Thanks to COVID-19, research trips and conferences haven't happened, so things have been a little slower than hoped. Carlson was very busy in Fall 2017 delivering lectures in a variety of places as part of the 500th anniversary of the beginning of the Reformation. anger that isn't a sin) at the Sixteenth Century Studies Conference (San Juan, PR) but then didn't get much else done because of becoming department chair. ![]() In Fall 2013, he presented a paper on Reformation ideas about 'just anger' (i.e. In September 2012, he gave the keynote address to the Western Conference on British Studies. In May 2011, he presented invited lectures in the United Kingdom at the Universities of Durham, Oxford, and Warwick. He has presented aspects of this research at the Center for Medieval Studies of the University of Minnesota, the Honors Program of Central Michigan University, the Early Modern History seminar sponsored by the University of Southern California and the Huntington Library, and the North American British Studies Conference. His current research is on the Seven Deadly Sins in post-Reformation England, with a particular focus on anger/wrath. He received the Faculty Scholarly Achievement Award in 2009. Forkosch Prize in British History (awarded by the American Historical Association). Carlson was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 1996 and served as an elected member of the North American Conference on British Studies council from 1999 to 2003, Associate Editor of the Journal of British Studies from 2005 to 2010, and a member of the Committee on the Morris K. Kate Cooper and Jeremy Gregory, Studies in Church History 40 (2004) and an article on "Teaching Elizabeth Tudor with Movies: Film, Historical Thinking, and the Classroom" which was based on his experience in a January Term class at Gustavus ( Sixteenth Century Journal 38 ). His most recent publications are "Confession and Absolution in Caroline Cambridge: The 1637 Crisis in Context" in Retribution, Repentance, and Reconciliation, ed. Larissa Juliet Taylor (Brill, 2001) and "Good Pastors or Careless Shepherds? Parish Ministers and the English Reformation," History 88 (2003). ![]() Margaret Spufford (Cambridge University Press, 1995), "The Boring of the Ear: Shaping the Pastoral Practice of Preaching in England, 1540-1640," in Preachers and People in the Reformations and Early Modern Period, ed. He also published several articles and essays on aspects of 16th and 17th century English religion, most notably the controversial "Clerical Marriage and the English Reformation, Journal of British Studies 31 (1992), "The origins, function, and status of the office of churchwarden, with particular reference to the diocese of Ely," in The World of Rural Dissenters, 1520-1725, ed. Parker, 1998), and (as editor and contributor) Religion and the English People 1500-1640: New Voices/New Perspectives (1998). ![]() He has also been a visiting graduate student at the University of Cambridge, where he was affiliated with Clare Hall.Ĭarlson has published three books: Marriage and the English Reformation (1994), 'Practical Divinity': The Works and Life of Revd Richard Greenham (with Kenneth L. Carlson received his BA in history from UCLA in 1976, MA from UCLA in history (British studies) in 1978, and PhD from Harvard University in 1987. He taught the first half of the European history survey and the department's required methods and historiography course, Thinking Historically, as well as courses on medieval and Tudor-Stuart England, Medieval Christianity, the Reformation, Modern Germany, and European Jewish history. He retired from teaching in May 2019 and is currently Research Professor. CARLSON AWARD FOR DISTINGUISHED TEACHINGĮric Carlson joined the Gustavus faculty in 1990 after teaching for three years at Denison University. Athletics at Gustavus Gustavus Adolphus College Shield IconĢ016 RECIPIENT OF THE EDGAR M.Fine Arts at Gustavus Musical Notes Icon.Admission at Gustavus Pencil Paper Icon.Center for International and Cultural Education.
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