Saturday, August 29, 2009

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Prompts for Thinking about Turner & Limerick

Here are some prompts to get you thinking about Frederick Jackson Turner's "The Significance of the Frontier in American History" and Patricia Limerick's "Adventures of the Frontier in the 20th Century."

Where did the idea of the frontier come from, and to what extent is the concept still useful today? This is this week's "key question."

While we are used to thinking about the U.S. as a "frontier culture" and Western expansion as the most important story of America, this idea wasn't invented until the end of the 19th century. Turner's "frontier thesis" developed the idea of the frontier and its importance that we still hold today. More recently, historians like Patrica Limerick have criticized Turner's frontier thesis, arguing that it is one-sided and does not take the story of other "frontiers"--such as the U.S.-Mexico border, or Asian Americans' movement from East to West--into account. In other words, Limerick is writing with a contemporary perspective, shaped by multiculturalism, while Turner is the more "traditional" historian.

These are difficult readings, and you may find yourself stuck when you sit down to write this week's blog post. If this happens to you, think smaller. Take a short section of the Limerick essay, for example, and respond to that. What is her main point? Why does she think it's so important to revise Turner's thesis? What do you think about her arguments?

Don't forget: your 500-word post is due FRIDAY by 3:00 pm!! Make sure you give yourself enough time to finish the readings and reflect so that you can post by then.



Monday, August 24, 2009

New American Studies Journal

I received an e-mail today about a new periodical: Journal of American Studies. It might be a good resource for AMS 205. Here's a description:
Journal of American Studies seeks to critique and interrogate the notion of "America", pursuing this through international perspectives on the history, literature, politics and culture of the United States. [...] The journal is intended not only for students and scholars, but also for general readers with an interest in the United States.
You can see their homepage here and the full-text contents of their most recent issue here. My favorite article so far? "Benjamin Franklin and the Leather-Apron Men: The Politics of Class in Eighteenth-Century Philadelphia."

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Howdy! Here's 5 random things about me.


  1. I've been teaching American literature and American studies for about 10 years.


  2. My favorite genre is autobiography. I like thinking about how people understand their lives, and how they represent themselves to others.


  3. Non-academic jobs I've had include: assistant editor and web manager for Foundry Management & Technology Magazine (now defunct, but not because of me); McDonald's manager; freelance writer for a Cleveland-based private investigator / televangelist.


  4. I'm a runner and swimmer, and I used to be an orange belt in Shotokan karate.


  5. I am obsessed with Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography.