Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Books by Fellows


Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling

Richard Bushman (Avery Distinguished Fellow, 1996-97)

Founder of the largest indigenous Christian church in American history, Joseph Smith published the 584-page Book of Mormon when he was twenty-three and went on to organize a church, found cities, and attract thousands of followers before his violent death at age thirty-eight. Richard Bushman, an esteemed cultural historian and a practicing Mormon, moves beyond the popular stereotype of Smith as a colorful fraud to explore his personality, his relationships with others, and how he received revelations.


Book cover.

Consistent Democracy: The “Woman Question” and Self-Government in Nineteenth-Century America

Leslie Butler (Occidental/Billington, 2021-22)

Examines how discussions about self-government and the so-called woman question developed in published opinion from the 1830s through the 1890s. Ranging beyond the organized women’s rights movement, it places in conversation travel writers and domestic advice gurus, activists and educators, novelists and journalists, as well as countless others who explored contested aspects of democratic womanhood. 


Puritan Conquistadors: Iberianizing the Atlantic, 1550-1700

Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (Mellon Fellow, 2003-04)

The book demonstrates that a wider Pan-American perspective can upset the most cherished national narratives of the United States, for it maintains that the Puritan colonization of New England was as much a chivalric, crusading act of Reconquista (against the Devil) as was the Spanish conquest.


The Undivided Past: Humanity beyond Our Differences

David Cannadine (Fletcher Jones Distinguished Fellow, 2010-11)

Investigating the six most salient categories of human identity, difference, and confrontation—religion, nation, class, gender, race, and civilization—David Cannadine questions just how determinative each of them has really been.


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

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.


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 Chakravarty (Thom Fellow, 2014-15)


Round About the Earth: Circumnavigation from Magellan to Orbit

Joyce Chaplin (Fletcher Jones Distinguished Fellow, 2006-07)

With illustrations and maps, a witty and erudite account of the history of circumnavigation and how it has influenced the way we think about the Earth and ourselves. In the first complete account, Joyce Chaplin tells of the outrageous ambitions that inspired men and women to take on the whole planet.


Home Divisions: Aristocracy, the State and Provincial Conflict

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.


Death by Effigy: A Case from the Mexican Inquisition

Luis Corteguera (NEH Fellow, 2007-08)

Drawing on inquisitorial papers from the Mexican Inquisition’s archive, Luis R. Corteguera weaves a rich narrative that leads readers into a world vastly different from our own, one in which symbols were as powerful as the sword.


Book cover with an image of different boats on the water

Entrepot of Revolutions: Saint-Domingue, Commercial Sovereignty, and the French-American Alliance

Manuel Covo (Thom Fellow, 2018-19)

The Age of Revolutions has been celebrated for the momentous transition from absolute monarchies to representative governments and the creation of nation-states in the Atlantic world. Much less recognized than the spread of democratic ideals was the period’s growing traffic of goods, capital, and people across imperial borders and reforming states’ attempts to control this mobility.


Book cover.

Origins of the Just War: Military Ethics and Culture in the Ancient Near East

Rory Cox (Caltech-Huntington, 2017-18)

Reveals the incredible richness and complexity of ethical thought about war in the three millennia preceding the Greco-Roman period, establishing the extent to which ancient just war thought prefigured much of what we now consider to be the building blocks of the Western just war tradition.


A book cover depicting a sky filled with birds and angelic figures, text fades from light blue to yellow "Climate Change and Original Sin."

Climate Change and Original Sin: The Moral Ecology of John Milton’s Poetry

Katherine Cox (NEH Fellow, 2018-19)

Focusing on the most recent epoch in which belief in an animate environment still widely prevailed, Climate Change and Original Sin argues that an ecologically inflected moral system assumed that humanity bore responsibility for climate corruption and volatility.


Poetry, Enclosure, and the Vernacular Landscape 1700-1830

Rachel Crawford (Thom Fellow, 1997-98)

Rachel Crawford examines the intriguing, often problematic relationship between poetry and landscape in eighteenth and early-nineteenth-century Britain. She discusses the highly contested parliamentary enclosure movement which closed off the last of England’s open fields between 1760 and 1815.


England on Edge: Crisis and Revolution, 1640-1642

David Cressy (Fletcher Jones Distinguished Fellow, 2003-04)

England on Edge deals with the collapse of the government of Charles I, the disintegration of the Church of England, and the accompanying cultural panic that led to civil war. Focused on the years 1640 to 1642, it examines stresses and fractures in social, political, and religious culture, and the emergence of an unrestrained popular press.


The Generals’ Civil War

Stephen Cushman (Rogers, 2019–20)

In December 1885, under the watchful eye of Mark Twain, the publishing firm of Charles L. Webster and Company released the first volume of the Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant. With a second volume published in March 1886, Grant’s memoirs became a popular sensation. Seeking to capitalize on Grant’s success and interest in earlier reminiscences by Joseph E. Johnston, William T. Sherman, and Richard Taylor, other Civil War generals such as George B. McClellan and Philip H. Sheridan soon followed suit.


Book cover.

Tempest: The Royal Navy and the Age of Revolutions

James Davey (Kemble, 2020-21)

In this insightful history, James Davey tells the story of Britain’s Royal Navy across the turbulent 1790s. As resistance and rebellion swept through the fleets, the navy itself became a political battleground. This was a conflict fought for principles as well as power. Sailors organized riots, strikes, petitions, and mutinies to achieve their goals. These shocking events dominated public discussion, prompting cynical—and sometimes brutal—responses from the government.


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

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.


Loving Dr. Johnson

Helen Deutsch (NEH Fellow, 1998-99)

Loving Dr. Johnson uses the enormous popularity of Johnson to understand a singular case of author love and to reflect upon what the love of authors has to do with the love of literature. Helen Deutsch’s work is driven by several impulses, among them her affection for both Johnson’s work and Boswell’s biography of him, and her own distance from the largely male tradition of Johnsonian criticism—a tradition to which she remains indebted and to which Loving Dr. Johnson is ultimately an homage.


Book cover.

Digging the Past: How and Why to Imagine Seventeenth-Century Agriculture

Frances E. Dolan (Fletcher Jones Foundation Distinguished Fellow, 2011-12)

Building on and connecting histories of food and work, literary criticism of the pastoral and georgic, histories of elite and vernacular science, and histories of reading and writing practices, among other areas of inquiry, Digging the Past offers fine-grained case studies of projects heralded as innovations both in the seventeenth century and in our own time.


True Relations: Reading, Literature, and Evidence in Seventeenth-Century England

Frances E. Dolan (Fletcher Jones Foundation Distinguished Fellow, 2011-12)

Dolan connects early modern debates about textual evidence to recent discussions of the value of seventeenth-century texts as historical evidence. Then as now, she contends, literary techniques of analysis have proven central to staking and assessing truth claims. She addresses the kinds of texts that circulated about three traumatic events—the Gunpowder Plot, witchcraft prosecutions, and the London Fire—and looks at legal depositions, advice literature, and plays as genres of evidence that hover in a space between fact and fiction.


Women’s Work in Early Modern English Literature and Culture

Michelle Dowd (Thom Fellow, 2006-07)

Dowd investigates literature’s engagement with the gendered conflicts of early modern England by examining the narratives that seventeenth-century dramatists created to describe the lives of working women.


Book cover with a long haired woman with wings, in a patterned orange dress.

Talking Back: Native Women and the Making of the Early South

Alejandra Dubcovsky (Fletcher Jones Fellow, 2019-20)

Historian Alejandra Dubcovsky tells a story of war, slavery, loss, remembrance, and the women whose resilience and resistance transformed the colonial South. In exploring their lives she rewrites early American history, challenging the established male-centered narrative.


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

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.


Jacksonian Antislavery and the Politics of Free Soil, 1824-1854

Jonathan Earle (NEH Fellow, 1999-00)

Taking our understanding of political antislavery into largely unexplored terrain, Jonathan H. Earle counters conventional wisdom and standard historical interpretations that view the ascendance of free-soil ideas within the antislavery movement as an explicit retreat from the goals of emancipation or even as an essentially proslavery ideology.


Cultivating Commerce: Cultures of Botany in Britain and France, 1760-1815

Sarah Easterby-Smith (Dibner, 2011-12)

Sarah Easterby-Smith rewrites the histories of botany and horticulture from the perspectives of plant merchants who sold botanical specimens in the decades around 1800.


The Imaginary Autocrat: Beau Nash and the Invention of Bath

John Eglin (NEH Fellow, 2002-03)

Richard Beau Nash was the original “It boy,” the self-invented, style-over-substance ruling impresario of Bath who came from humble beginnings. He is a living illustration of what can be achieved with self-confidence and self-possession, as he became the ever-present match maker, gambler, and businessman at the whirl of balls and games at Bath in the 18th century. John Eglin’s brilliant and rewarding book is concerned as much with Nash’s invention of himself as it is with the invention of Bath.