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Saturday, May 31, 2025

May 31-June 1, 2025: May 2025 Recap

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

May 5: The Works Progress Administration: EO 7034: A series for the WPA’s 90th anniversary kicks off with three significant elements of the Executive Order that established it.

May 6: The Works Progress Administration: My Column on Federal Workers: I wanted to make sure to include as part of this series one of my recent Saturday Evening Post Considering History columns on federal workers during the Depression.

May 7: The Works Progress Administration: The Arts: The series continues with three quotes that together help sum up the creation and arc of the WPA’s vital artistic & cultural programs.

May 8: The Works Progress Administration: Iconic Individuals: Three iconic & inspiring individuals linked to the WPA, as the series labors on.

May 9: The Works Progress Administration: Wartime Evolutions: The series concludes with two distinct but interconnected ways the WPA evolved during WWII, and what we can do with the combination.

May 10-11: A Works Progress Administration for the 21st Century: Unlikely as the idea is in May 2025, a special follow-up post making the case for a new WPA!

May 12: Spring Semester Reflections: Major American Authors of the 20th Century: For this year’s Spring semester reflections series, I paid tribute to my late Dad’s presence in my courses, starting with a Langston Hughes poem I taught the day after he passed.

May 13: Spring Semester Reflections: American Literature II: I also taught Gatsby the day after Dad passed, so shared how a debate I had with him helped shape my teaching.

May 14: Spring Semester Reflections: First-Year Writing II: The series continues with how I got to feature my Dad’s work in my FYW courses.

May 15: Spring Semester Reflections: Graduate Research Methods: My Dad’s focus on psychoanalytical theory isn’t my own, but I found a way to include it in my Grad course nonetheless.

May 16: Spring Semester Reflections: Student Tributes to Dad: The series concludes with a handful of moving tributes to my Dad as a teacher from former students.

May 17-18: What’s Next: And a weekend follow-up post highlighting three things I’m looking forward to in the Fall semester!

May 19: Malcolm X’s 100th: The Autobiography: For Malcolm Little’s 100th birthday, a series on cultural representations of Malcolm kicks off the complicated layers to his own text.

May 20: Malcolm X’s 100th: An Opera: The series continues with two distinct and equally important ways to contextualize the opera X (1986).

May 21: Malcolm X’s 100th: Lee’s Film: Three interesting contexts for Spike Lee’s epic 1992 biopic, as the series marches on.

May 22: Malcolm X’s 100th: A Cameo in Selma: Malcolm isn’t a main focus of Ava DuVernay’s film, but his powerful scene reflects the film’s overall goals.

May 23: Malcolm X’s 100th: One Night in Miami: The series concludes with a recent film adaptation that embodies the important goal of humanizing our heroes.

May 24-25: Malcolm X’s 100th: Malcolm in 2025: A special weekend follow-up post highlighting three lessons we can learn from Malcolm in 2025!

May 26: 2020s Blockbusters: Top Gun: Maverick: A Memorial Day series on recent summer blockbusters kicks off with a problem & a possibility with our cultural moment of ubiquitous sequels.

May 27: 2020s Blockbusters: Inside Out 2: The series continues with two distinct ways to contextualize the highest-grossing film of 2024.

May 28: 2020s Blockbusters: Jurassic World: What’s not new in the recent Jurassic Park films and what is, as the series explodes on.

May 29: 2020s Blockbusters: Barbie: What I liked a lot about the recent mega-blockbuster, and what I loved.

May 30: 2020s Blockbusters: Live Action Disney: The series and month conclude with three ways to explain the large and growing corpus of live-action remakes of animated films.

Next 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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