Visiting Assistant Professor
Migration, Labor and Working Class History, Women and Gender in the U.S., Latin America and Africa The Johns Hopkins University Department of History 2850 North Charles Street Baltimore MD 21218 Dell House 1401A Telephone: 410-516-7663 Email: shellweiss@jhu.edu
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Curriculum Vitae As a scholar of Modern American History, my work focuses on the inter-connected processes of migration, labor and race relations in the late nineteenth and twentieth century United States and Atlantic World. My current research focuses on foreign labor recruitment and race relations in the U.S. South and Latin America. This will be the subject of a book, _Translators Wanted in Dixie: Immigration and Race Relations in the Twentieth Century South_ (in progress). I am also currently working on an edited collection devoted to the legacy of the Dillingham Commission on Immigration. My first book, _Coming to Miami: A Social History_ (University of Florida Press, December 2008) offers a unique perspective on the larger narrative of 20th century immigration U.S. history by focusing southward toward the Caribbean and Latin America, rather than primarily on Europe. Portions of this research have been published in several articles and book chapters, including a collection of labor history essays, _Florida's Labor and Working-Class Past: Current Perspectives on Labor History from Spanish Florida to the New Immigration (University of Florida Press, November 2008) which I am co-editing with Robert Cassanello. This research has helped shape my teaching foci and community work. And I am particularly interested in how migration, race relations, and economic developments have reshaping the city of Baltimore. |