INTRODUCTION
I am a historian of American religion/religious history with particular interests in how constructions of religion take shape and change over time. My dissertation and broader graduate work focused on how various left-leaning groups of the 1960s imagined religion and its relationship to their activism.
My current project is a study of Midwestern and rural conceptualizations of religion, especially from the mid-19th through the mid-20th centuries.
I also work in digital history and the digital humanities. I play with text analysis, code just enough to break things, and actually enjoy data wrangling. Current digital-ish work includes exploring the uses and abuses of LLMs in improving pre-existing OCR transcripts of document images.
Current classes (Fall 2024):
- HIS 2010
- HIS 2500
- HIS 4775: Digitizing US Countercultures
Past classes:
- HIS 1500
- HIS 2010
- HIS 2500
- HIS 5160: US Religious History
BLOG POSTS
Test November 8, 2023
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