George and Ann RichardsCivil War Era Center

Colored Conventions
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Center Welcomes New Associate Director

Center Welcomes New Associate Director

We are pleased to announce that Emma Teitelman will join the department of history and the Richards Center in July as the center’s first associate director. As associate director, she will work closely with center director Rachel Shelden in shaping and executing the center’s strategic plan for the future. Emma’s research interests include the Civil War and Reconstruction, as well as the history of labor, inequality, and capitalism. Her current book project explores transformations in capitalism and the state after the Civil War, focusing especially on the histories of the South and the West. It argues that the fall of southern slavery brought profound change not only to the lives of enslaved people but also to national patterns of economic development, government activities, and colonial practices. These structural shifts were rooted in the federal government’s changing relationships to cohorts of northeastern businessmen and philanthropists. Faced with enormous political challenges in the wake of the war, federal authorities searched for allies, ultimately forging dynamic relationships to members of an increasingly politicized capitalist class. Joining together around the politics of emancipation, colonialism, and industrial capitalism, these postbellum forces steered the economic integration of the United States at a moment of dramatic uncertainty. In the process, northeastern capitalists and U.S. authorities foreclosed possibilities for alternative forms of life, incorporating Native peoples, the formerly enslaved, smallholding farmers, and landless workers into an increasingly coherent capitalist society. Emma’s writing has appeared in the Journal of American History and New Labor Forum, among others, and her work has been supported by the Huntington Library and the Andrea Mitchell Center for the Study of Democracy. Prior to joining Penn State and the Richards Center, she was the Mellon Research Fellow in American History at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. 

Emma in Cambridge