Contact Information
Office Hours
Research Interests
The social and cultural history of early modern Britain
Empire, race, and nation in Britain
Britain in the global eighteenth-century
Early modern Jewish history
The Jewish Atlantic world; the history of crime
The history of emotion
Women and gender in early modern Europe
Anglo-American legal history
Research Description
Dana Rabin specializes in the history of eighteenth-century Britain with anemphasis on crime, law, gender, and race. Her first book, Identity, Crimeand Legal Responsibility in Eighteenth-Century England (Palgrave, 2004), examined the language of mental statesin the English courtroom. Her recent book Britain and its InternalOutsiders 1750-1800: Under Rule of Law (Manchester University Press, 2017)analyzes the intersection of metropole and colony through a study of legal eventsinvolving criminal trials, law suits, legislation, and riot that unfolded inLondon in the second half of the eighteenth century. Featuring six case studies-- the Jewish Naturalization Act, the Elizabeth Canning kidnapping case(1753-1754); the Somerset Case (1771-72); the Gordon Riots (1780); the Spitheadand Nore mutinies of 1797; and the Act of Union with Ireland in 1800 -- thebook uses legal events as a prism through which to examine the complexitieswrought by empire and how the law created, delineated, maintained, and managedcategories of difference.
Rabin's current project, "Jews, Suffrage, and the Color Line in theBritish Empire, 1740-1858," examines Jewish civil rights throughout theBritish Empire between passage of the Naturalization Act (or Plantation Act) in1740 and "Jewish Emancipation" 1858 when Jews received the right tovote in Britain. This multi-sited project takes note of the Empire's metropoleand its colonial spaces, plantation societies and settler colonies, to studyhow definitions of race and religion shaped the lives of Jews and definitionsof Jewishness and whiteness.
Education
Ph.D. University of Michigan 1996
Additional Campus Affiliations
Professor, Program in Jewish Culture and Society
Professor, European Union Center
Professor, Center for Global Studies
Honors & Awards
Lynn M. Martin Professorial Scholar, 2018-2021
George S. and Gladys W. Queen Excellence in Teaching Award
Recent Publications
Rabin, D. Y. (2022). Slavery, Law, and Race in England and its New World Empire. Law and History Review, 40(3), 581-590. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248022000347
Rabin, D. (2021). Arguments: Reputation and Character in Eighteenth-Century Trials. In R. Probert (Ed.), A Cultural History of Law in the Age of Enlightenment (pp. 89-105). (The Cultural Histories Series). Bloomsbury Academic. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781474206587.ch-006
Rabin, D. (2018). ‘It Will Be Expected by You All, to Hear Something from Me’. In D. Lemmings, & A. N. May (Eds.), Criminal Justice During the Long Eighteenth Century: Theatre, Representation and Emotion (pp. 21-40). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429399220-2
Rabin, D. (2018). London: Emerging global city of empire (1660-1851). In A. MacKinnon, & E. M. MacKinnon (Eds.), Places of Encounter: Time, Place, and Connectivity in World History: Volume II (pp. 51-68). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429493317
Rabin, D. (2017). Britain and its internal others, 1750–1800: Under rule of law. (Studies in Imperialism). Manchester University Press. https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526120410