Historians in Related Fields

JAMES R. BARRETT (Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh, 1981), gender, racial, and ethnic identity and relations in U.S. working-class history.

O. VERNON BURTON (Ph.D. Princeton University, 1976), gender, masculinity, and racial and ethnic identity in the American South.

KENNETH M. CUNO (Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles, 1985), social, economic, and legal history of the modern Middle East, family history.

PETER FRITZSCHE (Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, 1986), European cultural history, memory and perception.

POSHEK FU (Ph.D. Stanford University, 1989), modern Chinese cultural history, popular culture, cinema studies, women and film.

CAROLINE HIBBARD (Ph.D. Yale University, 1975), Tudor-Stuart court culture, elite women in sixteenth and seventeenth-century Britain and Western Europe.

CRAIG M. KOSLOFSKY (Ph.D. University of Michigan, 1994), early modern Germany, daily life, the body.

JOHN A. LYNN (Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles, 1973), military history, France 1610-1815, women in early modern militaries.

DAVID PROCHASKA (Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, 1981), gender and postcolonial studies.

JOHN RANDOLPH (Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, 1997), Imperial Russia, family history.

MARK D. STEINBERG (Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, 1987), women’s experience and voices in imperial and revolutionary Russia, Russian feminism, the language of gender.

CAROL SYMES (Ph.D. Harvard University, 1999), Medieval Europe, especially France and England, cultural history, history of theatre, women and religion

MARIA TODOROVA, (Ph.D. Sofia, 1977), modern Balkans, family history