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Gerber, Matthew Dean

Associate Professor

Positions

Research Areas research areas

Research

research overview

  • Dr. Gerber's research is focused on the role of law and litigious practice in the social and political development of early modern Europe and its overseas colonies. His first book, 'Bastards: Politics, Family, and Law in Early Modern France' (Oxford University Press, 2012), explores the changing legal condition and practical treatment of children born out of wedlock in France between 1555 and 1789. His second book project is investing the history of property, kinship, and racialization in the eighteenth-century French Caribbean through a microhistory of litigation involving Angélique Hossé, mother of the Haitian revolutionary leaer Vincent Ogé.

keywords

  • social history, cultural history, political history, legal history, early modern Europe, early modern France, bastardy, illegitimacy, violence, terror, colonialism, race, early modern France, French colonial history

Publications

selected publications

Teaching

courses taught

  • HIST 1012 - Empire, Revolution and Global War: European History Since 1600
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2018 / Fall 2018 / Spring 2021 / Fall 2021 / Spring 2023 / Fall 2023 / Fall 2024
    Examines the history of modern Europe from 1600. Topics may include religious conflict, absolutism, the Scientific Revolution, the global impact of European colonialism and imperialism, the Enlightenment, the French and Industrial Revolutions, and the emergence of romanticism, nationalism, liberalism, socialism and modernism. Concludes by analyzing World War I and II, communist and fascist totalitarianisms, decolonization and the Cold War. Formerly HIST 1020
  • HIST 2100 - Revolution in History
    Primary Instructor - Summer 2023
    Examines the causes, character, and significance of political revolution in world history. Concentrating on one of the major revolutions of modern history, it examines why revolutions occur, who participates in revolution, and to what effect. Specific course focus varies.
  • HIST 3110 - Honors Seminar
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2022
    Practical historiography for students who wish to write a senior honors thesis. Emphasizes choice of topic, critical methods, research, organization, argumentation, and writing. Recommended restriction: History GPA of 3.5 or higher. May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours.
  • HIST 3120 - Honors Thesis
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2022 / Fall 2022 / Spring 2023
    Intended for students writing an Honors Thesis in History. Department enforced prerequisite: HIST 3110 and instructor consent.
  • HIST 3212 - Seminar in Early Modern Europe
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2018 / Fall 2020 / Spring 2022 / Fall 2024
    Capstone seminars are designed for advanced history majors to pull together the skills they have honed in previous courses. This seminar focuses on early modern European history, and will include readings and discussions in a small seminar setting. In relation to the course topic, students will develop an individual research project and write a substantial and original paper based on primary sources. Recommended restriction: History GPA of 2.0 or higher.
  • HIST 4212 - The Age of Religious Wars: Reformation Europe,1500-1648
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2019 / Spring 2024
    Traces the history of Europe from the end of the Hundred Years War through the Thirty Years War. During this period Europe experienced tremendous changes including emerging religious heresies, the advent of the Spanish Inquisition, violent civil wars, the witch craze, and the Thirty Years War, a precursor to the World Wars of the 20th century. Recommended prerequisite: HIST 1011 or HIST 1113.
  • HIST 4222 - War and the European State, 1618-1793
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2018 / Fall 2020 / Fall 2021 / Summer 2024
    Studies the development of the European states in response to international power struggles in the 17th and 18th centuries (up to the French Revolution). Same as HIST 5222.
  • HIST 4223 - The French Revolution and Napoleon
    Primary Instructor - Summer 2018 / Spring 2019 / Summer 2019 / Summer 2021 / Spring 2022 / Spring 2023 / Spring 2024
    Traces the origins, course, and consequences of the most important modern revolution, the French Revolution of 1789. While seeking to explain how a liberal movement for progressive change soon degenerated into the factional bloodbath of the Terror, will also examine the revolution's global impact and how three decades or revolutionary warfare lead to the rise and fall of Napoleon Bonaparte. Same as HIST 5223.
  • HIST 4232 - From Absolutism to Revolution in Europe, 1648-1789
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2023
    Studies the history of Europe from the end of the Thirty Years War through the outbreak of the French Revolution. Central themes include the establishment of more centralized, increasingly bureaucratic states; global expansion and economic commercialization; cultural developments such as the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment. Recommended prerequisite: HIST 1012 or HIST 1123.
  • HIST 5012 - Graduate Colloquium in European History
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2022
    Acquaints students with key works in the literature of European history, and addresses matters of method and interpretation. May be repeated up to 12 total credit hours. Department enforced requisite: admission to the graduate program in history.
  • HIST 5223 - The French Revolution and Napoleon
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2022
    Traces the origins, course, and consequences of the most important modern revolution, the French Revolution of 1789. While seeking to explain how a liberal movement for progressive change soon degenerated into the factional bloodbath of the Terror, will also examine the revolution's global impact and how three decades or revolutionary warfare lead to the rise and fall of Napoleon Bonaparte. Same as HIST 4223.
  • HIST 6800 - Readings in Global History
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2021
    Explores various topics, regions, and methods in history and historical writing by utilizing a global/thematic approach. Geared toward graduate students in History, but students from other disciplines with graduate standing may enroll with instructor consent. Topic and content of course will vary depending on instructor. May be repeated up 12 total credit hours.
  • HIST 6950 - Master's Thesis
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2021 / Spring 2022
    Registration intended for students working on a master's thesis.

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