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The past is never dead. It's not even past

Not Even Past

A Longhorn’s Life of Service: Tom Ward

April 8, 2019

Black and white photograph of a headshot of Tom Ward

By Nicholas Roland On March 23, 1961, recently-inaugurated President John F. Kennedy held a press conference at the State Department on Laos, a country little-known to most Americans at the time. Using a series of oversized maps, Kennedy detailed the advance of Communist Laotian and North Vietnamese forces in the country’s northeastern provinces. Rejecting an […]

Longfellow’s Great Liberators: Abraham Lincoln and Dante Alighieri

January 18, 2017

By Guy Raffa “We breathe freer. The country will be saved.” Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s response to the reelection of Abraham Lincoln in 1864 is a timely reminder of how, while they all matter, some presidential elections matter much more than others. Five years earlier Longfellow was one of many who believed the time for peace […]

From the Humanities to the Digital Humanities: The New Archive (No. 20)

March 26, 2015

By Maria José Afanador-Llach How does a humanist become a digital humanist? Dr. Ece (pronounced “A.J.”) Turnator talks with us about her work in digital history. She earned her Ph.D. in Byzantine History at Harvard University in 2013 and is currently curator of the Global Middle Ages Project and is a CLIR (Council on Library and […]

Selling ourselves short? PhDs Inside the Academy and Outside of the Professoriate

November 17, 2013

In 2009 I wrote: “It is hard not to feel that I have sold myself short by deciding not to be an academic.” It is remarkable how my perspective has changed over four years and how my satisfaction in my work exceeds anything I might have hoped for.

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Recent Posts

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  • Beyond the Archive: Digital Histories and New Perceptions of the Past
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