Ulrike Wiethaus Editor, Author & Translator

Anthony S. Parent Jr. received his PhD in history from UCLA. He is Professor of History and American Ethnic Studies at Wake Forest University. His scholarly focus areas are African America, colonial America, and the history of sexuality. His current research includes the transformation of Virginia slave society, a history of slave rebellion, and African American service during the American Revolution. He serves on the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts Advisory Board, where he is assisting in the interpretation of rooms where Harriet Jacobs lived. Parent is author of Foul Means: The Formation of a Slave Society in Virginia, 1660-1740 and co-author (with Ronald L. Heinemann, John G. Kolp, and William G. Shade) of Old Dominion New Commonwealth: A History of Virginia, 1607-2007.
Ulrike Wiethaus received her PhD in religious studies from Temple University. She holds a joint appointment in the Department of Religion and American Ethnic Studies and as Director of Religion and Public Engagement in the Department of Religion at Wake Forest University (WFU) as well as the Shively Faculty Fellowship (2010-2012). Her research interests focus on the history of Christian spirituality with an emphasis on gender justice and political history, and, most recently, historic trauma and the long-term impact of U.S. colonialism. Wiethaus has won several awards for her teaching, including the Innovative Teaching Award (with Gillian Overing, WFU 2008), the Presidential Library Grant (with Mary Scanlon, WFU 2008), and the Entrepreneurship and Liberal Arts Award for Local Community Involvement and Outreach (WFU 2007). She has also directed, produced, and co-produced documentaries.