Educator. Historian. Consultant.
About Me
My teaching and research are both facets of my role as a history communicator. Any history—thematic or chronological—naturally flows into other histories; as a history communicator, my role is to organize and interpret data in a way that is appropriate and understandable for an intended audience.
My thesis, “The World of Elagabalus,” is available online through Scholar Works and my book chapter, “The Ever-evolving Hatshepsut Problem: An African Queen and the Construction, Interpretation, and Expression of Identity,” in Gendering African Social Spaces is available on Amazon and in many university libraries—including Brown, Stanford, and the University of Chicago.