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Associated Faculty: Jess Whatcott
Email: [email protected] | Pronouns: They/Them/Theirs
Dr. Jess Whatcott (they/them/theirs) studies and teaches about formations of gender,
sexuality, disability, and race in United States history. They teach courses at SDSU
on U.S. history, body politics, and political economy. Currently, Dr. Whatcott research
focuses on California’s late nineteenth and early twentieth century eugenics policies,
especially institutionalization in state homes for the feeble-minded, state hospitals,
and youth reformatories. They also connect this history to current practices in state
prisons and other places of detention. Dr. Whatcott’s work has appeared or will soon
appear in Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and Society, NOTCHES: (re)marks on
the history of sexuality, The Activist History Review, and the Routledge Handbook
of Disability and Sexuality. Dr. Whatcott’s research, teaching, and community practice
are rooted in commitments to prison abolition, transformative justice, disability
justice, and ending sexualized violence. Professor Whatcott is also a self-identified
speculative fiction nerd.