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Historians in the News Archive



This page includes, in addition to news about historians, news about political scientists, economists, law professors, and others who write about history. For a comprehensive list of historians' obituaries, go here.

SOURCE: WaPo (1-20-12)

The fantasy find for historian Lonnie G. Bunch III includes a tattered pair of pantaloons made of that old “Negro cloth” and a coarse linen shirt that all but disintegrated on the back of its enslaved owner. Maybe a thrashed pair of brogans, too, worn around the plantation until the soles fell off.

Slave clothing,” Bunch said, almost wistfully, of the most elusive item on his historical wish list. “Still can’t find any.”

Bunch, the founding director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, is tantalized by the possibility that somewhere — in an attic or basement — somebody has work clothing once worn by a black slave.

He desperately wants to find, authenticate and restore it, then use the potent symbol of a painful past to humanize the story of slavery. But he and his staff of historical hunter-gatherers haven’t come close....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 20:08

SOURCE: Chronicle of Higher Ed (1-11-12)

The two students brought back to life on Facebook by a University of Nevada at Reno librarian have been returned to the history books for violating the social network’s terms of service.

Facebook shut down the profiles of Joe McDonald and Leola Lewis this morning, according to Donnelyn Curtis, the director of research collections and services at the University of Nevada at Reno. Before the accounts were taken offline, Ms. Curtis used the couple’s profiles to give students a glimpse of university life in the early 20th century. When Ms. Curtis logged in to update their profiles today, she was greeted with a message that said the profiles had been suspended. The development was first reported early today on the social-networking news site Mashable.

Facebook’s rules specify that users may not “provide any false personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than yourself without permission.” Ms. Curtis said she understood why the historical profiles violated Facebook’s policy, but added that she would have appreciated a warning before the company took action....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 19:57

SOURCE: AHA Today (1-24-12)

Whatever might be the truth about the apocalyptic eschatology of the Mayan calendar and its endtimes forecast for the Gregorian 2012, one thing is clear, it seems: The Mayan people knew about extracting pleasures from their existential present, as they appear to have used tobacco. That the peoples of Mesoamerica used nicotine could be surmised from other evidence, but a study published on January 12, 2012, in Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell, provided material evidence of tobacco use by the ancient Maya.

As if taking a cue from speakers at a digital humanities session at the recent AHA annual meeting—who exhorted historians to interact with practitioners of other disciplines—the study’s authors, Jennifer A. Loughmiller-Newman, an anthropology PhD student at the University of Albany, and Dmitri Zagorevski, director of the proteomics core in the Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, used gas and liquid chromatography mass spectrometry to detect the presence of nicotine in a codex-style flask (see image). They thus provided, for the first time, physical evidence for the use of tobacco by the Mayan people in the late classical period (600 to 900 CE). The spectrometric analysis also allowed the two researchers to conclude that the tobacco residues had not been subjected to any thermal effects, and thus that the container did not serve as an ash tray and that the tobacco was not “smoked.”...


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 19:55

SOURCE: Midland Daily News (1-29-12)

Former Midlanders Burton W. and Anita Folsom are the authors of a new book, "FDR Goes to War: How Expanded Executive Power, Spiraling National Debt and Restricted Civil Liberties Shaped Wartime America." The book is published by Simon & Schuster Inc.

"Did World War II really end the Great Depression -- or did President Franklin Roosevelt's poor judgment and confused management leave Congress with a devastating fiscal mess after the final bomb was dropped?," states the book jacket. "The Folsoms make a compelling case that FDR's presidency led to evasive and self-serving wartime policies."

The Folsoms are nationally recognized experts on the economic and domestic policies of Roosevelt....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 15:36

SOURCE: C-Ville (1-31-12)

For most Americans, Monticello is the home of Thomas Jefferson, an icon of American architectural expression, a treasured National Historic Landmark and the only American residence on UNESCO’s prestigious World Heritage List. But it’s also the best documented and best preserved early American plantation, and for that reason, a window into the obscure institution of slavery.

Wait now, haven’t we had that conversation before? Thomas Jefferson and slavery. Yes, we have, around a DNA test in 1998 and long before that. Really, since a political journalist named James Callender accused Jefferson in 1803 of keeping a slave named Sally as a “concubine.” These days most scholars of American history believe that Jefferson fathered at least one child, Eston Hemings, and probably all six of the known children of Sally Hemings, a household slave and the daughter of the matriarch Elizabeth Hemings....

After the DNA test, the entire world’s attention focused on Monticello for a moment, mostly to consider what, if any, effect the revelation would have on Jefferson’s consequential legacy as a principal proponent of human liberty. Senior historian Lucia (Cinder) Stanton, who had tracked the Hemings family through Jefferson’s writing and oral history, found herself at the center of a fury. The controversy arrived in the midst of her most compelling work on “Getting Word: Oral History Project,” which was initiated in 1993 to search for the narratives passed from one generation to the next from descendants of Monticello’s enslaved families. Prior to the “Getting Word” project, begun by Stanton and carried out with Project Historian Dianne Swann-Wright and consultant Beverly Gray, the knowledge of slave life at Monticello, although abundant, was limited to the written historical record—such as notes in Jefferson’s Farm Book, his memorandum or account books, and correspondence. These historical records revealed too little of the experience of slavery from the perspective of the enslaved people.

“It took a year out of my working life,” Stanton remembered. “Trying to explain the whole Sally Hemings/Jefferson thing to reporter after reporter starting from square one a hundred times. We sort of thought of life before DNA and after DNA.”...


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 15:22

SOURCE: ()

Mark Cousins is the Auntie Mame of filmmakers working today. By the end of Cousins’s monumental contribution to cinema, “The Story of Film: An Odyssey,” a fifteen-hour voyage into the global history of cinema, you feel as if you have lived that history. It’s a hell of a banquet Cousins puts together for us with a ridiculous amount of energy and passion for his subject–he creates an enthusiastic, addictive survey of the medium through crossing continents, time periods, styles, effects, industry trends, and so forth. To call it “absolute” isn’t necessarily hyperbole.

Cinespect caught up with Cousins in time for the MoMA screening of “The Story of Film: An Odyssey,” which runs from February 1-16. Our conversation is what follows.

Many thanks. We are still a bit amazed by the reaction–rave reviews and good sales around the world. The aim was to have impact: To make something passionate, a love letter to cinema, that would seduce people and encourage them to explore the movies. I wrote the book about eight years ago because I felt that there should be an accessible, international, single volume history of the movies. Then my producer, John Archer of Hopscotch films, suggested that we try to make the film. As it meant traveling the world and editing for years, I thought he was mad. But we started, and it grew. Doing the book first allowed me to work out storylines and themes, which would then shape the film.

Why “Saving Private Ryan” as the first film we see in the series?

The first shot in the film is from “Saving Private Ryan” because, in the edit, we decided to plunge in at the start, and the most immersive scene I could think of was that Omaha Beach scene. It immerses the viewer in sound, image, sea, war, chaos, panic. It demonstrates what cinema can do, its power....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 14:51

Henry Blodget is co-founder, CEO and Editor-In Chief of Business Insider.

On Friday in Davos, I interviewed Harvard professor Niall Ferguson, who has been very vocal in recent years about how the world is careening down an unsustainable path....

In one key way, Professor Ferguson now concedes, his adversary Paul Krugman has been right: The U.S. can carry a much-higher debt-to-GDP ratio than he thought. In fact, Ferguson now says, even his Harvard colleague Ken Rogoff, who wrote a seminal book about debt crisis called This Time It's Different, may be too pessimistic about the United States.

But Europe, Professor Ferguson says, is still screwed....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 14:50

SOURCE: Panama City News Herald (1-27-12)

William Price is the son of Christina Jeffrey, former Historian of the House of Representatives.

As a younger man I had the misfortune of watching my mother being lured into Washington by Newt Gingrich, who hired her as the historian of the House of Representatives when he was speaker of the House.

Newt and my mother, Christina Jeffrey, became close friends when she arranged for him to teach a class at Kennesaw State College in Newt’s congressional district, north of Atlanta. When Newt became speaker he had several jobs to dole out, one of which was the historian position. Newt offered the job to my mother, who was a professor at Kennesaw State. She left the security of tenure and crossed the Potomac for seemingly greener pastures.

This move turned into the biggest mistake any member of academia could ever make. As soon as Newt became speaker, vitriolic congressional Democrats quickly targeted all things Newt. My mother was no exception. Barney Frank and Charles Schumer pulled a partial quote from a confidential (never believe anything is confidential with the government) review she had written on a volunteer basis for the Department of Education 10 years prior about a program aimed at teaching the Holocaust to seventh-grade children....

Newt called a press conference immediately to announce that he had no idea that anything existed in my mother’s “past” that would have brought such disgrace on the Republicans (sarcasm intended).  He fired her eight days after taking the position by bravely ordering his staff to leave her a message on her answering machine, and we never heard from the man again....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 14:42

SOURCE: Grand Forks Herald (1-30-12)

Playford V. Thorson II could come off stern in a classroom, for he had high standards and expected students to meet them. He could be gruff, especially when confronted by pomposity, whether a freshman’s or a college dean’s.

But he could be charmingly whimsical and engaging, as well, former students and colleagues remember, often stopping in the middle of a lecture as if just then discovering the meaning of some event in the distant past. He delighted in the serendipity of learning.

Thorson, a UND history professor for 35 years who specialized in Scandinavian and immigrant studies as well as the broad sweep of modern European history, died Thursday in Grand Forks. He was 86.

“He knew books and he brought students’ attention to books, how important they were and how to interpret them,” said Gordon Iseminger, who joined UND’s history faculty in 1962, two years after his colleague....


Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 14:12

SOURCE: DNA (1-23-12)

One of Pakistan's most acclaimed historians, Ayesha Jalal bemoans the fact that history as an academic discipline has failed to grow in her country, a deficiency that needs to be addressed to spawn a new breed of scholars in the subject.

A professor of History at the Tufts University with as many as seven books to her credit, the Pakistani-American who is an authority on South Asia has chosen to return to Pakistan as a visiting scholar to help address the gap in her own way.

In India to attend the Jaipur Literature Festival, Jalal told PTI during an interaction why she felt that the academic growth of history in India had contributed to the development of a worthy scholarship in this country....


Tuesday, January 24, 2012 - 22:11

SOURCE: BBC News (1-23-12)

Novelist Jeffrey Eugenides and the late historian Manning Marable are among the nominees for the US National Book Critics Circle awards.

Eugenides is nominated for The Marriage Plot, the tale of three students caught in a love triangle, which opens on the day of their graduation.

Marable, meanwhile, is shortlisted in the biography category for his revelatory history of Malcolm X.

The winners will be announced on 8 March. No cash prize is given....


Tuesday, January 24, 2012 - 22:08

SOURCE: WaPo (1-23-12)

Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich likes to use the word “elites” as a pejorative when he talks about things and people whom he considers liberal. But the former House speaker himself is in pretty elite company when it comes to his PhD.

For one thing, earning a doctorate is a pretty elite thing to do in the United States. Nearly 40 percent of Americans ages 25 and older had an associate and/or bachelor's degree in 2010, according to the Census Bureau, while less than 3 percent had a doctorate.

Only one American president in the entire history of the country has had a doctorate, Woodrow Wilson, who served from 1913 to 1921, and earned a PhD in history and political science from Johns Hopkins University. His doctorate was called “Congressional Government: A Study in American Politics.” (Wilson was also president of Princeton University.)...


Tuesday, January 24, 2012 - 22:04

Ian Pryde is founder and C.E.O. of Eurasia Strategy & Communications in Moscow.

...Niall Ferguson, for instance, the noted presenter and pundit, said last week on Bloomberg TV, where he is a contributing editor, that Romney’s experience with start-ups and turnarounds was exactly what American needed.

As a professor of business administration at Harvard Business School with conservative leanings, Ferguson might be expected to say that, but in his other capacity as professor of history at Harvard, he really ought to know better. Business education or success hardly guarantees success in politics: Running a country requires far broader skills than managing a business.

In his Bloomberg appearance, for instance, Ferguson made no mention of the last Republican president, George W. Bush, who, despite his Harvard MBA and business experience, blundered into the Iraq war and ratcheted up America’s already huge debt. And it was of course “business types” at financial institutions who facilitated the huge amount of sovereign and personal borrowing that got the West into its current mess. Indeed, there is a strong argument that the narrow case-study approach to business education pioneered by Harvard Business School actually works against the broad strategic thinking necessary in politics, and indeed in business. After all, precious few in business and finance noted the impending financial crisis until just a few years before it broke – despite steadily rising debt levels in the West....


Tuesday, January 24, 2012 - 22:03

SOURCE: Public Radio International (1-24-12)

...The address begins at 9 p.m. eastern (8 central) and will be carried on all the major broadcast networks and cable news channels. About half of Americans are expected to watch the address.

Julian Zelizer, professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University, said the president realizes this is his opportunity to lay out the case for why he deserves to be re-elected.

"To contrast with what his opponents are saying in their primaries and caucuses," Zelizer said.

And it can have a major impact. Zelizer said Ronald Reagan's 1984 address won a landmark, with huge impact on his re-election.

"Reagan had spent the first four years being very bellicose, and using aggressive language against the Soviet Union," Zelizer said. "By 1983 and 1984, he's mellowed. He's worried about the potential for nuclear war with the Soviets, and his advisers were telling him you have to show you're genuinely interested in peace, or you're going to scare away voters."...


Tuesday, January 24, 2012 - 21:59

SOURCE: Chronicle of Higher Ed (1-22-12)

Built 20 miles north of Saigon, Long Binh Post was the largest U.S. base in Vietnam. Among its features was the Nature of the War Museum, a replica of a Viet Cong-controlled village complete with tunnels, booby traps, and weapons. It served "as a reminder to personnel that there was indeed a war going on somewhere nearby," writes Meredith H. Lair.

That was not always easy to remember, she suggests, in Long Binh, a Cleveland-size enclave of American opulence that rarely saw any danger. The joke was that if the Viet Cong ever really attacked the base, with its 180 miles of roads, they would have to use the scheduled bus system for the incursion.

The huge base is emblematic of Lair's fluid and engrossing new book, Armed With Abundance: Consumerism and Soldiering in the Vietnam War (University of North Carolina Press).

The typical experience of the American soldier in Vietnam was not "the infantryman humping the boonies on ambush patrol that Platoon and other popular treatments have enshrined in public memory," says the author, an assistant professor of history at George Mason University. While 2.5 million Americans served in Vietnam, a much smaller portion saw combat....


Monday, January 23, 2012 - 20:45

SOURCE: NYT (1-23-12)

Mary C. Henderson, a scholar of the theater whose interests as a historian and curator spanned centuries and as a Tony nominator and critic were up to the minute, died on Jan. 3 at her home in Congers, N.Y. She was 83.

The cause was Parkinson’s disease, her son Doug said.

Ms. Henderson, who taught theater history at New York University and other schools, wrote several books, often lavishly illustrated, reflecting her familiarity with and love of theater imagery and theater artifacts. They included “The City and the Theater” (1973, revised in 2004), a history of the city’s playhouses dating to the 18th century; “Broadway Ballyhoo” (1989), a study of theater advertising; and “Mielziner: Master of Modern Stage Design” (2000), an analytical biography of the prolific and influential designer Jo Mielziner, whose more than 200 shows included the original Broadway productions of “Carousel,” “Death of a Salesman,” “A Streetcar Name Desire,” “Guys and Dolls” and “Gypsy.”...


Monday, January 23, 2012 - 11:50

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Defenders of President Franklin Roosevelt's response to the Holocaust have been dealt a major blow, as a study by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has rejected a claim they frequently have made regarding the U.S. failure to bomb Auschwitz.

The development comes just before International Holocaust Remembrance Day (January 27), which commemorates the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

In numerous speeches, articles, and conferences in recent years, officials and supporters of the Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt Institute in Hyde Park, NY have claimed that then-Zionist leader David Ben-Gurion opposed bombing Auschwitz (for fear of harming prisoners). Roosevelt supporters have made the claim to deflect criticism of FDR for the U.S. rejection of requests to bomb the death camp.

But a newly-completed two-year study by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has concluded that Ben-Gurion opposed bombing the camp only for a period of several weeks when he believed it was a labor camp, and then reversed himself when he learned more about the true nature of Auschwitz, and thereafter supported bombing.  Ben-Gurion's associates in Europe and the United States then repeatedly pressed Allied officials to bomb the camp.

"There is now broad agreement among Holocaust historians regarding the question of David Ben-Gurion's position on bombing Auschwitz," said Dr. Rafael Medoff, director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, which had been urging the museum to study the subject in depth. "Roosevelt's apologists can no longer use Ben-Gurion to whitewash the Roosevelt administration's refusal to bomb Auschwitz."

The Wyman Insitute has issued a study of its own, "America's Failure to Bomb Auschwitz: A New Consensus Among Historians," which will be made available this week on the Institute's web site, www. WymanInstitute.org

Among the many Jewish leaders who called on the Allies to bomb Auschwitz in 1944 were World Zionist Organization president (and later president of Israel) Chaim Weizmann, senior Jewish Agency official (and later Israeli prime minister) Moshe Sharett, veteran Jewish leader Nahum Goldmann, and Palestine Labor Zionist leader (and future Israeli prime minister) Golda Meir.


Sunday, January 22, 2012 - 14:35

SOURCE: Prague Monitor (1-19-12)

Prague, Jan 18 (CTK) - Czech historians of art are opposed to the idea of the urn with famous Czech-born painter Frantisek Kupka's remains being transferred from Paris to Prague and placed at the Vysehrad cemetery where outstanding Czech personalities are buried.

Some say the Czech Republic should claim its adherence to Kupka (1871-1957), a world-renowned pioneer of world abstract art who died in France and was buried in Paris.

However, historians point out that Kupka chose France to live in and showed no interest to return to Bohemia.


Friday, January 20, 2012 - 14:09

SOURCE: Wales Online (1-19-12)

A Welsh historian who believes Wales’ part in the British Empire has been largely ignored has produced a new book to put the record straight.

Swansea University-based Professor Huw Bowen believes up to now Welsh historians have often viewed the Welsh as victims of the British Empire.

As a result he says, the story of Wales and the British Empire has concentrated on the working classes.

But Professor Bowen says the fabric of the British Empire was studded with Welsh soldiers, sailors, administrators, entrepreneurs, surgeons, diplomats and adventurers....


Friday, January 20, 2012 - 14:06

SOURCE: Independent (UK) (1-20-12)

Where are you now and what can you see?

I'm in my little writing hut in my Somerset home, looking down a sloping meadow which has a pond at the end.

What are you currently reading?

As ever, I've got multiple books on the go. The one I'm most concentrating on is Peter Englund's brilliant history, 'The Beauty and the Sorrow'. It is a collection of disparate accounts of the First World War from people living all over the world, and it corrects the Western view that most of the key fighting was done on the Western Front.

Choose a favourite author, and say why you admire her/him

The historian, Professor Hew Strachan, at Oxford University, who was my mentor. He got me into military history and unlike an awful lot of historians, who don't seem to be able to keep partiality or politics out of their work, he is able to do so. It's incredibly difficult to do, I think, but you never think for a moment when reading him that he has anything other than a distant, objective view....


Friday, January 20, 2012 - 13:09

SOURCE: BBC News (1-18-12)

Historian Simon Schama has launched a scathing attack on Downton Abbey, accusing it of improbable storylines and historical inaccuracies.

Criticising the show's popularity in the US, he accused it of "cultural necrophilia" and of pandering to "cliches" about British stately homes.

"Downton serves up a steaming, silvered tureen of snobbery," he wrote in The New Statesman.

Creator Julian Fellowes has previously defended the drama against such claims.

Responding to people who accused the show of using anachronistic language and etiquette, he said "the programme is pretty accurate"....


Wednesday, January 18, 2012 - 19:03

Jordan Michael Smith, a contributing writer at Salon, has written for the New York Times, Washington Post, and Boston Globe.

The premier Cold War historian first met the premier Cold War diplomat in 1974. Then a very junior professor at Ohio University, John Lewis Gaddis asked the already iconic George Frost Kennan if he could interview the former policy planner and ambassador to the USSR for an article he was writing for Foreign Affairs. It was only a brief interview, says Gaddis, and they met “only a couple of other times” before Kennan agreed to let Gaddis become his authorized biographer in 1981. Finally released in November after 30 years of work, George F. Kennan: An American Life is a triumph of scholarship and narrative. It is the best book yet written on the most important American foreign-policy thinker-practitioner of the 20th century.

The book was widely anticipated. Not only was it three decades in the making, but Gaddis has emerged in recent years as one of America’s most prominent historians of world affairs. He teaches a popular course on grand strategy at Yale and writes frequently for the press. He received the National Humanities Medal in 2005 and was a confidant of President George W. Bush. And Gaddis long ago established himself as the foremost chronicler of Kennan: he not only wrote the definitive book on Kennan’s strategy of containment, he penned a series of provocative articles attempting to apply Kennan’s thinking to America’s post-9/11 strategic environment. Kennan was always horrified at misappropriations of his ideas by other policymakers and scholars—he did not foresee that his official biographer would be one of the culprits.

The relationship began on common philosophical ground. It might seem strange that Kennan, in 1981 one of the world’s most respected foreign-policy thinkers, permitted someone he barely knew to have exclusive access to his much sought-after personal diaries and files. But though he was not yet close to Kennan, Gaddis had already launched a mini-revolution in the scholarly understanding of the Cold War. Born in a small town in southern Texas in 1941, Gaddis earned his doctorate from the University of Texas and had his dissertation published in 1972 as The United States and the Origins of the Cold War, 1941-1947. Relying on just-released documents, the book transformed the traditional narrative of the Cold War and won several awards, becoming for more than two decades the standard source on the early years of the conflict. “It was an instant success in a way that any Ph.D. might dream about,” his friend Paul Kennedy, himself among the top historians working in the United States, later gushed....


Monday, January 16, 2012 - 12:37

SOURCE: Salon (1-14-12)

In the US today, debt is ubiquitous. Whether it’s paying back thousands of dollars in student loans, using your Visa card for a pack of gum when you’re out of cash, or taking out a mortgage on a first home, it’s been woven into our financial system so tightly, that even when we suffer the sometimes cruel and unusual detriments of borrowing, we have little to no realistic impetus to stop. But it wasn’t always this way. In fact before the 20th century, debt was a taboo, feared, shameful, and kept in the shadows. So what events and institutions brought debt from its meager beginnings to its central role in American life?

In his new book, “Borrow: The American Way of Debt,” Cornell professor Louis Hyman writes, in essence, a biography of American debt. He traces debt through American history: from the late 19th century, when unpaid dues meant public ignominy, to the 1920s, when the auto industry changed the face of borrowing to the mortgage fallouts that led the Great Depression to the invention of the credit card as we now know it, all the way to the current shambles of our national economic livelihood. Along the way we meet characters like the Henry Ford, the xenophobic inventor of the Model T whose scorn for the liberal age of borrowing got the best him, and Lower East Side grocery clerk Joseph Miraglia, whose miraculous $10,000 spending spree in 1965 made history as one of America’s heftiest credit cart blunders.

Salon got a chance to speak with Hyman last week about America’s long road into debt, the problem with applying morality to economics and, of course, that scene in “Pretty Woman” where Julia Roberts goes on a shopping spree.   

Your background is in history and mathematics. How did you become interested in debt?

When I was in graduate school I was fishing around for a history topic that hadn’t been done or worked on before. This was in 2003, before financial history became fashionable again and before people knew there was going to be a crisis.

Little did you know… or maybe you did know, what would happen with the recession?

Unfortunately, as a historian of labor and business, I noticed that a lot of working people were struggling with debt. I thought it was a good topic to get some perspective on.  As I got into the topic it was something that lent itself well to the kinds of questions I that interested me. Historians are look at how things actually are, rather than economists who are interested in how things ought to be. My work is in people’s choices, and how our choices are constrained by institutions. It lends itself to a more readable history than just a history of charts and graphs....


Monday, January 16, 2012 - 11:36

SOURCE: Inside Higher Ed (1-11-12)

CHICAGO -- Analysis of current events is too important for historians to ignore, one of the nation’s preeminent scholars on the Middle East argued last week at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association.

Juan Cole, a professor of history at the University of Michigan, spoke on a panel titled “Historians, Journalists, and the Challenges of Getting It Right,” one of several sessions at this year’s conference devoted to the interplay of history and journalism. Other sessions included discussions on the American biography and the Cold War, publishing and the American century, and American intervention.

Cole, who writes a widely read blog on the Middle East, history and religion called Informed Comment and who once made news for being rejected for a post in Middle Eastern history at Yale University following conservative criticism of his opinions, is no critic of journalism or Luddite who fails to appreciate the information immediacy that characterized the Arab Spring. But the "first draft" of history in which journalists engaged in reporting on the uprisings was skewed, he and other panelists said.

One example is the proliferation of reports stressing the importance of Twitter and Facebook during the revolutions. Very few people in Tunisia are wired, and the percentage of the population using Twitter in Egypt might barely reach 1 percent, Cole said. “Gossip will do the trick if people are determined,” Cole said. Though he did not deny that technology was important, he said there was too much emphasis on it. Wired journalists from the Western world might have been looking for wired people in the Middle East to write about, Cole said....


Friday, January 13, 2012 - 18:43

SOURCE: Houston Chronicle (1-12-12)

As far as human rights, religion and politics goes, anti-Semitism has been around for generations - but is this historic topic breathing new life?

That's the question Deborah Lipstadt, the Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University in Atlanta, will discuss Tuesday in Houston.

Lipstadt is not talking about whether anti-Semitism exists. She's considering the idea that a "new" form is under way, one stemming from Europe and one that is more directly related to attitudes against Israel and its close connection with the United States.

"But I am not, in any way, shape or form, saying that everyone who has something to say about Israel is anti-Semitic," said Lipstadt, a consultant to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C....


Thursday, January 12, 2012 - 22:29

SOURCE: Inside Higher Ed (1-9-12)

CHICAGO -- The history of the history profession may provide some guidance to those trying to figure out the terrible job market, said panelists Friday at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association in Chicago.

In the last year, there have been frequent calls, including one by AHA leaders, for job candidates to develop alternative career paths, because the academic job market is not going to bounce back to pre-recession levels any time soon.

A paper presented at the session by Thomas Bender, a professor of history at New York University, suggested that even though nonacademic careers may be the obvious direction to go, a shift in thinking can only come about when the leading history departments in the country begin to actively back this kind of thinking. “Without that leadership, the changes proposed will be considered something subpar and thus not the thing for an aspiring department or student,” Bender said in his paper. He said research by the AHA Committee on Doctoral Education has shown that graduates students are afraid to tell their advisers that they are contemplating careers outside the academe.

“Such students preferred to pursue the profession of history in museums, historical societies, film making, and the park service, among other possibilities,” according to the paper. But the students fear that if and when their advisers find out their plans, they will not be supportive. That’s why a radical change is needed in the way history departments think: not only acceptance of a new normal, but also a realization that the market may even worsen in the years to come....


Thursday, January 12, 2012 - 22:28