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Jose C. Moya <moya@ucla.edu> UCLA Currently working on a socio-cultural history of anarchism in belle epoque Buenos Aires and of May Day in the Atlantic World |
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Address: | UCLA Department of History Los Angeles, California 90095-1473 United States |
Primary Phone: | 1 310 267-8475 |
Fax Number: | 1 310 206-9630 |
Web Page: | https://www.history.ucla.edu/moya/ |
List Affiliations: | Advisory Board Member for H-Migration |
Interests: | Ethnic History / Studies Labor History / Studies Latin American and Caribbean History / Studies Research and Methodology Urban History / Studies |
Bio: EDUCATION 1988,Ph.D. in History, Rutgers University ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE 1996-Present, Associate Professor, UCLA AWARDS 2000, Bryce Wood Award (honorable mention) for best book by the Latin American Studies Association. 2000, Bolton Prize for best book in Latin American History from the American Historical Association. 1999, Sharlin Memorial Award for outstanding book from the Social Science History Association. 1999, Hubert Herring Prize for best book from the Pacific Council on Latin American Studies. 1998, Choice 35th annual Outstanding Academic Book. RECENT FELLOWSHIPS & GRANTS 2002, ACLS, Burkhardt Fellowship 2001, President’s Research Fellowship in the Humanities 1998, NEH, Fellowship for University Professors 1998, Fulbright Fellowship RECENT PUBLICATIONS Cousins and Strangers: Spanish Immigrants in Buenos Aires, 1850-1930 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998). La inmigración española en la Argentina, editor (Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos, 1999) Latin American History and Historiography, editor (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming Summer 2004) “Immigrants and Associations: A Global and Historical Perspective,” forthcoming in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (2004). “The Positive Side of Stereotypes: Jewish Anarchists in Early-Twentieth-Century Buenos Aires,” forthcoming in Jewish History (2004). “For a Dialectical Approach to the Study of Immigration” Historical Methods v. 34, 1 (Winter, 2001): 46-50. “Spanish Immigration in Cuba and Argentina,” in Samuel L. Baily and Eduardo J. Miguez eds., Mass Migration to Modern Latin America (Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, 2003). “Italians in Buenos Aires’ Anarchist Movement: Gender Ideology and Women’s Participation,” in Donna Gabaccia and Franca Iacovetta eds., Women, Gender, and Transnational Lives: Italian Women around the World (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002) “Los gallegos en Buenos Aires durante el siglo XIX: Inmigración, adaptación ocupacional, e imaginario sexual,” in Xose M. Núñez Seixas, ed., La Galicia Austral (Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos, 2000). “Latin America and the World Economy since 1800” in Estudios Interdisciplinarios de America Latina y el Caribe [Tel Aviv] (Jan.-June, 2000). |