ESP Biography



ALEXANDRA STERN, PhD Candidate, Department of History




Major: History

College/Employer: Stanford

Year of Graduation: 2018

Picture of Alexandra Stern

Brief Biographical Sketch:

Originally from Louisville, KY, I'm a PhD candidate in Stanford's History Department. I study 19th century America, with a particular focus on the Civil War and Reconstruction periods and Native American history. I earned my BA with honors from the University of Pennsylvania in 2013, where I focused on the history of the American South. I am also a trained writing tutor and instructor and have worked at Stanford's Hume Center for Writing and Speaking for over 4 years.



Past Classes

  (Clicking a class title will bring you to the course's section of the corresponding course catalog)

H5778: In the Devil's Snare: Solving the Mystery of the Salem Witch Trials in Splash Spring 2017 (Apr. 22 - 23, 2017)
Witch hunting was hardly an unusual practice in early modern Europe. However, the long history of the practice cannot adequately explain America's Salem witch trials of the 1690s, in which over 200 people were accused of witchcraft. Exploring the history of Puritan life and belief in colonial America and using primary source evidence from the trials, we will seek to determine and understand the origins of the mass hysteria that produced one of the most infamous and bloody witch hunts in American history.


H5786: Playing Indian and the Creation of American Identity in Splash Spring 2017 (Apr. 22 - 23, 2017)
What does it mean to “play Indian”? How have Euro-Americans imagined their Native American neighbors since the colonial period and how have these imaginings helped construct America’s national identity? Seeking to address these questions through specific historical cases and open discussion, this course will allow students to explore the influence of Native American life and tradition on American identity, as well as consider the paradox of the simultaneous construction and destruction of Native people in American life inherent in the process.


H5369: In the Devil's Snare: Explaining the Salem Witch Trials in Splash Fall 2016 (Dec. 03 - 04, 2016)
Witch hunting was hardly an unusual practice in early modern Europe. However, the long history of the practice cannot adequately explain the Salem witch trials of the 1690s, in which over 200 people were accused of witchcraft. Exploring the history of Puritan life and belief in colonial America and using primary source evidence from the trials, we will seek to determine and understand the origins of the mass hysteria that produced one of the most infamous and bloody witch hunts in American history.


H5370: Hallowed by No Traditions, Hampered by None: The Story of Stanford's Founding in Splash Fall 2016 (Dec. 03 - 04, 2016)
This course offers students the opportunity to gain a better understanding of the campus by offering a brief history of Stanford's founders, particularly paying attention the university's place in Gilded Age America. Plenty of intrigue for all as topics will include the unexpected loss of the Stanfords' only son, the Stanfords' engagement with spiritualism, the founding vision of Stanford's mission, and the murder of Mrs. Jane Stanford in 1905. You won't be able to look at the campus the same way again.


S4890: The American Civil War in Splash Spring 2016 (Apr. 09 - 10, 2016)
Few events in American history match the significance of the Civil War, a conflict that freed 4 million people held in bondage and left 750,000 men dead. Seeking to understand why the Civil War is so important to our history and why Americans seem to love their civil war, this seminar will explore the war from a range of perspectives, including those of Union and Confederate soldiers, African Americans, women, and Native Americans. Based on the documents these different groups left behind, as well as the histories they inspired, we will seek, as historians, to understand how the Civil War was experienced and commemorated.


S4894: In the Devil's Snare: The History of the Salem Witch Trials in Splash Spring 2016 (Apr. 09 - 10, 2016)
Witch hunting was hardly an unusual practice in early modern Europe. However, the long history of the practice cannot adequately explain the Salem witch trials of the 1690s, in which over 200 people were accused of witchcraft. Exploring the history of Puritan life and belief in colonial America and using primary source evidence from the trials, we will seek to determine and understand the origins of the mass hysteria that produced one of the most infamous and bloody witch hunts in American history.


S4012: Picking Favorites: America's Greatest Presidents in Splash Fall 2014 (Nov. 08 - 09, 2014)
What makes a great POTUS? Can we ever definitively rank our 44 presidents? Maybe not, but we certainly will try. Come and discuss your favorite presidents and why you think so as we try to determine what qualities and abilities make great or terrible American heads of state.


S4013: Inhuman Bondage: A History of Slavery in the United States in Splash Fall 2014 (Nov. 08 - 09, 2014)
An exploration of violence, power, resistance, and the labor that helped build American capitalism, this course will trace the changing nature of slavery in America from its 17th century roots to the Civil War and emancipation. The relationship between slavery and race, as well as the diversity of human experiences in bondage, will receive particular attention.