Jennifer Adams-Massmann
Universität Heidelberg, Theologische Fakultät, Graduate Student
- Theologische Fakultät, Women and Religion in Colonial America, American Religion, Gender Studies, Gender and religion (Women s Studies), Moravian (Church History), and 16 moreEarly American History (colonial, revolutionary, and early republic), History of Missions, World Christianities, Native American Studies, Women's History, Church History, Early Modern History, Atlantic history, Transatlantic History, Religious History, Missionary History, Religious Studies, Colonial America, Ethnography (Research Methodology), Anthropology of Religion, and Language and Cultureedit
- - Chaplain at Peterhouse, University of Cambridge - Episcopal Church Foundation Fellow (2017-2020), John F Wilson Res... more- Chaplain at Peterhouse, University of Cambridge
- Episcopal Church Foundation Fellow (2017-2020), John F Wilson Research Fellowship (2018)
- former associate tutor in Church History, Cambridge Theological Federation
- Former instructor and research associate at the University of Heidelberg
- Doctoral candidate, writer, translatoredit - Jan Stievermann (Heidelberg), Craig Atwood (secondary advisor, Moravian Theological Seminary, USA), Rachel Wheeler (secondary advisor, IUPUI)edit
This was the conference: https://oieahc.wm.edu/conferences/supported/translation/index.html
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Report on the interdisciplinary and international "Religious Press and Print Culture" conference in Mainz, Germany, Nov 2014. "The Religious Press and Print Culture conference explored how the study of religious print matter contributes... more
Report on the interdisciplinary and international "Religious Press and Print Culture" conference in Mainz, Germany, Nov 2014.
"The Religious Press and Print Culture conference explored how the study of religious print matter contributes to our understanding of both religions and religious communities in North America from the colonial period to the present. It was a product of the research project “Pluralism, Boundary-Making, and Community-Building in North-American Religious Periodicals,” which was part of the DFG Research Group “Un/doing Differences,” and was organized by Oliver Scheiding and Anja-Maria Bassimir.
"The Religious Press and Print Culture conference explored how the study of religious print matter contributes to our understanding of both religions and religious communities in North America from the colonial period to the present. It was a product of the research project “Pluralism, Boundary-Making, and Community-Building in North-American Religious Periodicals,” which was part of the DFG Research Group “Un/doing Differences,” and was organized by Oliver Scheiding and Anja-Maria Bassimir.
Research Interests:
Book review of Stephanie Kirk and Sarah Rivett, eds., Religious Transformations in the Early Modern Americas (U of Pennsylvania P, 2014), 360 pp. Review published in peer-reviewed journal, Amerikastudien / American Studies 61.2 (2016).