Matthew Sparacio
Lecturer History- Education
Ph.D. Early American History, Auburn University, 2018
M.A. American History, Virginia Tech, 2010
- Specializations
Native American History, Choctaw Ethnohistory, Native South Health Cultures, Settler Colonial Print Culture, Military Occupation of Indian Territory
- Biography
Matthew Sparacio is a lecturer of Colonial and Native American History at Georgia State University. He previously taught at Southeastern Oklahoma State University after receiving his Ph.D. in History from Auburn University. His research focuses on Native health cultures in the Southeast United States, pre- and post-Removal Choctaw history, Native depictions in settler print culture, and the military occupation of Indian Territory (present-day Eastern Oklahoma). He is the former director of the “Fort Washita Rediscovery Project,” a collaborative initiative with the Chickasaw Nation that was awarded the 2023 Bruce T. Fisher Award by the Oklahoma Historical Society for the best public-facing history project in the state.
He is also the creator of the Native Atlanta Project at GSU examining settler depictions of indigenous peoples in the New South. His research has been published in Ethnohistory and his first book, The Choctaw Civil War: Justice and Sovereignty on the Franco-Choctaw Frontier, is currently under contract with the University of Alabama Press. His newest project, inspired by a 2022 NEH Summer Institute, recasts almanacs as manuals of settler colonialism and indigenous erasure.
- Publications
- “Smallpox and the Choctaw Civil War,” Ethnohistory 71, no. 1 (2024): 63-86.