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Alemán, Jesse.
Associate Professor, English. Ph.D., University of Kansas, 1999.
jman@unm.edu, 277-3209.
Research Interests: 19th-Cent. American and Mexican-American literatures,
gender and cross-dressing studies, contemporary Chicana/o literatures, the Mexican-American
war (1846-48).
Works-in-Progress:
"1848 and the Expansion of the American Literary Imagination: the Pulp
Fiction of the Mexican-American War"
"The Woman in Battle: The Narrative of Loreta Janets Velazquez, Cuban Woman
and Confederate Soldier."
Publications:
"Novelizing National Discourses: History, Romance and Law in The Squatter
and the Don." Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage, vol III.
Ed. Maria Herrera-Sobek, et al. Houston: Arte Publico, 2000.
"Historical Amnesia and the Vanishing Mestiza: The Problem of Race in The
Squatter and the Don and Ramona." Aztlán, 27:1 (2002).
Andre, Laura M.
Assistant Professor, Art & Art History. PhD, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, 2002.
lmandre@unm.edu, 277-5861
Research Interests: History of Photography, Visual Culture, Contemporary
Art, Queer Theory
Works-in-Progress:
Far Out: Picturing Lunar Desire & Space-Age Loss, Duke University
Press, forthcoming.
Publications:
Defying Gravity: Contemporary Art & Flight, North Carolina Museum
of Art & Prestel, 2003.
Axelrod, Melissa.
Associate Professor and Regents' Lecturer, Linguistics. Ph.D., University of
Colorado, 1990.
axelrod@unm.edu, 277-6353
Research Interests: Indigenous language revitalization and documentation,
narratives, women and literacy, discourse analysis, semantics, grammar.
Works-in-Progress:
Dictionary of Jicarilla Apache. UNM Press. Anticipated Fall 2006. (NSF-funded)
Dictionary and Electronic Archive of Nambé Pueblo history and language.
(NSF-funded)
Narratives of the Grupo de Mujeres por la Paz, Nebaj, El Quiche, Guatemala.
(NSF-funded)
Publications:
Phone, Wilhelmina, Maureen Olson, and Matilda Martinez. Abáachi Mizaa
Láo Ilkee' Shijai: Dictionary of Jicarilla Apache. Edited
by Melissa Axelrod, Jule Gómez de García, and Jordan Lachler.
With Sean Burke. UNM Press. Forthcoming
Gómez de García, J., M. Axelrod, and J. Lachler. "English
is the Dead Language: Native Perspectives on Bilingualism." In Margaret
Field and Paul Kroskrity (Eds.), Native American Language Ideologies: Language
Beliefs, Practices, and Struggles in Indian Country. Tucson: University
of Arizona Press. 2005.
Axelrod, M. The Semantics of Time: Aspectual Categorization in Koyukon Athabaskan.
Studies in the Anthropology of North American Indians. Lincoln: University
of Nebraska Press. In cooperation with the American Indian Studies Research
Institute, Indiana University. 1993. 199 pp.
Baackmann, Susanne.
Associate Professor, Foreign Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., University of
California at Berkeley, 1993.
theodor@unm.edu, 277-3206
http://www.unm.edu/~fll
Research Interests: 20th century literature and culture (German, European),
Cultural Studies, Gender Studies, Post World War II Literature, Holocaust, Memory
Culture, National Identity, Gender and Sexuality
Works-in-Progress:
Book Project : "Memories of War--War of Memories. The Performance of Memory
in German Postwar Culture."
Publications:
"Die Politik der Erinnerung: Grete Weil und Christa Wolf-und deren Transpositionen
des kulturellen Gedächtnisses," Peter Pabisch (ed.), Patentlösung
oder Zankapfel, Berlin/Frankfurt/New York: Peter Lang, 2005. pp.143-162.
"Kinder als Zeugen der Geschichte in Filmen über den Holocaust: Peppermint
Frieden, Auf Wiedersehn, Kinder, Das Leben ist schön und Nirgendwo in Afrika,",
Ciffre 2000. Neue Paradigmen der Gegenwartsliteratur, Ulrike Vedder and
Corinna Caduff (eds.), Paderborn: Fink Verlag, 2005. pp. 107-121.
Reconfiguring the Witness of the Holocaust. The Child as a Lieu de Mémoire
in Marianne Rosenbaum's Film Peppermint Frieden," Seminar 40:1 (February
2004), pp.19-34.
Erklär mir Liebe. Weibliche Schreibweisen von Liebe in der Gegenwartsliteratur
(Explain Love to Me: How Women Write Love in Contemporary German Literature),
Hamburg, Berlin: Argument Verlag, 1995.
Conquering Women. Women, War and the German Cultural Imagination. Co-edited
with Hilary Collier Sy-Quia. Berkeley: IAS Press, UC Berkeley, 2000.
"Configurations of Myth, Memory and Mourning in Grete Weil's Meine Schwester
Antione." German Quarterly 73:3 (Summer 2000).
Baca, Dorothy.
Associate Professor, Theatre & Dance. M.F.A., University of California at
Los Angeles, 1978.
dbbaca@unm.edu, 277-4104
Research Interests: History of women's fashion with focus on undergarments,
the decorated body and how different cultures adorn their bodies for rites of
passage.
Works-in-Progress:
Spanish colonial clothing-Southwestern history of clothing.
Barnet-Sanchez, Holly.
Associate Professor, Art & Art History. Ph.D., University of California,
Los Angeles.
Research Interests: Chicana feminist art, gender construction in Chicana
and Mexicana visual arts and its relation to literary traditions.
Publications:
"Transformations: The Art of Ester Hernandez." Curated exhibition
and authored catalogue. San Jose Center for the Arts. 1998.
"Adelita: Recordando a las Soldaderas." Curated exhibition. The Mexican
Museum, San Francisco. 1991.
Bennahum, Judith.
Professor, Theatre and Dance. Ph.D., University of New Mexico, 1981.
gigiben@unm.edu, 277-6125
Research Interests: Dance history; Ballet during the French Revolution;
Antony Guden, Choreographer of psychological ballets; fashion and ballet in
late-18th to mid-19th century.
Works-in-Progress:
A biography of René Blum, Successor to Diaghiber's Ballets and brother
of socialist Lém Blum.
Ballets:
Four Women, performed at Rodey Theatre, UNM
Medea. Video distributed by Dance of Princeton Books, 2000.
Binder, Melissa.
Associate Professor, Economics. Ph.D., Colombia University, 1995.
mbinder@unm.edu, 277-3548
http://www.unm.edu/~econ/faculty/binder.html
Research Interests: Family economics in Latin America and the United
States, working mothers, the economics of education.
Works-in-Progress:
"The Motherhood Wage Penalty Revisited: Experience, Heterogeneity, Work
Effort and Work-Schedule Flexibility." With Deborah J. Anderson and Kate
Krause.
Publications:
"The Motherhood Wage Penalty: Which Mothers Pay It and Why?" American
Economic Review, forthcoming May 2002.
Bokovoy, Melissa.
Associate Professor, History. Ph.D., Indiana University.
Research Interests: Modern Eastern Europe, WWI and WWII, gender and nationalism.
Publications:
Peasants and Communists. University of Pittsburgh, 1998.
State-Society Relations in Yugoslavia, 1945-1992. St. Martin's Press,
1997.
Broidy, Lisa.
Assistant Professor, Sociology. Ph.D., Washington State University, 1997.
lbroidy@unm.edu, 277-2002
Research Interests: Gender and crime/deviance.
Works-in-Progress:
"NIJ Grant: Understanding the Female Offender."
"Depressed Girls and Violent Boys: Similar Childhood Trajectories of Disruptive
Behavior and Divergent Adolescent Outcomes," with D.S. Nagin and R.E. Tremblay.
"A Devleopmental Framework or Studying the Desistance Process," with
E. Cauffman.
"General Strain Theory and Sex Differences in Deviant Outcomes: An Empirical
Test."
Publications:
"An Emperical Test of General Strain Theory." Criminology. 39. 2001.
"Gender and crime: A general strain theory perspective." with Robert
Agnew. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 34. 1997.
"Explaining Female Offending," with Darrell Steffensmeier. In Women,
Crime and Criminal Justice: Contemporary Issues. Lynne Goodstein, ed. Los
Angeles: Roxbury Press, 2001.
"Developmental trajectories of childhood disruptive behavior disorders
and adolescent delinquency: A six-site, cross-national study." With D.S.
Nagin, et al. Devleopmental Psychology. Forthcoming 2002.
"Sex Differences in Empathy and its Relation to Juvenile Offending."
With E. Cauffman, D. Espelage, A. Piquero and P. Mazerolle. Journal of Criminal
Justice. Forthcoming.
"A Cluster Analytic Investigation of MMPI profiles of serious male and
female juvenile offenders." With E. Cauffman, D. Espelage, P. Mazerolle,
A. Piquero and H. Steiner. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry. Forthcoming.
Cheek, Pamela.
Associate Professor of French, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures;
Program in Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, Coordinator. Ph.D.,
Stanford University, 1994
pcheek@unm.edu, 277-3810
Research Interests: History of sexuality, colonial and postcolonial theory,
the European Enlightenment
Works-in-Progress: A study of the dynamics of story migration
Publications:
Sexual Antipodes: Enlightenment Globalization and the Placing of Sex (Stanford UP, 2003)
Cyrino, Monica Silveira.
Associate Professor of Classics, Foreign Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., Yale
University, 1992.
Research Interests: Sexuality in ancient Greece and Rome; Greek and Latin
erotic poetry; Greco-Roman mythology; Classics and popular culture, especially
film.
Publications:
Big Screen Rome. Oxford, 2005.
In Pandora's Jar: Lovesickness in Early Greek Poetry. Lanham, 1995.
Cobb, Amanda.
Associate Professor, American Studies. Ph.D., University of Oklahoma, 1997.
acobb@unm.edu, 277-6358
Research Interests:Native American Studies: identity, sovereignty and
self-determination, education, representation, contemporary literature; language
and culture.
Works-in-Progress:
"The Real Washington Redskins: The Native Circle of Activists, Washington
DC, 1965-1975."
Focus on the work of Comanche activist LaDonna Harris
Publications:
Listening to our Grandmothers' Stories: The Bloomfield Academy for Chickasaw
Females, 1852-1949. University of Nebraska Press, 2000. American Book Award
Winner, North American Indian Prose Award Winner.
Cramer, Janet.
Assistant Professor, Communication and Journalism. Ph.D., Minnesota, 1999.
jcramer@unm.edu, 277-0095
Research Interests: Gender, Race, Class in mass media. History and sociology
of media.
Publications:
"Woman as Citizen: Race, Class and the Discourse of Women's Citizenship,
1894-1905." Journalism and Mass Communication Monographs, 165, March
1998.
"The Press, Women's Madness and Social Control." Women's Studies
in Communication (forthcoming)
"For Women and the War: The Mayflower, 1861-1864." In The Civil
War and the Press, Transachar Press, 2000.
Crown, Patricia.
Professor, Anthropology. Ph.D., University of Arizona.
Research Interests: Southwestern Archeology; archaeological approaches
to gender; ceramic analysis; materials analysis.
Cyrino, Monica.
Assistant Professor of Classics, Foreign Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., Yale
University.
Research Interests:Sexuality in ancient Greece and Rome; Greek and Latin
erotic poetry; Greco-Roman mythology.
Publications:
In Pandora's Jar: Lovesickness in Ancient Greek Poetry. University Press
of America, 1995.
Damico, Helen.
Professor, English. Ph.D., NY University, 1980.
hdamico@unm.edu, 277-7448 or 277-2252 (Institute
for Medieval Studies)
http://www.unm.edu/~medinst
Research Interests: Old English and Old Icelandic language and literature,
Medieval literature, Women in medieval literature.
Works-in-Progress:
"Juliana: The Saint in Trouble"
"'O Serpent under femynynytee': A search for the source of the allusion"
Beowulf's Queens and the politics of eleventh century England.
Publications:
Beowulf's Waltheow and the Valkyrie Tradition. University of Wisconsin
Press, 1984.
New Readings on Women in Old English Literature: An Anthology of Cricical
Articles. Indiana University Press, 1990.
Women in Old English, Medieval England: An Encyclopedia, 1989.
Women in Eddic Poetry, Medieval Scandanavia: An Encyclopedia, 1993.
Sörlaþattr, Medieval Scandanavia: An Encyclopedia, 1993.
Denetdale, Jennifer Nez
Assistant professor, History. Ph.D. in History, Northern Arizona University,
1999.
jdenet@unm.edu, 277-4138
Research Interests: Native American women, Women in the U.S. West, Native
American and Navajo history
Works-in-Progress:
"A Study of the Navajo Past: The Legacies of Chief Manuelito and Juanita,
1868 to the Present" [book manuscript]
"Chairmen, Presidents, and Princesses: The Navajo Nation, Gender, and
the Politics of Tradition," accepted for publication in Wicazo Sa Review (forthcoming Winter 2006)
"Discontinuities, Remembrances, and Cultural Survival: The Bosque Redondo
Memorial to the Navajo Long Walk," article will be submitted to New
Mexico Historical Review, forthcoming Spring 2006
Publications:
"Representing Changing Woman: A Review Essay on Navajo Women," American
Indian Culture and Research Journal vol. 25, no. 3 (2001): 1-26
Review essay of Swept Under the Rug: A Hidden History of Navajo Weaving by Kathy M'Closkey and Navajo Saddle Blankets: Textiles to Ride in the American
West edited by Lane Coulter, New Mexico Historical Review 78:4 (Fall
2003): 471-79
"Planting Seeds of Ideas and Raising Doubts About What We Believe: A Conversation
With Vine Deloria, Jr.," Journal of Social Archaeology 4:2 (June
2004): 131-146
"`One of the Queenliest Women in Dignity, Grace, and Character I Have
Ever Met': Navajo Women and Photography Portrayals of Juanita, 1868-1902," New Mexico Historical Review (Summer 2004): 289-318.
Donovan, Leslie A.
Associate Professor, University Honors Program. Ph.D., University of Washington,
1993.
ldonovan@unm.edu, 277-4313
http://www.unm.edu/~ldonovan
Research Interests: Women Saints' Lives, Old English Literature, Tolkien
Studies, Medieval Women, Celtic Studies, Old
Norse/Icelandic Literature.
Works-in-Progress:
The Old English Lives of Eufrosina and Eugenia: A Critical Edition of Two Female
Transvestite Saints in Their Anglo-Saxon Contexts, a book-length manuscript;
"Resolving Conflicts, Deciphering the Enigma: Beowulf's Hunferth
as
Precursor of the Early Court Fool," festschrift article
Publications (Selected):
Women Saints' Lives in Old English Prose. Library of Medieval Women
Series. Oxford: Boydell and Brewer, 1999.
"The Valkyrie Reflex in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings:
Galadriel, Shelob, Éowyn, and Arwen." In Tolkien The Medievalist.
Ed.Jane Chance. New York: Routledge, 2002. Pp. 106-32.
"Jesters Freed from their Jack-in-the-Boxes: Or Springing Creativity Loose
from Traditionally Entrenched Honors Students," Journal of the National
Collegiate Honors Council 2.2 (Fall/Winter 2001): 93-103.
Duran, Bonnie.
Assistant Professor, Family and Community Medicine. Ph.D., University of California
at Berkeley, 1997.
bonduran@unm.edu, 272-4173
Research Interests: Women's mental health, mental illness risk factors,
intimate partner violence, child abuse and neglect, outcomes of racial and gender
oppression.
Works-in-Progress:
"NIMH Study of Women's Risk and Protective Factors for Mental Disorders
for Native American and Latina Women"
Foss, Karen A.
Professor, Communication and Journalism. Ph.D., University of Iowa, 1976.
kfoss@unm.edu, 277-2641
Research Interests:Rhetorical theory and criticism; feminist perspectives
in communication;
contemporary social movements.
Works-in-Progress:
Essay on feminist conceptions of social change.
Publications:
Feminist Rhetorical Theories. With Sonja K. Foss and Cindy L. Griffin.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1999.
Women Speak: The Eloquence of Women's Lives. With Sonja K. Foss. Prospect
Heights, Ill: Waveland, 1991.
"Incorporating the Feminist Perspective in Communication Scholarship: A
Research Commentary." With Sonja K. Foss. In Doing Research on Women's
Communication: Perspectives on Theory and Method. Ed. Carole Spitzack and
Kathryn Carter. Norwood, NJ: Ablex, 1989.
"Feminist Reconstructionism: A Reply to Condit." With Sonja K. Foss
and Cindy L. Griffin. Women's Studies in Communication, 20 (Fall 1997),
117-35.
"The Construction of Feminine Spectatorship in Garrison Keillor's Radio
Monologues." With Sonja K. Foss. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 80
(November 1994): 410-26.
"Personal Experience as Evidence in Feminist Scholarship." With Sonja
K. Foss. Special Issue of the Western Journal of Communication, 58 (Winter
1994): 39-43.
Gauderman, Kimberly.
Associate Professor, History Department; Director of Latin American Studies.
Ph.D. from UCLA, 1998.
kgaud@unm.edu, 277-2451
Research Interests: early Latin America, women's history, ethnohistory,
gender and sexuality, economic and legal history
Publications:
Women's Lives in Colonial Quito: Gender, Law, and Economy in Spanish America,
University of Texas Press, 2003.
"A Loom of Her Own: Women and Textiles in Seventeenth-Century Quito," Colonial Latin American Review, June 2004.
"Father Fiction: A Comparison of English, Spanish and Andean Gender Norms," UCLA Historical Journal ( Special Issue: Indigenous Writing in the Spanish
Indies), vol. 12 (1992), 122-151.
Book Chapter: " The Authority of Gender: Marital Discord and Social Order
in Colonial Quito." In New World Orders: Violence, Sanction, and Authority
in the Colonial Americas, ed. John Smolenski and Thomas J. Humphrey, Univ.
of Pennsylvania Press, 2005 (71-91).
Hood, Jacqueline.
Professor, Management. Ph.D., University of Colorado.
Research Interests: Gender issues of management, organizational culture
and diversity; small
business and entrepreneurship.
Houston, Gail Turley.
Associate Professor, English. Ph.D., UCLA, 1990.
ghouston@unm.edu,
277-9118
Research Interests: 19th-century British Gothic novel, 19th-century British
women writers,
Charles Dickens and gender/class, Queen Victoria, Phoebe Anna Traquair.
Works-in-Progress:
"Gothic Economies: The Tale of Terror and Nineteenth-Century Capitalism."
"Phoebe Anna Traquair and the Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century
Scottish
Renaissance in Arts and Letters."
Publications:
Royalties: The Queen and Victorian Writers. Charlottesville: University
Press of Virginia, 1999. Victorian Literature and Culture Series.
Consuming Fictions: Gender, Class and Hunger in Dickens' Novels. Carbondale:
Southern Illinois University Press, 1994.
"Courting Lady Audley: Mary Braddon's Commentaries on the Legal Secrets
of Audley Court." Beyond Sensation: Mary Elizabeth Braddon in Context.
Eds. Pamela Gilbert and Marlene Tromp. SUNY, 1999.
"Reading and Writing Victoria: The Conduct Book and the Legal Constituion
of Female Sovereignty." Queen Victoria and the Making of Victorian Cultures.
Eds. Margaret Homans and Adrienne Munich. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1997.
"Feminist Theory" and "Psychoanalytic Theory" in The
Critical Experience: Reading, Writing and Criticism. Ed. David Cowles. Kendall-Hunt,
1994.
"Gender Construction and the Kunstlerroman: David Copperfield and Aurora
Leigh." Philological Quarterly 72.2 (Spring 1993): 213-36.
Hunt, Aeron
Assistant Professor, Department of English. Ph.D., University of Chicago 2005.
aeron@unm.edu, 277-6230
Research Interests: Victorian literature and culture, economics and literature,
gender studies, Victorian popular culture
Works-in-Progress: "Personal Business: Character and Commerce in
Victorian Literature and Culture" (manuscript)
Publications: "Calculations and Concealments: The Discourse of Infanticide
in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Britain," Victorian Literature and Culture (Forthcoming Spring 2006)
Hutchison, Elizabeth Quay.
Associate Professor, History. Ph.D., UC-Berkeley, 1995.
ehutch@unm.edu, 277-2266.
http://unm.edu/~hist/faculty.html
Research Interests: gender and sexuality; modern Latin America; Southern
Cone; labor;
religion.
Works-in-Progress:
Research on Chilean domestic service in the 20th century-migration, unionization,
gender and sexuality in labor relations, ethnic and class relations.
Publications:
Labors Appropriate to Their Sex: Gender, Labor and Politics in Urban Chile,
1900-1930. Duke University Press, 2001.
"From La mujer esclava to la mujer limón: Anarchism and the Politics
of Sexuality in Chile, 1901-1926." Hispanic American Historical Review,
2001.
Disciplina y desacato: Construcción de identidad en Chile, siglos
XIX y XX. Co-edited with Lorena Godoy, Karin Rosemblatt and Soledad Zárate.
Ediciones SUR and Centro de Estudios para el Desarrollo de la Mujer (CEDEM),
Santiago, Chile, 1995.
"'El fruto envenenado del árbol capitalista': Women Workers and
the Prostitution of Labor in Urban Chile, 1896-1925." Journal of Women's
History, 9, 131-150, 1998
"La historia detrás de las cifras: La evolución del censo
Chileno y la representación del trabajo femenino, 1895-1930," In
El género en historia, Anne Pérotin-Dumon, ed. [on line], Universidad
Católica, Santiago, Chile, 2000, available from http://www.sas.ac.uk/ilas/genero.htm
"El Feminismo en el movimiento obrero Chileno: La emancipación de
la mujer en la prensa obrera feminista, 1905-1908." Proposiciones 21, 50-64, December 1992.
Kerlee, Ime
Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow, Women Studies. Ph.D., Emory University.
Research interests: Global Feminisms, Women and Migration, LACS, Queer
Theory and Popular Culture, Dominican Republic
Publications: Are All the Women Still White? Globalizing Women's Studies (forthcoming).
"Decentering Whiteness: Global Films and the WS Classroom" in Simmet,
G. Ed. Citizens of the World (Duke University
Press, 2006).
"Report from Panama: Diasporic Dualities and the Search for a Feminist
Self" in Women's Studies (Emory, 2002).
Kolchevska, Natasha.
Associate Professor of Russian, Foreign Languages and Literatures. Director:
Russian Studies. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley.
nakol@unm.edu.
Research Interests: 20th Century Russian women writers; autobiography;
feminism in Russia; prison camp literature.
Krause, Kate.
Associate Professor, Economics. Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1996.
kkrause@unm.edu, 277-3429
http://www.unm.edu/~econ/faculty/krause.html
Research Interests:Motherhood wage penalty, how children acquire economic
skills and tastes,
water consumption and arid region sustainability, risk-taking and other economic
behaviors, New Mexico poverty issues (especially related to children and families)
Works-in-Progress:
Testing Water Conservation in the Lab.
Risk-Taking and Protocol Effects.
Bargaining Skills in Children.
Publications:
"The Motherhood Wage Penalty Revisited: Experience, Heterogeneity, Work
Effort and Work-Schedule Flexibility." With Deborah J. Anderson and Melissa
Binder. Forthcoming from the American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings.
Lampela, Laurel
Associate Professor, Art Education Program. Ph.D.,
1990, Ohio State University
lampela@unm.edu, 277-5519
http://www.unm.edu/%7Elampela/index.html
Research Interests: Quality instruction in visual arts education that
includes information relating to the understanding of lesbian, gay, and bisexual
content in artists' works and their lives; Preparing art teachers who can instruct
a culturally diverse population in the complex issues of gender and sexual identity;
Researching the lives and work of historical and contemporary lesbian artists;
Creative research related to the construction of hybrid realities in the form
of digital collages
Works-in-Progress: OutLOUD - I-Movie of selected historical and contemporary
lesbian artists
Portraits of Lesbians: The work of Jeanne Mammen, 20th century German artist
Publications:
2005 Lampela, L. Writing effective lesson plans while utilizing the work of
lesbian and gay artists.Art Education, 58(2), 33-39.
2005 Lampela, L. In tribute. The Journal of Gay and Lesbian Issues in Education,
2(3), 87-89.
2005 Cosier, K., Lampela, L., Moreno de la Garnica, S.M., Sanders, J., Smith-Shank,
D., Rhodes, M., & Whitehead, J., "(Un)Becoming Queer/(Un)Becoming LGBTIC," Journal of Social Theory in Art Education.
2003 Lampela, L. & Check, E. (Eds.). From our voices: Art educators and
artists speak out about lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered issues.
Dubuque, IA: KendallHunt.
2003 Lampela, L., "Is it safe to come out?" In L. Lampela & E.
Check (Eds.), From our voices: Art educators and artists speak out about
lesbian, gay,bisexual and transsgendered issues. Dubuque, IA: Kendall-Hunt.
2001 Lampela, L., "Daring to be different: A look at three lesbian artists." Art Education,54 (2), 45-51.
2001 Lampela, L., "Lesbian and gay artists in the curriculum: A survey
of art teachers' knowledge and attitudes," Studies in Art Education,
42 (2),146-160.
Lamphere, Louise.
Professor, Anthropology. Ph.D., Harvard University. lamphere@unm.edu.
Research Interests: women and work; Southwest; Navajo women; US immigration
and women's lives; Medicaid and welfare reform.
Publications:
Situated Lives: Gender and Culture in Everyday Life. Co-edited with Helena
Ragone and Patricia Zavella. Routledge Press, 1997.
Newcomers in the Workplace: Immigrants and the Restructuring of the U.S.
Economy. Co-edited with Guillermo Grenier. Temple University Press, 1994.
Sunbelt Working Mothers: Reconciling Family and Factory. Co-authored
with Patricia Zavella, Felipe Gonzales and Peter B. Evans. Cornell University
Press, 1993.
Structuring Diversity: Ethnographic Perspectives on the New Immigration.
Editor. University of Chicago Press. 1993.
From Working Daughters to Working Mothers: Immigrant Women in a New England
Industrial Community. Cornell University Press, 1987.
Woman, Culture and Society. Co-edited with Michelle Zimbalist Rosaldo.
Stanford University Press. 1974.
To Run After Them: The Social and Cultural Bases of Cooperation in a Navajo
Community. University of Arizona Press, 1967.
Lancaster, Jane.
Professor, Anthropology. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley.
jlancas@unm.edu.
Research Interests: reproductive biology and behavior of women; women's
life histories in
cross-cultural and historical perspective.
Publications:
Offspring Abuse and Neglect: Biosocial Dimensions. Co-edited with R.
Gelles. Aldine, 1987.
Parenting Across the Life-Span: Biosocial Dimensions. Co-edited with
J. Altmann, A. Rossi, and L. Sherrod. Aldine, 1987.
School-Age Pregnancy and Parenthood: Biosocial Dimensions. Co-edited
with B. Hamburg. Aldine, 1986.
Learn, Cheryl Demerath.
Professor Emerita. Ph.D., University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, 1993.
clearn@unm.edu, 277-9119
Research Interests: Women's health (especially older women), history
of women in health care in New Mexico, especially in nursing.
Works-in-Progress: Oral history project with the UNM Health Sciences
Library focusing on
nurses in New Mexico. Funded by the Feminist Research Institute.
Publications:
Older Women's Experiences of Spirituality: Crafting the Quilt. New York:
Garland Press, 1996.
"The Quilt of Spirituality: Older Women's Experiences." The Emergence
of the 21st Century Woman, P. Munhall and R. Fitzsimmons, eds. New York:
National League for Nursing, 1995.
"Health Practices of Adult Hispanic Women." With Patricia Higgins. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 25:5 (1999).
"Appraising the Menopause Web." AWHONN Lifelines. 2:4 (1998).
"Harmonizing Herbs." AWHONN Lifelines. 3:2 (1999).
Quarterly columns on research methodologies used in nursing for Beginnings:
The Official Newsletter of the American Holistic Nurses' Association. (ongoing)
Lopez, Kimberle.
Associate Professor, Spanish & Portuguese. Ph.D., University of California,
Berkeley.
klopez@unm.edu
Research Interests: Spanish and American literature; 19th and 20th century
novel; gender issues.
Lopez, Nancy.
Assistant Professor, Sociology. Ph.D., City University of New York.
nlopez@unm.edu, 277-3101
Research Interests: Race/ethnicity, youth gender, education, Latino/Carribean
studies.
Works-in-Progress:
Experiencing Race-Gender: Education and Second-Generation Dominicans, West-Indians
and Haitians in New York City. Book manuscript, Routledge, forthcoming.
"Disentangling Race-Gender Experiences at Work: Second-Generation Carribean
Young Adults," Gender and U.S. Immigration: Contemporary Trends.
Pierrette Hondaganeu-Sotelo, editor. University of California Press, forthcoming.
"Race-Gender High School Lessons: Second-Generation Dominicans in New York
City," Second Generation Young Adults in New York City. John Mollenkopf,
et al, editors. Russell Sage Foundation, forthcoming.
Publications:
"Race-Gender Experiences & Schooling: Second-Generation Dominican,
West-Indian and Haitian Youth in New York City." Race, Ethnicity and
Education, 5:1 (March 2002).
"Re-writing Race and Gender High School Lessons: Second-Generation Dominicans
in New York City," Teacher's College Record, forthcoming.
"Interrupting the Race-Gender Gap in Education for Latinos in Massachusetts." The Gastón Institute Research Briefing. Summer 2001, 1:1. Reprinted
in The Mauricio Gastón Institute Report. Summer 2001.
"Yola and Gender: Dominican Women's Unregulated Migration." With Ramona
Hernández. Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions.
Dominican Research Monographs, The CUNY Dominican Studies Institute, 1997.
"Yola and Gender: Dominican Women's Unregulated Migration." With Ramona
Hernández. Documents of Dissidence: Selected Writings by Dominican
Women. Daisy Cocco de Filippis, editor. New York: Dominican Studies Institute,
City University of New York, 2000.
"The Latest Edition of the Welfare Queen Story: An Analysis of the Role
of Dominican Immigrants in the New York City Political-Economic Culture."
With Ginetta Candelario. Phoebe: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Feminist
Scholarship, Theory and Aesthetics. 7.1 (Spring/Fall 1995).
Lopez-Chavez, Celia.
Associate Professor, University Honors Program. Ph.D., Universidad de Sevilla
(Spain).
celialop@unm.edu
Research Interests: Latin American and Spanish history and literature;
women and
gender issues in different cultures with interdisciplinary perspectives; teaching
strategies in seminars on women's issues.
Martínez, Estella A.
Associate Professor, Family Studies. Ph.D., Michigan State University, 1984.
estella@unm.edu, 277-8932
Research Interests: Mexican-American/Chicano/Hispanic families across the life
span.
McFarlane, Deborah R.
Professor, Department of Political Science. Doctor of Public Health, University
of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, 1983.
dmcf@unm.edu
http://www.unm.edu/~polsci/faculty_listing/McFarlane.htm
Research Interests: Reproductive Health, Politics related to Abortion,
Family Planning and Population
Works-in-Progress:
"From Consensus to Controvery: The Politics of U.S. Population Policy"
Publications:
The Politics of Fertility Control: Family Planning and Abortion Policies
in the American States ( with Kenneth Meier), 2001. Congressional Quarterly
Press
McKnight, Kathryn J.
Associate Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese. Ph.D., Stanford University,
1992.
mcknight@unm.edu, 277-3924
www.unm.edu/~mcknight
Research Interests: Colonial Latin American Literature, religious women
writers, Afro-Hispanic archival narratives of the 16th-17th centuries
Works-in-Progress:
"The House of Trials and the Trials of Masters-Level Research," in Approaches to Teaching Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz. Ed. Emilie L. Bergmann
and Stacey Schlau (forthcoming).
"Colonial Religiosity: Convents, Nuns, Witches, and Heretics," in A Companion to Latin American Literature and Culture. Ed. Sara Castro-Klaren
(forthcoming).
"Gendered Declarations: Three Enslaved Women Testify before Cartagena
Officials (1634)," Colonial Latin American Historical Review (forthcoming).
Publications:
The Mystic of Tunja: The Writings of Madre Castillo, 1671-1742. Amherst:
University of Massachusetts Press, 1997.
"Blasphemy as Resistance: An Afro-Mexican Slave Woman before the Mexican
Inquisition." Women in the Inquisition. Spain and the New World.
Ed. Mary Giles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.
Massmann, Ann
Associate Professor & SW Studies Librarian. MLIS, University of Texas at
Austin, 1990.
massmann@unm.edu, 277-8370
elibrary.unm.edu/cswr
Research Interests: cross-cultural identity; library preservation and
special collections.
Works-in-Progress:
"Loyalty Questioned: Nuevomexicanos in the Great War," "Documenting
Chicana/o Grassroots Activism in the Southwest," and "Anneliese's
Ashes: A Memoir."
Publications:
"Adelina 'Nina' Otero-Warren: A Spanish-American Cultural Broker." The Journal of the Southwest 42 (Winter 2000), 877-896.
"The Wood Shelving Dilemma." Library Resources & Technical
Services 44 (October 2000), 209-213.
"Recollections of the Daughter of Pioneers: The Memoirs of Clara Huning
Fergusson," New Mexico Historical Review 74 (January 1999), 29-53.
"Native American & Chicano Video and Film: Toward a New Model for
Collection Development in Academic Libraries," Advances in Collection
Development and Resource Management, vol. 2 (1996), 207-222.
Milleret, Margo.
Associate Professor, Spanish & Portuguese. Ph.D., University of Texas-Austin,
1986.
milleret@unm.edu, 277-8613.
Research Interests: Latin-American theatre, women dramatists, gender
and performance,
gender and language, Brazilian culture.
Works-in-Progress:
monograph on women's dramaturgy in Latin America from 1960's-present.
Study of "Teen Talk Barbie" dolls speaking English and Brazilian Portuguese.
Publications:
"Staging Sex and the Mid-life Woman in Mariela Romer's Experando al italiano." Revista de estudios hispánicos, 34. 2000.
"Girls Growing Up, Cultural Norms Breaking Down in Two Plays by Josefina
López." Gestos, 26. 1998.
"O perigo no palco: as mulheres, a velhice e a sexualidade." Passo
e compasso: nos ritmos do envelhecer. Ed. Maria José Barbosa. Forthcoming
from Editora da PUC-Rio Grande do Sul.
"Daughters versus Mothers on Latin American Stages." Todo ese fuego:
Homenaje a Merlin Forester. Eds Mara L. García and Doug Weatherford.
Mexico: Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala. 1999.
"Acting Radical: The Dramaturgy of Consuelo de Castro." Latin American
Women Dramatists: Theatre, Texts, and Theories. Eds Margarita Vargas and
Cathy Larson. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press. 1998.
Montoya, Margaret.
Professor, School of Law. J.D., Harvard Law School.
montoya@unm.edu.
Research Interests: identity formation, border theory; clinical legal
practice and affirmative
action within the Latina experience.
Muller, Helen Juliette.
Professor, Organizational Studies, Anderson School of Management. Ph.D., University
of Southern California. muller@anderson.unm.edu.
Research Interests: cross-cultural and cross-national research on organizations
and management, especially women in management and leadership; organizational
dynamics.
Nagengast, Carole.
Professor and Chair, Anthropology. Ph.D., University of California, Irvine,
1985.
cnagenga@unm.edu; 277-2635
Research Interests: Gender, ethnicity, class; Human Rights, Mexico, Central
Europe
Works-in-Progress: Three Families: Life on the US Mexico-Border
Publications:
Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs, Westview Press, 1991.Women & Development, 1998.
" Cultural Relativity vs. Universalism," Special Issue of The
Journal of Anthropological Research, 1997, 2004.
Nihlen, Ann.
Associate Professor and Regent's Lecturer, Language, Literacy and Sociocultural
Studies. Ph.D., University of New Mexico.
anihlen@unm.edu
Research Interests: interaction of gender, race, and social class in
education, teacher research, qualitative research in education.
Publications:
Studying Your Own School, Corwin Press, 1994, new edition due 2006.
Norwood, Vera.
Professor, American Studies. Ph.D., University of New Mexico.
Research Interests: environmental studies, gender studies.
Publications:
Made from This Earth: American Women and Nature. University of North
Carolina, 1993.
The Desert is No Lady: Southwestern Landscapes in Women's Writing and Art.
Yale University, 1987.
Obermeier, Anita.
Associate Professor, English. Ph.D., Arizona State University, 1992.
AObermei@unm.edu, 277-2930.
http://www.unm.edu/~aobermei/
Research Interests: Authorship studies, feminist approaches, intertextualities,
medievalism, mystics, saints' lives, translation criticism, and medieval medicine
Works-in-Progress:
Seed, Sex, Superiority: Medieval Concepts of Fertility and Sterility.
"Of Monarchies and Movies: Fertility and Sterility Issues in Braveheart and The Mists of Avalon."
"The Middle Ages: Not the Witch 'Burning Times'" for Medieval Misconceptions.
Eds. Bryon Grigsby and Steve Harris.
Publications:
The History and Anatomy of Auctorial Self-Criticism in the European Middle
Ages. Editions Rodopi's Series "Internationale Forschungen zur Allgemeinen
und Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft." Amsterdam and Atlanta: Rodopi,
1999, especially chapter 10.
"Joachim's Infertility in the St. Anne's Legend" in Chaucer and
the Challenges of Medievalism: Studies in Honor of Henry Ansgar Kelly. Eds.
Donka Minkova and Theresa Tinkle. Bern: Peter Lang, 2003. 289-307.
"The Privileging of Visio over Vox in the Mystical Experiences
of Hildegard of Bingen and Joan of Arc." (with Rebecca Kennison) Mystics
Quarterly 23:3 (1997): 137-67.
The Clan of the Cave Bear. Masterplots II: Juvenile and Young Adult Literature, Supplement. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press, 1997. 241-3.
"Faludi, Susan." Cyclopedia of World Authors, Revised Third
Edition. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press, 1997. 657.
"Navarre, Marguerite de." Cyclopedia of World Authors, Revised
Third Edition. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press, 1997. 1354-5.
"Isabella's Great Start." Women's International Network (WIN),
Nov. 2000: (an article on water birth and midwifery in the US). Journal is now
defunct. Article available at: http://www.unm.edu/~aobermei/Scholarship/WINMagazin.html
Rebolledo, Tey Diana.
Professor, Spanish and Portuguese. Ph.D., University of Arizona.
dreb@unm.edu.
Research Interests: women in the Southwest; Chicana literature; Latin
American poetry;
popular culture; Hispana oral history; Latin America women writers.
Publications:
la Diabla a Pie: Women's Cuentos from the New Mexico WPA. Co-edited with
Teresa Marquez. Forthcoming.
Women Singing in the Snow: A Cultural Analysis of Chicana Literature.
University of Arizona Press, 1995.
Infinite Divisions: An Anthology of Chicana Literature. Co-edited with
Eliana S. Rivero. University of Arizona Press, 1993.
Nuestras Mujeres: Hispanas in New Mexico, Their Images and Their Lives, 1582-1992.
Editor. Academia/El Norte Publications, 1992.
Las Mujeres Hablan: An Anthology of Nuevo Mexicana Writers. Co-edited
with Erlinda Gonzales-Berry and Teresa Marquez. Academia/El Norte Publications,
1988.
"Nuestras Mujeres." Traveling Photographic Show. Maxwell Museum, 1992;
New Mexico State Fair, 1993; Albuquerque Museum, 1997.
Bárbara O. Reyes
Assistant Professor, History. Ph.D., University of California-San Diego, 2000.
breyes3@unm.edu, 277-4133
Research Interests: Chicana/o History, History of the Southwest, Gender
Studies, 20th Century Immigration, Race and Culture Theory
Works-in-Progress:
"Race, Agency, and Memory in a Baja California Mission" Forthcoming
in Continental Crossroads, coedited by Sam Truett and Elliott Young,
Duke University Press.
Publications:
Nineteenth Century CalifornioTestimonials, Co-Editors: Rosaura Sánchez,
Beatrice Pita, Bárbara Reyes. Special Edition CRITICA: A Journal of
Critical Essays, Monograph Series, UCSD, Spring 1994
"From Mythologizing the Tragedy to Parodying the Myth: Two Representations
of the Mexican Revolution." CRITICA: A Journal of Critical Essays,
Special Edition on Chicano/a Cultural Studies. UCSD, Spring 1998.
Robin, Diana.
Professor Emerita, Foreign Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., University of Iowa.
Research Interests: feminism and Renaissance humanism; women in antiquity;
feminist
theory; postmodern critical theory; cultural studies; autobiographical theory.
Publications:
Redirecting the Gaze : Gender, Theory, and Cinema in the Third World.
Co-edited with Ira Jaffe. State University of New York, 1999.
Collected letters of a Renaissance Feminist. University of Chicago Press,
1997.
Filelfo in Milan: Writings, 1451-1477. Princeton University Press, 1991.
Ross, Lia
Programmer/Analyst III- CIRT and Part-time faculty, History Department. Ph.
D. History, University of New Mexico, 2004.
lross@unm.edu, 277-2471.
Research Interests:
15th-Century France, Burgundy, England.
Works-in-Progress:
Rewrite of dissertation Revisiting Decadence: Interpersonal Relations in
the Historical Narrative of Fifteenth-Century France, Burgundy, and England.
"Winners and Losers: Perceptions of War Leadership in Fifteenth-Century
Burgundian Chronicles." Under review for inclusion in Journal of Medieval
Military History (Boydell & Brewer).
"The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Visions of Burgundy, France, and England
in the Oeuvres of Georges Chastellain." Under review for inclusion in The
Hundred Years War: a Wider Focus- Vol. II (Brill)
"Beyond Eating: Political Use of Entremets at the Banquets of the Burgundian
Court." Under review for inclusion in Arizona Studies in the Middle
Ages and the Renaissance (Brepols)
Publications:
"Review of La Chronique de Sébastien Franck (1499-1542) : vision
de l'histoire et image de l'homme by Jean-Claude Colbus" - Sixteenth
Century Journal (due 2006)
Salinger, Adrienne.
Professor, Art and Art History. M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Research Interests: construction of identities in personal (domestic)
spaces.
Publications:
Living Solo. Andrews McMeel Publishing, 1998.
In My Room: Teenagers in Their Bedrooms. Chronicle Books, 1995. (2nd
Edition, 1997.)
Scharff, Virginia.
Associate Professor, History. Ph.D., University of Arizona.
vscharff@unm.edu.
Research Interests: American women; women's history; social theory; environmental
history;
history of technology; history of the American west.
Publications:
Women's Movements: Gender, Geography and the West. University of California
Press. Forthcoming.
Taking the Wheel: Women and the Coming of the Motor Age. Free Press.
1991; University of New Mexico Press, 1993.
Present Tense: The United States Since 1945. With Michael Schaller and
Robert Schulzinger. Houghton Mifflin, 1991. (2nd edition, 1995.)
Sedillo-Lopez, Antoinette.
Professor, Law. J.D., University of California, Los Angeles.
lopez@law.unm.edu.
Research Interests: women's legal issues; family law; comparative law
and culture.
Publications:
Latina Issues: Fragments of Historia (ella) (Herstory). Garland, 1995.
Emerging Voices: Political, Social, Cultural and Legal Issues. Series
Editor, Garland, 1997.
Shipman, Virginia C.
Professor, Family Studies. Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh, 1960.
vshipman@unm.edu, 277-4063.
Research Interests: ecosystemic approaches to human development; adult
development and
aging; early childhood education; family violence; research ethics.
Works-in-Progress: Coordinator for Family Studies Program; Improving
quality and
compensation of early childhood educators and providers.
Sierra, Christine Marie.
Associate Professor, Political Science. Ph.D., Stanford University.
csierra@unm.edu.
Research Interests: Chicana/Latina politics; ethnicity and gender in
American politics; political
participation and political representation; social movement and interest group
politics.
Publications:
Chicana Voices: Intersections of Class, Race, and Gender. Co-editor.
University of New Mexico Press. (Third Printing, 1993.)
Chicana Critical Issues. Co-editor. Third Woman Press. 1993.
Slaughter, M. Jane.
Professor, History. Ph.D., University of New Mexico.
mjane@unm.edu.
Research Interests: comparative women's history (politics, war, revolution);
modern Italy; history of sexuality.
Publications:
Women and the Italian Resistance, 1943-1945. Arden Press, 1998.
European Women on the Left. Co-edited with Robert Kern, 1980.
Biography & Civilization: Gender & Politics. With Melissa Bokovoy.
Houghton-Mifflin. Forthcoming.
Tiano, Susan.
Professor, Sociology. Ph.D., Brown University.
stiano@unm.edu.
Research Interests: gender and development; women workers in maquiladora
industry; women coping with economic crises and transformation to capitalism;
gender differences in social support among homeless and marginally housed, impoverished
populations under conditions of "welfare reform"
Publications:
Patriarchy on the Line: Labor, Gender, and Ideology in the Mexican Maquila
Industry. Temple University Press, 1994.
Women on the US-Mexico Border: Responses to Change. Co-edited with Vicki
Ruiz. Allen and Unwin, 1987.
Trinidad Galvan, Ruth
Assistant Professor, Department of Language, Literacy & Sociocultural Studies.
Ph.D., University of Utah
trinidad@unm.edu, 227-0094
http://llss.unm.edu/rtrin.html
Research Interests: Global and transnational issues as they pertain
to all immigrants and campesinas [rural Mexican women] in particular; Exploring
diverse pedagogical practices as experienced and lived out by third and fourth
world peoples; Feminist research and multicultural issues.
Publications:
Trinidad Galván, R. (2005). Transnational Communities en la Lucha: Campesinas
and Grassroots Organizations "Globalizing From Below." Journal
of Latinos and Education (4)1, 3-20.
Trinidad Galván, R. (2001). "Portraits of Mujeres Desjuiciadas:
Womanist Pedagogies
of the Everyday, the Mundane and the Ordinary." International Journal
of Qualitative Studies in Education, 14(5), 603-621.
Trinidad Galván, R. (in press, 2006). "Campesina Pedagogies of
the Spirit: Examining Women's Sobrevivencia". In Delgado Bernal, D., Elenes,
A., Gonzalez, F., & Villenas, S. (Eds.). Latina/Chicana Feminist Pedagogies
and Epistemologies of Everyday Life: Educación en la Familia, Comunidad,
y Escuela. Albany, NY: Suny Press.
Trinidad, R. & Villenas, S. (1999). Teachers' Attitudes Toward ESL Students
and
Programs. In S. Wade (Ed.), Preparing Teachers for Inclusive Education: Case
Pedagogies and Curricula for Teacher Educators, pp. 139-148. New Jersey: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
Weigle, Marta.
University Regents Professor, Anthropology. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania.
Research Interests: Women and mythology, women and oral tradition.
Publications:
Spiders and Spinsters: Women and Mythology. University of New Mexico
Press.
Women of New Mexico: Depression Era Images. Ancient City Press, 1993.
Creation and Procreation: Feminist Reflections on Mythologies of Cosmogony
and Parturition. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989.
Two Guadalupes: Hispanic Legends and Magic Tales from Northern New Mexico.
Ancient City Press, 1987.
Wood, Carolyn J.
Professor and :Department Chair, Educational Leadership & Organizational
Learning. Ph.D., Washington University (St. Louis), 1977
cwood@unm.edu, 277-3925
edlead.cte-0027.unm.edu/naw/VVindex.naw
Research Interests: Learned Helplessness, Taught Helplessness
Woodward, Carolyn.
Associate Professor, English. Ph.D., University of Washington.
Research Interests: feminist theory, eighteenth century British fiction.
Publications:
Reading Elsewheres in the Masterhouse of British Fiction, 1740-1760.
University of Illinois, forthcoming.
The Cry: A New Dramatic Fable (1754) by Sarah Fielding. Co-edited with
Jane Collier. University of Kentucky, 2000.
Changing Our Power: An Introduction to Women Studies. Kendall-Hunt, 1991.
Young, Joni.
Professor of Accounting, Anderson Schools of Management. Ph.D., University of
Washington.
Research Interests: women in non-profit organization, visual imagery
in accounting reports. |