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Jason M. Kelly <jaskelly@iupui.edu> Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis |
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Address: | School of Liberal Arts, Indiana University Department of History, IUPUI 504B Cavanaugh Hall, 425 University Blvd. Indianapolis, Indiana 46202-5140 United States |
Primary Phone: | 317.274.1689 |
List Affiliations: | Advisory Board Member for H-Albion List Editor for H-Albion Reviewer for H-Business Web Editor for H-Albion |
Reviews: | untitled |
Interests: | Anthropology European History / Studies Women, Gender, and Sexuality |
Bio: CURRENT POSITION Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis Associate Professor of British History EDUCATION Ph.D. History, University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), 2004 M.A. History, UCSB, 1999 B.A. History, Pennsylvania State University,1997 COURSES • Western Civilization (Prehistory to 1500, 1500 to Present) • History of Britain, 1688 to present • Comparative Perspectives on British Imperialism • Gender in Eighteenth-Century Britain SELECTED BOOKS AND ARTICLES Archaeology and Identity in the British Enlightenment: The Society of Dilettanti, 1732 to 1816. New Haven and London: Yale University Press and the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. 2010. (associate editor for Britain) The International Encyclopedia of Protest and Revolution, 1500 to Present. 8 vols. Ed. Immanuel Ness. Oxford: Blackwell. 2010. “James ‘Athenian’ Stuart’s Portrait of James Dawkins.” The British Art Journal. 8.2 (2007): 24-25. “The Portraits of Sir James Gray (c. 1708-73).” The British Art Journal. 8.1 (2007): 15-19. “Riots, Revelries, and Rumor: Libertinism and Masculine Association in Enlightenment London.” Journal of British Studies. 45.4 (2006): 759–795. “Society of Dilettanti.” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. (ed.) Looking Up: Observation and Science in the Early Modern Period. Ottawa: Legas and the Center for Communication and Information Sciences, 2002. With William Pencak. “Charles Peirce, Semiotics, and the History of Science.” Looking Up: Observation and Science in the Early Modern Period. Ed. Jason M. Kelly. Ottawa: Legas and the Center for Communication and Information Sciences, 2002. 7-12. |