Dr. Lindsay Stallones Marshall
- About
- Education
- Research
Biography
Dr. Marshall is an Assistant Professor of History and affiliated faculty with Native American Studies. She earned her PhD in History at the University of Oklahoma and MA in Liberal Arts from Stanford University. Before coming to higher education, Dr. Marshall spent eleven years teaching high school history/social science in California.
Current Courses
104.001History Of Native Americans
310.001Native American History
245.001The Native Nineteenth Century
104.001History Of Native Americans
Teaching Interests & Areas
Native American history
History of the North American West
Public memory
History of education
Animal studies
Research Interests & Areas
Dr. Marshall's main research focus is settler colonial memory construction of Native American history through U.S. history education. Her book manuscript Teaching Us to Forget: The Wars of Westward Expansion, U.S. History Education, & Public Memory, 1870 - 1995 explores the construction of memory about the wars the U.S. waged against Native Nations in the late nineteenth century. It interrogates the fundamental narrative framing of U.S. history as taught in schools and examines the ongoing and destructive memory work anti-Indigenous textbook narratives perform through secondary history education.
Dr. Marshall also researches historical horse-human relationships with an emphasis on interdisciplinary and decolonial methodologies. Drawing from archival sources, environmental history, ethology, Indigenous sources, and practical research in various traditions of equitation, she investigates events in the history of the U.S. West through a horse-centered lens of analysis.