phd, she/her

Overview

I’m a historian and writer with a deep commitment to producing public-facing scholarship. Since completing my PhD in history in 2016, I have worked outside the academy at a public history non-profit, as an independent journalist and essayist, facilitator, and consultant. My writing has appeared in Electric Literature, The Nation, Atlas Obscura, PRI’s The World, Jacobin,  and The Abusable Past. My book, La Raza Cosmética: Beauty, Identity, and Settler Colonialism in Postrevolutionary Mexico (University of Arizona Press, 2020), was a finalist for the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association's Best First Book Award in 2021. In summer 2025, I’ll be launching Past Lives Press, a historical consultancy centered around the radical act, art, and power of zines.

Awards & Opportunities

Most recently, I was awarded a US@250 Fellowship from New America for 2024/2025. As a member of New America's second cohort of fellows, I’ll be reporting on the afterlife of Amache, Colorado’s WWll-era Japanese American concentration camp and its transition to becoming America's newest National Historic Site.

This fellowship is an extension of my work as a community-engaged independent journalist and public historian. My research and interview techniques adhere to journalistic best practices and also draw from my educational background in archival research and ethnographic fieldwork. You can see more on my project page about this.

I have received past support from: Artist Trust GAP Funding Award (2024), Roundhouse Foundation/Pine Meadow Ranch Artist Residency (2024), 4Culture Heritage Professional Grant (2023), Zenith Cooperative Journalism Fellowship (2022), among others.

Communities & Networks

My work comes from, and is directly shaped by, the communities—both the people and the places—I am fortunate enough to call home. Much gratitude to the following communities, networks, and outlets for welcoming me in and allowing me to be a part of your growing influence in the world: Community Archives Collaborative, Common AREA Maintenance, National Council of Public History, Labor and Working-Class History Association, International Workers of the World, Freelance Journalists Union, and the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association.

Work & Approach

Currently, I am the Heritage Program Manager at 4Culture, where I work to get taxpayer-funded grants into the hands of heritage organizations across King County. At 4Culture, I use a racial equity lens to fund work that has been historically left out of mainstream historical accounts. Previously, I worked at Densho for 9 years as their Communications and Public Engagement Director, where I created an artist residency program and co-created storytelling platforms for Japanese Americans artists, creatives, activists, and scholars.

As a historian, public scholar, and writer, I’m committed to writing about challenging parts of our past—white supremacy, settler colonialism, genocide—and illustrating how those things give shape to the world we inhabit today, hopefully inspiring readers to think critically about their own complicity and work to mitigate harm, repair, and rematriate.

For a hi-res image, see below.

About Natasha Varner

Historian, public scholar, and journalist with a deep commitment to producing public-facing scholarship.

I have made my home in Seattle on the lands of the Lushootseed-speaking peoples, including the Duwamish, Muckleshoot, Puyallup, Snoqualmie, Suquamish, and Tulalip tribes. Urban Indigenous peoples of many Nations live and thrive in Seattle, but we also have one of the highest per capita rates of murdered and missing Indigenous women. As a settler, I’m committed to doing what I can to repair and support Indigenous-led rematriation efforts. Currently that includes dedicating my research and writing to explorations of settler colonial harm, offering workshops and educational resources to other settlers, and making monthly donations to Real Rent Duwamish and Chief Seattle Club. When not writing or haunting an archive, find me slinging generous pours of cheap boxed wine at Common Area Maintenance art events; lurking in thrift stores, coffee shops, and dive bars, and trail running in the rain (the muddier the better).