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Archives for August 2022

“Capture the schools”

John Fea   |  August 17, 2022

University of Pennsylvania education historian Jonathan Zimmerman reflects on the wars over history in schools. A taste: Last year, former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon likewise called on right-wing Americans to capture the schools. “The path to save the nation is […]

Post-Dobbs America: Federalism Revived, Transformed

John H. Haas   |  August 17, 2022

How useful are historical analogies in our new political era?

In sixty years American society has moved from “we shall overcome” to “you will not replace us”

John Fea   |  August 16, 2022

Over at Zocalo Public Square, writer David Ulin offers some reflections on Joan Didion’s 1967 essay “Slouching Toward Bethlehem” and how her words continue to resonate. Here is a taste: What we’re seeing is not a matter of disagreement or […]

The “civic grit” of Liz Cheney

John Fea   |  August 16, 2022

Today is primary day in Wyoming. It is likely that Liz Cheney will not win her GOP primary race against Trump-backed Harriet Hageman. This piece explains why. Over at The Bulwark, American historian James Banner lauds Cheney for defending the […]

Do you need help with history grant writing?

John Fea   |  August 16, 2022

Check out this webinar sponsored by the Organization of American Historians: This webinar will help historians connect their existing aptitudes and skills to the process of institutional grant writing. Historians already engage in most of the common doings of the […]

Babylon in early America

John Fea   |  August 16, 2022

Kristopher Stinson, a graduate student at George Mason University, is the author “American Babel: History and Empire in the Early American Republic,” an essay in the Summer 2022 issue of the Journal of the Early Republic. In a short post […]

Can the United States Constitution survive the social media age?

John Fea   |  August 16, 2022

The United States Constitution, James Madison argued, only works when people are spread-out geographically. Social media shrinks that distance. Here is a taste of political scientist Danielle Allen’s piece at The Washington Post. When we teach constitutional history, we often […]

Wally Cleaver, ‘50s TV, and Free-Range Kids

M. Elizabeth Carter   |  August 16, 2022

There’s magic in a walkable neighborhood

What should a college graduate know about slavery?

John Fea   |  August 15, 2022

Historian Steven Mintz offers twenty-three things any college graduate should know about slavery. I like the idea of this post, but I would be happy if my general education (non-majors) students knew a handful of these facts. Here is a […]

A national conservative defines “national conservatism” as an effort to “legislate toward a Protestant vision” for America

John Fea   |  August 15, 2022

The so-called “national conservatives” are meeting next month in Miami. Speakers include Florida governor Ron DeSantis, Missouri senator Josh Hawley, political scientist Yoram Hazony, First Things editor R.R. Reno, historian Wilfred McClay, and Southern Baptist seminary president Albert Mohler (we […]

American historian Sean Wilentz on Marco Rubio’s “fake populism”

John Fea   |  August 15, 2022

Distinguished Princeton historian Sean Wilentz was recently part of a group of historians (and others) that Joe Biden invited to the White House to discuss the fate of American democracy. Marco Rubio called the group “elitists” and “snobs” working against […]

Does Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick believe in the verbal, plenary inspiration of…the U.S. Constitution?

John Fea   |  August 15, 2022

A lot of people grow tired of me calling this stuff out. I grow tired of having to call it out. But somebody’s got to do it. This stuff is not going away anytime soon. If the words of the […]

Why presidents can’t keep their documents

John Fea   |  August 15, 2022

There is a reason why the FBI executed a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago last week. Here is a nice explainer from National Public Radio: For the first two centuries of U.S. history, outgoing presidents simply took their documents with them […]

Evangelical roundup for August 15, 2022

John Fea   |  August 15, 2022

What is happening in Evangelical land? Study: 25% of American evangelicals have spoken in tongues. The first few tweets in Lisa Sharon Harper’s twitter thread on the Beth Moore grape crushing tweet: Beth Moore plays with her critics: The Winnipeg […]

Last Call

Thomas Hibbs   |  August 15, 2022

With the close of the series, Better Call Saul’s acute rendering of evil turns unexpectedly toward hope

Eric Metaxas and Charlie Kirk have a Christian nationalist meltdown in the wake of the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago

John Fea   |  August 14, 2022

Conservative evangelicals went crazy after the FBI executed a search warrant at Donald Trump’s home in Palm Beach. (I haven’t seen much from them after we learned Trump had classified nuclear documents). We chronicled some of the initial reaction here. […]

Sunday night odds and ends

John Fea   |  August 14, 2022

A few things online that caught my attention this week: Museum bathrooms St. Augustine and slavery Max Norman reviews Jeff Deutsch, In Praise of Good Bookstores What happens to your tax return? The history of tenure Political writing Charlie Kirk […]

Song of the Day

John Fea   |  August 14, 2022

After an exhausting summer, I could really use a week or so at the Moonlight Motel (preferably one near the Jersey shore) before the start of the semester. Here is Bruce:

Donald Trump in 2016 on “classified information”

John Fea   |  August 14, 2022

From The Washington Post:

Jacqueline Doyle shares her experience writing for Current

John Fea   |  August 12, 2022

Earlier this week we published Jacqueline Doyle‘s piece “What Grows on Trees.” Doyle is professor emeritus of English at California State University, East Bay, and author of The Missing Girl. Her creative nonfiction has earned numerous Pushcart nominations and seven Notable Essay […]

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