Erin Stewart Mauldin
            
            
            John Hope Franklin Chair of Southern History
            
            Associate Professor and Undergraduate Director
            
            CONTACT Information and CV
            
            Office: SNL 100
Email: emauldin@usf.edu
Curriculum Vitae
            
            EDUCATION
            
            Ph.D., Georgetown University, 2014
            
            TEACHING
            
            My goal as an educator is to advance students鈥 understanding from the misconception
                  that history is a series of 鈥渇acts鈥 to be memorized to the realization that history
                  is a question-driven enterprise. I want students to consider not just what we know about history, but how we know it. I teach courses on the 18th, 19th, and 20th century U.S. as well as thematic
                  courses in environmental history, military history, legal history, and food history.
                  I also occasionally teach our Methods and Materials classes, the U.S. History surveys,
                  and graduate seminars in St. Petersburg. I use a variety of interactive and field-based
                  learning strategies in all of my courses, with an emphasis on community engagement.
                  My students have produced historical markers for local neighborhoods, launched exhibits
                  at a living history park, collected oral histories, made podcasts, digitally catalogued
                  artifacts collected at community 鈥淗istory Harvests,鈥 produced digital walking tours,
                  and more.
            
            RESEARCH
            
            Interdisciplinarity forms the methodological underpinning of my work, and I borrow
               heavily from the natural sciences, geography, and environmental sociology to reframe
               the big questions of nineteenth-century southern history: the impacts of the Civil
               War and emancipation on southern agriculture, economic stagnation in the shadow of
               鈥淜ing Cotton,鈥 and, more recently, the twin processes of industrialization and urbanization.
               My book, Unredeemed Land: An Environmental History of Civil War and Emancipation in the Cotton
                  South, was published by Oxford University Press in 2018. It was awarded the 2019 Wiley-Silver
               Book Prize and CHOICE magazine designated it an Outstanding Academic Title. I am also
               the co-editor of the Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Global Environmental History, now available in an all-new and revised second edition (2025), and have published
               work in The Journal of the Civil War Era, The Alabama Review, and edited volumes including The Oxford Handbook on Reconstruction, Battlefields and Homefronts, Appalachian Epidemics, and Bloomsbury History: Theory and Method. My next book project, under contract with Routledge Press, it titled War and Environment in American History. I am also working on another monograph, tentatively titled, The First White Flight, which investigates the role of industrial pollution in shaping the urban geography
               of the New South.
            
            I am also the Co-Editor of the Environmental History and the American South book series (University of Georgia Press).
            
            Oxford University Press, 2018
            Wiley Blackwell, 2025 (2nd ed.)