January 31, 2024
Camille Robcis’ book, Disalienation: Politics, Philosophy, and Radical Psychiatry in Postwar France, was awarded the 2024 Frantz Fanon Outstanding Book Award. Read more here.
Camille Robcis’ book, Disalienation: Politics, Philosophy, and Radical Psychiatry in Postwar France, was awarded the 2024 Frantz Fanon Outstanding Book Award. Read more here.
Kim Phillips-Fein reviewed Heather Cox Richardson’s Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America in The Nation.
James Stafford published an article in Dissent, “Labor Under New Management,” in which he explores political developments in Britain’s Labour Party ahead of elections this year.
Kim Phillips-Fein was interviewed on two podcasts: “Know Your Enemy,” where she discussed historians and their approaches to the right and the far right, and “Love is the Message,” where she explored New York’s 1975 fiscal crisis.
Aaron Freedman published an article on the legacy of Alan Brinkley in Reviews in American History.
Natasha Lightfoot was awarded an honorable mention for the annual Conference on Latin American History’s Paul Vanderwood Article Prize for her 2022 article, “So Far to Leeward: Eliza Moore’s Fugitive Cosmopolitan Routes to Freedom in the Nineteenth Century Caribbean,” which appeared in the William and Mary Quarterly 79. Read more here.