
Gail Dubrow
University of Minnesota · History
Active 1984–2025
About
Gail Dubrow is a Professor at the College of Design at the University of Minnesota. Her research focuses on US urban history, US women’s history, Asian American history, public history, and historic preservation. She is recognized for her contributions to understanding the historical development of urban spaces and the role of women and Asian Americans within these contexts, emphasizing the importance of public history and preservation efforts.
Research topics
- Sociology
- History
- Political science
- Gender studies
- Geography
Selected publications
Women in Historic Preservation
2025-01-01
otherSenior authorChange Over Time · 2024-03-01
article1st authorCorrespondingConserving Asian American Heritage
Change Over Time · 2024-03-01
article1st authorCorrespondingBuildings & Landscapes Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum · 2024-09-01
article1st authorCorrespondingFeminist and Multicultural Perspectives on Preservation Planning
2023-04-28
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingChapter 1 Invisibility and Representation: An Introduction to LGBTQ Historic Preservation
Berghahn Books · 2022-09-27
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingChapter 3 Taking Action: An Overview of LGBTQ Preservation Initiatives
Berghahn Books · 2022-09-27
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingPracticing Architecture under the Bamboo Ceiling
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians · 2021-09-01 · 1 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingIwahiko Tsumanuma (also known as Thomas S. Rockrise) was among the earliest immigrants from Japan to come to the United States to study architecture, and in the early twentieth century he established a successful practice, first in New York City and later in Asia. However, despite his training at Syracuse University in the conventional Beaux-Arts architectural vocabulary of the period, Tsumanuma found that the expectations of white patrons required that he design objects and spaces around Orientalist themes in the language of Japonisme. In Practicing Architecture under the Bamboo Ceiling: The Life and Work of Iwahiko Tsumanuma (Thomas S. Rockrise), 1878–1936, Gail Dubrow and collaborators Christina M. Rockrise, Alyssa Gregory, and Sarah Pawlicki make use of a previously unavailable archive of Tsumanuma's family papers to document the architect's life and career, presenting an in-depth case study of the multiple ways in which racism shaped the lives and experiences of Japanese immigrant architects in the United States in the early twentieth century. The methods used for this investigation, which included consulting family papers and collaborating with family descendants, provide a model for scholars seeking to better understand racism's formative role in shaping the history of the architectural profession.
Taking Intersectionality Seriously
The Public Historian · 2019-05-01 · 9 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorIn recent years, preservation agencies at the federal, state, and locals levels have advanced more inclusive approaches to historic preservation by commissioning theme studies, surveys, and nominations to registers of historic places that address previously neglected aspects of US heritage. Much of the work done under the broad umbrella of inclusive histories has been focused on communities defined by a single aspect of identity. This essay raises questions about the effectiveness of single-community studies in addressing previously overlooked aspects of history at the intersections of race, class, gender, sexuality, and more. We encourage preservation professionals to take seriously the concept of intersectionality, which acknowledges the multivalent quality of lived experience, addresses the complexity of identity, and recognizes the multiplicity of communities with a stake in the preservation and interpretation of any given historic property. This essay argues for the strategic importance of learning from recent studies of LGBTQ resources to refine intersectional approaches to preservation planning, while identifying hidden barriers to inclusion and cultural equity in programs and projects that use a single lens to identify cultural resources associated with underrepresented groups.
Berghahn Books · 2019-09-04
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding
Frequent coauthors
- 26 shared
Larry Knopp
University of Washington Tacoma
- 25 shared
Hope Ann Benedict
Western History Association
- 25 shared
Bill Par- Menter
Lewis Clark State College
- 25 shared
Matthew Klingle
Idaho State University
- 25 shared
Virginia Scharff
- 25 shared
H. Wayne Schow
Western History Association
- 25 shared
Judith Austin
Western History Association
- 25 shared
Peggy Pascoe
University of Idaho
Awards & honors
- American Council on Education Fellow in Higher Education Adm…
- Best Book in Historic Preservation, Society of Architectural…
- Environmental Design Research Association – PLACES Award (20…
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