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验证码:

Allyson F. Creasman

职称:Associate Professor

所属学校:Carnegie Mellon University

所属院系:history

所属专业:History, General

联系方式:412.268.9832

简介

Dr. Creasman’s research interests focus on religious reform and confessional relations, as well as issues of social discipline and criminality, in the early modern German cities. Her most recent book, Censorship and Civic Order in Reformation Germany, 1517-1648: “Printed Poison and Evil Talk” (Ashgate, 2012) explores the impact of the censorship of print and oral culture on the formation of public opinion and the construction of civic and religious identity in Germany’s “long Reformation” (c. 1520-1650). She is currently researching a book on slander and defamation in the German imperial cities during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Dr. Creasman earned her Ph.D and M.A. in history at the University of Virginia, and she was the recipient of a Fulbright fellowship to Germany in 1998-2000. Before turning to history, she practiced law in Florida, having earned her B.A. and J.D. degrees from the University of Florida. In addition to Censorship and Civic Order, other publications include “‘Lies as Truth’” – Policing Print and Oral Culture in the Early Modern City,” in Ideas and Cultural Margins in Early Modern Germany, ed. Marjorie E. Plummer and Robin Barnes (Ashgate, 2009), “Side-Stepping the Censors: the Clandestine Trade in Prohibited Texts in Early Modern Augsburg,” in Shell Games: Scams, Frauds and Deceits in Late-Medieval and Early Modern Cultures (Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, 2004), and “The Virgin Mary Against the Jews: Anti-Jewish Polemic in the Pilgrimage to the Schöne Maria of Regensburg, 1519-1525,” Sixteenth Century Journal 33(4): 965-83 (Winter 2002).

职业经历

Dr. Creasman’s research interests focus on religious reform and confessional relations, as well as issues of social discipline and criminality, in the early modern German cities. Her most recent book, Censorship and Civic Order in Reformation Germany, 1517-1648: “Printed Poison and Evil Talk” (Ashgate, 2012) explores the impact of the censorship of print and oral culture on the formation of public opinion and the construction of civic and religious identity in Germany’s “long Reformation” (c. 1520-1650). She is currently researching a book on slander and defamation in the German imperial cities during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Dr. Creasman earned her Ph.D and M.A. in history at the University of Virginia, and she was the recipient of a Fulbright fellowship to Germany in 1998-2000. Before turning to history, she practiced law in Florida, having earned her B.A. and J.D. degrees from the University of Florida. In addition to Censorship and Civic Order, other publications include “‘Lies as Truth’” – Policing Print and Oral Culture in the Early Modern City,” in Ideas and Cultural Margins in Early Modern Germany, ed. Marjorie E. Plummer and Robin Barnes (Ashgate, 2009), “Side-Stepping the Censors: the Clandestine Trade in Prohibited Texts in Early Modern Augsburg,” in Shell Games: Scams, Frauds and Deceits in Late-Medieval and Early Modern Cultures (Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, 2004), and “The Virgin Mary Against the Jews: Anti-Jewish Polemic in the Pilgrimage to the Schöne Maria of Regensburg, 1519-1525,” Sixteenth Century Journal 33(4): 965-83 (Winter 2002).

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