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James Oliver Horton (1943–2017)

Autor von Slavery and the Making of America

13+ Werke 568 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

James Oliver Horton, the Benjamin Banneker Professor of American Studies and History at George Washington University, directs the African American Communities Project at the Smithsonian Institution. He is a regular panelist on The History Channel's The History Center. (Bowker Author Biography)

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Oversized book with lots of pictures, photos, paintings, documents and images of artifacts. A detailed timeline and bibliography conclude the book.
 
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VillageProject | Jan 18, 2024 |
I found that the author frequently wandered off into ideas and historical inaccuracies in which he applies simplistic arguments concerning slavery into complicated or incorrect circumstances such as the cause of the civil war, Fort Pillow and reconstruction to name a few. However; when he sticks to the subject this book contains many historical facts about such figures as Harriot Tubman and Fredrick Douglas which are not widely known. In all an Ok book once you get past the obvious prejudice of the author.… (mehr)
 
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dswaddell | Apr 3, 2014 |
Public history, history presented in museums, parks and at historical sites, is the sharp end of scholarship. We Americans know our history. We remember what our parents, grandparents, and teachers have told us about the way things were. We have seen John Wayne die defending the Alamo, and die again building airstrips in the South Pacific. However, our historical memory is often at odds with historical fact. James Oliver Horton and Lois Horton’s 2009 book “Slavery and Public History: the Tough Stuff of American Memory” is a collection of essays examining the causes and outcomes of some recent controversies that have resulted when memory and fact collide.

All of the essays that the Hortons chose for the book are readable easy to follow. Given that a public historian's job is to present complicated issues and events in a manner acceptable to experts and understandable to school children I would not expect anything less. In fact, he difference between “historical memory” and “historical fact” a distinction I have stumbled over in the past, is better explained here than in any historiography I have read. In addition to the opening theoretical articles there are several interesting case studies presented, the controversy on the new building for the Liberty Bell and its location on the site of the Presidents House, introducing the stories of bonded servants to tours at historical sites like Monticello and “My Old Kentucky Home” Park, and reinterpreting Richmond Virginia’s public space to encourage historical tourism in the new, New South, are interesting and, for me, somewhat surprising. Edward Lnienthal wraps the book up by showing that our disconnect between our “historical memory” and our factual, documented history is not restricted to slavery or even to the United States by pointing out similar disconnects around the world.

If you have ever disagreed with something you read in a museum or on a monument you might enjoy this book.
… (mehr)
 
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TLCrawford | Nov 14, 2012 |

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13
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2
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568
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#44,051
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3.8
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3
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32

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