Sharing some everyday thoughts with students in my FAU history seminar in comparative history, Spring 2012. Please talk back!
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Conference on Florida
I'm going to be attending much of the upcoming conference on Florida at the Crossroads, sponsored by the University of Miami's Center for the Humanities. Sessions on Friday morning and Saturday morning are particularly related to what we learned about in Landers' Atlantic Creoles book, and in fact, she will be presenting on Saturday morning! Registration is free, so come down to Miami to learn more about Florida's history during the Age of Revolutions, or to find out what academic conferences look like. I'll even introduce you to Jane Landers if you want to get your book signed!
The U.S., Cuba, and rethinking the end of slavery
The documentary I referred to tonight in class, Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North, is one I showed last semester in my course on New World Slavery. It covers the journey of one Rhode Island woman (and a few extended family members) who sought to discover the roots of her family's wealth in the U.S. slave trade--via the contraband slave markets that Landers talked about in her chapter on the role of Cuba in the 19th century. The documentary is a fascinating one, as it delves into issues of silencing "unthinkable" histories (like the New Englanders' myth of not being involved with slavery), and of considering the consequences of economic privileges and handicaps that have trickled down since slavery and the slave trade ended. It can be requested from the Jupiter Library, or browse through the clips and materials available for teaching.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
The Revolution Will be Forgotten?
I added to the wiki bibliography on the Haitian Revolution a fascinating web initiative called The Louverture Project. It is an open-source collaborative wiki/clearinghouse for primary source documents, images, links to archives and libraries, and all kinds of information that historians have uncovered in the past few decades--especially enhanced since the bicentenary of Haitian independence in 2004 and the tragedy of the 2010 earthquake (which included the near-destruction of the National Archives and the loss of many books and other documents). Is it possible that Trouillot's assertions that the Haitian Revolution remains "unthinkable" have been broken by this surge of scholarship? What do you think of the title of their proposed online narrative, "The Revolution Will be Forgotten"?
Homage to Enlightenment scholar Margaret Jacob
Historian Margaret C. Jacob is one of those names that didn't make it onto my starter bibliography about the Enlightenment, but as evidenced from this January's meeting of the American Historical Association in Chicago, her work has helped revolutionize scholars' understanding of the Enlightenment and its spread during the early 18th century.
Check out some of her titles on the library shelves here at FAU, or go to her online C.V. or to Historical Abstracts (one of FAU's most powerful electronic databases) to search for articles that might be compelling reading for your research project.
Check out some of her titles on the library shelves here at FAU, or go to her online C.V. or to Historical Abstracts (one of FAU's most powerful electronic databases) to search for articles that might be compelling reading for your research project.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Haiti can be rich again.
Just the title of this op-ed piece in Sunday's NYTimes struck me as a fabulous re-thinking of the standard narrative of Haiti's modern "failures." I wasn't at all surprised to see that it was written by Laurent DuBois, the pre-eminent scholar of the Haitian Revolution (you'll see his name a few times in our course bibliographies). Another related article on the "rural road to recovery."
History and the danger of stories
I saw this TED talk by economist Tyler Cowen posted to my friend's Facebook page the other day and got to thinking about our conversation on the first night of class about whether we think of the Age of Atlantic Revolutions as the "spring of hope" (as Dickens and many nationalist historiographies have painted independence movements) or as a "season of irony" (Egerton's take on the counter-productive social goals of Simon Bolivar and Denmark Vesey). The jist of Cowen's talk is that we should be suspicious of these types of heroic/tragic narrative tropes, for any familiar story--the struggle to survive, the fight against tyranny, the tragedy of broken promises--just flattens out the messiness of reality. What do you think?
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