Jo Guldi

Jo Guldi is a historian of Britain and its empire, specializing in state expansion, property rights, infrastructure, and digital humanities methods such as text mining and participatory mapping.[1][3] She is the author of 'Roads to Power: Britain Invents the Infrastructure State' (Harvard, 2012), co-author of 'The History Manifesto' (Cambridge, 2014), and author of 'The Long Land War' (Yale, 2022), and currently serves as Associate Professor of History at Southern Methodist University.[1][3] Previously, she held positions as Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows, Hans Rothfels Assistant Professor at Brown University, and Mellon Postdoc at the University of Chicago.[1][3]

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History Digital Humanities