JAIMIE D. CRUMLEY portrait
  • Assistant Professor, Gender Studies
801-581-8094

Publications

  • Jaimie D. Crumley (2024). “The Black Queer Theological Tradition of Abolition: Zilpha Elaw’s Nineteenth-Century Ministry of Spectacle,” . University of Alabama Press. Published, 01/01/2024.
  • Jaimie D. Crumley (2023). “A Womanist Dancing Mind in Wilderness Archives". Black Perspectives: The Blog of the African American Intellectual History Society. Published, 11/16/2023.
  • Jaimie D. Crumley (2023). “Where African and Indigenous Stories Meet the Story of the Old North Church, 1723-1812". Anglican and Episcopal History. Published, 09/04/2023.
  • Jaimie D. Crumley (2023). “Applying Migration Studies to the History of Black Fugitivity in the Antebellum Urban South". Black Perspectives: The Blog of the African American Intellectual History Society. Published, 03/23/2023.
  • Jaimie D. Crumley (2022). “Puritans Behaving Badly: Gender, Punishment, and Religion in Early America by Monica D. Fitzgerald” . Reading Religion. Published, 05/20/2022.

Research Statement

Dr. Jaimie D. Crumley is an Assistant Professor in the Gender Studies and Ethnic Studies Divisions with the School for Cultural & Social Transformation at the University of Utah. She is the former Research Fellow at Old North Illuminated, the secular non-profit organization that preserves and interprets the history of the Old North Church, the oldest extant church building in Boston, Massachusetts. Dr. Crumley's research and teaching focus on the history of race, gender, and religion in the United States. She is currently at work on her book manuscript, We Will Live: Black Christian Feminists in the Age of Revolutions. We Will Live is about the contributions that women of African descent in New England made to abolitionist politics and New England Protestantism between 1770 and 1870. 

 

Research Keywords

  • Womanist Theory
  • Public History
  • History of Slavery
  • History of Abolition
  • Black Women's History
  • Black Feminisms
  • Archival Theory
  • American Religious History
  • African American History
  • Abolitionist Feminisms