***********************************
Assistant Professor
Department of History
Arizona State University
Lattie Coor Building
-- Rm. 4547
Tempe, AZ 85287-4302
wendy.plotkin@asu.edu
Office
Hours (Spring, 2008): Tuesday & Thursday, 4:30-5:30 p.m.
|
|
||
|
[Click on Images for Source Information] |
|||
*TEACHING*
My focus at
In the spring semester of 2008, I will be teaching History 300 (Historical Inquiry): The Metropolis in America. I have also taught History 411 (U.S. History, 1945-1973), History 412 (U.S. History, 1973-Present), and History 498 (Historical Inquiry): Watergate.
*INTEGRATING HISTORY & INTERNET*
I worked with Richard Jensen to establish H-Net (History On-Line) at the
My major activity within H-Net was establishing and acting
as the chief editor of H-Urban from February, 1993 to the present. H-Urban
(http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~urban)
was the first of the H-Net scholarly forums on history and the humanities,
and served as a model for many of those that followed. In addition to
its discussions, H-Urban
Reviews (overseen by Professors
Clay McShane of Northeastern University and Sharon
Irish of University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana) are available as
a major scholarly resource to urban scholars across the world, comprising
over 300 reviews of books, exhibitions, and websites since 1997. In
2001, H-Urban announced its on-line
Comm-Org ![]()
I was founder & editor of COMM-ORG, the H-Urban On-Line Seminar on History
of Community Organizing and Community-Based Development, from November, 1995
to December, 1996 (funded by the
*RESEARCH AND MAJOR PUBLICATIONS*
Historical Topics
My major interest is in the
dynamics of democracy in 20th century
I have begun a national study
of racial deed restrictions and restrictive covenants within the United States,
the first part of which is tentatively entitled Deeds of Whiteness:
Racial Deed Restrictions and Restrictive Covenant Cases, 1892-1953.
This study will examine the over 100 cases heard in state and federal appeals
courts from the first recorded case (Gandolfo v. Hartman) in Ventura
in 1892 to the cases heard after Barrows v. Jackson, the 1953 U.S.
Supreme Court decision that closed the loopholes against enforcement of racial
deed restrictions left open in its 1948 decision, Shelley v. Kraemer (see
below).
I have submitted for publication Deeds of Mistrust: Race, Housing
and Restrictive Covenants in Chicago. Deeds of Mistrust
examines the use of "racial restrictive covenants" against African
Americans in
I have also examined the use of racial and religious restrictive covenants
and the broader issue of housing discrimination against Jews in the
Those interested in the overall
topic may consult the "Racial and
Religious Restrictive Covenants" site on the Arizona State
University WWW server. For future work, I am interested in editing
a volume on the experience with racial and religious restrictive covenants
in cities throughout the
I have also explored the responses to rent control in
I am interested in exploring the lives and careers of
Louis (1899-1952)
and Mary
Bolton (1899-1976) Wirth. Louis was a
I am interested in the larger issue of urban public policy, and published
a review essay on the topic in the September, 2003 issue of the Journal
of Urban History.
History and the Digital
Revolution
I am also interested in the use of digitization and computer mediated communication in disseminating historical scholarship. I have contributed a chapter -- “Electronic Texts in the Historical Profession: Perspectives from Across the Scholarly Spectrum" -- to Orville Vernon Burton, ed., Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, May, 2003) as well as reviews of books addressing the topic [Howard Rheingold, The Virtual Community, 1993, in Journal of American Planning Association, Winter, 1995] and of on-line exhibits and primary documentary materials [Carl Smith, "The Great Chicago Fire and the Web of Memory" WWW site, Chicago Historical Society, The Public Historian, Spring, 1997 (with Perry Duis) and Pennsylvania Gazette CD-ROM, Folio I: 1729-1750, Journal of American History, March, 1994].
More recently, I have been involved in exploring the
integration of historical geography and geographical information systems (GIS)
in teaching history, drawing on resources from ASU's Quality of Instruction
Grant program within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The first fruits
of the this project are described on the History Department's "Funded
Projects" webpage, at http://www.asu.edu/clas/history/FundedProjects/GIS.htm
.
*Organizational Affiliations*
I am a member of the Boards
of Directors of the Society for American
and Regional City Planning History and the Urban History Association, and a member
of the Organization of American Historians.
*Personal*
I live in
Last revised on January 23, 2008
***********************************