Jonathan Nashel
Jonathan Nashel
Professor of History
Wiekamp Hall, Room DW3247
(574) 520-4232
jnashel@iusb.edu
Mailing Address:
Department of History
Indiana University South Bend
1700 Mishawaka Avenue
PO Box 7111
South Bend, IN 46634-7111
Jonathan Nashel is Professor of History. He received his PhD in American History from Rutgers University. He teaches courses on twentieth century American History, the cold war, and American film and photographic History. His book Edward Lansdale’s Cold War was published in 2005 by the University of Massachusetts Press. It charted the political and cultural world of an infamous CIA agent. He has two forthcoming essays: “Cord Meyer, the Gray Man of the CIA,” in Simon Willmetts, ed., Agents of Influence: The Cultural Politics of Espionage (Georgetown University Press); and “The Bonding of Allen Dulles and James Jesus Angleton,” in Mark Stout and Sarah-Jane Corke, eds., Adventures in Intelligence History: Stories from The International Spy Museum and Beyond (University Press of Kansas). He has published articles, essays, and book reviews on the Vietnam War and the CIA. His current book-length project, “Darkness Visible: a Cultural History of the CIA” explores the many ways in which the CIA figures in post-war America.