About

Michael J. Albani (He/Him/His) is a PhD Candidate at Michigan State University who holds an MA in History from Loyola University Chicago and a BA in History and English from Albion College. He specializes in the study of U.S. history, Native American history, women’s and gender history, and digital humanities, and his dissertation, tentatively titled “Racializing Indigenous Society: Native Americans, Euro-Americans, and the Struggle for Authority in the Great Lakes Borderlands, 1763-1888,” centers on the persistence of Anishinaabe women and their children of mixed heritage from Michilimackinac. Conceptions of race and perceptions of people with Indigenous ancestry drastically changed as Euro-American newcomers encroached upon this space. Albani’s project analyzes how the enduring presence of Anishinaabe women at peripheries like Michilimackinac affected nineteenth-century state formation efforts on both sides of the border between the U.S. and Canada. Furthermore, it examines how people of mixed heritage retained authority throughout the Great Lakes region as Euro-Americans imposed new racial classifications upon them.

Education

MA in History from Loyola University Chicago (2016)

BA in History and English from Albion College (2012)

Blog Posts

    Publications

    Book Reviews

    Friends, Foes, and Furs: George Nelson’s Lake Winnipeg Journals, 1804-1822 by Harry W. Duckworth, H-Environment (Forthcoming).

    Gichi Bitobig, Grand Marais: Early Accounts of the Anishinaabeg and the North Shore Fur Trade by Timothy Cochrane, History: Reviews of New Books 47, no. 5 (2019), 114-16.

    Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600-1870 by David Andrew Nichols, Indiana Magazine of History 115, no. 2 (2019), 158-59.

    The Slave Ship: A Human History by Marcus Rediker, The Lumanary: News, Exhibitions, and Events from the Loyola University Museum of Art, no. 28 (2016), 16.

    Blog Posts

    “Lost in the Flood: Young Earth Creationism from George McCready Price to Ken Ham,” The Activist History Review, 2017.

    “A New Home for the New Year: An Infant Christ at LUMA,” The Lakefront Historian, 2016.

    “‘Stagestruck City: Chicago’s Theater Tradition and the Birth of the Goodman’: A Review,” The Lakefront Historian, 2015.

    Michael J. Albani

    Profile picture of Michael J. Albani

    @mjjalbani

    Active 3 years, 8 months ago