[A Recap of the month that was in AmericanStudying.]
July
1: Models of Critical Patriotism: “What to the Slave is the 4th of
July?”: A July 4th series inspired by my book Of Thee I Sing
kicks off with a stunning speech that challenges us as much today as it did 172
years ago.
July
2: Models of Critical Patriotism: “Eulogy on King Philip”: The series continues
with a speech that offers two complementary models of critical patriotism.
July
3: Models of Critical Patriotism: Suffrage Activists at the Centennial
Exposition: National divisions and critical patriotism at the nation’s 100th
birthday celebration, as the series rolls on.
July
4: Models of Critical Patriotism: America is in the Heart: An author and
book that both introduce under-narrated histories and redefine American identity.
July
5: Models of Critical Patriotism: MLK and Baldwin, Kaepernick and the 1619
Project: The series concludes with a link to my Saturday Evening Post
Considering History column on the long legacy of African American critical
patriotism.
July
6-7: Critical Patriotism in 2024: And a special weekend follow-up on
protests that exemplify critical patriotism, protests that don’t quite, and why
it’s not as simple as that.
July
8: Found Footage Stories: History of New York: For the 25th
anniversary of the Blair Witch Project, a series on found footage
stories kicks off with a humorous text that was way ahead of its time.
July
9: Found Footage Stories: The “Introduction” to “Rip Van Winkle”: The
series continues with a silly and a serious layer to Washington Irving’s
continued use of found footage frames.
July
10: Found Footage Stories: House of Leaves: The limitations and
possibilities of scary stories, as the series discovers on.
July
11: Found Footage Stories: Illuminae: Two ways to contextualize a bestselling
dystopian YA series that relies on found footage.
July
12: Found Footage Stories: Horror Films: The series concludes with the
longstanding appeal and the limits of faux-realism.
July
13-14: Found Footage Stories: The Blair Witch Project: For the film’s 25th
anniversary, a special weekend post on three Blair Witch legacies.
July
15: ElvisStudying: Elvis and Sinatra: In honor of an iconic date in his history,
a series on Elvis Presley kicks off with the differences between influential and
interesting.
July
16: ElvisStudying: Elvis Films: The series continues with takeaways from
three stages in Presley’s iconic film career.
July
17: ElvisStudying: Graceland: Mythic facades, the realities behind them,
and a third way to look at Elvis’ historic home, as the series rocks on.
July
18: ElvisStudying: The Presidential Medal of Freedom: The important national
honor as a unifying occasion or a partisan instrument.
July
19: ElvisStudying: First and Last: For that iconic anniversary, on how we
can understand Elvis’ profound changes, and why they’re not the whole story.
July
20-21: ElvisStudying: Representing the King: The series concludes with
quick takeaways from a handful of the countless cultural depictions of Elvis.
July
22: Revisiting the Canon: Ernest Hemingway: In honor of Hemingway’s 125th
birthday, a series on revisiting canonical authors kicks off with three phenomenal
Hem short stories.
July
23: Revisiting the Canon: James Fenimore Cooper: The series continues with
historical and literary reasons to revisit a challenging early bestseller.
July
24: Revisiting the Canon: Nathaniel Hawthorne: How two of our most
over-taught texts can still be under-appreciated, as the series reads on.
July
25: Revisiting the Canon: Mark Twain: Reading and thinking about a
long-past author as a contemporary commentator.
July
26: Revisiting the Canon: William Faulkner: The series concludes with how a
classic author’s struggles can be as illuminating as his triumphs.
Next
series begins 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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