Caitlin Blanchfield is a historian of architecture and landscape. She is a postdoctoral fellow in architecture, urbanism, and the humanities at Princeton University. Her work examines the infrastructures of settler colonialism and material practices of resistance, addressing the role of modernist land management and design practices in projects of dispossession and colonization in North America and across the reaches of U.S. empire, as well as the anticolonial architectures that unsettle them. Blanchfield was a founding editor of the Avery Review, her coauthored book Modern Management Methods: Architecture, Historical Value, and the Electromagnetic Image was published by Columbia University Press in 2019. Her work has been supported by the New York State Council for the Arts, Dumbarton Oaks, The Graham Foundation, and the Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture. She holds a PhD in architectural history and theory from Columbia University.