The Scholars Speak: Amy Murrell Taylor

“The Scholars Speak”: Civil War and Reconstruction Today’s scholar is Professor Amy Murrell Taylor, professor of history at the University of Albany. She is the author of the marvelous book The Divided Family in Civil War America (2005) and a co-editor (with Michael Perman) of Major Problems in the Civil War and Reconstruction. 1. Ever…

We’re Number 12! We’re Number 12!

According to The Daily Beast, Tina Brown’s e-zine that Newsweek bought, becoming a history major is the 12th worst choice a student can make.  Of course, that’s based on this criteria: Unemployment, recent grad: 10.2 percentUnemployment, experienced grad: 5.8 percentEarnings, recent grad: $32,000Earnings, experienced grad: $54,000Projected growth, 2010-2020: +18 percentRelated occupation: Historian All that said,…

The Scholars Respond – Graber on Prisons

Here is Jennifer Graber’s response to the student comments on her work that considered antebellum prisons and how to teach antebellum America. Similar to Matt’s response, I’m interested that students picked up on something – the connection to slavery – that was not the focus on my book. I find this instructive in terms of…

uncoverage update

Followers of the blog may have read about my attempts to incorporate an “uncoverage” approach to my course in American religious history.  Rather than bull through the material in typical survey style, I’ve structured the course in five chronologically progressing sections, with each section geared toward answering a single question.  The idea was to get…

Matthew Bowman Responds to Student Comments

Matthew Bowman Responds to Student Comments  Offer extra credit and they shall come! My students were offered some extra credit to read Matthew Bowman‘s blog entry on teaching Mormonism in the US history survey course and incorporate their thoughts on Joseph Smith’s writings on plural marriage in 1842 (and apologies to all for the…

First Feminisms

Primary Sources on Transatlantic Feminisms“And the war came.” Thank goodness for Abraham Lincoln, his short sentences, and even his passive voice. There is so much to teach even from this little bit in his Second Inaugural. In class, we’re pressing ever closer to the Civil War (or whatever we choose to call it). One of…

The Home Stretch

Trimester of the Semester As my students handed in their second essays (either on what made the United States a “nation” from 1760 to 1830 or on what was the biggest weakness in the new nation-state), I reflected with my students on entering the “trimester of the semester.” My wife has just entered her third…

The Scholars Speak – Anthony Kaye on teaching slavery

The Scholars Speak – Anthony Kaye on Teaching Slavery Today’s edition of The Scholars Speak comes from Anthony Kaye who teaches history at Penn State University. He is the author of Joining Plaecs: Slave Neighborhoods in the Old South, a fascinating examination of how slaves made space in the Natchez District of southwest Mississippi and…

Alasdair MacIntyre coming to UIC this Tuesday

Okay, so slightly off topic, but one of the programs I’m involved in my day job is bringing Alasdair MacIntyre to campus this Tuesday, and I’m excited. He is, of course, one of the most famous philosophers in the Western world, and he’s been at the top of the field of ethics for four decades.…