Jason H. Dormady is a Professor of History at Central Washington University and received his PhD from UC Santa Barbara (2007). His work on community, conflict, and religion includes the 2011 Primitive Revolution: Restorationist Religion and the Idea of the Mexican Revolution, 1940-1968 and a 2015 edited collection titled Just South of Zion: The Mormons in Mexico and Its Borderlands. Recent work appeared in The Latin Americanist as "God, Cleanliness, and the City: Local Uses of Hygiene and Anticlerical Language in Religious Conflict-Guadalajara, Mexico 1939–1942." (December 2020
Jason H. Dormady is a Professor of History at Central Washington University and received his PhD from UC Santa Barbara (2007). His work on community, conflict, and religion includes the 2011 Primitive Revolution: Restorationist Religion and the Idea of the Mexican Revolution, 1940-1968 and a 2015 edited collection titled Just South of Zion: The Mormons in Mexico and Its Borderlands. Recent work appeared in The Latin Americanist as "God, Cleanliness, and the City: Local Uses of Hygiene and Anticlerical Language in Religious Conflict-Guadalajara, Mexico 1939–1942" (December 2020)
I am pleased to continue the “Teaching with H-Latam’s Research Corner Blog” series featuring graduate students from Rutgers University. Whether you are a graduate student or a scholar at any other level of your career, I want to know about your research this summer. I'm also looking for selections from archivists or librarians who would like to inform our readers about your resources. I'll edit your posts this summer or in early fall, and publish them not long after. Please email me at gkpierce@ship.edu or fill out this Google Form to express your interest in blogging.
Josh