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An American in Assam (or the “Thrill of the Hunt”)

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How does a historian specializing in the American West find himself in Assam, India? If one finds themselves in such a predicament, do they do archival work the same as the United States? I have thought often of these questions before and after I left the U.S. on August 17, 2019. Having received the notification from the Fulbright Program that I had been selected to research the history of the British Raj in Assam, panic began to set in. Although I knew my way around different U.S. archives (big/small; general/specialized; near/far, etc.), I had never ventured out of the safe confines of my own country. Actually, this fellowship marks the first time I had ever left North America. I began to wonder if I would be able to “make it” in such a different environment. One of the many legacies of British colonial rule is their archival systems. The National Library and the National Archives spawned from British efforts to save every scrap of paper and book written about their efforts ...

Public History Q&A: How to Share the Past with the Community

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Many people do not notice the differences between “traditional” history and public history. This month we present a Q&A session with MJ Vega on how public projects get done and some of the challenges involved with bringing the past alive for a modern audience. Prior to starting graduate school at Washington State University, MJ created and now maintains a website dedicated to the public history of his high school football team. This is the brief story of how that project happened. Q: What got you interested in doing this kind of project? Why the history of this particular high school team?  A: I was born and raised in Monroe, WA, so it’s something I already have some familiarity with. When I was growing up in the 2000s, I would always hear about the team, so I just assumed we had always been bad, because no one had said anything to the contrary. But when I started going to Monroe High, the program started to turn around. I still didn’t follow the team much, but in my...

"A Beginning for Other Women": The Marital Rape Exemption and the Rideout Case

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On March 17, 2017, an Oregon man named John Rideout received a sentence of more than sixteen years in prison for rape and sodomy. His two victims, a woman he knew from church and his ex-girlfriend, spoke before a judge at the Marion County courthouse before sentencing; one said she hoped Rideout received help, while the other declared, “I am a victim no longer.” [1] Addressing the court, Rideout maintained his innocence, and then stated he was proud of his accusers, because they “stood up to me.” [2] Nearly forty years earlier, another woman stood up to Rideout: his former wife, Greta. On October 10, 1978, Greta Rideout, then 23 years old, telephoned the Women’s Crisis Center in Salem, as well as the Salem Police Department, alleging that her 21-year-old husband beat and raped her. She underwent a medical examination at Salem Memorial Hospital, where the doctor who examined her later testified she suffered from bruising around the left eye and cheek; her lips appeared bitten; an...

Placing the American Civil War in an International Context

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Whether perusing high school history textbooks or viewing documentary films by Ken Burns, one is left impressed by the sheer magnitude of the American Civil War. In fact, few other phenomena can be said to have exerted so dramatic an influence on the United States as a nation. More than 150 years later the events during that period have become mythologized into a canon of oft-repeated tales about noble leaders and heroic battles. Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis ... Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee ... Gettysburg and Antietam. source: New York Public Library Myriad other names and locations have been immortalized in the historical memory of Americans as well. In many of these narratives the United States nation, both united and divided, remains the central player within this historical narrative. [1] In many respects this nation-centric focus is understandable. Although too diverse and far-reaching to sufficiently examine in this space, the Civil War helped to crea...