Elaine Marie Nelson


Elaine Nelson
  • Assistant Professor, History
  • Executive Director, Western History Association
  • Spring 2024 office hours: Mondays and Wednesdays, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

Contact Info


Biography

Elaine Nelson specializes in the North American West. She arrived at KU in 2020. 

Education

Ph.D. in American Western History, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM
M.A. in History, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE
B.A. in English and History Education, University of Nebraska at Kearney, Kearney, NE

Research

Nelson’s research on the North American West appears in academic journals, various anthologies and public exhibits. Her first book manuscript examines the history of memory, monuments and tourism. She has presented at several professional conferences and received fellowships and grants from numerous institutions and organizations.

Teaching

Nelson teaches courses focused on the Great Plains, North American West, women and gender, and U.S. history in general.

Selected Publications

"Mni Luzahan and ‘our beautiful city’: Indigenous Resistance in Rapid City and the Black Hills up to 1937,” in Cathleen Cahill and Andrew Needham, Eds., Indian Cities: Histories of Indigenous Urbanism, University of Oklahoma Press (Winter 2022)

“‘No where to be found’: Myth-Mapping, Empire, and Resistance in the Black Hills Country, 1800-1860,” South Dakota History (Summer 2021)

Women in Omaha: An Exhibit Catalog of a Biographical Sketch of Persistence Through History, 2019

“Draft by Draft: The Battle of Sandoz and Her Big Horn Manuscript,” Great Plains Quarterly (Spring 2019)

“The Legacy of Black Hills Tourism and Native American Performers,” in Matthew J. Hill, ed., Reinterpreting Mount Rushmore’s Heritage: Native Engagements with a National Memorial in the Context of the Black Hills (Cooperative Agreement #P14AC00888, Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Park Service and The University of Massachusetts Amherst, 2019)

“Cultural Survival and the Omaha Way: Eunice Woodhull Stabler’s Legacy of Preservation on the Twentieth-Century Plains,” Great Plains Quarterly (Summer 2009)

Exhibitions

Co-curator, “Women in Omaha: A Biographical Sketch of Persistence through History,” The Durham Museum, Omaha, Nebraska, February 3-July 29, 2018. Awarded the Alice Smith Public History Prize, Midwestern History Association, May 24, 2019.

This collaborative teaching and public engagement project featured the stories of women from diverse backgrounds and highlighted their experiences as advocates, leaders, and professional. Read more about the exhibit here and here.