TOBIAS HIGBIE
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Office: 5242 BUNCHE HALL
Phone: 310-794-9331
Fax:
310-206-9630
E-mail:
higbie@history.ucla.edu
Mailing Address:
6265 Bunche Hall
Box 951473
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1473
Field
United States social history, labor and working class history
Research Interests
Tobias Higbie is an Associate Professor in the UCLA History Department where he teaches classes on labor and social movement history, labor studies, and U.S. History. He is also an advisor to the Institute for Research on Labor & Employment and the Labor & Workplace Studies undergraduate minor. Higbie is the author of Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwest, 1880-1930 (2003), and articles on migration, print culture, and working class education. Before coming to UCLA in 2007, Higbie taught labor history and contemporary economics for trade unionists at the University of Illinois, and directed a research center at the Newberry Library in Chicago. He holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of Illinois.
Notes
Twitter: @TobiasHigbie
Advisor, UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment.
Advisor, National Center for History in the Schools.
Member, American Federation of Teachers, University Council, AFL-CIO.
Selected Publications
"Why Do Robots Rebel? The Labor History of a Cultural Icon" in Labor 10:1 (Spring 2013). Read it Here. See more images.
“Unschooled but Not Uneducated: Print, Public Speaking, and the Networks of Informal Working-Class Education, 1900-1940,” pp. 103-125 in Adam R. Nelson and John L. Rudolph, eds., Education and the Culture of Print in Modern America (University of Wisconsin Press, 2010).
Frontier to Heartland: Making History in Central North America (Curator), online exhibit at the Newberry Library, 2010. Presentation slides for "Imagining the Spaces of Central North America" November 17, 2010.
“Between Romance and Degradation: Navigating the Meanings of Vagrancy in North America, 1870-1940,” pp. 250-269 in Augustus Lee Beier and Paul Ocobock, eds., Cast Out: A Global History of Vagrancy. Ohio University Press, 2008.
Outspoken: Chicago's Free Speech Tradition. Curator (with Peter Alter), Newberry Library/Chicago Historical Society exhibit, 2004. Online exhibit.
“Rural Work, Household Subsistence, and the North American Working Class: A View from the Midwest,” International Labor and Working Class History 65(Spring 2004): 50-76.
Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwest, 1880-1930. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2003.
“Crossing Class Boundaries: Tramp Ethnographers and Narratives of Class in Progressive Era America,” Social Science History 21:4 (Winter 1997): 559-592.
Grants
Lloyd Lewis Fellow in American History, Newberry Library, 2013-2014.
Awards
Allan Sharlin Memorial Award, Social Science History Association, 2004.
Philip Taft Labor History Book Award, Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations, 2004. Awarded jointly to Indispensable Outcasts and Robert Korstad, Civil Rights Unionism.
Grad Students
Caroline Luce, Alfred Flores, Andrew Gomez.
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