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David W. Blight

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Supporters of Donald Trump displayed a gallows as they gathered outside the US Capitol on 6 January 2021. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

Trump has birthed a dangerous new ‘Lost Cause’ myth. We must fight it | The Guardian

January 12, 2022

The lie that the election was ‘stolen’ from Trump is building its monuments in ludicrous stories, and codifying them in laws to make the next elections easier to pilfer.

American democracy is in peril and nearly everyone paying attention is trying to find the best way to say so. Should we in the intellectual classes position our warnings in satire, in jeremiads, in social scientific data, in historical analogy, in philosophical wisdom we glean from so many who have instructed us about the violence and authoritarianism of the 20th century? Or should we just scream after our holiday naps?

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Bettmann / Getty; The Atlantic

Trust the Teachers | The Atlantic

November 22, 2021

Here’s what parents need to understand about the teaching of history.

Every effective American teacher seeks the trust of society, of parents, and of the young people they teach. Public education as a whole depends on these bonds of trust. Our divisive politics regarding how to teach children about slavery, race, and other difficult subjects in school has broken that trust.

Anyone who has ever taught for one day knows that trust must be earned. Facing a classroom full of 14- or 16-year-olds with varying degrees of attention and preparation on any subject is one of the hardest and most important of all professions.

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Drana and Jack. Art by Jennifer Davis Carey/Photography by Scott Briggs

Drana and Jack. Art by Jennifer Davis Carey/Photography by Scott Briggs

Teaching about Slavery | Education Next

September 25, 2021

Both race in the classroom and the New York Times’s 1619 Project have been the subject of recent state legislative efforts, heated debate, and extensive press coverage, both at Education Next (see, for example, “Critical Race Theory Collides with the Law,” legal beat, Fall 2021, and “The 1619 Project Enters American Classrooms,” features, Fall 2020) and elsewhere. The post-George Floyd racial reckoning and the new Juneteenth federal holiday have roused attention toward teaching the history of slavery in America. As part of our continuing coverage of these issues, we asked some of the nation’s foremost scholars and practitioners to respond to the prompt, “How should K–12 schools teach about slavery in America? What pitfalls should teachers and textbooks avoid? What facts and concepts should they stress? Are schools generally doing a good or bad job of this now?”

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Crews remove the Robert E. Lee statue on Monument Avenue in Richmond on Wednesday. (John McDonnell/The Washington Post)

Crews remove the Robert E. Lee statue on Monument Avenue in Richmond on Wednesday. (John McDonnell/The Washington Post)

Brief Amicus Curiae of Historians David W. Blight and Gaines M. Foster

September 12, 2021

Historians David Blight and Gaines Foster wrote an amicus brief to the Virginia Supreme Court supporting the motion to remove the Robert E. Lee statue on Monument Avenue in Richmond. On September 2, 2021, the Court unanimously ruled that the state had the authority to remove the statue, and on Wednesday, September 8, the statue was taken down.

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Sterling Professor of History David Blight and President Peter Salovey

Sterling Professor of History David Blight and President Peter Salovey

Remembering the Past, Remembering 9/11 | Yale Talk

September 12, 2021

David Blight, Sterling Professor of History at Yale University, who served as an advisor to the team of curators at the 9/11 Memorial and Museum, and Peter Salovey, Yale University President, discuss commemorating tremendous loss, the purpose of memorialization, and teaching complex history.

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Frederick Douglass, Slavery, & Emancipation | Pioneer Institute

August 25, 2021

“The Learning Curve” podcast series

Cara Candal and guest co-host Derrell Bradford of the Pioneer Institute’s “The Learning Curve” podcast series, talk with David Blight, Sterling Professor of American History and director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition at Yale University. Blight shares what drew him as a teenager in Flint, Michigan to the study of America’s past, and to Douglass in particular. He explains the role of Walter O. Evans, to whom he dedicated the book.

Listen to the podcast: https://pioneerinstitute.org/civil-rights-education/yales-pulitzer-winning-prof-david-blight-on-frederick-douglass-slavery-emancipation/

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Disputes over history education quickly invoke curricula, and creep into school boards and state legislatures with increasing stakes. Photograph by Harold M. Lambert / Getty

Disputes over history education quickly invoke curricula, and creep into school boards and state legislatures with increasing stakes. Photograph by Harold M. Lambert / Getty

The Fog of History Wars | The New Yorker

June 10, 2021

A new battle is being waged over how we teach our country’s past. But old feuds remind us that history is continually revised, driven by new evidence and present-day imperatives.

Once again, Americans find themselves at war over their history—what it is, who owns it, how it should be interpreted and taught. In April, the Department of Education called for a renewed stress, in the classroom, on the “unbearable human costs of systemic racism” and the “consequences of slavery.” In response, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell issued a formal letter, demanding more “patriotism” in history and calling the Democrats’ plan “divisive nonsense.” Like all great questions of national memory, the latest history war has to play out in politics, whether we like it or not. This is especially true as we limp, wounded, from the battlefields of the Trump era, when facts were nearly rendered irrelevant.

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American Academy of Arts and Letters 2020 Gold Medal in History

May 21, 2021

The American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced the recipients of its highest honors for excellence in the arts. David W. Blight has been awarded the Gold Medal for History. The Gold Medal is awarded to those who have achieved eminence in an entire body of work.

View a clip of the award ceremony: https://youtu.be/a8BtzybfGyE

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David W. Blight and Annette Gordon-Reed Biographers International Organization 2021 Conference The James Atlas Plenary, May 13, 2021

David W. Blight and Annette Gordon-Reed
Biographers International Organization 2021 Conference
The James Atlas Plenary, May 13, 2021

BIO 2021 Conference: James Atlas Plenary: Restoring Overlooked Lives

May 13, 2021

Biographies are a critical component of our collective historical record; one consequence of allowing certain lives to be neglected is an incomplete historical record. At a critical moment for biographers to engage in a broad conversation about why certain lives have been overlooked and what can be done to remedy this, BIO has invited two world-class, Pulitzer Prize-winning historians and biographers to illuminate the subject, David W. Blight (Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom) and Annette Gordon-Reed (The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family).

View video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVWJMbj7Bjk

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James Weldon Johnson’s Ode to the “Deep River” of American History | The New Republic

March 03, 2021

What an old poem says about the search for justice following the Capitol riot

Marches and mobs in Washington, D.C., have been much on the minds of Americans of late. So, too, for James Weldon Johnson in 1930, when the longtime secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People crafted the poem “St. Peter Relates an Incident of the Resurrection Day.” First published that year in a private printing of only 200 copies and then in 1935 to a larger audience, Johnson’s remarkable six-page creation warrants our reading now as the FBI pursues hundreds of insurrectionists from the Capitol riot on January 6.

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Frederick Douglass in 1870. Photo from Library of Congress (Schreiber)

Frederick Douglass in 1870. Photo from Library of Congress (Schreiber)

Kevin McCarthy loves Frederick Douglass. Do you feel better now? | Los Angeles Times

February 17, 2021

Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) loves the great African American leader Frederick Douglass. He has a portrait of the former slave in his office at the U.S. Capitol. Does that make you feel any better?

Just now many Americans are weary of, indeed fed up with, Republicans’ venality, hypocrisy and lies. But if we were hoping for at least a weekend off after the second impeachment trial ground to its inevitable end, it was not to be.

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Are We One Country or Two? A Conversation about Reconciliation with David Blight | CSRC

February 05, 2021

For years, commentators have talked about the culture wars, but increasingly, scholars and others are beginning to refer to a “truth divide,” suggesting that beliefs held by Americans are now so different that we are essentially living in two separate realities. Reflecting on the attacks on the Capitol, the presidential inauguration, and other recent events, David Blight (Yale University), one of the country’s leading Civil War historians, discusses what it means to live in and think about prospects for unity in a divided nation.

View video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTQpK1hTd6g&feature=youtu.be

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Kevin Seefried stands with a Confederate flag after storming the Capitol during a Joint Session of Congress in which members were to certify the 2020 Presidential election. Prosecutors say Seefried was arrested Thursday, Jan. 14, after authorities u…

Kevin Seefried stands with a Confederate flag after storming the Capitol during a Joint Session of Congress in which members were to certify the 2020 Presidential election. Prosecutors say Seefried was arrested Thursday, Jan. 14, after authorities used the image to help identify him. | POLITICO illustration/Photo by Chris Kleponis/Sipa USA(Sipa via AP Images)

How Trumpism Is Becoming America’s New “Lost Cause” | Politico

January 21, 2021

Lately, Americans seem obsessed with Civil War references—and there’s a good reason why, says David Blight.

The idea of a new Civil War has been coursing through the national conversation lately, as Americans try to make sense of the violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, or the polls showing a majority of Republicans still don’t recognize Joe Biden’s election. Fox News segments have warned that Democrats want to force a “new version of Reconstruction” on an unsuspecting public.

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Lincoln, Douglass & Biden Together | The Wavemaker Conversations Inaugural Edition

January 19, 2021

If Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass could visit Joe Biden today, and advise him on his inaugural address, what would they say?

View video: https://medium.com/@schuldermichael/the-wavemaker-conversations-inaugural-edition-c957fe37a717

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Confederate veterans at a reunion in Washington in 1917. Harris & Ewing, via Alamy

Confederate veterans at a reunion in Washington in 1917. Harris & Ewing, via Alamy

How Trumpism May Endure | New York Times

January 09, 2021

The Confederacy built a lasting myth of victory out of defeat. Trump and his followers may, too.

One hundred and fifty years after the emergence of the Confederate Lost Cause ideology, a new Lost Cause invaded the U.S. Capitol with the incitement of the president of the United States. Waving American, Confederate, Gadsden and, especially, Trump flags, Donald Trump’s loyalists desecrated the greatest symbolic edifice of America.

Trumpism has already become a lethal Lost Cause. It does not quite have martyrs and a cult of the fallen in which to root its hopes and dreams. But it does have a self-destructive cult leader about to leave power in a defeat that has been transformed into a narrative of betrayal, resistance and a promise of political revitalization.

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America’s rivals cited the chaos at the Capitol as a sign that America has forfeited its claim to be a political model or world leader. Photograph by David Butow / Redux

America’s rivals cited the chaos at the Capitol as a sign that America has forfeited its claim to be a political model or world leader. Photograph by David Butow / Redux

The World Shook as America Raged | The New Yorker

January 08, 2021

One of the darkest days in American history played out in a barely two-square-mile area, but it rippled across the globe. Authoritarian leaders were gleeful about the chaos in the world’s most powerful democracy. As armed insurrectionists, white supremacists, and rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol, the Foreign Minister of Venezuela—a failing state with rival claims to the Presidency, and shortages of power, food, and medicine—tweeted a warning about political polarization in the United States. With more than a whiff of Schadenfreude, Jorge Arreaza wished Americans well in finding “a new path towards stability and social justice.”

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The Spirit of Democracy | New-York Historical Society

January 02, 2021

New-York Historical Society Public Programs On-Demand

Since the nation’s founding, Americans’ aspirations towards a more perfect union have been punctuated by an ongoing progression of rebirth and renewal. From the Civil War to the civil rights movement and beyond, the United States has been forced to reckon with its imperfect fulfillment of its democratic ideals. In the wake of the 2020 election and the moral and philosophical fragmentations that it has reaffirmed, historian David W. Blight, in conversation with Lewis H. Lapham, illuminates the evolution to our contemporary experience and the path forward.

Listen to the conversation: https://programs.nyhistory.org/video/info/a-conversation-with-david-blight-the-spirit-of-democracy

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History of Divisive Presidential Elections | Washington Journal

December 28, 2020

David Blight on the History of Divisive Presidential Elections

Yale University American History professor David Blight talked about the history of divisive presidential elections in the U.S. and parallels between the 2020 election and the election of 1860 which led to the Civil War.

View Video: https://www.c-span.org/video/?507322-5/washington-journal-david-blight-discusses-history-divisive-presidential-elections

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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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Copyright © 2015 by David W Blight