Overview
I work on the political, cultural, intellectual and gender history of early modern England. My first book,Political Passions: Gender, the Family and Political Argument in England 1680-1714 (2000), asked how the ways that people thought about women, gender and the family might shape or in turn be shaped by political struggles over legitimacy, inheritance, royal favorites and highly politicized concepts of public and private. In 2013 I published A Plague of Informers: Conspiracy and Political Trust in William III's England, which takes another set of problems not normally written about in the context of political history -- what or whom can one trust? -- and explores how these problems were expressed and addressed in the turbulent years following the Revolution of 1688, when the new Williamite regime struggled to obtain the trust of subjects even as it relied upon methods (such as the use of paid informers and suspension of habeas corpus) which contradicted its legitimating claim to restore liberty to the English. Plague of Informers also digs deep into social history, reconstructing as far as possible the lives and motivations of the relatively humble men and women who presented information about plots (or sham-plots) to government officials.
My current project looks at detention and imprisonment in early modern England. I am interested in understanding the experience of persons detained for long periods of time without actually having been convicted of a crime. I also think about prisons as sites of politics , where both gaolers and prisoners engage in pragmatic and ideologically charged ways with notions of rights, constitutions and authority; and how this in sometimes gave actors in the wider political world an investment in what happened in the prison. I am also interested in how the detention of prisoners was understood to be similar to (or different from) other situations in early modern England in which people were restrained from moving where they pleased: the confinement of the sick to hospitals or their own houses, the commitment of lunatics to asylums, or slavery.
I teach classes on English/British history from 1500-1800, and have also taught a survey of the early modern Atlantic world. I also courses organized on themes, like "Gender and Power," "Law and Revolution," and "The Birth of the Prison."
Research Focus
- Early modern English political and cultural
- Gender and Sexuality
- History of Prisons
Publications
Academic Articles
- Politics and Gender in Crisis in David Underdown’s “The Taming of the Scold". History Compass. 11. 2013
- The Public, the Private, and Feminist Historiography. Histoire Sociale. Social History. 80:421. 2007
- Thinking about Allegiance in the English Civil War. History Workshop Journal. 61:183-191. 2006
- Book Review Colloquium: Modernity and the Glorious Revolution. Huntington Library Quarterly.
Books
- A Plague of Informers: Conspiracy and Political Trust in William III's England. New Haven: Yale University Press. 2013
- Political Passions: Gender, the Family and Political Argument in England 1680-1714 . Manchester ; New York : Manchester University Press. 1999
Chapters
- National Security and Secularization in the English Revolution of 1688. After Secular Law. Ed. Sullivan, Winnifred. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 2011
- Matthew Smith Versus the "Great Men" : Plot Talk, the Public Sphere, and the Problem of Credibility in the 1690s. The Politics of the Public Sphere in Early Modern England. 2007
- The Female Politician in the Late Stuart Age. Politics, Transgression, and Representation at the Court of Charles II. 2007
- The Family in the Exclusion Crisis: Locke versus. Filmer Revisited. A Nation Transformed: England after the Restoration. 2001
- Sometimes a Scepter is only a Scepter: Pornography and Politics in Restoration England. The Invention of Pornography: Obscenity and the Origins of Modernity, 1500-1800. 1993
- The Politics of Legitimacy: Women and the Warming Pan Scandal. The Revolution of 1688-1689 : Changing Perspectives. 1992
In the news
- Cornell history scholars in residence at Institute for Advanced Study
- Daniel Baugh, ‘giant’ of British maritime history, dies at 92
- King Charles III must quickly determine his path as ruler
- Graduate Student in Paris Researches Electricity and Revolutionary Energy
- History major spends summer exploring world of foreign policy research
- Nine Arts and Sciences faculty chosen as 2017 Public Voices Fellows
HIST Courses - Fall 2024
- HIST 2001 : Supervised Reading - Undergraduate
- HIST 3002 : Supervised Research - Undergraduate
- HIST 8004 : Supervised Reading