Julia Carroll

American religious history, Atlantic World systems, plantation landscapes & modern consciousness, the Lowcountry South

  • Title American religious history, Atlantic World systems, plantation landscapes & modern consciousness, the Lowcountry South
  • Education BA in History and Religious Studies, Georgia State University
    MA in History, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

I study histories of the Atlantic World, specifically intersections of religion, race, and place. My dissertation, “The Protestant Sanctioning of Race-Based Slavery in Language & Landscape in the Anglo-American South, 1739-1791”, considers how the mid-eighteenth century merging of Protestant beliefs with proslavery ideologies contributed to the widespread acceptance of both, and how the legacy of this pairing continues to manifest today. This project is a continuation of my master’s thesis and is anchored not only by the significant paper trail left by America’s first celebrity speaker/author/proslavery evangelical, George Whitefield, but is also informed by my years spent living and working in Savannah, Georgia, home to Whitefield’s American mission. Having recently been awarded a Graduate Research Abroad Fellowship (GRAF) by BU, in Fall 2021 I will be traveling to England for archival research. 

You can find my CV here

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