German Moravians in the Atlantic World April 4-6, 2002 In Celebration of the 250th Anniversary of the Wachovia Settlement Department of History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
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PAPERS
Deep in the Side of Jesus: Zinzendorfian Piety in Colonial America By Craig D. Atwood
From Trombone Choir to Church Band: Brass Instruments in Communities of The Moravian Brethren in America By Stewart Carter
The Why of Moravian Music By C. Daniel Crews
Jesus Is Female: The Moravian Challenge in the German Communities of British North America By Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Building 'Villages of the Lord': The Birth and Development of the Moravian Congregation Town By Christopher E. Hendricks
The Social, Cultural, and Pietist Context of the Moravian Movement By Tanya Kevorkian
New Birth in a New Land: Evangelism, Ethnicity, and Assimilation Among North Carolina's Moraviansin the Early National Period By S. Scott Rohrer
Globalization and Its Discontents: Religious Radicals Confront the Modern Age By Jon Sensbach
Moravian Artisans and the Emergence of a New Order in Salem By Michael Shirley
"No one should lust for power women least of all.": Dismantling Female Leadership among 18th Century Moravians By Beverly P. Smaby
A Community of Women: Cherokees and Moravians in the Early Nineteenth Century By Anna Smith
Fashion Passion: the Rhetoric of Dress within the Eighteenth Century Moravian Brethren By Elisabeth Sommer
Yankee Doodle Dutchmen: North Carolina's Moravian Community and the New Nation By Daniel B. Thorp
Faint and starving: Concepts of culture and social reality among Native American refugeesin the North American Mid-Atlantic, 1743-1771 By Axel Utz
Continental European Physicians and their Medicine in Colonial North America: Halle Pietists, Moravians, Schwenkfelders, and a French Universalist By Renate Wilson
Image and Reality of the Role of the Pastor's Wife in the Pioneering Generation of Protestant German-speaking Clergy in the American Colonies By Marianne S. Wokeck