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Archives for January 2025

LONG FORM: Can Christians Write? 

Paul J. Pastor   |  January 10, 2025

Make no mistake: Christian art offers a distinctive gift to the world

Jimmy Carter’s “life was a testament to the goodness of God”

John Fea   |  January 9, 2025

Here is Jimmy Carter’s grandson Jason Carter today at the former president’s memorial service: I was struck by three things during the service There was a different kind of “power” on display here. Watch the recessional here: Until the very […]

Reviving intellectual life in the university is “more than simply promoting the humanities or encouraging interdisciplinary study”

John Fea   |  January 9, 2025

Earlier today I posted on Steven Mintz’s categorization of university professors. Read it here and figure out where you fall in Mintz’s taxonomy. Mintz’s categorized professors as part of his larger thoughts on how to make universities less anti-intellectual. Here […]

What kind of professor are you?

John Fea   |  January 9, 2025

Here’s a post for the academics who read this blog. Over at his Inside Higher Ed blog, historian Steve Mintz writes: “As an academic, I’ve encountered a complicated taxonomy of professors that goes beyond these stereotypes.” He suggests ten categories […]

Pamela Paul: “it would be better if the A.H.A. as an institution never weighed in on political conflicts”

John Fea   |  January 9, 2025

Yesterday we called your attention to the American Historical Association’s resolution on “scholasticide” in Gaza. Get up to speed here. Today, New York Times columnist Pamela Paul, who attended the AHA business meeting where the resolution was approved, weighs in. […]

Right coding: who owns Homer anyway?

Nadya Williams   |  January 9, 2025

The right coding of Homer or the classics is really not helpful for anyone.

Commonplace Book #305

John Fea   |  January 9, 2025

While many worry about fragmentation, polarization, and the potential for violence, among leading political actors, the idea of a common good sought through common hopes is nowhere invoked, much less pursued. The ethical boundaries that define solidarity are erected and […]

REVIEW: Quiet in a World of Distraction 

Abigail Wilkinson Miller   |  January 9, 2025

Hope and quiet walk hand in hand

Russell Moore on Jimmy Carter’s salvation

John Fea   |  January 8, 2025

Back In December, a podcaster asked Albert Mohler, the president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, if Jimmy Carter was a “born-again Christian.” Jimmy Carter always said he was a born-again Christian, but the podcaster’s question seemed to […]

The American Historical Association votes to condemn “scholasticide” in Gaza

John Fea   |  January 8, 2025

From the AHA website: Whereas the US government has underwritten the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) campaign in Gaza with over $12.5 billion in military aid between October 2023 and June 2024; Whereas that campaign, beyond causing massive death and injury […]

Peter Wood’s “Black Majority” turns 50

John Fea   |  January 8, 2025

When I started teaching colonial American history twenty-five years ago, Peter Wood’s Black Majority: Race, Rice, and Rebellion in South Carolina was on the syllabus. I used to teach it alongside Edmund Morgan’s American Slavery-American Freedom. (Today my students no […]

‘Don’t Look Up’: Three years later

John Fea   |  January 8, 2025

Some of you may remember Adam McKay’s movie Don’t Look Up. Wikipedia describes it an “apocalyptic political satire black comedy.” The film starred Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence, Rob Morgan, Jonah Hill, Tyler Perry, TimothĂ©e Chalamet, Ron Perlman, Cate Blanchett, and Meryl […]

Jimmy Carter at Washington D.C.’s First Baptist Church

John Fea   |  January 8, 2025

Over the weekend I watched a 2023 C-SPAN piece on Jimmy Carter’s relationship with the First Baptist Church in Washington D.C. The Carters arrived at First Baptist on the Sunday after his inauguration and immediately applied for membership. The C-SPAN […]

Commonplace Book #304

John Fea   |  January 8, 2025

Puritan perfectionism has, in fact, survived its pluralization into faiths other than Calvinism, and it has survived its pluralization into faiths other than Calvinism, and it has survived its secularization into movements that are self-consciously nonreligious. That ethos endures and […]

Enrollment is up for 1 in 5 evangelical colleges and universities: Christianity Today’s report last week

Nadya Williams   |  January 8, 2025

Mission matters.

REVIEW: Hateful Jane Austen 

Jon D. Schaff   |  January 8, 2025

All you need is love?

James Kirby Martin, RIP

John Fea   |  January 7, 2025

I met James Kirby Martin once. We both spoke at the Fort Ticonderoga Seminar on the American Revolution in 2009. I did not know him well, but he was always kind to me following that meeting and I have learned […]

Commonplace Book #303

John Fea   |  January 7, 2025

Outrage against a grievance caused by others, then, becomes the source of authentic identity and authentic action. In this strange calculus, the more rage the better. In turn, rage, hatred, and the desire for revenge that emanate from injury become […]

The Author’s Corner with Lindsey Bestebreurtje

Rachel Petroziello   |  January 7, 2025

Lindsey Bestebreurtje is a Curatorial Assistant with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. This interview is based on her new book, Built by the People Themselves: African American Community Development in Arlington, Virginia, from the Civil […]

Pretty boy Luigi

Elizabeth Stice   |  January 7, 2025

The story of “Pretty Boy Floyd” has parallels to the recent story of Luigi Mangione.

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