E. Duke RicheyEducationPh.D. (History),
University of Colorado, 2006
M.A. (History),
University of Montana, 1999
M.S. (Environmental Studies),
University of Montana, 1998
B.A., (History and Natural Resources)
University of the South, 1991
Teaching ExperienceVisiting Assistant Professor, Pacific Lutheran University, 2007-2008
Visiting Assistant Professor,
Whitman College, 2006-2007
Adjunct Instructor,
Metropolitan State College of Denver, 2005-2006
Selected Publications
"Aspen, Colorado," in Mark Souther and Nicholas Dagen Bloom, eds.,
Tourist Nation: A Compendium of American Destinations: Forty Places That Define the Trade (Chicago: Center for American Places, forthcoming).
“Sports and Recreation,” in Rick Newby, ed.,
The Rocky Mountain Region: The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures (Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing, 2004), pp. 391- 420.
Book Reviews:
Stan Cohen,
Downhill in Montana: Early Day Skiing in the Treasure State and Yellowstone National Park, in
Montana: The Magazine of Western History, forthcoming.
Tom Ewing, ed.,
The Bill Monroe Reader, on H-Southern Music, H-Net Reviews, November, 2007.
Peter Nabokov and Lawrence Loendorf,
Restoring A Presence: American Indians and Yellowstone National Park, on H-AmIndian, H-Net Reviews, October, 2006.
Selected Conference Papers“Teaching the Salmon Re
public: Pedagogies and Public Histories of Place in the Pacific Northwest.” National Council on Public History, Louisville, Kentucky, forthcoming, April, 2008.
“Free the Heel, Free the Mind: Backcountry Skiing, the Telemark Turn, and ‘Pinhead’ Environmentalism.” American Society for Environmental History, Baton Rouge, March 1, 2007.
“The New American West As Living Space: Ski Towns, Workers, and the Struggle for Affordable Housing.” Organization of American Historians, Memphis, April 4, 2003.
“Aspen and the Quaking Leaf: Place, Nature, and Image-Making in America’s Archetypal Ski Town.” American Society for Environmental History, Denver, March 23, 2002. Panel organizer.