Bradford Brown

Bradford Brown

Associate Professor

    Bradley Hall 351
    (309) 677-4908
   bb@bradley.edu

 

Ph.D., French History, University of California, Santa Barbara
M.A., European History, University of California, Santa Barbara
B.A., Social and Political Theory, Whittier College

Teaching

  • CIV 100 - Western Civilization
  • CIV 101 - Western Civilization, to 1600
  • CIV 102 - Western Civilization, from 1600
  • CIV 111 - Western Civilization and English Composition to 1600
  • CIV 112 - Western Civilization and English Composition from 1600
  • CIV 113 - Western Civilization and Fine Arts to 1600
  • CIV 114 - Western Civilization and Fine Arts since 1600
  • HIS 333 - Cross-Cultural Contacts: Rebel Saints, Pirates, & Slaves in the Atlantic World
  • HIS 337 - Modern World History: Non-Western Civilizations and Geography
  • HIS 341 - The French Revolution
  • HIS 342 - Europe, 1789-1914
  • HIS 343 - The Enlightenment
  • HIS 350 - Historical Methods
  • HIS 375 - The Holocaust
  • HIS 385 - Science, Technology, and Society
  • HIS 405 - Independent Reading in History
  • HIS 406 - Individual Study in History
  • HIS 451 - Research Seminar in European History
  • HON 100 - The Utopian Imagination
  • SOC 390 - Sociology of Globalization
  • SOC 420 - Critical Theory

Scholarship

Booklets & Reports

Articles

Reviews

  • Review of Mike Rapport, 1848: Year of Revolution, in History: Reviews of New Books 39, no. 2 (2011): 54.
  • Review of Corry Cropper, Playing at Monarchy: Sport as Metaphor in Nineteenth-Century France, in H-France Review 10, no. 105 (August 2010).
  • Review of William Fortescue, France and 1848: The End of Monarchy, in H-France Review 7, no. 4 (January 2007).
  • Review of Jill Harsin, Barricades: The War of the Streets in Revolutionary Paris, 1830-1848, in H-Net Reviews (December 2003).
  • Review of John M. Knapp, Behind the Diplomatic Curtain: Adolphe de Bourqueney and French Foreign Policy, 1816-1869, in H-France Review 2, no. 131 (December 2002).

Dissertation

  • “Kingship and the French Revolution of 1830: The Meaning of Royal Authority in Popular Political Culture and Orléanism,” Phd dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1999, UMI 9956131.

Service

Faculty Advisor

  • History Club
  • Pi Gamma Mu, local chapter of the social science honors society
  • Phi Alpha Theta, local chapter of the history honors society