Jonathan Rees, Curriculum Vitae – 2019-20



JONATHAN REES Department of HistoryColorado State University - PuebloPueblo, CO 810012200 Bonforte BoulevardPueblo, CO 81001(719) 549-2541E-Mail: Jonathan.Rees@csupueblo.edu or drjonathanrees@ APPOINTMENTS:Professor of History: Colorado State University - Pueblo, Pueblo, CO. Fall 1999-Present.Lecturer (Full-Time): Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, MO. Fall 1998-Spring 1999. Visiting Assistant Professor of History: Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA. Fall 1997-Spring 1998. Lecturer: University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh, Oshkosh, WI. Fall 1996.Courses Taught: America, 1787-1877America, 1877-1945* America, 1945-Present* American Business History* American Labor History American WestColorado History*Food in AmericaHistoriography Introduction to Digital HistoryMine and Mill*Slavery in America*Southwest HistoryU.S. History Survey I (to 1877) U.S. History Survey II (since 1877) * Also taught graduate versions of these courses.Other Duties:Faculty Development Coordinator, CSU-Pueblo Center for Teaching and Learning, 2019-PresentHistory Department Internship Coordinator, 2015-PresentVice-President, Colorado Ludlow Massacre Centennial Commission, 2013-2014 (by appointment of Governor John Hickenlooper).Pueblo Food Council, 2019-Present.National Council Member, District 2, American Association of University Professors (AAUO), 2015-Present.Co-President, Colorado Conference, AAUP, 2013-2019.President, CSU-Pueblo AAUP, 2019-Present. Co-Director of four U.S. Department of Education Teaching American History grants, 2006-2011. Historical Advisor, Steelworks Center of the West, Pueblo, CO, 2000-Present.Editor-in-Chief, US Survey II (1877-Present), Milestone Documents, 2011-Present.Editorial Advisory Board, Academe magazine.Columnist, Chronicle of Higher Education, Vitae Project, 2013-2018.Expert advisor, Colorado Encyclopedia, Colorado state University – Fort Collins and Colorado Humanities.EDUCATION: Ph.D.: U.S. History, University of Wisconsin - Madison (August 1997).Dissertation Title: "Managing the Mills: Labor Policy in the American Steel Industry, 1892-1937." Advisor: Professor J. Rogers Hollingsworth. Prelim Fields: American Labor History, America 1914-1945. Minor: Distributed (Industrial Relations, Economics and Sociology). M.A.: U.S. History, University of Wisconsin - Madison (May 1992).Thesis Title: "Caught in the Middle: The Seizure and Occupation of the Cudahy Brothers Company, 1944-1945." B.A. (Cum Laude): University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA (May 1988). Majors: History and Political Science. AWARDS:2004-05, 2017-18 - University Award for Faculty Excellence in Scholarly/Creative Activity, Colorado State University - Pueblo2016-18 – Faculty Fellow, Center for Teaching and Learning, Colorado State University – Pueblo.Summer 2014 - NEH Seminar on the Digital Humanities, George Mason University, Arlington, VA.Spring 2006 - Fulbright Teaching Fellowship, Ovidius University, Constanta, Romania2004 - Outstanding Faculty Member, College of Humanities and Social Science, Colorado State University – PuebloPUBLICATIONS: Books:The Chemistry of Fear: Harvey Wiley’s Many Struggles for Pure Food. Under contract at the Johns Hopkins University Press (Forthcoming 2020).Food Adulteration. Under contract at Reaktion Press (Forthcoming 2020).Editor, Counterpoints: Paired Sources from U.S. History, 1865-present. Milestone Documents, 2019.How We Used to Get Ice. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018.Refrigerator. New York: Bloomsbury, 2015.Refrigeration Nation:?A History of Ice, Appliances and Enterprise. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, October 2013.Industrialization and the Transformation of America Life, 1877 to the Present. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2012.Representation and Rebellion: The Rockefeller Plan at the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, 1914-1942.? Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2010.Managing the Mills:? Labor Policy in the American Steel Industry During the Nonunion Era.? Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 2004.Education Is Not an App: The Political Economy of University Teaching in the Internet Age. Co-Author (with Jonathan Poritz). New York: Routledge, 2016.Co-Editor (with Jonathan Pollack), The Voice of the People: Primary Sources on the History of American Labor, Industrial Relations and Working-Class Culture. Wheeling, IL: Harlan Davidson, 2004. Articles:“Harvey Wiley and the Transformation of the American Diet,” in Chemistry's Role in Food Production and Sustainability: Past and Present, Mary Virginia Orna, Gillian Eggleston and Alvin F. Bopp, eds. (Washington, D.C.: American Chemical Society, 2019): 75-84.‘Transcending Seasons,” Food + City Issue IV, July 2018, 17-23."The raw water craze threatens to undo one of our major public health achievements," Washington Post, January 11, 2018.Is It a Bird? Is It a Plane? No, It’s SUPERPROFESSOR!!!, The Sociology Review, May 26, 2016.“How Long Will Your Class Remain Yours? Academic Freedom and Control of the Classroom,” Hybrid Pedagogy, January 26, 2016.“Mini-Object Lesson: The Art of Fridge Magnets,” The Atlantic, September 26, 2015.“The Flipped Classroom Is Professional Suicide,” The Kernel, August 23, 2015.“A Culture of Free Enterprise: Employer Management Policies in the United States Since 1970,” in Management History: Global Past and Present. Charlotte, NCC: Information Age Publishing, 2015. “Beyond Body Counts: A Centennial Rethinking of the Ludlow Massacre,” Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas 11 (Fall 2014): 107-115.“A Screen-Only School in San Francisco,” The Baffler, August 27, 2014.“More Than MOOCs,” Academe 100 (May-June 2014): 13-16.“The Taylorization of the Historian’s Workplace,” AHA Perspectives on History 52 (February 2014): 45-46.?“The Invention of Refrigerated Transport and the Development of the International Dressed Meat Trade,” in History of Artificial Cold, Scientific, Technological and Cultural Issues, Kostas Gavroglu, ed. (Dordrecht: Springer, 2014): 251-65.“The Huge Chill: Why Are American Refrigerators So Big?,” The Atlantic, October 4, 2013. "The MOOC Racket," Slate, July 25, 2013."Peer Grading Can't Work," Inside Higher Education, March 5, 2013."The Obsolescence Question," Inside Higher Education, July 30, 2012."Teaching History with YouTube Revisited," AHA Perspectives on History 49 (April 2011): 40-41.“What’s Left at the Bottom of the Glass: The Quest for Purity and the Development of the American Natural Ice Industry,” in Food Chains: From Farmyard to Shopping Cart, Roger Horowitz and Warren Belasco, eds. (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008): 108-25."The Natural Price of Natural Ice in America, 1880-1910," Business and Economic History On-Line 6, (2008). "Teaching History With YouTube (and other primary-source video sites on the internet)," ?AHA Perspectives on History 46 (May 2008): 30-31.“What If a Company Union Wasn’t a ‘Sham?’”: The Rockefeller Plan in Action,” Labor History 48 (November 2007): 457-475.""I Did Not Know . . . Any Danger Was Attached:" Safety Consciousness in the Early Ice and Refrigeration Industries," Technology and Culture 46 (July 2005): 541-60.“X,” “XX” and “X-3”: Labor Spy Reports from the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company Archives," Colorado Heritage (Winter 2004): 28-41."A Crisis Over Consensus: Standardized Testing in American History and Student Learning," Radical Pedagogy 5:2 (2003)."Discussion - Welfare Capitalism in the United States: Policies, Practices and Possibilities," Industrial Relations Research Association, Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting (2003): 71-3."John Fitch, David Brody and the Culture of Management in American Labor History," Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations 12 (JAI: Amsterdam, 2003): 197-222."The Bessemer Historical Society and the Colorado Fuel and Iron Archives," Labour History [Australia] 84 (May 2003): 119-20. "The Colorado Fuel and Iron Archives," Annotation 31.1, (March 2003): 8-8. "Frederick Taylor in the Classroom: Standardized Testing and Scientific Management," Radical Pedagogy 3:2, (2001). “Managing the Mills: Labor Policy in the American Steel Industry, 1892-1937 [Dissertation Summary],” Business and Economic History 27, (Fall 1998): 23-28. "Cultural Influences on Labor Policy: American Steel Manufacturers in the Nonunion Era," Essays in Business and Economic History, (1998): 197-213. "Homestead in Context: Andrew Carnegie and the Decline of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers,” Pennsylvania History 64, (Autumn 1997): 509-33. "'Giving With One Hand and Taking Away With the Other': The Failure of Welfare Capitalism at United States Steel, 1901-1937," Labor's Heritage 9, (Fall 1997): 20-31, 48-57. "Caught In the Middle: The Seizure and Occupation of the Cudahy Brothers Company, 1944-1945," Wisconsin Magazine of History 78, (Spring 1995): 200-18. Co-Author (with Jonathan Poritz), “The Tenured IT Expert,” Inside Higher Education, September 20, 2016.Co-Author (with Greg Patmore), “Employee publications and employee Representation Plans: The case of Colorado Fuel and Iron, 1915-1942,” Management and Organisational History 3 (2008): 257-72.Co-Author (with Brian Clason), “Dr. Richard Corwin and Colorado’s Changing Racial Divide,” in Making an American Workforce: The Rockefellers and the Legacy of Ludlow, Fawn-Amber Montoya, ed. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2014: 33-47.Participant, “The Flipped U.S. History Classroom: A Roundtable Discussion,” The American Historian 1 (November 2014): 16-19.Encyclopedia Entries:“Colorado Fuel and Iron Company,” “Ludlow Massacre,” and “Pueblo,” Colorado Encyclopedia, (online) Colorado Humanities/Colorado State University.“Industry, Commerce and Urbanization in the United States, 1880-1929,” The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Urban History, Vol. I. Timothy J. Gilfoyle, ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019): 60-70.“Ice Houses” and “Refrigeration,” The Chicago Food Encyclopedia, Carol Mighton Haddix, Bruce Kraig and Colleen Taylor Sen, eds. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2017): 139-40, 208-09. “Industrialization and Urbanization in the United States, 1880-1929,” Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History.“Refrigeration,” Discoveries in Modern Science: Exploration, Invention, Technology, Vol. 3, James Trefil, ed. (Farmington Hills, MI: Macmillan Reference USA, 2015): 933-36.“Labor Organizations and Reform Movements in the Industrial Revolution,” The Industrial Revolution in America: Overview/Comparison, Kevin Hillstrom and Laurie Collier Hillstrom, eds.? (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2007): 127-53.“Labor Organizations and Reform Movements,” The Industrial Revolution in America: Agriculture and Meatpacking, Kevin Hillstrom and Laurie Collier Hillstrom, eds.? (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2007): 117-43."Labor Organizations and Reform Movements," in Industrial Revolution in America: Mining and Petroleum, Kevin Hillstrom and Laurie Collier Hillstrom, eds.? (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2006): 117-43."Labor Organizations and Reform Movements," in Industrial Revolution in America: Iron and Steel, Kevin Hillstrom and Laurie Collier Hilstrom, eds.? (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2005): 129-56."Iron- and Steelworkers," in The Encyclopedia of Chicago, James R. Grossman, Ann Durkin Keating and Janice L. Reiff, eds.? (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004): 427-28."Steelworkers Movement," in Encyclopedia of American Social Movements, Volume 2, Immanuel Ness, ed.? (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2004): 543-47.Book Reviews:“Cornering the Market: Independent Grocers and Innovation in American Small Business, by Susan Spellman,” Technology and Culture 59 (October 2018): 972-73.“Worker Voice: Employee Representation in the Workplace in Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK and the US, 1914-1939, by Greg Patmore,” Labour/Le Travail 79 (Spring 2017): 298-300.“Slaughterhouse: Chicago’s Union Stockyard and the World It Made, by Dominic A. Pacyga,” Winterthur Portfolio 5 (Winter 2016): 291-92.“Food in Time and Place: The American Historical Association Companion to Food History, Paul Freedman, Joyce E. Chaplin and Ken Albala, eds.,” Agricultural History 89 (Fall 2015): 612-14.“Workers in Hard Times: A Long View of Economic Crises, Leon Fink, Joseph A. McCartin and Joan Sangster, eds.,” Journal of American History 101 (December 2014): 1010-11."The Gospel of Progressivism: Moral Reform and Labor War in Colorado, 1900-1930, by R. Todd Laugen," Pacific Historical Review 81 (February 2012): 106-07."The Trail of Gold and Silver: Mining in Colorado, 1859-2009, by Duane A. Smith," New Mexico Historical Review 86 (Fall 2011): 540-41."Condensed Capitalism: Campbell Soup and the Pursuit of Cheap Production in the Twentieth Century, by Daniel Sidorick," American Historical Review 116 (April 2011): 473."American Abyss: Savagery and Civilization in the Age of Industry, by Daniel E. Bender," Journal of American History 97 (December 2010): 838."Killing for Coal: America's Deadliest Labor War, by Thomas G. Andrews," Center for Colorado and the West at Auraria Library (2009)."Citizen Docker: Making a New Deal on the Vancouver Waterfront, 1919-1939 by Andrew Parnaby," Pacific Northwest Quarterly 99 (Summer 2008): 152-53."Industrial Genius:? The Working Life of Charles Michael Schwab by Kenneth Warren," Journal of American History 94 (December 2007): 954-55.“The Global Evolution of Industrial Relations: Events, Ideas and the IRRA by Bruce E. Kaufman,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought 29 (March 2007): 122-24."The Rise of the Silver Queen: Georgetown, Colorado, 1859-1896, by Liston E. Leyendecker, Christine A. Bradley, and Duane A. Smith," Western Historical Quarterly 37 (Winter 2006): 518-19.“Students Against Sweatshops, by Liza Featherstone,” Labor History 47 (May 2006): 275-77."Labor's Time: Shorter Hours, the UAW, and the Struggle for American Unionism, by Jonathan Cutler," Labor 3 (Spring 2006): 159-61."Linde: History of a Technology Corporation, 1879-2004, by Hans-Liudger Dienel," Technology and Culture 46 (October 2005): 849-50."Bloodless Victories, by Howell John Harris," Business History Review 75 (Summer 2001): 396-98.“The Business of Benevolence, by Andrea Tone,” Business History Review 72 (Summer 1998): 24-26.FELLOWSHIPS: Arthur H. Cole Grant, Economic History Association, w/ Daniel I. Rees and Mark Anderson, 2016.SEED Grant, Colorado State University - Pueblo, Spring/Fall 2012.Research Fellowship, University of Sydney (Australia), Department of Work and Organisational Studies (May 2009).Grant-In-Aid, Rockefeller Archives Center, Sleepy Hollow, NY (Summer 2007, Spring 1996). Grant-In-Aid, Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, DE (Fall 2005, Summer 2002, Winter 1998). Smithsonian Institution Travel Grant (National Museum of American History), Washington, D.C. (June-July 2000). George Meany Memorial Archives Fellowship, George Meany Memorial Archives, Silver Spring, MD (Fall 1995-Spring 1996). H.B. DuPont Fellowship, Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, DE (Summer 1994). PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS: “Academic Freedom and the LMS,” American Historical Association Pacific Coast Branch, Las Vegas, NV (August 2019)“Harvey Wiley and the Transformation of the American Diet,” “Food and…” conference, Humanities Center, Texas Tech University, (April 2018).“Harvey Wiley and the Transformation of the American Diet,” Food at the Crossroads Symposium, American Chemical Society annual meeting, New Orleans, LA (March 2018).“More Than Meat: The Ice Industry and the Transformation of the American Diet,” Invention of Food conference, Institute for Historical Studies, University of Texas – Austin, Austin TX (April 2017).“Academic Freedom, Quality of Teaching and Intellectual Property in the Digital Environment,” Western Regional Conference, Western Faculty Association, Saskatoon, SK (Canada) (October 2015).“Plenary Session: Systematic Impacts,” Digital Learning Research Network conference, Palo Alto, CA (October 2015). “Class Struggle Over the Virtual Classroom,” Digital Learning Research Network conference, Palo Alto, CA (October 2015).“How Long Will Your Class Remain Yours?,” American Association of University Professors, Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C. (June 2015).“Everything Rots: Food Preservation in World History,” Declinism Seminars: Decay, Axel and Margaret Ax:son Johnson Foundation, Harvard Faculty Club, Cambridge, MA (February 24, 2015).“The Preservation of Meat in the Late-Nineteenth Century,” The Food Conference, New York, NY, (April 2014).“The Taylorization of the Historian’s Workplace,” American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., (January 2014).“What Problem Do MOOCs Solve?,” MOOC Research Initiative Conference, Arlington, TX, (December 2013).“It’s the Shared Governance, Stupid,” University of Denver Strategic Issues Panel on the Future of Higher Education, Denver, CO, (July 2013).“Representation and Rebellion: The Rockefeller Plan at the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, 1914-1942,” Western History Lecture Series, Colorado State Historical Society, (April 2011)."Budgetary Shared Governance: What to Ask For, What to Expect," AAUP Shared Governance Conference, Washington, D.C. (November 2010).“Thomas Mort, the Invention of Mechanical Refrigeration and the Development of the Australian Meat Export Industry,” Society for the History of Technology, Tacoma, WA (September 2010)."Inventing the Cold Chain: Technology and Demand in the American Natural Ice Industry," Society for the History of Technology, Pittsburgh, PA (October 2009)."Why Do Americans Have Such Big Refrigerators?," Tasting Histories, Robert Mondavi Institute of Food and Wine, University of California - Davis, (February 2009). "John D. Rockefeller, Jr. and the Failure of 'Liberal' Anti-Unionism," Labor and the Right, University of California - Santa Barbara (January 2009)."The Natural Price of Natural Ice in America, 1880-1910," Business History Conference, Sacramento, CA (April 2008).“The Table or the Railroad Car?:? The Quest for Purity and the Development of the American Ice and Refrigeration Industry,” at “Food Chains: Technology, Provisioning and Science,” Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, DE (November 2006).“Their “Friend and Champion?:” The Rockefeller Plan and the Problem of Industrial Relations,” North American Labor History Conference, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI (October 2006). "The Ludlow Memorial:?Inspiration, Solidarity and Historical Memory," The Organization of American Historians, Washington, D.C. (June 2006)."Why the Rockefeller Plan Came Up Short," Southwest Social Science Association, New Orleans, LA (March 2005)."Comment," Industrial Relations Research Association, Washington, D.C. (January 2003). “What Once Was Old Is New Again: John R. Commons and American Labor History,” Mid-America Conference on History, Springfield, MO (September 1999). “Homestead in Context: Technological Change and the Decline of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers,” Society for the History of Technology, Baltimore, MD (October 1998). Dissertation Session, Business History Conference, College Park, MD (March 1998). "Welfare Capitalism and Business Culture: The American Steel Industry Before the New Deal," 9th International Conference on Socio-Economics, Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, Montreal, Canada (July 1997). "Cultural Influences on Labor Policy," Economic and Business Historical Society Conference, Richmond, VA (April 1997). "A Kind Face on a Cold Policy: Welfare Capitalism in the Steel Industry, 1901-1919," Economic and Business Historical Society Conference, Boulder, CO (April 1995). "Caught in the Middle: The Seizure and Occupation of the Cudahy Brothers Company, 1944-1945," Third Annual Social History Conference, University of Cincinnati (October 1993). ................
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