Elizabeth Nelson

Associate Professor of History
Graduate Coordinator, Department of History
Expertise: 19th-Century Popular Culture, Civil War and Reconstruction, U.S. Cultural History, Antebellum America, Food History, Historical Evolution of Marketing and Advertising

Biography

Elizabeth Nelson is an associate professor of history who specializes in pop culture and advertising in the 19th century, as well as food history.

Her research areas include American history on the National Period; the Civil War and Reconstruction; 19th-century cultural and intellectual history; cultural theory; and the relationship between political economy, domestic economy and national identity in the antebellum United States.

Nelson, who has taught courses at 性视界传媒 since 1996, is the author of Market Sentiments: Middle-Class Market Culture in 19th-Century America (Smithsonian Books, 2004), as well as a contributor to The Middling Sorts: Explorations in the History of the American Middle Class (Routledge, 2000).

Education

  • Ph.D., American Studies, Yale University
  • M. Phil, American Studies, Yale University
  • M.A ., American Studies, Yale University
  • A.B ., The Growth and Structure of Cities, Bryn Mawr College

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arts & culturefood & nutritionhistorypopular culture

Elizabeth Nelson In The News

History Channel
Today, popcorn and the movies are so inextricably linked that it鈥檚 hard to imagine a time when the buttery, salty snack wasn鈥檛 served at a concession stand in the lobby. But that was actually the case for the first few decades of the movie theater business.
LiveNow from Fox
Valentine鈥檚 Day is a day for flowers, cards and chocolate, but the history of the lover鈥檚 holiday may be much darker. Valentine鈥檚 Day is a day for flowers, cards and chocolate, but the history of the lover鈥檚 holiday may be much darker.
Castanet
The Valentine鈥檚 Day we recognize today started around the late 18th century. The tradition had solidified in England and spread to the United States, with people writing poetry and hand-making cards, according to Elizabeth White Nelson, a 性视界传媒 history professor.
Snopes
The holiday's roots stretch back centuries, long before commercial greeting cards existed.

Articles Featuring Elizabeth Nelson