The Department of History

Doomsday Book
Christine Stansell

IN THIS SECTION

Faculty

Fredrik Albritton Jonsson

Guy Salvatore Alitto

Leora Auslander

Dain Borges

John Boyer

Mark Bradley

Matthew Briones

Susan Burns

Dipesh Chakrabarty

Paul Cheney

Kathleen Conzen

Edward Cook, Jr.

Bruce Cumings

Jane Dailey

Constantin Fasolt

Shiela Fitzpatrick

Cornell Fleischer

Rachel Fulton

Michael Geyer

Jan Goldstein

Adam Green

Ramón Gutiérrez

Jonathan Hall

Cameron Hawkins

James Hevia

Thomas Holt

Rachel Jean-Baptiste

Adrian Johns

Walter Kaegi

James Ketelaar

Emilio Kourí

Jonathan Lyon

David Nirenberg

Emily Osborn

Moishe Postone

Robert Richards

Julie Saville

James Sparrow

Amy Dru Stanley

Christine Stansell

Mauricio Tenorio

Bernard Wasserstein

Alison Winter

John Woods

Tara Zahra

Visiting Faculty

Louis Granados

James Grossman

Alma Guillermoprieto

Joanna Guldi

Qunyu Tan

Emeriti Faculty

Ralph Austen

Prasenjit Duara

Bentley Duncan

Charles Gray

Hanna Gray

Harry Harootunian

Neil Harris

Ping-ti Ho

Ronald Inden

Halil Inalcik

Barry Karl

Friedrich Katz

Julius Kirshner

Emmet Larkin

William McNeil

Tetsuo Najita

Peter Novick

William Sewell

Ronald Suny

Noel Swerdlow

Associated Faculty

Muzaffar Alam

Michael Allen

Clifford Ando

Catherine Brekus

Jean Comaroff

John Craig

Fred Donner

Robert Fogel

Dennis Hutchinson

Rochona Majumdar

Paul Mendes-Flohr

Jennifer Palmer

Lucy Pick

Holly Shissler

Christine Stansell

Stein-Freiler Distinguished Service Professor in United States History and the College
Ph.D. Yale University 1979

The University of Chicago
Department of History
1126 East 59th Street, Mailbox 119
Chicago, IL 60637
(773) 702-3313 -- Office
(773) 702-7550 -- Fax
Email: stansell@uchicago.edu

Field Specialties
Women's and gender history; Antebellum U.S. social and political history; American cultural history; History of human rights and post-catastrophic societies.

Biography

Christine Stansell is a leading historian of American women, with interests in women's and gender history, antebellum U.S. social and political history, American cultural history, and how societies reconstruct themselves after catastrophes. After graduating from Princeton University (1971), she earned a Ph.D. in American Studies at Yale University (1979) and joined the Princeton History Department in 1982. She will begin teaching at the University of Chicago in Autumn 2007. Beginning with her years as a graduate student at Yale in the early 1970s, Professor Stansell helped to establish and further the "second wave" of women's history and gender studies. Her first book, City of Women: Sex and Class in New York 1789-1860 (1986), explored the streets, tenements, dance halls, and sweatshops of antebellum New York City to reveal the central role working-class women played in the city's history. At the same time she worked in the new field of the history of sexuality, collaborating with Ann Snitow and Sharon Thompson to publish the groundbreaking collection Powers of Desire: The Politics of Sexuality (1983). Her most recent book, American Moderns: Bohemian New York and the Creation of a New Century (2000), weaves together the lives of the influential group of writers, artists, and political radicals who lived in Greenwich Village in the years between 1890 and 1920 to deliver a wide-ranging account of left-wing politics, avant-garde art, intimate relationships, and American social history at the opening of the 20th century. Professor Stansell writes and reviews widely for The New Republic and other journals of opinion on subjects ranging from African-Americans in New York City and the painter James McNeill Whistler to Theodore Roosevelt, the history of love, and 1960s feminism. Her writings on the election of 2008 appeared in Dissent and New York magazine and on the Huffington Post. Most recently, she published a piece on the fifteenth anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda for The New Republic. She had been the recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (1993-94), a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey (1990-91), and the Mary Bunting Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (2006-07).

Current Project

Her book The Feminist Promise, 1792 to the Present will be published by Random House/Modern LIbrary in April 2010. Future projects will focus on social and political activity across the color line in antebellum America and England, the history of motherhood, the home front in World War II and post-catastrophic societies.

Teaching Interests

Professor Stansell will teach courses for undergraduates on American women from the 16th to the early 20th century; the history of feminism; motherhood; and the history of sexuality. She will offer graduate seminars on gender history, the post-Civil War period, the history of sexuality, and metropolitan life; the latter is a writing/research workshop that trains students to write about cities.

Publications

American Moderns: Bohemian New York and the Creation of a New Century, Owl Books

City of Women: Sex and Class in New York, 1789-1860, University of Illinois Press

Powers of Desire: The Politics of Sexuality (New feminist library), Monthly Review Press