<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/history/people/joseph-locke.html" dsn="people"><first_name>Joseph</first_name><last_name>Locke</last_name><prefixes/><post_nominals/><title-1>Assistant Professor</title-1><title-2>Director of Graduate Studies</title-2><title-3/><title-4/><department>History</department><type>Faculty</type><email>joseph.locke@unt.edu</email><phone/><image><img src="/history/images/history.unt.edu/files/images/faculty/photos/joseph-locke-unt-headshot.jpg" alt="Joseph Locke Headshot "/></image><office>WH 253</office><address/><office-hours/><types><type>Faculty</type></types><departments><department>History</department></departments><main-content>Highlights
Texas, U.S. South, U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, American Religion, Gilded Age and Progressive Era
Bio
Joseph Locke specializes in the history of Texas, the American South, and the U.S.-Mexico borderlands in the late-nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He graduated from the University of Texas and received his M.A. and Ph.D. in history from Rice University. His first book, Making the Bible Belt: Texas Prohibitionists and the Politicization of Southern Religion, was published by Oxford University Press in 2017. He also co-created The American Yawp (americanyawp.com), a history textbook published in print by Stanford University Press in 2019. He is currently at work on two projects: a history of religion in Texas and a history of Americans' imaginings of the U.S.-Mexico borderlands. He teaches courses in the history of Texas, the U.S. South, the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, American religion, and the Gilded Age and Progressive Era.
Selected Publications
Books
 Making the Bible Belt: Texas Prohibitionists and the Politicization of Southern Religion (Oxford University Press, 2017).
 The American Yawp: A Massively Collaborative Open U.S. History Textbook, Volumes I &amp; II, Co-Edited with Ben Wright (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2019).
Selected Articles
“The Heathen at our Door: Missionaries, Moral Reformers, and the Making of the ‘Mexican Problem,’” The Western Historical Quarterly 49 (Summer 2018), 127-153. ***Winner: Western Historical Association’s Oscar O. Winther Award***
“History Can Be Open Source: Democratic Dreams and the Rise of Digital History,” co-authored with Ben Wright, The American Historical Review 126 (December 2021), 1485–1511.</main-content></item>