Jen Manion
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Jen Manion is a social and cultural historian, author, and professor of History and Sexuality, Women's and Gender Studies at Amherst College. Manion is the author of '' Female Husbands: A Trans History'' and '' Liberty's Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America''.


Early life and education

Manion was raised in the borough of St.Clair, outside of
Pottsville, Pennsylvania Pottsville is the county seat of Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 13,346 at the 2020 census, and is the principal city of the Pottsville, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area. The city lies along the west bank of th ...
. In a 2018 essay that describes Manion's childhood experiences, Manion wrote, "I have always been a gender warrior and a gender outlaw." Manion completed a BA in history from the
University of Pennsylvania The University of Pennsylvania (also known as Penn or UPenn) is a private research university in Philadelphia. It is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and is ranked among the highest-regarded universitie ...
, and a PhD in history from
Rutgers University Rutgers University (; RU), officially Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is a public land-grant research university consisting of four campuses in New Jersey. Chartered in 1766, Rutgers was originally called Queen's College, and was ...
.


Career

Manion was a member of the history department faculty at
Connecticut College Connecticut College (Conn College or Conn) is a private liberal arts college in New London, Connecticut. It is a residential, four-year undergraduate institution with nearly all of its approximately 1,815 students living on campus. The college w ...
for ten years before becoming an associate professor at Amherst College in 2016. Manion was also the founding director of the LGBTQ Resource Center at Connecticut College. In 2021, Manion became a full professor at Amherst and received an honorary masters of arts degree. On writing, Manion has stated, "My topics choose me. As a historian, what I write about depends on what sources I have found. But I only spend time on things that have relevance beyond the world of academic history - such as mass incarceration or transgender liberation - otherwise, I do not think I am making the best use of my time and resources." In 2015, as an associate professor of history at Connecticut College, Manion published '' Liberty's Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America''. In a 2016 interview, while discussing a developing research and writing project then titled "Born in the Wrong Time: Transgender Archives and the History of Possibility, 1770-1870," Manion stated, "most of the records are about such people rather than by them, so I try to write about people in broad, expansive ways that create space and possibility for how they might have lived, how they understood themselves, and how other people viewed and treated them", and further stated, "This project is partly about recovering an archive but it also very much about ''how we think and write about the past'' as well." '' Female Husbands: A Trans History'' was published by Cambridge University Press in 2020.


Books

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Awards

* 2016 Mary Kelley Book Prize by the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic (''Liberty's Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America'') * 2020 British Association for Victorian Studies Best Book Prize (''Female Husbands: A Trans History'') * Finalist, 2021
Lawrence W. Levine Award The Lawrence W. Levine Award is an annual book award made by the Organization of American Historians (OAH). The award goes to the best book in American cultural history.http://www.oah.org/programs/awards/lawrence-w-levine-award/ Last viewed Septembe ...
, Organization of American Historians (''Female Husbands: A Trans History'')


Honors

* 2018 elected member of the Massachusetts Historical Society * 2020 elected member of the
American Antiquarian Society The American Antiquarian Society (AAS), located in Worcester, Massachusetts, is both a learned society and a national research library of pre-twentieth-century American history and culture. Founded in 1812, it is the oldest historical society i ...


Personal life

Manion married Jessica Halem in
Provincetown, Massachusetts Provincetown is a New England town located at the extreme tip of Cape Cod in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, in the United States. A small coastal resort town with a year-round population of 3,664 as of the 2020 United States Census, Province ...
in 2014.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Manion, Jen Living people 21st-century American historians Historians from Pennsylvania Amherst College faculty Connecticut College faculty University of Pennsylvania alumni Rutgers University alumni Transgender non-binary people Year of birth missing (living people) LGBT people from Pennsylvania American non-binary writers