This page features brief excerpts of stories published by the mainstream
media and, less frequently, blogs, alternative media, and even obviously
biased sources. The excerpts are taken directly from the websites cited in
each source note. Quotation marks are not used.
Source: Foundation for Individual Rights in Education
12/18/2020
The nonpartisan Foundation for Individual Rights in Education asks University of Mississippi Chancellor Glenn Boyce to reevaluate the decision to end Professor Garrett Felber's employment, raising the possibility that the decision was related to Felber's criticism of the university.
Source: Haymarket Books
12/22/2020
A group of scholars will convene a virtual event to discuss the case of Garrett Felber at the University of Mississippi and the status of activist scholarship in the U.S. academy, including historians Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Robin D.G. Kelley, and Elizabeth Hinton.
Source: The Atlantic
12/20/2020
by Deborah Cohen
Historian Deborah Cohen reviews new books on the early womens movement by Rachel Holmes and Martha S. Jones.
Source: Boston Review
12/21/2020
by Agnes Callard
Two new books take aim at the moral failures of meritocracy. But we can advocate for a more just society without giving up on merit.
Source: Perspectives on History
12/18/2020
by Jacqueline Jones
Historians, their departments, and their institutions will have to respond creatively to the challenges posed by COVID, but perhaps the profession and the place of history in American culture can emerge stronger than ever.
Source: Washington Post
12/20/2020
The Washington Post's editorial board recommends the young educational justice activist to replace Robert E. Lee's statue in the US Capitol.
Source: Virginian-Pilot
12/19/2020
Mount Vernon historian Mary Thompson says the legend of George Washington's super-potent recipe for eggnog is bunk, but the estate does preserve a hand-written holiday cake recipe from Martha Washington.
Source: Forward
12/20/2020
The racial justice protests of 2020 pushed up sales of Marc Dollinger's book on political relationships between Jewish and African American groups. But Brandeis University Press has balked at publishing a new introductory essay that suggests American Jews need to acknowledge and confront their privileges as white Americans.
Source: Bloomberg
12/19/2020
Veteran war correspondent Tom Ricks has written a new book on the influence of Greece and Rome on the American founders, and discusses how this year's election reflects that influence.
Source: Times of Israel
12/19/2020
Historian Lukasz Krzyzanowski argues that most Poles today are “unwilling to accept the bitter fact that they live in a post-genocidal land.”
Source: The Atlantic
12/21/2020
The urban bourgeoisie of the 19th century pushed Christmas away from a drunken celebration of leisure and toward a holiday merging piety and consumerism.
Source: Chronicle of Higher Education
12/17/2020
Historian Walter Johnson says the Garrett Felber controvery at the University of Mississippi reflects the fact that “there are a lot of energetic, critical activists, students and faculty on that campus, who are trying to hold the university to a different standard than that which it’s been held to before.”
Source: Atlas Obscura
12/15/2020
The first cohort of Black women to serve in the US Navy were enlisted as reservists to fill shortages in the service's clerical workforce. At the time, the nation's climate of racism forced them to keep a low profile. A researcher compiling a book about the "Golden Fourteen" mined family history to learn about their service.
Source: The Metropole
12/17/2020
Chances are you've figured out your self-care rituals after months of COVID restrictions, but it's never too late to pick up something new from the staffers of the Urban History Association's Metropole blog.
Source: Inside Higher Ed
12/17/2020
Scholars pledge not to speak at University of Mississippi until it reinstates a colleague who publicly questioned why his chair rejected a grant, allegedly for political reasons.
Source: Politico
12/16/2020
With one notable exception, secession has been an idle threat in American political discourse. Richard Kreitner's book on secession movements anchors columnist Jack Shafer's analysis.
Source: Vice
12/16/2020
At 73, Dr. Robert Bullard, widely recognized as the 'Father of Environmental Justice,' is now preparing the next generation of Black leaders to lead the movement.
Source: Harvard Magazine
12/16/2020
by Benjamin M. Friedman
Historian Benjamin Friedman's new book examines the importance of changing religious ideas in American Protestantism as influences on the development of social and economic policy. Part of the concluding chapter is excerpted here.
Source: NPR
12/15/2020
Historian Robert Dallek interprets Franklin Roosevelt's core challenge at inauguration as producing a program of reform to stabilize the economy without indulging the currents of authoritarianism sweeping Europe.
Source: Woodrow Wilson Center and National History Center
12/16/2020
The Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963 is typically viewed as marking a first step toward nuclear arms control. But Toshihiro Higuchi argues that it was also one of the first international agreements that addressed a truly global, human-induced environmental problem. He discusses his new book for the Washington History Seminar on Thursday, 12/21 at 4:00 PM EDT.