News

Jesse Spohnholz Accepts Fellowship

Jesse Spohnholz has accepted a residential fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study (located in Princeton, NJ) for Spring 2027. While there, Spohnholz will be working on his next book project, which explores the relationship between religious refugees, utopian thinking, and global colonialism during the dramatic transformations in understandings of the world and the cosmos […]

Marlene Gaynair Talk at Harvard University

Marlene presented her talk “The Only Airline You’ll Ever Love”: Air Jamaica and the Paradoxes of Postcolonial Mobility” as a part of the Canada Seminar at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University. She explores how Air Jamaica, as a migratory infrastructure, simultaneously facilitated the formation of a diasporic cosmopolitan identity and served […]

Social Studies Major in New Position

Tucker Senter (Samish Nation), a junior majoring in social studies at Washington State University, earned a prestigious position at the Hoover Institution’s Indigenous Student Seminar this summer. Tucker will join approximately twenty other Native American students to study US Native policy and hear from a variety of Indigenous entrepreneurs, scholars, and community leaders. The seminar […]

Sue Peabody Podcast Episode

Sue Peabody participated in a episode, “Abandoned Histories,” for the American Historical Association’s History in Focus Podcast: https://www.historians.org/podcast/abandoned-histories/. We discuss a variety of research projects that we have shelved for various reasons – ethical, practical, intellectual – over the years.

Marlene Gaynair Presents Paper

Marlene Gaynair presented her paper “’Five Flights a Day’:  Air Jamaica and the Spread of Post-Colonial Jamaican Identity” today at the semiannual Lees Seminar at Rutgers University – Camden. This chapter from her book examines how Jamaica’s national airline facilitated the formation of a diasporic cosmopolitan identity for Jamaicans and served as a vehicle of foreign control […]

Nik Overtoom Featured in Newsletter and Discussion

Nik Overtoom was featured in the WSU Libraries’ Crimson Reads Newsletter for March 2026, “Authors Reveal Genesis of Their 2025 Books.” https://libraries.wsu.edu/blog/2026/03/13/wsu-crimson-reads-authors-reveal-genesis-of-their-2025-books-panel-on-march-26/. He also was an invited panelist for the Crimson Reads 13th Annual Celebration of WSU Authors, hosted by Terrell Library, for the discussion, “Teaching the Future: WSU Textbook Authors on Writing and Publishing,” held on […]

L Heidenreich Interview

L Heidenreich was interviewed for The First 100: Chicanas Changing History project.  Their work “Skirt Drama,” and “To(o) q/Queer Aztlan” was published in Jota: A Queer Latina y Latinx Anthology (Flowersong Press).

Eugene Smelyansky Guest on Podcast

Eugene Smelyansky was a guest on the American Medieval podcast, hosted by historian Matthew Gabriele (Virginia Tech). Eugene got to discuss what sparked his interest in studying marginalized peoples in medieval Europe and the enduring appeal of all things medieval in our own time. He also discussed his most recent book, Medievalisms and Russia: The Contest for Imaginary […]

Jesse Spohnholz Presentation

On March 9th at 2pm Pacific, Jesse Spohnholz will present as part of the American Historical Association’s “The Civic Value of World History” online event as part of Civic Learning Week (link opens in new window), moderated by Kenneth Pomeranz.

Jennifer Binzewski Presents at Gonzaga University

On March 2, Jennifer Binzewski (WSU PhD 2016) presented Gonzaga University’s “The Art and Craft of History” annual lecture for 2026. Her talk was titled “Widows Behaving ‘Badly’: The Underground Catholic Community in Tudor & Stuart England.”