Department of History George Washington University
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Faculty and Staff
 
Full-Time Faculty
 
Hugh Agnew
(Central Europe) is completing a survey history of the Czechs and the Bohemian crownlands, and has recently finished articles on Czechs and Germans in Bohemia in 1848, and on the last three royal coronations in Bohemia, 1791-1836.  His long-term research interest remains exploring the construction of a Czech national culture in Bohemia during the nineteenth century. (PhD, Stanford University, 1981)
Office: 1957 E Street, NW, Ste 401
Phone:

202-994-0885

E-mail: agnew@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Adele L. Alexander
(African-American and U.S. Women's History), author of Ambiguous Lives: Free Women of Color in Rural Georgia, 1789-1799, has also written Homelands and Waterways: the American Journey of the Bond Family 1846-1926, published by Pantheon in 1999.  It incorporates the black Atlantic world, African American history, family history, gender issues, military and social history during the period 1846-1926.  (PhD, Howard University, 1994)
Office: Phillips 303
Phone: 202-994-6528
E-mail: alalex@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


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Tyler Anbinder
(19th C. American Politics and Immigration) is an expert on Civil War-era politicsand immigration.  His most recent book, Five Points (2001), traced the history of nineteenth-century America's most infamous immigrant slum, focusing in particular on tenement life, inter-ethnic relations, and ethnic politics.  His previous monograph, Nativism and Slavery, analyzed the role of the anti-immigrant, anti-Catholic Know Nothing party on the political crisis that led to the Civil War.  His current research includes immigrant savings habits and religious festivals, as well as a book-length study of immigrant life in New York City from the first Dutch settlers to the present. (PhD, Columbia University, 1990)
Office: Phillips 317
Phone: 202-994-6470
E-mail: anbinder@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 166, History 177, History 184, History 264, History 265, History 274

Curriculum Vitae:
Tyler Anbinder

 
Muriel Atkin
(Russia and Central Asia) is working on a study of the roles of Islam and nationalism in the political conflict in Tajikistan, a Central Asian republic.  Her other research interests include Russian policy towards Muslims at home and abroad, and Russian/Soviet relations with Iran. Her publications include Russia and Iran, 1780-1828 and The Subtlest Battle: Islam in Soviet Tajikistan (PhD, Yale University, 1976)
Office: Phillips 336
Phone: 202-994-6426
E-mail: matkin@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:
Muriel Atkin


 
William H. Becker
(U.S. Business History) has recently completed two co-authored books: Voice of the Marketplace: A History of the National Petroleum Council (with Joseph A. Pratt and William M. McClenahan) and The Market, the State, and the Export-Import Bank of the United States, 1934-2001 (with William M. McClenahan). He is currently writing Shaping Corporate America: Big Business and the Twentieth Century Experience.  His teaching includes courses on American business history, the history of the international economy, business-government relations, and business and public policy. (PhD, The John Hopkins University, 1969)
Office: Phillips 324
Phone: 202-994-6052
E-mail: whbecker@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:
William H. Becker

 
Edward D. Berkowitz
(20th C. U.S. Public Policy) writes on American social welfare policy.  His books include: Disabled Policy, America's Welfare State, and Mr. Social Security-the Life of Wilbur J. Cohen.  In 1998 and 1999, he published two books: a history of the Institute of Medicine, and a history of the Medical Follow-up Agency, both with the National Academy Press.  In 2003 the University of Wisconsin press published his book titled Robert Ball and the Politics of Social Security.  His current research projects include interview for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on the Medical Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988 and a book on the 1970's, under contract to Columbia University Press. (PhD, Northwestern, 1976)
Office: Phillips 319
Phone: 202-994-8174
E-mail: ber@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 72, History 176, History 199, History 214

Curriculum Vitae:
Edward D. Berkowitz

 
Allida Black
(20th C. U.S., Eleanor Roosevelt, Human Rights) teaches courses in US women's political history, the New Deal, and recent political history. She directs the Eleanor Roosevelt Papers, a documentary history of ER's human rights record.  She is currently writing a political biography of Eleanor Roosevelt and the textbook Human Rights: Pages from History for Oxford University Press. Scribners will release The Papers of Eleanor Roosevelt: Volume I, The Human Rights Years, 1945- 1948 in August 2006. (PhD, George Washington University, 1993)
Office: Somers Hall 121
Phone: 202-242-6721
E-mail: amblack@gwu.edu

The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:
Allida Black
Brief biography


 
Nemata Blyden
(Africa) teaches courses on African and African Diaspora History.  She is the author of West Indians in West Africa, 1808-1880: A Diaspora in Reverse (Rochester University Press, 2000), The Search for Anna Erskine: African American Women in Nineteenth-Century Liberia in Catherine Higgs, Barbara A. Moss, Earline Rae Ferguson (eds.) Stepping Forward: Black women in Africa and the Americas (Ohio University Press, 2002) and Edward Jones, An African American in Sierra Leone, in John Pulis, (ed.) Moving On: Black Loyalists in the Afro-Atlantic World (Garland Press, 1999).  She has presented papers and lectured widely nationally and internationally and has served as a consultant for the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library).  Dr. Blyden has lived in Europe, Africa and the Soviet Union. (PhD, Yale University, 1998)
Office: Phillips 307
Phone: 202-994-3318
E-mail: nemata@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


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Gregg Brazinsky
(U.S./Asian Relations) specializes in American Foreign Policy and U.S.-East Asian relations. He is especially interested in the cultural interactions that have occurred between the United States and East Asia during the twentieth century.  He is currently working on a book that examines American intellectual and cultural relationswith South Korea during the fifties and sixties. (PhD, Cornell University, 2002)
Office: Phillips 305
Phone: 202-994-0987
E-mail: brazinsk@gwu.edu

Co-director, George Washington Cold War Group (GWCW)

Syllabi:
History 182, History 282, Cold War in Asia, Cold War Seminar

Curriculum Vitae:


 
Eric Cline
(Ancient History) is an historian and active field archaeologist specializing in international trade and diplomacy in the ancient world.  He is the author of Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea (Oxford, 1994) and co-editor ofAmenhotep III: Perspectives on his Reign (Ann Arbor, 1998) and The Aegean and the Orient in the Second Millennium BC (Liege, 1998).  He has participated in more than 17 seasons of excavation and survey in Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Cyprus, Greece, Crete, and the United States, and is currently a Senior Staff Archaeologist at the ongoing excavations of Megiddo in Israel.  A former Fulbright scholar, Dr. Cline has previously taught at Stanford, Xavier, and the University of Cincinnati.  His most recent book, The Battles of Armageddon, a military history of Megiddo and the Jezreel Valley from the Bronze Age to the Nuclear Age, was published in September 2000 by the University of Michigan Press.  (PhD, University of Pennsylvania, 1991)
Office: Phillips 302
Phone: 202-994-0316
E-mail: ehcline@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:
Eric Cline (home page)

 
Robert Cottrol
(U.S. Legal History) is the Harold Paul Green Research Professor of Law in the Law School and Professor of History and Sociology in the Columbian School of Arts and Sciences.  He teaches courses that are cross-listed in the law school and the history department including: the survey of US Legal History, the Social and Economic History of Labor Law (seminar), and Comparative Perspectives on the Law of Race and Slavery (seminar).  He has co-authored the book Brown v. Board of Education: Caste, Culture and the Constitution which was published September, 2003 by University Press of Kansas.  He is also researching the role of law in the history of slavery and racial stratification in Latin America.  (PhD, Yale University; JD, Georgetown University)
Office: 2000 H Street M406A
Phone: 202-994-5023
E-mail: bcottrol@main.nlc.gwu.edu

Syllabi:


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Cynthia Harrison
(U.S. Women's and Constitutional History) teaches courses in women's history, women and public policy, and constitutional history.  Her writing focuses on women and public policy, e.g. the current constitutional status of women, the long-term impact of the women's movement, the need to resolve the issue of child care and women's work, and the policy goals of feminist organizations concerning poor women. (PhD, Columbia University, 1982)
Office: Phillips 303
Phone: 202-994-6943
E-mail: harrison@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 140, History 175, History 273 , History 140

Curriculum Vitae:
Cynthia Harrison

 
Hope M. Harrison
(Cold War, Germany, Russia, US foreign policy) published a prize- winning book in 2003 on the East German and Soviet decision to build the Berlin Wall. She is fluent in Russia and German and has worked extensively in archives in Moscow and Berlin on this topic. Her current research examines how the post-1990 united Germany has been dealing with the East German communist past. Professor Harrison's broader research interests are Soviet and Russian foreign policy decision making, the two Germanys in the Cold War, how countries deal with difficult aspects of their past (such as through war crimes tribunals, truth commissions, or memorials), and the interaction between history and politics. (Ph.D., Columbia University, 1993).
Office: 1957 E St NW, Suite 412
Phone: 202-994-5439
E-mail: hopeharr@gwu.edu

Director, Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies

Co-director, George Washington Cold War Group (GWCW)

Syllabi:
History 251, History 257

Curriculum Vitae:
Hope M. Harrison


 
James G. Hershberg
(Cold War, U.S. Foreign Policy) is exploring the international history of the Cold War, with special attention to the impact of newly available sources from the former Soviet bloc as well as from U.S. and Western archives. This research builds on his ongoing work with the Woodrow Wilson Center's Cold War International History Project and the National Security Archive at GW, and his own research in U.S., British, Russian, and other archives.  His current writing projects include a book on new evidence on the Cuban Missile Crisis, and several articles on new evidence on the Vietnam War. (PhD, Tufts University, 1989)
Office: Phillips 326
Phone: 202-994-6476
E-mail: jhershb@gwu.edu

Co-director, George Washington Cold War Group (GWCW)

Syllabi:
History 182, History 282, Nuclear Arms Race, Rethinking the Cold War

Curriculum Vitae:


 
Dane Kennedy
(British Empire, Modern Britain) is the Elmer Louis Kayser Professor of History and International Affairs.  Harvard University Press will publish his biographical study of Richard Francis Burton, the nineteenth century British explorer, author, and translator, in 2005.  His book Britain and Empire, 1880-1945 has just been published in the Longman Seminar Studies in History series.  His previous publications include The Magic Mountains: Hill Stations and the British Raj (University of California Press and Oxford University Press, 1996) and Islands of White: Settler Society and Culture in Kenya and Southern Rhodesia, 1890-1939 (Duke University Press, 1987). Professor Kennedy received a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 2003. (PhD, UC Berkeley, 1981)
Office: Phillips 312
Phone: 202-994-6229
E-mail: dkennedy@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


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Emmet Kennedy
(France and the French Revolution) is the author of several works on French history and a charter member of the Historical Society.  He is best known for A Philosophe in the Age of Revolution and A Cultural History of the French Revolution.  His Secularism and its Opponents from Augustine to Solzhenitsyn is forthcoming. He has given papers in France (where he taught for four years), England, Belgium, Italy, Sweden, Germany and Austria. He has held fellowships from The American Council of Learned Societies, The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and grants from The American Philosophical Society and the French Embassy. (PhD, Brandeis University, 1973)
Office: Phillips 320
Phone: 202-994-6254
E-mail: ekennedy@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 123, History 124, History 141, History 142, History 148, The French Revolution

Curriculum Vitae:


 
Dina Rizk Khoury
(Ottoman and the modern Middle East) has written on the Iraqi provinces of the Ottoman Empire in the early modern period. Her research has focused on the social history and  political culture of the Ottoman provinces with particular emphasis on urban rebellions and Islamic reform agendas. Her book, State and Provincial Society in the Ottoman Empire: Mosul 1540-1934 (Cambridge University Press, 1997), won the Fuat Koprulu bi-annual prize from the Turkish Studies Association and the British-Kuwait Friendship prize from the British Society of Middle Eastern Studies. Her current research interests include the relationship of memory to identity and the impact of violence on Middle Eastern societies. She is writing a book, "Postponed Lives: War and Remembrance in Iraq", on the impact of war on Iraq's war generation. Professor Khoury is a recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, 2007. (Phd Georgetown, 1987).
Office: Phillips 314
Phone: 202-994-6239
E-mail: dikhy@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


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Peter Klarén
(Latin America) is author of the Oxford history of Peru (Peru: Society & Nationhood in the Andes, 2000/Spanish edition 2004).  He is working on a new book tentatively titled From Chavez to Peron: a Century of Latin American Populism.  His chapter "Time of Fear (1980-2000): Modern Violence in the Long Sweep of Peruvian History" appeared in 2007 in the bilingual e-book sponsored by the Ford Foundation Historizar el pasado vivo en America Latina/Historicizing the Living Past in Latin America, edited by Anne Perotin-Dumon.(PhD, University of California, Los Angeles, 1968)
Office: Phillips 313
Phone: 202-994-6233
E-mail: klaren@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 163, History 164, History 261, IAFF 287

Curriculum Vitae:


 
Christopher Klemek
(20th C. Urban History, U.S. and Europe) traces the political and intellectual shifts affecting urban policy over the second half of the 20th century by comparing the fate of older industrial cities in the west, including Berlin, London, Toronto, Boston, New York, and Philadelphia in his book, Urbanism as Reform: Modernist Planning and the Crisis of Urban Liberalism in Europe and North America, 1945-1975 (Chicago, forthcoming). He is currently working on a biography of urban activist and critic Jane Jacobs. (PhD, University of Pennsylvania, 2004)

Office: Phillips 315
Phone: 202-994-0419
E-mail: klemek@gwu.edu
   http://home.gwu.edu/~klemek/

Syllabi:


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Kirk W. Larsen
(Korea) is finishing a study of Qing Imperialism in Korea (tentatively titled: From Suzerainty to Imperialism: The Qing Empire and Choson Korea, 1876-1910). He is also working on projects on 19th-century Korea's foreign trade and integration into the world economy; cannibalism and other "urban legends;" and the history of North and South Korea in the 1980's. (PhD, Harvard, 2000)

Director, Sigur Center for Asian Studies
Office: 1957 E St. NW, Rm. 503H
Phone: 202-994-5253
E-mail: kwlarsen@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Jehangir Malegam
(Medieval France, Low Countries and Papacy) is writing
a book on contested notions of peace and violence in
Latin Europe between 1050 and 1200.  His work focuses
on intersections between biblical exegesis, sacramental theology and conceptions of social order. He is also interested in the relationship of  colonial ethnography to medieval representations of conflict and reconciliation.  An article, "No Peace for the Wicked: Conflicting Visions of Peacemaking in an Eleventh-Century Monastic Narrative" will appear in the Spring 2008 issue of Viator: Medieval and Renaissance Studies. (PhD, Stanford, 2006)
Office: Phillips 309
Phone: 202-994-3957
E-mail: jmalegam@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Edward A. McCord
(China) specializes in the history of military-civil relations in 19th and 20th century China.  He has written extensively about modern China warlordism, and is currently working on a major book-length project that examines militia organizations in Republican China (1911-1949).  (PhD, University of Michigan, 1985)
Office: 1957 E St. NW, Suite 503K
Phone: 202-994-5785
E-mail: mccord@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 118, History 187, History 250, History 295, History 296

Curriculum Vitae:
Edward A. McCord

 
Shawn McHale
(Vietnam) Has recently published a book entitled Print and Power: Confucianism, Buddhism, and Communism in the Making of Modern Vietnam, 1920-1945 (University of Hawaii Press). He has published articles on Vietnamese Confucianism, Marxism and  memory, and Vietnamese historiography.  (PhD, Cornell University, 1995)
Office: 1957 E St. NW, Suite 503
Phone: 202-994-2760
E-mail: mchale@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Marcy Norton
(Early Modern Spain) is completing a book about the transition of tobacco and chocolate from pre-Columbian goods to European commodities.  Her research interests include the impact of the New World on the Old; interactions between people and "drugs"; and early modern cultural identities. (PhD, UC Berkeley, 2000)
Office: Phillips 339
Phone: 202-994-3405
E-mail: mnorton@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Linda Levy Peck
(Tudor-Stuart England) is the Columbian Professor of History and has written extensively on early modern British politics, political thought, and culture. The author of Northampton, Patronage and Policy at the Court of James I (London: Allen & Unwin, 1982), her book,  Court Patronage and Corruption in Early Stuart England (London: Routledge, 1991), paperback edition, Routledge, 1993),  won the John Ben Snow prize for the best book in British Studies in 1991.  She is co-editor with John Guy and David Smith of the Royal Historical Society, Bibliography in British History, 1500-1700, CD-Rom (1998). She is currently finishing a book on luxury consumption and cultural borrowing in seventeenth century England. (PhD, Yale University, 1973)
Office: Phillips 332
Phone: 202-994-6796
E-mail: llpeck@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Leo P. Ribuffo
(Modern America; U.S. Intellectual History) is the author of Right Center Left: Essays in American History and The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Far Right from the Great Depression to the Cold War, which won the OAH Merle Curti Prize in 1985. He is writing a book titled The Limits of Moderation: Jimmy Carter and the Ironies of American Liberalism, which will interpret Jimmy Carter's presidency in broad social and cultural context.  This will be the first study of the "Carter Era" based on extensive use of archival material at his presidential library, including recently declassified documents relating to foreign policy and defense. See here for his recently written article "George W. Bush, the 'faith-based' president, and the latest 'evangelical menace'"   (PhD, Yale University, 1976)
Office: Phillips 318
Phone: 202-994-6469
E-mail: ribuffo@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 72 (Word Perfect), History 134 (Word Perfect), History 267 (Word Perfect), History 283 (Word Perfect), Readings Seminar (Word Perfect)

Curriculum Vitae:


 
Shira Robinson
(Modern Middle East) is completing a book about the elaboration of citizenship in early Israel and the state's imposition of military rule on the Palestinian Arabs who remained within its borders from 1948 through 1966. Her research interests lie in colonialism, citizenship, and cultures of Militarism in the Middle East after World War I. (PhD, Stanford, 2005)
Office: Phillips 330
Phone: 202-994-2457
E-mail: snrobins@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Marc E. Saperstein
(Judaic Studies) is the Charles E. Smith Professor of Modern Jewish History, and director of the Judaic Studies Program.  He is continuing a long-term project on the 550 manuscript sermons of Saul Levi Morteira, leading rabbi of the Portuguese Jewish community in Amsterdam from 1619-1660, as evidence for the nature of that community and its rabbinic leadership.  A newer project is an investigation of sermons delivered by American and British rabbis during the Nazi period (1933-1945 as evidence for first-level responses to the persecution and eventual mass murder of Jews.  This is part of a broader study of Jewish preaching responding to historical events of the 19th and 20th centuries.  (PhD, Harvard University, 1977)
Office: 2142 G Street
Phone: 202-994-4780
E-mail: msaper@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Daniel Schwartz
(Modern Jewish history; Judaic studies) specializes in modern Jewish and European intellectual and cultural history.  He is currently finishing a book that traces the shifting image of the seventeenth-century Dutch Jewish philosopher Baruch Spinoza in modern Jewish  culture.  His research interests include Jewish historical consciousness, early modern and modern Jewish identities, and Jewish intellectuals.
(Ph.D., Columbia University, 2007)
Office: Phillips 317
Phone: 202-994-2397
E-mail: dbs50@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
David Silverman
(Colonial America, Native American history) teaches courses on American Indian, Colonial American, and Revolutionary American history. His first book, Faith and Boundaries: Colonists, Christianity, and Community among the Wampanoag Indians of Martha's Vineyard, 1600-1871 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005), examines the peaceful English-Indian coexistence and long-term survival of Wampanoag communities on the island of Martha's Vineyard. He has published several essays relating to that project, including "Indians, Missionaries, and Religious Translation: Creating Wampanoag Christianity on Seventeenth-Century Martha's Vineyard," which won the Lester J. Cappon award for best article of 2005 in the William and Mary Quarterly. He is currently writing a book about the development of American Indian race consciousness in the colonial and early national periods told through the histories of the multitribal, Christian Indian communities of Brothertown and New Stockbridge.
Office: Phillips 321
Phone: 202-994-8094
E-mail: djsilver@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
Colonial North America, Indians and the Problem of Race in Early America, Revolutionary America, Native American History to 1830

Curriculum Vitae:
David Silverman

 
Ronald Spector
(Modern Military History) is the author of Eagle Against the Sun: The American War with Japan, which won the Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt Prize for Naval History, and After Tet: The Bloodiest Year in Vietnam. His most recent book is At War at Sea: Sailors and Naval Warfare in the Twentieth Century, which won the 2002 Distinguished Book Award of the Society for Military History.  He is currently working on a study of the immediate aftermath of World War II in China and Southeast Asia. (PhD, Yale University, 1967)
Office: Phillips 323
Phone: 202-994-6425
E-mail: spector@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Richard Stott
(19th C. American Urban and Labor History) conducts research in nineteenth-century social and cultural history, including working class history, immigration and ethnicity and the history of the American West. He is currently examining the historical transformation male milieus underwent in nineteenth-century America.  He is looking at such locales as taverns, "moral regions" such as the Bowery and gold-rush California, steamboats and colleges to analyze the causes and consequences of a more restrained masculine comportment and style that emerged in this period.  Prof. Stott is the author of Workers in the Metropolis: Class, Ethnicity and Youth in Antebellum New York City (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1990). (PhD, Cornell University, 1983)
Office: Phillips 316
Phone: 202-994-8154
E-mail: rstott@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 72, History 172, History 178, History 198

Curriculum Vitae:


 
Richard Thornton
(U.S. Foreign Relations, Sino-Soviet Relations) writes on recent political developments in China and Russia. His recent works include: Falklands Sting: Reagan, Thatcher, and Argentina's Bomb; Odd Man Out: Truman, Staliln, Mao, and the Origins of the Korean War; The Reagan Revolution, I: The Politics of U.S. Foreign Polilcy; and The Reagan Revolution, II: Rebuilding the Western Alliance. He is now completing the third volume in the series: The Reagan Revolution, III: Defeating the Soviet Challenge.   (PhD, University of Washington, 1966)
Office: MVC ACAD 321
Phone: 202-994-6722
E-mail: rthornto@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Daqing Yang
(Japan) is currently researching in three areas: the construction of the Japanese empire in East Asia after 1933, from the perspective of telecommunications networks as its "nerve system;" the history and historiography of the Rape of Nanjing; and continuity in Japan's relationship with Asia in the early postwar period.  (PhD, Harvard University, 1996)
Office: Phillips 327
Phone: 202-994-8262
E-mail: yanghist@gwu.edu

Syllabi:


Curriculum Vitae:


 
Andrew Zimmerman
(Modern Germany and German Imperialism) is the author of Anthropology and Anti-Humanism in Imperial Germany (Chicago 2001).  His research interests include modern Germany, the history of the social sciences, and the relations among modernization, imperialism, and globalization. He is currently writing about the influence of Booker T. Washington and the New South on German Imperialism in Africa.   (PhD, University of California, San Diego, 1998)
Office: Phillips 304
Phone: 202-994-0257
E-mail: azimmer@gwu.edu

Syllabi:
History 40, History 132, History 201, History 243, History 297

Curriculum Vitae:
Andrew Zimmerman

 
 
Department Staff
 
Michael Weeks
Office Manager
Office: Phillips 337
Phone: 202-994-4868
E-mail: mwweeks@gwu.edu
 
Evelyn Williams
Executive Aide
Office: Phillips 335
Phone: 202-994-6230
E-mail: egw@gwu.edu
 
Robert Lintott
Office Assistant
Office: Phillips 335
Phone: 202-994-6230
E-mail: rlintott@gwu.edu
 
Josh Wolf
Office Assistant
Office: Phillips 335
Phone: (202) 994-6230
E-mail: joshwolf@gwu.edu
 
 
 
Part-Time/Affiliated Faculty
 
Charlene Bickford
Revolutionary Era America
Office: 2120 L St., Suite 255
Phone: 202-676-6777
E-mail: bickford@gwu.edu
 
Ken Bowling
Revolutionary Era America
Office: 2120 L St., Suite 255
Phone: 202-676-6777
E-mail: kbowling@gwu.edu
 
Adam Howard
U.S. Diplomatic History
Office: Phillips 309
Phone: 202-994-3957
E-mail: ahoward@gwu.edu
 
Dean Kostantaras
Seminar: Eastern Europe
Office: Phillips 310
Phone: (202) 994-6232
E-mail: dkostant@gwu.edu
 
Robert Krikorian
International Affairs
Office: 1957 E St., Rm. 308
Phone: 202-663-3901
E-mail: krikor@gwu.edu
 
C. Thomas Long
Rdg/Rsch Sem: Strategy & Policy
Office: Phillips 330
Phone: 202-994-2457
E-mail: tomlong@erols.com
 
Phil Muehlenbeck
Africa to Independence in 1957
Office: Phillips 317
Phone: (202) 994-2397
E-mail: pmuehlen@gwu.edu
 
Nina Seavey
Documentary Film
Office: MPA 519
Phone: 202-994-6787
E-mail: seavey@gwu.edu
 
Lauren Strauss
History of the Jews in America; Judaic Studies
Office: 2412 G Street #202
Phone:
E-mail: lstrauss@gwu.edu
 
Anthony Toth
Modern Middle East
Office: Phillips 340
Phone: 202-994-2457
E-mail: anthonytoth@gmail.com
 
 
Copyright © 1996-2005, Department of History, The George Washington University. All rights reserved.
For comments or questions please write to Department of History, Phillips 335, Washington, DC, 20052; or, e-mail us at: history@gwu.edu.