News
January 31, 2025
It was a great pleasure to teach the “Origins of Capitalism” (or History 159A) course this past fall. I believe the course was last taught in the spring of 2013, when the instructor was Jan de Vries, my then graduate advisor, and I was the GSI. Among our students was Jordan Mursinna, who is now a lecturer in our department.
January 22, 2025
BARTH FAMILY GIFT SUPPORTS WESTERN HISTORY AT BERKELEY
January 21, 2025
"In this interview, Massimo Mazzotti discusses the inspirations behind Reactionary Mathematics: A Genealogy of Purity, a thought-provoking exploration of the relationship between mathematics and politics," write Berkeley Letters & Science.
January 10, 2025
December 10, 2024
The Department of History's Hannah Zeavin named one of the 2024 Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant winners.
November 26, 2024
November 22, 2024
Stephanie Jones-Roger's Research Highlighted in new New York Times Article "Scholars Thought White Women Were Passive Enslavers. They Were Wrong."
October 28, 2024
October 22, 2024
October 8, 2024
October 3, 2024
Dylan Penningroth is a finalist for the 2024 Cundill History Prize!
UC Berkeley History Professor Emeritus David Hollinger is one of a small handful of people on the UC Berkeley campus today who participated in the Free Speech Movement (FSM) of 1964. In a recent conversation, Hollinger reflected on his experience in the FSM and its connection to his career as a scholar and teacher.
September 23, 2024
September 9, 2024
May 31, 2024
May 20, 2024
May 1, 2024
Congratulations to Hidetaka Hirota on his election as vice president/president elect of the IEHS!
April 15, 2024
UC Berkeley History Professor John Connelly has been awarded a prestigious 2024 Guggenheim Fellowship.
March 29, 2024
February 20, 2024
December 26, 2023
December 17, 2023
November 13, 2023
November 6, 2023
Dear friends,
It is with deep sadness that I share news of the death of John L. Heilbron, Professor Emeritus of History of Science and former Vice Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley. John passed away in Padua, Italy, on Sunday morning, November 5, 2023, at the age of 89.
October 25, 2023
October 23, 2023
September 10, 2023
An article by Professor David Henkin was published in the Atlantic this month. The article, "Three Cheers for Partisanship," discusses the ways in which politics can be viewed as a team sport. Read the full article here.
August 15, 2023
July 28, 2023
June 21, 2023
We are thrilled to share the news that Trevor Jackson is officially joining us as Assistant Professor in the fall, jointly appointed with the Program in Political Economy. It's a huge pleasure to have him back (as many of you know, he is one of our own PhDs). He will be teaching classes that serve both History and Political Economy and will be physically located with us in Dwinelle.
June 13, 2023
We are delighted to announce that Hannah Zeavin is officially joining us as Assistant Professor in the fall, jointly appointed with the Berkeley Center for New Media. We're thrilled to have her among us.
June 9, 2023
“Offering support in this early stage can mean the difference between thriving and floundering in the academy.”
May 24, 2023
Drawing from her book How the Clinic Made Gender Professor Sandra Eder reflects on the history of gender, its origins in the medical sector, and its fraught present in this article for the Los Angeles Review of Books. Read the full article here.
May 1, 2023
April 25, 2023
History Professor Ussama Makdisi's course, History 100 M Special Topics: Palestine and the Palestinians: A Modern History, explores the history of contemporary Palestine with a focus on the experiences and voices of Palestinian people. Read the full article here.
April 14, 2023
The Division of Social Sciences is honoring our own Marianne Bartholomew-Couts and James Vernon with the Distinguished Service and Teaching Awards. This is much-deserved recognition of two colleagues whose dedication and skill have made the History Department and the Division a better place. We celebrate with them. Both Marianne and James will be honored during the Social Science Fest on Tuesday, April 25. Congratulations!
February 28, 2023
Stephanie Jones-Rogers is one of nine scholars to receive the 2023 Dan David Prize, the largest history prize in the world.
February 17, 2023
2/17/2023
Dear friends,
It is with great sadness that I convey news of the death of Eugene F. Irschick, a distinguished historian of South Asia and a member of the Berkeley History Department since 1964. Born in 1934, Gene passed away on November 10, 2022, in El Dorado Hills, California, at the age of 88.
December 1, 2022
If you have yet to meet Professor Philipp Lenhard and Professor Nel de Mûelenaere, two visiting professors in History, this article by the Californian offers a highlight into their experiences at UC Berkeley. Professor Lenhard visits us from the University of Munich in Germany, through the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst scholarship. Nel de Mûelanaere joins us by way of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel in Belgium, as the Rubens Chair for the History and Culture of the Low Countries.
October 4, 2022
Professor Christine Philliou helped secure a $1 million endowment from the Modern Greek Studies Foundation in San Francisco, to establish the Nikos Kazantzakis Visiting Scholar Program at the UC Berkeley Modern Greek and Hellenic Studies Program. The program will officially launch in 2023 to support visiting scholars in the field of Modern Greek Studies with a particular focus on Modern Greek language, literature, film, history and culture.
August 16, 2022
In a new op-ed published in the Washington Post, Associate Professor Hidetaka Hirota examines the practice of bussing migrants across state lines, a strategy currently employed by governors in the Southwest, and its historical precedent in mid-19th century Massachusetts.
June 30, 2022
Bonnie Morris has a featured article on AHA Perspectives, marking the 50 year anniversary of Title XI.
June 2, 2022
Update on August 1, 2022:
The History Department invites you to consider a donation to the Richard and Valerie Herr Graduate Student Support Fund, in celebration of Professor Emeritus Richard Herr while supporting graduate students studying Spain and the Mediterranean region.
Dear friends,
April 28, 2022
This May, Professor Carlos Noreña will deliver the prestigious J.H. Gray Lectures at Cambridge University. Read below to register.
In 2022, the J. H. Gray Lectures will be delivered by Prof. Carlos Norena (UC Berkeley). The Lectures will be livestreamed. Further details will be circulated nearer the time.
17th May
Lecture: Geographies of Power (5pm G.19)
18th May
February 23, 2022
Professor David Henkin is featured on Berkeley Voices, "a Berkeley News podcast about the people and research that makes UC Berkeley the world-changing place that it is." Listen to "How the seven-day week made us who we are."
Nov 11, 2021
February 3, 2022
Professor Ethan Katz was featured on PBS NewsHour, to share his views about recent remarks on The View about the Holocaust, and what these remarks might teach us about the state of antisemitism today. In the PBS segment, Katz notes, "I think we are in a moment of diminished public consciousness about the Holocaust.
December 13, 2021
Additional reading:
"Mourning the loss of Dr. Tyler Stovall," the Othering and Belonging Institute
"In Memoriam," Perspectives on History - AHA
September 27, 2021
9/24/21
Dear friends,
I am saddened to share the news that Charles G. Sellers, a long-time member of our Department, passed away September 23, at the age of ninety-eight.
September 20, 2021
Christine Philliou's newest title, Turkey: A Past Against History, has a featured review in the journal Foreign Affairs. Click here to learn more.
August 12, 2021
Updated: August 12th, 2021
We'd like to highlight the following extensive articles honoring the life of Leon Litwack:
A Tribute to Leon Litwack by James Grossman and Waldo E. Martin, Perspectives on History
In Memoriam: Leon Litwack by Waldo E. Martin, Department of History Newsletter
August 2, 2021
Congratulations to Professor Susanna Elm, who was among 84 new Fellows elected by the British Academy, in recognition of her scholarly distinction in the social sciences. Elm is the Sidney H. Ehrman Professor of European History, and is one of only two scholars selected in her field this year.
July 19, 2021
Congratulations to Associate Professor Ronit Stahl, who has been named a Greenwall Faculty Scholar. The Greenwall Faculty Scholars Program in Bioethics is a career development award to enable junior faculty members to carry out innovative bioethics research.
May 12, 2021
Christine M. Philliou was interviewed for New Books Network, to discuss her newest title Turkey: A Past Against History (University of California Press, 2021)
May 3, 2021
We are thrilled to announce that Professor Cathryn Carson has been appointed as the next chairman of the UC Berkeley History Department. Trained in Physics and the History of Science at the University of Chicago and Harvard University, Cathryn joined the Berkeley faculty in 1996 and she currently holds the Thomas M. Siebel Presidential Chair in the History of Science.
April 8, 2021
On Monday April 12, UC Berkeley will host “Race and responsibility: a conversation on Black-Jewish relations and the fight for equal justice.” The event is headed by Associate Professor of History Ethan Katz, and will feature Eric K.
March 17, 2021
"Robert Middlekauff, Historian of Washington and His War, Dies at 91," The New York Times (September 9, 2021)
March 15, 2021
Congratulations to Associate Professor Ethan Katz, whose article “Jewish Citizens of an Imperial Nation-State: Toward a French-Algerian Frame for French Jewish History" has been awarded an Honorable Mention for the William Koren Jr.
October 1, 2020
Congratulations to Associate Professor Stephanie Jones-Rogers, who has been awarded a number of prizes for her ground-breaking publication, They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South (Yale University Press, 2019).
Bernadette Pérez joined the History Department this Fall, as the newest addition to our faculty. Pérez is a historian of race and environment in the United States, specializing in the histories of Latinx and Indigenous peoples. She earned her Ph.D. in U.S. History from the University of Minnesota. She holds an M.A. in Latin American Studies from the University of California, Berkeley and a B.A. in International Relations from the University of Colorado, Boulder (her hometown).
July 7, 2020
June 18, 2020
Today, we highlight the historical texts produced by our own History faculty, who, in contributing to scholarship about African-American history, have expanded how scholars interrogate North American history as a whole.
April 17, 2020
Today, the Los Angeles Times Book Awards announced that Associate Professor Stephanie Jones-Rogers has won the 2019 Book Prize in History, for They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South!
February 19, 2020
Congratulations to Associate Professor Stephanie Jones-Rogers, whose book They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South (Yale University Press)was named an L.A.
February 10, 2020
Thank you to everyone who joined us on Wednesday, February 5th for this year’s History Homecoming! History Homecoming, the Department's annual event for alumni and friends, features a faculty panel on a historical theme followed by a catered reception.
February 5, 2020
This month, the Latin American Studies Association awarded Elena Schneider the Bryce Wood Book Award for her title The Occupation of Havana: War, Trade, and Slavery in the Atlantic World.
January 16, 2020
This month, Professor Michael Nylan’s translation of Sun Tzu’s The Art of War was released by W.W. Norton. Nylan is the first female scholar to translate this 2500-year-old classic text into any language.
January 15, 2020
Congratulations to Associate Professor Ethan Katz and fellow editors Lisa Moses Leff, and Maud S. Mandel, whose anthology Colonialism and the Jews (Indiana University Press, 2017) has been selected as a Finalist for the 2019 National Jewish Book Awards! The winners of the 2019 National Jewish Book Awards will be honored on March 17, 2020 at an awards dinner and ceremony in Manhattan.
November 27, 2019
Associate Professor Daniel Sargent has been selected to join the 2020 UC Berkeley Faculty Leadership Academy! Each year, a limited number of tenured faculty are selected to participate in this leadership development program designed for faculty who are dedicated to enhancing their leadership abilities on the Berkeley campus.
November 25, 2019
Congratulations to Associate Professor Stephanie Jones-Rogers, whose book They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South was named as one of the “Ten Best History Boo
October 7, 2019
On November 20th, Professor Brian DeLay will be a featured speaker for a Morton L. Mandel Public Lecture organized by the Berkeley Program Committee of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, titled “Arms Trafficking: Its Past, Present and Future”.
September 23, 2019
On September 16th, Associate Professor Brian DeLay spoke on a panel titled “The 2nd Amendment: American Society’s Interpretation Across Time", at the Free Speech Movement Café in Moffitt Library. The panel, which also included Franklin Zimring, Professor of law, Paul Pierson, Professor of political science , and moderator Hannah Shearer, Litigation Director at Giffords Law Center, debated current issues around the Second Amendement from legal, historical, and political science perspectives.
September 19, 2019
The Southern Historical Association has announced Assistant Professor Caitlin Rosenthal as the 2019 winner of the Francis B. Simkins Award, for Accounting for Slavery: Masters and Management (Harvard University Press, 2018).
According to the SHA's press release:
September 10, 2019
Today, Associate Professor Elena Schneider was announced as the winner of the Murdo J. MacLeod Book Prize by the Latin American and Caribbean Section (LACS) of the Southern Historical Association. This prestigious prize was awarded for Schneider’s 2019 title, The Occupation of Havana: War, Trade, and Slavery in the Atlantic World.
August 19, 2019
On August 30th, to mark the 400th anniversary of the beginning of slavery in North America, UC Berkeley will host an initiative throughout the 2019-2020 academic school year, called "400 Years of Resistance to Slavery and Injustice".
August 2, 2019
On August 2nd, Associate Professor Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers was interviewed for The Washington Post about her most recent publication, They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South. In this interview, Jones-Rogers details her research process, discusses the stereotypes about white women that her research directly challenges, and the public reaction to her findings.
June 24, 2019
On June 20th, assistant professor Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers was featured on an episode of KQED's radio program Forum, titled "As House Takes Up Reparations Bill, How Should the U.S. Pay Its Debts to the Enslaved?"
May 23, 2019
April 17, 2019
April 15, 2019
March 27, 2019
March 17, 2019
March 5, 2019
November 17, 2018
Assistant Professor Ronit Stahl has been awarded the 2018 Frank S. and Elizabeth D. Brewer Prize for her book Enlisting Faith: How The Military Chaplaincy Shaped Religion and State in Modern America (Harvard University Press, 2017). The prize, awarded by the American Society of Church History, honors outstanding scholarship in church history by a first-time author and comes with a cash award of $2500.
October 10, 2018
September 18, 2018
After serving in senior administrative roles within the College of Letters and Science (L&S) for a decade, Carla Hesse will return to her full-time faculty position after the completion of her terms next summer. A talented and versatile leader with a fervent belief in the power of a liberal arts education, Carla has served as executive dean of L&S since 2014 and as dean of its Division of Social Sciences since 2009.
June 22, 2018
May 25, 2018
April 30, 2018
April 10, 2018
March 1, 2018
January 16, 2018
In selecting The Work of the Dead, a book by UC Berkeley history professor Thomas W. Laqueur, to receive the 2018 Shannon Prize in Contemporary European Studies, the jury praised its examination of how and why the living have cared for the dead in western Europe since the 18th century as a monumental achievement.
September 6, 2017
July 27, 2017
In her recent post on the Berkeley Blog, Stephanie Jones-Rogers, assistant professor of history, explores the ways the U.S. legal system has historically sanctioned deadly force against African Americans, and how that history connects to the prevalence of police shootings of African Americans today.