Celebrating Arts & Sciences Faculty Authors - Fall 2009

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Celebrating Arts & Sciences FACULTY SCHOLARS Levy & Greenberg978-1-4331-0697-2:GREENBERGdd.qxd

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From Spinoza Lévinas TO

Hermeneutical, Ethical, and Political Issues in Modern and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy

ZE’EV LEVY Edited by YUDIT KORNBERG GREENBERG PETER LANG

W W W . PE T E R L A NG . CO M

Yudit Kornberg Greenberg is the Cornell Endowed Chair of Religion and Director of the Jewish Studies Program at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. Dr. Greenberg is the author of Better Than Wine: Love, Poetry and Prayer in the Thought of Franz Rosenzweig (1996) and the editor of the Encyclopedia of Love in World Religions (2007). She has written articles on topics in modern and contemporary Jewish thought and is presently completing a manuscript on love in Jewish thought.

/ From Spinoza TO Lévinas

Ze’ev Levy is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Haifa and was also a guest professor at the University of Heidelberg, the Hochschule für jüdische Studien, and the University of Kassel in Germany as well as at the University of Binghamton and at Queens College in the United States. He is the author of numerous books including Between Yafeth and Shem: On the Relationship Between Jewish and General Philosophy (Lang, 1987) and Baruch or Benedict: On Some Jewish Aspects in Spinoza’s Philosophy (Lang, 1989). His main fields of interest are structuralism, ethics, hermeneutics, Spinoza, and Lévinas.

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In From Spinoza to Lévinas, Ze’ev Levy discusses the pivotal ideas of the most influential Jewish thinkers in modern times including Spinoza, Mendelssohn, and Lévinas. Levy accounts for the political foundation of the philosophies of Spinoza and Mendelssohn and the role of hermeneutics in the writings of Spinoza and Maimonides. He traces the history of modern philosophical and biblical hermeneutics and considers issues pertaining to death and dying in light of traditional Jewish and contemporary concepts of the body and soul. Finally, Levy focuses on the thought of Emmanuel Lévinas, arguably one of the most important Jewish philosophers in the second half of the twentieth century. By articulating and responding to contemporary ethical and political challenges and dilemmas, Levy succeeds in contributing to the rich legacy of Jewish thought.

InternatIonal Handbook of

Cross-Cultural Counseling Cultural Assumptions and Practices Worldwide

lawrence H. GersteIn | P. Paul HePPner | stefanía ÆGIsdóttIr seunG-MInG alvIn leunG | katHryn l. norswortHy

M a k i n g C at f i s h B a i t o u t o f g o v e r n M e n t B oy s t h e f i g h t a g a i n s t C at t l e t i C k s a n d t h e t r a n s f o r M at i o n o f t h e y e o M a n s o u t h Claire stroM

Friday, November 20, 2009 Galloway Room


November 20, 2009

We would like to congratulate Arts & Sciences faculty members who have published or edited books, peer-reviewed journal articles, or the creative equivalent during spring and fall 2009. We are pleased to honor the work of Drs. Ilan Alon, Mario D’Amato, Marc Fetscherin, Yudit Greenberg, Kathryn Norsworthy, Socky O’Sullivan, Alberto Prieto-Calixto, Robert Smither, Claire Strom, and Professor Wenxian Zhang. We are also delighted to highlight the work of 24 A&S faculty members who published over 50 journal articles or the creative equivalent for their discipline. Today, we celebrate our colleagues for their exceptional scholarly achievements. While teaching and learning remain top priorities, these faculty members have successfully integrated their research interests into their courses honoring the primacy of student-centered learning at Rollins. In addition, their work contributes to disciplinary knowledge, enhances the intellectual vitality of our community of learners and continues to improve Rollins’ reputation for academic excellence. In an effort to foster additional scholarly conversations, the Office of the Dean of the Faculty instituted the Interdisciplinary Scholarship Series (ISS). The series began this fall with three faculty presentations and will continue with four events during the spring semester. Calls for future ISS topics will be announced at the end of the spring semester. We congratulate each of our distinguished colleagues on their outstanding accomplishments and thank them for their many contributions to Rollins as we strive to educate students for responsible leadership and global citizenship.

With best regards, Roger N. Casey, Ph.D. Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost

Laurie M. Joyner, Ph.D. Dean of the Faculty Professor of Sociology


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2009

WELCOME

Laurie M. Joyner, Ph.D. Dean of the Faculty Professor of Sociology

FACULTY PANEL

Ilan Alon, Ph.D. and Marc Fetscherin, Ph.D. China Rules: Globalization and Political Transformation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009)

Mario D’Amato, Ph.D. Pointing at the Moon Buddhism, Logic, Analytic Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 2009)

Yudit Kornberg Greenberg, Ph.D. From Spinoza to Lévinas: Hermeneutical, Ethical, and Political Issues in Modern and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy (Peter Lang Publisher Inc., 2009)

Kathryn Norsworthy, Ph.D. International Handbook of Cross-Cultural Counseling: Cultural Assumptions and Practices Worldwide (Sage Publications Inc., 2009)

Socky O’Sullivan, Ph.D. and Wenxian Zhang, M.L.S., M.S. A Trip to Florida for Health and Sport: the Lost 1855 Novel of Cyrus Parkhurst Condit (Florida Historical Society, 2009)

Alberto Prieto-Calixto, Ph.D. Héroes, prisioneros y renegados. El cautiverio en la narrativa hispánica de los siglos XVI y XVII (Prensa Académica Castellana, 2009)

Robert Smither, Ph.D. Personality: Theories and Applications (2nd ed., Hogan Press)

Claire Strom, Ph.D. Making Catfish Bait out of Government Boys: The Fight against the Cattle Tick and the Transformation of the Yeoman South (University of Georgia Press, 2009)

CLOSING REMARKS

Roger N. Casey, Ph.D. Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost

RECEPTION


China Rules: Globalization and Political Transformation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009) Edited by Ilan Alon, Julian Chang, Marc Fetscherin, Christoph Lattemann and John R. McIntyre The development of the Chinese MNC is a new feature of globalization. This book deals with the political economy and governance of China and discusses the contemporary discourse of Chinese enterprise internationalization. The first section shows how the internationalization of Chinese enterprises will reshape global competition, and how new corporate governance structures impact the long-term performance of state-owned enterprises in China. The second section assesses international trade and foreign direct investment (FDI) by Chinese firms and their impact on the target countries. The effects of China’s policy and regulatory changes on outward FDI are outlined and a Sino-EU Intra Industry Trade and FDI analysis explores the nature of the challenge facing the EU. Section three describes the developments in certain Chinese industries, telecommunications, electronic and automotive, and explains corporate and government strategies to gain access to global natural resources.

Ilan Alon, Ph.D., is the George D. and Harriet W. Cornell Professor of International Business and serves as executive director of the Rollins China Center. He received a B.S. and M.B.A. from Fairleigh Dickinson University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Kent State University. He is the author, editor, or coeditor of 22 books and has published more than 100 articles, chapters, and conference papers. His three recent books on China include Biographical Dictionary of New Chinese Entrepreneurs and Business Leaders (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2009), Globalization of Chinese Enterprises (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), and Business and Management Education in China: Transition, Pedagogy and Training (World Scientific, 2005). Alon is a recent recipient of the Chinese Marketing Award, a dual award from the Tripod Marketing Association (China) and the Society for Marketing Advances (USA). He has taught courses in top Chinese MBA programs including Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Fudan University, and China Europe International Business School. He is also an international business consultant, with experience in China as well as other countries, and a featured speaker in many professional associations.


Marc Fetscherin, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of international business and an associate of the Rollins China Center. He is also an Asia programs visiting scholar at Harvard University, as well as a visiting professor at East China University of Science and Technology (China), Copenhagen Business School (Denmark), and the University of Fribourg (Switzerland). He received a M.I.M. from the University of Lausanne (HEC), a M.B.S. from the London School of Economics, a Ph.D. from the University of Bern, and completed post-doctoral work at Harvard University. Fetscherin serves on the editorial boards of two journals and was a guest editor of three special issues. In addition to editing the book China Rules: Globalization and Political Transformation (2009) he has contributed to eight books and has published over 30 peer-reviewed articles in leading international academic journals such as Journal of Marketing, Journal of Brand Management, International Marketing Review, International Journal of Market Research, International Journal of Emerging Markets, Management International Review, Multinational Business Review, Corporate Governance: An International Review, European Journal of International Management, International Journal of Chinese Culture and Management, Asia Business & Management, Chinese Management Studies. He has organized, served as a program chair, or presented at more than 50 national and international conferences. Fetscherin has received multiple teaching and research awards and grants for over $300,000, including two grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation (Switzerland) and a grant from the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung (Germany) for a joint research project with University of Potsdam and Harvard University.


Pointing at the Moon Buddhism, Logic, Analytic Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 2009) Edited by Mario D’Amato, Jay L.Garfield, and Tom J.F. Tillemans This volume collects essays by philosophers and scholars working at the interface of Western philosophy and Buddhist Studies. Many have distinguished scholarly records in Western philosophy, with expertise in analytic philosophy and logic, as well as deep interest in Buddhist philosophy. Others have distinguished scholarly records in Buddhist Studies with strong interests in analytic philosophy and logic. All are committed to the enterprise of cross-cultural philosophy and bringing the insights and techniques of each tradition to bear in order to illuminate problems and ideas of the other. These essays address a broad range of topics in the philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, logic, epistemology, and metaphysics, and demonstrate the fecundity of the interaction between the Buddhist and Western philosophical and logical traditions.

Mario D’Amato, Ph.D., is an associate professor of religion. He received his B.A. from Loyola University Chicago and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He is interested in the study of Asian religious traditions, and especially Buddhism, as a means of expanding western conceptions of the category of “religion.” He is concerned with philosophical questions on the meaning and significance of religion, and with cultivating normative reflection on such questions. He is currently engaged in research projects directed towards the exegesis of Yogacara Buddhist thought, focusing on the translation and interpretation of Sanskrit texts.


From Spinoza to Lévinas: Hermeneutical, Ethical, and Political Issues in Modern and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy (Peter Lang Publisher Inc., 2009) Ze’ev Levy. Edited by Yudit Kornberg Greenberg

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From Spinoza to Lévinas: Hermeneutical, Ethical, and Political Issues in Modern and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy is a collection of essays on topics related to From Spinoza the dialectics of tradition and modernity that commenced Lévinas in the modern period with Spinoza, and have dominated continental philosophy and contemporary Jewish Hermeneutical, Ethical, and Political Issues in Modern and thought since then, culminating in the thought of Lévinas. Contemporary Jewish Philosophy Levy contextualizes issues of individual freedom, dignity, responsibility, and social justice in discussions on the ZE’EV LEVY separation of religion and state and the culture wars in contemporary Israel; the role of myth and hermeneutics in contemporary religious discourse; medical technology and the ethics of death and dying; the philosophical shift from ontology to ethics and duties for “the other” as a secularized form of redemption. s t u di e s i n j u da i s m / 4

Yudit Kornberg Greenberg, Ph.D., is the George D. and Harriet W. Cornell Professor of Religious Studies and director of the Jewish Studies program. Greenberg is co-chair of the Comparative Studies of Judaisms and Hinduisms Group at the American Academy of Religion, has served on the editorial board of the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, and is Editor of Studies in Judaism Series for Peter Lang International. Her published works include Better Than Wine: Love, Poetry, and Prayer in the Thought of Franz Rosenzweig (Scholars Press/Oxford University Press, 1996), and the two-volume Encyclopedia of Love in World Religions (ABC-CLIO, 2007). Her fields of teaching and research include modern and contemporary Jewish thought, women and religion, and cross-cultural studies of love and the body. Greenberg has published numerous articles in leading journals such as The Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy, and has contributed essays to several books in modern and postmodern Jewish philosophy. She is presently completing her manuscript entitled Judaism and the Imperative to Love: Defining the Human-Divine Interface. Greenberg lectures nationally and internationally. She is an active voice and presence in inter-faith dialogue locally, nationally and internationally, serving as delegate to the Parliament of the World’s Religions and the Dialogue Institute. She has been a Visiting Scholar at the Centre for Jewish Studies at Oxford University and is a Summer Visiting Fellow at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem.


International Handbook of Cross-Cultural Counseling: Cultural Assumptions and Practices Worldwide (Sage Publications Inc., 2009) Edited by L.H. Gerstein, P.P. Heppner, S. Ægisdóttir, S.A. Leung and K.L. Norsworthy InternatIonal Handbook of

Cross-Cultural Counseling Cultural Assumptions and Practices Worldwide

lawrence H. GersteIn | P. Paul HePPner | stefanía ÆGIsdóttIr seunG-MInG alvIn leunG | katHryn l. norswortHy

The only book to capture the rich diversity of the profession of counseling around the world, this volume provides a strong theoretical, research, and practical focus, with contributions from many world-renowned scholars. The first section of the Handbook includes chapters on multicultural and cross-cultural psychology in relation to the profession of counseling in a global context—its current status, methodological issues when studying culture, opportunities and challenges in collaboration across borders, and indigenous models of counseling.

The heart of the Handbook includes chapters that describe the present state of the field in the following countries: • Europe: France, Great Britain, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Sweden, former USSR • The Middle East: Israel, Turkey, United Arab Emirates • The Americas and the Caribbean: Argentina, Canada, Colombia, Ecuador, Puerto Rico, Venezuela • South and West Africa: Nigeria, South Africa • Central Asia: Kyrgyzstan • South Asia: India, Pakistan • Southeast Asia: Malaysia, Singapore • East Asia: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan • Oceania: Australia Topics covered in the various country chapters include the history of counseling, cultural and religious values that have shaped attitudes toward counseling, types of clients and presenting problems, indigenous models of counseling, professional issues and challenges, research findings, the influence of U.S. models, and implications for the future.

Kathryn Norsworthy, Ph.D., is a professor of graduate studies in counseling. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in Educational Psychology (emphasis on Child and Family Psychology) and completed a post-doctoral respecialization in Counseling Psychology at the University of Georgia. Her research and practice interests include social justice/liberatory models of international consultation, research, and activism; peace psychology; integration of Buddhist principles and practices in psychotherapy; and trauma, particularly within contexts of ethno-political conflict. Norsworthy has been working and doing research in South and Southeast Asia for over a decade.


A Trip to Florida for Health and Sport: the Lost 1855 Novel of Cyrus Parkhurst Condit (Florida Historical Society, 2009) Edited by Socky O’Sullivan & Wenxian Zhang While conducting a summer inventory in the Archives and Special Collections at Rollins, Wenxian Zhang, head of archives & special collections, discovered a rare manuscript in the school’s Florida Collection. It consists of an unpublished novel about a young man’s winter visit to Florida. Apparently written by Cyrus Parkhurst Condit (1830 – 1861), it was one of many gifts to Rollins from Frederick Dau, an editor, collector, and the author of Florida: Old and New (1934). Based on internal evidence, Condit’s biography and historical events, it was determined that the manuscript was probably written in 1855. Written on one side of 162 folio leaves (12 5/8 by 8 inches), the manuscript is folded in quires and sewn and bound in stiff tan wrappers. The sewing has come loose, as have the wrappers, but everything is present, including a portion of the spine. The manuscript is enclosed in a brown cloth slipcase. The wrappers and first and last few pages are damp-stained, obscuring only two or three words of the Table of Contents. The novel tells the story of George Morton, a 17-year-old New Yorker who travels one December to Florida for his health. While most of the narrative focuses on Welaka, a small town 55 miles south of Jacksonville, and the adjacent Lake George region, it also includes visits to St. Augustine, Enterprise, Mellonville (now Sanford) and Silver Glen Springs, as well as hunting, fishing and camping trips along the state’s rivers and lakes. According to Kenneth Curry Professor of Literature Maurice O’Sullivan, the manuscript’s importance stems both from its date, which makes it one of the state’s first novels and from its detailed portrait of ordinary life along the St. Johns River in the early 1850’s.


Maurice “Socky” O’Sullivan, Ph.D., is the Kenneth Curry Professor of Literature. He received his A.B. from Fairfield University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve University. O’Sullivan is co-director of the Florida Center for Shakespeare Studies and has served as Chair of the English Department, Chair of the Humanities Division, and President of the Faculty. As the 2006 President of the College English Association, he has written extensively on literature, Florida, popular culture, Shakespeare, religion, education, and current events. Among the ten books he has written, edited, or co-edited are The Florida Reader (Pineapple Press, 1991), Florida in Poetry (Pineapple Press, 1995), Twentieth Century American Reader 1900-1945 (United States Information Agency, 1999), and Shakespeare Plays the Classroom (Pineapple Press, 2003). Active in teaching and learning programs at Rollins and in the community, he has also received numerous grants and awards, including the Florida College English Association’s 2003 Colleague of the Year Award, the Florida Historical Association’s 1992 Charlton Tebeau Award for Outstanding Book of the Year, two silver medal awards from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education’s National Professor of the Year, and four teaching awards at Rollins. His Crime Fiction and Film in Florida: Florida Noir (Bowling Green University Popular Press, 1997) was selected as an Edgar finalist by the Mystery Writers of America.

Wenxian Zhang, M.L.S., M.S., is a professor and serves as head of archives and special collections. He earned both his M.L.S. and M.S. from Southern Connecticut State University and worked as director of the Ansonia Library in Connecticut for five years before joining the Rollins faculty in 1995. Zhang is responsible for the creation of Rollins Digital Archives and Oral History Archive. He is a Rollins China Center research associate and faculty advisor of the Asian American Student Association. Besides his publications in the Journal of Archival Organization, Florida Historical Quarterly, Libraries & Cultural Record, and College & Undergraduate Libraries, he is also the lead author of Rollins Architecture: A Pictorial Profile of Current & Historical Buildings (2009), and Walk of Fame: A Rollins Legacy (2004). Zhang is a member of the Society of American Archivists, the Society of Florida Archivists, the Winter Park Historical Association, and a life member of Chinese American Librarians Association. He currently serves on the Board of Advisors of the Orlando Chinese Professional Association (OCPA), the Review Committee of R.M. & D.L. Smith Winter Park History Research Grant, and the CALA Committees on Sally C. Tseng Professional Development Grant and Research Travel Grant. Zhang is a 2009 recipient of the OCPA Community Service Award.


Héroes, prisioneros y renegados. El cautiverio en la narrativa hispánica de los siglos XVI y XVII (Prensa Académica Castellana, 2009) Alberto Prieto-Calixto The theme of Anglo-American captivity in hands of the Indians in North American territories has been extensively covered by literary and history scholars. In the Spanish colonies, captivity was a common reality mainly for the colonized, but also in some instances for the Spaniards themselves. This constitutes a vast field that has not been studied in depth yet. Heroes, Prisoners and Renegades. Captivity in the Hispanic Narratives of the 16th-17th Centuries by Alberto Prieto Calixto brings some much needed light to the field, providing a new perspective on the captivity theme and including the Spanish Empire as a whole. Through the detailed analysis of the captivity narratives of the Golden Age and Colonial periods, the author effectively bridges the literatures and cultures of Spain and the Americas. The book traces down dozens of texts, from pure fictional literary texts to chronicles or judicial documents, where captivity is depicted. The author uses the captivity narrative to reveal situations where captor and captive break the strict border imposed by the colonial discourse between the self and the other. In these situations, captives become others, they became acculturated, or they became Muslims or Indians. Some of them, given the opportunity, refused to come back to their own civilization. These cases clearly presented a subversive aspect to the order establish by the Spanish Crown and the Catholic Church. This study places a special focus on the tension between dogma and subversion, compliance and resistance, in texts that deal with captivity. Using an eclectic approach, Prieto Calixto’s book engages several theoretical issues oriented towards New Historicism, including cultural production analysis and postcolonial theory. --Rosa Vergara

Alberto Prieto-Calixto, Ph.D., is an associate professor of modern languages & literatures. He received a Licenciado en Filosofía y Letras University of Valladolid, Spain, a M.A. in Spanish from Arizona State University, and a Ph.D. in Spanish from Vanderbilt University. Prieto-Calixto’s areas of teaching expertise include Hispanic Literatures (XVI-XVII Centuries), Spanish Film and Civilization. Prieto-Calixto has presented numerous papers at professional national and international conferences, including presentations on film, literature, culture, immigration, and pedagogy. Author of several articles and book collaborations, he is also Director-inResidence of Verano Español (Rollins’ summer program in Spain).


Personality: Theories and Applications (2nd ed., Hogan Press) Robert Hogan and Robert Smither Personality: Theories and Applications addresses six fundamental questions regarding human nature: what motivates humans, how personality develops, whether we can really know ourselves, how the unconscious functions, what constitutes mental health, and the relationship between the needs of the individual and the demands of society. The book reviews what each of the major personality theorists—including Freud, Jung, Erikson, Rogers, sociological theorists, evolutionary psychologists, and others—had to say about these important topics. The book also applies each theory to a practical life issue, such as conflict resolution or the employment interview, as well as to the biography of a well known person such as Ben Franklin, Simone de Beauvoir, or Wassily Kandinsky.

Robert Smither, Ph.D., is professor of psychology. He holds a doctorate from the Johns Hopkins University, a M.A. in educational psychology from San Francisco State University, and a B.A. in political science and East Asian languages and literatures from Indiana University. Prior to coming to Rollins, Smither worked for the U.S. Department of State and taught at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. Smither’s areas of expertise include personality theory, psychology and religion, personnel selection, and leadership. Some of his other books include The Psychology of Work and Human Performance (3rd edition, 1998), Organization Development: Strategies for Changing Environments (1996; with John Houston and Sandra McIntire), and Competitors and Comrades: Personality, Economics, and Culture (Praeger, 1984). He is presently working on a book about the ideas of human nature found in major religions. Smither previously served as dean of the Hamilton Holt School at Rollins (1993-98; 2004-05) and director of the Master of Liberal Studies program (2000-09).


Making Catfish Bait out of Government Boys: The Fight Against the Cattle Tick and the Transformation of the Yeoman South (University of Georgia Press, 2009) Claire Strom

M a k i n g C at f i s h B a i t o u t o f g o v e r n M e n t B oy s t h e f i g h t a g a i n s t C at t l e t i C k s a n d t h e t r a n s f o r M at i o n o f t h e y e o M a n s o u t h

This first full-length study of the cattle tick eradication program in the U.S. offers a new perspective on the fate of the yeomanry in the 20th century South during a period when state and federal governments were both increasing and centralizing their authority. As Strom relates the power struggles that complicated efforts to wipe out the Boophilus tick, she explains the motivations and concerns of each group involved, including largeand small-scale cattle farmers, scientists, and officials at all levels of government.

Claire stroM

In the remote rural South – such as the piney woods of south Georgia and north Florida – resistance to mandatory treatment of cattle was unusually strong and sometimes violent. Cattle often ranged free, and their owners raised them mostly for local use rather than faraway markets. Cattle farmers in such areas, shows Strom, perceived a double threat in tick eradication mandates. In addition to their added costs, eradication schemes, with their top-down imposition of government expertise, were anathema to the yeomanry’s notions of liberty. Strom contextualizes her southern focus within the national scale of the cattle industry, discussing, for instance, the contentious place of cattle drives in American agricultural history. Because Mexico was the primary source of potential tick reinfestation, Strom examines the political and environmental history of the Rio Grande, giving the book a transnational perspective. Debates about the political and economic culture of small farmers have tended to focus on earlier periods in American history. Here Strom shows that pockets of yeoman culture survived into the 20th century and that these communities had the power to block (if only temporarily) the expansion of the American state.

Claire Strom, Ph.D., is the Rapetti-Trunzo Chair of History and the editor of Agricultural History. This is her third book.


Spring and Fall 2009 Peer-Reviewed Publications or Creative Equivalents Ilan Alon, Ph.D. Alon, Ilan and Craig McAllaster. Measuring the Global Footprint of an MBA. Journal of Studies in International Education (2009) 13 (4): 522-540. Kiymaz, Halil, Ilan Alon, and Ted Veit. Returns of ADRs in Emerging and Developed Markets. Thunderbird International Business Review (2009) 51 (6): 567-581. Alon, Ilan and Theodore T. Herbert. A Stranger in a Strange Land: Micro Political Risk and the Multinational Firm. Business Horizons (2009) 52 (2): 127-137. Vianelli, Donata and Ilan Alon. Travel Agents’ Perceptions of Cruise Tourism in Croatia and Sloveni. International Journal of Global Management Studies Quarterly (2009) 1 (1): 1-22. Sardy, Marc and Ilan Alon. Understanding Chinese Management Needs Through Ancient Chinese Philosophy. International Journal of Business and Globalisation (2009) 3 (2): 207-213. Rogers, Donald P., T.D. Lairson, I. Alon, M.J. Sardy, C.J. McInnis-Bowers, C.J, and S. Agee. Blending pragmatic liberal education with an international business programme: the Rollins College experience. Int. J. Management in Education (2009) Vol. 3. Nos. 3/4. Alon, Ilan, Julian Chang, Marc Fetscherin, Christoph latemann, John McIntyre, Globalization with Chinese Characteristics. Chinese Management Studies (2009) 3 (1): 8-10. Lattemann, C., M. Fetscherin, S. Li, I. Alon, and A-M. Schneider. CSR Communication Intensity of Chinese and Indian Multinational Companies. Corporate Governance: An International Review (2009) Vol. 17 (4): 426-442. Alon, Ilan, Robert Moore, and Wenxian Zhang. 2009. “Doing Business in Asia,” in Handbook of Research on Asian Entrepreneurship, ed. Leo Paul Dana, Mary Han, Isabell M. Welpe, 387-411. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. (Reprint). Welsh, Dianne H.B. and Ilan Alon. 2009. “Global Franchising and Other Forms of Entrepreneurship,” in Global Entrepreneurship, ed., S. M. Carraher, D. H.B., Welsh, 182-212 Dubuque, IA: Kendall Hunt Publishing Company. Ballard, Nadia and Ilan Alon. 2009. “Going International? Alternative Modes of Entry for Entrepreneurial Firms,” in Global Entrepreneurship, ed. Shawn M. Carraher, Shawn M., Dianne H.B Welsh, 213-226. Dubuque, IA: Kendall Hunt Publishing Company.


Jennifer Cavenaugh, Ph.D. Cavenaugh, Jennifer. Hooray For What! A Glimpse into the Golden Age of Sexual Harassment. Journal of American Theater and Drama (Winter 2009) (23): 5-29. Cavenaugh, Jennifer and Joseph Bromfield.* A Historiography of Informed Imagination: A Dramaturgical Reading of the Correspondence Between Annie Russell and Faith Baldwin. Theater History Studies (Fall 2009) 29.

Ed Cohen, Ph.D. Cohen, Edward H. The 1918 Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins. The Book Collector 58.2 (2009) 199-218. Cohen, Edward H. 2009. Images of Englishness: The Daily Chronicle and ‘Proposed Laureates’ to Succeed Tennyson. The Lure of Illustration in the Nineteenth Century: Picture and Press, ed. Laurel Brake & Marysa Demoor, 251-63. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Dan Chong, Ph.D. Chong, Daniel. Five Challenges to Legalizing Economic and Social Rights. Human Rights Review (June 2009) 10 (2): 183-204. Chong, Daniel. 2009. “Economic Rights and Extreme Poverty: Moving toward Subsistence.” The International Struggle for New Human Rights, ed. Clifford Bob, 108-129 University of Pennsylvania Press.

Alice Davidson, Ph.D. Walton, M. D., A.E. Harris, & A.J. Davidson. It makes me a man from the beating I took: Gender and aggression in children’s narratives about conflict. Sex Roles: A Journal of Research (2009) 6: 383 - 398.

Margot Fadool, Ph.D. Fadool, M.C. We don’t serve no ice cream!: Enhancing children’s understanding and use of literacy through play events. Journal of Reading Education (2009) 34: 23-29.


Marc Fetscherin, Ph.D. Fetscherin, M., M. Toncar. Valuating Brand Equity and Product Related Attributes in the Context of the German Automobile Market. Journal of Brand Management (2009) Vol. 17 (2), 134-145. Fetscherin, M., M. Toncar. Country of origin effect on the U.S. consumers’ brand perception of automobiles from China and India. Multinational Business Review (2009) Vol. 17 (2): 115-131. Lattemann, C., M. Fetscherin, S. Li, I. Alon, and A-M. Schneider. CSR Communication Intensity of Chinese and Indian Multinational Companies. Corporate Governance: An International Review (2009) Vol. 17 (4): 426-442. Pillania, R., M. Fetscherin. The State of Research on Multinationals and Emerging Markets. Multinational Business Review (2009) Vol. 17 (2): 5-15. Fetscherin, M. Nation Branding. Journal of Marketing (May 2009) Vol. 73 (2). Alon, I., J. Chang, M. Fetscherin, C. Lattemann, J. McIntyre. Globalization with Chinese Characteristics. Chinese Management Studies (2009) Vol. 3 (1): 8-10. Fetscherin, M. Importance of Cultural and Risk Aspects In music piracy: A Cross-National Comparison Among University Students. Journal of Electronic Commerce Research (2009) Vol. 10 (1): 42-55. Fetscherin, M., M. Toncar. Viewpoint: Visual Puffery in Advertising. International Journal of Market Research (2009) Vol. 51(2): 147-148. Sardy, M., M. Fetscherin, Comparing the Automotive Industries of China, India and South Korea: An Application of the Double Diamond Model. Competition Forum (2009). Vol. 7 (1):6-16.

Carol Frost, M.A. Frost, Carol. “Pelican.” Bright Wings, An Illustrated Anthology of Bird Poems. Ed. Billy Collins. Illustrations David Allen Sibley. New York: Columbia University Press, 2009. 23. Frost, Carol. “Apiary 40.” Poetry, March 2009. 23. Online at http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poem.html?id=183267. Frost, Carol. “Beauty and Dust.” Smartish Pace 16. 2009. 39. Frost, Carol. “All things Are Taken.” Smartish Pace 16. 2009. 38.


Fiona Harper, Ph.D. Harper, F., Paul Rawson. Colonization of the Northwest Atlantic by the Blue Mussel, Mytilus Trossulus Postdates the Last Glacial Maximum. Marine Biology (2009).

Alicia Homrich, Ph.D. Ugwuegbulam, C. N., Alicia M. Homrich, and Celestine Kadurumba. 2009. “Counseling in Nigeria: An Overview.” International Handbook of Cross-Cultural Counseling: Counseling Assumptions and Practices Worldwide, ed. L.H. Gerstein, P.P. Heppner, S. Ægisdóttir, S.A. Leung, & K.L. Norsworthy. Sage Publications. Homrich, A. M. 2009. “Group Work, Key Legal Issues.” The ACA Encyclopedia of Counseling. 235-237. American Counseling Association.

Madeline Kovarik, Ed.D. Kovarik, M. Death in the Classroom. Florida Reading Journal (2009) 45 (3). Kovarik, M. Developing Tolerance and Understanding of Family Diversity Through Children’s Literature. Florida Libraries (2009) 25 (1).

R. Matilde Mésavage, Ph.D. Mésavage, R. Matilde. 2009. Concupiscence, transgression et déception dans La Fraude de Mohammed El Hassani, Sinaïa, Romania. Conseil International d’Études Francophones Vitalité littéraire au Marocen. Originally presented in 2006, and published in 2009.

Robert Moore, Ph.D. Alon, Ilan, Robert Moore, and Wenxian Zhang (2009). “Doing Business in Asia,” in Handbook of Research on Asian Entrepreneurship ed. Leo Paul Dana, Mary Han, Isabell M. Welpe,eds., Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar 387-411. (Reprint).


Socky O’Sullivan, Ph.D. O’Sullivan, M. Artes Illiberales: The Four Myths of Liberal Education. Change (Sept./Oct. 2009).

David C.S. Richard, Ph.D. Andrews, D. R., D. C. S. Richard, & K. Aroian. Factor structure of the Denyes Self Care Practice Instrument (DSCPI-90). Western Journal of Nursing Research (2009) 31 (6): 799-811. Huprich, S. K., T.A. Schmitt, D.C.S. Richard, M. Zimmerman, & I. Chelminski. Comparing factor analytic models of DSMIV personality disorder symptoms in psychiatric outpatients. Personality Disorders: Theory, Treatment, and Research (2009).

Marc Sardy, Ph.D. Sardy, M., M. Fetscherin, Comparing the Automotive Industries of China, India and South Korea: An Application of the Double Diamond Model. Competition Forum (2009). Vol. 7 (1): 6-16. Sardy, M.J., L. Sprague. Inventory Management: Some surprising news about classical views on inventory and some non-classical responses to traditional practice. Inventory Management, Non-Classical Views (2009). Ed. Jaber, M. Y, CRC Press-Taylor and Francis Group. Sardy, M.J. Imperialism and its effects on Natural Resource Acquisition. International Journal of Business and Emerging Markets (2009). Sardy, M.J. An Entrepreneurial Approach to Global Stimulus. AIB Insight (2009) No. 9 (2). Rogers, Donald P., T.D. Lairson, I. Alon, M.J. Sardy, C.J. McInnis-Bowers, C.J, and S. Agee. Blending pragmatic liberal education with an international business programme: the Rollins College experience. Int. J. Management in Education (2009) Vol. 3. Nos. 3/4. Lewin, R.A., M.J. Sardy, S.E. Satchell, and B.P.Y Chan. Strategies for emerging from an economic crisis; why equity-only portfolios are still a bad idea. Proceedings of Academy of Economics and Finance (February 2009).


John Sinclair, D.M.A. Sinclair, John. 2009. Loveliest Immanuel: Moravian Sacred Solos. Perf. Sharla Nafzinger, John V. Sinclair, Bach Festival Chamber Orchestra. Morain Music Foundation WinstonSalem, NC and Bethleham, PA –CD

Richard Skinner, Ph.D. Skinner, Richard. George W. Bush and The Partisan Presidency. Political Science Quarterly. (Winter 2008) 123: 605-22.

Robert Smither, Ph.D. Smither, R., A. Khorsandi. The implicit personality theory of Islam. Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. (2009) 1: 81-96.

Steven St. John, Ph.D. St. John S.J., J.D. Boughter. Orosensory responsiveness to and preference for hydroxide-containing salts in mice. Chemical Senses (2009) 34: 487-498.

Patricia Tomé, Ph.D. Tomé, Patricia. Performing el cuerpo femenino como menú gastronómico: STUFF de Coco Fusco y Nao Bustamante. Latin American Theatre Review (Fall 2009) 43.1: 57-70.


Giorgio Turri, Ph.D. Turri, G., H.P. Jenssen, F. Cornacchia, M. Tonelli and M. Bass. Temperature-dependent stimulated emission cross section in Nd3+:YVO4 crystals. Journal of the Optical Society of America B (November 2009). Pyshkin, S., J. Ballato, M. Bass and G. Turri, Evolution of luminescence from doped gallium phosphide over 40 years. Journal of Electronic Materials (2009) 38: 640

Tonia Warnecke, Ph.D. Warnecke, T. Teaching globalisation from a feminist pluralist perspective. International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education (2009) Vol. 1, Nos. 1/2 93-107.

Wenxian Zhang, M.L.S., M.S. Alon, Ilan, Robert Moore, and Wenxian Zhang. 2009. “Doing Business in Asia,� in Handbook of Research on Asian Entrepreneurship, ed. Leo Paul Dana, Mary Han, Isabell M. Welpe, 387-411. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. (Reprint).

*=Rollins student


Notes


Notes


Notes



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