Writing

Books:

Spiritual Criminals: How the Camden 28 Put the Vietnam War on Trial University of Chicago Press, 2024

In Spiritual Criminals, Michelle M. Nickerson shares a complex portrait of the Camden 28, a passionate group of grassroots religious progressives who resisted both their church and their government as they crusaded against the Vietnam War. Founded by priests, nuns, and devout lay Catholics, members of this coalition accepted the risks of felony convictions as the cost of challenging the nation’s military-industrial complex and exposing the illegal counterintelligence operations of the FBI. By peeling away the layers of political history, theological traditions, and the Camden 28’s personal stories, Nickerson reveals an often-unseen spiritual side of the anti-war movement. At the same time, she probes the fractures within the group, detailing important conflicts over ideology, race, sex, and gender that resonate in the church and on the political Left today.

 

 

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Mothers of Conservatism: Women and the Postwar Right Princeton University Press, 2012

Mothers of Conservatism tells the story of 1950s Southern Californian housewives who shaped the grassroots right in the two decades following World War II. Michelle Nickerson describes how red-hunting homemakers mobilized activist networks, institutions, and political consciousness in local education battles, and she introduces a generation of women who developed political styles and practices around their domestic routines. From the conservative movement’s origins in the early fifties through the presidential election of 1964, Nickerson documents how women shaped conservatism from the bottom up, out of the fabric of their daily lives and into the agenda of the Republican Party.

A unique history of the American conservative movement, Mothers of Conservatism shows how housewives got out of the house and discovered their political capital.

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Sunbelt Rising: The Politics of Space, Place, and Region  University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011

Coined by Republican strategist Kevin Phillips in 1969 to describe the new alloy of conservatism that united voters across the southern rim of the country, the term “Sunbelt” has since gained currency in the American lexicon. By the early 1970s, the region had come to embody economic growth and an ambitious political culture. With sprawling suburban landscapes, cities like Atlanta, Dallas, and Los Angeles seemed destined to sap influence from the Northeast. Corporate entrepreneurialism and a conservative ethos helped forge the Sunbelt’s industrial-labor relations, military spending, education systems, and neighborhood development. Unprecedented migration to the region ensured that these developments worked in concert with sojourners’ personal quests for work, family, community, and leisure. In the resplendent Sunbelt the nation seemed to glimpse the American Dream remade.

The essays in Sunbelt Rising deploy new analytic tools to explain this region’s dramatic rise. Contributors to the volume study the Sunbelt as both a physical entity and a cultural invention. They examine the raised highway, the sprawling prison complex, and the fast-food restaurant as distinctive material contours of a region. In this same vein they delineate distinctive Sunbelt models of corporate and government organization, which came to shape so many aspects of the nation’s political and economic future. Contributors also examine literature, religion, and civic engagement to illustrate how a particular Sunbelt cultural sensibility arose that ordered people’s lives in a period of tumultuous change. By exploring the interplay between the Sunbelt as a structurally defined space and a culturally imagined place, Sunbelt Risingaddresses longstanding debates about region as a category of analysis.

Reviews: Mothers of Conservatism

Journal of American Political Thought, Fall 2013, by Daniel Horowitz.

History News Network, Summer 2012, by Emily Suzanne Johnson

Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, 2015, by Melissa Deckman

American Historical Review, 2013, by Sylvie Murray

Pacific Historical Review, 2013, by Glenna Mathews

Zeitschrift für Pädagogik, 2013, by Michael Geiss

Recensio.net, 2013, by Anke Ortlepp

Society for U.S. Intellectual History, 2015, by Kristen Shedd

Western Historical Review, 2013, by Simon Hall

Reviews: Sunbelt Rising

Journal of American History, 2011, by David Goldfield

Pacific Historical Review, 2013, by Brooks Flippen

Journal of Economic History, 2012, by Carol Heim

Journal of Southern History, 2012, by Sean Cunningham

Selected Articles & Essays:

Aggiornamente from Left to Right: Catholic Women in American Politics, 1965-1975,” French Review of American Studies (158:1), Spring 2019

“Catholic Social Teaching in their Own Words: Oral Histories of College Students Learning CST,” co-authored with Harry Dammer at the University of Scranton, Journal of Catholic Higher Education (37:1), Winter 2018

“Women, Gender, and Conservatism in Twentieth Century America,” in The Oxford Handbook of American Women’s and Gender History, (Oxford University Press, 2018)

Politically Desperate Housewives in Southern California

Beyond Smog, Sprawl, and Asphalt: Developments in the Not So New Suburban History