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Tag Archives: American Popular Culture
The “Lost Cause,” and Frederick Douglass’s Response: Teaching Civil Rights, 13
[Note: Here we are near the end of the second decade of the twentieth-first century, and we as a nation are still arguing about statues to Confederate leaders, generic marble remembrances of the “Confederate Soldier,” and other public efforts to … Continue reading
Posted in ""state rights", Age of Jim Crow, American History, Books, Civil Rights Movement, Current Events, Education, Historical Reflection, History, Popular Culture, Research, Retirement, Southern History, Uncategorized, WP Long Read
Tagged "Frederick Douglass" (2018), Age of Jim Crow, American History, American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, Civil Rights Movement, David W. Blight, education, Historical Reflection, history, History Teaching, Southern History, Teaching, Teaching History
4 Comments
A Post for the Fourth of July in Georgia, 2019
Those of you who follow this blog know that I have a fondness for “annual” posts. One of my favorite holidays is Independence Day, because it gives me a chance to assess how the nation’s seminal holiday has been celebrated … Continue reading
Posted in 4th of July, American History, Current Events, History, Popular Culture, Retirement, Southern (Georgia) History, Uncategorized
Tagged American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, American Revolution in Georgia, Fourth of July celebrations, Georgia and the American Revolution, Georgia History, Historical Reflection, Southern History, Teaching, Teaching History
6 Comments
My Brother the Writer, Act 3: The Prequel
A Review of Rick Lamplugh, The Wilds of Aging: A Journey of Heart and Mind (2018). Available at amazon.com in both paperback and e-book formats. [NOTE: On two previous occasions (see here and here), I have reviewed books written by … Continue reading
Posted in "In The Temple of Wolves", Books, Delaware, family history, memoir, Popular Culture, Retirement, Rick Lamplugh, Uncategorized, Wolves, WP Long Form, Yellowstone National Park
Tagged American Popular Culture, family history, In The Temple of Wolves, Newark (Delaware), Retirement, Rick Lamplugh, WP Longform, Yellowstone National Park
2 Comments
Polishing the “Marble Man”: Reflections on Douglas Southall Freeman’s “R.E. Lee” (4 vols., 1934-1935)
[NOTE: I never intended to read Douglas Southall Freeman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning four-volume biography of Robert E. Lee. After all, in grad school one of my professors dismissed Freeman’s effort out of hand, remarking that Freeman’s Lee would have been a … Continue reading
Posted in Age of Jim Crow, Books, Civil War, Current Events, Historical Reflection, History, History Teaching, Research, Retirement, Shelby Foote, Southern (Georgia) History, Southern History, Uncategorized, WP Long Read
Tagged "R.E. Lee", Age of Jim Crow, American History, American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, Douglas Southall Freeman, Historical Reflection, history, Southern History
6 Comments
The “Second Reconstruction”: The Modern Civil Rights Movement, 1940s-1968, Part 1 (Teaching Civil Rights, 12)
[NOTE: One of the most significant developments in American history since the end of World War II has been the modern civil rights movement, which noted historian C. Vann Woodward termed “the Second Reconstruction.” Between the 1940s and 1968, the … Continue reading
Posted in American History, Civil Rights Movement, Dr. Martin Luther King, Education, Historical Reflection, History, History Curriculum, History Teaching, Martin Luther King, Popular Culture, Research, Retirement, Southern History, Sun Belt, Teaching, Uncategorized
Tagged Age of Jim Crow, American History, American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, Civil Rights Movement, education, Historical Reflection, history, History Curriculum, History Teaching, Prep school teaching, Prep school teaching with a PhD, Retirement, Southern History, Teaching, Teaching History
2 Comments
“My people, yes!”
A Review of: Nancy Isenberg, White Trash: The 400-Year Old History of Class in America. New York: Penguin Books, 2016. [NOTE: Like J.D. Vance’s Hillbilly Elegy (2016), Nancy Isenberg’s White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America, had … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Civil Rights Movement, Current Events, Historical Reflection, History, Interdisciplinary Work, Popular Culture, Southern History, Teaching, Uncategorized, WP Long Read
Tagged American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, Civil Rights Movement, Historical Reflection, history, Interdisciplinary Work, Southern History, Teaching, Teaching History
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“The Gathering”: Leadership Retreat Devotional, 1999 (Be True to Your School, 6)
[NOTE: During the 1999-2000 school year, I served as Interim Chair of the History Department at Atlanta’s Finest Prep School (AFPS). This assignment meant, among other things, that I was once again “in the administrative loop,” whether I wished to … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Current Events, Education, Historical Reflection, History Teaching, Interdisciplinary Work, memoir, Popular Culture, Prep School, prep school teaching with a PhD, Retirement, Sun Belt, Teaching, Theology, Uncategorized
Tagged American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, education, Historical Reflection, History Teaching Career Retrospective, Interdisciplinary Work, Prep school teaching, Prep school teaching with a PhD, Religion, Retirement, Teaching, Teaching History
6 Comments
The New South: Myth and Reality (Teaching Civil Rights, 9)
[NOTE: This is the first of several posts that will reveal my approach to “teaching Civil Rights” to a class of high school juniors and seniors. I did not do a lot of lecturing in this course, but what I … Continue reading
Posted in Age of Jim Crow, Historical Reflection, History, History Curriculum, History Teaching, Research, Southern History, Teaching, Uncategorized, WP Long Read
Tagged American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, myth and reality, New South, New South Creed, Southern History, Teaching, Teaching History
4 Comments
Betts: A Mother’s Memoir, 1923-1964 Part VIII: Betts, Ben, and J.B., 1940-1944
[NOTE: Almost a year ago, I put up what I thought would be the final installment of the series, “Betts: A Mother’s Memoir, 1923-1964.” But I hadn’t considered my “Historical Pack Rat” gene. . . . In the middle of … Continue reading
The Story Behind “A Scrappy Fourth of July” (In Pursuit of Dead Georgians, 29)
[Note: Last time, I regaled you with “Confessions of a Historical Pack Rat,” a light-hearted look at where I’ve gotten some of the material for posts at “Retired But Not Shy” (hereafter RBNS) over its first eight years. As it … Continue reading
Posted in 4th of July, American "republicanism", American History, American Revolution, Education, Georgia History, Historical Reflection, History, History Curriculum, History Teaching, Popular Culture, Research, Retirement, Southern History, Teaching, Uncategorized
Tagged American History, American History and Culture, American Popular Culture, education, Georgia and the American Revolution, Georgia History, Historical Reflection, History Curriculum, History Teaching, Retirement, Southern History, Teaching History
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