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UTE LOTZ-HEUMANN
Heiko A. Oberman Chair in Late Medieval and Reformation History



Several highlights of Professor Lotz-Heumann's career to date are the following. She has
 
  Written two books, Die doppelte Konfessionalisierung in Irland:  Konflikt und Koexistenz im 16. und in der ersten Hälfte des 17. Jahrhunderts [The Process of Dual Confessionalization in Ireland:  Conflict and Coexistence in the 16th and the First Half of the 17th Centuries] (Tubingen:  Mohr Siebeck, 2000), over 500 pages; and, with Stefan Ehrenpreis, Reformation und konfessionelles Zeitalter (Kontroversen um die Geschichte) [Reformation and the Confessional Age (Controversies in History)] (Darmstadt:  Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 2002).

  Come within a hair’s breadth of completing a second major research monograph, tentatively entitled “The German Spa:  A Heterotopia of the Long Eighteenth Century.”

  Edited or coedited four additional volumes, the titles of which, in English, are:  Taking Sides?  Colonial and Confessional Mentalities in Early Modern Ireland:  Essays in Honour of Karl S. Bottigheimer (Dublin:  Four Courts Press, 2003); Paths of Modernity:  Festschrift for Heinz Schilling on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday (Berlin:  Duncker & Humblot, 2007); Town and Religion in the Early Modern Period:  Social Orders and Their Representations (Frankfurt/Main and New York:  Campus, 2007); and Conversion and Confession in the Early Modern Period (Gütersloh:  Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2007).

  Published 39 scholarly articles in a variety of venues, mainly in refereed journals but in part in electronic journals and reference works.  The subjects of these articles reveal a ranging topical expertise and familiarity with theories of interest to members of the historical profession today.

   Jointly edited two other book-length collections that are forthcoming and has four additional articles of her own in press.

  Presented 60 scholarly papers and research reports at conferences and other gatherings of our peers.

  In 2007, been appointed to the executive board of the Verein für Reformationsgeschichte, the German equivalent of the Society for Reformation Research in North America.  She will retain this position after coming to the University of Arizona.  She has served as editorial assistant to Professor Heinz Schilling, the European editor of the Archive for Reformation History.

  During six years at Humboldt University, accumulated extensive experience teaching and advising both undergraduate and graduate students.

 

  The Division for Late Medieval and Reformation Studies |
The University of Arizona | Douglass 315 |
PO Box 210028 | Tucson, Arizona 85721-0028 |
(520) 621-1284 | fax:(520) 621-5444