Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center for International Security and Cooperation Stanford University


People


Photo of Priya Satia
Magnify

Priya Satia, PhD   Download vCard
Assistant Professor of History; Europe Center Research Affiliate

History Department
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-2024

psatia@stanford.edu
(650) 723-9534 (voice)


Research Interests
Modern British cultural and political history, colonialism and imperialism, the experience and practice of war, technology and culture, human rights and humanitarianism, the state and institutions of government, arms trade, political economy of empire, environmental history.


Priya Satia's research interests span modern British cultural and political history, colonialism and imperialism, the experience and practice of war, technology and culture, human rights and humanitarianism, the state and institutions of government, arms trade, political economy of empire, and environmental history.

Satia was raised in Los Gatos, California and educated at Stanford, the London School of Economics, and the University of California, Berkeley where she earned her Ph.D. in 2004.  She is currently Assistant Professor of History at Stanford where she teaches courses on modern Britain and the British Empire. Her first book, Spies in Arabia: The Great War and the Cultural Foundations of the Britain's Covert Empire in the Middle East (OUP, 2008), won several major prizes, including the prestigious Herbert Baxter Adams Prize of the American Historical Association. Her work can also be found in the American Historical Review, Past and Present, Technology and Culture, and elsewhere. Currently, Satia is researching the manufacture, trade, and use of small arms in the British empire for her book project, Guns: The True History of the British Empire.


|

News around the web

Air campaign set unethical precedent in Iraq, prof says
Associate Professor of History Priya Satia B.A., B.S. ‘95 delivered a talk entitled “The Defense of Inhumanity: Air Control and the British Idea of Arabia” Thursday at Annenberg Auditorium. The talk was part of the Ethics and War Series sponsored by the Bowen H. McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society.
February 10, 2012 in The Stanford Daily

Stanford experts: how 9/11 has changed the world
Never-ending war? A new "greatest generation?" A professor whose 3-year-old son is on the government's watchlist? Six Stanford experts talk about the world since that terrible day a decade ago.
August 31, 2011 in Stanford University News