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Jon G. Lemmond <jonucsb@yahoo.com> University of California, Santa Barbara I am currently working on domestic violence in late Medieval and early-modern Nuremberg. More generally, I am interested in pre-modern cultural studies of gender, the history of the body and religious experience and violence. |
Address: | 810 Westmont Road Santa Barbara, California 93108 United States |
List Affiliations: | Advisory Board Member for H-HRE Reviewer for H-HRE |
Interests: | Intellectual History Medieval and Byzantine History / Studies Religious Studies and Theology Urban History / Studies Women, Gender, and Sexuality |
Bio: EDUCATION: Ph.D., Candidate, Early Modern Europe, University of California, Santa Barbara. Dissertation Title: ‘With Carrot or Club’: Gender Relations and Domestic Violence in Sixteenth-Century Nuremberg, Degree Expected: June, 2006 Fields of Study: German Reformation, English Reformation, Late Medieval Family & Gender, Ottoman Empire Dissertation Advisor: Abraham Friesen Dissertation Committee: Abraham Friesen; Sears McGee; Carol Lansing M.Div., Concentration in Church History, Fuller Theological Seminary, 1999. B.A., Double Major in Religious Studies and Music, Houston Baptist University, 1994. CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS: “Doctor Siemann is IN: The Problematization of Male Authority in Sixteenth-Century Nuremberg” Sixteenth-Century Studies Conference, Denver, Colorado, October 25, 2001. “Rhetoric and Radical Women: The Formation of Group Identity and Feminine Empowerment in Sixteenth-Century Marginalized Religious Groups” Interdisciplinary Conference on Language and Literature (ICOLL 2000), Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, October 20, 2000. TEACHING EXPERIENCE: Adjunct Assistant Professor, Religious Studies Department, Westmont College, Santa Barbara. RS 150 God, the Devil, and Early Modern Religious Culture: the Witchcraze and Inquisitions in Europe (1400-1800), Summer 2004. RS 151 History of World Christianity, 2002 -2004 (four semesters). RS 150 Gender & Sex in Historical Context: the Body, Gender Constructions, & Sexuality in Pre-Modern Christianity, Spring 2004. RS 120 History of Christianity during the Reformation Era (1450-1648), Summer 2003. Lecturer, Senior Summer Sessions Institute, Santa Barbara. Close Encounters: Western Culture from 1050-1715, Summer 2002. Laws, Gods, and Heroes: The Rise of Western Civilization from Ancient History to 1050 A.D., Summer 2001. Lead Teaching Assistant, University of California, Santa Barbara. 2001-2002. Duties included: facilitating orientation for first-year TAs, conducting nine TA training seminars, acting as liaison between TAs and faculty, supervising and evaluating first-year TAs, authoring grant proposals for Instructional Development, revising and updating the History Department’s TA Manual, and creating TA website. PUBLICATIONS: “A Journey to Austell: My Four Conversions” in Fuller Voices: Then and Now, ed. Russell Spittler, (Fuller Seminary Press, 2004). REVIEWS: Christianity and Sexuality in the Early Modern World: Regulating Desire, Reforming Practice. Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. London: Routledge, 2000. 288 pp. Sixteenth-Century Studies Journal, Vol. XXXIII, No. 2 (Summer 2002), pp. 572-573. Europe in the Sixteenth Century. Pettegree, Andrew. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2002. 380 pp. Sixteenth-Century Studies Journal. RESEARCH & TEACHING INTERESTS: Renaissance-Reformation Europe, Early Modern Social and Cultural History, History of Global Christianity, History of Sexuality and Gender. |