Daniel A. Nathan

Like my grandfather and father, I was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and raised as an Orioles fan. Unlike them, however, I grew up in Flint, Michigan, of Roger & Me fame. I attended where I was a double History and English major, and spent part of my junior year studying in London. I earned my M.A. and Ph.D. in American Studies from the . After teaching at Miami University in Ohio, for four years, I was the Fulbright Professor of North American Studies at the University of Tampere in Finland.
I have eclectic, wide-ranging interests. All of my courses and most of my writing
                                 projects are interdisciplinary and most engage the politics of cultural representation,
                                 popular culture, and history. One of my primary areas of interest is American sport.
                                 My book  (2003) engages all of these subjects. I have also written essays and book, film,
                                 and exhibition reviews for Aethlon: The Journal of Sport Literature, American Quarterly, American Studies, The
                                    International Journal of the History of Sport, Journal of American Studies, Journal
                                    of Sport History, and the OAH Magazine of History. In addition, I have collaborated with two former ΞΆΓάΘ¦ students, Peter Berg and
                                 Erin Klemyk, on an essay titled "'The Truth Wrapped in a Package of Lies': Hollywood,
                                 History, and Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York" published in  (2007). I have also contributed chapters to numerous anthologies, including  (2008),  (2008), and  (2014). I have edited  (2013) and  (2016), and co-edited with anthropologist George Gmelch  (2017). 
My writing complements my teaching, as both stress interdisciplinarity and the multiple
                                 ways that we can know the past. I have taught classes on the 1950s, how Hollywood
                                 filmmakers have represented the American past, popular culture as public history,
                                 sport and American culture, American autobiography, E.L. Doctorow's America, global
                                 perspectives of the United States, and the HBO series The Wire. 
Active in the North American Society for Sport History (NASSH), I was the organization’s
                                 President (2013-2015). I have also served as the Film, Media, and Museum Reviews editor
                                 for the  and am on several editorial boards. Here at ΞΆΓάΘ¦, I have Chaired the Department
                                 of American Studies, the Committee on Educational Policies and Planning (CEPP), the
                                 Appointments and Tenure Committee (ATC), and the Athletic Council. 
In 2019, I was awarded the Douglas Family Chair in American Culture, History, and Literary and Interdisciplinary Studies.