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Department of History
University of Mississippi

Archive for the ‘history faculty info’ Category

Mikaëla M. Adams

Posted on: July 2nd, 2012 by

Associate Professor of History

Office Hours: By appointment

Bishop Hall 337
(662) 915-1332  |  mmadams@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill

Teaching and Research Interests
Native American History, Citizenship and Sovereignty, Identity and Belonging, Identity and Belonging, Race Relations, South, Medical History

Mikaëla M. Adams is an Assistant Professor of Native American history. She received her doctorate from the University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill in 2012.

Her first book, Who Belongs? Race Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South (Oxford University Press, 2016), which was based on her doctoral work, explores how six southeastern Indian tribes—the Pamunkey Indian Tribe of Virginia, the Catawba Indian Nation of South Carolina, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians of North Carolina, the Seminole Tribe of Florida, and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida—decided who belonged to their communities in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. As she argues in the book, the right to determine tribal citizenship is fundamental to the exercise of tribal sovereignty, which is a key concept in understanding the relationship between indigenous people and the settler-colonial government of the United States. Deciding who belongs to Indian tribes has a complicated history, however, especially in the American South. Indians who remained in the South following the forced removals of indigenous peoples west of the Mississippi River in the 1830s became a marginalized and anomalous people in an emerging biracial world. Despite the economic hardships and assimilationist pressures they faced, they insisted on their political identity as citizens of tribal nations and rejected Euro-American efforts to reduce them to another racial minority. Drawing upon their cultural traditions, kinship patterns, and evolving needs to protect their land, resources, and identity from outsiders, southern Indians constructed tribally-specific citizenship criteria that went beyond the dominant society’s racial definitions of “Indian.” By focusing on the rights and resources at stake, the effects of state and federal recognition of tribes’ political status, the influence of kinship systems and racial ideologies, and the process of creating official tribal rolls, Who Belongs? historicizes belonging and reveals how Indians established legal identities. The varying experiences of the six tribes in this study belie the notion of an essential or racialized “Indian” and show that citizenship in a tribe is a historically-constructed and constantly-evolving process.

Adams’s current research project, tentatively titled Influenza in Indian Country: Indigenous Sickness, Suffering, and Survival during the 1918-1919 Pandemic, will provide an ethnohistorical account of the world’s deadliest pandemic and its long-term consequences for Native American communities across the United States. It will explore how the virus infected indigenous people on reservations and boarding schools, how their living conditions in this period exacerbated the effects of influenza, how institutionalized segregation determined Native access to healthcare, how indigenous people responded medically, and how this health crisis affected the federal-tribal relationship. By combining the methodologies of medical history and ethnohistory, this project will highlight both the biological consequences of influenza on Native American communities and the ways that social constructions of race, ethnicity, sickness, and healing shaped the experience of infection for indigenous people in this time period.

Mikaela Adams CV

Darren E. Grem

Posted on: June 12th, 2012 by

Casual portrait of Darren Grem set outdoorsAssociate Professor of History and Southern Studies

Office Hours: By Appointment

Bishop Hall 307
(662) 915-7734  |  degrem@olemiss.edu

Education

Ph.D, University of Georgia

Teaching and Research Interests
20th-century United States, southern history and southern studies, culture, capitalism, religion, politics

Darren E. Grem earned his B.A. from Furman University and M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Georgia. He held postdoctoral fellowships at Yale University and Emory University before joining the faculty at the University of Mississippi.

Grem is the author of The Blessings of Business: How Corporations Shaped Conservative Christianity (Oxford University Press, 2016), a book that details how conservative evangelicals strategically used business leaders, organizations, methods, and money to advance their cultural and political aspirations in twentieth-century America.  With John Corrigan and Amanda Porterfield, he is co-editor of The Business Turn in American Religious History (Oxford University Press, 2017), a collection of essays that reconsiders the role of business in American religious culture and politics.  Also, with Ted Ownby and James G. Thomas, Jr., he is co-editor of Southern Religion, Southern Culture: Essays Honoring Charles Reagan Wilson (University Press of Mississippi, 2018).

Grem’s second long-term book project, Hard Times, U.S.A.: The Great Depression and New Deal in American Memory, is an expansive study of how Americans after World War II remembered and used the Great Depression in popular culture (memorial sites, music, literature, art, film) and in political activism for and against the New Deal state.

In the Department of History and at the Center for the Study of Southern Culture, he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in twentieth-century U.S. history, southern history and southern studies, and modern politics and culture.  For more info, go to: www.darrengrem.com.

Jeffrey R. Watt

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Kelly Gene Cook, Sr. Chair and Distinguished Professor

Bishop Hall 332
(662) 915-5805  |  hswatt@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Teaching and Research Interests
Early Modern Europe, Reformation, Social History

Jeffrey R. Watt joined the University of Mississippi faculty in 1988 and teaches lecture courses on the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the age of Absolutism and Enlightenment and seminars on women and the family in medieval and early modern Europe, historiography of European history to 1815, early modern social history, and witchcraft. His most recent book is The Consistory and Social Discipline in Calvin’s Geneva (University of Rochester Press, 2020). Free digital access to this book is available through the Sustainable History Monograph Pilot (https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/42650), which is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon foundation. Previous publications include The Scourge of Demons: Possession, Lust, and Witchcraft in a Seventeenth-Century Italian Convent (University of Rochester Press, 2009); Choosing Death: Suicide and Calvinism in Early Modern Geneva (Truman State University Press, 2001); The Making of Modern Marriage: Matrimonial Control and the Rise of Sentiment in Neuchâtel, 1550-1800 (Cornell University Press, 1992); and articles in journals such as the Archive for Reformation HistoryChurch History, the Journal of Early Modern History, the Journal of Social History, the Journal of Family History, and the Sixteenth Century Journal. He is also the editor of From Sin to Insanity: Suicide in Early Modern Europe (Cornell University Press, 2004) and The Long Reformation (Houghton Mifflin, 2006). Since 2010 he has been the director of the project to publish scholarly editions of the twenty-one volumes of the Genevan Consistory that date from the ministry of the reformer John Calvin, who created this morals court. Starting with volume six, he has been co-editor (with Isabella M. Watt) of these editions, which has resulted, thus far, in the publication of the following volumes: Registres du Consistoire de Genève au temps de Calvin, vols. 6–17 (Droz, 2012-23). In 2021–22, Watt’s Consistory project received $375,000 in grants from the Loterie romande (the Lottery for French-speaking Switzerland) and another Swiss charitable institution that requests anonymity. In addition to remuneration for the co-editor and the copy-editor, these funds are covering the costs of publishing the remaining volumes, making all volumes available Open Access, and restructuring and making available Open Access the database the editors created. Watt’s service to the profession has included a stint as Vice President (2009) and President (2010) of the Sixteenth Century Society and Conference, a scholarly organization with approximately 1,500 members.

Jeffrey Watt CV

Nicolas Trépanier

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Professor TrépanierAssociate Professor

Bishop Hall
ntrepani@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, Harvard University

Teaching and Research Interests
Middle East

A native of Québec, Canada, Nicolas Trépanier holds a Ph.D. (Middle Eastern Studies/History) from Harvard University. His book, Foodways and Daily Life in Medieval Anatolia: A New Social History (University of Texas Press, 2014) explores the daily experiences of the ordinary folk through the various parts that food played in those lives –from agricultural production to religious fasting, and from commercial exchanges to meal schedules.

He is currently working on landscape and the way ordinary people in medieval Anatolia perceived the land on which they lived. In parallel, he is also interested in the relations between history and videogames, a topic on which he regularly teaches a course. He has been a member of the Department of History at the University of Mississippi since August 2009.

Nicolas Trépanier CV

Douglass Sullivan-González

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

 Professor of History

Office hours: By Appointment

Bishop Hall 320
(662) 915-7109 |  dsg@olemiss.edu

Education 
Ph.D, University of Texas at Austin

Teaching and Research Interests
Latin America

Douglass Sullivan-González authored The Black Christ of Esquipulas: Religion and Identity in Guatemala, published by the University of Nebraska Press in 2016, and Piety, Power, and Politics: Religion and Nation Formation in Guatemala, 1821-1871,  published by the University of Pittsburgh Press in 1998.  Sullivan-González also translated Edelberto Torres-Rivas’s Interpretación del desarrollo social centroamericano as History and Society in Central America in 1993 and he co-edited a manuscript with Charles Reagan Wilson on The South and the Caribbean, published by The University of Mississippi Press in 2001.  His most recent article, “History of Liberation Theology in Latin America,” will be published by Oxford University Research Encylopedia on Latin America in 2022.

Sullivan-González completed his Bachelor of Arts with Honors at Samford University and his Master of Divinity and Master of Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary.  He taught Church History and Social Ethics from 1984-1986 at the Nicaraguan Baptist Seminary in Managua, Nicaragua, and completed his Phd in Latin American History at The University of Texas at Austin.  He initiated his teaching career at UM as Assistant Professor in 1993, and then taught at Tulane University as Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of History from 1999-2000  Sullivan-González served as Dean of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College from 2003-2021 and returned to the Department of History as Professor of History in 2021.

Sullivan-González CV

Mohammed Bashir Salau

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Dr. SalauProfessor of History

Office Hours:  Tuesdays 8am-noon or by appointment

Bishop Hall 335 | (662) 915-5751  |  bashir@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, York University, Canada

Teaching and Research Interests

Mohammed Bashir Salau received his Ph.D. from York University, Canada, in 2005. He taught at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington State and served as a visiting scholar at Kwara State University in Nigeria. His works focus on slavery, Islam, labor, European imperialism and African diaspora history. Salau’s primary research focuses on Hausaland, Nigeria and other parts of West Africa, mainly nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He is the author of two books. The first book, The West African Slave Plantation: A Case Study was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2011. Salau’s second book, Plantation Slavery in the Sokoto Caliphate: A Historical and Comparative Study (University of Rochester Press, 2018), is a work of synthesis that engages with major debates on internal African Slavery, on the meaning of the term “plantation,” and on comparative slavery. Presently, Salau is working on the biography of one Dorugu Kwage Adamu, a Hausa man who was enslaved in West Africa during the early years of his life in the mid-nineteenth century, and he teaches the African history survey— “Introduction to African History” as well as courses on Islam in Africa, Nationalism in Africa, Africa and World War II and the history of slavery in Africa.

 

Bashir Salau CV

Charles K. Ross

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Professor of History and African American Studies

Office hours: By Appointment

Longstreet Hall 309
(662) 915-5978  |  cross@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, Ohio State University

Teaching and Research Interests
African American, U.S. 20th Century, Sports

His research and teaching interests include twentieth century U.S. History, African American History and Sport History. Dr. Ross has published a chapter titled “A Historical Legacy of Black Male Leadership: Medgar Evers” in Brothers of the Academy Up and Coming Black Scholars Earning Our Way in Higher Education.  His first book, Outside the Lines: African Americans and the Integration of the National Football League, was published by New York University Press in 1999.  Dr. Ross latest book, Money, Mavericks and Men: The AFL, Black Players and the Evolution of Modern Football, was published by Temple University Press in 2016.

Charles Ross CV

Ted M. Ownby

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Professor of History and Southern Studies Director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture

Office hours: Tuesdays, 12:30-2; Thursdays, 12-1:30; and by appointment

Bishop Hall 309A
(662) 915-3315  |  hsownby@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, Johns Hopkins University

Teaching and Research Interests
South, Religion, Popular Culture

Ted Ownby has a joint appointment in History and Southern Studies. He is the author of American Dreams in Mississippi: Consumers, Poverty, and Culture, 1830-1998 (1999) and Subduing Satan: Religion, Recreation and Manhood in the Rural South, 1865-1920 (1990) and editor of Black and White: Cultural Interaction in the Antebellum South (1993). He is co-editor of the Mississippi Encyclopedia and the undergraduate advisor for Southern Studies majors. He writes and teaches classes on the social and cultural history of the American South.

Ted Ownby CV

Christopher A. Luse

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Instructional Assistant Professor

Office Hours: Mondays 3-4 pm & By Appointment

Tupelo 337C
caluse@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D., Emory University

Theresa H. Levitt

Posted on: November 18th, 2011 by

Professor of History

Office hours: By Appointment

Bishop Hall 323
(662) 915-3792  |  tlevitt@olemiss.edu

Education
Ph.D, Harvard University

Teaching and Research Interests
History of Science, France

Theresa joined the faculty at the University of Mississippi in 2002. She received her B.S. in physics from MIT, a MA in History from Iowa State University, and a PhD from Harvard. Her publications include The Shadow of Enlightenment: Optical and Political Transparency in France 1789-1848 (Oxford University Press, 2009) and A Short Bright Flash: Augustin Fresnel and the Birth of the Modern Lighthouse (W.W. Norton, 2013 and 2015).

Theresa Levitt CV