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March 2002
Volume 88, No. 4
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Presidential Address
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The Power of History: The Weakness of a Profession
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Over the past thirty years, historians have seen their job prospects
shrink and their job security erode. Both the sales of scholarly
history books and the number of undergraduate history majors have
fallen. But in his presidential address to the Organization of American
Historians, Kenneth T. Jackson sees reasons for hope and spurs to
action. He celebrates the unprecedented variety of innovative scholarship
and the growing public interest in history. He urges history departments
to cut back production of new doctorates and reliance on adjunct
instructors. He urges professional groups to work with such natural
allies as community college and high school teachers in joint efforts
to revitalize teaching and broaden the audience for history.
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Articles
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Empires, Exceptions, and Anglo-Saxons: Race
and Rule between the British and United States Empires, 1880-1910
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Paul A. Kramer explores the dialogue between Americans
and Britons on the meanings of race, empire, and national exceptionalism
at the turn of the twentieth century. At a decisive moment, he argues,
American colonialists successfully justified the annexation of the
Philippines by an appeal to Anglo-Saxon racial exceptionalism. Reclaiming
their ties to the British Empire through blood, culture, and history,
American imperialists pronounced the nation both bound and fit to
acquire an overseas colonial empire. By 1902, however, the rhetoric
of American exceptionalism eclipsed the racial appeal, as Americans
trumpeted their alleged republican mission to govern "dependencies"
in a selfless spirit and with a promise of eventual self-government.
Special Online Feature: Kramer's article is the featured
article for the third installment of
"Teaching the JAH" web project.
Image reprinted from The Chicago Tribune,
Aug. 24, 1898.
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The Only Badge Needed Is Your Patriotic Fervor:
Vigilance, Coercion, and the Law in World War I America
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As the United States mobilized for World War I, the government
looked to voluntary associations to safeguard American communities
from foreign invasion and domestic subversion. The officials who
urged grass-roots groups to police their neighbors distinguished
between "vigilance," endorsed as a democratic duty, and
"vigilantism," denounced as mob violence. In the article
that won the Louis Pelzer Award for 2001, Christopher Capozzola
shows that in practice--in extralegal coercion of workers, women
suspected of prostitution, and African Americans--vigilance and
vigilantism mingled. His work raises questions about ideals of active
citizenship, links between voluntarism and political violence in
American history, and contemporary assumptions that voluntary associations
contribute positively to civic identity and democratic engagement.
Image courtesty Tulsa Race Riot Collection,
McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa.
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Ethnics against Ethnicity: European Immigrants
and Foreign-Language Instruction, 1890-1940
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Why did European immigrants decline to study their
"native" languages in American public schools during the
first half of the twentieth century? The standard historical interpretation
stresses the coercive waves of Americanization that dampened linguistic
diversity throughout the land. Yet, as Jonathan Zimmerman
shows, urban schools continued to offer Polish, Hebrew, Norwegian,
and a host of other immigrant tongues. Promoted by ethnic leaders,
the courses taught "pure" languages that differed sharply
from the regional or mixed dialects that most newcomers actually
spoke. By refusing to register their children for classes in their
supposedly ancestral tongues, immigrants registered their hostility
to uniform ethnic identities. Across a wide range of languages,
they expressed their ethnicity--like their Americanism--in their
own terms.
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The Great Society after Johnson: The Case
of Bilingual Education
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Gareth Davies explores the tenacity of the
liberal reformist impulse that created the Great Society. Most historians
see the mid-1960s as the crest of that impulse, but Davies contends
that a second peak occurred within government agencies during Richard
M. Nixon's first term. Latinos were among the groups who received
increased attention from the federal government during the second
phase of the Great Society. Davies uses the rise of the bilingual
education program to illustrate how executive concerns, pressure
group politics, bureaucratic entrepreneurship, and judicial activism
combined to advance the cause of "language minorities"
during the Nixon administration.
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Textbooks and Teaching
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"Editors' Introduction: Teaching outside the Box," by
Gary J. Kornblith and Carol Lasser
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
Special Online Feature: Syllabi and other supplemental
material are available at our
"Textbooks and Teaching" companion site.
"Re-Visioning Women's History through Service Learning,"
by Catherine Badura
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"Exploring the Wide World of Sports: Taking a Class to the
(Virtual) Olympics," by Amy Bass
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"'It Was As If We Were Never There': Recovering Detroit's
Past for History and Theater," by Charles Bright
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"'Bringing History to Life': Oral History, Community Research,
and Multiple Levels of Learning," by A. Glenn Crothers
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"Going Public with Introductory American History," by
John J. Grabowski
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"La Castaña Project: A History Field Laboratory Experience,"
by Cecilia Aros Hunter and Leslie Gene Hunter
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"On the Road and out of the Box: Teaching the Civil Rights
Movement from a Chrysler Minivan," by Alyssa Picard and Joseph
J. Gonzalez
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"'Forgotten Voices and Different Memories': How Students at
California State University, Monterey Bay, Became Their Own Historians,"
by David A. Reichard
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"Teaching Students to Become Producers of New Historical Knowledge
on the Web," by Kathryn Kish Sklar
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"The Collaborative Research Seminar," by John Wertheimer
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"Using Historical Landscape to Stimulate Historical Imagination:
A Memoir of Climbing outside the Box," by James P. Whittenburg
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
"A Modest Proposal: Less (Authority) Is More (Learning),"
by Michael Zuckerman
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
Photograph by James P. Whittenburg.
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Book Reviews
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A complete listing of book reviews is available here..
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Web Site Reviews
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New York Times Daily Lesson Plan and Daily Lesson Plan Archive,
by Arnold Pulda
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
Documenting the American South, by Crandall Shifflett
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1820-1940,
by Allison L. Sneider
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
The New Deal Network, by Charles Forcey
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
Project WhistleStop: Truman Digital Archive Project, by
Patrick D. Reagan
[Full text available at the History Cooperative]
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Announcements
Recent Scholarship
Contents of Volume 88
Index to Volume 88
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On
the cover: Selling empire and race patriotism. In this
turn-of-the-century tea advertisement, Queen Victoria herself invites
President William McKinley to partake in imperial commerce and social
relations. Reprinted from Ladies Home Journal, Oct.
1897. See Paul A. Kramer, "Empires, Exceptions, and Anglo-Saxons:
Race and Rule between the British and United States Empires, 18801910,"
p. 1315
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