In the fall 2012 issue of Early American Studies:
- Mary Kelley, “‘While Pen, Ink & Paper Can Be Had’: Reading and Writing in a Time of Revolution.”
- Karin Wulf, “Bible, King, and Common Law: Genealogical Literacies and Family History Practices in British America.”
- Christopher M. Parsons and Kathleen S. Murphy, “Ecosystems under Sail: Specimen Transport in the Eighteenth-Century French and British Atlantics”
- Kelly Wisecup, “Medicine, Communication, and Authority in Samson Occom’s Herbal.”
- Sarah Fatherly, “Tending the Army: Women and the British General Hospital in North America, 1754–1763”
- Michael Hoberman, “‘Under Their Captivity & Dispersion’: The Story of Boston’s First Jewish Business Venture.” (I recently noted a lecture by Prof. Hoberman.)
- Jasper M. Trautsch, “‘Mr. Madison’s War’ or the Dynamic of Early American Nationalism?”
- Gloria L. Main, “Women on the Edge: Life at Street Level in the Early Republic.”
- Ruth Wallis Herndon, “Poor Women and the Boston Almshouse in the Early Republic.”
- Monique Bourque, “Women and Work in the Philadelphia Almshouse, 1790–1840.”
- three more articles about poor American women in the early nineteenth century.
New Nation; Whose American Revolution Was It?: Historians Interpret the Founding; Liberty’s Exiles: American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World; The Limits of Optimism: Thomas Jefferson’s Dualistic Enlightenment; Jonathan Fisher of Blue Hill, Maine: Commerce, Culture, and Community on the Eastern Frontier; A Place in History: Albany in the Age of the Revolution, 1775–1825; and more.
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