Historians of Women and Gender
JEAN ALLMAN (Ph.D. Northwestern University, 1987), Africa, women and colonial encounters, religion and vernacular modernities, nationalism and dress, gender, ethnicity and migration.
MATTI BUNZL(Ph.D. University of Chicago, 1998), Modern history and culture of Central Europe, Jewish history, history of gender and sexuality.
ADRIAN BURGOS, JR. (Ph.D. University of Michigan, 2000), United States, intersection of race, nation, and gender in Latino history and American cultures, racial boundaries, the construction of masculinity, diasporic identities in the Americas.
ANTOINETTE BURTON (Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1990), South Asian women; feminist/cultural theory; women in the British empire.
SHEFALI CHANDRA (Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, 2003), Modern South Asia, gender and women, British empire, special interest in feminist and postcolonial studies, language, popular culture, and education.
CLARE CROWSTON (Ph.D. Cornell University, 1996): early modern European women's/ gender history; women's work and women's guilds.
AUGUSTO ESPIRITU (Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles, 2000), American cultural, Asian American, post-colonial nationalism, gender and performativity, transnational migration.
KRISTIN HOGANSON (Ph.D. Yale University, 1995): U.S. cultural, foreign relations, and gender history
DIANE P. KOENKER (Ph.D. University of Michigan, 1976): social history of Russia and the Soviet Union; comparative working-class history; women and gender in Russia and Europe.
TAMARA MATHESON (Ph.D. Rutgers, 2002), modern France, women, gender, and sexuality, history of the media.
ERIK MCDUFFIE (Ph.D., New York University, 2003), United Stesm African American Women's History, Women and U.S. Radicalism.
MEGAN McLAUGHLIN (Ph.D. Stanford University, 1985): medieval European women, gender, sexuality.
MARK S. MICALE (Ph.D. Yale University, 1987), Modern Europe, gender, science, and medicine, especially psychiatry, historical and theoretical studies of masculinity, history of the body, history of sexualities.
JESSICA MILLWARD (Ph.D., UCLA, 2003), United States, Gender and Slavery, African American Women's History.
KATHRYN OBERDECK (Ph.D. Yale University, 1991), United States, cultural and intellectual history, gender and working-class, popular and mass culture, gender and popular religion, changing roles of intellectuals, social relations of space and place.
ELIZABETH PLECK (Ph.D. Brandeis University, 1973): U.S. women's and family history; gender and ethnicity; family violence.
DANA RABIN (Ph.D. University of Michigan, 1996), Early Modern Britain, legal, cultural, and gender history.
LESLIE J. REAGAN (Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1991): U.S. women's history; women and law; gender, medicine, and health; sexuality.
SHARRA VOSTRAL (Ph.D. History, Washington University in St. Louis, 2000) Gender and Technology, U.S. Women’s History, medicine, health.