MARGARET SUSAN THOMPSON

Department of History
145 Eggers Hall
The Maxwell School of Citizenship & Public Affairs
Syracuse University
Syracuse, New York 13244-1090
(315) 443-2210 (voice); 443-9082 (fax)

E-Mail: msthom1@ibm.net (preferred); also: msthomps@juno.com or msthomps@maxwell.syr.edu

ACADEMIC HISTORY

AWARDS AND GRANTS:

[does not include routine institutional support]

PUBLICATIONS:


Book Reviews in Wisconsin Magazine of History, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Congress and the Presidency, America, Commonweal, Catholic Historical Review, New York History, The Historian, Western Historical Review, Records of the American Catholic Historical Society, Journal of the American Academy of Religion.

PAPERS and PRESENTATIONS:

[does not include conference commentaries, routine in-house presentations, guest lectures in classes, etc.; papers subsequently published are listed above]

TALKS:

[Religious congregations, sisters' organizations, and general public; a representative sample]

National Sisters' Vocation Conference; Northwest Conference of Women Religious; Sisters of St. Joseph of Boston; Institute of D'Youvillian Spirituality (Grey Nuns); Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph (Canada); Sisters of Charity of Nazareth; League of Women Voters (Gainesville, Florida, Syracuse and New York State); Greater Syracuse N.O.W.; Wadhams Hall Theological Seminary; University of Notre Dame Seminar on American Catholicism; Smith College; Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur (Connecticut); Vocation Affiliates Program and 1994 Lenten Public Lecture Series, Diocese of Syracuse; Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet (Latham Province); Chicago Catholic Women, Sisters of Providence (Indiana); Sisters of the Holy Cross (Indiana); Sisters of St. Benedict (Minnesota); Diocese of Syracuse; Sisters of Mercy of the Americas; Sisters of Mercy, St. Louis; Syracuse Univ. Library Associates; United Church of Fayetteville, NY.

WORK IN PROGRESS:

The Yoke of Grace: American Nuns and Social Change, 1808-1917. Book-length analysis of Catholic sisters, from the foundation of the first indigenous American community to the 1917 codification of canon law. To be published by Oxford University Press; prospectus available upon request.

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

1981-- . Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York.

Asst. Prof. of History, 1981-86; Associate Professor, 1986- ; Director of American Studies, 1986-94; Director of Graduate Studies (History), 1989-92; Assoc. Prof. of Political Science, 1993- .

1977-81. Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois.

Instructor in History, 1977-79; Assistant Professor, 1979-81; Director of American Studies, 1981.

OTHER EXPERIENCE:

[not including advising or other routine "service" responsibilities at S.U., routine community involvement, etc.]

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS:

REFERENCES

available upon request

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