Hello! I am a historian of the early Atlantic world. I also study the history of health and medicine, spatial history, and notions of place in the early modern world. In 2023, I earned my PhD in world history at Northeastern University. Currently, I am an Assistant Professor of History at Butler University, where I am also affiliate faculty with the Interdisciplinary Program in Public Health. I am also a content editor for the Age of Revolutions.
My book project, Constructing Health: Concepts of Well-Being in an Urbanizing Atlantic World, is under contract with University of Virginia Press. The research for this project has been supported by the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, the American Philosophical Society, the South Caroliniana Library, Haverford College Quaker & Special Collections, the Huntington Library and Corpus Christi College at Oxford, the John Carter Brown Library, the American Historical Association, and the Francis Wood Institute at the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.
I also consider myself a digital humanist, particularly one that loves all things mapping and GIS! Feel free to learn more about the myriad projects I have built, contributed to, or managed over on my DH page.
My scholarship been featured in The Washington Post, Philadelphia Weekly, the Age of Revolutions online journal, the American Philosophical Society online exhibitions, Synapsis medical humanities blog, the Women Writers Project Blog, and the NULab Blog. I am also the recipient of the 2020 Outstanding Graduate Student Award in Humanics at Northeastern University.
I’m always excited and open to be a part of conference panels, participate in writing opportunities, and network with other scholars. Please don’t hesitate to reach out!
Feel free to email me at: mnebiolo [@] butler [dot] edu.