Hom Headshot

Affiliated Professor

smh@ucsb.edu

5323 Phelps Hall

About

Stephanie Malia Hom is Professor of Transnational Italian Studies and Chair of the Department of French & Italian. She is an affiliated faculty member of the Department of Anthropology and the Program in Comparative Literature.

She writes and lectures on modern Italy and the Mediterranean, mobility studies, colonialism and imperialism, migration and detention, and tourism history and practice. She is the author of Empire's Mobius Strip: Historical Echoes in Italy's Crisis of Migration and Detention (Cornell, 2019), which won the 2019 AAIS Book Prize (20th and 21st century), and The Beautiful Country: Tourism and the Impossible State of Destination Italy (Toronto, 2015). She also co-edited with Dana Renga, the edited volume lllegality and the Making of Italy: Crime Italian Style (Liverpool UP, 2026) as well as  Italian Mobilities (Routledge, 2016) with Ruth Ben-Ghiat. Trained in literary criticism and cultural anthropology, her essays and articles have been published in wide range of venues, including the leading journals in the fields of Italian studies, tourism history, urban studies, and folklore. She has also worked as a journalist in the U.S. and Europe. For her research, Hom has been awarded fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, American Academy in Rome, American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Bogliasco Foundation, Cesare Barbieri Endowment for Italian Culture, Harvard University, The Nantucket Project, Ragusa Foundation for the Humanities, and Stanford Humanities Center. She earned her MA and PhD in Italian Studies at UC Berkeley and holds a BA with honors in International Relations from Brown University.

She is currently working on two book projects: one that explores the dynamics of coerced mobilities in the experiences of Mediterranean slavery and Italian colonialism, and another that examines the ideological roots of the myth that Italy is colorblind, tracing this belief back to the fictional narratives produced about colonialism in the era during and immediately after Italy's direct colonial rule. 

She regularly teaches courses on transnational Italian Studies, biopolitics and medical humanities, Italian colonialism and empire, crime Italian style, tourism and travel literature, and gastronomic Italy. She is currently accepting MA/PhD students.