|
Current Research
My research interests are closely connected to my teaching. I focus on colonial and legal history, with a keen interest in the South. Currently I am conducting research on a new book project, "Legal Cultures in Eighteenth-Century America," which explores the legal cultures of 3 colonial cities (Boston, Philadelphia and Charleston). It is a study that combines cultural and social history, using a comparative approach, so it meshes several techniques of historical analysis.
As part of this research, I have delivered numerous papers in England and America. In 2008, I spoke to the NYU Seminar on the Atlantic World about Joseph Bennett's 'legal tourism' in early America, and in 2009, I will present my work on lawyers' library collections to the NYU Legal History seminar.
I have received grants to support this project from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Massachusetts Historical Society, the American Philosophical Society, the Library Company of Philadelphia, and the New England Research Consortium.
My most recent publications are to be found in Christopher Tomlins and Michael Grossberg, eds., The Cambridge History of Law in America (2008); Daniel Hamilton and Alfred Brophy's Transformations in American Legal History (Harvard University Press, 2009); and Jonathan Wells and Jennifer Green's new anthology on the nineteenth-century Southern middle class (LSU Press, 2009).
|
Book
My book, Slave Patrols: Law and violence in Virginia and the Carolinas, was published by Harvard University Press in 2001.
My book on slave patrols has been favorable reviewed in many outlets (including The Nation, Oct. 11, 2001 issue or at Common-Place in its Fall 2001 issue). A paperback edition was released in fall 2003, and you can get more information about it at the Harvard University Press website. In February 2005, the History Channel aired a documentary on slave patrols and slave catchers that drew heavily upon this book.
|