CURRICULUM
VITAE
Name:
Edward S. Haynes
Address:
Office:
Department of History, 346 Bancroft Hall, Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC
29733-0001; 803-323-4682; FAX 803-323-4023
Home:
680 Rabun Circle, Rock Hill, SC 29730-3235; 803-325-2265
E-Mail:
maharao@yahoo.com or haynese@winthrop.edu
Fields
of Specialization:
Modern
South Asian and Middle Eastern history and civilization, Asian, non-Western ,
and world history and civilizations
Education:
Duke
University, 1966-70, A.B. (1970), history
University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1970-71, history (German history)
Jawaharlal
Nehru University, 1973-74, M.Phil.
(1975), history (modern Indian history), thesis: “British Intervention in
Alwar, 1857-1876,” Centre for Historical Studies, May 1974, under the
direction of S. Gopal
Duke
University, 1971-75, A.M. (1972) and Ph.D.
(1975), history (modern South Asian history), Ph.D. dissertation: “Jagirdars
and Government: The Political Role of the Kinship Elite in Alwar (Rajputana,
India), 1858-1910,” Department of History, April 1975, under the direction
of Philip B. Calkins (Dissertation
Abstracts International 36 [December 1975]: 3952-A, UM 75-29,477)
Languages:
Hindi:
Reading and speaking knowledge, use in research, have taught at the elementary
level
Urdu:
Reading and speaking knowledge, use in research,
have taught at the most elementary level
Rajasthani
(Dundhari, Mewati, and Marwari): Rudimentary reading
and speaking knowledge, some use in research
German:
Reading knowledge only at present, use in research
Arabic: Rudimentary familiarity with Gulf, Egyptian, and modern standard Arabic
Pashto:
Extremely rudimentary speaking knowledge (mainly restricted to
comprehension)
Computer:
Extensive use of word processing, desk-top publishing, data base, statistics,
mapping, graphics, and other software packages; considerable microcomputer
experience and abilities including networking and internet/WWW applications;
decent knowledge of BASIC in several dialects
International
Experience:
Significant
travel, research, and study in: India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, the United
Kingdom, China, (former) Hong Kong, Australia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and
Nepal
Organized
and led student groups to Egypt (1996) and India (1999 and 2001)
Grants
and Awards:
NDEA
Title VI Graduate Fellow in Hindi-Urdu, Davidson College, 1972, and Duke
University, 1972/73
American
Institute of Indian Studies Summer Hindi Fellow, 1973
Shell
Companies Foundation Research Fellow, 1973/74
American
Institute of Indian Studies, supplementary research grant, 1973/74
National
Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar Fellow, 1980
American
Institute of Indian Studies Senior Research Fellow, 1980/81, 1985/86, and
2001/2
Co-investigator,
with J. F. Richards, James R. Hagen, Elizabeth Flint, and Judith B. Dillon,
“Land Use and Vegetation Change in South Asia, 1800-1980,” Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, DC, 1987-89
Winthrop
College/University Research Council grants, 1988, 1990, 1994, 1995, 1998,
2000, and 2001
Fulbright-Hays
Group Seminar Fellow for study abroad, 1988
Winthrop
College/University Presidential Citation for Meritorious Service, 1989 and
1999
Member
of Phi Kappa Phi (history honorary), 1990
Joseph
J. Malone Faculty Fellowships in Arab and Islamic Studies, 1992 (Egypt) and
1993 (Saudi Arabia and Qatar)
Listed
in Who’s Who in the South and
Southwest, 24th and 25th editions
Special
Award from the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations for achievements with
regard to services to the Model League of Arab States program, 1996
Member
of Omicron Delta Kappa (leadership and service honorary), 1996
Winthrop
University sabbatical, 2001/2
Publications:
Books:
Jagirdars
and Government: Rajput Kingship and Kinship Polity in Alwar State Under
British Paramountcy, 1775-1947, Delhi: Manohar,
under contract (expected 2003?)
With
Rana Chhina, Medals and Decorations of Independent India; Delhi: Manohar, under
contract (expected 2003?)
From
Izzat to Honour: Changing Modes of
Representing Honor in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century India,
Delhi: Manohar, under contract (expected 2003?)
Books
(edited):
With
David J. Dell, Guide to Buddhist Religion, comp. Frank Reynolds, et al. The Asian
Philosophies and Religions Resource Guides. Boston: G. K. Hall & Co., 1981
Guide
to Islam, comp. David Ede, et al. The Asian
Philosophies and Religions Resource Guides. Boston: G. K. Hall & Co., 1983
With
David J. Dell, Guide to Chinese Religion, comp. David C. Yü and Laurence Thompson.
The Asian Philosophies and Religions Resource Guides. Boston: G. K. Hall &
Co., 1985
Articles:
“Bibliographies
on South Asia,” Journal of Indian
History 50 (April 1972): 149-58
“British
Policy Toward the Indian States, 1803-1870: Intervention, Adoption, Minority,”
Journal of the Rajasthan Institute of Historical Research 12
(October-December 1975): 14-28
“Subhas
Chandra Bose and the Early Azad Hind
Sangh, April-November 1941,” Bengal
Past and Present 96 (January-June 1975): 1-21
“Imperial
Impact on Rajputana: The Case of Alwar, 1775-1850,” Modern
Asian Studies 12 (July 1978): 419-53
“Alwar:
Bureaucracy versus Traditional Rulership — Raja, Jagirdars, and New
Administrators, 1892-1910,” in People, Princes, and Paramount Power: Society and Politics in the Indian
Princely States, ed. Robin Jeffrey; Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1978;
pp. 32-64
“Changing
Patterns of Dispute Settlement in Eastern Rajputana During the Late Nineteenth
Century,” Journal of Asian History 13 (1979): 152-87
“A
Corinthian Capital on a Column of Ellora: The Transfer of the Concept of
Feudalism to the Rajput States of North India,” Journal
of Indian History 57 (August-December 1979): 235-71
“Comparative
Industrialization in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century India: Alwar State and
Gurgaon District,” South Asia n.s.
3, 2 (December 1980, pr. 1982):
25-42
With
J. F. Richards and James R. Hagen, “Changing Land Use in Bihar, Punjab, and
Haryana, 1850-1970,” Modern Asian Studies 19 (July 1985): 699-732
With
John F. Richards and James R. Hagen, “Changes in the Land and Human
Productivity in Northern India, 1870-1970,” Agricultural
History 60 (October 1985): 523-48
“Computers
and Non-Roman Script Languages,” Overseas
Research Bulletin of the Council of American Overseas Research Committees,
Smithsonian Institution, 1 (fall 1987): 3-10
“Patawallas
of Paramountcy: Professional Bureaucratic Subversion of the Indian Princely
States,” Indo-British Review: A Journal of History 15, 2 (December 1988, pr.1989):
123-38
“The
British Alteration of the Political System of Alwar State: Lineage
Patrimonialism, Indirect Rule, and the Rajput Jagir
System in an Indian ‘Princely’ State, 1775-1920,” Studies
in History n.s. 5, 1 (January-June 1989): 27-71
“From
Sagara to Sanjay: The Kshatriya Alternative and Feudal Authoritarianism in
Indian History,” in Boeings and Bullock-Carts: Studies in Change and Continuity in Indian
Civilization (Essays in Honour of K. Ishwaran), vol. 2, Indian
Civilization in its Local, Regional and National Aspects, ed. Dhirendra K.
Vajpeyi; Delhi: Chanakya Publications, [1990], pp. 63-93
“Rajput
Ceremonial Interactions as a Mirror of a Dying Indian State System, 1820-1947,”
Modern Asian Studies 24, 3 (July
1990): 459-92
“The
Political Role of the Armed Forces of the Indian States after World War I,” Journal
of Asian History 24, 1 (1990): 30-56
“Patronage
for the Arts and the Rise of the Alwar State,” in The
Idea of Rajasthan: Explorations in Regional Identity, vol. 2, Institutions, eds. Karine Schomer, Joan L. Erdman, Deryck O. Lodrick,
and Lloyd Rudolph; Delhi: Manohar, 1994, pp. 265-89
“The
Natural and the Raj: Customary State Systems and Environmental Management in
Pre-integration Rajasthan and Gujarat,” in Nature
and the Orient: The Environmental History of South and Southeast Asia,
eds. Richard H. Grove, Vinita Damodaran, and Satpal Sangwan; Delhi: Oxford
University Press, 1998, pp. 734-92
“Land Use, Natural Resources, and the Rajput State, 1780-1980,” in Desert, Drought & Development: Studies in Resources Management and Sustainability, eds. Rakesh Hooja and Rajendra Joshi; Jaipur and New Delhi: Rawat Publications, [1999], pp. 53-119
“Lineage, State, and Symbolism of Rule in Late-Eighteenth-Century Eastern Rajputana,” in Rethinking Early Modern India, ed. Richard B. Barnett ([New Delhi]: Manohar, 2002), pp. 33-83
"The Evolution and Development of Representative Systems of Military Honour in India," Proceedings of the United Services Institution of India, 132, 549 (July-September 2002): 417-30
"Outsiders of Paramountcy: The Dilemma of Thomas Cadell, Political Agent in a Rajput State," in Outsiders of British India: Dissent Within the Ruling Elite, ed. Lorenzo M. Crowell (Westport: Greenwood Press, in press)
Electronic
Publications (due
to a major “hacking” episode, most of these are now off-line):
“The
League of Arab States” (and with another name
until April 1998, “The Model League of Arab States”) a coordinated
set of World Wide Web pages (http://haynese.winthrop.edu/index.html), February
1995 et seq.
“The
Indian Princely States,” a coordinated set of World Wide Web pages (http://haynese.winthrop.edu/india/pstates/pstates.html),
May 1996 et seq.
“The
International Electronic Phaleristic Encyclopedia,” a coordinated set of
World Wide Web pages (http://haynese.winthrop.edu/iepe.html),
June 1997 et seq.
Papers
Presented to Conferences (only those not revised and published):
“The
Uses of Literature in the Teaching of South Asian History,” presented to the
New York State Conference of Asian Studies, State University of New York at
Albany, Albany, NY, October 1976
“The
Political and Social Role of an Imperial Army: The Case of the Indian Army,”
presented to the International Studies Group of the Hudson-Mohawk Association
of Colleges and Universities, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY, February
1977
“Changing
Patterns of Bureaucratic Participation in an Indian Princely State: Alwar,
1917-1947,” presented to the 8th Wisconsin Conference on South Asia,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WS, November 1979
“After
Netaji: The Indian Independence
Movement in Europe After Subhas Chandra Bose's Departure, 1942-45,”
presented to the 12th International Conference on Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose,
George Washington University, Washington, DC, December 1981
With
J. F. Richards and James R. Hagen, “Developing a Historical Data Base for
Carbon Releases from the Conversion of Land to Agriculture: Punjab and Bihar,
India,” presented to the Numeric Data Workshop of the Sixth ORNL Life
Sciences Symposium, “The Global Carbon Cycle,” Knoxville, TN, November
1983
“The
Impact of Partition on Punjabi Land Use, 1930-1960,” presented to the
Southeast Regional Conference of the Association for Asian Studies, Duke
University, Durham, NC, January 1985
“The
Himalayan Region: A Historical Perspective on Energy Policies, Environment,
and Society,” presented to the Conference on Energy Resources in South Asia,
The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, DC, May 1985
“Of
Health and Paramountcy: The Institutional and Professional Dynamic of Western
Medicine in the Rajputana States, 1830-1947,” presented to the 41st Annual
Meetings of the Association for Asian Studies, Washington, DC, March 1989
“South
Asian Governmental Perceptions of and Responses to Environmental Crises,
1860-1990,” presented to the 8th Annual Meeting of the Association of Third
World Studies, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, October 1990
“The
Problem of the Indian States: Who, What, and Why Were They?,” presented to
the 19th Wisconsin Conference on South Asia, Madison, WS, November 1990
“Teaching
South Asian Civilizations: The Modern Period,” presented to the Georgia
Conference on World History, Clayton State College, Morrow, GA, November 1990
“Political and Lineage
Intrigue in the Indian States: Rajput Realities and British Convictions in
Conflict,” presented to the Southeast Regional Conference of the Association
for Asian Studies, Winthrop College, Rock Hill, SC, January 1991
“Semi-Arid
Resource Management in the Saurashtra Peninsula: Kings, Peasants, and Graziers
in Conflict,” presented to the 43rd Annual Meetings of the Association for
Asian Studies, New Orleans, LA, April 1991
“The
Development of Religious and Communal Consciousness in Nineteenth-Century
North-Eastern Rajputana: The Case of the Behror Masjid/Mandir,”
presented to the 45th Annual Meetings of the Association for Asian Studies,
Los Angeles, CA, March 1993
“Lions,
and Tigers, and Bears—Are Bap!:
The Place and Management of Wildlife Resources in the Princely States of
Eastern Rajputana before 1947,” presented to the 24th Wisconsin Conference
on South Asia, Madison, WS, October 1995
“Surviving
Among the Empires: Lineage Politics and Competing Paramountcies in the State
of Qatar, 1783-1916,” presented to the 1995 annual meetings of the Middle
East Studies Association, Washington, DC, December 1995
“Across
the Black (and Pearly?) Waters: The South Asian Presence in the Gulf in the
Nineteenth Century,” presented to the 1997 annual meetings of the Middle
East Studies Association, San Francisco, CA, November 1997
“Teaching
about Libya as a Bridge to International Understanding,” presented to the
conference Libyan-American Relations over the Years, Maastricht School of
Management, Maastricht, The Netherlands,
April 1999
“And
How Many Divisions do WE have? Comparative Tactical Lessons for American
Academics,” presented to the Second Conference on US-Libya Relations, Sliema,
Malta, August 1999
“Indirect
Izzat: Representing Honor in the Indian ‘Princely’ States, 1858-1970,”
presented to the Conference “Indirect Rule in Africa and
India: Colonial ‘Traditionalism’ and Its Legacy in the (post)Modern
World,” Yale University, New Haven, CT, March 2001
“Wearing
Honour: The Introduction of Tangible Representations of Honor into the
Rajputana States,” presented to the Fourth International Conference on
Rajasthan, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, December 2001
“Civil Honor: Constructing Orders to Order India” presented to the 31st Wisconsin Conference on South Asia, Madison, WS, October 2002 - the supporting Power Point presentation is on-line
“Implementing
Democratic Change in Afghanistan: The Emergency Loya Jirga Selection, 2002,”
presented to the fall 2002 meetings of the Southeast Regional Seminar on
Middle East and Islamic Studies, Boone, NC, October 2002 - the supporting
Power Point presentation is on-line
Teaching:
Teaching
Assistant and Course Coordinator in South Asian Civilization, Duke University,
January-May 1975
Visiting
Instructor of History, Kansas State University, September 1975-August 1976
Visiting
Scholar of South Asian Studies, Skidmore College, September 1976-August 1977
Adjunct
Assistant Professor of History, State University of New York at Albany,
September 1977-July 1978
Assistant
Professor of History, University of Northern Iowa, August 1978-June 1980
Occasional
teaching in the Department of History, in the South Asian Studies Program, and
in the Continuing Education Program, Duke University, September 1984-August
1987
Assistant
Professor (1987-92) and Associate Professor (1992—) of History, Winthrop
College/University, August 1987—
Areas
of Teaching Ability:
South
Asian history and civilization; Asian history and civilizations; history and
culture of the Middle East, Japan, and China.; comparative non-Western
studies; World and Western civilizations; Vietnam War; history and
civilization of Australia; introductory courses on Islam and Hinduism; surveys
of European, environmental, and world military history; research methodology
in history (including computer applications and statistics)
Courses
Taught:
World
Civilizations, Western Civilization, and a two-semester broadly-based
interdisciplinary world “Humanities” series; traditional and modern Asian
history and civilization (undergraduate and graduate); traditional and modern
South Asian history and civilization (undergraduate and graduate); intensive
readings course on South Asian history 1192-1858; traditional and modern
literature of South Asia; introductory Hindi/Urdu language; modern history of
the Middle East (since Islam) (undergraduate and graduate); the contemporary
Islamic World, 1919 to the present (honors); history of the Arab World since
WWI (undergraduate and graduate); revolutionary movements in Islam
(undergraduate and graduate); graduate research seminar in recent Middle
Eastern history; Model League of Arab States two-semester course; the modern
history of China (since Qing Dynasty) (undergraduate and graduate); the modern
history of Japan (since Tokugawa period) (undergraduate and graduate);
graduate-level course on imperialism and nationalism in Asia; course on M. K.
Gandhi (undergraduate and graduate); history of Vietnam and the Second
Indochina War (undergraduate and graduate); history of Australia; the
comparative history of the world, 1000-2000 (graduate and undergraduate);
graduate-level course on world environmental history; freshman “Critical
Issues” seminars; European history from the Renaissance to 1815
(undergraduate); Asian religions; undergraduate survey courses on Islam and
Hinduism; primary supervision of M.A. candidates; service on both preliminary
oral examination and dissertation examination committees of Ph.D. candidates
Related
Experience:
Research
Associate, Division of National History, Museum of History and Technology,
Smithsonian Institution, 1969
Member
of the Kansas State University South Asia Committee, 1975/76; founding editor
of the South Asian Studies Newsletter
and coordinator of the South Asia film series
Faculty
adviser to the Kansas State University India Association, 1975/76
Experience
at Kansas State University in liaison between area studies programs and the
public schools (“outreach”) over a four-state area, 1975/76, and in a
special summer institute for elementary and secondary school teachers, 1976
Program
Consultant, Asian Studies Program, Skidmore College, 1976/77
Program
Consultant, Asian Studies Program, State University of New York at Albany,
1977/78
Associate
in the University Seminar on Tradition and Change in South and Southeast Asia,
Columbia University, 1977/78
Consultant,
Bureau of Postsecondary Planning, Office of Higher and Professional Education,
New York State Education Department, 1978
Consultant,
Center for International Programs and Comparative Studies, New York State
Education Department, and Editorial Coordinator, Project on Asian Philosophies
and Religions, 1978-82
Member
of the University of Northern Iowa Asian Studies Committee, 1978-80
Member
of the University of Northern Iowa Humanities Committee, 1979/80
Cofounder
of a program at the University of Northern Iowa to train undergraduate
business majors in Japanese culture and language and to establish liaison with
local industries to aid in this program and to employ these students upon
graduation, 1980; obtained considerable financial commitment from industries
in support of this program
Participant
in the National Endowment for the Humanities summer seminar “Anthropological
Models and the Study of South Asian History,” The University of Chicago,
1980
Associate
in the Program in Comparative Studies on Southern Asia, Duke University,
1980-82
Freelance
copy editor and proofreader, Carolina Academic Press, 1981-85, and Acorn
Press, 1982-85
Assistant
Editor (March 1982-June 1983) and Managing Editor (July 1982-June 1983), Duke
University Press, 1982-83
Associate
in the Indian Ocean Regional Studies Program, Center for International
Studies, Duke University, 1982-90
Research
Associate, Project on Land Use and Vegetation Change in South and Southeast
Asia, 1700-1980, Department of History, Duke University, 1983-87
Cofounder
and member, the Triangle (NC) Symposium on South Asian Studies, 1984-94
Secretary
(1987-91) and Chair, Committee on Conferences (1984-91), Rajasthan Studies
Group, Association for Asian Studies; planned and obtained funding (Ford
Foundation and Smithsonian Institution) for a major multinational scholarly
conference in and on Rajasthan (December 1987); coordinated other conference
presentations under the auspices of the Rajasthan Studies Group (AAS); 1995,
established and maintained a national and international internet
mailing/discussion list for the body
Adviser,
Pre-Major Advising Center, Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, Duke
University, 1986/87
Consultant
on Asian and Middle Eastern language applications on microcomputers, the
Council of American Overseas Research Centers, The Smithsonian Institution,
1987-91
Member
of Winthrop College/University Faculty Advisory Committee on International
Week, 1988-94
Director,
Pre-Major Advising Center, College of Arts and Sciences, Winthrop
College/University, 1988-93; in connection with this service, received a
Winthrop College Presidential Citation for Meritorious Service in 1989
Participant
in Fulbright-Hays Group Seminar, “Modernization and Social Change in China:
A Curriculum Enrichment Project,” People's Republic of China, 1988
Winthrop
College/University representative to SASASAAS (South Atlantic States
Association for Asian and African Studies), 1988-99
Member
of the Winthrop College Committee on the International Film Series, 1988/89
Secretary
to the Winthrop College Faculty Conference, 1989/90
Member
of the Winthrop College/University Committee on the Critical Issues Symposium,
1989-90, 1992-93
Member
of the Winthrop College/University Committee on Women's Studies, 1989-94
President
(1992—) and Vice President (1989-92) of the Winthrop College/University
chapter of the American Association of University Professors
Member
of the Winthrop College/University International Studies Committee, 1990-93,
1996-99
Member
of the Winthrop College Arts and Sciences Curriculum Committee, 1990-92 (Chair
1991/92)
Member
of Winthrop College Faculty Advisory Committee for the Placement Center,
1990-91
Member
of Winthrop College/University Advisory Committee for the Model United
Nations, 1990-93, 1994-99
Member
of Winthrop College Committee on Excellence in Advising, 1991-92
Member
of Winthrop College committee on the “1492 Commemoration,” 1991-92
Joseph
J. Malone Faculty Fellowship in Arab and Islamic Studies, National Council on
U.S.-Arab Relations, Egypt 1992 and Saudi Arabia/Qatar 1993
Director
(1996-97), Associate Director (1993-96), and Editor of Newsletter
(1993-95, 1996-97), Carolinas Committee on U.S.-Arab Relations, National
Council on U.S.-Arab Relations
Member
of Winthrop University Faculty Concerns Committee, 1993-96
Advisor,
Winthrop University Model League of Arab States (representing the State of
Qatar), 1993-98 (National Model 1995: outstanding delegation award, two
outstanding delegate awards, one committee chair; International Model 1995:
Certificate of Merit award; National Model 1996: outstanding delegation award,
four outstanding delegate awards, next year’s secretary general elected from
our delegation, special award for myself; National Model 1997: one outstanding
delegate award); National Model 1998 [Bahrain]: one outstanding delegate award
[?]; coordinated high school model as a part of our model United Nations
program, 1996-99; established and maintained a set of World Wide Web pages
(cited under “publications” above) and an Internet mailing/discussion list
for the national and international program
Member
of Editorial Board, Environment and History: An International Journal of Environmental
History, 1995-99
Associate
in the Gulf 2000 Project, Columbia University, 1995—
Senior
Research Associate, Winthrop University Archives, 1995-96
Editor
of Newsletter and Member of the
Executive Board, Society for Gulf Arab Studies, 1996-97
Member
of the Winthrop University Academic Freedom and Tenure Committee, 1996-99
(chair 1996-99)
Member
of the Winthrop University Committee on Post-Tenure Review, 1997-99; in
connection with this service, received a Winthrop University Presidential
Citation for Meritorious Service in 1999
Corresponding
Member, Almanach de Bruxelles, 1998—
Member
of the Winthrop University Committee on Environmental Studies, 1999-2000
Member
of Secretariat, U.S.-Libyan Dialogue Group, 1999—
Member of Board of Directors, Libyan-American Friendship Association, 1999—
Member,
Industrial Workers of the World, 1999—
International
Monitor for the Emergency Loya Jirga Selection Process in Afghanistan under
the auspices of the United Nations Assistance Mission Afghanistan (UNAMA) and
the Special Commission for the Emergency Loya Jirga, May 2002
http://faculty.winthrop.edu/haynese/EDRESUME.html
6 November 2002