Committee

Women’s History Through Film Committee

Anne Boylan, Professor Emerita of History

Anne Boylan, Professor of HistoryAnne M. Boylan is an historian of the nineteenth-century United States and of women and gender.  A graduate of Mundelein College (BA 1968) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (PhD 1973), she has published articles in The Journal of American History, American Quarterly, The Journal of the Early Republic, and other scholarly journals.  Her books are Sunday School: The Formation of an American Institution, 1790-1880 (Yale University Press, 1988); The Origins of Women’s Activism: New York and Boston, 1797-1840 (University of North Carolina Press, 2002) and Women’s Rights in the United States: A History in Documents (Oxford University Press, 2014).  She is currently researching the production of popular versions of women’s history in the 19th and 20th –century United States.  She has been the recipient of fellowships and awards from the National Endowment for the Humanities; the Radcliffe Research Scholars Program; the Hagley Museum and Library; the Western Association of Women Historians; the American Association for State and Local History; the Middle States Council for the Social Studies; and the University of Delaware.

Angela Hoseth, Computer Support Specialist, I

Angela Hoseth, Coordinator, History Media CenterAngie is a computer support specialist for the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Delaware. She received the B.A. in Anthropology and B.S. in Geography from the University of North Dakota and the Master of Education in Educational Technology from the University of Delaware. Angie has been a member of the Women’s History Through Film committee since 2000.

 

Marie Laberge, Assistant Professor

Marie Laberge , Women & Gender studiesDr. Marie Laberge (B.A. Simmons College, Boston; M.A. & Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison) is an Assistant Professor of Women and Gender Studies Department. Dr. Laberge has taught at UD since 1996 and is an expert in oral history data collection and analysis. She is the primary Interviewer and Researcher, “Women at the Center: History of Women’s Studies at the University of Delaware” Oral History Project and has been continuing that work and producing a short 20-minute video. This film explores the history of women’s studies at the University of Delaware using oral histories and it is a center piece of the 40th Anniversary of Women’s Studies at UD. A past recipient of the University of Delaware Excellence in Teaching Award, Dr Laberge teaches: ‘Introduction to Women’s Studies, ‘ ‘Women and Violence,” “Women and Religion” “Women and Work,” “Introduction to Feminist Theory” and “Feminist Oral History.” She has also organized and supervised the Women’s Studies lecture series on “Research on Women,” “Research on Race, Ethnicity and Culture” the “Women’s History through Film” Series and the “Gender in International Films” Series. Dr Laberge has regularly taught the First Year Experience Freshman Fall seminar.

Karen Rosenberg, Professor of Anthropology

Karen RosenbergKaren Rosenberg is a biological anthropologist whose work focuses on human evolution, with special emphasis on Neanderthals. Karen conducts research into the evolution of women and childbirth practices and is the co-editor of the journal PaleoAnthropology.

 

 

 

 

Patricia Sloane-White, Professor of Anthropology

sloane-whitePatricia Sloane-White, Professor Women & Gender Studies and Anthropology at the University of Delaware and the Chair of Women & Gender Studies. She served as the Director of Islamic Studies (2011-2014) and was a Faculty Fellow in the College of Arts and Sciences, directing the Plastino Scholars, Dean’s Scholars, and the Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies programs. Professor Sloane-White is a two-time recent Fulbright Scholar to Malaysia, affiliated with the University of Malaya and the International Islamic University of Malaysia.

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