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).
Teaching U.S. History with Liberia