Jules Gill-Peterson
Jules Gill-Peterson | |
---|---|
Academic work | |
Discipline | Historian |
Sub-discipline | Transgender history, critical work on transmisogyny |
Institutions | Johns Hopkins University |
Website | www |
Jules Gill-Peterson is a Canadian historian specializing in transgender history. She is an associate professor of history at Johns Hopkins University. Her work focuses on how science, medicine, and race inform transgender embodiment. Her best-known work is Histories of the Transgender Child, which documents the 20th-century history of transgender childhood in the United States, and received the 2019 Lambda Literary Award for Transgender Nonfiction.[1] She is a general co-editor of Transgender Studies Quarterly, and previously served as a research fellow at the American Council of Learned Societies and at the Kinsey Institute.
Education
Peterson earned a bachelor's degree in history from the University of Ottawa in 2010 and received a PhD in American studies from Rutgers University in 2015. She was advised by Professor Frances Bartkowski for her dissertation Queer Theory is Kid Stuff: A Genealogy of the Gay and Transgender Child. In 2020, she received a Chancellor’s Distinguished Research Award from the University of Pittsburgh, where she previously served as a faculty member.[2][3][4][5]
Bibliography
Books
- Gill-Peterson, Jules (October 23, 2018). Histories of the Transgender Child. Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press.
- Gill-Peterson, Jules (January 2024). A Short History of Trans Misogyny. London and New York: Verso Books.
References
- ^ "31st Annual Lambda Literary Award Winners Announced". Lambda Literary. June 4, 2019. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
- ^ "Jules Gill-Peterson". Johns Hopkins University. July 20, 2021. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
- ^ "Jules Gill-Peterson Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Retrieved July 12, 2022.
- ^ "New Faculty Profile: Julian Gill-Peterson". University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
- ^ Gill-Peterson, Jules (2015). Queer theory is kid stuff: a genealogy of the gay and transgender child (PhD thesis). Rutgers University - Newark. doi:10.7282/T3GM8963.
External links