Category Archives: Production of History

Toilers in the Trope Workshop

One of my hopes for cultural history & media studies courses that I teach is that students will learn not just how to read, analyze and critique expressive culture but also get some sense of how to produce it, use … Continue reading

Posted in Africa, Digital Humanities, Popular Culture, Production of History | 1 Comment

The Temperament of Serpents

I went surf fishing in Delaware for the first time this summer. My previous experience had been limited to freshwater fishing, mostly for trout, some with a spinning reel using lures and bait, some fly-fishing. So I spent some time … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Digital Humanities, Information Technology and Information Literacy, Production of History | 3 Comments

Looking Backward

I’ve been fiddling with the syllabus for my Image of Africa class, which I am to teach this fall for the first time in a while. No course in my repertoire has changed as much in my underlying assumptions about … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Africa, Production of History | 22 Comments

Africans and the Slave Trade

It’s been a very busy couple of weeks, as the last half of April so often is. Usually that leaves me with a mind like a blown-out tire for the week where everything calms down, and this year has been … Continue reading

Posted in Africa, Production of History | 2 Comments

Literacy Quizzes (Again)

There is probably no point whatsoever to a critique of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute’s civics literacy quiz (via 11d), but hope springs eternal, I guess. First off, my generic criticisms of these kinds of historic or social-science literacy quizzes. Usually, … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Cleaning Out the Augean Stables, Politics, Production of History | 5 Comments

Hester Prynne, Schmester Prynne, or Sarah Palin’s Ressentiment Clubhouse

A friend of mine recently remarked that her 16-year old was frustrated by having to read The Scarlet Letter and other works of classic literature being pushed at him in his high school English class. She’s helping him stick to … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Politics, Production of History | 9 Comments

Reading the Not-Yet

I really like John Holbo’s point about teaching Descartes’ actual writings as an introduction to “modern philosophy” in this Crooked Timber post. There’s a general pedagogical point here about intellectual history. When we teach canonical texts that are commonly held … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Production of History | 3 Comments

Anatomy of a Search

If there’s anything that I think needs to be learned through experience or through directly witnessing the experience of others, it’s online information-seeking. I don’t think you can give a useful general description of how to search that a student … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Information Technology and Information Literacy, Production of History | 7 Comments

The Microhistorical Unknown

In some forthcoming work, I’ve argued that historians tend to overinterpret or misread silences in archival records, seeing instrumental or intentional erasures of knowledge instead of the incidental accidents or the peculiar character of modern archival culture. I suggest that … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Production of History | 5 Comments

Nobody Expects the Black Swans?

I liked The Black Swan better than John Holbo and much of the Crooked Timber commentariat. But I completely agree with a lot of the criticisms. The book itself is not a good read because Taleb gets so caught up … Continue reading

Posted in Books, Miscellany, Production of History | 4 Comments