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David W. Blight

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Trump Versus History II | TNR Live
Trump Versus History II | TNR Live
November 3

"Trump Versus History: How Trump is trying to change our sense of who we are."

Historians "have opened the gates of historical knowledge to myriad new subjects and methods that have educated a largely curious and willing world. Now we have to mobilize to defend our profession not only with research and teaching but in the realm of politics and public persuasion." What if History Died by Sanctioned Ignorance?, David W. Blight; The New Republic, September, 2025

In this TNR Live, Blight talks with some fellow academics on how they must fight to preserve our history AND democracy.

With

David W. Blight, Sterling Professor of American History, Yale University

Geraldo Cadava, Wender-Lewis Teaching and Research Professor of History, Northwestern University; contributing writer, The New Yorker

Edward Ayers, Tucker-Boatwright Professor of the Humanities, University of Richmond

Molly Worthen, journalist, professor of history, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Join them Monday, November 3, 2025 | 4:00-5:00 PM EST | Virtual

For more information and to register:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/trump-versus-history-ii-tickets-1735550380909?aff=oddtdtcreator

See their recent articles for The New Republic here:https://newrepublic.com/series/67/trump-history-authoritarianism


News


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United States of Anxiety | NPR

November 16, 2020

MAGA, the New Confederate Lost Cause

White supremacist myths turn defeated leaders into heroic victors. Will Donald Trump now get the same transfiguration as Robert E. Lee? If history is our guide — as it often is on this show — then there's reason to worry about the answer to that question. Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Dr. David Blight (Sterling Professor of History at Yale University and the author of "Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom") joins Kai to tell the story of the Confederacy's Lost Cause mythology — how it was created, why it still matters today, and how similar it may feel to the new Lost Cause of Donald Trump.

Listen to the podcast: https://www.npr.org/podcasts/527667974/united-states-of-anxiety

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The Most Sacred Right | NPR

October 29, 2020

Frederick Douglass dreamed of a country where all people could vote and he did everything in his power to make that dream a reality. In the face of slavery, the Civil War and the violence of Jim Crow, he fought his entire life for what he believed was a sacred, natural right that should be available to all people - voting. NPR Throughline podcast episode featuring David Bight and Carol Anderson.

Listen to the podcast: https://www.npr.org/2020/10/02/919532810/the-most-sacred-right

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Republicans: The New Confederacy | The New York Review

October 20, 2020

Democracy works best when politics don’t mirror the country’s deepest social divisions, and all sides can accept defeat and a transition of government. As Trump flags replace Confederate flags on truck caravans and at Republican rallies, we are about to experience a presidential contest, perhaps the first since 1860, when it is possible that millions on each side will not find defeat acceptable.

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Illustration by The New York Times; Photograph by Democratic National Convention, via Associated Press

Illustration by The New York Times; Photograph by Democratic National Convention, via Associated Press

Barack Obama Delivers a Jeremiad | New York Times

August 21, 2020

In his convention speech, the former president sought to renew faith in the democratic project.

On Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2020, standing in front of an exhibition about the Constitution in Philadelphia, Barack Obama fully became an American Jeremiah.

Unlike that Hebrew prophet, Mr. Obama did not shatter the earth, nor predict the destruction of all our temples, nor see our Jerusalem quite yet in its deserved ruin. He did not tell us that collectively our “clothing is stained with the blood of the innocent and the poor,” as Jeremiah did. But he came close, even as he delivered a moving reassertion of American “ideals” and “creeds.”

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David Blight talks with GWC Writer-in-Residence Peter Almond

August 12, 2020

David Blight speaks with Peter Almond, Gloucester Writers Center Writer-in-Residence, about emancipation and reconstruction and the practice of history in a time of upheaval over race and change in the United States.

View Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILoqxVX4Z6U&feature=youtu.be

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Why Is This Happening? with Chris Hayes

Why Is This Happening? with Chris Hayes

America’s Prophet of Freedom with David Blight | Why Is This Happening? with Chris Hayes

July 21, 2020

“There’s a Chance to Tell a New American Story. Biden Should Seize It.”

Who should we be building monuments to in America? Few figures have pushed for a truly fair and equal society in this country like Frederick Douglass. A man who saw the full promise of American democracy even years before the start of the Civil War. This week Chris sits down with professor and historian David Blight to talk about his Pulitzer winning book Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom. The two discuss the life of the freed slave, orator, and writer whose words would go on to push America toward the multi-racial, multi-religious, multi-ethnic democracy that we still are striving for today.

Listen to the podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/why-is-this-happening-with-chris-hayes/id1382983397?i=1000485596124

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Monuments to America’s true ideals and history, like Alison Saar’s Harriet Tubman Memorial, “Swing Low,” in Harlem, should be built nationwide. HSP Archive

Monuments to America’s true ideals and history, like Alison Saar’s Harriet Tubman Memorial, “Swing Low,” in Harlem, should be built nationwide. HSP Archive

Reimagining America’s Memorial Landscape | New York Times

July 17, 2020

On July 9, former Vice President Joseph Biden announced a new slogan for his campaign: “Build Back Better.” In economic terms the tag line makes sense even if it lacks moral inspiration. It complements the call others have made for a “Building Back Freer” Covid-19 recovery process that both incorporates our current racial reassessment in the United States and responds to an escalating crisis of labor exploitation and modern slavery across the globe.

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Protesters call for the removal of a Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond, Virginia, in June. Photograph by Eze Amos / Getty

Protesters call for the removal of a Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond, Virginia, in June. Photograph by Eze Amos / Getty

Europe in 1989, America in 2020, and the Death of the Lost Cause | The New Yorker

July 06, 2020

In November, 1989, when the Berlin Wall suddenly began to crumble and then fall, much of the world watched in awe. Could it be true that Communism was about to collapse? For seventy years, it had been a system, an ideology, that ordered large swaths of the globe. Now a whole vision of history—a vision meant to maximize freedom, but which had turned, over time, into tyranny—seemed to be leaving the stage.

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The Freedmen's Memorial in Washington's Lincoln Park. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

The Freedmen's Memorial in Washington's Lincoln Park. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

Yes, the Freedmen’s Memorial uses racist imagery. But don’t tear it down | Washington Post

June 25, 2020

The Freedmen’s Memorial in Washington is not a Confederate monument. It famously exhibits a standing Abraham Lincoln seemingly giving freedom to a kneeling black man naked from the waist up, whose chains are being broken. It was and is a racist image. This is hardly the monument our culture would create today as a memorial of emancipation. But none of us can ultimately have our history or memory pure. Memory is always about the politics of the present, but the righteous present is not always right.

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NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY Museum & Library | because history matters

NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY Museum & Library | because history matters

Celebrating Juneteenth: The Legacy of Frederick Douglass | New-York Historical Society

June 18, 2020

What did the nation look like in the years following the end of the Civil War and the emancipation of African Americans? In a special conversation to celebrate Juneteenth, historians David W. Blight and Eddie S. Glaude, Jr. (moderator) delve into the life of one of the most important figures of the 19th century, writer, orator, and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, and how his legacy continues to resonate today.

View video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qQVyICzQyE

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People raise their hands as they protest at the makeshift memorial in honour of George Floyd, on June 4, 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

People raise their hands as they protest at the makeshift memorial in honour of George Floyd, on June 4, 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

America's Call For A Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement | NPR

June 09, 2020

The call for a modern-day civil rights movement. We talk to two scholars of history about the need for change and healing.

David Blight, professor of history, African American studies and American studies and director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance and Abolition at Yale University. Author of "Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom," which won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in History.

Lucas Johnson, executive director of civil conversations and social healing for the On Being Project. Community organizer, writer and a minister in the American Baptist Churches.

Listen to the NPR On Point podcast: https://www.wbur.org/onpoint/2020/06/09/america-modern-day-civil-rights-movement

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GETTY / THE ATLANTIC

GETTY / THE ATLANTIC

One Week to Save Democracy | The Atlantic

June 05, 2020

Lessons from Frederick Douglass on the tortured relationship between protest and change

In America’s house divided, racism—its structures and its individual acts—is tearing us apart in what feel like irreparable ways. On top of that, more than 106,000 Americans are dead from a virus that’s still raging, nearly 40 million others are unemployed, and hundreds of businesses as well as police buildings and vehicles are burning in American cities. As small but violent groups peddle conspiracy theories and wish for some kind of civil war, the country’s civic bonds are threatening to unravel.

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Courtesy of Zócalo Public Square.

Courtesy of Zócalo Public Square.

"Hattiesburg" Tells Us What America Has Lost, Gained—and Still Needs to Fix | Zócalo

May 23, 2020

Zócalo Book Prize Winner William Sturkey Describes What a Community Achieved Under Oppression—and How We Can Learn From Its Accomplishments Today

At a moment when community feels precious and crisis lays bare American inequalities, the title subject of the 10th annual Zócalo Public Square Book Prize Lecture felt vital: “How Do Oppressed People Build Community?”

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Photo illustration: Elise Swain/The Intercept, Getty Images

Photo illustration: Elise Swain/The Intercept, Getty Images

What Reconstruction and the New Deal Can Teach Us about What Comes after the Pandemic Presidency | The Intercept

May 13, 2020

The 2020 election is six months away, more than 80,000 Americans have been killed by coronavirus and official unemployment is inching toward 20%. This week on Intercepted: An in-depth historical look at some of the great crises in U.S. history and how presidents, Congress, and social movements have responded. David Blight, Pulitzer prize winning author of “Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom” and a Yale history professor, discusses the era of Reconstruction, the swift dismantling of its hard fought gains, and the enduring power of white supremacy.

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Trent Parke / Magnum

Trent Parke / Magnum

After the Flood Recedes | The Atlantic

April 26, 2020 in Articles •

Like Frederick Douglass, we can find inspiration for this moment in the oldest story of rebirth and renewal.

Those with power who are planning our resurgence from the coronavirus need imagination and, above all, the humility of a long view of the human drama. To buoy myself one recent morning, after reading so much bad news, I did what the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass had done at an earlier moment of crisis: I sat and reread the Book of Genesis. One of the most profound rebirths, at least in spiritual and literary terms, occurs in the first eight chapters of that oldest story of all.

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Joan Wong

Joan Wong

Trump Reveals the Truth About Voter Suppression | New York Times

April 13, 2020 in Articles •

The president is the latest in a long line of conservative politicians to see minority voters as a threat.

On March 30, the Republican id burst forth when President Trump said that the latest congressional stimulus bill “had things — levels of voting that, if you ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.” Two days later, the Republican House speaker in Georgia, David Ralston, admitted that an expansion of absentee voting would be “extremely devastating to Republicans and conservatives in Georgia.”

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Leah Millis / Reuters

Leah Millis / Reuters

The United States Is Being Taught by Facts and Events | The Atlantic

March 25, 2020 in Articles •

The pandemic is reminding Americans of the importance of government.

In August 1861, several months after the secession of 11 southern states and the outbreak of the Civil War, the abolitionist Frederick Douglass declared that “nations seldom listen to advice from individuals, however reasonable. They are taught less by theories than by facts and events.”

The United States is currently being educated by facts and events. And, as in other times of crisis—war, economic collapse, natural disasters—even those who do not like government are realizing that they need it. Government can protect them; it might save their life and livelihood. Irony will not die in the time of the coronavirus; even many of those who believe the federal government should not intervene in society except for national defense, and would happily privatize most elements of public life, are now straining to have government save society. With this issue, we have a long history.

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2020 American Academy of Arts and Letters | Gold Medal for History

March 24, 2020 in Awards •

NEW YORK, March 24th, 2020 — The American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced the recipients of its highest honors for excellence in the arts. Architect Peter Eisenman and historian David Blight have been awarded the Gold Medals for Architecture and History, respectively. Given each year in two rotating categories of the arts, the Gold Medal is awarded to those who have achieved eminence in an entire body of work.

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Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Mich., had pretty good luck in high school; his teacher would go on to win a Pulitzer Prize (Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call file photo)

Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Mich., had pretty good luck in high school; his teacher would go on to win a Pulitzer Prize (Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call file photo)

Dan Kildee reunites with his high school teacher (who happens to be a Pulitzer Prize winner) | Roll Call

February 12, 2020 in Articles •

For three years Dan Kildee sat in David Blight’s high school classroom watching his teacher bring history to life. They didn’t even have to leave the building — though they did that too, like when Blight stood in the middle of a field at Gettysburg describing Pickett’s charge, the crucial maneuver in the Civil War’s most famous battle.

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The Miller Center | UVA

January 26, 2020 in Public Speaking •

David Blight spoke at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center on Friday, January 24, 2020. Blight discussed his book “Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom” (Simon & Schuster, October 2018) and larger issues of race in America as part of UVA's 2020 Community MLK Celebration.

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Copyright © 2015 by David W Blight