Cynthia Marasigan
Associate Professor and Undergraduate Director
Department of Asian and Asian American Studies
Background
Cynthia Marasigan is a historian whose research and teaching interests include United States history from the mid-19th century to the present, with particular engagement in U.S. Empire studies, comparative and relational studies of race, U.S.-Philippine and Filipino American history, and Afro-Asian histories.
Her current book manuscript, Empire’s Color Lines: How African American Soldiers and Filipino Revolutionaries Transformed Amigo Warfare (forthcoming, Duke University Press), explores intersections of U.S. imperialism, Jim Crow, and colonial resistance by analyzing a range of interactions between Black soldiers and Filipinos during the Philippine-American War and its aftermath.
Select Publications
- “The Persistence of War through Migration,” in Filipinx American Studies: Reckoning, Reclamation, Transformation, eds. Rick Bonus and Antonio T. Tiongson, Jr. (New York: Fordham University Press, 2022), 67-82.
- “Race, Performance, and Colonial Governance: The Philippine Constabulary Band Plays the St. Louis World’s Fair.” Journal of Asian and Asian American Studies 22.3 (October 2019): 349-385.
Education
- PhD, History, University of Michigan
- MA, Historical Studies and Political Science, New School for Social Research
- BA, History, Binghamton University
Research Interests
- U.S. empire
- Comparative and relational studies of race
- Philippine and Filipino American history
- Afro-Asian histories
Teaching Interests
- Asian American history
- U.S. empire, race and citizenship
- Philippine and Filipino American history
- Afro-Asian histories
- Mixed race families
Awards
- Ford Foundation Postdoctoral and Dissertation Fellowships
- Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Fellowship, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- J. William Fulbright Grant, Philippines
- George C. Marshall/Baruch Fellowship
- Foreign Language Area Studies Fellowship