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Jessica Kross
Associate Professor of History
Office: 237 Gambrell Hall
(803) 777-5928
Jessica-Kross@sc.edu
Education:
B.A. Brandeis University (1965)
Ph.D. University of Michigan (1974)
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Teaches Anglo-America, Atlantic World of 16th-18thc, with special interests in social
and cultural history, religion, gender, and leisure.
Professor Kross teaches the US history survey course, Colonial America, Everyday Life
in Colonial America, and graduate courses including Religion and Gender in Anglo-America.
Her publications include: The Evolution of An American Town:
Newtown, New York, 1642-1775, the edited volume American Eras:
The Colonial Era, 1600-1754, and “Mansions, Men, Women and the
Creation of Multiple Publics in Eighteenth-Century British North America,”
Journal of Social History 33(1999), 385-408.
Current Activities:
My current manuscript project is Calvin's Children: Anxiety, Prescriptive Moralism,
Religion, and Spirituality in Anglo-America. In this work I explore the gap between
religion and spirituality in the 17th and 18th centuries. My next project will look
at the relationship among the Reformation, commoditization of time, and gender in
Anglo-America. I am asking who has time, who controls time, and what are the gendered
cultural expectations and realities surrounding the buying and selling of time.
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