Gregory Joel Hitch (He/Him)


Photo of Gregory Hitch
Phone
920-832-6689
Campus Address
Main Hall
Room 313
Ethnic Studies
Title
Jill Beck NEH Postdoctoral Fellow in the Humanities
About

Gregory Hitch is an interdisciplinary scholar working at the intersection of Indigenous studies, environmental history, and science and technology studies. As a community-engaged scholar, Greg's research focuses on working with Indigenous communities fighting for environmental justice and sovereignty, in addition to the environmental history of settler colonialism in the United States.  

His most recent research with the Menominee Nation explores Menominee survival, adaptation, and resurgence through their struggles against the American settler colonial state from colonization to climate change. Employing reciprocal research methods, Greg volunteered with the Menominee community to halt unsafe mineral extraction in Menominee waterways and find alternatives to extractive capitalism grounded in food and energy sovereignty, working with nonprofits to build out solar energy and small-scale organic agriculture. 

His most recent writing titled, "A Forest of Energy: Settler Colonialism, Knowledge Production, and Sugar Maple Kinship in the Menominee Community” will be co-published with Marcus Grignon in the June 2023 issue of American Quarterly

At Lawrence, Greg teaches courses in Native American studies, history, and environmental justice, with a special focus on contributing to anti-racism and anti-colonialism on campus. 

You can learn more about Greg's work at https://gregoryhitch.com/ 

Education
Gregory earned a BA in History, Environmental Studies, and American Indian Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and a MA and PhD in American Studies from Brown University.
Years at Lawrence
2022-present