
Faculty
Catherine Molineux
Assistant Professor of History
PhD, Johns Hopkins University, 2005
British Atlantic History; North American colonial history; history of early modern Britain; race and slavery; cultural studies
Telephone: 615-322-9369
Email: catherine.a.molineux@vanderbilt.edu
Office Hours: M 2:00-4:00 pm, by appointment.
Office: Benson Hall 221
Catherine Molineux is a historian of culture in the early modern British Atlantic world, with a focus on race, slavery, and empire. She is the author of “Hogarth’s Fashionable Slaves: Moral Corruption in Eighteenth-Century London” in English Literary History (2005) and “Pleasures of the Smoke: ‘Black Virginians’ in Georgian London’s Tobacco Shops” in The William & Mary Quarterly (2007). "Pleasures of the Smoke" has been named co-winner of the 2008 James L. Clifford Prize from American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS). Her current book project, entitled The Peripheries Within: Race, Slavery, and Empire in Early Modern England, analyzes visual and literary representations of black slaves produced in early modern England as a lens into popular beliefs about race, slavery, and empire. Grants and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, John Carter Brown Library, The Huntington Library, and Clark Library, among others, have supported her research.
Professor Molineux teaches undergraduate courses in British Atlantic history, colonial North American history, and early modern British visual culture, race and sexuality, as well as graduate courses on British political thought and the methodologies of history.

Department of History
VU Station B #351802
2301 Vanderbilt Place
Nashville, TN 37235-1802
Department Location:
227 Benson Hall
Phone: (615) 322-2575
Fax: (615) 343-6002
E-mail: History@vanderbilt.edu
Office Hours:
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. CST
Summer Office Hours:
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4 p.m.