About Me

Bonnie Effros joined the Department of History at the University of Liverpool in August 2017. As the Chaddock Chair of Economic and Social History, she teaches both early medieval and modern European history. She was previously Professor of History, and the inaugural Rothman Chair and Director of the Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere, at the University of Florida (2009-2017), where she oversaw the Center’s activities, including an annual speaker series and funding competitons for summer grant support for faculty and graduate students in the humanities, lecture series and workshops, library resources, community projects, and team-teaching in the humanities. In 2017, she successfully submitted a grant application to the Mellon for "Intersections: Animating Conversations in the Humanities" to support undergraduate core teaching in the humanities at the University of Florida. She also helped the Humanities Center initiate an annual week-long summer humanities program for high school students in Florida, Humanities and the Sunshine State, with the support of the Florida Humanities Council, the Center for Precollegiate Education and Teaching, and the College of Liberal Arts and Science.

Professor Effros earned her Ph.D. in history at UCLA (1994), where she specialized in the European Middle Ages. Her dissertation, based on written and archaeological evidence for burial rites in Merovingian Gaul, offered fertile ground for her first two books: Caring for Body and Soul: Burial and the Afterlife in the Merovingian World (Penn State University Press 2002) and Merovingian Mortuary Archaeology and the Making of the Early Middle Ages (University of California Press 2003). Her abiding interest in ritual practice and gender thereafter formed the basis for a series of essays on early medieval feasting and fasting published as Creating Community with Food and Drink in Merovingian Gaul (Palgrave 2002). This research enabled her to explore pagan-Christian interactions, female and clerical ascetic practice, food rites associated with burial custom, and dietary discussions in the post-Roman West. Her work has appeared in the peer-reviewed journals: Antiquity, British Journal of the History of Science, Early Medieval Europe, Journal of the History of Collections, Journal of Women's History, MVSE, Quaestiones Medii Aevi Novae, Revue belge de philologie et d’histoire, Speculum, and Viator. She has also published chapters in the Transformation of the Roman World series (published by E. J. Brill), the supplementary series of the Reallexikon für Altertumskunde (published by Walter de Gruyter), the series Forschungen zur Geschichte des Mittelalters (published by the Austrian Academy), the Actes des Journées internationales d'Archéologie mérovingienne (published by the Association francaise d'archéologie mérovingienne) and MittelalterStudien (published by the Institut zur interdisziplinären Erforschung des Mittelalters und seines Nachwirkens at Universität Paderborn), and a variety of other edited collections.

In the last two decades, Professor Effros has published in a second research field of nineteenth-century studies, and particularly in the history of archaeology. In Uncovering the Germanic Past: Merovingian Archaeology in France, 1830-1914 (Oxford, 2012), she links growing interest in the Merovingian past to the discovery of long-forgotten cemeteries uncovered during the course of the industrial revolution in France. These discoveries of “Germanic warriors” pushed the French to reconsider their national origins which could no longer be linked exclusively to the ancient Gauls. In this work, she also examines the impact of the formation of the discipline of archaeology on the collection and interpretation of material artifacts, a topic likewise tied to her book manuscript (now in proofs) entitled Incidental Archaeologists: French Officers and the Rediscovery of Roman North Africa (Cornell University Press, August 2018). In the course of the French invasion and subsequent “pacification” of the region that became Algeria, the armée d’Afrique confiscated homes, land, and mosques from the indigenous population and massacred tribes that resisted French domination. Along with the normalization of violence against civilian inhabitants, classical monuments fared badly, being reused as fortifications or destroyed as materiel for building French barracks, roads, and hospitals. This book examines the contributions of nineteenth-century officers, who, raised on classical accounts of warfare and often trained as cartographers, developed interest in the Roman remains they encountered throughout Algeria. Linking archaeological studies of the Roman past to French narratives of the Algerian occupation, the work examines how Roman archaeology helped foster a new identity for military and civilian settlers and examines the close entanglement of classical studies with politics in colonial and metropolitan France.

In addition to the University of Florida, Professor Effros previously taught at the University of Alberta, where she held an Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Department of History and Classics, at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville in the Department of Historical Studies, and at Binghamton University, where she served as chair of the Department of History. Among other awards, she has received a membership in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (2013-2014), the Sylvan C. Coleman and Pamela Coleman Memorial Fund Fellowship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2001-2002), the Berkshire Summer Fellowship at the Bunting Institute (now the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study) (1998), a Camargo Foundation Fellowship in Cassis, France (Fall 1997), the Franklin Research Fellowship from the American Philosophical Society (2004), as well as grants and/or invitations from the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) in Munich, the Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum in Mainz, the Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften in Vienna, and, most recently, the Centre d'Etudes Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale at the Université de Poitiers. During past years she has served as a sponsored lecturer for the Archaeological Institute of America, as a member of the Breasted Prize Committee of the American Historical Association, and as a Councillor of the Medieval Academy of America.

Professor Effros is currently on the editorial board of the newly created journal Studies in Late Antiquity. In addition, she is co-editor with Professor Isabel Moreira (University of Utah) of the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of the Merovingian World (Oxford 2019), which involves 45 contributors from four continents. Together with Professor Guolong Lai (University of Florida), she has co-edited a collected volume Unmasking Ideology in Imperial and Colonial Archaeology: Vocabulary, Symbols and Legacy (Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2018), which is the fruit of an international workshop held at the University of Florida from 8-11 January 2015 with support of the ACLS/Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange Comparative Perspectives on Chinese Culture and Society Program and the Rothman Endowment of the Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere. She also serves as the series editor of the Brill Series on the Early Middle Ages, a continuation of the Transformation of the Roman World series published by E.J. Brill in the Netherlands.

Contact Information

Email: bonnie.effros[at]liverpool.ac.uk

Postal Address:

Department of History
University of Liverpool
Liverpool L69 7WZ
United Kingdom

On Academia.edu