Saturday, November 2, 2024

November 2-3, 2024: October 2024 Recap

[A Recap of the month that was in AmericanStudying.]

September 30: 19th Century Baseball: A Contested Origin: Inspired by a bicentennial birthday and connected to my new podcast, a series on 19C baseball kicked off with two interesting details about the contested story of the sport’s origins.

October 1: 19th Century Baseball: Henry Chadwick: For his 200th birthday, the series continues with three ways the “Father of Baseball” helped shape the sport and its stories.

October 2: 19th Century Baseball: The Massachusetts Game: Three places that can help us better remember an alternative form of baseball, as the series plays on.

October 3: 19th Century Baseball: The First Professionals: Four figures who together help us chart the evolution of professional baseball in the late 19th century.

October 4: 19th Century Baseball: The Celestials: The series concludes with two 19th century baseball context for the 1870s team at the heart of my podcast.

October 5-6: My New Podcast!: And speaking of that podcast, a special weekend post on three takeaways from my first experience with the medium!

October 7: Contested Holidays: Memorial/Decoration Day: Ahead of Columbus/Indigenous Peoples’ Day, a series on contested holidays kicks off with a couple additional thoughts on my annual Memorial and Decoration Day post.

October 8: Contested Holidays: The 4th of July: The series continues with whether and how there’s a place for celebratory patriotism in our national commemorations.

October 9: Contested Holidays: Labor Day: The bare minimum for how we should celebrate Labor Day and a couple steps beyond, as the series parties on.

October 10: Contested Holidays: Thanksgiving/Day of Mourning: With Thanksgiving just a few weeks away, two ways we can be thankful while mourning.

October 11: Contested Holidays: “The War on Christmas”: The series concludes with three voices who can help us see through the “War on Christmas” canard.

October 12-13: Contested Holidays: Columbus/Indigenous Peoples Day: And for the holiday, a special weekend post on how my thinking on it has evolved over the last decade, and one thing I’d still emphasize.

October 14: Famous Phone Calls: The Great Gatsby: For the 75th anniversary of a key stage in the technology, a series on American phone calls kicks off with three phone calls at the heart of Fitzgerald’s portrayal of early 20C America.  

October 15: Famous Phone Calls: The Scream Films: The series continues with one thing that’s really changed since the first of these phone-focused films, and one that hasn’t.

October 16: Famous Phone Calls: Phone Songs: Five pop songs that call upon this technology, as the series rings on.

October 17: Famous Phone Calls: “Madam and the Phone Bill”: A funny and fun poetic character, and the layers of meaning she reveals.

October 18: Famous Phone Calls: The 2024 Election: With the election now just days away, the series concludes with how phone calls symbolize the striking contrast at the heart of this campaign.

October 19-20: An AmericanStudier Tribute to the Phone: And on a more fully positive note, what the phone has meant to me over the last decade of my life and relationships.

October 21: Prison Stories: Dorothea Dix: For the 30th anniversary of a sobering statistic, a PrisonStudying series kicks off with the activist from whom we still have a lot to learn.

October 22: Prison Stories: Alcatraz: The series continues with why it’s okay to turn a prison into a tourist attraction, and what we can remember instead.

October 23: Prison Stories: Ian Williams and Teaching in Prisons: Re-sharing one of my earliest posts, on a colleague and friend doing vital work in our prisons.

October 24: Prison Stories: Johnny Cash: The message the Man in Black still has for us, if we can ever start to hear it, as the series rolls on.

October 25: Prison Stories: The Inside Literary Prize: The series concludes with three quotes that together sum up why one of our newest prizes is also one of the most important ever.

October 26-27: A PrisonStudying Reading List: And speaking of writing and reading, a weekend reminder that there’s always more we can read and learn.

October 28: The Politics of Horror: Psycho and The Birds: We all know this year’s Halloween is interconnected with a very scary political season, so a series on the politics of horror films kicks off with defamiliarization and prejudice in Hitchcock.

October 29: The Politics of Horror: Last House on the Left: The series continues with a horror film that’s more disturbing in what it makes us cheer for.

October 30: The Politics of Horror: Hostel and Taken: The horrifying xenophobia at the heart of two of the 21st century’s biggest hits, as the series screams on.

October 31: The Politics of Horror: The Saw Series: Different visions of morality in horror films and franchises, and whether they matter.

November 1: The Politics of Horror: Recent Films: The series and month conclude with quick political takeaways from five new horror classics.

Election series starts Monday,

Ben

PS. Topics you’d like to see covered in this space? Guest Posts you’d like to contribute? Lemme know!

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