Don’t want to spend the day reading polls but can’t quit the intertubes? Me neither on both counts—so here’s another #ScholarSunday thread of great public scholarly writing from the past week to check out instead. #twitterstorians
For @Medium, @bleachbred boils #Election2020 down to some of the core American & human rights issues on the ballot.

medium.com/the-polis/lect…
Those issues will continue past Tuesday of course, so make sure to check out Th’s @SchomburgCenter event feat @rdunbaro, Johanna Fernández, and Paul Ortiz.

eventbrite.com/e/histories-of…
For @CNNOpinion, @ProfMSinha uses the election of 1860 to make the case for this year’s crucial significance.

cnn.com/2020/10/28/opi…
At his great blog, @joelowndes writes about David Duke, election dread, & premonitions of our political moment.
joelowndes.org/post/election-…
Great @marthasjones_ column for @people on Kamala Harris & the legacy of powerful black women & antiracism activism:
people.com/human-interest…
It’s hard to think of anything but the election atm, but we need to. To wit: @varsha_venkat’s new blog on the histories that rivers help us better remember:

varsha.substack.com/p/rivers-right…
& @SilasLapham for @Medium on the 1939 MSG Nazi rally, Frank Yerby, & white supremacy in 2020:
interminablerambling.medium.com/is-it-starting…
& @LDBurnett for @ArcDigi on the history of the idea of “the judgment of history.”
arcdigital.media/is-history-now…
& @ProfKori at @LAReviewofBooks on the prescience of Butler’s Kindred:
avidly.lareviewofbooks.org/2020/10/22/the…
& @LeahBaer9 for @Ideas_History on John Brown’s raid & who gets to claim historical “hallowed ground”:
s-usih.org/2020/10/who-cl…
At my AmericanStudies blog, @robinfield wrote a great Guest Post on Toni Morrison & the evolution of the rape novel in America.

americanstudier.blogspot.com/2020/10/octobe…
For a glimpse into Fall 2020 on college campuses, read @TheTattooedProf for @chronicle on what’s working & what’s not in our #highered HyFlex experiment.
chronicle.com/article/our-hy…
Also for @chronicle, @readywriting reminds us of all the challenges & crises affecting university staff.
chronicle.com/article/the-st…
Finally, for my new @SatEvePost Considering History column I used the upcoming 100th anniversary of the Ocoee massacre to trace the link between voter suppression & white supremacist racial terrorism:
saturdayeveningpost.com/2020/10/consid…
PS. As ever, I’m sure I’ve missed a lot, so add more public scholarly writing (including your own!) to this thread, please!

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More from @AmericanStudier

28 Oct
#OnThisDay 134 years ago, the Statue of Liberty was formally dedicated in New York Harbor. The moment reflects two frustrating layers to American mythmaking, but nonetheless still embodies some of the best of our ideals & community. A thread:
The 1st layer of frustrating mythmaking is the thoroughgoing erasure of the Statue’s original focus on slavery and abolition. Only the broken chains around Liberty’s feet (tellingly invisible to nearly all visitors to the island) reflect those origins.
By 1886 the US was fully in the throes of Lost Cause narratives of Civil War, race, & nation, & this erasure of Edouard Laboulaye’s original vision for the Statue reflects those broader collective elisions & myths.

americanstudier.blogspot.com/2019/04/april-…
Read 14 tweets
27 Oct
We’re a week out from not just #ElectionDay, but also the 100th anniversary of the Ocoee Massacre. & for this month’s @SatEvePost Considering History column, I delve into the foundational ties bt voter suppression & racial terrorism. #twitterstorians

saturdayeveningpost.com/2020/10/consid…
Even as we’ve started to better remember histories of white supremacist violence, from the Red Summer of 1919 and Tulsa to the lynching epidemic, I think we still too often see such horrors as spontaneous explosions of mob hate, reflective of deeper prejudices but impromptu.
But in truth, white supremacist violence in America has consistently been carefully planned & orchestrated, w/voter suppression as one of its chief goals. My column traces that legacy through New Orleans, the 1874 massacres, Wilmington, Ocoee, & the 1968 Mississippi murders.
Read 7 tweets
26 Oct
Determined not to let the limits & frustrations of hybrid/pandemic in-person classes keep me from sharing William Apess as fully as possible w/my Am Lit I students. He remains one of the 3-4 voices we all most need to listen to, & we're gonna hear & respond to him today!
That means "Indian's Looking-Glass for the White Man," rivaled only by Douglass's "What to the Slave..." as a bracing, biting attack on white American hypocrisy & prejudice--& an act of hopeful resistance & challenge to move us toward a more perfect union.
english.hku.hk/staff/kjohnson…
& it means "Eulogy on King Philip," a critically patriotic speech as brave as Douglass' as it was delivered in Boston's Odeon Theater & made the case for the Wampanoag chief as a Revolutionary US ancestor at least as worthy of commemoration as Washington.
voicesofdemocracy.umd.edu/apess-eulogy-s…
Read 4 tweets
18 Feb
On Toni Morrison’s bday, I’m thinking a lot about the end of her masterpiece Beloved in relationship to the @WoodsonCenter’s #1776woodson project (a direct response to the #1619Project). #twitterstorians
@WoodsonCenter Beloved’s short final chapter's through-line is a repeated phrase: “It was not a story to pass on” (shifted to “This is not a story to pass on” for its final repetition). The section's overtone is forgetting, suggesting the phrase's literal meaning (don’t pass this story on).
@WoodsonCenter That desire to forget—the character of Beloved, but also the histories of enslavement, slave trade, slavery's horrors, & esp what they demand of all those affected by them of which she’s a living reminder—is entirely understandable & to some degree even necessary for survival.
Read 13 tweets
18 Aug 19
Obviously some (well, a good bit) of the criticism of the #1619Project is white supremacist bigotry, full stop. But it seems to me another substantive factor is our collective reliance on celebratory, uncritical patriotism, & a related problem given a clear diagnosis in 1873:
In that year, the Harvard prof & reformer Charles Eliot Norton was on a steamship voyage from England to the US, & Ralph Waldo Emerson was on the same journey. They talked a lot, & Norton noted that even in old age, Emerson maintained his "inveterate & persistent optimism."
Norton acknowledged (this was in letters describing their convos) that such optimism was pleasant in an "such a character as Emerson's," but called it a "dangerous doctrine for a people," as it is "at the root of ... much of our unwillingness to accept hard truths."
Read 9 tweets
4 Aug 19
Let’s be clear: the exclusionary, white supremacist vision of the US has consistently produced some of our most horrific acts of violence & domestic terrorism. Native American massacres & genocides, as early as the Mystic Village massacre of 1636.
americanstudier.blogspot.com/2018/09/septem…
Lynching epidemics, targeting African Americans for more than a century but also targeting Chinese and Mexican Americans throughout the West and Southwest (among other communities).
saturdayeveningpost.com/2019/03/consid…
Massacres of entire American communities of color, from Wilmington, NC’s African American community in 1898…
wilmingtononfire.com
Read 15 tweets

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