Jana K. Lipman

Associate Professor

  • New Orleans LA UNITED STATES
  • Hebert 113
  • Department of History
jlipman@tulane.edu504-862-8618

Jana Lipman is a historian of refugees in America, immigration, the U.S. War in Vietnam and U.S.-Latin American relations.

Contact

Biography

I study US foreign relations and immigration history. My current book is a history of Vietnamese refugee camps at the end of the U.S. War in Vietnam. For this project, I have conducted research in the UK, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Malaysia.

My first book was a history of the US naval base in Guantánamo Bay (GTMO) from the point of view of Cuban base workers. Through extensive field and archival research in Havana, Santiago de Cuba, and Guantánamo, Cuba, I analyzed how Cuban base employees navigated the politics and contradictions of living in Cuba and working for the US military.

My publications also include: Making the Empire Work: Labor and U.S. Imperialism (Co-editor), NYU Press, 2015 and Ship of Fate: A Memoir of a Vietnamese Repatriate by Tran Dinh Tru (Co-translator), University of Hawaii Press, 2017. My work has also appeared in American Quarterly, Immigrants and Minorities, the Journal of Asian American Studies, the Journal of American Ethnic History, the Journal of Military History, Modern American History, and Radical History Review.

I have also advised the Guantánamo Public Memory Project and the Humanities Action Lab (New School).

Areas of Expertise

Vietnam
Social and Political History
20th-century U.S.
Foreign Relations
Cuba

Accomplishments

Newcomb Tulane College Honors Professor of the Year

2019

Tulane School of Liberal Arts April Brayfield Prize for Excellence in Teaching

2015

Constance Rourke Essay Prize

2012

for the best article published in American Quarterly

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Education

Yale University

Ph.D.

History

2006

Yale University

M.Phil.

History

2003

Yale University

M.A.

History

2001

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Affiliations

  • Guantanamo Public Memory Project : Advisor

Media Appearances

5 things to know about Guantanamo Bay on its 115th birthday

The Conversation  online

2018-12-10

The naval base at Guantanamo Bay is quietly commemorating its 115th anniversary. On Dec. 10, 1903, the United States established its first overseas military base on 45 square miles of Cuban territory.

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Agricultural Labor Since 1930 and Organic Farming

CSpan  online

2017-12-01

Tulane University professor Jana Lipman taught a class on agricultural labor in the United States since 1930 and the rise of organic farming. She described the “bracero” program which brought temporary workers from Mexico in the 1940s and 50s, as well as farm workers strikes under leaders such as César Chávez. She argued that despite the rise in consumer awareness relating to organic food, worker conditions are not always considered a factor in what people buy.

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The South Vietnamese who fled the fall of Saigon – and those who returned

The Conversation  online

2017-09-19

More than 120,000 people fled Vietnam after the North Vietnamese captured Saigon on April 30, 1975. This chaotic evacuation has been captured in iconic photos, documentary films and oral histories. How did the Vietnamese seeking safety actually get from small boats or rooftop helicopters to the United States?

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Articles

Cuban Revolution in America: Havana and the Making of the United States Left 1968 – 1992

Labor

Jana Lipman

2019-09-01

Teishan A. Latner’s Cuban Revolution in America: Havana and the Making of the United States Left, 1968 – 1992 is an excellent new book on left- wing activists, the complex politics of solidarity, and US- Cuban relations. It acts as a worthy sequel to Van Gosse’s classic Where the Boys Are (New York: Verso, 1993), which analyzes the New Left and its identification (and admiration) of the Cuban revolution and the Castro brothers’ masculinity in the 1950s and early 1960s. Latner moves his analysis forward in time and argues that American activists used travel as a way to forge solidarity with the Cuban revolution and that, in turn, the Cuban government capitalized on these friendship brigades as a way to win ideological points in its ongoing public relations war with the United States. “Cuba like all nations, needed allies abroad,” Latner...

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Immigrant and Black in Edwidge Danticat's Brother, I'm Dying

Modern American HistoryJana K. Lipman

Jana K. Lipman

2018-11-20

The history of Americans' treatment of newcomers has proven especially fraught in the case of black immigrants who remain categorized as part of Black America, a community that, from Frederick Douglass to Black Lives Matter, has consistently had to fight for the rights and recognition of U.S. citizenship.

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Cuba's Racial Crucible: The Sexual Economy of Social Identities, 1750–2000

Cuban Studies

Jana Lipman

2018-01-01

Karen Y. Morrison's Cuba's Racial Crucible: The Sexual Economy of Social Identities, 1750–2000 argues for the centrality of the family in the longue durée of race making in Cuba. Morrison's ambitious project tackles a long chronological scope, starting in the eighteenth century, moving through the illegal slave trade, the Wars of Independence, and emancipation in the nineteenth century, and concluding with the twentieth century and the Cuban Revolution. Morrison argues against an explanation of interracial family formation in Cuba, as being a simple matter of blanqueamiento, or a shared and straightforward project of whitening. Instead, she argues that "this study highlights the inextricable links between 'family,' 'race,' and 'nation' in the competing nationalist visions of Cuba that have existed since the eighteenth century" (xvi).

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