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Not Even Past

Why I Ban the Word “Feminism” from My Classes

March 29, 2017

by Jacqueline Jones In each of my graduate seminars, at the beginning of the semester, I caution students not to use certain words I consider problematic; these words can actually hinder our understanding of a complex past.  Commonly used—or rather, overused—in everyday conversation as well as academic discourse, the banned words include “power,” “freedom,” and […]

The Gunning of America: Business and the Making of American Gun Culture, by Pamela Haag (2016)

March 13, 2017

By Isaac McQuistion Guns and America enjoy a symbiotic relationship, the one constantly evoked when you refer to the other. A Congressional Research Service report estimated that, in 2009, the number of firearms in the United States surpassed the number of people, 310 million compared to 306.8 million. That gap has continued to widen, and […]

Giordano Bruno and the Spirit that Moves the Earth

March 8, 2017

By Alberto A. Martinez Before Galileo did anything in astronomy, the Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno argued that the Earth moves around the Sun. Bruno believed that the Earth is a living being, with a soul. These were unusual beliefs for a Christian. In 1592, Bruno was captured by the Inquisition in Venice and imprisoned. The next […]

Digital Teaching: A Mid-Semester Timeline

February 20, 2017

By Chris Babits Last March, students in Dr. Erika Bsumek’s Introduction to American Indian History took their midterm exam. Most students earned good grades, but on a mid-semester assessment, a large number expressed interest in some form of extra credit. Students also indicated that since the material was very new to them (secondary curricula rarely emphasizes […]

The Price for Their Pound of Flesh

February 1, 2017

The Price for their Pound of Flesh

The Price for their Pound of Flesh is the first book to explore the economic value of enslaved men, women, and children in the American domestic slave trade, from before they were born until after their death, in both public and private market transactions and appraisals.

History in a “Post-Truth” Era

January 18, 2017

Stylized picture of a laptop sitting on a nicely decorated desk displaying the words "fake news" on a blurred out online article

To me at least, the recent presidential election was all about history.

How to Survive a Plague: The Inside Story of How Citizens and Science Tamed AIDS, by David France (2016)

January 16, 2017

By John Carranza In the 1980s, the United States experienced a new disease that seemed to target young, gay men living in New York City and San Francisco. From the beginning, those doctors and scientists willing to treat members of the gay community remained perplexed as to why these men, their ages ranging from their […]

Finding Hitler (in All the Wrong Places?)

January 11, 2017

By Christopher Babits Good historians keep an open mind when doing archival research. Our reading of the relevant literature, not to mention the preliminary research we conduct, provides a general understanding of our topic, but we have to prepare ourselves for surprises. This is the most exciting part of research — examining documents no one […]

Digital Dividends

January 4, 2017

For the past few months I have been considering beginning a new digital history research project.

Historical Perspectives on The Birth of a Nation (2016)

December 12, 2016

“They killing people everywhere for no reason at all but being black.” —Cherry (the wife of Nat Turner played by Aja Naomi King) By Ronald Davis The number of books, novels, articles, plays and movies committed to the life and times of Nat Turner is vast. None of these sources is without controversy.  It should […]

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