Joseph Sciorra, Calandra Italian American Institute, Queens College
Comment
The Influence of Italian and Italian American Art in Public Art and Architecture in New York City
Adele La Barre Starensier, Art Historian
Crime and Immorality in the Jewish Immigrant Community:
Prejudices and Realities, 1850-1920
The Rise of Fredericka "Marm" Mandelbaum, "Queen of Fences": How the Political Economy of New York City's Thirteenth Ward Affected a German-Jewish Immigrant Woman's Criminal Choices, 1850-1884
Rona Holub, History, Columbia University
The Bureau of Social Morals: The Response of New York's German Jews to the Perceived Immorality of their Eastern European Co-religionists
Jean Mensch, Independent Scholar
Zelig: Folk Hero or Enemy of the People?
Arthur Aryeh Goren, Professor, American Jewish History, Columbia University
Public Art Past and Present: Agencies and Agendas (Roundtable)
Harriet Senie, Museum Studies and Art History, Art Department, City College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Sally Webster, American Art, Lehman College and Graduate Center, City University of New York
Michele Cohen, Public Art for Public Schools; Graduate Center, City University of New York
Michele Bogart, Department of Art History, State University of New York, Stony Brook; New York City Art Commission
Comment
Tom Eccles, Public Art Fund
When New York Was A Frontier:
Gender, Race and Place in the 18th Century
Chair
Elaine Forman Crane, History, Fordham University
New York City Blacks in the 18th Century
Penny Sonnenburg, History, East Tennessee State University
The Taming of the Bronx Frontier
Lloyd Ultan, Bronx County Historical Society; History, Farleigh Dickenson University
Abigail Levy Franks: Tale of an 18th Century New York Matron
Edith Gelles, Institute for Research on Women and Gender, Stanford University
Comment
Doron Ben-Atar, History, Fordham University
Moderator
Ronald J. Grele, History, Columbia University
Colin Greer, New World Foundation
David Hammack, History, Case Western Reserve University
Peter Johnson, The Rockefeller Family Office
Kathleen D. McCarthy, Center for the Study of Philanthropy, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Reflections on the History of Philanthropy in New York City (Roundtable)
The Chinese Confession Program (Roundtable)
John Hayakawa Torok, Columbia Law School
Winifred Chin, Author, Paper Son, One Man's Story
John Kuo Wei, Asian/Pacific/American Studies and Gallatin, New York University
Mary Ting Lui, History, Yale University