My research focuses on the transnational history of the 20th century United States, particularly on how religion shaped, and was shaped by, America’s engagement with the world. Trained in European and North American history, I am fascinated by the relationship between politics and culture, the sacred and the profane, and the transnational interconnectivities of performances, practices, and beliefs in the 20th century.
Research Interests
- 20th Century US history
- Global history
- Religious history
My most recent monograph Altar Call in Europe: Billy Graham, Mass Evangelism, and the Cold-War West (Oxford University Press, 2021) challenges assumptions about a uniquely American relationship between politics, consumerism, and religion. By examining religious practices and performativity across the Atlantic, and how they have influenced each other, I argue against an exceptional American religious modernity.
During my work on the steering committees of the international network “A Global History of US Evangelicalism” and the AHRC-funded international network “Promise and Peril of America in the World”, I developed an increasing interest in the concepts of American Empire and soft-power. These themes frame my current research on the religious, political, and cultural encounters between British and US missionaries and Nigerian Christians at the time decolonisation and independence.
I served as Chair of HOTCUS, the Historians of the 20th Century United States in the UK, (2020-23) and I am currently a member of the Council of the American Society of Church History, and the Deputy Director of the RAI.
See page on St Anne's College website