Hilary Iris Lowe

My blogs

About me

Location Philadelphia--Temple University, Pennsylvania
Introduction Hilary Iris Lowe is the Director of Temple University’s Center for Public History and an assistant professor in the History Department. She teaches courses in U.S. cultural history, public history, and American studies. Her current research seeks to understand how humans have used historic places and literary objects to connect with literature and the past. She holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Kansas. Her first book, Mark Twain’s Homes and Literary Tourism, was published in 2012 and is part of the Mark Twain and his Circle Series at the University of Missouri Press. She and Jennifer Harris edited the collection From Page to Place: American Literary Tourism and the Afterlives of Authors (2017). She is currently working on two long-term research studies, the administrative history of the John F. Kennedy National Historic Site and a monograph, Open House: House Museums, Gender, Sexuality, and Politics of Memory, which is in early stages. She fascinated by EVERY house museum and would love to visit all 15,000 in the U.S. She has been teaching at Temple since 2012.