When the World Turned Upside Down
Fruitful and Under-studied: Introducing a Roundtable on the Confederation Era
Cholera Revisited

Cholera Revisited

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Learning from Crisis: Narrative and the History of Medicine
The Enduring Significance of the Cholera Years
It Keeps Happening Here
Calling for a Blue Early America
Safeguarding Secrecy: Executive Privilege in the Early Republic
Charles Averill’s The Cholera-Fiend: Fiction for a Pandemic
Juneteenth and More: Celebrating Regional Black Civic Holidays
Accountability, Participation, Productivity, and Community: The Second Book Writers’ Workshop in the Virtual Age
The Second Book Workshop at the Society for Civil War Historians
Book-Writing Workshops at the Latin American and Caribbean Section of the Southern Historical Association
Modeling Midcareer Mentorship: Creating a Second-Book Writer’s Workshop
A “Man of His Time” and the Methods of White Supremacy: #SHEAR2020 and the Plenary Debacle
Was Indian Removal Genocidal?
And/Or: Reflections on SHEAR’s Plenary
Rehabilitating and Teaching Revolution (1985): 35 Years Later

Rehabilitating and Teaching Revolution (1985): 35 Years Later

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In a post from 2020, Bryan Rindfleisch makes the case for why we should revisit the critically panned 1985 Al Pacino film Revolution (which turns 40 this year).