Linda Reeder
Linda Reeder
B.A. University of Wisconsin-Madison, History and Italian, 1985
Ph.D. Rutgers, 1995
Linda Reeder specializes in modern Italian history. Her research interests focus on gender, sexuality, migration, national belonging, the history of Italian psychiatry, and the history of emotions. Her first book, Widows in White: Migration and the Transformation of Rural Italian Women (University of Toronto Press, 2003) examines the role Sicilian women who remained at home played in shaping migration networks, and the impact emigration had on women's private and public lives. Her recent work, Italy in the Modern World: Society, Culture, and Identity (Bloomsbury, 2019) is a history of modern Italy centered on gender and mobility. Her current book project, Disordered Houses examines the role of Italian psychiatry in shaping notions of gender, sexuality, and citizenship in the construction of modern Italy.
Dr. Reeder teaches courses on 19th and 20th century European women's history, the history of modern Italy, the history of contemporary Europe, gender history, and migration.
Widows in White: Migration and the Transformation of Rural Italian Women, Sicily, 1880-1920. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002.