MARSHA L. WEISIGER

CURRICULUM VITA

 

Department of History, New Mexico State University, MSC 3H              (505) 646-4037

P.O. Box 30001, Las Cruces, NM 88003-8001                                       

 

EDUCATION

PhD (History), University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2000

MA (History), University of Oklahoma, 1991

BA (History), Arizona State University, 1978, summa cum laude

BA (Anthropology), Arizona State University, 1978, summa cum laude

 

ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT

New Mexico State University, Department of History                             2001-present

      Assistant Professor

Southern Methodist University, Clements Center for Southwest Studies    2000-2001

      Carl B. and Florence E. King Fellow in Southwest History

University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of History                        Fall 1998

      Instructor

University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of History                        Fall 1996

Teaching Assistant

University of Oklahoma, Department of History                                      Summer 1990

Instructor

University of Oklahoma, Department of History                                      1988-1990

Teaching Assistant

 

COURSES TAUGHT

Making the American West

American West in Popular Culture

Southwestern Environmental History

Plague, Plunder, and Preservation: American Environmental History

Graduate Reading Seminar: Environment, Ecology, and Culture

Graduate Research Seminar: Land, Nature, and Culture

Historic Preservation

Public History Seminar: History and Memory

Introduction to Recent American History

Nature and Society (Southern Methodist University)

U.S. Environmental History (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

American West in Literature and Film (University of Oklahoma)

 

WORK IN PROGRESS

Sheep Dreams: Environment, Cultural Identity, and Gender in Navajo Country.  Book-length monograph in progress, under contract with the University of Washington Press, Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books.

Buildings of Wisconsin.  Principal author, with Jeff Dean, Jim Draeger, Geoffrey Gyrisco, Paul Jacobovich, William Philpott, and Tracy Will, of an encyclopedia-length manuscript.  Buildings of the United States series, prepared under the auspices of the Society of Architectural Historians, under contract with the Center for American Places.  Forthcoming October 2006.

 “The Arts and Crafts Movement in Wisconsin.”  In Buildings of Wisconsin,  under contract with the Center for American Places.  Forthcoming October 2006.

“Migrant Camps.”  Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and CultureOklahoma City, Oklahoma Historical Society. Forthcoming 2006.

 

PUBLICATIONS

Books

Land of Plenty: Oklahomans in the Cotton Fields of Arizona, 1933-1942.  Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1995.  Recipient of the Angie Debo Prize in the History of the American Southwest, University of Oklahoma Press, 1999 (refereed).  Finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award, Oklahoma Center for the Book, 1996.

 

Articles

“The Origins of Navajo Pastoralism.” Journal of the Southwest 46 (Summer 2004): 253-82.

“The Debate Over El Lobo: Can Historians Make a Difference?”  Public Historian 26 (Winter 2004): 123-44.

"The Reception of The Grapes of Wrath in Oklahoma: A Reappraisal."  The Chronicles of Oklahoma 70 (Winter 1991-92): 394-415.

"Mythic Fields of Plenty: The Plight of the Depression-Era Oklahoma Migrants in Arizona."  The Journal of Arizona History 32 (Autumn 1991): 241-266.  Recipient of the C. L. Sonnichsen Award for best article published in the Journal in 1991.

 

Public History

Boosters, Streetcars, and Bungalows.  Phoenix: Roosevelt Action Association, 1984.

The Social and Economic Effects of the Siting of the St. Lucie Nuclear Plant, with David Pijawka.  Washington, D.C.: Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1981.

 

Reviews and Indexes

Book Review.  Navaho Expedition: Journal of a Military Reconnaissance from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the Navaho Country, Made in 1849 by Lieutenant James H. Simpson, edited by Frank McNitt, Military History of the West. Forthcoming.

Book Review.  Diné: A History of the Navajos and For Our Navajo People: Diné Letters, Speeches, and Petitions, 1900-1960, both by Peter Iverson and Monty Roessel (2002). Journal of Arizona History, Summer 2004.

Book review.  Under Sacred Ground: A History of Navajo Oil, by Kathleen P. Chamberlain (2001). Journal of Arizona History, Autumn 2002.

Book review.  Indian Country, God’s Country: Native Americans and the National Parks, by Philip Burnham (2000). Environmental History, July 2001.

Book review.  Revolt Among the Sharecroppers, by Howard Kester, with an introduction by Alex Lichtenstein (1997). Labor History, November 1999.

Book review.  Remaking the Agrarian Dream: New Deal Rural Resettlement in the Mountain West, by Brian Q. Cannon (1996). Journal of Arizona History, Summer 1998.

Index preparer.  Muir: Nature Writings, by John Muir; edited by William Cronon.  New York: Library of America, 1997.

 

PROFESSIONAL PAPERS

“Teaching Borders, Boundaries, and Frontiers on the U.S.-Mexico Border.” Panel discussion with Kenneth Hammond and Margaret Malamud.  Crossing Borders Interdisciplinary Conference, University of Glamorgan, Wales, December 2004.

“Remembering Ganado: Livestock Reduction, Landscape Change, and Memory in Navajo Country.”  Navajo Studies Conference, Durango, Colorado, October 2004.

“Remembering Ganado: Livestock Reduction, Landscape Change, and Memory in Navajo Country.”  American Society for Environmental History, Victoria, British Columbia, March 2004.

“Environmental and Public History.”  Plenary-session panelist.  American Society for Environmental History and the National Council on Public History (joint meeting), Victoria, British Columbia, March 2004.

“The Debate over El Lobo: Can Historians Make a Difference?”  American Society for Environmental History, Providence, Rhode Island, March 2003.

“The Reintroduction of the Mexican Gray Wolf in the Southwest,” round-table discussion on “Environmental Historians and their Publics,” with Nancy Langston, Lynne Heasley, Thompson Smith, Richard White, and Paul Sabin.  American Society for Environmental History, Denver, Colorado, March 2002.

"Sheep is Life: Land Use, Environment, and Identity in Navajo Country."  Western History Association, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 1997.

"Contested Stories of the Land: Federal Range Experts, Navajos, and Livestock Grazing, 1890-1940."  American Society for Environmental History, Baltimore, Maryland, March 1997.

"Preserving Community History: Interpreting Cultural Landscapes."  Panel discussion with William Cronon, Dolores Hayden, Arnold Alanen, and Rebecca Bernstein, University of Wisconsin-Madison lecture series on preserving women's history, March 1995.

"Preservation Historians: Building a New Western History."  Western History Association, Tulsa, Oklahoma, October 1993.

"So Long Its Been Good to Know You: Exodus from the Oklahoma Cotton Belt, 1933-1940."  Social Science Association, Austin, Texas, 1992.

"Prelude to The Grapes of Wrath: Oklahoma Migrants in Arizona."  Western History Association, Reno, Nevada, October 1990.

"Congressional Investigation: The Tolan Committee and the Okie Migration of the 1930s."  Mid-America Conference on History, Stillwater, Oklahoma, September 1989.

"The Reception of The Grapes of Wrath in Oklahoma: A Reappraisal."  Phi Alpha Theta, Weatherford, Oklahoma, February 1989.  Recipient of the award for best paper by a graduate student.

"Cotton Pickers Wanted:  The Lure of Arizona in the Depression Migration from Oklahoma."  Oklahoma Association of Professional Historians, El Reno, February 1988.

 

PUBLIC TALKS

“Desperately Seeking Diné.”  Talk for the Southwest and Border Cultures Institute, October 2003.

 

ACADEMIC and PUBLICATION AWARDS

Fellowship, National Endowment for the Humanities, 2004-05

Educational Minigrant, College of Arts and Sciences, New Mexico State University, 2003

Senior Fellow, Environmental Leadership Program, 2003-present

Faculty Research Award, Charles Redd Center for Western Studies, 2003

Research Minigrant, Southwest and Border Cultures Institute, New Mexico State University, 2003, 2004-05

National Endowment for the Humanities Focus Grant for “Creating Connections” project (co-principal investigator), 2003

Research Minigrant, Arts and Sciences Research Center, New Mexico State University, 2002, 2003

Carl B. and Florence E. King Fellow, Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University, 2000-2001

Fellow, Environmental Leadership Program, 2000-2002

Angie Debo Prize (for Land of Plenty), University of Oklahoma Press, 1999

Star Fellowship, Environmental Protection Agency, 1997-2000

American Fellow, American Association of University Women, 1997-98

Dissertation Research Grant, Department of History, UW-Madison, 1996, 1997

Phillips Fund Grant, American Philosophical Society, 1996

Graduate Student Award, Coordinating Council on Women in History/Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, 1996

Walter Rundell Graduate Student Award, Western History Association, 1995

C. L. Sonnichsen Award (for “Mythic Fields of Plenty”), Arizona Historical Society, 1992

A. K. Christian Graduate Fellowship in History, OU, 1990

District American History Scholarship Award, Colonial Dames of America, Oklahoma Chapter, 1990

Outstanding Graduate Paper, Phi Alpha Theta (Oklahoma region), 1989

Woman of the Year, ASU, 1978

Outstanding Liberal Arts Student, ASU, 1978

Reynold's Scholarship in Anthropology, ASU, 1978

Phi Beta Kappa, 1978

College Register, 1978

Mortar Board (Senior Honor Society), 1977-1978

Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges, 1977‑1978

Phi Kappa Phi, 1977

Phi Alpha Theta (History Honor Society), 1976‑1978, 1988-1990

Regents' Academic Scholarship, ASU, 1975‑1978

Dean's List, 1975-1978

 

PUBLIC HISTORY GRANTS

New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities; Globalization, Modernization, and Its Discontents Speakers’ Series, 2004.

Southwest and Border Cultures Institute; Borders, Boundaries, and Frontiers Speakers’ Series, 2003

McCune Charitable Foundation, Leopold Forum: El Lobo (symposium) 2002-2003

Thaw Charitable Trust, Leopold Forum: El Lobo (symposium) 2002-2003

Charles Redd Center for Western Studies, Leopold Forum: El Lobo (symposium) 2002-2003

Southwest and Border Cultures Institute, Leopold Forum: El Lobo (symposium), 2002-2003

New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities, Leopold Forum: El Lobo (symposium), 2002-2003

Environmental Leadership Program, Leopold Forum: El Lobo (symposium), 2001-2003

Oklahoma Humanities Foundation, Forgotten Legacies: Glimpses of Oklahoma's Social and Cultural History (museum exhibitions, traveling exhibit, and humanities lectures), 1991

Oklahoma Humanities Foundation, Oklahoma-Arizona Migration Project (oral history), 1990

Arizona Council for the Humanities, Oklahoma-Arizona Migration Project (oral history), 1990

 

PUBLIC HISTORY/CONSULTING EXPERIENCE

Mesquite Street-Original Townsite Historic District Survey                                  Summer 2004

Principal investigator for reconnaissance-level survey of historic Hispanic neighborhood, consisting largely of adobe buildings.  Conducted for Steve Newby Associates, the City of Las Cruces, and the Las Esperanzas neighborhood association.

American Journey Project                                                                                  Fall 2002

Member of the Editorial Advisory Committee for the creation of a Web site (www.americanjourneys.org) of the classic primary sources documenting European and Euroamerican exploration of the United States, for the Wisconsin Historical Society in conjunction with National History Day.

Leopold Forum: El Lobo                                                                         February 2003

Project director for humanities symposium on the reintroduction of the Mexican gray wolf into the Southwest borderlands, bringing together environmental historians, biologists, policy-makers, environmental activists, and ranchers. 

Living U.S. Women’s History Project                                                                 2000-2001

Oral historian for project documenting the trail blazers of women’s history, under the direction of Mary Rothschild and Kathryn Kish Sklar.  Interviewed Linda Kerber, Sara Evans, Lila Rupp, and Judith Leavitt.

Buildings of Wisconsin                                                                                       1993-2001

Historian and principal author of book prepared for the Wisconsin Historical Society, Historic Preservation Division.  Architectural encyclopedia emphasized the expression of social, economic, and environmental history through the built environment.

Oklahoma Historical Society                                                                              1990-1993

State Architectural Historian, State Historic Preservation Office.  Administrator of National Register, survey, and compliance programs; public speaker and workshop coordinator.

"Forgotten Legacies: Glimpses of Oklahoma's Social and Cultural History."           1991

Volunteer project director for a three-part museum exhibit series for Norman Depot, Inc.  Curator for "Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad," a traveling exhibit that continues to criss-cross Oklahoma.  Funded by the Oklahoma Humanities Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Meacham*Weisiger*Associates, Norman, Okla.                                                 1987-1990

Co-owner of a consulting firm specializing in historic preservation.

Oklahoma Foundation for the Humanities                                                            1989

Program Associate, assisting grant applicants in preparing successful proposals.

University of Oklahoma, Design/Research Center                                               1986‑1988

      Graduate Research Assistant/Historian.

Weisiger & Associates, Tempe, Ariz.                                                                1982‑1987

      Owner of a historic preservation consulting firm.

Heritage Foundation of Arizona, Phoenix, Ariz.                                                   1985

      Executive Director of a statewide nonprofit historic preservation organization.

Edna Rider Whiteman Foundation, Mesa, Ariz.                                                    1984‑1985

      Executive Director for a philanthropic foundation.

Mountain West Research, Inc., Tempe, Ariz.                                                      1980‑1982

      Research Analyst for an economic/demographic consulting firm.

Mountain West Research, Inc., Tempe, Ariz.                                                      1979‑1980

      Editor and Technical Writer.

Arizona State University, Tempe                                                                        1977‑1978

      Student Archeologist.

Arizona State University, Tempe                                                                        1977‑1978

      Student Archivist/Oral Historian.

 

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

Editorial board, Environmental History, appointed to 2006 term

Volunteer, New Mexico Heritage Preservation Alliance Statewide Conference, Las Cruces/Mesilla, New Mexico, April 2004.

Rachel Carson Prize Committee for best dissertation, American Society for Environmental History, 2004.

Manuscript reviewer for Thinking Through the Past (3rd Ed.), by John Hollitz.

Manuscript reviewer, Agricultural History, 2003; Western History Quarterly, 2003; University of Washington Press, 2004, Environmental History (2005).

Butler Young Scholar Award Committee, Charles Redd Center for Western Studies, 2003.

Chair, “Natural Resources Research” session.  Symposium on Agriculture and Rural Life in the American Southwest and Northern Mexico, sponsored by the Agricultural History Society, Las Cruces, New Mexico, May 2003.

Chair, “First Person Interpretation and Experienced History” session.  Rural Women’s Studies Association and Association for Living History, Farm and Agricultural Museums joint conference, Las Cruces, New Mexico, February 2003.

“Incorporating Environmental History into the History and Science Classroom.  Talk given to National Endowment for the Humanities Teachers’ Institute, Las Cruces, June 2002.

Chair, “American Indian” session.  Joint meeting, New Mexico Historical Society and Arizona Historical Society, Las Cruces, New Mexico, April 2002.

Commentor, “Gender, the Body, and the Environment” session.  American Society for Environmental History, Denver, Colorado, March 2002.

Chair, “Building the West’s Living Spaces: Vernacular Architecture in the American West” session.  Western History Association, San Diego, California, October 2001.

 

COMMUNITY SERVICE

Oscar Jacobson Native American Cultural Center, Board of Directors, 1991-1993

Norman Depot, Inc., Board of Directors, 1988-1992

Oklahoma Foundation for the Humanities, Program Evaluator, 1989-1990

Oklahoma History Day, Judge, 1989, 1992

Arizona Historic Sites Review Committee, 1984‑1985 term

Heritage Foundation of Arizona, Board of Directors, 1983‑1985

Tempe Historical Society, Board of Directors, 1982‑1984

Gentle Strength Cooperative, Convener/President, 1984