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Books by Fellows


The Settlement of the Poor in England, c. 1660-1780: Law, Society, and State Formation

Tadmor Tadmor Naomi (Fletcher Jones, 2018-19)

The Settlement of the Poor in England is about social change and about history’s unintended consequences. It is also about the struggles and experiences of individuals and communities. It reminds us how the settlement legislation still resonates today. 


Herbs and Roots: A History of Chinese Doctors in the American Medical Marketplace,

Tamara Venit Tamara Venit Shelton (ACLS, 2017-18)

In this intricately crafted history, Tamara Venit Shelton chronicles the dynamic systems of knowledge, therapies, and materia medica crossing between China and the United States from the eighteenth century to the present.


The Poverty of Disaster: Debt and Insecurity in Eighteenth-Century Britain

Tawny Tawny Paul (NEH, 2015-16)

Tawny Paul examines the role that debt insecurity played within society and the fragility of the credit relations that underpinned commercial activity, livelihood, and social status.


Brabbling Women: Disorderly Speech and the Law in Early Virginia

Terri Terri Snyder (Thom Fellow, 1996-97)

By examining women’s use of language, Terri L. Snyder demonstrates how women resisted and challenged oppressive political, legal, and cultural practices in colonial Virginia. Contending that women’s voices are heard most clearly during episodes of crisis, Snyder focuses on disorderly speech to illustrate women’s complex relationships to law and authority in the seventeenth century.


Games of Property: Law, Race, Gender, and Faulkner’s Go Down, Moses

Thadious Thadious Davis (Avery Distinguished Fellow, 2000-01)

In Games of Property, distinguished critic Thadious M. Davis provides a dazzling new interpretation of William Faulkner’s Go Down, Moses. Davis argues that in its unrelenting attention to issues related to the ownership of land and people, Go Down, Moses ranks among Faulkner’s finest and most accomplished works.


Pathfinder: John C. Frémont and the Course of American Empire

Thomas Thomas Chaffin (Mellon Fellow, 1998-99)

The career of John Charles Frémont (1813–90) ties together the full breadth of American expansionism from its eighteenth-century origins through its culmination in the Gilded Age. Tom Chaffin’s biography demonstrates Frémont’s vital importance to the history of American empire, and illuminates his role in shattering long-held myths about the ecology and habitability of the American West.


Home Divisions: Aristocracy, the State and Provincial Conflict

Thomas Thomas Cogswell (NEH Fellow, 1995-96)

Largely based on the chance survival of a rich and previously unexploited archive of Henry Hastings, fifth earl of Huntingdon and Lord Lieutenant of Liecestershire, this book affords an in-depth look at early Stuart government and politics different than any hitherto presented.


The Marketplace of Revolution: How Consumer Politics Shaped American Independence

Timothy Timothy Breen (Times Mirror Distinguished Fellow, 1997-98)

The Marketplace of Revolution offers a boldly innovative interpretation of the mobilization of ordinary Americans on the eve of independence. Breen explores how colonists who came from very different ethnic and religious backgrounds managed to overcome difference and create a common cause capable of galvanizing resistance.


The Primitive, the Aesthetic, and the Savage

Tony C. Tony C. Brown (NEH Fellow, 2007-08)

Tony C. Brown examines “the inescapable yet infinitely troubling figure of the not-quite-nothing” in Enlightenment attempts to think about the aesthetic and the savage. The various texts Brown considers—including the writings of Addison, Rousseau, Kant, and Defoe—turn to exotic figures in order to delimit the aesthetic, and to aesthetics in order to comprehend the savage.


Book Cover with red and yellow title, and illustrations of coat of arms

Fictions of Consent: Slavery, Servitude, and Free Service in Early Modern England

Urvashi Urvashi Chakravarty (Thom Fellow, 2014-15)


The Education of Jane Addams

Victoria Victoria Brown (Billington/Occidental Fellow, 2000-01)

The Education of Jane Addams traces, with unprecedented care, Addams’s three-decade journey from a privileged prairie girlhood through her years as the competent spinster daughter in a demanding family after her father’s death to her early seasoning on the Chicago reform scene.


Prospero’s America: John Winthrop, Jr., Alchemy, and the Creation of New England Culture, 1606-1676

Walter Walter Woodward (NEH Fellow, 2002-03)

In Prospero’s America, Walter W. Woodward examines the transfer of alchemical culture to America by John Winthrop, Jr., one of English colonization’s early giants. Winthrop participated in a pan-European network of natural philosophers who believed alchemy could improve the human condition and hasten Christ’s Second Coming.


Divining Science: Treasure Hunting and Earth Science in Early Modern Germany

Warren Warren Dym (Dibner Fellow, 2009-10)

The study of German mining and metallurgy has focused overwhelmingly on labor, capitalism, and progressive engineering and earth science. This book addresses prospecting practices and mining culture. Using the divining, or dowsing rod as a means of exposing miner beliefs, it argues that a robust vernacular science preceded institutionalized geology in Saxony, and that the Freiberg Mining Academy (f.1765) became a site for the synthesis of tradition and new science.


Newton the Alchemist: Science, Enigma, and the Quest for Nature's "Secret Fire"

William William Newman (Searle, 2014-15)

Newton the Alchemist unlocks the secrets of Newton’s alchemical quest, providing a radically new understanding of the uncommon genius who probed nature at its deepest levels in pursuit of empirical knowledge.


Jews and Gentiles in Early America, 1654-1800

William William Pencak (Mellon Fellow, 2002-03)

Jews and Gentiles in Early America offers a uniquely detailed picture of Jewish life from the mid-seventeenth century through the opening decades of the new republic. Though the first national census in 1790 counted barely three thousand Jews, the Jewish community was nevertheless far more important in the history of early America than their numbers suggest, author William Pencak reveals in this fascinating chronicle of an often-overlooked aspect of American Jewish history.


Inglorious Revolution: Political Institutions, Sovereign Debt, and Financial Underdevelopment in Imperial Brazil

William William Summerhill (ACLS Fellow, 2006-07)

Nineteenth-century Brazil’s constitutional monarchy credibly committed to repay sovereign debt, borrowing repeatedly in international and domestic capital markets without default. Yet it failed to lay the institutional foundations that private financial markets needed to thrive. This study shows why sovereign creditworthiness did not necessarily translate into financial development.


Book cover.

Common Understandings, Poetic Confusion: Playhouses and Playgoers in Elizabethan England

William William West (NEH, 2012-13)

William N. West proposes a new account of the kind of participatory entertainment expected by the actors and the audience during the careers of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. 


Liberty Is Sweet: The Hidden History of the American Revolution

Woody Woody Holton (LA Times Fellow, 2016–17)

Using more than a thousand eyewitness accounts, Liberty Is Sweet explores countless connections between the Patriots of 1776 and other Americans whose passion for freedom often brought them into conflict with the Founding Fathers.


The Life of Kingsley Amis

Zachary Zachary Leader (Fletcher Jones Distinguished Fellow, 2002-03)

Here is the authorized, definitive biography of one of the most controversial figures of twentieth-century literature, renowned for his blistering intelligence, savage wit and belligerent fierceness of opinion: Kingsley Amis was not only the finest comic novelist of his generation–having first achieved prominence with the publication of Lucky Jim in 1954 and as one of the Angry Young Men–but also a dominant figure in post—World War II British writing as novelist, poet, critic and polemicist.