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| Publications of Gabriel N. Rosenberg :recent first alphabetical by type listing:%% @article{fds298330, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Food and Everyday Life on Kentucky Farms, 1920–1950}, Journal = {History: Reviews of New Books}, Volume = {35}, Number = {2}, Pages = {59-59}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2007}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0361-2759}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03612759.2007.10527016}, Doi = {10.1080/03612759.2007.10527016}, Key = {fds298330} } @misc{fds298331, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Department of Agriculture}, Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of American Environmental History}, Publisher = {Facts on File}, Editor = {Brosnan, K}, Year = {2010}, ISBN = {0816067937}, Key = {fds298331} } @misc{fds298334, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {The Charleston Slave Conspiracy of 1822}, Volume = {2}, Pages = {163-190}, Booktitle = {Conflicts in American History: The Early Republic, 1783-1860}, Publisher = {Facts on File}, Editor = {Nicholson, CB}, Year = {2010}, ISBN = {0816070938}, Key = {fds298334} } @misc{fds298340, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {The Programa Interamericano para la Juventud Rural and Rural Modernization in Cold War Latin America}, Journal = {Research Reports of the Rockefeller Archives}, Year = {2011}, Key = {fds298340} } @article{fds298338, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Not in This Family: Gays and the Meaning of Kinship in Postwar North America, by Heather Murray}, Journal = {The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth}, Volume = {5}, Number = {2}, Pages = {337-339}, Year = {2012}, Month = {Spring}, ISSN = {1939-6724}, Key = {fds298338} } @misc{fds298328, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {A Painful Retreat on Child Labor}, Journal = {Raleigh News-Observer}, Year = {2012}, Month = {May}, Key = {fds298328} } @article{fds298339, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight, by Timothy Pachirat}, Journal = {Agricultural History}, Volume = {87}, Number = {2}, Pages = {259-261}, Year = {2013}, Month = {Spring}, ISSN = {1533-8290}, Key = {fds298339} } @article{fds352561, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Youth as Infrastructure: 4-H and the Intimate State in the 1920s Rural United States}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Editor = {Sparrow, J and Novak, W and Sawyer, S}, Year = {2013}, Key = {fds352561} } @article{fds226648, Author = {G.N. Rosenberg and M. Honeck}, Title = {Transnational Generations: Organizing Youth in the Cold War}, Journal = {Diplomatic History}, Volume = {38}, Number = {2}, Year = {2014}, Month = {April}, ISSN = {1467-7709}, Key = {fds226648} } @article{fds298335, Author = {Rosenberg, GN and Honeck, M}, Title = {Transnational Generations: Organizing Youth and Cold War International Relations, 1945-1980}, Volume = {38}, Number = {2}, Year = {2014}, Month = {April}, ISSN = {1467-7709}, Key = {fds298335} } @misc{fds298327, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Learning to Hate the Pacers, a Team I Have Long Loved}, Journal = {Indianapolis Star}, Year = {2014}, Month = {April}, Key = {fds298327} } @misc{fds298326, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Where are the Animals in the History of Sexuality?}, Journal = {Notches: (Re)marks on the History of Sexuality}, Year = {2014}, Month = {September}, url = {http://notchesblog.com/2014/09/02/where-are-animals-in-the-history-of-sexuality/}, Key = {fds298326} } @misc{fds298333, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Youth as Infrastructure: 4-H and the Intimate State in the 1920s Rural United States}, Booktitle = {Boundaries of the State in U.S. History}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Editor = {Sparrow, J and Novak, W and Sawyer, S}, Year = {2015}, ISBN = {9780226277646}, url = {http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/B/bo21386415.html}, Key = {fds298333} } @book{fds298336, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {The 4-H Harvest: Sexuality and the State in Rural America}, Series = {Politics and Culture in Modern America}, Pages = {312 pages}, Publisher = {University of Pennsylvania Press}, Year = {2015}, ISBN = {978-0-8122-4753-4}, url = {http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/book/15441.html}, Abstract = {"Eureka! Who would have thought that a history of the 4-H club could brilliantly illuminate so many far corners of knowledge: state projects of masculinity and reproduction, patriotism, modernity, imperialism, race, eugenics and more. Gabriel N. Rosenberg's bio-political view is original, surprising, deeply-sourced, convincing, and a delightful read."—James C. Scott, Yale University "This beautifully crafted study offers a braided history of the state, the body, and the countryside. At its center is the 4-H club, which Rosenberg brilliantly reveals not as a nostalgic relic of an agrarian past but as an active engine of modern bio-politics. Whether or not you have ever set foot at the county fair, The 4-H Harvest is an absorbing and utterly original read."—Margot Canaday, Princeton University "Gabriel N. Rosenberg's masterful history of 4-H is the first in-depth study of an institution that every historian of agriculture, not to mention every rural American, recognizes as an essential component of the modern rural landscape. The project delivers a sophisticated mix of cultural, political, and economic history that exposes the hidden hands and visible bodies at work in constructing twentieth-century U.S. governance in the American heartland."—Shane Hamilton, University of Georgia 4-H, the iconic rural youth program run by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has enrolled more than 70 million Americans over the last century. As the first comprehensive history of the organization, The 4-H Harvest tracks 4-H from its origins in turn-of-the-century agricultural modernization efforts, through its role in the administration of federal programs during the New Deal and World War II, to its status as an instrument of international development in Cold War battlegrounds like Vietnam and Latin America. In domestic and global settings, 4-H's advocates dreamed of transforming rural economies, communities, and families. Organizers believed the clubs would bypass backward patriarchs reluctant to embrace modern farming techniques. In their place, 4-H would cultivate efficient, capital-intensive farms and convince rural people to trust federal expertise. The modern 4-H farm also featured gender-appropriate divisions of labor and produced healthy, robust children. To retain the economic potential of the "best" youth, clubs insinuated state agents at the heart of rural family life. By midcentury, the vision of healthy 4-H'ers on family farms advertised the attractiveness of the emerging agribusiness economy. With rigorous archival research, Gabriel N. Rosenberg provocatively argues that public acceptance of the political economy of agribusiness hinged on federal efforts to establish a modern rural society through effective farming technology and techniques as well as through carefully managed gender roles, procreation, and sexuality. The 4-H Harvest shows how 4-H, like the countryside it often symbolizes, is the product of the modernist ambition to efficiently govern rural economies, landscapes, and populations.}, Key = {fds298336} } @misc{fds305639, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Breeds and Breeding}, Volume = {10}, Booktitle = {Animals}, Publisher = {Macmillan}, Editor = {Juno Parrenas}, Year = {2015}, Month = {July}, Key = {fds305639} } @article{fds298329, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {A Race Suicide Among the Hogs: The Biopolitics of Pork in the United States, 1865-1940}, Journal = {American Quarterly}, Volume = {68}, Number = {1}, Pages = {49-73}, Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press}, Year = {2016}, ISSN = {0003-0678}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000372946900005&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1353/aq.2016.0007}, Key = {fds298329} } @misc{fds298332, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {A Classroom in the Barnyard: Reproducing Heterosexuality in American 4-H}, Booktitle = {Queering the Countryside: New Directions in Rural Queer Studies}, Publisher = {New York University Press}, Editor = {Gray, M and Johnson, C and Gilley, B}, Year = {2016}, Key = {fds298332} } @article{fds344566, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Beyond the Fruited Plain: Food and Agriculture in U.S. Literature, 1850-1905}, Journal = {AMERICAN LITERATURE}, Volume = {88}, Number = {2}, Pages = {408-410}, Year = {2016}, Key = {fds344566} } @article{fds344565, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Global Appetites: American Power and the Literature of Food}, Journal = {AMERICAN LITERATURE}, Volume = {88}, Number = {2}, Pages = {408-410}, Year = {2016}, Key = {fds344565} } @article{fds344568, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {Just Queer Folks: Gender and Sexuality in Rural America}, Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SEXUALITY}, Volume = {25}, Number = {1}, Pages = {180-182}, Publisher = {UNIV TEXAS PRESS}, Year = {2016}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds344568} } @misc{fds344567, Author = {Rosenberg, G}, Title = {Fetishizing Family Farms}, Journal = {The Boston Globe}, Year = {2016}, Month = {April}, Key = {fds344567} } @article{fds344564, Author = {Rosenberg, G}, Title = {How Meat Changed Sex}, Journal = {GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies}, Volume = {23}, Number = {4}, Pages = {473-507}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2017}, Month = {October}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-4157487}, Abstract = {<jats:p>The article explores the history and structure of American laws criminalizing sexual contact between humans and animals to demonstrate how the ecological conditions of late capitalism are remaking sexual taxonomies, practices, and identities. It notes that the majority of these statutes have been enacted within the past three decades and most contain language that explicitly exempts animal husbandry and veterinary medicine from prosecution. The article explores the legislative politics that produce these exemptions and exposes an underlying ambiguity: in the age of industrial reproduction, the “accepted practices” of animal husbandry can be distinguished from bestiality only through legal fiat. The structure of the laws exempts human sexual contact with animals when it reproduces biocapital and produces “perverse” bestialists and “normal” farmers as mirrored categories, distinguished not by their relations to animals but by their relations to capital. Finally, the article reads this insight against the biopolitical theorist Giorgio Agamben's concept of anthropogenesis and notes that such exemptions reveal a limitation in his theory. In place of the timeless ritualism of Agamben's “anthropological machine,” the article argues for an account of speciation that recognizes strategic gradations of pain and pleasure, the critical role of sexual violence and reproduction, and processes of trans-speciative procreation.</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.1215/10642684-4157487}, Key = {fds344564} } @article{fds351383, Author = {Way, and Okie, and Funes-Monzote, and Nance, and Rosenberg, and Specht, and Swart}, Title = {Roundtable: Animal History in a Time of Crisis}, Journal = {Agricultural History}, Volume = {94}, Number = {3}, Pages = {444-444}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2020}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3098/ah.2020.094.3.444}, Doi = {10.3098/ah.2020.094.3.444}, Key = {fds351383} } @misc{fds352572, Author = {Rosenberg, G}, Title = {Animals}, Pages = {32-41}, Booktitle = {The Routledge History of American Sexuality}, Year = {2020}, ISBN = {9781315637259}, Abstract = {This book is an invaluable resource for students or scholars seeking to grasp current research on the history of sexuality and is a seminal text for undergraduate and graduate courses on American history, Sexuality Studies, Women's Studies, ...}, Key = {fds352572} } @article{fds352560, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {No Scrubs: Livestock breeding, eugenics, and the state in the early twentieth-century United States}, Journal = {Journal of American History}, Volume = {107}, Number = {2}, Pages = {362-387}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2020}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaaa179}, Doi = {10.1093/jahist/jaaa179}, Key = {fds352560} } @article{fds357652, Author = {Rosenberg, GN}, Title = {On the scene of zoonotic intimacies jungle, market, pork plant}, Journal = {Transgender Studies Quarterly}, Volume = {7}, Number = {4}, Pages = {646-656}, Year = {2020}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/23289252-8665341}, Abstract = {COVID-19, like HIV/AIDS before it, is being allegorized as a cost of perverse intimacies with nature. This essay surveys three scenes of intimate zoonotic exchange — the jungle, the wet market, and the pork plant — and maps how each contributes to the operation of racial capitalism.}, Doi = {10.1215/23289252-8665341}, Key = {fds357652} } | |
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