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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: February 15, 2022
Professor John Tone came to Georgia Tech in 1990 and is one of the longest-serving faculty members in the School of History and Sociology.
He specializes in Spanish and Cuban military history and the history of disease and medicine, teaching courses on European History, European Intellectual History, French Revolution and Napoleon, History of Disease and Medicine, Modern Cuba, Modern Spain, and The Enlightenment.
Get to know Professor Tone in this six-question Q&A, where he shares why he pursued a career in history, what he hopes to achieve in his research, and much more!
I had a close friend, a graduate student in history, and an RA in my dorm at Columbia University named Bernard Bellon. He inspired me to apply to graduate school at Columbia and stay in New York City, which I was inclined to do anyway. I had started in journalism, moved to political science and pre-law, but discovered that I didn’t get as much enjoyment from these things as I did when reading and discussing history.
Well, as a matter of fact, Bernard Bellon was on the faculty at GT. Also, one of my own cohort, Margo Finn, was at Emory. When GT ran a search for a Europeanist, they encouraged me to apply. As it so happened, I had been doing research on an ancient agricultural implement used in the Basque Country, so I had a good “history of technology” job talk queued up already.
My first three books [The Fatal Knot: The Guerrilla War in Navarre and the Defeat of Napoleon in Spain (1995), La guerrilla española (1999), and War and Genocide in Cuba (2006)] had to do with aspects of insurgency, and I argued that ideology played a smaller role in inspiring insurgents in Navarre, Spain, and Cuba than socio-economic conditions, made worse the existential crisis of occupations. I think it is a fundamental truth about most insurgencies.
I wanted to discourage the tendency to listen to literate elites and their analyses of insurgents, about whom they knew next to nothing, and to find more reliable sources in tax records, criminal proceedings, land sales and leases, censuses, estate inventories, parish records, and so forth.
I’m currently researching the history of the conquest of yellow fever in Cuba. I want to change the American tendency to claim credit, through Walter Reed, for the theory and the experiments conducted by Cuban physician Carlos Finlay, who ultimately worked out how yellow fever spread.
Cooking, gardening, reading, binge watching series.
At Georgia Tech you will be surrounded by engineers and computer scientists. In the real world, they will be surrounded by you. Keep that in mind.
Yes. Johntone@gatech.edu. I can talk about my research and the subjects I teach.
Thank you Professor Tone!
Learn more about his work below, and stay tuned on Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Twitter for new student, faculty, and alumni spotlights every month.