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  1. Kathleen M. Brown is a historian of gender and race in early America and the Atlantic World. She is the author of several books, including Foul Bodies and Undoing Slavery, and the lead faculty historian of the Penn & Slavery project.

  2. Kathleen M. Brown is an American historian specializing in early American and Atlantic history, the history of comparative race, gender, and sex, and the history of abolition and human rights. She is currently the David Boies Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.

  3. Kathleen Lynn Brown (born September 25, 1945) is an American attorney and politician who served as the 29th treasurer of California from 1991 to 1995. Brown unsuccessfully ran for governor of California in the 1994 election.

  4. Dr. Kathleen Brown is the lead historian for the Penn & Slavery Project and has been with the project since its inception. She is a historian of gender and race in early America and the Atlantic World. Educated at Wesleyan and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, she is author of Good Wives, Nasty Wenches, and Anxious Patriarchs: Gender, Race ...

  5. 6 de jun. de 2023 · Historian Kathleen M. Brown discusses her book \"Undoing Slavery: Bodies, Race and Rights in the Age of Abolition\" and how abolitionists focused on the physical and moral integrity of enslaved people. She also connects her research to the current debates over reproductive rights and white nationalism.

  6. kabrown@sas.upenn.edu. Kathleen Brown is a historian of gender and race in early America and the Atlantic World. Educated at Wesleyan and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, she is author of Good Wives, Nasty Wenches, and Anxious Patriarchs: Gender, Race, and Power in Colonial Virginia (Chapel Hill, 1996), which won the Dunning Prize of the ...

  7. Kathleen Brown | Penn Arts & Sciences Endowed Professors. Brown’s scholarship, which is characterized by novel approaches to the examination of issues of racial and gender hierarchies—particularly in colonial settings—and 19th-century attitudes, has offered important new insights to scholars and students of gender, race, and history.