December 30: 2013 in Review: The Marathon Bombing: A series on 2013 stories I didn’t cover on the blog
starts with the year’s biggest and darkest Boston event.
December 31: 2013 in Review: Nelson Mandela: The series continues with ways to AmericanStudy the
iconic 20th century leader.
January 1: 2013 in Review: The Pope: Three American connections for the radical new pontiff,
as the series rolls on.
January 2: 2013 in Review: Iran: The challenges and importance of remembering the complex, interconnected
histories of the US and our most prominent current adversary.
January 3: 2013 in Review: Aaron Hernandez: The series concludes with the histories and perils of our
national love affair with gangsters.
January 4-5: Ani DiFranco and Slavery: A special addition to the series, in response to a very
recent event and controversy.
January 6: San Fran Sites: Angel Island: A series on Bay Area places and stories starts with the
value of seeing a complex American site in person.
January 7: San Fran Sites: Palace of Fine Arts: The series continues with the deeply strange and yet
also inspiring artistic site.
January 8: San Fran Sites: Alcatraz: Why it’s not so great to turn a prison into a tourist
site, and why it might be okay, as the series rolls on.
January 9: San Fran Sites: Muir Woods: The arguments for experiencing a natural wonder in
solitude, and why it’s fitting to do so more communally as well.
January 10: San Fran Sites: Remembering Chinatown: The series
concludes with some thoughts on the past, the present, and a way to bridge the
gap.
January 11-12: Ben Mangrum’s Guest Post: A special Guest Post from one of the founding editors
of the great new Ethos Review site.
January 13: Spring 2014 Previews: A Fantastic Intro: A series on what I’m looking forward to this semester
starts with the life skills my Intro to Sci Fi/Fantasy course helps teach.
January 14: Spring 2014 Previews: Novel Perspectives: The series continues with the narrators we like and
those we don’t in my Post-1950 American Novel course.
January 15: Spring 2014 Previews: A New Awakening: The most persistent challenge I face in my teaching and
how I revised my Am Lit II syllabus in response, as the series rolls on.
January 16: Spring 2014 Previews: Writing Our World: What I’m comfortable with for my new Writing II class,
and what I really need your help with!
January 17: Spring 2014 Previews: The Book Talks Resume: The series concludes with three upcoming book talks
that will take me to new places, literally and philosophically.
January 18-19: Crowd-sourced Spring Previews: Responses to the week’s posts and some of what my
fellow AmericanStudiers are looking forward to this spring—add your previews in
comments!
January 20: The Real King: My annual MLK Day post kicks off a series on engaging with the complex
histories behind the Civil Rights Movement.
January 21: Civil Rights Histories: Rosa Parks: The series continues with the good, better, and best
ways to remember an iconic figure and moment.
January 22: Civil Rights Histories: Murders in
Mississippi: Two cultural representations
of a tragic event, and what each leaves out, as the series rolls on.
January 23: Civil Rights Histories: George Wallace: Why we can’t remember a lifetime through its worst
moments, but why we do have to focus on them nonetheless.
January 24: Civil Rights Histories: Yuri Kochiyama: The series concludes with the inspiring American life
that pushes way past racial binaries and ethnic categorizations.
January
25-26: Crowd-sourced Civil Rights: Another crowd-sourced post, this one
drawn from the civil rights responses and connections of fellow AmericanStudiers.
January
27: Football Focalizes: Concussions and Hypocrisy: A Super Bowl-inspired
series starts with the hypocrisy at the heart of 21st century
football fandom.
January
28: Football Focalizes: Racism and Forgiveness: The series continues with
the controversial story that’s partly inspiring, and partly not so much.
January
29: Football Focalizes: Rape and Recognition: Questions that we’ll never
entirely answer, and why it’s vital to ask them nevertheless, as the series
rolls on.
January
30: Football Focalizes: RGIII and Winning: On winning and losing, success
and failure, and iconic American figures and narratives.
January
31: Football Focalizes: The Bigger Question: The series concludes with a
bigger question about the role of football and sports in 21st
century America.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. Topics or themes
you’d like to see covered in future series? Guest Posts you’d like to write?
Lemme know!
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