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职称:Associate Professor
所属学校:The University of Tennessee-Knoxville
所属院系:History
所属专业:History, General
联系方式:(865) 974-9871
Chad Black is a specialist in the late-colonial and early-Republican Andean region, with a special emphasis on the connections between law, governance, and gendered social authority. Among his specific areas of research are women’s uses of customary legal practices to assert social and economic autonomy, the impact of the independence period on social relations, and the conflict between institutional and popular norms of sexual behaviors. His dissertation, “Between Prescription and Practice: Governance, Legal Culture, and Gender in Quito, 1765-1830,” was directed by Dr. Kimberly Gauderman. He was recipient of the Fulbright-Hays International Dissertation Research Fellowship in 2002-2003.
Chad regularly presents his work at both regional and international conferences on Latin American history. Recent conference presentations include the Rocky Mountain Conference on Latin America Studies, 2007 and 2004; American Historical Association/Conference on Latin American History, 2006; and Latin American Studies Association, 2007 and 2004. For the 2007 Latin American Studies Association International Congress, Chad organized a panel entitled “Unnatural Acts: ‘Aberrant’ Sex and ‘Normative’ Gender in Colonial Latin America,” which included a paper of his own entitled “As (S)he Would Treat a Woman: Gender and Same-Sex Love in Bourbon Quito.”