Contact Information
309 Gregory Hall 416 M/C466
810 S Wright
Urbana, IL 61801
Research Areas
Biography
Tamara Chaplin is Professor of Modern European History and Lynn M. Martin Professorial Scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. A historian of contemporary France with specializations in gender and sexuality, media history, and queer theory, Chaplin is affiliated with the Departments of Gender and Women’s Studies, French and Italian, Global Studies, the European Union Center, the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory and the initiative on Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies. Her recent book, Becoming Lesbian: A Queer History of Modern France (University of Chicago Press, 2024), a landmark analysis of how a marginalized subculture used the modern media to transform public attitudes toward sexual desire, was completed with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Camargo Foundation, and UIUC’s Center for Advanced Study. Chaplin's first monograph Turning On the Mind: French Philosophers on Television (University of Chicago Press, 2007) examined the relationship between TV, high culture, and French national identity. Her scholarship has appeared in the Journal of the History of Sexuality, French Historical Studies, the Journal of the History of Ideas, and in edited collections in French and English on youth sexuality, May ’68, Michel Foucault, and second wave feminism. A governing member of the Western Society for French History and past board member of the American Historical Association’s Committee on LGBT History, Chaplin also serves on the Comité Scientifique for the Société Pour l’Histoire des Médias (Paris, France). She published a co-edited volume (with Jadwiga E. Pieper- Mooney), The Global Sixties: Conventions, Contests, and Countercultures (Routledge Press, 2017).
Recipient of the highest teaching awards delivered at the University of Illinois—both the Provost's Campus Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching and the LAS Dean's Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching—Dr. Chaplin teaches survey and special topics courses at the graduate and undergraduate levels on modern Europe, France, sexuality, human rights, history and social theory, World War I, media and popular culture. A former professional ballet dancer, trained actor and member of the Screen Actor’s Guild, Dr. Chaplin received her doctorate in Modern European History from Rutgers University and her BA from Concordia University (Montreal).
Research Interests
histories of gender and sexuality
media history
queer theory
World War I
human rights
theories of social justice
histories of entertainment and the performing arts
Education
Ph.D. Rutgers University, 2002
BA Concordia University, Montreal, 1995
Courses Taught
Modern France
Western Civilization 1660 to the Present
World War I and the Global Twentieth Century
History of Human Rights
Sexuality in Modern Europe
Global Queer Sexualities
History and Social Theory
Popular Culture and Mass Media
Additional Campus Affiliations
Professor, History
Professor, French and Italian
Professor, Gender and Women's Studies
Professor, Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory
Professor, Center for Global Studies
Highlighted Publications
Chaplin, T. E. (2007). Turning on the Mind: French Philosophers on Television. University of Chicago Press.
Recent Publications
Chaplin, T. (2023). QUEERING FRANCE SINCE THE BELLE ÉPOQUE: Between Emancipation and Repression. In The Routledge Handbook of French History (pp. 503-513). Taylor and Francis. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780367808471-47
Chaplin, T. (2021). "Woman Dressed like a Man": Gender trouble at the sapphic cabaret, Paris, 1930-1960. French Historical Studies, 44(4), 711-748. https://doi.org/10.1215/00161071-9248727
Chaplin, T. (2019). Utopian Gaiety: French Lesbian Activism and the Politics of Pleasure (1974–2016). In M. Atack, A. S. Fell, D. Holmes, & I. Long (Eds.), Making Waves: French Feminisms and their Legacies 1975-2015 (pp. 115-128). (Contemporary French and Francophone Cultures). Liverpool University Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvt9k6bg.14
Chaplin, T. E. (2018). ‘A Woman Dressed Like a Man’: Female Masculinity at the Sapphic Cabaret, Paris, 1930-1960. H-France Salon, 10(20).
Chaplin, T. E., & Pieper Mooney, J. E. (2017). Introduction: The global 1960s: Convention, contest, and counterculture. In T. Chaplin, & J. E. Pieper Mooney (Eds.), The Global 1960s: Convention, Contest and Counterculture (pp. 1-12). (Decades in Global History). Taylor and Francis. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315200828-1