J. C. Frankenbach

Ph.D. Candidate

North America


J. (Julia) C. Frankenbach is a historian of early North America. She specializes in the history of the Spanish-occupied North American West and gravitates to historical topics dealing with labor, colonialism, gender, and the environment. In 2013, she earned a B.A. in environmental studies from Mount Holyoke College before studying history at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where she completed her M.A. in 2017. At Berkeley, she is researching the political history of the Spanish-occupied Indigenous San Francisco Bay Area. The project looks at the ways Bay Area tribes engaged the Spanish colonial livestock economy to set the terms of their relationships with colonizers and with one another. She is a Berkeley Fellow and a two-time Foreign Language & Area Studies (FLAS) Fellow and has received support for her work from the American Philosophical Society and the UC Berkeley Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies.

Julia is involved in several initiatives to support K-12 educators interested in incorporating recent scholarship in their California history curricula. In summer 2022 she collaborated with the UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project to host a K-12 teachers' institute on histories of slavery in California. She also spearheaded H-Net's Teach California project, an initiative to make university-developed teaching resources accessible to educators in K-12 and community college spaces.

Research Interests

North American West

Indigenous history

Colonial Mexico

Environmental history

Gender & the environment

California Indian studies

Conference & Workshop Presentations

2024 "Livestock Production, Gender, & Power in the Greater Indigenous Bay Area" - BOCA LONGA, Emory University

2023 “Strange Missions: Livestock Production & Space in the Native San Francisco Bay" - Workshop for New & Emerging Studies of the Spanish Borderlands, Huntington Library

2022 “Roads to Reclamation: Fugitive Networks & Indigenous Nation-Building in the Heart of California” - Front Range Early American Consortium

2018 “Equestrian Labor & Indigenous Knowledge in Spanish-Occupied California” - Western History Association

Fellowships & Awards

2024 Phillips Fund Grant in Native American Research, American Philosophical Society

2023 Best Graduate Seminar Paper Prize, UC Berkeley Department of History

2022 Foreign Language & Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship, UC Berkeley Center for Latin American Studies

2021 Tinker Field Research Grant, UC Berkeley Center for Latin American Studies

2021 Foreign Language & Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship, UC Berkeley Center for Latin American Studies

2020 Berkeley Fellowship for Graduate Study

Education

M.A., History, University of Colorado at Boulder, 2017

B.A., summa cum laude in Environmental Studies, Mount Holyoke College, 2013