aul Jay
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Thomas Frank wrote in a recent essay published in Le Monde Diplomatique , “This essay is not a brief for free speech absolutism, or an effort to rationalize conspiracy theory or an attack on higher learning. It’s about the future of the Democratic Party, the future of the left, and here is the suggestion I mean to make: the form of liberalism I have described here is inherently despicable. A democratic society is naturally going to gag when it’s told again and again in countless ways, both the subtle and gross, that our great national problem is our failure to heed the authority of traditional elites.”
Father Mark F. Carr Pilot file photo
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At the time of his retirement as pastor of St. Nicholas Parish in Abington in 1997, Father Mark Carr reflected that he remembered the first “documentation” of his desire to be a priest was in a composition he wrote at the Henry Adams School in Boston in fourth grade!
A Bostonian through and through and the son of two immigrants from Ireland, Mark and Mary (McNamara) Carr, Mark F. Carr was born in Boston and educated in its public schools. The names of the schools echo the proud history of the city itself: Henry Adams, Francis Parkman and Boston Latin.
The Austerity Politics of White Supremacy
Since the end of the Confederacy, the cult of the âtaxpayerâ has provided a socially acceptable veneer for racist attacks on democracy. A composite photograph of South Carolina s majority-black legislature created and circulated by opponents of Reconstruction (Library of Congress)
From the Southern strategy of the 1960s to Donald Trumpâs refusal to concede the presidential election, it is easy to trace the Republican Partyâs decades-long descent into racial authoritarianism. Despite the presidentâs unhinged response to the election results, the real locus of power is the Senate, where Republican legislators have been striking sober-sounding notes about the need for smaller government, an end to relief spending, and the danger of higher taxes. Those desperate to see a return to normalcy may hail this born-again fiscal conservatism as a departure from Trumpâs racist, antidem
â1âNo Document, No History
â2âCollection, Preservation and Publication
â3âThe Republic of Letters, or a Network of Historiographical Fraternity
â4âMany Documents, Many Histories
2
â1âThe Third Volume of The History of New-Hampshire
â2âNatural History Turned National History
â3âHoneybees and Fiddlers: National Unity or Individual Uniqueness
â4âHistory Writing and the Building of the Federal Republic
â5âSatire in History
3
â1âErudition or Narrative
â2âDocument Hunter and Blocked Historian
â3âThe Editor s Duty/Liberty
â4âThe Biographer s (Sub)Voice
â5âFiliopietism, Blasphemy, or.
4
â1âGeography and History
â2âThe Tradition of American Geographic History
â3âHistory and Geography Education in Nineteenth-Century America
â4âVisible and Timeless History: Emma Willard s ``Temp
True West Magazine
The late author-screenwriter Jeb Rosebrook, editor Stuart Rosebrook, Paul Andrew Hutton and True West’s Bob Boze Bell share a grand moment at the joint Arizona-New Mexico History Convention in Flagstaff, Arizona, in 2017, where Stuart had just moderated a panel discussion by Hutton and Bell on one of their research subjects, Mickey Free.
– Photo by Dorothy Rosebrook, Courtesy Paul Andrew Hutton –
Do you remember the first time you read Paul Andrew Hutton? He immediately captured my interest and imagination with his double-barreled literary prose and academic virtuosity in the pages of his first book,
Phil Sheridan and His Army (University of Nebraska Press, 1986; new edition, University of Oklahoma Press, 1999). Whether or not you were knowledgeable about General Sheridan before you read Hutton’s award-winning biography, this book hooked you and made you eager to read more history written and interpreted by Hutton. He was an academic historian who wrot