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Dr Elsa Devienne

Assistant Professor

Department: Humanities

I joined ϲ in 2019, having previously taught at Princeton University, Université Paris Nanterre, Science Po Paris and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales. My research lies at the intersection of urban history, the environmental humanities, and the history of gender, body, and sexuality, with a focus on the 20th century. I am particularly interested in the history of Americans’ intense engagement with their coastlines, from the 19th-century beach-bathing boom until today’s climate crisis and its catastrophic consequences for coastal communities.

My first book, La ruée vers le sable: une histoire environnementale des plages de Los Angeles (Sorbonne Editions, 2020), won the 2021 Willi Paul Adams Award awarded by the Organization of American Historians for the best book on American history published in a language other than English. A translated and updated version with a new epilogue came out with Oxford University Press in 2024 under the title . I am also the author of several award-winning articles published in academic journals in the US and Europe, including in The Journal of Urban History,The European Journal of American Studies,California History, Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoireandActes de la recherche en sciences sociales.

My research has been supported by grants from the Fulbright Program, the Princeton-Mellon Initiative for Architecture, Urbanism and the Humanities, the British Association of American Studies, the FACE Foundation, the Historical Society of Southern California, the Ahmanson Foundation and the British Academy/Leverhulme Small Grant scheme, among others.

I regularly appear on radio, podcast and tv shows to speak about my research. In 2022, I was featured on Arte's tv-show "Making History" to talk about I also use my expertise to write about topical issues for a general audience. You can find an op-ed (in French) I wrote for éپDzin reaction to the 2020 Australian bushfires, an article on how history can help us save California beaches for Time Magazine (2024) , and my Top 5 beach reads recommendations for The Wall Street Journal (2024).

At Northumbria, I contribute to American studies and history modules, including the first-year core module "From Sea to Shining Sea: US History from 1776 to 2008", the second-year module "Affluence & Anxiety: US history 1920-1960" and the third-year module "Red, White and Green: The American Environment through Time." While teaching at Northumbria, I have reflected on the need to historicize the climate crisis and bring environmental issues to the forefront of the American studies curriculum. I have developed these ideas in a recent essay ("") published in the Journal of American Studiesand a roundtable I edited for.

I have been active in several learned societies. I am a member of the BAAS (British Association of American Studies) executive committee, where I co-lead our sustainability initiative, Green BAAS. I am also currently Regional Representative (France) for the European Society of Environmental History.

Elsa Devienne

My first book, La ruée vers le sable : une histoire environnementale des plages de Los Angeles au XXe siècle (2020), recounts the formidable beach modernization campaign that transformed Los Angeles into one of the world’s greatest coastal metropolises, revealing how the city’s man-made shores served as a central locus for the reinvention of seaside leisure and the triumph of modern bodies. Integrating environmental, cultural, and social history, La ruée vers le sablenot only uncovers how the Los Angeles coastline was constructed, but also how this major planning and engineering project affected the lives of ordinary city-dwellers and their relationship to nature. You can read a review published in Le Monde , and a review in English . A revised and updated English version of the book will come out in 2024 with Oxford University Press under the title

In parallel to my work on American coastlines, I have explored the history of the body, beauty, nudity, and muscularity. I have published several articles on these topics, including “The Life, Death, and Rebirth of Muscle Beach: Reassessing the Muscular Physique in Postwar America, 1940s-1980s” (Southern California Quarterly) which was awarded the by the Historical Society of Southern California.

I am currently developing two new research projects. The first explores the history of anti-plastics activism in the US (and elsewhere) from the 1970s until today, focusing on its role in shaping mainstream environmentalist rhetoric and tactics and its relationships with connected fights, such as climate change, and environmental justice demands. I was recently awarded a British Academy/Leverhulme Small Grant to develop this research.

The second looks at the history of pedestrianism and air pollution in US and UK cities from the perspective of parents and children. I wrote on the history of the school run will give you a taste of what I am trying to achieve with this research. Whether writing on air pollution or plastics, I draw inspiration and determination from my commitment, in my personal life, to global climate action and environmental justice.

  • History PhD
  • History MA


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