The University of Michigan-Flint
Department of History


Faculty

Roy Hanashiro     Bruce Rubenstein    Joseph Rahme    Theodosia Robertson


John Ellis     Ami Pflugrad-Jackisch    Gregory Havrilcsak

Part-Time Faculty    Winter Office Hours

Please Contact Amanda Broadworth, Department Secretary, to set up advising appointments @ amandalb@umflint.edu
 

Roy S. Hanashiro, Professor and Chair

Degrees: Ph.D., University of Hawaii, 1988; M.A., University of Hawaii, 1978; B.A., University of Hawaii, 1976.

Field: East Asia; Japan

Research Interests: Modern Japan; Asian economic history.

Representative Publications:

Thomas William Kinder and The Japanese Imperial Mint, 1868-1875.  Leiden: Brill Academic Press, 1999.

“In the Midst of Western Imperialism: Japanese-Hawaiian Relations during the Mid-nineteenth Century,” Study of Economic History, 3 (1999): 143-167.

“The Japanese Imperial Mint and the Issue of Jurisdiction Over Foreign Employees, 1869-1875,”  Journal of Asian History, 30 (1996): 1-26.

“Nagasaki beki-keibi ni kansuru ichi shiry [A Source Concerning the Nagasaki Trade and Defense]," Seinan chiikishi kenKysh [Southwestern Area Historical Review], vol. 5. Edited by Hidemura Senz. Kyoto: Shibunkaku shuppan, 1988: 353-401.

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
okuma@umflint.edu


Bruce A. Rubenstein, Professor

Degrees: Ph.D., Michigan State University, 1974; M.A., Michigan State University, 1968; B.A. Michigan State University 1967.

Field: Modern America

Research Interests: Michigan history; Sports history; American Indians and the American West.

Representative Publications:

Michigan: A History of the Great Lakes State.  Co-author Lawrence E. Ziewacz.  Harlan Davidson, 2001.

"Don't Let the Rain Come Down: The 1911 World Series," Pennsylvania History, Fall 1995.

"George Armstrong Custer," Great Lives From History (Salem Press, 1987).

"To Destroy a Culture: Indian Education in Michigan," Michigan History, Summer 1976.

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
rubenste@umflint.edu


Joseph G. Rahme, Associate Professor

Degrees: Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1994; M.A., University of Michigan, 1982; B.A., University of Michigan, 1979.

Field: Modern Southwest Asia and North Africa; Islamic Civilization; World History.

Research Interests: Muslim/non-Muslim Relations; Ottoman Empire; Historiography of World History.

Representative Publications:

-Introduction to, and translation of a chapter from, Abd-al-Rahman al-Kawakibi, “Umm al-Qura,” in al-Amal al-Kamila lil-Kawakibi ( Beirut: Markaz Dirasat al-Wahda al-Arabiyya, 1995), pp. 358-367, as “Summary of the Causes of Stagnation” in Charles Kurzman, ed., Modernist Islam, 1840-1940: A Source Book, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), pp. 152-157.

“Some Socio-Economic Observations on the Relationship Between the Mountain and the Coast in Early 17th  Century Ottoman Syria.” In The Mamluks and the Early Ottoman Period in Bilad al-Sham: History and Archeology. Proceedings of ARAM’s 10th International Conference, American University, Beirut. Edited by the ARAM Society for Syro-Mesopotamian Studies. Vol. 9-10 (1997-1998): 419-430.

“Ethnocentric and Stereotypical Concepts in the Study of Islamic and World History,” The History Teacher, Vol. 32, No. 4 ( August 1999): 473-494.

“Namik Kemal’s Constitutional Ottomanism and Non-Muslims,” Journal of Islam and Muslim-Christian Relations, Vol. 10, No.1 (March 1999): 23-39.

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
jygr@umflint.edu


Theodosia S. Robertson, Associate Professor

Degrees: Ph.D., Slavic Languages and Literatures, Indiana University, 1985; B.A., History and French, Dominican University of San Rafael, CA, 1967.

Field: East Central Europe; Poland

Research Interests:  Modern Poland; Jewish civilization in Polish lands

Representative Publications:

Regions of the Great Heresy. A Biographical Portrait of Bruno Schulz  by Jerzy Ficowski (W.W. Norton, 2003). Editor and translator.

“Jerzy Ficowski”; “Jadwiga Maurer,” in Holocaust Literature: An Encyclopedia of Writers and Their Work, 2 vols., ed. By S. Lillian Kremer, (New York: Routledge, 2002).

“Imagery and History in the Stories of Bruno Schulz.  The Motif of the Railroad,” in Czytanie Schulza [Reading Schulz], ed. Jerzy  Jarzebski (Cracow: TIC, 1994).

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
teddyrob@umflint.edu


John S. Ellis, Assistant Professor

Degrees: Ph.D., Boston College, 1997; M.A., University of Wales, Aberystwyth, 1995; B.S. Eastern Michigan University, 1990.

Field: Western Europe; British Isles and Empire

Research Interests: Nationalism and national identity in the British Isles; Modern Wales and Ireland

Representative Publications:

Investiture:  Royal Ceremony and National Identity in Wales, 1911-1969.  Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2007.

“Celt versus Teuton; Race, Character and British National Identity, 1850-1914,” in Pol O’Dochartaigh, ed., Yearbook for the Centre of Irish-German Studies 2002.  Limerick: University of Limerick, 2003.

“The Degenerate and the Martyr: Nationalist Propaganda and the Contestation of Irishness, 1914-1918,” Eire-Ireland (Fall/Winter 2001): 7-33.

“The ‘Methods of Barbarism’ and the ‘Rights of Small Nations’; War Propaganda and British Pluralism,” Albion 30, 1 (Spring 1998): 49-75.

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
ellisjs@umflint.edu  

Map 7.1 Early Expansion of Muslim Rule

Map 8.2 The Crusades

Map 17.1 The Atlantic World 

Map 28.2 Cold War

Map 30.2 GNP


Ami Pflugrad-Jackisch, Assistant Professor

Degrees:  Ph.D., University at Buffalo, 2005; M.A., University of Maine- Orono, 1998; B.A., University at Buffalo, 1996.

Field:  The Early Republic and Antebellum America; the Atlantic World

Research Interests:  The Antebellum South; race, gender, and culture in American History

Representative Publications:

“We Are All Brothers: Secret Fraternal Organizations and the Transformation of White Male Political Culture in Antebellum Virginia” (Ph.D. Diss., University at Buffalo, 2005)

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
 pfljack@umflint.edu


Gregory M. Havrilcsak, Lecturer

Degrees: Post-Graduate- University of Virginia, International Center for Jefferson Studies.   M.A., Oakland University; B.A. University of Michigan Flint.

Field: Colonial America and the Young Republic, Jeffersonian and Jacksonian Eras, the Progressive Era and American Military History

Contact Information:
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
greghav@umflint.edu


Part-time Faculty 

Dave Clark
American history
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
clarkdb@umflint.edu

Mohamed Daassa
Mainline: (810) 762-3366 (History Department)
Mainline: (810) 762-3370 (Foreign Language Department)
Fax: (810) 762-3366 (History Department)
daassa@umflint.edu
 
Mike Kassel
American history
Mainline: (810) 762-3366
Fax: (810) 762-3367
mkassel@umflint.edu


                            HOME                PROGRAMS                COURSES

                            SCHOLARSHIPS                ALUMNI                LINKS

                            PHI ALPHA THETA                HISTORICAL SOCIETY                SOCIAL STUDIES