Here it is, my 57th #ScholarSunday thread (& last regular one of 2021, before a year-end special in a couple weeks) of great public scholarly writing & work from the last week! Enjoy & share more, please! #twitterstorians
We lost one of our true scholarly giants this week in bell hooks. @JSTOR is offering many of her foundational readings free of charge: daily.jstor.org/bell-hooks-res…
The amazing folks @BlkPerspectives continue to carry the legacy of folks like hooks forward. This week that includes Herb Boyd on Robert Farris Thompson & Greg Tate: aaihs.org/flyboy-meets-g…
PS. I’m sure I missed plenty as ever, so please share more public scholarly writing & work, including yours! Thanks, happy reading, may it be a restful & rejuvenative holiday period, & see y’all in two weeks for a year-end thread!
Not gonna QT that despicable Lippincott thread on immigration, but just wanted to share one of the most telling speeches in American history: South Carolina Senator Ellison DuRant Smith in support of the 1924 Quota Act.
Smith's speech exemplifies two ideas at the heart of my last two books. An exclusionary definition of American identity: "It is for the preservation of that splendid stock that has characterized us that I would make this not an asylum for the oppressed of all countries..." +
& the link of that white supremacy to mythic patriotism & its idealized vision of the Revolution/Constitution: "Let up keep what we have, protect what we have, make what we have the realization of the dream of those who wrote the Constitution."
When Susie King Taylor worked alongside Clara Barton at a Beaufort hospital, it was a collaboration between two of the Civil War's most inspiring figures. One of so many histories we can only remember if we learn about race & antiracism! #twitterstorians saturdayeveningpost.com/2021/12/consid…
If, as @jimdowns1 has argued so well, the #CivilWar was centrally linked to disease & pandemic, that makes figures like Taylor & Barton as influential & important as any generals or politicians. All part of the ongoing reframing of the era & expanding of our collective memories.
In November 2019, as stories of the latest school shooting crossed my feed, I dashed off this opening to my most hastily composed @SatEvePost column ever: "One morning early last spring, my younger son & I were in an argument as I drove the boys to their respective schools.+
The subject was entirely silly & unnecessary, but we both felt passionately & weren’t backing down. The argument continued up until he got out of the car, which meant that for the only time during that entire school year, we didn’t say “I love you” to each other as he got out.+
I spent the remainder of the day paralyzed, unable to think about anything other than the possibility of a school shooting and of that angry drop-off being our last interaction." Over 2 years later, the only thing that's changed is I never miss the chance to tell 'em I love them.
The vital @gutenberg_org turns 50 this year! So to celebrate that bday, I wanted to share 5 books you can read for free thanks to that amazing collection. Starting w/Zitkala-Ŝa’s American Indian Stories for #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth. #twitterstorians
I'd love to share lots more online reading recommendations, on Project Gutenberg & beyond, in the crowd-sourced weekend post! What digitally available works or online collections/resources would you highlight, all? @PedagogyAmLitSt
The next free online read in my @gutenberg_org bday series is Helen Hunt Jackson's Ramona (1884), a blend of romance & realism that has inspired generations (not always in the ways she intended) & still has a great deal more to teach us. #twitterstorians
In February, I finally got to share a Guest Post from one of my very first Twitter connections & one of my AmericanStudying models, @adamgolub on creativity:
Apropos of this earlier mini-thread on Rittenhouse & exclusion/inclusion, wanted to share a few #VeteransDay thoughts on US military service & those competing visions of America. #twitterstorians
At one of my book talks for We the People back in 2019, an audience member asked a challenging, excellent question about how many of my examples of an inclusive America seem to come from wars & military service. rowman.com/ISBN/978153812…
They had a point: in that talk alone I focused at length on Japanese American soldiers in WWII, the US Colored Troops during the Civil War, & the “Manilamen,” the Filipino Americans who played such a vital role in the War of 1812's culminating Battle of New Orleans.