
Gail Dubrow
Adjunct Professor: Urban Design and Planning
dubrow@u.washington.edu
Education
Ph.D. Graduate School of Architecture and Urban Planning, UCLA, 1991.
Selected Bibliography
"Contested Places in Public Memory: Reflections on the Sources Available
for Documenting Japanese American Heritage." Invited contribution
to Oral History and Public Memories, edited by Paula Hamilton and
Linda Shopes (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, forthcoming).
"The Nail That Sticks Up Gets Hit: The Architecture of Japanese
American Identity in the Urban Environment, 1884-1942." Invited contribution
to Nikkei (Dis)Appearances: Twentieth Century Japanese American and
Japanese Canadian History in the Pacific Northwest, edited by Louis
Fiset and Gail Nomura (Seattle: University of Washington Press, in press).
Restoring Women's History through Historic Preservation. Editor,
with Jennifer Goodman. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003.
Winner of the Antoinette Forrester Downing Award for the Best Book in
Historic Preservation, Society of Architectural Historians (2004).
Sento at Sixth and Main: Preserving Landmarks of Japanese American
Heritage, with Donna Graves (Seattle: Seattle Arts Commission, 2002).
Second edition of Sento in production with Smithsonian Institution
Press (forthcoming Fall 2004).
"Blazing Trails with Pink Triangles and Rainbow Flags," in
Restoring Women's History Through Historic Preservation, edited
by Gail Dubrow and Jennifer Goodman (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 2003): 281-299.
Gail Dubrow and Mary Corbin Sies, authors and editors, "Letting
Our Guard Down: A Forum on Gender, Race, Ethnicity and Sexuality in Planning
History," Journal of Planning History 1:3 (Fall 2002).
"Deru Kugi Wa Utareru or The Nail That Sticks Up Gets Hit: The Architecture
of Japanese American Identity, 1885-1942. The Rural Environment."
Journal of Architectural and Planning Research 19:4 (Winter 2002):
319-333.
"Asian American Imprints on the Western Landscape," in Preserving
Cultural Landscapes in America, edited by Arnold R. Alanen and Robert
Z. Melnick (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000): 143-168.
"Feminist and Multicultural Perspectives on Preservation Planning,"
in Making the Invisible Visible: Multicultural Planning History,
edited by Leonie Sandercock (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1998): 57-77. A revised and expanded version of an essay that originally
appeared in Planning Theory 13 (Summer 1995): 89-103.
Gail Dubrow and Alexa Berlow, "Vernacular and Popular Architecture
in Seattle," in Shaping Seattle Architecture, edited by Jeffrey
Ochsner (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1994): 282-288 and 311-312.
"Women and Community." In Reclaiming the Past: Landmarks
of Women's History. Edited by Page Putnam Miller. Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1992: 83-118.
The Library Book: A Century of the Seattle Public Library with
Judy Anderson and John Koval, (Seattle: Seattle Arts Commission, 1991).
"Restoring a Female Presence," in Architecture: A Place
for Women, edited by Ellen Perry Berkeley and Matilda McQuaid, associate
editor (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1989), 159-170.
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