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    Of possible interest to Native American and Indigenous Studies
    scholars:<br>
    <br>
    -------- Original Message --------
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          <th align="RIGHT" nowrap="nowrap" valign="BASELINE">Subject: </th>
          <td>[EARAM-L] Science of Empire bibliography is posted!</td>
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          <th align="RIGHT" nowrap="nowrap" valign="BASELINE">Date: </th>
          <td>Mon, 7 May 2012 13:52:25 -0400</td>
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          <th align="RIGHT" nowrap="nowrap" valign="BASELINE">Reply-To:
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          <td>Society of Early Americanists
            <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:EARAM-L@LISTSERV.KENT.EDU">&lt;EARAM-L@LISTSERV.KENT.EDU&gt;</a></td>
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    <pre>Dear colleagues:

The bibliography created from the suggestions you offered on the SEA list for
my fall graduate course, The Science of Empire, is now posted on the SEA
webpage.  Thank you again, everyone, for your replies to my query!

My course is in early modern studies, pre-1800, so I removed some of the
suggestions that were fully nineteenth-century in orientation.  

As always, Susan Imbarrato took the lead here and found some additional
resources of use for those studying the history of science and the environment,
and she created a very useful page of materials and sites related to this topic
for our mutual benefit.  

Here are the links Susan provided:

The Society of Early Americanists Teaching Early American Topics page:
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://web.mnstate.edu/seateaching/">http://web.mnstate.edu/seateaching/</a>

Literature of the History of Science &amp; Empire:
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://web.mnstate.edu/seateaching/es_historyandscience.html">http://web.mnstate.edu/seateaching/es_historyandscience.html</a>

I'll now tackle the fall syllabus with greater ease.  Looking forward to
knocking off this syllabus before the week is out!  (It never feels like summer
is here until those fall syllabuses are completed!)

Best wishes,
Carla Mulford, English, Penn State


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