Curriculum Vitae

 

DALE WAYNE TOMICH

 

 

Personal Data:

 

Date of Birth:                            March 25, 1946

                                                Male, Married

 

Place of Birth:                           Milwaukee, Wisconsin

 

 

University Address:                   Department of Sociology                     

                                                Binghamton University

                                                P.O. Box 6000

                                                Binghamton, N.Y. 13901-6000

                                                (607) 777-2628

 

Home Address:                        425 S. Jensen Road

                                                Vestal, NY 13850-3018

                                                (607) 729-7119

 

Academic History:

 

Ph.D.  University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1976 (History).

M.A.  University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1971 (History).

B.A.  University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1968 (History).

 

Languages:  French, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, German

 

Academic Positions

 

2000          Professor of Sociology and History, Binghamton University

1997          Professor, Department of Sociology, SUNY/Binghamton

1986- 97    Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, SUNY/Binghamton 

1976-85     Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, SUNY/Binghamton

 

Administrative Experience

 

Chair, Department of Sociology, Binghamton University (1999-);  Director, Graduate Certificate Program in Global Studies, Binghamton University (1999-); Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Sociology, SUNY/Binghamton (1990-1992, 1995-1999).

 

Visiting Positions

 

Visiting Professor, Department of History, Princeton University (1999); Visiting Professor, Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas, Departamento de História, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil (1998); Visiting Professor, U.F.R., Géographie, Histoire et Sciences de la Société, Université de Paris VII-Denis Diderot (1997); Visiting Professor, Development Studies Program, University of California, Berkeley (1994); Visiting Scholar, Center for Comparative Research in History, Society, and Culture, University of California, Davis (1994); Research Associate, Center for Latin American Studies, University of California, Berkeley (1993-1994); Visiting Lecturer, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis (1993); Visiting Professor, Latin American Studies Program, University of California, Berkeley (1993); Visiting Professor, Department of History, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas - São Paulo, Brazil (1988).

 

Awards/Distinctions:

                                               

1991 Distinguished Scholarship Award, Political Economy of the World System Section of the American Sociological Association for Slavery in the Circuit of Sugar:  Martinique and the World Economy, 1830-1848, (The Johns Hopkins University    Press).

 

1982-83  Fulbright-Hays Lectureship (Brazil).

 

1981-82  National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for Independent Study and Research.

 

1981-82  Social Science Research Council Postdoctoral Grant for International

         Research.

        

1979  SUNY Research Foundation Award. 

 

1977  National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend.

 

Publications:

 

 Books:

 

The Second Slavery:  Global Process and Local Histories in the Remaking the American Plantation Periphery, 1815-1888. (in progress).

 

Ambiguities of Modernity:  Science, Space, and Slavery in Nineteenth Century Cuba. (in progress).

 

Slavery in the Circuit of Sugar:  Martinique and the World Economy, 1830-1848. (Baltimore:  The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990).

 

 

Articles and Translations:

 

“The Wealth of Empire:  Francisco Arango y Parreño, Political Economy, and Slavery in Cuba,” (Comparative Studies in Society and History, forthcoming).

 

“Slavery in Martinique in the French Caribbean,” in Caribbean Slavery in the Atlantic World, Verene A. Shepherd and Hilary McD. Beckles, eds. (Princeton: Markus Wiener, 2000).

 

"The French Caribbean" with Carolyn Fick in Encyclopedia of Slavery, Seymour Drescher and Stanley L. Engerman, eds. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).

 

"Spaces of Slavery: Times of Freedom: Rethinking Caribbean History in World Perspective," Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East XVII, 1 (1997), 67-80.

 

"World of Capital, Worlds of Labor:  Reworking Class in Global Perspective."  in Reworking Class:  Cultures and Institutions of Economic Stratification and Agency , John R. Hall, ed. (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997), 287-311.

 

"Plantations in Latin America," Encyclopedia of Latin American History (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, in press).

 

"The Black Diaspora," The History Workshop Journal, 42 (Autumn, 1996), 330-335.  Reprinted in Afro-Ásia (Centro de Estudos Afro-Orientais da Universidade Federal da Bahia) 17 (1996), 252-259.

 

"Contested Terrains:  Houses, Provision Grounds, and the Reconstitution of Labor in Post-Emancipation Martinique," in Mary Turner, ed.,  From Chattel Slavery to Wage Slavery (Bloomington:  Indiana University Press, 1995), 241-257.

 

"Visions of Liberty:  Martinique in 1848,"  Proceedings of the Nineteenth Meetinging of the French Colonial Historical Society, Providence Rhode Island, May, 1993 (Cleveland:  French Colonial Historical Society, 1994), 164-172.

 

"Small Islands & Huge Comparisons: Caribbean Plantations, Historical Unevenness, & Capitalist Modernity," Social Science History  18, 3 (Fall, 1994), 339-358.

 

"World Market and American Slavery:  Problems of Historical Method,"  in Els espais del mercat, Manuel Cerdá, ed. (Valencia, Spain:  Diputació de Valencia, 1993), 213-240.

 

"Trabalho Escravo e Trabalho Livre:  Origens Historicas do Capital" Revista USP (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil) 13 (Março-Maio, 1992), 100-117.

 

"Gender:  The Production of Social Relations," International Labor and Working-Class History 41 (Spring, 1992), 37-41.

 

"World Slavery and Caribbean Capitalism: The Cuban Sugar Industry, 1760-1868," Theory and Society 20, 3 (June, 1991), 297-319.

 

"Une Petite Guinée:  Provision Ground and Plantation in Martinique, 1830-1870,"  Slavery and Abolition 12, 1 (May, 1991), 68-91.  Reprinted in The Slaves' Economy.  Independent Production by Slaves in the Americas, Ira Berlin and Philip D. Morgan, eds.  (London:  Frank Cass & Co. Ltd., 1991), 68-91.    Also reprinted in Cultivation and Culture:  Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas, Ira Berlin and Philip D. Morgan, eds.  (Charlottesville:  University of Virginia Press, 1993), 221-242.

 

"The Other Face of Slave Labor:  Provision Grounds and Internal Marketing in Martinique," in Caribbean Slave Society and Economy:  A Student Reader, Hilary McD. Beckles and Verene A. Shepherd, eds. (Kingston, JA: Ian Randle; London: James Currey, 1991), 304-318.  Reprinted in Caribbean Slavery in the Atlantic World, Verene A. Shepherd and Hilary McD. Beckles, eds. (Princeton: Markus Wiener, 2000).

 

"A Brecha Camponesa," in Actualidade e Abolição, Manuel Correia de Andrade and Eliane Moury Fernandes, orgs. (Editora Massanga: Recife - PE, Brasil).

 

"Caribbean Slavery and the Struggle over Reproduction," in Working Without  Wages:  Domestic Labor and Self-Employment Within Capitalism, Jane Collins and Martha Gimenez, eds. (Albany:  State University of New York Press, 1990), 116-124.

 

"Liberté ou Mort:  Republicanism and Slave Revolt in Martinique, February, 1831," History Workshop Journal 29, (Spring, 1990), 85-91.

 

"Sugar Technology and Slave Labor in Martinique, 1830-1848," De Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 63, 1/2, (1989), 118-134.

 

"The 'Second Slavery:' Bonded Labor and the Transformation of the Nineteenth Century World Economy," in Rethinking the Nineteenth Century:  Movements and Contradictions, Francisco O. Ramirez, ed. (Westport, CT, Greenwood Press, 1988), 103-117.

 

"White Days, Black Days:  The Working Day and the Crisis of Slavery in the  French Caribbean," in Crises in the Caribbean Basin,  Richard A. Tardinico, ed. (Newbury Park, California, Sage Publications, 1987), 31-45.

 

"Rapporti Sociali di Produzione e Mercato Mondiale nel Dibattito Recente sulla  Transizione dal Feudalismo al Capitalismo," Studi Storici, 21, 3  (Luglio-Settembre, 1980), 539-564.        Spanish translation "Relaciones sociales de producción y mercado mundial en el debate reciente sobre la transición del feudalismo al capitalismo," Manuscrits. Revista d'História Moderna (Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona) 4/5 (Abril, 1987), 209-239.

 

"The Dialectic of Colonialism and Culture:  The Origins of the Négritude of  Aimé Césaire," Review, II, 3 (Winter, 1979), 351-385.

 

"The United States and Latin America:  Two Types of Violence," with James  Petras, Studies in Romance Languages and Literatures:  Essays Critical and  Contextual, Sandra Messinger Cypess, editor (Lawrence, Kansas: Coronado Press,  1979).

 

"Georges Haupt, 1928-1978," with Anson G. Rabinbach, in New German Critique,  No. 14, (Spring 1978), 3-6.  Reprinted in International Labor and Working Class  History, No. 14-15 (Spring 1979), 2-5.

 

Translation of "Why the History of the Working-Class Movement?" by Georges  Haupt, in New German Critique, 14, (Spring 1978), 7-27, and in Review, II,  1, (Summer, 1978).

 

"Images and Realities of Violence:  The United States and Latin America," with  James Petras, in Conflict, Order, and Peace in the Americas, Part II:   Analyses of the Issues, Michael E. Conroy and Norman V. Walbek, ed. (Austin,  Texas: Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas, 1978),  91-136.  Reprinted in Revista de Sociologia, XL, Numero extraordinario (E),  1978, 195-231.

 

"Some Further Reflections on Class and Class Conflict in the World-Economy," (Binghamton, NY:  Working Papers of the Fernand Braudel Center for the Study of  Economies, Historical Systems and Civilizations, 1977).

 

Book Reviews in:

 

Agricultural History, The American Historical Review, American Journal of Sociology, Contemporary Sociology, Hispanic American Historical Review, History Workshop Journal, Journal of Forest History, The Journal of Peasant Studies,  Journal of Social History, Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, Slavery and Abolition,  Social Forces,  William & Mary Quarterly, .

 

Invited Papers:

 

Guest Lectures:

 

“The Global Production of Local Difference:  Toward a Historical Geography of the Atlantic Plantation Periphery,” Critical Development Seminar, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA.  November 16, 2001.

 

“The Wealth of Empire:  Francisco Arango y Parreño, Enlightenment, and Slavery in Cuba,”  Latin American Studies Program, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA.  November 15, 2001.

 

“The Local Context of Global Action: Slaves, Peasants, and Workers in the Caribbean,” presented the Department of Rural Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.  April 24, 2001.

 

“The African Diaspora.”  Roundtable Discussion.  Department of History.  Princeton University.  Princeton, New Jersey.  March 2, 1999.

 

“African Diaspora, Atlantic History: Changing the Boundaries of Historical Inquiry,” presented to the African Studies Program, the Department of Afro-American Studies and the Latin American Studies Program, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI.  November 24, 1998.

 

“Strategies for Comparative Historical Research,” presented to the Global Studies Program, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI.  November 23, 1998.

 

“Mercado, Trabalho e Dominação no Pensamento dos Escravistas Cubanos,” presented to Departamento de História, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte - MG, Brasil.  July 15, 1998.

 

“Thinking Through Slavery: Discourse and Ideology in the Analysis of Nineteenth Century Planter Thought,” Institute for Global Studies in Culture, Power, and History, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.  (February 17, 1998).

 

“Slavery and Emancipation in the French Caribbean,” presented to the Seminar on Caribbean History, Society, and Culture, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI.  October 10, 1994.

 

“19th Century Slavery in Brazil:  Current Themes in Research,” Roundtable Discussion.  Center for Latin American Studies, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA.  May 24, 1994.

 

“Good Slaves, Bad Citizens:  Reorganizing Labor in Post-Emancipation Martinique,”  presented to the Economic History Workshop, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis, CA, Jan. 28 1994.

 

“The Global in the Local: Approaches to the Historical Construction of Time and Space” presented to the Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley, CA, March 17, 1993.

 

“Reconstructing Time, Space and Historical Unevenness: World Economy and Comparative Strategies,” presented to the Center for Comparative Research in History, Society, & Culture, University of California, Davis, CA, January 12, 1993.

 

“Caribbean Counterpoint:  Plantation and Peasantry during Slavery and After,”  presented at the Department of History, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, March 31, 1992.

 

“Capitalist Development and Worker Resistance in Brazil:  São Paulo, 1964-1982,” presented at the Department of History, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, March 30, 1992.

 

“Slave Culture, Work, and Subsistence,” presented to the History Workshop Seminar, London, England, May 13, 1991.

 

“Origins of the Sugar Central in Martinique and Cuba: A Problem in Historical Comparison,” presented to the Program in Atlantic History, Culture and Society, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, December 5, 1989.

 

“The Haitian Revolution and The History of Slavery in the Americas,” presented to the Seminar on Comparative Post-Emancipation Societies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, October 12, 1988.

 

“Time, Labor Discipline, and Slavery in the French Caribbean,” paper presented at the Workshop on Post-Emancipation Societies in the Americas, Latin American Studies Program, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., March 21, 1987.

 

“Tendencias de historiografia sobre escravidão no Caribe,” presented to the Department of History, University of São Paulo, Brazil, May 19, 1983.

 

“International Labor Migrations in Historical Perspective,” with James O'Connor, presented to the Department of Sociology, University of  California at Santa Barbara, January 30, 1979.

 

“New World Slavery in the Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism,” presented to the Department of Sociology, University of California at Santa Cruz,  January 29, 1979.   

 

Symposia:

 

“La richesse d’empire:  l’esclavage et la pensée économique des planteurs cubains à l’époque de la révolution à Saint-Domingue,” presented at the conference on Ruptures et continuités de la politique coloniale française: 1802 – 1804 – 1825 – 1830, Université de Paris VIII (Saint-Denis).  Paris, France June 20-22, 2002.

 

Capitalism and Slavery Revisited: Remaking the Slave Commodity Frontier,” presented at the conference on Eric Williams: His Scholarship, Work And Impact, The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York, NY. February 16, 2002.

 

“Constructing the Sugar Frontier:  Francisco Arango y Parreño, Slavery and Enlightenment,,” presented at the conference on  Paradigms and Paradigmas: Histories and Historians of the Spanish Colonial Past, Fordham University, New York, NY. September 29, 2001.

 

“The Pervasive Institution:  Hemispheric Perspectives on Comparative Slaveries,” presented at the conference on Greater American Histories?,  The Huntington Library, San Marino, CA., March 9-10, 2001.

 

“Global Compositions of Caribbean Labor,” presented at the conference The Global Importance of Being Local,  The Crossing Borders Program, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA.  March 2-4, 2001.

 

“Historicity:  The Importance of Places and the Particular” presented at the conference Questions of Methodology/ Questioning Foundations: Epistemology – Subjectivity – Context, Ford Group on Nationalism, Citizenship, and Identity, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. April 8, 2000.

 

"Constructing World Inequality: Market, Labor, and Slavery in Nineteenth Century Cuban Thought," presented at the Twenty-third Annual Political Economy of the World System Conference.  University of Maryland, College Park, MD.,  March 26-27, 1999.

 

"New World Slavery and Historical Modernity" presented at the Conference on Transmodernity, Historical Capitalism, and Coloniality: A Post-Disciplinary Dialogue, Binghamton University, Binghamton, N.Y., Dec. 4, 1998.

 

"Slavery, Race and Labor in the Political Economic Discourse of Francisco de Arango y Parreño" presented at the Symposium From Colonial Plantations to Global Peripheries: A Century of Transformations in the Caribbean and Tropical Asia, Caribbean Resource Center, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, P.R.  October 8, 1998.

 

"Transatlantic Translations:  E.P. Thompson in Brazil" presented at the Symposium Remembering E.P.Thompson, Brown University, Providence, R.I. March 4, 1995.

 

Commentator for "Thinking About Contemporary World History," panel presented at the conference on Interpreting Historical Change at the End of the Twentieth Century:  The Challenges of the Present Age to Historical Thought and Social Theory,  Center for Comparative Research in History, Society, and Culture, University of California, Davis, CA, February 25, 1995.

 

Participant in roundtable, "Tradição e Novidades," at the conference A História Acolá, Centro de Estudos Norte de Portugal-Aquitânia, Porto, Portugal, December 8-10, 1994.

 

"Reconstructing the Labor Process: Planter Control and Worker Resistance in Post-Emancipation Martinique," presented at the conference on From Chattel Slavery to Wage Slavery, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London, London, England, May 9-10, 1991.

 

"World Economy and Local Histories:  Markets, Production, and Problems of Historical Method,"  presented at the conference on Els espais del mercat, Second International Local History Colloquy, University of Valencia, Spain, April 24-26, 1991.

 

"The Struggle Over Labor:  Plantation and Provision Ground in Slavery and Freedom in Martinique, 1830-1870," paper presented at the Conference on Cultivation and Culture:  Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, April 14, 1989.

 

"A Outra Face do Trabalho Cativo: A Roça Escrava na Martinica," paper presented at Colóquio: O Negro:  Religião e Cultura, Universidade Federal de Bahia, Museu de Arte da Bahia, Salvador - BA, Brasil, June 19, 1988.

 

"A Brecha Camponesa," paper presented at Seminário:  Actualidade & Abolição, Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Recife - PE, Brasil, June 16, 1988.

 

"A Outra Face do Trabalho Cativo: A Roça Escrava na Martinica," paper presented at Colóquio Internacional sobre a Escravidão, Universidade Federal de Paraná, Curitiba - PR, Brasil, June 13, 1988.

 

"Liberté ou Mort:  Republicanism and Slave Revolt in Martinique, 1831," paper presented at Escravidão: Congresso Internacional, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo - SP, Brasil, June 8, 1988.

 

"A Brecha Camponesa," paper presented at Seminário: O Negro no Brasil, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre - RS, Brasil, June 3, 1988.

 

"A Luta em Torno da Jornada de Trabalho sob a Escravidão," paper presented at Symposium Histórias de Liberdade:  Cidadões e Escravos no Mundo Moderno (Comemorações do Centenário da Abolição da Escravidão, 13/V/1888 - 13/V/1988), Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas - SP, Brasil, June 2, 1988.

 

"A Outra Face do Trabalho Cativo: A Roça Escrava na Martinica," paper presented at Symposium Histórias de Liberdade:  Cidadões e Escravos no Mundo Moderno (Comemorações do Centenário da Abolição da Escravidão, 13/V/1888 - 13/V/1988), Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas - SP, Brasil, June 1, 1988.

 

"Slavery and Slaveries:  Bonded Labor and the Transformation of the Nineteenth Century World Economy," paper presented at the Tenth Annual Political Economy of the World System Conference.  San Francisco State University, San Francisco CA, March 3, 1986.

 

"White Days, Black Days:  The Working Day and the Crisis of Caribbean Slavery," paper presented at the Nineth Annual Political Economy of the World System Conference, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, March 28-30, 1985.

 

"Images and Realities of Violence:  The United States and Latin America," with  James Petras, presented at the Tom Slick Professorship in World Peace  Conference on Conflict, Order, and Peace in the Americas.  Lyndon B. Johnson  School of Public Affairs, The University of Texas at Austin, November 10-12,  1976.

 

Professional Meetings:

 

“The World After the World System,” Presidential Panel of the Social Science History Association. “New Directions in Historical Sociology,” Pittsburgh, PA.  October, 2000.

 

Commentator for panel “The Invention of Empire:  Cuba and Spain in the Nineteenth Century,” Society for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies,  New York University, April 27-30, 2000.

 

Co-Organizer (With Aníbal Quijano) of Symposium "Work at a Turning Point?" XIV World Congress of Sociology.  Montréal, Québec, Canada.  July 28-August 1, 1998.

 

“World of Capital, Worlds of Labor:  Rethinking Class in Global Perspective."  Session on Rethinking Class.  Committee on Conceptual and Terminological Analysis.  XIII World Congress of Sociology.  Bielefeld, Germany.  July 18-23, 1994.

 

"Non-violent Abstraction:  From Cases to Instances in World Systems Analysis."  World Systems Analysis 1: Historical Comparisons Across Global Boundaries.  XIII World Congress of Sociology.  Bielefeld, Germany.  July 18-23, 1994.

 

"Visions of Liberty: Martinique, 1848," paper presented at the Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society,  The John Carter Brown Library, Providence, RI, May 22, 1993.

 

"Les Nouveaux Affranchis: Manumission and Slave Society in Martinique under the July Monarchy," paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American  Historical Association, Washington, D.C., December 29, 1992.

 

"Small Islands and Huge Comparisons:  Caribbean Plantations, Historical Unevenness, and Capitalist Modernity," paper presented at the joint session  of the sections on Historical-Comparative Sociology and the Political Economy of the World System at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Pittsburgh, PA, August 21, 1992.

 

"The Second Slavery: Cuba in the Nineteenth Century World Division of Labor, 1760-1868," paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association, Washington, D.C., November 19, 1989.

 

Chair and Commentator for "The Origins of the Atlantic Working Class,"  panel presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Studies Association, Miami, Florida, October 28, 1988.

 

"A Luta em Torno da Jornada de Trabalho sob a Escravidão," paper presented at the Eighth Annual Meeting of the Sociedade Brasiliera de Pesquisa Histórica, São Paulo - SP, Brasil, July 29, 1988.

 

"Sugar Technology and Slave Labor in Martinique, 1830-1848," paper presented at The International Congress of Americanists, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, July 4, 1988.

 

"Theory, Method, and the History of Slavery:  Forces and Relations of Production," paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Sociological Society, Nashville, Tennessee, March 17, 1988.

 

"Why is the World Market Organized into States?" with Philip McMichael, paper presented at the Annual Convention of the International Studies Association, Washington, D.C., April 15, 1987.

 

"Caribbean Slavery and the Struggle over Reproduction," paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Washington, D.C., August 26, 1985.

 

"The Transformation of the Social Organization of Large Estate Agriculture in  the 19th Century World Economy:  The French West Indies (Martinique) and the  Kingdom of Naples (Calabria)," with Marta Petrusewicz, presented at the Eighth International Economic  History Congress, Budapest, Hungary, August 1982.

 

"The Crisis of Sugar Production in the Dissolution of Slavery in Nineteenth  Century Martinique," presented at the Annual Meeting of the American  Historical Association, Los Angeles, California, December 28, 1981.

 

"Images and Realities of Violence:  The United States and Latin America," with  James Petras, presented at the panel on "Sociology of War and Peace:   Alternative to the Warfare State," American Sociological Association  Convention, Chicago, September 7, 1977.

 

 


Professional Affiliations:

 

American Sociological Association

 

American Historical Association

 

Latin American Studies Association

 

Social Science History Association

 

Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (The Netherlands)

 

International Sociological Association

 

Other Scholarly Activities:

 

Faculty Associate, Fernand Braudel Center for the Study of Economies, Historical Systems, and Civilizations (SUNY/Binghamton).

 

Editorial Board, Contours (Duke University).

 

Editorial Board,  Taller D'Història (Centre D'Estudis D'Història Local.  Valencia, Spain).

 


Courses Taught:

 

Undergraduate:

 

Social Change in the Twentieth Century World:  Fall, 1976; Spring, 1977; Fall, 1977, Fall, 1978; Spring, 1980; Fall, 1980; Fall, 1983; Spring, 1984; Fall, 1984; Fall, 1989; Spring 1996.

 

Theories of Social Change:  Spring, 1978; Spring, 1985; Fall, 1986; Fall, 1988; Fall, 1989.

 

Historical Sociology of Plantation Systems:  Spring, 1977; Spring, 1979; Spring, 1987.

 

Social Movements: Fall, 1983; Fall, 1986.

 

Slavery, Race, and Culture:  Fall, 1985; Fall, 1988.

 

Contemporary Social Theory:  Fall, 1985.

 

Workers and Workers' Movements:  Fall, 1987.

 

Sociology of Knowledge:  Spring, 1989.

 

Peasants and Peasant Movements in Latin America, Fall, 1990.

 

Introduction to Latin American Studies (University of California, Berkeley): Spring, 1993.

 

Classical Sociological Theory (University of California, Davis): Fall 1993.

 

Development and Underdevelopment in Theory and History  (University of California, Berkeley): Spring, 1994.

 

Sociological Frameworks: Fall, 1994; Fall, 1995, Fall 1996.

 

Social Change: Enterprises, Markets and Work: Spring, 1995.

 

Comparative Social Development:  Fall 1995. Fall, 1996.

 

Patterns of World Development:  Fall, 1997.

 

The History of the Caribbean from 1492 (Princeton University): Spring, 1999.

 

Comparative Slavery in the Americas: (Princeton University): Spring, 1999.

 

Graduate:

 

The Atlantic in the World Economy: Africa and the Americas (with Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch): Spring 2001

 

Methods of World Historical Change: Spring, 2000.

 

Global Representation; Representations of the Global (co-taught with Charles Burroughs, Art History) Spring, 2000.

 

Modern Social Change:  The Rise of the Modern World System:  Fall, 1977; Fall, 1978; Fall, 1979; Fall, 1980; Fall, 1984.

 

World System Studies:  Fall, 1991; Fall, 1994; Fall, 1996; Fall, 1997; Fall 2000.

 

Classical European Social Theories:  Spring, 1978.

 

Sociological Analysis:  Spring, 1979.

 

Theoretical Studies:  Spring, 1980; Spring, 1984; Spring, 1985; Spring, 1986; Spring, 1987; Spring, 1988; Spring, 1989; Spring, 1990; Spring 1991; Spring 1992; Spring, 1995; Spring 1996, Spring 1998; Fall, 1998; Fall, 1999; Spring 2001.

 

Advanced World System Studies: Spring, 1997; Fall, 1998.

 

Advanced Theoretical Studies: Spring, 1997.

 

Capitalism and Agriculture in Latin America (Universidade Estadual de Campinas):  1982.

 

Historiography (Universidade Estadual de Campinas):  1982.

 

Slavery and Emancipation in the Americas (Universidade Federal de Bahia, Universidade Federal de Paraná): 1983;  (Universidade Estadual de Campinas):  1988; (Universidade de São Paulo): 1998.

 

Historical Sociology of the Caribbean:  Spring, 1982.

 

Social Movements:  Spring, 1986.

 

Plantations, Peasants, and Proletarians:  Plantation Systems in the Historical Development of the World Economy: Fall, 1987.

 

Social & Labor Movements: Spring, 1990.

 

Global History, Local History: Theoretical and Methodological Issues (Center for Comparative Research in History, Society, and Culture.  University of California at Davis): Spring 1994.

 

Labor in the World Economy, Fall, 1995.


References:

 

Professor Giovanni Arrighi

Department of Sociology

The Johns Hopkins University

Baltimore, MD 21218

 

Professor Ira Berlin

Department of History

University of Maryland

2115 Frances Scott Key Hall

College Park, MD 20742-7315

 

Professor Stephen Bunker

Department of Sociology

University of Wisconsin

Madison, WI 53706

 

Professor Jane Collins

Department of Sociology

University of Wisconsin

Madison, WI 53706

 

Professeur Catherine Coquery-Viderovitch

Département d'Histoire

Université de Paris VII

Place Jussieu

75005 Paris, France

 

Professor Harriet Friedmann

Department of Sociology

University of Toronto

563 Spadina Avenue

Toronto, Ontario

Canada M5S 1A1

 

Professor Sidney W. Mintz

Department of Anthropology

The Johns Hopkins University

Baltimore, MD 21218

 

Professor Francisco Scarano

Department of History

3211 Humanities Building

University of Wisconsin-Madison

Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1483

 

Professor Joan W. Scott

The Institute for Advanced Study

Princeton, NJ  08540

 

Professor Rebecca Scott

Department of History

Haven Hall

University of Michigan

Ann Arbor, MI 48109

 

Professor Immanuel Wallerstein

The Fernand Braudel Center

The State University of New York at Binghamton

P.O. Box 6000

Binghamton, NY 13902-6000

 

Professor John Walton

Department of Sociology

University of California

Davis, CA 95616


References:

 

Professor Giovanni Arrighi

Department of Sociology

The Johns Hopkins University

Baltimore, MD 21218

 

Professor Stephen Bunker

Department of Sociology

University of Wisconsin

Madison, WI 53706

 

Professor Immanuel Wallerstein

The Fernand Braudel Center

The State University of New York at Binghamton

P.O. Box 6000

Binghamton, NY 13902-6000