[A Recap of the
month that was in AmericanStudying.]
June
29: The 4th in Focus: “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?”:
A July 4th series starts with the stunning speech that challenges us
as much today as it did a century and a half ago.
June
30: The 4th in Focus: Born of the 4th of July: The
series continues with three telling evolutions of a classic American phrase.
July
1: The 4th in Focus: Fireworks: The history, symbolism, and
limitations of an American tradition, as the series rolls on.
July
2: The 4th in Focus: “Speaking of Courage”: The July 4th
setting and climax of one of my favorite American short stories.
July
3: The 4th in Focus: “Sandy (4th of July, Asbury Park)”:
The series concludes with how Bruce captured the more intimate sides to
Independence Day.
July
4-5: The 4th in Focus: The Adams Letters: A special weekend post
on the myths and realities of the founding revealed in the couple’s letters.
July
6: Secret Service Stories: The JFK Assassination: A series on the 150th
anniversary of the Secret Service’s founding starts with an article that raises
new, frustrating questions.
July
7: Secret Service Stories: In the Line of Fire: The series continues with a
scene that humanizes the agency’s most famous failure, and the shortcomings of
the film that surrounds it.
July
8: Secret Service Stories: The Lincoln “What If?”: Unanswered questions,
the timing of the agency’s founding, and historical frustrations, as the series
rolls on.
July
9: Secret Service Stories: Guarding Tess: What a comic melodrama can tell
us about the unique reality of a lifelong Secret Service detail.
July
10: Secret Service Stories: 21st Century Scandals: The series
concludes with what’s not new about the recent spate of scandals, and what is.
July
11-12: Samuel Southworth’s Guest Post: In Honor of the 150th
Anniversary of the US Secret Service: In my latest Guest Post, Samuel
Southworth highlights the complex, controversial, and impressive histories of
the government agency.
July
13: Trinity Sites and Texts: Los Alamos: A series on the 70th
anniversary of the Trinity atomic test starts with three ways to AmericanStudy
the bomb’s laboratory.
July
14: Trinity Sites and Texts: Historical Novels: The series continues with
two very different fictional respresentations of the test and its contexts.
July
15: Trinity Sites and Texts: Scientific Spies: What we can’t know about
histories of espionage, what we can, and how we can understand them, as the
series rolls on.
July
16: Trinity Sites and Texts: The Enola Gay Controversy: Three telling
moments in the history of a controversial exhibit on the bomb.
July
17: Trinity Sites and Texts: On Faith and the Bomb: The series concludes
with what the name Trinity can help us analyze about the site and its
histories.
July
18-19: Trinity Sites and Texts: Hiroshima Mon Amour: But wait, a special
weekend post on what a foreign film can help us AmericanStudy about Trinity and
war.
July
20: Billboard #1s: “I’ll Never Smile Again”: A series on the 75th
anniversary of Billboard’s pop music
charts starts with what’s different, and what’s not, about the first #1 hit.
July
21: Billboard #1s: “The Battle of New Orleans”: The series continues with
the most unique #1 hit, and what we can learn from it.
July
22: Billboard #1s: “Bridge over Troubled Water”: A surprisingly quiet #1
hit and the possibilities and limitations of art, as the series rolls on.
July
23: Billboard #1s: “Gangsta’s Paradise”: The #1 hit that changed,
portrayed, and perhaps exploited the game.
July
24: Billboard #1s: “Tik Tok”: The series concludes with the artistic and
ethical flaws in Ke$ha’s trashy hit, and the one more of treasure that redeems
it.
July
25-26: Crowd-sourced Chart-toppers: In my latest crowd-sourced post, fellow
AmericanStudiers share their responses and thoughts on pop music—add yours in
comments, please!
July
27: Scholars on Fire: Luke Dietrich: A series on young scholars on fire
starts with the service, online, and scholarly work of Luke Dietrich.
July
28: Scholars on Fire: Vetri Nathan: The series continues with why a
professor of Italian can and should be included on AmericanStudier.
July
29: Scholars on Fire: Christine Yao: Three exemplary projects from a grad student
poised to take the next step, as the series rolls on.
July
30: Scholars on Fire: Paul Edwards: Three compelling blog posts from a grad
student who’s in the process of updating and expanding that blog—so keep an eye
on it!
July
31: Scholars on Fire: Temple Colleagues: The series concludes with three
Temple grad colleagues of mine doing great work—as well as a comment
highlighting another young scholar on fire. Add your own, please!
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. Topics you’d
like to see covered in this space? Guest Posts you’d like to write? Lemme know!
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