Celia Chazelle

The College of New Jersey



Professor and Chair
Department of History

Curriculum Vitae

Early Medieval Forum

Contact



 

When I was a high school student outside Boston at the time of Kent State, I immersed myself in the anti-war movement and — inspired by a terrific teacher — the study of US history. I thought at the time that I was headed for a career in public service, possibly law and government. Then I went to the University of Toronto, discovered the Middle Ages, and... the subsequent chapters in my professional life are pretty clear from my curriculum vitae.

In the last several years, however, my dismay at the growing social inequalities in this country and at the impact of American foreign policy on the rest of the world has led my scholarly interests back to something akin to their starting point. I am still fascinated by medieval history, in particular the history of the Early Middle Ages — a frequently misunderstood era. The latter point is discussed in the volume of essays I have co-edited with Felice Lifshitz, Paradigms and Methods in Early Medieval Studies.

As a small contribution to the effort to encourage early medieval studies see, too, the website of my listserv, the Early Medieval Forum. But more overtly than my past research, my recent projects concern the contributions that medievalists — perhaps especially early medievalists — can make to our understanding today of social justice, human rights, and how best to promote peace.

My interest in matters of social justice is tied to my work with fellow faculty to encourage the teaching and study of religion at the College of New Jersey. Visit our website for more information and for videos from the series of events we organized last year for the College's Religion, Culture, and Identity program. Click here for the Religion Compass website, on whose editorial board I serve. Increasingly important for me, too, are my work with community organizations in Camden, New Jersey, such as Heart of Camden, and teaching in one of the New Jersey state prisons.

The online essays by my husband Bernard eloquently express a perspective on current events matching my own. His website also has great pics of our two kids: Anna, whose current interests lie mainly in the theater, and Damien, drummer (rock and jazz) and filmmaker; and of our cat, Mistie.


On the human and financial costs of the war in Iraq, click here

Teaching

Most of my courses investigate different aspects of the social, political, cultural, and religious history of western Eurasia and the Mediterranean, including North Africa, from the Roman Empire to the late Middle Ages. I have also taught the department survey course, “World History I” (prehistory to 1500) and the college’s freshman or "First Seminar," for which I usually focus on aspects of social justice and human rights. Other seminars offered in the past have examined premodern religions, especially ancient and medieval Christianity, the Merovingians and Carolingians, the Middle Ages in modern film, the mythology of “Star Wars,” and the role of medieval studies in addressing modern issues of social justice.

Course Offered Fall 2008

  • FSP 114: “Social Justice, History and Practice”
    Click here for the class webblog, where the students exchange ideas about assigned readings, guest lectures, topics raised in class discussions, and their community service in Camden, a critical component of their coursework.
  • STUDENTS: click here for SOCS website