From the AHA
New Report Shows Little Growth in Salaries for History Faculty
Historians in academia saw little, if any improvement in their wages over the past academic year, as average salaries for…
Jonathan Spence to Deliver Jefferson Lecture
Jonathan D. Spence, former president of the AHA (2004) and the Sterling Professor of History, emeritus, at Yale University, will…
History Doctoral Programs Site Updated
The AHA’s History Doctoral Programs web site (at www.historians.org/projects/cge/PhD/intro.cfm) has now been updated to include current information on students, faculty,…
219 Congressional Offices Lobbied on Museums Advocacy Day
On Monday, March 22, 2010, more than 200 museum directors, curators, staff, trustees, and students gathered at the National Building…
Controversy in the Classroom: A Matter for Debate
The essays that follow, gathered under the rubric of “Controversy in the Classroom,” are the result of a conscious decision…
Beyond Morality: Teaching about Ethnic Cleansing and Genocide
In 2002, I was offered an unusual opportunity to teach a comparative course on genocide and ethnic cleansing to a…
Taking the Court into the Classroom: Using Legal Cases to Discuss Controversial Topics
Noting the interaction between American politics and our courts, a Frenchman visiting the U.S. in the early 1800s made a…
Anti-Homophobia Education: Predicaments and Possibilities
It is no secret that homophobia runs rampant through U.S. middle and high schools. According to a recent study, 75.4…
Teaching LGBTQ History: Two Situations
I teach courses primarily in American history at a small university. I am one among four historians who are part…
Teaching Controversial Topics: Abortion
Unlike the Locofoco Party, say, or the Federal Highway Act, the topic of abortion can start a fight in a…
Safer Sex in the High School History Classroom: How Sex Is Repressed, Why It Is Necessary, and What We Can Do About It
Sex has become a “toxic” issue in high school history classes, capable of destroying careers, spawning lawsuits, and dividing communities.…
Teaching Old Controversies before New: The Galileo Affair and Darwinian Revolution
One hundred fifty years following its debut, Darwin’s theory of evolution through natural selection remains controversial in the public arena—even…
American Foreign Policy at an Impasse: Teaching about Vietnam and the Civil Rights Movement
The collision between the war in Vietnam and the Civil Rights movement has been well explored by scholars, but the…
Painful Pedagogies: Teaching about War and Violence in African History
African history is riddled with pain. So wretched are the injustices, so deep run the scars that it is virtually…
Small Steps in a Museum, Big Steps for History? Questions from an Intern
Museums are not often seen by most people as classrooms or as sites of controversy. But when I began to…
Religion in History and Social Studies
Teacher education programs often overlook the importance of preparing K–12 teachers to address religious ideas in history and social studies.…
Let’s Talk about Religion
How are we, as educators, to discuss religion in the classroom? The answer is not and cannot be simple. As…
Lessons from the Modern Middle East
Orientalism, Islamic revival, Palestine/Israel, the gendered discourse of the veil, the Iranian revolution, the politics of oil, torture and terror—could…
Doing History in NPS “Classrooms”
What makes something “controversial” for, or at, sites in the National Park System? Does what makes a “controversy” in a…
Teaching “The United States and the Vietnam War”
Controversies about what Americans call “The Vietnam War” that go back to the 1960s live on in classrooms today. I…
History with Controversy, and History Without
Recently, popular television personality Stephen Colbert invited the distinguished U.S. historian and former president of the AHA, Eric Foner, to…
Coalition Testimony on NARA and NHPRC Submitted to House Subcommittee
Budget proposals, which were sent to Congress on February 1, 2010, included small but significant reductions (from the sums appropriated…
What the Data Reveals about Women Historians
Editor’s Note: The following essay is based on the author’s presentation in a session at the annual meeting of the…
Member News, May 2010
Editor’s Note: The purpose of this column, which is published in Perspectives on History as space permits, is to recognize…
Aging and the Art of Writing
Editor's Note: Perspectives on History welcomes letters to the editor on issues discussed in its pages or which are relevant…
A Correction from DAAD on Age Restrictions
Editor's Note: Perspectives on History welcomes letters to the editor on issues discussed in its pages or which are relevant…
Robert James Young (1937–2010)
Researcher of English East India and Dutch East India Companies Robert James Young (1937–2010) died on February 4, 2010, after…
Jack R. Pole (1922-2010)
2002 Honorary Foreign Member; historian of Anglo-American legal tradition Jack Pole, whose career as a British historian of the United…
Memorial Day 2010
Today we observe Memorial Day. To learn about its history, how to teach students about it, and more, see the…
Our Courts in the Classroom
Today’s digital world allows younger generations to engage and interact with history like never before, such as through virtual games.…
Maps of London – Crace Collection
Fans of historic maps may be interested in the Crace Collection of Maps of London brought to us by the…
American Historical Association Calls on the Texas State Board of Education to Reconsider Amendments to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Social Studies
The following press release and statement were sent to the Texas State Board of Education from the American Historical Association…
Discussions on the AHA Facebook Page: We Want to Hear from You!
One of the features of the new AHA’s Facebook page is a discussion board with various questions for you to…
Online Oral History Projects, Part VI
This week we continue with our recent miniseries on online oral history projects. Again, be sure to peruse parts one,…
Digital State Libraries
Many state libraries, archives, museums, and historical societies use the web to digitize their resources and make their individual state’s…
Perspectives on History – May 2010
The May 2010 issue of Perspectives on History, now online, tackles the complex topic of “Controversy in the Classroom.“ AHA…
Turning the Pages Online
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) in Bethesda, Maryland has kiosks that implement touch screen technology and animation software, allowing…
Discovering the Civil War at the National Archives
The National Archives‘ new “Discovering the Civil War” exhibit reexamines this well-visited topic through primary documents presented in new ways,…
Sharing Perspectives on History Articles
Ever read an article in an issue of Perspectives on Historyonline and wanted to pass it along to a friend…