1 CURRICULUM VITAE William B. Taylor wtaylor ... - Semantic Scholar

“El espacio y los pueblos de la Nueva España,” Historia Mexicana XXXIX: 3 (1990): ... apocado': Conceptos de los curas párrocos sobre los indios de la Nueva.
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CURRICULUM VITAE William B. Taylor [email protected] Department of History University of California Berkeley, CA 94720 EDUCATION University of Michigan University of the Americas Occidental College

1966-1969 Ph.D., History 1964-1965 M.A., History 1960-1964 B.A., Latin American Studies

TEACHING EXPERIENCE 19981993-1998 1992-1993 1982-1993 1971-1982 1969-1971 1965-1966 1965

Muriel McKevitt Sonne Professor of History, University of California, Berkeley Edmund and Louise Kahn Professor of History and Adjunct Professor of Anthropology, Southern Methodist University Commonwealth Professor of History, University of Virginia Professor of History, University of Virginia Assistant Professor to Professor of History, University of Colorado, Boulder Assistant Professor of History, University of Colorado, Denver High school Spanish instructor, Desert Sun School, Idyllwild, CA. History instructor, Universidad de las Américas, México, D.F.

VISITING APPOINTMENTS Fall 1981 Fall 1980 Spring 1980

Professor of Latin American History, Harvard University Edward F. Arnold Distinguished Professor, Whitman College Profesor Visitante de Historia Latinoamericana, Universidad de Guadalajara

PUBLICATIONS BOOKS George Wilkins Kendall’s Narrative of an Expedition Across the Great South-Western Prairies (1841), edited, introduced, and annotated, with Gerald R. Saxon, 2 vols., Dallas: Library of Texas History, 2004. Entre el proceso global y el conocimiento local: Ensayos sobre el estado, la sociedad, y la cultura en el México del siglo XVIII, Mexico: Miguel Angel Porrúa and Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Iztapalapa, 2003. Colonial Latin America: A Documentary History, with Kenneth Mills and Sandra Lauderdale-Graham, Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources Publishers, 2002. Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, associate editor, 3 vols., New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. Colonial Spanish America: A Documentary History, with Kenneth Mills, Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources Publishers, 1998.

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Magistrates of the Sacred: Priests and Parishioners in Eighteenth-Century Mexico, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1996. Spanish edition, joint publication of El Colegio de Michoacán and El Colegio de México, 1999. Violence and Resistance in the Americas: Native Americans and the Legacy of Conquest, co-edited with Franklin Pease G.Y., Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994. Iberian Colonies, New World Societies: Essays in Memory of Charles Gibson, co-edited with Richard L. Garner, State College, PA, private printings, 1985, 1986. Drinking, Homicide, and Rebellion in Colonial Mexican Villages, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1979. Spanish edition, Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico, 1987. Landlord and Peasant in Colonial Oaxaca, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1972. Spanish edition, Instituto Oaxaqueño de las Culturas, Oaxaca, 1998. ARTICLES “Guadalupe, Remedios y la cultura política del período de la Independencia,” in “Pasajes culturales hacia la Independencia en México” (two essays on political culture in Mexico during the Independence Period, with joint introduction and conclusion, co-authored by Brian Connaughton), for publication in the proceedings of the international symposium on México: 1810-1910-2010: Dos siglos de historia. Cambios y perspectivas, sponsored by the Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, March 27-29, 2007. “Buscando y encontrando a Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe en el siglo XVIII.” To be published in Humanitas (Anuario del Centro de Estudios Humanísticos, Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León), vol. 34, 2007. See August 22, 2006 letter from Israel Cavazos Garza. “Between Nativitas and Mexico City: An Eighteenth-Century Pastor’s Local Religion,” Martin Nesvig, ed., Local Religion in Colonial Mexico, Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 2006, pp. 91-117. “Two Shrines of the Cristo Renovado: Religion and Peasant Politics in Late Colonial Mexico,” The American Historical Review 110:4 (October 2005), 945-974. “Many Historiographical Mexicos,” History Compass 3 (posted August 2005) Latin America 155, pp. 110. [Blackwell Publishing Company’s online history journal] “Our Lady in the Kernel of Corn, 1774,” The Americas 59:4 (April 2003), 559-570. “Mexico’s Virgin of Guadalupe in the Seventeenth Century: Hagiography and Beyond,” in Allan Greer and Jodi Bilinkoff, eds., Colonial Saints: Discovering the Holy in the Americas, 1500-1800, New York: Routledge, 2003, pp. 277-298. “Cristos de Caña,” Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, New York: Oxford University Press, 2001, I: 286-287. “Mesoamerican Chronology: The Colonial Period (1521-1821), Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, New York: Oxford University Press, 2001, II: 257-264. “Nuestra Señora de los Remedios,” Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, New York: Oxford University Press, 2001, III: 66-68. “Roman Catholic Church: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries” (with Carlos Martínez Assad), Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, New York: Oxford University Press, 2001, III: 89-92.

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“Santiago,” Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, New York: Oxford University Press, III: 122124. “La Iglesia entre la jerarquía y la religión popular: Mensajes de la zona de contacto,” in Brian Connaughton, ed., Historia de América Latina, vol. 1 La época colonial, Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2000, pp. 177-226. “Imágenes milagrosas de la época colonial: Acotaciones para una historia transatlántica,” Memorias de la Academia Mexicana de la Historia XLIII (2000), pp. 167-184. “Woodrow Borah …, aquí William Taylor,” Historias 45 (enero-abril 2000), pp. 3-6. “Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe y compañía: La Virgen María en la colonial ciudad de México,” Historias 43 (mayo-agosto 1999), pp. 39-50. “Our Lady of Guadalupe and Friends: The Virgin Mary in Colonial Mexico City,” Morrison Library Inaugural Address Series, University of California, Berkeley, 1999. “La historia como aproximación al contexto,” Boletín Editorial 80, El Colegio de México (julio-agosto 1999), pp. 30-32. “Pensar en imágenes,” Letras Libres (Revista Mensual), Año 1, Núm. 6 (1999), pp. 24-29. “¿Eran campesinos los indios? El viaje de un norteamericano por la historia colonial mesoamericana,” Relaciones: Estudios de Historia y Sociedad, 78 (spring 1999): 81-110. “Morelos: Un ejemplo regional de sacerdotes, feligreses, e insurrección,” Historias 40 (abril-septiembre 1998), pp. 47-82. “Nuestra Señora del Patrocinio y Fray Francisco de la Rosa: Una intersección de religión, política, y arte en el México del siglo XVIII,” Relaciones: Estudios de Historia y Sociedad, 73 (winter 1998): 281-312. “El camino de los curas y de los Borbones hacia la modernidad,” in Alvaro Matute, Evelia Trejo, and Brian Connaughton, eds., Estado, iglesia y sociedad en México, siglo XIX, Mexico: Miguel Angel Porrúa, 1995, pp. 81-113. “Colonial Religion and Quincentennial Metaphors: Mexican Santiagos and Cristos de Caña,” Willamette Journal of the Liberal Arts, Supplemental Series No. 6 (1994), pp. 26-49. “Amigos de sombrero: Patrones de homicidio en el centro rural de Jalisco, 1784-1820,” in Antonio Escobar O., ed., Indio, nación y comunidad en el México del siglo XIX, Mexico: CIESAS, 1993, pp. 63-104. “Santiago’s Horse: Christianity and Colonial Indian Resistance in the Heartland of New Spain,” in William B. Taylor and Franklin Pease G.Y., eds., Violence and Resistance in the Americas: Native Americans and the Legacy of Conquest, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993, pp. 153-189. “El espacio y los pueblos de la Nueva España,” Historia Mexicana XXXIX: 3 (1990): 803-810 (review essay). “’De corazón pequeño y ánimo apocado’: Conceptos de los curas párrocos sobre los indios de la Nueva España del siglo XVIII,” Relaciones: Estudios de Historia y Sociedad, 39 (Summer 1989): 5-67. “Banditry and Insurrection: Rural Unrest in Central Jalisco, 1790-1816,” in Friedrich Katz, ed., Riot, Rebellion, and Revolution in Mexican History, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1988, pp. 205-

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246. Spanish version published as Revuelta, rebelión y revolución: La lucha rural en México del siglo XVI al siglo XX, Mexico: Era, 1990, I, 187-222. “The Virgin of Guadalupe in New Spain: An Inquiry into the Social History of Marian Devotion,” American Ethnologist 14: 1 (February 1987): 9-33. Spanish version published in Trace, no. 22 (Dec. 1992): 72-85. “Homicidios en el distrito de Tlacolula, Oaxaca, 1700-1900: Un examen preliminar de las actas de defunción,” in María de los Angeles Romero Frizzi, ed., Lecturas históricas del estado de Oaxaca: Época colonial, Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 1986, pp. 477-505. “Indian Pueblos of Central Jalisco on the Eve of Independence,” in Richard L. Garner and William B. Taylor, eds., Iberian Colonies, New World Societies: Essays in Memory of Charles Gibson, State College, PA: private printing, 1986, pp. 161-183. “Between Global Process and Local Knowledge: An Inquiry into the Social History of Early Latin America, 1500-1900,” in Olivier Zunz, ed., Reliving the Past: The Worlds of Social History, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1985, pp. 115-190. “Cofradías and Cargos: An Historical Perspective on the Mesoamerican Civil-Religious Hierarchy,” American Ethnologist 12:1 (February 1985): 1-26. (Co-authored with John K. Chance) “Conflict and Balance in District Politics: Tecali and the Sierra Norte de Puebla in the Eighteenth Century,” in Ronald Spores and Ross Hassig, eds., Five Centuries of Law and Politics in Central Mexico, Nashville: Vanderbilt University Publications in Anthropology, 30 (1984), pp. 87-106. Corrected version published in Arij Ouweneel and Simon Miller, eds., Studying the Indian Community of Colonial Mexico, Amsterdam: 1990, pp. 267-291. “Bandolerismo e insurgencia en el centro de Jalisco, 1790-1816,” Encuentro: Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades 1: 3 (abril-junio 1984): 5-54. “Sacarse de pobre: El bandolerismo en la Nueva Galicia, 1774-1821,” Revista de Jalisco IV: 3 (Sept.-Dec/ 1980): 27-28. “Crisis in the Mexican Countryside: An Historian’s View,” Rolling Stock I: 1 (summer 1981): pp. 1, 6, 7, 16. “Indian Peasants and the State in Late Colonial Mexico,” Occasional Papers No. 1, Department of History, University of Missouri-St. Louis, 1980. “Estate and Class: A reply,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 21 (1979): 434-442. (co-authored with John K. Chance) “La Indiada: Peasant Uprisings in Central Mexico and Oaxaca, 1700-1810,” Actes du XLIIe Congrès International des Americanistes, Paris: 1978, vol. 3, pp. 189-196. “Estate and Class in a Colonial City: Oaxaca in 1792,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, vol. 19 (1977): 454-487. (co-authored with John K. Chance) “Colonial Mexico: New Views from the Top,” Latin American Research Review 12 (1977): 216-221. “Techniques for Integrating Popular Culture into a Course on Twentieth-Century Mexico,” in Teaching Latin American History, E. Bradford Burns, Eduardo Hernández, and Mary Karasch, eds., Los Angeles: Office of Learning Resources, UCLA, 1977, pp. 10-17. “Revolution and Tradition in Rural Mexico,” Peasant Studies, 5 (1976): 31-37.

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“Town and Country in the Valley of Oaxaca, 1750-1812,” in Provinces of Early Mexico: Variants of Spanish American Regional Evolution, Ida Altman and James Lockhart, eds., Los Angeles: University of California Press-UCLA Latin American Center, 1976, pp. 63-95. “Land and Water Rights in the Viceroyalty of New Spain,” New Mexico Historical Review, 50 (1975): 189212. “Time and Community Studies: Four Books on Rural Societies in Contemporary Mexico,” Peasant Studies Newsletter, 4 (1975): 13-17. “Landed Society in New Spain: A View from the South,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 54 (1974): 387-413. “Haciendas coloniales en el valle de Oaxaca,” Historia Mexicana, 23 (1973): 284-329. Reprinted in Enrique Florescano, ed., Haciendas, latifundios y plantaciones en América Latina, Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1975, pp. 71-104. “Patrón Leadership at the Crossroads: Southern Colorado in the Late Nineteenth Century,” Pacific Historical Review, 42 (1973): 335-357. (co-authored with Elliott West). Reprinted in Norris Hundley, ed., The Chicano, Santa Barbara: Clio Press, 1975, pp. 73-95. “The Hapsburg Era,” in Richard E. Greenleaf and Michael C. Meyer, eds., Research in Mexican History: Topics, Methodology, and a Practical Guide to Field Research, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1973, pp. 131-135. “Cacicazgos coloniales en el valle de Oaxaca,” Historia Mexicana, 20 (1970): 1-40. Reprrinted in María de los Angeles Romero Frizzi, ed., Lecturas históricas de Oaxaca: Época colonial, Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 1986, pp. 149-191. “The Foundation of Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de los Morenos de Amapa,” The Americas, 26 (1970): 439-446. BOOK REVIEWS American Ethnologist (1) American Historical Review (6) The Americas (2) Annales: E.S.C. (1) Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (1) Ethnohistory (1) Hispanic American Historical Review (12) Historia Mexicana (3) The Historian (5) Inter-American Review of Bibliography/Revista Inter-Americana de Bibliografía (1) Iztapalapa: Revista de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades (1) Journal of American History (1) Journal of Inter-Disciplinary History (1) Journal of Military History (1) Letras Libres (1) Montana: The Magazine of Western History (3) Virginia Quarterly Review (book notices) Vuelta (1)

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SELECTED LECTURES AND PAPERS “Meeting Our Lady of Guadalupe in Eighteenth-Century Mexico,” international conference on devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe, Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, University of Notre Dame, November 2006. “Beauty and the Beholder in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Viceregal Art,” Art and Religion Conference, Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley, on the occasion of the rededication of the school’s building, April 21-22, 2006. "Trouble with Miracles: An Episode in the Culture and Politics of Wonder in Colonial Mexico," The Virginia Reddy Lecture, Occidental College Department of History, March 27, 2006 “Short Journeys to Sacred Places: Devotional Landscapes and Circulation in Colonial Mexico,” The Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, University of Toronto, March 22, 2005. Revised for presentation as the Travis-Merrick Lecture for the Department of History, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, October 2005. “The Culture and Politics of Miracles in Colonial Mexico,” seminar and discussion, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, University of Toronto, March 24, 2005. “Many Historiographical Mexicos,” session of the Mexican Studies Committee of the Conference on Latin American History at the American Historical Association Convention, January 9, 2005. “Images of Devotion in Colonial Mexico,” gallery talk, Hearst Museum of Anthropology, November 18, 2004. “The Limits of Pilgrimage: Devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe in Eighteenth-Century Mexico,” for “Moving On: Towards a Phenomenological Approach to Colonial Subjectivities,” a session for the American Anthropological Association annual convention, San Francisco, November 2004 “Process in Place: Toward a History of Devotional Landscapes in Mexico,” for symposium on Devotional Landscapes: Mapping the Shrines and Saints of New Spain, Geographic Information Science Center, University of California-Berkeley, February 27, 2004. “One Image, Two Shrines: The Cristo Renovado de Santa Teresa in Mexico’s Colonial Landscape,” Distinguished Speaker Lecture Series on Latin America, Department of History, University of Texas at Austin, April 3, 2003. “Mexico’s Virgin of Guadalupe in the Seventeenth Century: Hagiography and Beyond,” American Catholic Historical Association convention, Portland, OR, March 16, 2002. “Shrines Without Pilgrims? Miraculous Images and Sacred Places in Colonial Mexico and Beyond,” Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, February 7, 2002. “The Bancroft Library as Teaching Laboratory,” annual retreat of the Bancroft Library staff, January 8, 2001. “Baroque Spaces,” Sacred Space Symposium: The Photographs of Carolyn Brown, Southern Methodist University, September 9, 2000. “Imágenes milagrosas de la época colonial: Acotaciones para una historia transatlántica,” Academia Mexicana de la Historia initiation lecture, May 9, 2000. “Santuarios e imágenes en el tiempo mexicano. Las inquietudes de un historiador,” Facultad de Filosofía, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa, May 8, 2000.

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“Guadalupanismo in the Seventeenth Century: Old Quandaries and an Untapped Source,” All-University of California Conference on Latin American History, UC-Davis, May 5, 2000. “Our Lady of Guadalupe and Friends: The Virgin Mary in Colonial Mexico City,” Bancroft Library Faculty Inaugural Lecture, February 17, 1999; also presented at the San Antonio Museum of Art, San Antonio, TX, March 14, 1999. “Images of Becoming Latin American in the Sixteenth Century,” the Alfred E. Golz Lecture in History, Bowdoin College, November 5, 1997. Presentations on miraculous images and shrines in Mexican history, El Colegio de Michoacán, October 1920, 1997. Seminar on Magistrates of the Sacred for the “RED de Historia Colonial” (university professors of western and northern Mexico), Universidad de Guadalajara, March 14, 1997. “Were Indians Peasants? Historians and Anthropologists in the Study of Rural Mexico after the Spanish Conquest,” American Historical Association convention, January 7, 1996 (panel #126 on “Peasants? A Comparison of Current Categories and Labels”) “’Her Time is Coming’: San Blas and Tepic in British and American Writings, 1822-1931,” Yale University Conference on Rethinking the Post-Colonial Encounter: Transnational Perspectives on the Foreign Presence in Latin America, October 18-21, 1995. “Nuestra Señora del Patrocinio de Tepetlatcingo: A Window onto Local Religion and Franciscan Mission in Eighteenth-Century Mexico,” France V. Scholes Chair Seminar, Tulane University, April 7, 1995. “Fuentes primarias y la imaginación histórica,” two-week seminar for faculty and graduate students of the Departamento de Historia, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Iztapalapa, May-June 1994. “Nuestra Señora del Patrocinio of Tepetlatcingo: Francisco de la Rosa’s Account of Images and Miracles in Eighteenth-Century Mexico,” First Annual Graduate Lecture and Seminars in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Southern Methodist University, February 2-4, 1994. “Iglesia, religión, y estado en el siglo XVIII,” lecture and discussion, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, May 12, 1992. “Colonial Religion and Quincentennial Metaphors: Mexican Santiagos and Cristos de Caña,” Lecture Series on the Columbian Encounter, College of William & Mary, March 5, 1992. (Presented also at James Madison University in October 1992; the University of Texas at Austin in November 1992; and Willamette University in February 1993) “The Mexican Clergy and the Bourbon Path to Modernity,” symposium on Mexico: The Challenge of Modernity, 1821-1991, University of California, San Diego, October 4-5, 1991. “Mexico as Oriental: Toward a History of American and British Representations Since 1821,” Latin American Studies Association convention, Washington, D.C., April 1991. “Religious Change in Colonial Mexico,” seminar for the Mesoamerican Archive and the Department of Religious Studies, University of Colorado, March 18-19, 1991. “Parish Priests in the Mexican War of Independence: A View from the Colonial Side,” lecture for the Harvard University Department of History, December 12, 1990.

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“The Aftermath of Conquest,” “Religious Change and the Problem of Conquest as Metaphor,” and “Double Eagle: American and British Images of Mexico since Independence,” two-day seminar at Essex Community College, Baltimore, MD. (National Endowment for the Humanities Quincentenary Workshop for Maryland Community College Teachers, June 25-26, 1990) “Pueblos of Morelos and Their Parish Priests in the Colonial Twilight,” for “Spain and the Altantic World: Symposium in Honor of J.H. Elliott,” The Johns Hopkins University, May 12, 1990. “Santiago’s Horse: Christianity and Colonial Indian Resistance in the Heartland of New Spain,” Smithsonian Columbus Quincentenary Symposium on “Violence and Resistance in the Americas: The Legacy of Conquest,” Washington, D.C., May 5, 1989. “’Small Hearts and Diminished Spirits’: Priests on Indians in Late Colonial Mexico,” the J.H. Parry Memorial Lecture, Harvard University, April 28, 1988. “Cura and Crown in Eighteenth-Century Mexico: Two keys from the John Carter Brown Library,” The John Carter Brown Library, Providence, RI, November 14, 1986. “El bastón y la vara: Curas y pueblos de indios en la época colonial,” El Colegio de Jalisco, Guadalajara, Mexico, May 1986. “The Cane and the Staff: Parish Priests, Indian Pueblos, and Authority in Late Colonial Mexico,” Seminar on Atlantic History, Culture, and Society, The Johns Hopkins University, October 8, 1985. “Marías y Guadalupes,” lecture and seminar, El Colegio de Jalisco, Guadalajara, Mexico, June 1985. “The Virgin Mary and Three Conquests: An Inquiry into the Social History of Marian Devotion in Colonial Mexico,” The Arthur Aiton Memorial Lecture, University of Michigan, March 15, 1984. “Rural Unrest in Central Jalisco, 1790-1816,” Social Science Research Council Symposium on Comparative Peasant Rebellions in Mexican History, Ixtapan de la Sal, Mexico, March 1981 and New York, April 1982. “Crisis in the Mexican Countryside: An Historian’s View,” The Edward F. Arnold Lecture, Whitman College, December 1, 1980. “Concepto, método y algunos resultados de la historia indígena mexicana del siglo XVIII a través de los archivos judiciales,” Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores del Occidente (Guadalajara), May 6, 1980. “Oportunidades de investigación sobre la historia social en los archivos criminales de Guadalajara,” Archivo Histórico de Jalisco, February 16, 1980. “Fuentes para la historia del campesinado en la Nueva España,” Escuela de Estudios Hispano-Americanos (Sevilla), October 1979. “La Indiada: Rebeliones de comunidades campesinas en la Intendencia de México y la Mixteca Alta, 17001810,” panel on Peasant Rebellions in Latin America, International Congress of Americanists, Paris, 1976. “Peasants in Trouble: Rural Crime and Criminal Testimony in Colonial Mexico,” American Historical Association convention, Atlanta, 1975. REPORTS

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“Patterns of Homicide in the District of Tlacolula, Oaxaca, 1700-1880: A Preliminary Examination of Death Records,” working paper for N.E.H.-funded project on “Anti-Violent Communities in Southern Mexico,” John Paddock, director, July 1982. “Cochití Lands and the Disputed Sale to Luis María Cabeza de Baca of 1805,” report commissioned by Cochití Pueblo on the history of the Pueblo’s land rights during the Spanish and Mexican periods, 1981. (Archival investigation, translation of key documents, and report) “A Response to Michael Meyer’s ‘Land, Water and Equity in Spanish Colonial and Mexican Law,’” essay commissioned by U.S. Department of Justice and submitted in evidence in State v. Aamodt, December 1979. “Colonial Water Rights and Land Ownership in the Tewa Pueblo Region,” report to the U.S. District Court of New Mexico, commissioned by the U.S. Department of Justice, 1977. (Revised, expanded version completed in 1980; submitted in evidence in State v. Aamodt.) “Mission Water Rights in the Spanish Borderlands: Laws and Adjudication,” archival research and report commissioned by the Native American Rights Fund, 1976. “Land and Water Rights in the Viceroyalty of New Spain: Principles and Practice,” report to the U.S. District Court of New Mexico in the trial of State v. Aamodt, No. 6639-Civil, 1974, commissioned by the U.S. Department of Justice and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Albuquerque Area Office. “St. Cajetan’s Church as a Historical Landmark: A Statement Presented to the Denver Landmark Commission,” January 1970. (with Matthew T. Downey) SCHOLARSHIPS, FELLOWSHIPS, STUDENT AWARDS Rackham Prize Fellowship, 1968-1969 National Defense Education Act Fellowship, 1967-1968 University Fellowship, University of Michigan, 1966-1967 Fulbright Grant, Mexico, 1964-1965 Phi Beta Kappa, 1963 Carnegie Foundation Scholarship, Guadalajara, Mexico, summer 1962 RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, PROFESSIONAL RECOGNITION The Virginia Reddy Endowed Lecture in History, Occidental College, March 27, 2006 BANAMEX-Atanasio G. Saravia Premio de Historia Regional, 2005 [awarded in Mexico City, November 30, 2005] Travis-Merrick Endowed Lecture in History, University of Oklahoma, October 28, 2005 The Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, University of Toronto, March 2005 Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, CA, 2001-2002 Humanities Research Fellowship, University of California, Berkeley, fall 2001, fall 2005 Elected corresponding member, Academia Mexicana de la Historia, 1999 Laurence Perrine Phi Beta Kappa Faculty Award, Southern Methodist University, 1998 Albert J. Beveridge Prize, American Historical Association, 1997 Herbert Eugene Bolton Prize, Conference on Latin American History, 1997 Bryce Wood Book Award, Latin American Studies Association, 1997 Godbey Lecture Series Authors’ Award, Southern Methodist University, 1997 Southern Methodist University Graduate Faculty Lectureship, 1994 Fellow, National Humanities Center, Research Triangle Park, NC, 1990-1991 Conference on Latin American History Prize, 1988

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The J.H. Parry Memorial Lecture, Harvard University, April 28, 1988 Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, Fall 1987 Mellon Foundation Grant, Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University, May 1987 Albert J. Beveridge Grant, American Historical Association, June 1986 The Arthur Aiton Memorial Lecture, University of Michigan, March 15, 1984. Faculty Mentor for Jacob Van Ek Award winner, Félix Cerna, University of Colorado, 1981 Edward F. Arnold Distinguished Professor, Whitman College, fall 1980 Choice selection as an Outstanding Academic Book, 1980 Hubert Herring Prize, Pacific Coast Council on Latin American Studies, 1979 Social Science Research Council Fellowship, 1979-1980 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, 1979-1980 Conference on Latin American History Prize, 1978 Faculty Mentor for Jacob Van Ek Award winner, Paul E. Lorenson, University of Colorado, 1978 J.A. Robertson Memorial Prize, Conference on Latin American History, 1975 University of Colorado Teaching Recognition Award, 1974 Louis K. Koontz Memorial Award, Pacific Historical Review, 1974 Runner-up, Herbert Eugene Bolton Prize, Conference on Latin American History, 1973, 1980 Faculty Research Fellowship, University of Colorado, Fall 1976 National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, 1974-1975 American Philosophical Society grants, 1974, 1970 University of Colorado Summer Initiation Fellowship, 1970 Fulbright Fellowship, Mexico, 1964-1965 SCHOLARLY SERVICE Board of Editors: American Historical Review, fall 2005-2008 Encuentros: Revista Tamaulipeca de Historia y Ciencias Sociales, 2004Signos Históricos: Revista Semestral, 2000Revista de Indias, 1998Colonial Latin American Review, 1998-2004 The Americas, 1996-2002 Estudios Urbanos, 1995-2000 Historia Mexicana, 1991-1993 Encuentro: Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades, 1985-1988 Hispanic American Historical Review, 1982-1987, 1996-2002 Latin American Research Review, 1982-1984 South East Latin Americanist, 1982-1984 Peasant Studies, 1977-1979 Editorial Consultant: Hispanic American Historical Review, 1971Latin American Research Review, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1993 American Ethnologist, 1987, 1989 Ethnohistory, 1987, 1989 Journal of Ritual Studies, 1988 Comparative Studies in Society and History, 1989, 1995 The Social Science Journal, 1989 The Americas, 1993American Historical Review, 1995, 2005Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, 2001 Historia Mexicana, 2001, 2003, 2004 The Catholic Historical Review, 2004 Journal of Early Modern History, 2005

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Little, Brown & Co., 1972 Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1972, 1993 University of Texas Press, 1972, 1980, 1981 (2), 1989 Cambridge University Press, 1975, 1982, 1987, 1997, 2003 University of New Mexico Press, 1975, 1987, 1993 Stanford University Press, 1975, 1982, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1995, 1997, 1999 University of California Press, 1976 Princeton University Press, 1978 University of Wisconsin Press, 1981, 1982 University of Kentucky Press, 1981 Duke University Press, 1989, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006 Pennsylvania State University Press, 1990 Harvard University Press, 1992 W.W. Norton, 1994 Oxford University Press, 1995, 2000 University of Oklahoma Press, 1999 The Bancroft Library Press, 1999 University of Calgary Press, 2002 Hackett Publishing Co., 2003, 2004, 2005 Compass Point Books, 2004 Blackwell, 2006 Critiqued more than 150 book and article manuscripts in Latin American, European, and American history for authors before publication. Other Professional Service Outside Home Institution includes: Advisory Board, Academy of American Franciscan History, 2005John E. Fagg Book Prize Committee, American Historical Association, 2005-2007 J.A. Robertson Prize Committee, Conference on Latin American History, 2005 Invited Nominator, MacArthur Foundation individual grants program, 2001 Franklin Pease Memorial Prize Committee, Colonial Latin American Review, chair, 2001; member, 20012004 Provost’s external review committee for the Department of History San Diego State University, 1999 Bolton Prize Committee, Conference on Latin American History, 1999 Committee on Committees, American Historical Association, 1998-2001 Research Grants Advisory Committee, The John Carter Brown Library, 1997 Fulbright-Hays Fellowships panel for Latin American history and literature, 1993-1995; chair, 1995 J.A. Robertson Prize Committee, Conference on Latin American History, 1993, 2005 External reviewer, Office of Fellowships and Grants, Smithsonian Institution, 1991 External evaluator of the Department of History, University of Maryland, College Park, 1991 Member, research project and seminar, “Estado, Iglesia, y Sociedad en México, Siglo XIX,” Secretaría de Educación Pública, Mexico, 1991-1993 External evaluator of the Department of History, University of California, San Diego, 1990 External reviewer for fellowship applications, National Humanities Center, 1990-1995 External reviewer for fellowship applications, Woodrow Wilson Center for International Studies, Smithsonian Institution, 1990-1997 National Endowment for the Humanities grants panel, 1990 International Advisory Board, Mesoamerican Archive, University of Colorado, 1989-1993 National Advisory Board, The John Carter Brown Library, 1986-1989 Co-organizer (with John TePaske and others), Virginia-Carolinas Seminar on Colonial Latin America, 1986-1992 External reviewer for fellowship applications, National Endowment for the Humanities, Division of Public Programs, 1978-1980; fellowships and grants, 1984 Consultant and expert witness on land rights in New Mexico under Spanish and Mexican rule, commissioned by the Center for Land Grant Studies, Santa Fe, NM, 1982-1984

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Consultant and expert witness before U.S. Congress House and Senate Indian Affairs committees on historical land rights of Cochití Pueblo, 1979-1985 Consultant on mission land and water rights under Spanish colonial law to the Native American Rights Fund, 1975-1977 Consultant and expert witness on Indian water rights under Spanish colonial law, commissioned by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Indian Affairs, an the New Mexico Pueblos of San Ildefonso, Nambé, Tesuque, and Pojoaque, 1974-1982 Consultant, Colorado Humanities Program project, “Boulder’s Chicano Community: Where Is It?” 19771979 Member: American Historical Association; Conference on Latin American History; Academy of American Franciscan History; John Carter Brown Library Associates; Academia Mexicana de la Historia.