[A Recap of the month that was in AmericanStudying.]
July
3: Patriotism in 2023: What the Gerrymander? Podcast: For July 4th,
I shared some of the many ways I’ve been able to talk about my patriotism book,
starting with this excellent podcast on contemporary politics.
July
4: Patriotism in 2023: Black Legislators, Past and Present: The series
continued with the most recent of the many Saturday
Evening Post columns where I’ve talked American patriotism.
July
5: Patriotism in 2023: Adult Learning Conversations: What I shared and
learned in an adult learning class on patriotism, as the series talks on.
July
6: Patriotism in 2023: Critical Patriotism and the Court: One particular
article and context that an adult learning student shared with me after that
aforementioned class.
July
7: Patriotism in 2023: “Patriotic Education”: The series concludes with a
frustratingly ubiquitous current context for the contested history of American
patriotism.
July
8-9: Patriotism in 2023: Talking Of Thee I Sing: Which is one of many
reasons why I’d love any and every chance to keep talking about this book, so
please share such opportunities at any time!
July
10: AmericanStudying Summer Jams: Summer Wind: It ain’t summer without summer
jams, so this week I AmericanStudied a handful of summer songs, starting with a
Sinatra classic that reveals a lot about performance, authorship, and
collective memory.
July
11: AmericanStudying Summer Jams: Summertime Blues: The series continues
with what a summer classic reveals about the voices of youth.
July
12: AmericanStudying Summer Jams: Summer in the City: Whether all art is political,
and why the question matters more than the answer, as the series rocks on.
July
13: AmericanStudying Summer Jams: Summertime: Two distinct but equally
significant ways to AmericanStudy the Fresh Prince and his most famous summer
jam.
July
14: AmericanStudying Summer Jams: All Summer Long: The series concludes
with classic rock, pseudo-nostalgia, and the undeniable role of pop culture in
our lives.
July
17: Seneca Falls Studying: Quaker Communities: For the 175th
anniversary of the Seneca Falls Convention, a series on its histories and
contexts starts with a delightfully specific and importantly broad layer to the
Convention’s origins.
July
18: Seneca Falls Studying: The Declaration: The series continues with one
obviously important choice in the Convention’s key document, and one subtler
one.
July
19: Seneca Falls Studying: Douglass and Suffrage: Three ways in which Frederick
Douglass contributed to the fight for women’s suffrage, as the series convenes
on.
July
20: Seneca Falls Studying: Rochester: Why an immediate follow-up convention
was so important, and two of its more groundbreaking details.
July
21: Seneca Falls Studying: The Historic Site’s Site: The series concludes
with three of the many interesting things you can find on the Women’s Rights
National Historical Park’s website.
July
22-23: The 21st Century Women’s Movement: A special weekend
follow-up on five figures who embody the contemporary fight for women’s rights.
July
24: Korean War Studying: The Armistice: For the 70th anniversary
of the Korean War’s Armistice, a series on that forgotten conflict starts with
why that concluding treaty took so long, and what has lingered for the seven
decades since.
July
25: Korean War Studying: MacArthur and Truman: The series continues with
what differentiates the war’s most prominent American leaders, and what links
them nonetheless.
July
26: Korean War Studying: Films: Three films from just a three-year period
that reflect three stages of cultural representation, as the series fights on.
July
27: Korean War Studying: M*A*S*H: I couldn’t write a KoreanWarStudying
series without analyzing the three iterations of the famous portrayal of
wartime doctors.
July
28: Korean War Studying: So What?: The series concludes with three reasons
to better engage with one of our more under-remembered conflicts.
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!
No comments:
Post a Comment