Skip to main content

Lisa McClain

Lisa McClain headshot

Specializations

Renaissance and Reformation Europe
Gender Studies
Christianity

Education

Ph.D., University of Texas
M.A., University of Texas
B.A., University of Texas


Dr. Lisa McClain is a Professor of History and Gender Studies and has been on faculty at Boise State University since 2001. Her fields of specialty include the history of religion and the intersections of gender, religion, and popular culture. She is the author of the books Divided Loyalties? Pushing the Boundaries of Gender and Lay Roles in the Catholic Church 1534-1829 (Palgrave MacMillan, 2018); Lest We Be Damned: Practical Innovation and Lived Experience among Catholics in Protestant England 1559-1642 (Routledge 2004); a chapter A Companion to Catholicism and Recusancy in Britain and Ireland: From Reformation to Emancipation (Brill, 2022); a chapter in the book Women during the English Reformations: Renegotiating Gender and Religious Identity (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014); and articles in journals such as Church History, Sixteenth Century Journal,the Catholic Historical Review,the Journal of Religious History, and Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature.

McClain serves as an expert on gender with the Inclusion Crowd (visit website), an international Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Think Tank made up of academics, social media influencers, authors, and industry leaders across five continents, brought together to address issues of inclusion across a variety of identity categories and intersections, especially in the workplace. The Inclusion Crowd is “focused on ensuring fairness, opportunity and representation for everyone within society; irrespective of background or characteristic.”

Her public history articles on the intersections of religion, gender, and sexualities for The Conversation (visit website), an editorially curated, nonprofit news organization with a monthly readership of 18 million and reach of 42 million through Creative Commons, have garnered over 446,000 reads. 

Dr. McClain has been interviewed for national podcasts, such as the The Pride Podcast (listen to podcast) and Made to Motivate (listen to podcast) and is serving as a peer reviewer for Los-Angeles-based production company.

She is currently working on a new research agenda involving faith and LGBTQ+ history in Idaho and the U.S. Intermountain West, supported by grants from the Osher Institute and the Institute for Advancing American Values. She is also investigating and experimenting with the ethical use of AI in the classroom to best prepare her students for professional success after graduation.

Dr. McClain served as Director of Gender Studies at Boise State from 2002-2011, during which time the program received the Emerging Center Award from the National Council for Research on Women in 2010. Dr. McClain has researched the issue of domestic violence and sexual assault perpetrated against women with disabilities as part of her work in Gender Studies. Her work has been published by the Center for Women Policy Studies based in Washington D.C. 

Dr. McClain is an activist for equity issues–particularly gender, disability, and sexual orientation–in academia, in Boise, and throughout the state. For her work, she has been named an Idaho Woman of the Year; an Idaho Woman Making History; and a Les Bois Awards finalist.

In 2019, McClain received the Faculty Excellence Award from the College of Arts & Sciences, and in 2022, she was named the honored faculty member by a Boise State Top Ten Scholar. She has been nominated for the Golden Apple Award for exemplary teaching and service to students at Boise State, as well as for the Foundation Scholars Award for Service. She currently serves as a faculty mentor for a McNair Scholar

Dr. McClain is married, and she and her husband have a daughter and a son. Evenings and weekends will find her in the outdoors and engaging in athletic activities, especially swimming, hiking, snowshoeing, tennis, and racquetball. She also reads avidly in many genres and loves to cook. She enjoys quiz-type games and became a 1-day Jeopardy champion in 2006. She has recently begun to experiment with Role Playing Games (RPGs), both in the classroom and for fun.

five people including Lisa McClain stand at the front of conference room

A photo of the members of Dr. McClain’s panel “Half of the Story: LGBTQ+ People in the Pacific Northwest” at the American Association of State and Local History, Sept 7, 2023. From left to right: Dr. Lisa McClain, BSU, Micah Hetherington, BSU History Graduate Student, Chelsee Boehm, MA-History, Boise State, Grace Hudson Museum and Sun House, Ukiah, CA, Alan Virta, Head Archivist (ret.), Boise State University Special Collections and Archive, Dr. Brian Stack, Spokane Falls Community College, Spokane, WA


Contact

Office: L176
Phone: (208) 426-1985
lmcclain@boisestate.edu

Fall 2024 Office Hours:

Tuesdays from Noon – 1:15 pm in L-176 (in the History Department in the Albertsons Library Building-enter through back of the building.)

Wednesday 2:30 – 4:30 pm via Zoom

Or by appointment. 

World History I
Intro. to Gender Studies
Global Religion
Gender and Sexuality
Age of Renaissance and Reformation
Saints and Sinners: Women in Christianity
History of Women in Early Modern Europe
History of Everyday Life
Foundations of Ethics and Diversity


Lisa McClain on the Iron Throne from the tv show Game of Thrones

Dr. McClain and students pose with the Iron Throne from the television show, Game of Thrones

Graduate Students

  • Micah Hetherington – Chair
  • Mandee Snowden-Edmonds – Chair
  • Abra Rank – Committee Member

Selected Scholarship

“Underground Devotions: The Day-to-Day Challenges of Practicing an Illegal Faith” 
in A Companion to Catholicism and Recusancy in Britain and Ireland: From Reformation to Emancipation, ed. Robert E. Scully, S.J. with Angela Ellis (Leiden: Brill, 2022).

Divided Loyalties? Pushing the Boundaries of Gender and Lay Roles in the Catholic Church for Three Centuries, 1534-1829
(Palgrave MacMillan, 2018)

“Elizabeth Cary and Intersections of Catholicism and Gender in Early Modern England”
in Women during the English Reformations: Renegotiating Gender and Religious Identity, ed. Julie Chappell and Kaley A. Kramer
(Palgrave MacMillan, 2014)

Lest We Be Damned: Practical Innovation and Lived Experience among Catholics in Protestant England, 1559-1642
(Routledge, 2004)