[Five years ago this week, my first Saturday Evening Post Considering History column dropped. That space and work have become crucial components of my career over these years, so for this anniversary I wanted to reflect on a few particular, telling columns from my first year there. Leading up to a special weekend tribute and request!]
When I was
initially recruited (by the wonderful editor Jen Bortel
about whom I’ll write in the weekend post) to write a new column for the Saturday Evening Post online, I’m pretty
sure we talked directly about the idea for a first column
inspired by my Chinese
Exclusion Act book. It made sense to start with something familiar, but I knew
I wanted soon and consistently to expand into topics about which I hadn’t had
as much of a chance to write (or even in some ways think) previously, and I was
able to do so immediately with my
second column on Rosa Parks and the women behind the Montgomery bus boycott
(with a major hat-tip to Danielle
McGuire’s book, which I insisted be mentioned as well as cited in the
column). That goal meant that one of the main elements of this column would be
finding those topics for each post, and the third and fourth reflected two such
inspirations: the
third on the occasion of Black History Month; and the
fourth starting with a historical anniversary (the 50th of
Walter Cronkite on the Vietnam War). That balance—of more and less familiar topics,
and of different forms of inspiration—has very much continued for the five
years since.
Next
anniversary reflection tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Thoughts on these columns? Your own writing to share?
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