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Katherine A. Hermés
Associate Professor of History
Co-Coordinator, Women’s Studies Program
Department of History
208 DiLoreto Hall
Central Connecticut State University
1615 Stanley Street
New Britain, CT 06050
Phone: (860) 832-2818
Fax: (860) 832-2804
Email: hermesk@ccsu.edu
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Areas of Specialization: Atlantic World, South Pacific,
Native American
Katherine A. Hermés received her B.A. in history from the University of California at Irvine in
1985. She subsequently received her M.A. (1986) and M. Phil (1987) from Yale University. She earned
her J.D. from the Duke University School of Law in 1992 and her Ph.D. from Yale in 1995. She joined
the faculty at CCSU in 1997. Prior to her arrival, she was a Lecturer in the Department of History
at the University of Otago (Dunedin, New Zealand). At CCSU, she
has served as interim department chair (Fall 2001) and interim
coordinator of Polish Studies (2001-2002). In the fall of 2005,
she began a three-year term as co-coordinator of the Women’s Studies program.
Dr. Hermés’ teaching interests include
the Atlantic World, the South Pacific, Native
American History, and Legal History. She was a finalist for CCSU’s Excellence
in Teaching Award in 1999 and a semi-finalist
in 2005. She has presented papers by invitation at the Harvard International
Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World in 1997, 2000, and 2005, as well as at the Atlantic
History Workshop sponsored by the Seminar in 2005. Her current research explores the ways in which
legal spaces were shaped during colonizations of various places, and to what extent legal
innovations remained part of the settled landscape or were replaced by the colonizers’ legal
systems. She is completing two manuscripts, one entitled Decided by Law:
Algonquians and Europeans in Colonial Legal Culture, 1600-1775, and a second, with
co-author Alexandra Maravel, entitled The Trials of Scipio Brown, A Free
African American in Colonial Rhode Island.
Selected Publications:
- "Law and Native Americans" in Cambridge History of Law
in America, eds. Christopher Tomlins and Michael Grossberg (New York: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming).
- "Native Americans and the Law," Connecticut History
43, no. 2 (2004) [special issue editor].
- "‘I, Pampenum’: Native American Women’s Use of Connecticut’s
Colonial Courts," in Communities of Women, eds. Barbara Brooks
and Dorothy Page (Dunedin: University of Otago Press, 2002.) With Alexandra Maravel.
- "‘Justice Will Be Done Us’: Algonquian Demands for Reciprocity in the Courts
of European Settlers," in The Many Legalities of Early America,
eds. Christopher L. Tomlins and Bruce H. Mann (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press for
the Omohundro Institute for Early American History and Culture, 2001.)
- "‘By Their desire recorded: Native American Wills and Estate Administrations in
Colonial Connecticut," Connecticut History 38, no. 2 (1999).
- "Jurisdiction in the Colonial Northeast: Algonquian, English and French Governance in the
Seventeenth Century," American Journal of Legal History 42, no. 1 (1999).
- "America’s World; The World’s America," Australasian
Journal of American Studies (1996) [special issue co-editor].
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