Duane Corpis
      
          
            Associate Professor of History, NYU Shanghai; Global Network Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts and Science, NYU
          
          
  Email
              duane.corpis@nyu.edu
          Room
              W810
          Duane Corpis is an Associate Professor of History at NYU Shanghai. He is also a Global Network Associate Professor in the Faculty of Arts and Science at NYU. Prior to joining NYU Shanghai, he was an Assistant Professor at Cornell University. He holds a PhD from NYU.
Professor Corpis is recipient of the 2013-2014 Smith Book Award from the Southern Historical Association and the 2013 Hans Rosenberg Article Prize from the Central European History Society. He has been an NEH Humanities Summer Scholar, a Senior Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Central European University, and a Herzog Ernst Fellow at the Gotha Research Center and Library. He also serves on the Editorial Collective of the journal Radical History Review.
Selected Publications
- Crossing the Boundaries of Belief: Geographies of Religious Conversion in Southern Germany, 1648-1800. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, 2014.
 - “Christianity in the Atlantic World.” In The Princeton Companion to Atlantic History, edited by Joseph C. Miller. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2014.
 - “Marian Pilgrimage and the Performance of Male Privilege in Eighteenth-Century Augsburg.” Central European History 45 (September 2012): 375-406.
 - “Paths of Salvation and Boundaries of Belief: Spatial Discourse and the Meanings of Conversion in Early Modern Germany.” In Conversion and the Politics of Religion in Early Modern Germany, edited by David M. Luebke, et al., 14-31. New York: Berghahn Books, 2012.
 
Education
- PhD, Early Modern European History
New York University 
Research Interests
              - European History, 1450-1850
 - Social, Cultural, and Religious History
 - Atlantic World History and Global History
 
Courses Taught
              - Global Perspectives on Society
 - Histories and Politics of Noise
 - Humanities Honors Independent Study
 - Independent Study I - Humanities
 - Social Foundations III
 - Witches, Magic and the Witch Hunts in the Atlantic World, 1400-1700
 - World History: Part II
 
      