Books by Fellows
Enlightenment in the Colony: The Jewish Question and the Crisis of Postcolonial Culture
Aamir Aamir Mufti (ACLS Fellow, 2004-05)
Aamir Mufti identifies the Hindu-Muslim conflict in India as a colonial variation of what he calls “the exemplary crisis of minority”—Jewishness in Europe. He shows how the emergence of this conflict in the late nineteenth century represented an early instance of the reinscription of the “Jewish question” in a non-Western society undergoing modernization under colonial rule.

Political Economy and the States of Literature in Early Modern England
Aaron Aaron Kitch (Dibner Fellow, 2012-13)
Crossing the disciplinary borders between political, religious, and economic history, Aaron Kitch’s innovative new study demonstrates how sixteenth-century treatises and debates about trade influenced early modern English literature by shaping key formal and aesthetic concerns of authors between 1580 and 1630.

Competing Visions of Empire: Labor, Slavery, and the Origins of the British Atlantic Empire
Abigail Abigail Swingen (Thom, 2011-12)
Abigail L. Swingen’s insightful study provides a new framework for understanding the origins of the British empire while exploring how England’s original imperial designs influenced contemporary English politics and debates about labor, economy, and overseas trade.
Trying Biology: The Scopes Trial, Textbooks, and the Antievolution Movement in American Schools
Adam Adam Shapiro (Dibner Fellow, 2009-10)
In Trying Biology, Adam R. Shapiro convincingly dispels many conventional assumptions about the 1925 Scopes “monkey” trial. Most view it as an event driven primarily by a conflict between science and religion. Countering this, Shapiro shows the importance of timing: the Scopes trial occurred at a crucial moment in the history of biology textbook publishing, education reform in Tennessee, and progressive school reform across the country.
Aloha America: Hula Circuits through the U.S. Empire
Adria Adria Imada (Thom Fellow, 2007-08)
Aloha America reveals the role of hula in legitimating U.S. imperial ambitions in Hawai’i. Hula performers began touring throughout the continental United States and Europe in the late nineteenth century. These “hula circuits” introduced hula, and Hawaiians, to U.S. audiences, establishing an “imagined intimacy,” a powerful fantasy that enabled Americans to possess their colony physically and symbolically. Meanwhile, in the early years of American imperialism in the Pacific, touring hula performers incorporated veiled critiques of U.S. expansionism into their productions.
The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia, 1772-1832
Alan Alan Taylor (Ritchie Distinguished Fellow, 2012-13)
Frederick Douglass recalled that slaves living along Chesapeake Bay longingly viewed sailing ships as “freedom’s swift-winged angels.” In 1813 those angels appeared in the bay as British warships coming to punish the Americans for declaring war on the empire. Over many nights, hundreds of slaves paddled out to the warships seeking protection for their families from the ravages of slavery. The runaways pressured the British admirals into becoming liberators. As guides, pilots, sailors, and marines, the former slaves used their intimate knowledge of the countryside to transform the war.
William Cooper’s Town: Power and Persuasion on the Frontier of the Early American Republic
Alan Alan Taylor (Ritchie Distinguished Fellow, 2012-13)
An innovative work of biography, social history, and literary analysis, this Pulitzer Prize-winning book presents the story of two men, William Cooper and his son, the novelist James Fennimore Cooper, who embodied the contradictions that divided America in the early years of the Republic. Taylor shows how Americans resolved their revolution through the creation of new social forms and new stories that evolved with the expansion of our frontier.
American Revolutions: A Continental History, 1750-1804
Alan Alan Taylor (Ritchie Distinguished Fellow, 2012-13)
The American Revolution is often portrayed as a high-minded, orderly event whose capstone, the Constitution, provided the ideal framework for a democratic, prosperous nation. Alan Taylor, two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize, gives us a different creation story in this magisterial history of the nation’s founding.
Shades of Hiawatha: Staging Indians, Making Americans, 1880-1930
Alan Alan Trachtenberg (Times Mirror Distinguished Fellow, 1998-99)
A century ago, U.S. policy aimed to sever the tribal allegiances of Native Americans, limit their ancient liberties, and coercively prepare them for citizenship. At the same time millions of arriving immigrants sought their freedom by means of that same citizenship. In this subtle, eye-opening new work, Alan Trachtenberg argues that the two developments were, inevitably, juxtaposed: Indians and immigrants together preoccupied the public imagination, and together changed the idea of what it meant to be American.
Herbert Eugene Bolton: Historian of the American Borderlands
Albert Albert Hurtado (Los Angeles Times Distinguished Fellow, 2007-08)
Herbert E. Bolton (1870–1953), a leading historian of the American West, Mexico, and Latin America, helped establish the reputation of the University of California and the Bancroft Library in the eyes of the world and was influential among historians during his lifetime, but interest in his ideas waned after his death. Now, more than a century after Bolton began to investigate the Mexican archives, Albert L. Hurtado explores his life against the backdrop of the cultural and political controversies of his day.

Talking Back: Native Women and the Making of the Early South
Alejandra Alejandra Dubcovsky (Fletcher Jones Fellow, 2019-20)
Historian Alejandra Dubcovsky tells a story of war, slavery, loss, remembrance, and the women whose resilience and resistance transformed the colonial South. In exploring their lives she rewrites early American history, challenging the established male-centered narrative.

Militarizing Outer Space: Astroculture, Dystopia and the Cold War
Alexander Alexander Geppert (Searle Professor, 2021-22)
Militarizing Outer Space explores the dystopian and destructive dimensions of the space age and challenges conventional narratives of a bipolar Cold War rivalry. Concentrating on weapons, warfare and violence, this provocative volume examines real and imagined endeavors of arming the skies and conquering the heavens. The third and final volume in the groundbreaking European Astroculture trilogy, Militarizing Outer Space zooms in on the interplay between security, technopolitics and knowledge from the 1920s through the 1980s. Often hailed as the site of heavenly utopias and otherworldly salvation, outer space transformed from a promised sanctuary to a present threat, where the battles of the future were to be waged. Astroculture proved instrumental in fathoming forms and functions of warfare’s futures past, both on earth and in space. The allure of dominating outer space, the book shows, was neither limited to the early 21st-century nor to current American space force rhetorics.

Limiting Outer Space: Astroculture After Apollo
Alexander Alexander Geppert (Searle Professor, 2021-22)
Propels the historicization of outer space by focusing on the 1970s, the Post-Apollo era of crisis and reconfiguration, utilizes an international and transdisciplinary perspective to explore the cultural history of outer space, and explores the reconfiguration of space imaginaries during the decade after the moon landings.

A Global Enlightenment: Western Progress and Chinese Science
Alexander Alexander Statman (Dibner, 2018-19)
A revisionist history of the idea of progress reveals an unknown story about European engagement with Chinese science.
The Enlightenment gave rise not only to new ideas of progress but consequential debates about them. Did distant times and places have anything to teach the here and now? Voltaire could believe that they did; Hegel was convinced that they did not. Early philosophes praised Chinese philosophy as an enduring model of reason. Later philosophes rejected it as stuck in the past. Seeking to vindicate ancient knowledge, a group of French statesmen and savants began a conversation with the last great scholar of the Jesuit mission to China. Together, they drew from Chinese learning to challenge the emerging concept of Western advancement.
A Global Enlightenment traces this overlooked exchange between China and the West to make compelling claims about the history of progress, notions of European exceptionalism, and European engagement with Chinese science. To tell this story, Alexander Statman focuses on a group of thinkers he terms “orphans of the Enlightenment,” intellectuals who embraced many of their contemporaries’ ideals but valued ancient wisdom. They studied astronomical records, gas balloons, electrical machines, yin-yang cosmology, animal magnetism, and Daoist medicine. And their inquiries helped establish a new approach to the global history of science.
Rich with new archival research and fascinating anecdotes, A Global Enlightenment deconstructs two common assumptions about the early to late modern period. Though historians have held that the idea of a mysterious and inscrutable East was inherent in Enlightenment progress theory, Statman argues that it was the orphans of the Enlightenment who put it there: by identifying China as a source of ancient wisdom, they turned it into a foil for scientific development. But while historical consensus supposes that non-Western ideas were banished from European thought over the course of the Enlightenment, Statman finds that Europeans became more interested in Chinese science—as a precursor, then as an antithesis, and finally as an alternative to modernity.
Aesthetic Science: Representing Nature in the Royal Society of London, 1650-1720
Alexander Alexander Wragge-Morley (Fellow in the Caltech-Huntington Program for the Study of Materialities, Texts, and Images, 2013-14)
The scientists affiliated with the early Royal Society of London have long been regarded as forerunners of modern empiricism, rejecting the symbolic and moral goals of Renaissance natural history in favor of plainly representing the world as it really was. In Aesthetic Science, Alexander Wragge-Morley challenges this interpretation by arguing that key figures such as John Ray, Robert Boyle, Nehemiah Grew, Robert Hooke, and Thomas Willis saw the study of nature as an aesthetic project.
The Imagined Civil War: Popular Literature of the North and South, 1861-1865
Alice Alice Fahs (Thom Fellow, 1997-98)
In this groundbreaking work of cultural history, Alice Fahs explores a little-known and fascinating side of the Civil War—the outpouring of popular literature inspired by the conflict. From 1861 to 1865, authors and publishers in both the North and the South produced a remarkable variety of war-related compositions, including poems, songs, children’s stories, romances, novels, histories, and even humorous pieces. Fahs mines these rich but long-neglected resources to recover the diversity of the war’s political and social meanings.
The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitans in an Age of Expansion, 1560-1660
Alison Alison Games (Ritchie Fellow, 2013–14)
How did England go from a position of inferiority to the powerful Spanish empire to achieve global pre-eminence? In this important second book, Alison Games, a colonial American historian, explores the period from 1560 to 1660, when England challenged dominion over the American continents, established new long-distance trade routes in the eastern Mediterranean and the East Indies, and emerged in the 17th century as an empire to reckon with.
Inventing the English Massacre: Amboyna in History and Memory
Alison Alison Games (Ritchie Fellow, 2013–14)
In its 17th-century heyday, the English broadside ballad was a single large sheet of paper printed on one side with multiple woodcut illustrations, a popular tune title, and a poem. Inexpensive, ubiquitous, and fugitive—individual elements migrated freely from one broadside to another—some 11,000 to 12,000 of these artifacts pre-1701 survive, though many others have undoubtedly been lost. Since 2003, Patricia Fumerton and a team of associates at the University of California, Santa Barbara have been finding, digitizing, cataloging, and recording these materials to create the English Broadside Ballad Archive.
Mining Language: Racial Thinking, Indigenous Knowledge, and Colonial Metallurgy in the Early Modern Iberian World
Allison Allison Bigelow (Thom Fellow, 2017-18)
Mineral wealth from the Americas underwrote and undergirded European colonization of the New World. Building upon works that have narrated this global history of American mining in economic and labor terms, Mining Language is the first book-length study of the technical and scientific vocabularies that miners developed in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as they engaged with metallic materials.

Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England
Amanda Amanda Vickery (Searle Professor, 2017-18)
This book unlocks the homes of Georgian England to examine the lives of the people who lived there. Vickery introduces us to men and women from all walks of life: gentlewoman Anne Dormer in her stately Oxfordshire mansion, bachelor clerk and future novelist Anthony Trollope in his dreary London lodgings, genteel spinsters keeping up appearances in two rooms with yellow wallpaper, servants with only a locking box to call their own.
Laughter: Notes on a Passion
Anca Anca Parvulescu (Thom Fellow, 2008-09)
Most of our theories of laughter are not concerned with laughter. Rather, their focus is the laughable object, whether conceived of as the comic, the humorous, jokes, the grotesque, the ridiculous, or the ludicrous. In Laughter, Anca Parvulescu proposes a return to the materiality of the burst of laughter itself. She sets out to uncover an archive of laughter, inviting us to follow its rhythms and listen to its tones.
Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America
Andrea Andrea Tone (NEH Fellow, 1997-98)
In Devices and Desires, Andrea Tone breaks new ground by showing what it was really like to buy, produce, and use contraceptives during a century of profound social and technological change. A down-and-out sausage-casing worker by day who turned surplus animal intestines into a million-dollar condom enterprise at night; inventors who fashioned cervical caps out of watch springs; and a mother of six who kissed photographs of the inventor of the Pill — these are just a few of the individuals who make up this riveting story.
Sensation and Sensibility: Viewing Gainsborough’s “Cottage Door”
Ann Ann Bermingham (NEH Fellow, 2003-04)
Late in his career Thomas Gainsborough became preoccupied with the theme of the cottage door, and he created a group of paintings and drawings that show rustic figures clustered around the open door of a cottage set in a deeply wooded landscape. Often seen as exemplars of the rural idyll, these works were among the first landscape paintings to reflect the eighteenth-century aesthetic of sensibility.
The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright
Ann M. Ann M. Little (Dana and David Dornsife Fellow, 2014-15)
Esther Wheelwright’s life was exceptional: border-crossing, multilingual, and multicultural. This meticulously researched book discovers her life through the communities of girls and women around her: the free and enslaved women who raised her in Wells, Maine; the Wabanaki women who cared for her, catechized her, and taught her to work as an Indian girl; the French-Canadian and Native girls who were her classmates in the Ursuline school; and the Ursuline nuns who led her to a religious life.
Popular Fiction and Brain Science in the Late Nineteenth Century
Anne Anne Stiles (Thom Fellow, 2009-10)
This book examines the cultural impact of neurological experiments on late-Victorian Gothic romances by Robert Louis Stevenson, Bram Stoker, H. G. Wells and others. Novels like Dracula and Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde expressed the deep-seated fears and visionary possibilities suggested by cerebral localization research, and offered a corrective to the linearity and objectivity of late Victorian neurology.

Magus: The Art of Magic from Faustus to Agrippa
Anthony Anthony Grafton (Fellow in the Rogers/Research Institute at Caltech and The Huntington, 2021-22)
Anthony Grafton argues that the magus in sixteenth-century Europe was a distinctive intellectual type, both different from and indebted to medieval counterparts as well as contemporaries like the engineer, the artist, the Christian humanist, and the religious reformer.
What Blood Won’t Tell: A History of Race on Trial in America
Ariela Ariela Gross (NEH, 2003-04)
Unearthing the legal history of racial identity, Ariela Gross’s book examines the paradoxical and often circular relationship of race and the perceived capacity for citizenship in American society. This book reminds us that the imaginary connection between racial identity and fitness for citizenship remains potent today and continues to impede racial justice and equality.
Other Things
Bill Bill Brown (Los Angeles Times Distinguished Fellow, 2012–13)
From the pencil to the puppet to the drone—the humanities and the social sciences continue to ride a wave of interest in material culture and the world of things. How should we understand the force and figure of that wave as it shapes different disciplines? Other Things explores this question by considering a wide assortment of objects—from beach glass to cell phones, sneakers to skyscrapers—that have fascinated a range of writers and artists, including Virginia Woolf, Man Ray, Spike Lee, and Don DeLillo.
The Sound of Virtue: Philip Sidney’s Arcadia and Elizabethan Politics
Blair Blair Worden (Fletcher Jones Distinguished Fellow, 1994-95)
Written around 1580, Philip Sidney’s ‘Arcadia’ is a romance, a love story, a work of wit and enchantment set in an ancient and mythical land. But, as Blair Worden now startlingly reveals, it is also a grave and urgent commentary on Elizabethan politics. Under the protective guise of pastoral fiction, Sidney produced a searching reflection on the misgovernment of Elizabeth I and on the failings of monarchy as a system of government.