Nathan Orgill

TOP CLAW RECIPIENT
Dr. Nathan N. Orgill
Professor of History, Interim Associate Dean
Biography
Dr. Nathan N. Orgill completed a BA and MA in history at Fresno State, as well as a Ph.D. in history at Duke University. At Duke, his research focused on German public-relations policy in the late Kaiserreich and European international history before World War I. He taught history, Latin and humanities in Central California before joining the faculty at GGC in 2009 as assistant professor of history. He was subsequently promoted to associate professor of history in 2015 and to professor of history in 2021. He聽served as the Chair of Faculty for the history program from 2018 to 2022. In 2022, he was promoted to History and Geography Department Chair.
He regularly teaches survey courses in European, world and American history, as well as upper-level courses for history majors 鈥 including "Revolutionary Europe" (HIST 3335), "Modern Germany" (HIST 3340), and "World War II" (HIST 4388). Orgill has recently introduced role-playing games in all his courses, using 鈥淩eacting to the Past鈥 pedagogy to deepen student learning.
Education
- Doctorate 鈥 history 鈥 Duke University
- Master's 鈥 history 鈥 Fresno State
- Bachelor's 鈥 history 鈥 Fresno State
Academic Interests
- European international military history (1815-present)
- Modern Europe (esp. Central Europe and Germany)
- The World Wars
- Journalism history
Publications
Selected Publications
- Rumors of the Great War: The British Press and Anglo-German Relations during the July Crisis. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books/Rowman and Littlefield, 2019.
- 鈥淩eawakening the Nation: British Journalists and the Interwar Debate on the Origins of the First World War.鈥 In Bingham, Adrian, ed. Writing the First World War after 1918. London: Routledge, 2018.
- 鈥淏elgian Crisis of 1831,鈥 鈥淏ismarck, Otto von,鈥 鈥淐ongress of Vienna,鈥 鈥淩usso-Japanese War,鈥 and 鈥淪plendid Isolation.鈥 In Martel, Gordon, ed. The Encyclopedia of Diplomacy. 4 Vols. Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, 2018.
- 鈥溾楧ifferent Points of View鈥: The Daily Telegraph Affair as a Transnational Media Event,鈥 The Historian 78, no. 2 (2016): 213-257.
- 鈥淩eawakening the Nation: British Journalists and the Interwar Debate on the Origins of the First World War.鈥 Journalism Studies 17, no. 4 (2016): 517-531.
- 鈥淏etween Coercion and Conciliation: Franco-German Relations in the Bismarck Era.鈥 In Germond, Carine, and Henning T眉rk, eds. A History of Franco-German Relations in Europe: From Hereditary Enemies to Partners. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008, 49-59.
Professional Service
- Program Committee, European History Section, Southern Historical Association (2019-2022)
- Book Reviews Editor, H-German (2014-2017)
Distinctions
- VPASA Research Leave, 色库TV (2017)
- Travel Grant, 4th Annual College and University Educators Workshop, Council on Foreign Relations, New York (2015)
- VPASA Research Seed Fund Award, 色库TV (2014 & 2010)
- Jack and Anita Hess Fellow, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (2013)
- Russell F. Weigley Award for the Most Promising Paper in Military History, Barnes Club Conference, Temple University (2005)
- Fellowship to attend the third annual Vienna Circle Conference on Scientific World Conceptions, University of Vienna (2002)
- University-wide Outstanding Master鈥檚 Thesis Award, Fresno State (2002)