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Peter Soppelsa

Peter Soppelsa

Associate Professor

Peter Soppelsa.

peter.soppelsa@ou.edu
Physical Sciences Room 625
(405) 325-2213


  • B.A., Philosophy (with High Honors), Oberlin College, 2000
  • Ph.D., History, University of Michigan, 2009

I work in the fields of urban history, environmental history, and the history of technology, informed by attention to theory, method, and interdisciplinary approaches.My research interests include urban infrastructure, envirotech, the Anthropocene, animal studies, mobility studies, and public health in modern European and global histories. My latest book, Paris After Haussman was published by the University of Pittsburgh Press in 2026.

I was managing editor of Technology and Culture from 2010 to 2020 and am the co-editor with Suzanne Moon of History of Technology: Critical Readings, 4 vols. (Bloomsbury, 2020). I teach courses in media history, environmental history, history of technology, and social and ethical issues in STEM. I am a faculty affiliate in Environmental Studies.


  • History of technology
  • Urban history
  • Media history
  • Modern European history (especially France's Third Republic and Paris)
  • Modernism and modernity
  • Visual studies
  • Animal studies
  • Public works and public health

  • Paris After Haussmann: Living with Infrastructure in the City of Light, 1870–1914. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2026.
  • “Theorizing Infrastructure and Affect,” in Urban Infrastructure: Historical and Social Dimensions of an Interconnected World, ed. Jonathan Soffer, Joseph Heathcott, and Rae Zimmerman (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2022), 207-222.
  • “Losing France’s Imperial War on Rats,” Journal of the Western Society for French History 47 (2021): 67-87. (This article is Open Access.)
  • “Universal Expositions: Behind the Scenes and Beyond the Fairgrounds (Response Essay),” Dix-Neuf: Journal of the Society of Dix-Neuviémistes 24, nos. 2-3, “Paris Universal Expositions, 1855-1900” (July 2020): 260–67. 
  • “The End of Horse Transportation in Belle Epoque Paris,” Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment (ISLE) 24, no. 1 (Winter 2017): 113-29. 
  • “Reworking Appropriation: the Language of Paris Railways, 1870-1914,” Transfers: Interdisciplinary Journal of Mobility Studies 4, no. 2 (Summer 2014): 104-23. 
  • “Paris’s 1900 Universal Exposition and the Politics of Urban Disaster,” French Historical Studies 36, no. 2 (Spring 2013): 271-98.