Recent Faculty Publications

Connie Chiang

Connie Chiang

Nature Behind Barbed Wire: An Environmental History of the Japanese American Incarceration, (Oxford University Press, Forthcoming 2018)

The mass imprisonment of over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry during World War II was one of the most egregious violations of civil liberties in United States history. Removed from their homes on the temperate Pacific Coast, Japanese Americans spent the war years in ten desolate camps in the nation’s interior.

David Gordon

David Gordon

Apartheid in South Africa: A Brief History in Documents (Bedford/St. Martin's, 2017)

This volume introduces undergraduates to a collection of primary documents on apartheid in South Africa, one of the best known and frequently cited systems of institutionalized and legalized racial and ethnic segregation.

 Meghan Roberts

Meghan Roberts

Sentimental Savants: Philosophical Families in Enlightenment France (University of Chicago Press, 2016)

Though the public may retain a hoary image of the lone scientific or philosophical genius generating insights in isolation, scholars discarded it long ago. In reality, the families of scientists and philosophers in the Enlightenment played a substantial role, not only making space for inquiry within the home but also assisting in observing, translating, calculating, and illustrating.

David Hecht

David Hecht

Storytelling and Science: Rewriting Oppenheimer in the Nuclear Age (University of Massachusetts Press, 2015)

No single figure embodies Cold War science more than the renowned physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. Although other scientists may have been more influential in establishing the institutions and policies of the nuclear age, none has loomed larger in the popular imagination than the "father of the atomic bomb."