Author: The Curator

Categories Mary Phagan

These are the 15 best things to do in Dallas this weekend – CultureMap Dallas

There is a lot happening in and around Dallas this weekend, with multiple events jockeying for "biggest of the week." They include seven concerts, featuring a top country singer, rapper, K-Pop band, and classic rocker. There will also be five local theater productions, a famous drag performer, a dance production, a huge soccer match, and the closing of a long-running art exhibition.

Below are the best ways to spend your precious free time this weekend. Want more options? Lucky for you, we have a much longer list of the city's best events.

Thursday, July 27

Yellowcard in concert Rock band Yellowcard will celebrate the 20th anniversary of their 2003 breakthrough album, Ocean Avenue, as part of their North American tour. The band has released 10 albums in their career, most recently 2016's self-titled album. Their most recent release is their new EP, Childhood Eyes. They'll play at The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory in Irving.

North Texas Performing Arts productions Theater company North Texas Performing Arts will present two new productions this weekend at Willow Bend Center for the Arts in Plano. From their College Pursuits program comes Parade, a Tony Award-winning play about Leo Frank, a Brooklyn-raised Jew living in Georgia, who is put on trial for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan, a factory worker under his employ (five performances through Sunday). On the mainstage will be Pippin, a circus-inspired saga in which the young prince Pippin is in search of the secret to true happiness and fulfillment. He seeks it in the glories of the battlefield, the temptations of the flesh, and the intrigues of political power. It runs July 28-August 6.

Friday, July 28

Eric Church in concert It didn't take long for country singer Eric Church to get to the top of the mountain in the genre. His 2006 debut album, Sinners Like Me, made the top 10 on the Country charts, and he's been at No. 1 or in the top 5 with his six subsequent albums, including his most recent release, the 2021 triple album Heart & Soul. He'll play at Dos Equis Pavilion with special guests Midland and Ray Wylie Hubbard.

Sara Evans in concertUPDATE 7-27-2023: This concert has been canceled due to illness of the artist, DSO announced. Ticket holders will be contacted for a refund; for more information, email customerservice@dalsym.com.Sara Evans ranks as one of the most-played female artists in country radio over the past two decades thanks to No. 1 songs like No Place That Far, Suds In The Bucket, A Real Fine Place To Start, Born to Fly, and A Little Bit Stronger. She's released 10 albums in her career, most recently 2020's Copy That. She'll play an acoustic set with her band at Meyerson Symphony Center.

Sundown Collaborative Theatre presents Body Stories (a working title)Body Stories is the second in Sundowns Stories (a working title) series, in which they collect stories submitted by the community and come together to devise something completely original. The cast takes the submissions, along with many of their own stories, and weaves them into a devised piece about the highs and lows of life in a variety of diverse bodies. The production runs through August 6 at Aura Coffee in Denton.

Uptown Players presents Chicken & Biscuits Uptown Players closes its 21st season with the regional premiere of Chicken & Biscuits, which follows rivaling sisters, Baneatta and Beverly, as they try to bury their father without killing each other. Baneattas husband tries to mediate the family drama, Baneattas son intentionally brings his neurotic white Jewish boyfriend along, and Beverlys nosy daughter keeps asking questions no one wants to answer. The production runs through August 13 at Kalita Humphreys Theater.

Jinkx Monsoon: Everything at Stake Two-time RuPaul's Drag Race winner and Broadway breakout star Jinkx Monsoon and her musical main squeeze Major Scales come to Dallas with the show Everything at Stake, featuring a full rock band. Known for her electric and eclectic performance style, Jinkx weaves together tales from her enigmatic life in a show where music, comedy, witchy magic, and camp-fantasy collide. She'll perform at Majestic Theatre.

Theatre Frisco presents Pippin There will be dueling Pippins in Collin County this week as Theatre Frisco presents its own version a few miles north of North Texas Performing Arts. The musical that made director/choreographer Bob Fosse a famous name long before Cabaret and All That Jazz uses the medieval legend of Charlemagne's son, Pippin, heir apparent to the Holy Roman Empire, to tell a parable about a young man's search for meaning and truth. It will run through August 13 at Frisco Discovery Center.

The DASH Ensemble presents The Power of Collision As part of AT&T Performing Arts Center's Elevator Project series, The DASH Ensemble presents The Power of Collision, a familiar story that expresses how fragile life can be, how heavy things can get, and how exciting life can become when one weathers the storm of both. The plot unfolds over the course of three acts, each one displaying a distinct use of contemporary movement and illusionism as innovative tools for storytelling. There will be three performances through Sunday at Wyly Theatre.

Saturday, July 29

Soccer Champions Tour: FC Barcelona vs. Real Madrid Football Soccer clubs FC Barcelona and Real Madrid are two of the most successful teams in European history. FC Barcelona has won 27 La Liga titles, five Champions League titles, and three FIFA Club World Cup titles. Real Madrid has been even better, with 35 La Liga titles, 14 Champions League titles, and five FIFA Club World Cup titles. They'll face off in a "friendly" match at AT&T Stadium as part of the Soccer Champions Tour.

Lil Baby in concert Rapper Lil Baby has had a big impact on the hip hop world since releasing his debut album in 2018. Building on a series of well-received mixtapes, his first album went to No. 3 on the Billboard 200, and his next two albums, including 2022's It's Only Me, both went to No. 1. Having done collaborations with Nicki Minaj, Travis Scott, Kirk Franklin, and more, Lil Baby looks to be a power in the genre for a long time. He'll lead a huge concert at American Airlines Center, featuring special guests The Kid LAROI, GloRilla, GLOSS UP, Rylo Rodriguez, and Hunxho.

Dallas Symphony Orchestra presents "Queens of Cool" The Queens of Cool - Denise Lee, Deon Q, and Angie McWhirter - will perform the music from the era of the Kings of Cool (Frank, Dean & Sammy), some of the best music ever made. Norman Williams will serve as Music Director for this concert, taking place at Meyerson Symphony Center.

KARD in concert Unlike seemingly every other K-Pop group that's made their way from South Korea to the United States, KARD is a co-ed group comprised of two men and two women - J.Seph, BM, Somin, and Jiwoo. Since debuting in 2017, the band has released a series of mini-albums, including the recently-released Icky. They'll perform at the Music Hall at Fair Park.

Sunday, July 30

Photo by Anthony DAngio

Dallas Museum of Art presents "Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism" closing dayAfter 11 months, Sunday will be moving day for "Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism" at the Dallas Museum of Art. The exhibition features 80 works drawn from the Museums collection that showcase the work of artists from three historical eras who utilize optical effects or mechanical or manipulable parts to engage the viewer physically or perceptually.

Steve Miller Band in concert The legendary Steve Miller Band, known for songs like "The Joker," "Livin' in the USA," "Take the Money and Run," "Rock'n Me," "Fly Like an Eagle," "Jet Airliner," "Jungle Love," and "Abracadabra," comes to Dos Equis Pavilion for a retrospective of their long and distinguished career. They'll be joined by special guests Cheap Trick.

Originally posted here:

These are the 15 best things to do in Dallas this weekend - CultureMap Dallas

Categories Mary Phagan

Talk to Me hands the horror genre a creepy new entry – CultureMap Dallas

There is a lot happening in and around Dallas this weekend, with multiple events jockeying for "biggest of the week." They include seven concerts, featuring a top country singer, rapper, K-Pop band, and classic rocker. There will also be five local theater productions, a famous drag performer, a dance production, a huge soccer match, and the closing of a long-running art exhibition.

Below are the best ways to spend your precious free time this weekend. Want more options? Lucky for you, we have a much longer list of the city's best events.

Thursday, July 27

Yellowcard in concert Rock band Yellowcard will celebrate the 20th anniversary of their 2003 breakthrough album, Ocean Avenue, as part of their North American tour. The band has released 10 albums in their career, most recently 2016's self-titled album. Their most recent release is their new EP, Childhood Eyes. They'll play at The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory in Irving.

North Texas Performing Arts productions Theater company North Texas Performing Arts will present two new productions this weekend at Willow Bend Center for the Arts in Plano. From their College Pursuits program comes Parade, a Tony Award-winning play about Leo Frank, a Brooklyn-raised Jew living in Georgia, who is put on trial for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan, a factory worker under his employ (five performances through Sunday). On the mainstage will be Pippin, a circus-inspired saga in which the young prince Pippin is in search of the secret to true happiness and fulfillment. He seeks it in the glories of the battlefield, the temptations of the flesh, and the intrigues of political power. It runs July 28-August 6.

Friday, July 28

Eric Church in concert It didn't take long for country singer Eric Church to get to the top of the mountain in the genre. His 2006 debut album, Sinners Like Me, made the top 10 on the Country charts, and he's been at No. 1 or in the top 5 with his six subsequent albums, including his most recent release, the 2021 triple album Heart & Soul. He'll play at Dos Equis Pavilion with special guests Midland and Ray Wylie Hubbard.

Sara Evans in concertUPDATE 7-27-2023: This concert has been canceled due to illness of the artist, DSO announced. Ticket holders will be contacted for a refund; for more information, email customerservice@dalsym.com.Sara Evans ranks as one of the most-played female artists in country radio over the past two decades thanks to No. 1 songs like No Place That Far, Suds In The Bucket, A Real Fine Place To Start, Born to Fly, and A Little Bit Stronger. She's released 10 albums in her career, most recently 2020's Copy That. She'll play an acoustic set with her band at Meyerson Symphony Center.

Sundown Collaborative Theatre presents Body Stories (a working title)Body Stories is the second in Sundowns Stories (a working title) series, in which they collect stories submitted by the community and come together to devise something completely original. The cast takes the submissions, along with many of their own stories, and weaves them into a devised piece about the highs and lows of life in a variety of diverse bodies. The production runs through August 6 at Aura Coffee in Denton.

Uptown Players presents Chicken & Biscuits Uptown Players closes its 21st season with the regional premiere of Chicken & Biscuits, which follows rivaling sisters, Baneatta and Beverly, as they try to bury their father without killing each other. Baneattas husband tries to mediate the family drama, Baneattas son intentionally brings his neurotic white Jewish boyfriend along, and Beverlys nosy daughter keeps asking questions no one wants to answer. The production runs through August 13 at Kalita Humphreys Theater.

Jinkx Monsoon: Everything at Stake Two-time RuPaul's Drag Race winner and Broadway breakout star Jinkx Monsoon and her musical main squeeze Major Scales come to Dallas with the show Everything at Stake, featuring a full rock band. Known for her electric and eclectic performance style, Jinkx weaves together tales from her enigmatic life in a show where music, comedy, witchy magic, and camp-fantasy collide. She'll perform at Majestic Theatre.

Theatre Frisco presents Pippin There will be dueling Pippins in Collin County this week as Theatre Frisco presents its own version a few miles north of North Texas Performing Arts. The musical that made director/choreographer Bob Fosse a famous name long before Cabaret and All That Jazz uses the medieval legend of Charlemagne's son, Pippin, heir apparent to the Holy Roman Empire, to tell a parable about a young man's search for meaning and truth. It will run through August 13 at Frisco Discovery Center.

The DASH Ensemble presents The Power of Collision As part of AT&T Performing Arts Center's Elevator Project series, The DASH Ensemble presents The Power of Collision, a familiar story that expresses how fragile life can be, how heavy things can get, and how exciting life can become when one weathers the storm of both. The plot unfolds over the course of three acts, each one displaying a distinct use of contemporary movement and illusionism as innovative tools for storytelling. There will be three performances through Sunday at Wyly Theatre.

Saturday, July 29

Soccer Champions Tour: FC Barcelona vs. Real Madrid Football Soccer clubs FC Barcelona and Real Madrid are two of the most successful teams in European history. FC Barcelona has won 27 La Liga titles, five Champions League titles, and three FIFA Club World Cup titles. Real Madrid has been even better, with 35 La Liga titles, 14 Champions League titles, and five FIFA Club World Cup titles. They'll face off in a "friendly" match at AT&T Stadium as part of the Soccer Champions Tour.

Lil Baby in concert Rapper Lil Baby has had a big impact on the hip hop world since releasing his debut album in 2018. Building on a series of well-received mixtapes, his first album went to No. 3 on the Billboard 200, and his next two albums, including 2022's It's Only Me, both went to No. 1. Having done collaborations with Nicki Minaj, Travis Scott, Kirk Franklin, and more, Lil Baby looks to be a power in the genre for a long time. He'll lead a huge concert at American Airlines Center, featuring special guests The Kid LAROI, GloRilla, GLOSS UP, Rylo Rodriguez, and Hunxho.

Dallas Symphony Orchestra presents "Queens of Cool" The Queens of Cool - Denise Lee, Deon Q, and Angie McWhirter - will perform the music from the era of the Kings of Cool (Frank, Dean & Sammy), some of the best music ever made. Norman Williams will serve as Music Director for this concert, taking place at Meyerson Symphony Center.

KARD in concert Unlike seemingly every other K-Pop group that's made their way from South Korea to the United States, KARD is a co-ed group comprised of two men and two women - J.Seph, BM, Somin, and Jiwoo. Since debuting in 2017, the band has released a series of mini-albums, including the recently-released Icky. They'll perform at the Music Hall at Fair Park.

Sunday, July 30

Photo by Anthony DAngio

Dallas Museum of Art presents "Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism" closing dayAfter 11 months, Sunday will be moving day for "Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism" at the Dallas Museum of Art. The exhibition features 80 works drawn from the Museums collection that showcase the work of artists from three historical eras who utilize optical effects or mechanical or manipulable parts to engage the viewer physically or perceptually.

Steve Miller Band in concert The legendary Steve Miller Band, known for songs like "The Joker," "Livin' in the USA," "Take the Money and Run," "Rock'n Me," "Fly Like an Eagle," "Jet Airliner," "Jungle Love," and "Abracadabra," comes to Dos Equis Pavilion for a retrospective of their long and distinguished career. They'll be joined by special guests Cheap Trick.

Read the original here:

Talk to Me hands the horror genre a creepy new entry - CultureMap Dallas

Categories Mary Phagan

Transit-oriented development arrives in this week’s 5 most-read … – CultureMap Dallas

There is a lot happening in and around Dallas this weekend, with multiple events jockeying for "biggest of the week." They include seven concerts, featuring a top country singer, rapper, K-Pop band, and classic rocker. There will also be five local theater productions, a famous drag performer, a dance production, a huge soccer match, and the closing of a long-running art exhibition.

Below are the best ways to spend your precious free time this weekend. Want more options? Lucky for you, we have a much longer list of the city's best events.

Thursday, July 27

Yellowcard in concert Rock band Yellowcard will celebrate the 20th anniversary of their 2003 breakthrough album, Ocean Avenue, as part of their North American tour. The band has released 10 albums in their career, most recently 2016's self-titled album. Their most recent release is their new EP, Childhood Eyes. They'll play at The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory in Irving.

North Texas Performing Arts productions Theater company North Texas Performing Arts will present two new productions this weekend at Willow Bend Center for the Arts in Plano. From their College Pursuits program comes Parade, a Tony Award-winning play about Leo Frank, a Brooklyn-raised Jew living in Georgia, who is put on trial for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan, a factory worker under his employ (five performances through Sunday). On the mainstage will be Pippin, a circus-inspired saga in which the young prince Pippin is in search of the secret to true happiness and fulfillment. He seeks it in the glories of the battlefield, the temptations of the flesh, and the intrigues of political power. It runs July 28-August 6.

Friday, July 28

Eric Church in concert It didn't take long for country singer Eric Church to get to the top of the mountain in the genre. His 2006 debut album, Sinners Like Me, made the top 10 on the Country charts, and he's been at No. 1 or in the top 5 with his six subsequent albums, including his most recent release, the 2021 triple album Heart & Soul. He'll play at Dos Equis Pavilion with special guests Midland and Ray Wylie Hubbard.

Sara Evans in concertUPDATE 7-27-2023: This concert has been canceled due to illness of the artist, DSO announced. Ticket holders will be contacted for a refund; for more information, email customerservice@dalsym.com.Sara Evans ranks as one of the most-played female artists in country radio over the past two decades thanks to No. 1 songs like No Place That Far, Suds In The Bucket, A Real Fine Place To Start, Born to Fly, and A Little Bit Stronger. She's released 10 albums in her career, most recently 2020's Copy That. She'll play an acoustic set with her band at Meyerson Symphony Center.

Sundown Collaborative Theatre presents Body Stories (a working title)Body Stories is the second in Sundowns Stories (a working title) series, in which they collect stories submitted by the community and come together to devise something completely original. The cast takes the submissions, along with many of their own stories, and weaves them into a devised piece about the highs and lows of life in a variety of diverse bodies. The production runs through August 6 at Aura Coffee in Denton.

Uptown Players presents Chicken & Biscuits Uptown Players closes its 21st season with the regional premiere of Chicken & Biscuits, which follows rivaling sisters, Baneatta and Beverly, as they try to bury their father without killing each other. Baneattas husband tries to mediate the family drama, Baneattas son intentionally brings his neurotic white Jewish boyfriend along, and Beverlys nosy daughter keeps asking questions no one wants to answer. The production runs through August 13 at Kalita Humphreys Theater.

Jinkx Monsoon: Everything at Stake Two-time RuPaul's Drag Race winner and Broadway breakout star Jinkx Monsoon and her musical main squeeze Major Scales come to Dallas with the show Everything at Stake, featuring a full rock band. Known for her electric and eclectic performance style, Jinkx weaves together tales from her enigmatic life in a show where music, comedy, witchy magic, and camp-fantasy collide. She'll perform at Majestic Theatre.

Theatre Frisco presents Pippin There will be dueling Pippins in Collin County this week as Theatre Frisco presents its own version a few miles north of North Texas Performing Arts. The musical that made director/choreographer Bob Fosse a famous name long before Cabaret and All That Jazz uses the medieval legend of Charlemagne's son, Pippin, heir apparent to the Holy Roman Empire, to tell a parable about a young man's search for meaning and truth. It will run through August 13 at Frisco Discovery Center.

The DASH Ensemble presents The Power of Collision As part of AT&T Performing Arts Center's Elevator Project series, The DASH Ensemble presents The Power of Collision, a familiar story that expresses how fragile life can be, how heavy things can get, and how exciting life can become when one weathers the storm of both. The plot unfolds over the course of three acts, each one displaying a distinct use of contemporary movement and illusionism as innovative tools for storytelling. There will be three performances through Sunday at Wyly Theatre.

Saturday, July 29

Soccer Champions Tour: FC Barcelona vs. Real Madrid Football Soccer clubs FC Barcelona and Real Madrid are two of the most successful teams in European history. FC Barcelona has won 27 La Liga titles, five Champions League titles, and three FIFA Club World Cup titles. Real Madrid has been even better, with 35 La Liga titles, 14 Champions League titles, and five FIFA Club World Cup titles. They'll face off in a "friendly" match at AT&T Stadium as part of the Soccer Champions Tour.

Lil Baby in concert Rapper Lil Baby has had a big impact on the hip hop world since releasing his debut album in 2018. Building on a series of well-received mixtapes, his first album went to No. 3 on the Billboard 200, and his next two albums, including 2022's It's Only Me, both went to No. 1. Having done collaborations with Nicki Minaj, Travis Scott, Kirk Franklin, and more, Lil Baby looks to be a power in the genre for a long time. He'll lead a huge concert at American Airlines Center, featuring special guests The Kid LAROI, GloRilla, GLOSS UP, Rylo Rodriguez, and Hunxho.

Dallas Symphony Orchestra presents "Queens of Cool" The Queens of Cool - Denise Lee, Deon Q, and Angie McWhirter - will perform the music from the era of the Kings of Cool (Frank, Dean & Sammy), some of the best music ever made. Norman Williams will serve as Music Director for this concert, taking place at Meyerson Symphony Center.

KARD in concert Unlike seemingly every other K-Pop group that's made their way from South Korea to the United States, KARD is a co-ed group comprised of two men and two women - J.Seph, BM, Somin, and Jiwoo. Since debuting in 2017, the band has released a series of mini-albums, including the recently-released Icky. They'll perform at the Music Hall at Fair Park.

Sunday, July 30

Photo by Anthony DAngio

Dallas Museum of Art presents "Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism" closing dayAfter 11 months, Sunday will be moving day for "Movement: The Legacy of Kineticism" at the Dallas Museum of Art. The exhibition features 80 works drawn from the Museums collection that showcase the work of artists from three historical eras who utilize optical effects or mechanical or manipulable parts to engage the viewer physically or perceptually.

Steve Miller Band in concert The legendary Steve Miller Band, known for songs like "The Joker," "Livin' in the USA," "Take the Money and Run," "Rock'n Me," "Fly Like an Eagle," "Jet Airliner," "Jungle Love," and "Abracadabra," comes to Dos Equis Pavilion for a retrospective of their long and distinguished career. They'll be joined by special guests Cheap Trick.

Link:

Transit-oriented development arrives in this week's 5 most-read ... - CultureMap Dallas

Categories Leo Frank

Who Is History For? – Boston Review

Popularizing the Past: Historians, Publishers, and Readers in Postwar America Nick Witham University of Chicago Press, $45.00 (cloth)

It seems almost quaintat a time when the academy is under systemic attack by those who talk of facts, faith, the greatness of the Founders, and the still greater power of woke educatorsthat during the 1990s, historians of the United States with decent job prospects started to beat themselves up over their failure to drop the jargon, engage the public, synthesize their findings, or tell national stories that could also pass professional muster. Did academics fail to learn (or remember) how to gain and retain the appreciation of the citizenry by . . . writing books? Thirty years later, historians continue some of the same self-scrutiny, often on social media, under the more obviously politicized signs of presentism, The 1619 Project, and the banning of books that draw on their work.

Though historiansof all peopleshould know better, we sometimes still talk, and write, as if there is a single national audience for popular history.

The late twentieth-century quarrels took place in the wake of an explosion of knowledge (a crisis of overproduction, really, due to growing ranks of PhDs), the arrival in greater numbers of women and people of color in the academy, and an ensuing greater distrust of happy white male national stories. The divide appeared to widen and morph into an ever more exaggerated distinction between popular and academic history. In 1994 Harvards Bernard Bailyn opined that there is no systematic reason why good history cant be popular, but it seldom is, simply because. . . . it is so difficult to maintain the historians discipline and at the same time make the story compelling and broadly accessible. Professors did not want to get caught on the wrong side of this particular railroad track by the wrong people: a promotion or even a career could be at stake. Recent debates about presentism and the politicization of the past are haunted by this dual legacy: rewards and punishments handed out for being political, for being popular, for being neither, or for toeing an often invisible set of crisscrossing lines.

If it wasnt all so academic, it might be described as the real world. Insofar as audiences denote constituencies and vary from place to place, the academic-popular divide itself might be mistaken, too, for a politics. Ironically, the education of more and more people in the United States has led to an expansion of potential audiences for quality, and progressive, history. It has also generated a series of unresolved questions about overt and implicit politics, style, and the identity of the historian as a writer and a public person.

In his new book Popularizing the Past, historian Nick Witham sheds light on five particularly interesting historians writing and publishing strategies during the mid-to-late twentieth century. He has a small but unusual cast of characterstwo mainstream historians who taught at elite schools and straddled an intellectual but popular fence (Richard Hofstadter, Daniel J. Boorstin), and three radical new faces who developed new fields or, at least, new audiences (John Hope Franklin, Howard Zinn, and Gerda Lerner).

In the first group, Witham sees a genre of national popular history that draws not necessarily straight lines from politics past to present, which comes in liberal and conservative guises and is aimed at a general reader. (Witham acknowledges the vagueness of this category and approaches it less as a fiction than as something under construction during the postwar paperback revolutionan insight that follows from other scholarly work on the history of the book and popular culture, though usually with more attention to the whiteness and middle-classness of the phenomenon.) By contrast, Witham sees Franklin, Lerner, and Zinn speaking to or constructing an audience of activist readers, a mode of historical writing that persists to the present and arguably has been just as important in shaping the sense of what history can or ought to be. Indeed, by giving the majority of his pages to activist historians who, paradoxically or not, achieved popularity, Witham begs the question of where change comes from, in history as well as history writing.

Ultimately, Witham says, all five of his subjects were intellectuals who created their own publics, comparing them implicitly to todays social mediasavvy activist-scholars. Before the podcast, there were paperbacksperhaps as democratic in effect, if not in production. (Its much harder to get a contract with a publisher than to upload your own show on Spotify.) While acknowledging and in some cases even championing professional specialization in new fields like womens history (Lerner) or African American history (Franklin), all of Withams models showed faith in the idea that given the right support and guided by the right understanding of what made for popular history, the historical profession could produce work that would inspire everyday Americans to think differently about their nations past, he writes.

The think differently part is essential, but so is these historians experience of the mid-century paperback revolution that could put their books into the hands of anyone who perused those once ubiquitous, squeaky rotating racks of little, 6 by 4 books whose pages had already turned brownish. When it came to printed history, both the student audience and the popular one seemed to be growing. These professors didnt think their job was to conserve and re-present, much less dumb down, old understandings on cheaper paper. It was to craft and synthesize new knowledge, but in an accessible way that had political implications.

In light of the laments and controversies and crises in the disciplinefueled by a dearth of secure jobs amid rising denunciations of historians for trying to do their jobs, both inside and beyond the classroomWithams retrospective is as refreshing as a half-full glass of water. By celebrating the historian as writer without considering what other popular and political writers and historians with similar interests were doing in those yearsand especially what they did when accused of being politicalWitham dodges an opportunity to do more than previous handwringers. The present may not be so different than the recent past for historians, but the infrastructures that support scholarly work that might translate into mass or activist readership are under attack as never before, in part because of the perceived successes of radical history. In other words, the contemporary crisis looks less like a failure of historians to rise to the writerly aspirations of their forebears than a concerted antiwoke backlash to their popular successes as well as their activism.

Witham starts out with the narratives of declension that leading U.S. historiansfrom Allan Nevins in 1939 to Eric Foner in 1980 to Jill Lepore in 2018have spun about professional, college-teaching historians failures to reach and enlighten the masses. Was the problem sheer inaccessibility due to narrow specializations or abstruse prose? Was it mistaken migration away from uplifting (or even tragic) stories about presidents, wars, the nation-state? Didnt anyone succeed in marrying sophistication or political punch with popular appeal?

Witham finds underappreciated understandings of audience and purpose in his five case studies, beginning with a searching brief for Hofstadter, the only historian to be honored by inclusion in the Library of Americaand whom Lepore has used to prod colleagues who have allegedly lost their liberal, nationalist, storytelling way.

Hofstadters breakthrough book was written on a competitive fellowship funded by publisher Alfred A. Knopf, and it can be surprising to recall just how critical Hofstadter was of what Knopf decided to call The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It (1948). The young Columbia University professor told the reader that he had no desire to add to a literatureof hero-worship andnational self-congratulation. He analyzed ideals but insisted they had to be understood in social and economic contexts. He paid attention to slavery and to class as shaping facts of political economy, bringing it up at the outset of chapters on the Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson, and Andrew Jackson. He was unconventionally kind to Wendell Phillips at a time when radical abolitionists were still denounced as utopian ideologues. And he called out aristocrats and capitalists as populist posers. Hofstadter was tough on populism later, especially its anti-Semitic varieties. But as Withams case makes clear, the tendency of twentieth-century specialists to read his career and his sense of U.S. history backward from Age of Reform (1955) and Anti-Intellectualism in American Life (1962) misses too much of whats still useful (and entertaining) in his vision of American political culture.

Its revealing that the closest thing to what was once called a pointy-headed intellectual among Hofstadters statesmen is John C. Calhoun, whom he called the Marx of the Master Class. Hofstadter excoriates Calhoun not as an old-fashioned paternalist but, in Withams update, as a racial capitalistin other words, definitely not as the racial anti-capitalist that Eugene D. Genovese, who chose to study with Columbias Southern history specialists rather than with Hofstadter, would later make him out to be. Hofstadters chapter on Calhoun in The American Political Tradition can be read as a satire of the recondite debates between American socialists and communists over intellectuals and the bourgeoisie, much as his takedown of Jackson buying a slave literally on the road to Tennessee and destiny madeand still makesa mockery of the excuses for Jackson offered up by Democratic court historians like Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. and Sean Wilentz. This was a version of popular history that maintained a critical stance toward the past while addressing an audience whose ideas he sought to fundamentally disrupt, Witham concludes.

Popularizing the Past traces Hofstadters emplotment of irony and tragedy in U.S. history to his writerly ambitions. His aim, Witham says, was not to appeal to what he viewed as the lowest common denominator in contemporary culture (which he would go on to witheringly dissect in Anti-Intellectualism and in The Paranoid Style in American Politics) but to emulate his literary heroes in New York, like Lionel Trilling and Edmund Wilson, while educating the American public. The American Political Tradition won praise from reviewers precisely because of its transgression of national historical pieties, its egalitarian sympathies, and its realism about social movements and alliance politics, though by the late 1960s it would be seen by some radical historians as too fatalistic about the triumph of capitalist values and the failures of the left.

Richard Hofstadter wrote about a capitalist consensus in order to criticize it, for an audience across the political spectrum.

What Witham captures especially well is how Hofstadter, with his iconoclastic approach to statesmen that made them at once representative of movements and full of contradictions, enabled many readers to appreciate the grand march of American partisan politics while keeping a critical distance from all of its paragons, including the Roosevelts. He neither disputed that these men were important nor reduced them to cardboard figures of glory or betrayal. The V-9 Vintage paperbackwith its red-white-and-blue striped cover, one of the first of what would be more than a thousand Vintage titles over the next three decadeshad something, if not for everybody, at least for anyone with a skeptical bone in their body. Hofstadter dealt in similes that juxtaposed archetypes, calling attention to epic pretensions, tragic flaws, and less than inspiring realities: the Aristocrat as Democrat (Jefferson), the Patrician as Agitator (Phillips), the Democrat as Revivalist (William Jennings Bryan). One might admire what these men and American politics accomplished, he suggested, but in a measured way that marked the differences between the past and the present. Each figure and movement suggested persistent American capitalist and reform themes but also the shifting obsessions of past generations: not so much founding fathers as more or less embarrassing grandfathers. If you listen to them hard, Hofstadter seems to say, you realize that they didnt have all the answers in their own times, much less in ours.

Hofstadter wrote about a capitalist consensus in order to criticize it, for an audience across the political spectrum. Ultimately, though, Witham is more interested in Hofstadters style than his substance, missing opportunities to see their relationship. If these were professional and political contradictions, as Witham writes, Hofstadter embraced them as much as he embraced anythingas a writing problem. (One of his students once described to me a teaching practice that included both close editingSurely there must be a more felicitous way of making this point?and lecturing directly from his own manuscripts.) I am really a suppressed litterateur, Hofstadter wrote to Alfred Kazin sometime in the early 1950s. Excavating Hofstadters own developing understanding of his method from his letters, Witham shows how he embraced artistic genres like caricature while blurring the literary boundaries between scholarly and popular writing. He also considered himself unusual among historians in both trying and succeeding at this, even though he clearly owed much to a tradition of Progressive debunking, from the 1890s to the 1930s.

These lessons were not lost on Foner (also his student) or on Zinn, who was still quoting him approvingly in 1995. With Foner we get the rigor and political savvy, if more rarely the irony; with Zinn, the debunking and the caricatures. Perhaps what has been lost is the felicitous balance, already under great pressure as Hofstadter matured and the political contexts for his writing changed.

In Boorstin, Hofstadter had an alter ego on the moving-right side of the political spectrum, one who agreed with his view of a relative absence of real growth in the American Political Tradition. Eventually, in the last, self-critical, yet forward-looking chapter of The Progressive Historians (1968), Hofstadter made Boorstin the foremost negative example of the consensus school with which he felt he had been mistakenly lumped. The skepticism was mutual and built over time. Boorstin had publicly mocked Hofstadters incorporation of social science (and literary flair) in Age of Reform; Hofstadter objected privately to his doppelgangers smug nationalism and his anti-intellectualism. Witham agrees that Boorstins emphasis on no-nonsense capitalist practicalities in his The Americans trilogy meant ironing out, or simply ignoring, much of the conflict and violence in U.S. historysomething Hofstadter could never be accused of, despite his emphasis on a capitalist ideological consensus. Hofstadter returned to themes of violence and tragedy at the end of his career, in response to students and to the conflicts of the 1960s. Boorstin fled them.

Boorstins own trademark use of irony, like Hofstadters, made it possible for him to be read appreciatively yet differently by different people. Reading Witham on these two historians, I felt I finally understood what both had in common with celebrated fiction writers of the same years, like J. D. Salinger or even Vladimir Nabokov. Or to put it differently: these guys were the Rod Serlings of popular, synthetic, but high-end American history, guiding young and old into the twilight zone of the distant and the near pasts where everything was familiar yet weird. The problems with detachment and irony, however, are more evident with Boorstin, much of whose work has not stood the test of time.

Daniel Boorstin was a liberal who punched left so hard and so often that his other hand withered.

Boorstin was a liberal who punched left so hard and so often that his other hand withered. He famously swore before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) that despite his brief Communist Party membership in 193839, his Lost World of Thomas Jefferson (1948) promoted the unique virtues of American democracy. (He also ratted out names of other Communist Party members he had known.) Two decades later, historian John Patrick Diggins observed that had the committee actually read the book, they would have been outraged at the academics deliberate misdirection, for the book actually criticized Jeffersons idealism. Boorstins Genius of American Politics (1953) similarly argued against modern abolitionists and their idealist schemes, and he gave Pennsylvania Quakers the same treatment in The Americans: The Colonial Experience (1958). For Boorstin, the usable past lay in pragmatism, not dreams, even dreams of equality or democracy: the nation simply had no philosophy that could be exported to the rest of the world, he wrote. And if anybody did have an ideologywell, too bad for them, because history just doesnt go according to plan. The genius of America was not to have genius (which meant: theory, intellectuals, real European-style or anticolonial revolutions).

With no ideology but practicality, there was no need, Boorstin thought, to look for classes or alliances underneath the seeming consensus. Take Boorstins 1966 introduction to An American Primer, a collection of the eighty-three most important documents of the American past with generous prefaces and afterwards by contemporary historians:

This is a book of Citizens History. Our American past always speaks to us with two voices: the voice of the past, and the voice of the present. . . . Historians history is the patient, endless effort to resurrect the dead past.

But the citizen cannot wait. . . . The good historian warns against a too-simple moral, a too-clear answer to any question. The citizens duty is to think and feel and act promptly. The historian who refuses to draw conclusionsuntil more evidence is in, or because we can never knowis fulfilling his vocation. . . .

Much of the history of our national testament consists in the ironies and the whimsies by which slogans cried up in one cause become shibboleths of quite other causes, causes which as often as not their original authors would have fought against. To read these remarkable Afterlives is to acquire a sobering humility about our power over our grandchildren, and to discover the extent and the limits of our ancestors power over us. But it is also to realize our great power and our need, in every generation, to rediscover and to re-create our tradition.

Theres little room here for politics or reform informed by rigorous history: the default is going to be myth and more myth as Boorstin reinscribes the very divide that his primer sets out to transcend. For Boorstin, history should make us wary, skeptics of change rather than agents of it, and the past and the present have to be kept separate by historians even if they wont be by citizens. Everything misfires except going with the middlebrow flowand maybe wise men who take a knowing, worldly, long-term view. This is patriotism with ironic detachment, and by the time Boorstin wrote, it had long since reeked of reaction. Hofstadter had more respect for his readersand for students and colleagues. While Boorstin helped run the pathbreaking bottom-up historian Jesse Lemisch out of the University of Chicagobecause, as Lemisch recounted, he enjoyed what he called my sea stories but could not abide my introduction of the notion of classHofstadter encouraged Foner and Michael Wallace, among others who went on to write definitive histories during the later twentieth century.

And yet, Boorstins observation that slogans could be interpreted in ways their creators might recoil from applies to his own work. His democracy of consumers and individualists provided grist for critics as well as conservatives, much as Hofstadters ironies could reassure those who thought fundamental change either undesirable or unlikely in America. Harvey Neptune, for example, has brilliantly interpreted The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson, which the Jefferson establishment of the time hated, as a mocking takedown of emerging racial science. Witham cites but doesnt really engage Neptunes bold thesis that Boorstin later pursued an un-American, indeed postcolonial, critique of American exceptionalism in his comparisons of the new nation to other former colonies in the Americas. Perhaps Boorstins years at the University Chicago taught him, la the acolytes of Leo Strauss, to send different messages to the masses and to the philosophers.

Boorstin seems to have enjoyed the personal inscrutability and distance from politics that many postPopular Front creatives cultivated. He identified not as a lawyer, a historian, or an administrator, though he worked at all these, but as a writer. Or was the slipperiness born of distrust and fear of the mob, from the son of a lawyer who had to get out of Atlanta after defending Leo Frank in court before his lynching? What Witham calls Boorstins indifference to entrenched racial inequalities in the United States, despite growing up in Tulsa during and after the pogrom of 1921, suggests a distinct and not minor, though less often highlighted, case of twentieth-century Jewish assimilation. Witham does not solve the puzzle of Boorstin, in part because he seems unequipped to deal with the varieties of Jewish American experience represented by four of his five historians. But by following the middle of Boorstins career, he illustrates how historians aiming for the middlebrow intervened ambitiously yet ambiguously in politics even when they were distancing themselves from the vulgarities they associated with student activism.

In his own red-white-and-blue Vintage paperback of 1968, Staughton Lynd, who died last November, explicitly identified radicals in search of a usable past as his intended audience. His title, Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism (1968), suggested pluralities in a broader left traditionin marked contrast to Bailyns singular story in The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1967). The second part of Popularizing the Past pivots to three historians who wrote explicitly for alternative audiences of such activist readers. Witham finds not one tradition, but several related ones. Again he emphasizes the successes of the work rather than the ironies.

Though John Hope Franklin was skeptical of interdisciplinary Black studies, radicals found his liberal Afrocentrism useful enough.

John Hope Franklin found a sweet spot in an audience across the color line for a rigorous and comprehensive history of African Americans,From Slavery to Freedom, first in 1948 to tell the story of the process by which the Negro has sought to cast his lot with an evolving American civilizationa clear integrationist, proCivil Rights agendaand then, after 1969, in a paperback, which Franklin insisted on to compete with cheap, polemical alternatives beginning to flood the market. Trained at Harvard by Progressive historians and influenced by Black left historians like W. E. B. Du Bois, C. L. R. James, and Eric Williams, Franklin was liberal and optimistic about progress. He didnt seek controversy but adapted to it, much as he managed to fit in at North Carolina Central, Howard University, Brooklyn College, the University of Chicago, Duke University, and Bill Clintons presidential commissions on race.

Though Franklin was skeptical of interdisciplinary Black studies and of cultural nationalism, radicals and nationalists found his liberal Afrocentrism useful enough. As Robin D. G. Kelley has put it, cloaked in the protective armor of judicious prose was a surprisingly radical interpretation of American history in which African Americans were central to the national story and in which many if not most of their gains derived from their own efforts. His books origins and continuing use as a course textbook allowed for regular, careful, and unapologetic revisionsseven editions through 1994in response to fundamental disputes over questions of racial politics, including his own resistance to the use of Black instead of Negro. Witham is sensitive to all this, but more discussion of Franklins actual interpretations of U.S. history would have clarified that Franklin furthered a long tradition of Black studya tradition that didnt depend on New Yorks downtown and midtown publishers.

Franklins persistence complicates the emphasis on generational conflict in histories of the civil rights movement, as well as the assumed academic/pop culture divide. At the same time, Witham ignores Franklins close ties to Boorstin, who published Franklins short history of Reconstruction in a series he edited and helped bring Franklin to Chicago. They remained friends for the rest of their lives and even planned to write a book together. When he penned his memoir forty years later, Franklin was still disgusted by students leafletting Boorstins classes with excerpts from his HUAC testimony. Either both their stories are more complex than radical-versus-conservative or general-versus-activist readers, or something is missing from Withams account. That something is also suggested by the fact that when John Lewis was arrested in Selma, he was carrying a copy of The American Political Tradition in his backpack. Sometimes Witham, like a savvy publisher, puts his historians into boxes that both authors and readers resisted.

Howard Zinns clear intentions provoked what now looks like the prehistory of attacks on wokeness as unpatriotic propaganda.

Witham sees Zinn similarly, as a generational bridge between the Old and New Left. The very notion of A Peoples History of the United States (1980) owed much to the Popular Front. To a paleo-progressive suspicion of militarism and imperialism, Zinn added his early New Left experience in the South, where he taught at Spelman College and encouraged students to organize (from 1956 until he was fired in 1963), which led him to highlight both oppression and resistance. Like his friend Lynd, he appealed to activists by putting radicals and radicalisms front and center, over a long arc. In his 1964 book on the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Zinn was one of the first to (approvingly) call civil rights protesters The New Abolitionists.

The basic idea was to go over or under the head of the establishment and its textbooks that pushed a seemingly neutral view that was actually the ideology of an oppressive establishment. Zinn embraced controversy and deliberately politicized history. He believed in protest and illustrated how business leaders and politicians responded violently to initiatives from below. Accordingly, he wasnt especially focused on college-educated readers: he looked younger and broader, not least because he understood youth itself as a radical political force. He and his publisher, Harper & Row, gradually conceptualized their readership as members of a politicized community of activists who might be teenagers or their teachers but could be anybody tired of patriotic bromides that papered over genocide, slavery, exploitation, and the sins of industrial capitalism and the state.

These choices opened Zinn to criticisms from professionals, including next-wave labor and social historians, for being romantic and simplistic. But theres no denying the inspiration that so many have drawn from Zinns popularization of Old and New Left themes. The function, for Witham, mirrored that of Franklins generative textbook, even if the audience only partially overlapped and the style differed. Zinns clear intentions, and the radical uses of his widely popular book, also provoked what now looks like the prehistory of attacks on wokeness as unpatriotic propaganda.

There was a cost. Increased controversy often led to interchanges where his arguments . . . were reduced to soundbites, most notably with A Peoples History as an iconic text, an apt symbol of a culture war that anyone could fight. In Zinns new world, one that may be more familiar to a new generation of historians qua op-ed writers and podcasters, popularity was synonymous with controversy. Zinn himself became something of a peoples history brand. But he was always more than that. In Doing History from the Bottom Up (2014), Lynd reminds us that after their Spelman experience (Zinn had hired him, only to be first fired for his activism), his friend directly addressed the way that the myth of a unitary Southern continuity and culture fooled people into thinking that attitudes had to be changed slowly, not precipitated through alterations in law and behavior. No wonder they looked again at the debates in antebellum antislavery. Nodding to Betty Friedan, Zinn called this book The Southern Mystique (1964). Among the experts on race and Southern history he cited was Franklin, whose book Zinn and Lynd used in the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Schools curriculum.

Popularizing the Past broadens its ambit with a final chapter on Gerda Lerner, an indispensable pioneer of womens history and a contemporary of the four male historians born during or shortly after World War I. It might be obvious to those who have read her that Lerner combined Franklins scholarly precision with Zinns activism and a commitment to feminism as both politics and a mode of inquiry, but it is less well known that she shared the literary ambitions of Hofstadter and Boorstin. As a Jewish migr from Austria, Lerner had first been an activist and aspiring fiction writer, and coauthor of an off-Broadway musical Singing of Women (1951) and the screenplay of John Howard Griffins Black Like Me (1961), before deciding to go to graduate school during the early 1960s. Looking back on her career, she would repeatedly emphasize how womens history needed rigor, clarity, and style to gain the popular audience, and political effects, it must have. Lerner forms a fitting conclusion to Popularizing the Past because she combined all the trends Witham specifies, with the exception of the ironic veilsomething she could not afford given the struggle Lerner faced, as a woman writing about women, to break into the mainstream of American historical writing.

Womens history, for Gerda Lerner, had to be more than the story of the womens rights movement. It became all of womens experience.

Witham rightly emphasizes the breadth and sheer learnedness as well as radicalism of Lerners project: first, a pathbreaking biography of the feminist-abolitionist Grimk sisters, but even more impressively, her two-volume study of The Creation of Patriarchy (1986) and The Creation of Feminist Consciousness (1993). Her most-thumbed work, however, may be her mass-marketed Black Women in White America: A Documentary History (1972), which prioritized female experience but also highlighted the intersection of race and class. Witham also points out that the growth of the popular audience for good and useful womens history depended not so much on university curricula as the proliferation of feminist bookstores and consciousness-raising. (And perhaps the evolution of the professional-managerial class. My own used copy of Lerners last essay collection, Living with History/Making Social Change (2009), has a bookplate from the Executive Women in Government 2009 Annual Summit and Training Conference.)

Womens history, for Lerner, had to be more than the story of the womens rights movement. It became all of womens experience and also equally concerned with men and women, a transformative way of looking at national and world historywhat sometime colleague Joan Wallach Scott would theorize as a gendered approach to power. In a sense, with her patriarchy-to-feminism synthesis, Lerner circled back to an ambitious, scholarly, yet popular search for an educated general readerbuilding out from an activist base. There wasnt any point at all in even entertaining the notion that this work was not political to the core. Nor was there any denying that Lerner, like Franklin and Zinn, achieved something that many of their academic colleagues had begun to say was impossible: grand narratives that reflected the new work in many subfields.

Withams readings of these five figures offer sensitive analysis and point to the key questions about politics and publishing, but his interpretation of what it all adds up to will probably strike some readers as banal. There were and are multiple and competing publics for popular history, Witham concludes. The audiences for history simultaneously broadened and diversified in the late twentieth century in ways that blurred the line historians drew between the popular and academicand perhaps even rendered that tension meaningless.

Though historiansof all peopleshould know better, we sometimes still talk, and write, as if there is a single national audience for popular history. There wasnt and isnt, at least not any more than there is for a novel or a play. By illustrating the strategies and the successes of these five historians, Witham takes down the heated if not hysterical tone of both historians and pundits about presentism and the politicization of history.

What if historians had more than the smallest fraction of the public support given to social scientists or scientists?

Still, it is hard not to wonder what Withams study might suggest if he had dealt with some examples that cut across his categories of general versus activist historians and readers, followed their entire careers or backlists as such, or even looked more closely at their relationships with each other. Hofstadter, after all, is still often read as essentially antipopulist and antiradical, but he seemed to take a more critical turn (or return?) in 1968, as he began working on a multivolume history of the United States. Unfortunately, he died of leukemia in 1970, so all we have is his extended prologue, America at 1750: A Social Portrait. Would this have been the lost synthesis, stylistically and interpretively, Americanists are still trying to find? Witham treads lightly over Boorstins conservative third act, implying more consistency than Boortsin actually demonstrated: timing, and the rightward turn of U.S. politics, usually explains these things, but in Witham it is strangely absent, as if historians not only make their audiences but also their eras. What if he had considered C. Vann Woodward, the southerner as liberal who by the early 1990s (much like Wilentz now) came to serve as a historian-cop of race discourse from a perch at the New York Review of Books?

Meanwhile, Lynd, a decade younger than the historians who are Withams focus, wrote accessibly and influentially, but his actual activism pushed him onto a blacklist (with assists from Woodward and Genovese), from which he could not pen the kind of ambitious histories of the Revolution and the politics of slavery for which he laid the groundwork during the 1960s. In autobiographical writings Lynd reasons that he was more committed to politics than to writing history. Yet for a half century after he lost his job at Yale and was ostracized after nearly being hired at five Chicago-area institutions, he chose to keep experimenting with history from the bottom up. What if Knopf, the National Endowment for the Humanities, or Yale had gotten over Lynds antiwar activism and given him a fellowship to write more about radicalism, antislavery, the Revolution, the Civil War, and the American political tradition? What if, indeed, historians had more than the smallest fraction of the public support given to social scientists or scientists? Debate about these issues would have been richer for it, and the 1619 Project would have had more to work with. In that possible world, the rhetorical situation facing historians today almost certainly would have been very differentso different, perhaps, that the 1619 writers might not have made the overstatements that certain of our would-be Woodwards have seized upon in a specious bid to reject the whole effort out of hand.

The new divide, in any case, seems to be not so much academia versus public sphere or scholarship versus presentism (or activism) as hagiography versus iconoclasm, harder right versus harder left, and whiteness versus its substantive or performative rejection. Maybe the false choices Witham writes against remain the same because, as Hofstadter and Lynd understood, our politics goes in cycles and doesnt change quite so much as it may seem. Looking back in 1993 at his career, and bemoaning how social history has become too academicized and deactivated, Lemisch asked waggishly if it might help were another such time as The Sixties to come, to clear our heads and help us to see the world plainly. Maybe that time has come: maybe it is now.

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Who Is History For? - Boston Review

Categories Leo Frank

Who Is History For? – Boston Review

Popularizing the Past: Historians, Publishers, and Readers in Postwar America Nick Witham University of Chicago Press, $45.00 (cloth)

It seems almost quaintat a time when the academy is under systemic attack by those who talk of facts, faith, the greatness of the Founders, and the still greater power of woke educatorsthat during the 1990s, historians of the United States with decent job prospects started to beat themselves up over their failure to drop the jargon, engage the public, synthesize their findings, or tell national stories that could also pass professional muster. Did academics fail to learn (or remember) how to gain and retain the appreciation of the citizenry by . . . writing books? Thirty years later, historians continue some of the same self-scrutiny, often on social media, under the more obviously politicized signs of presentism, The 1619 Project, and the banning of books that draw on their work.

Though historiansof all peopleshould know better, we sometimes still talk, and write, as if there is a single national audience for popular history.

The late twentieth-century quarrels took place in the wake of an explosion of knowledge (a crisis of overproduction, really, due to growing ranks of PhDs), the arrival in greater numbers of women and people of color in the academy, and an ensuing greater distrust of happy white male national stories. The divide appeared to widen and morph into an ever more exaggerated distinction between popular and academic history. In 1994 Harvards Bernard Bailyn opined that there is no systematic reason why good history cant be popular, but it seldom is, simply because. . . . it is so difficult to maintain the historians discipline and at the same time make the story compelling and broadly accessible. Professors did not want to get caught on the wrong side of this particular railroad track by the wrong people: a promotion or even a career could be at stake. Recent debates about presentism and the politicization of the past are haunted by this dual legacy: rewards and punishments handed out for being political, for being popular, for being neither, or for toeing an often invisible set of crisscrossing lines.

If it wasnt all so academic, it might be described as the real world. Insofar as audiences denote constituencies and vary from place to place, the academic-popular divide itself might be mistaken, too, for a politics. Ironically, the education of more and more people in the United States has led to an expansion of potential audiences for quality, and progressive, history. It has also generated a series of unresolved questions about overt and implicit politics, style, and the identity of the historian as a writer and a public person.

In his new book Popularizing the Past, historian Nick Witham sheds light on five particularly interesting historians writing and publishing strategies during the mid-to-late twentieth century. He has a small but unusual cast of characterstwo mainstream historians who taught at elite schools and straddled an intellectual but popular fence (Richard Hofstadter, Daniel J. Boorstin), and three radical new faces who developed new fields or, at least, new audiences (John Hope Franklin, Howard Zinn, and Gerda Lerner).

In the first group, Witham sees a genre of national popular history that draws not necessarily straight lines from politics past to present, which comes in liberal and conservative guises and is aimed at a general reader. (Witham acknowledges the vagueness of this category and approaches it less as a fiction than as something under construction during the postwar paperback revolutionan insight that follows from other scholarly work on the history of the book and popular culture, though usually with more attention to the whiteness and middle-classness of the phenomenon.) By contrast, Witham sees Franklin, Lerner, and Zinn speaking to or constructing an audience of activist readers, a mode of historical writing that persists to the present and arguably has been just as important in shaping the sense of what history can or ought to be. Indeed, by giving the majority of his pages to activist historians who, paradoxically or not, achieved popularity, Witham begs the question of where change comes from, in history as well as history writing.

Ultimately, Witham says, all five of his subjects were intellectuals who created their own publics, comparing them implicitly to todays social mediasavvy activist-scholars. Before the podcast, there were paperbacksperhaps as democratic in effect, if not in production. (Its much harder to get a contract with a publisher than to upload your own show on Spotify.) While acknowledging and in some cases even championing professional specialization in new fields like womens history (Lerner) or African American history (Franklin), all of Withams models showed faith in the idea that given the right support and guided by the right understanding of what made for popular history, the historical profession could produce work that would inspire everyday Americans to think differently about their nations past, he writes.

The think differently part is essential, but so is these historians experience of the mid-century paperback revolution that could put their books into the hands of anyone who perused those once ubiquitous, squeaky rotating racks of little, 6 by 4 books whose pages had already turned brownish. When it came to printed history, both the student audience and the popular one seemed to be growing. These professors didnt think their job was to conserve and re-present, much less dumb down, old understandings on cheaper paper. It was to craft and synthesize new knowledge, but in an accessible way that had political implications.

In light of the laments and controversies and crises in the disciplinefueled by a dearth of secure jobs amid rising denunciations of historians for trying to do their jobs, both inside and beyond the classroomWithams retrospective is as refreshing as a half-full glass of water. By celebrating the historian as writer without considering what other popular and political writers and historians with similar interests were doing in those yearsand especially what they did when accused of being politicalWitham dodges an opportunity to do more than previous handwringers. The present may not be so different than the recent past for historians, but the infrastructures that support scholarly work that might translate into mass or activist readership are under attack as never before, in part because of the perceived successes of radical history. In other words, the contemporary crisis looks less like a failure of historians to rise to the writerly aspirations of their forebears than a concerted antiwoke backlash to their popular successes as well as their activism.

Witham starts out with the narratives of declension that leading U.S. historiansfrom Allan Nevins in 1939 to Eric Foner in 1980 to Jill Lepore in 2018have spun about professional, college-teaching historians failures to reach and enlighten the masses. Was the problem sheer inaccessibility due to narrow specializations or abstruse prose? Was it mistaken migration away from uplifting (or even tragic) stories about presidents, wars, the nation-state? Didnt anyone succeed in marrying sophistication or political punch with popular appeal?

Witham finds underappreciated understandings of audience and purpose in his five case studies, beginning with a searching brief for Hofstadter, the only historian to be honored by inclusion in the Library of Americaand whom Lepore has used to prod colleagues who have allegedly lost their liberal, nationalist, storytelling way.

Hofstadters breakthrough book was written on a competitive fellowship funded by publisher Alfred A. Knopf, and it can be surprising to recall just how critical Hofstadter was of what Knopf decided to call The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It (1948). The young Columbia University professor told the reader that he had no desire to add to a literatureof hero-worship andnational self-congratulation. He analyzed ideals but insisted they had to be understood in social and economic contexts. He paid attention to slavery and to class as shaping facts of political economy, bringing it up at the outset of chapters on the Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson, and Andrew Jackson. He was unconventionally kind to Wendell Phillips at a time when radical abolitionists were still denounced as utopian ideologues. And he called out aristocrats and capitalists as populist posers. Hofstadter was tough on populism later, especially its anti-Semitic varieties. But as Withams case makes clear, the tendency of twentieth-century specialists to read his career and his sense of U.S. history backward from Age of Reform (1955) and Anti-Intellectualism in American Life (1962) misses too much of whats still useful (and entertaining) in his vision of American political culture.

Its revealing that the closest thing to what was once called a pointy-headed intellectual among Hofstadters statesmen is John C. Calhoun, whom he called the Marx of the Master Class. Hofstadter excoriates Calhoun not as an old-fashioned paternalist but, in Withams update, as a racial capitalistin other words, definitely not as the racial anti-capitalist that Eugene D. Genovese, who chose to study with Columbias Southern history specialists rather than with Hofstadter, would later make him out to be. Hofstadters chapter on Calhoun in The American Political Tradition can be read as a satire of the recondite debates between American socialists and communists over intellectuals and the bourgeoisie, much as his takedown of Jackson buying a slave literally on the road to Tennessee and destiny madeand still makesa mockery of the excuses for Jackson offered up by Democratic court historians like Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. and Sean Wilentz. This was a version of popular history that maintained a critical stance toward the past while addressing an audience whose ideas he sought to fundamentally disrupt, Witham concludes.

Popularizing the Past traces Hofstadters emplotment of irony and tragedy in U.S. history to his writerly ambitions. His aim, Witham says, was not to appeal to what he viewed as the lowest common denominator in contemporary culture (which he would go on to witheringly dissect in Anti-Intellectualism and in The Paranoid Style in American Politics) but to emulate his literary heroes in New York, like Lionel Trilling and Edmund Wilson, while educating the American public. The American Political Tradition won praise from reviewers precisely because of its transgression of national historical pieties, its egalitarian sympathies, and its realism about social movements and alliance politics, though by the late 1960s it would be seen by some radical historians as too fatalistic about the triumph of capitalist values and the failures of the left.

Richard Hofstadter wrote about a capitalist consensus in order to criticize it, for an audience across the political spectrum.

What Witham captures especially well is how Hofstadter, with his iconoclastic approach to statesmen that made them at once representative of movements and full of contradictions, enabled many readers to appreciate the grand march of American partisan politics while keeping a critical distance from all of its paragons, including the Roosevelts. He neither disputed that these men were important nor reduced them to cardboard figures of glory or betrayal. The V-9 Vintage paperbackwith its red-white-and-blue striped cover, one of the first of what would be more than a thousand Vintage titles over the next three decadeshad something, if not for everybody, at least for anyone with a skeptical bone in their body. Hofstadter dealt in similes that juxtaposed archetypes, calling attention to epic pretensions, tragic flaws, and less than inspiring realities: the Aristocrat as Democrat (Jefferson), the Patrician as Agitator (Phillips), the Democrat as Revivalist (William Jennings Bryan). One might admire what these men and American politics accomplished, he suggested, but in a measured way that marked the differences between the past and the present. Each figure and movement suggested persistent American capitalist and reform themes but also the shifting obsessions of past generations: not so much founding fathers as more or less embarrassing grandfathers. If you listen to them hard, Hofstadter seems to say, you realize that they didnt have all the answers in their own times, much less in ours.

Hofstadter wrote about a capitalist consensus in order to criticize it, for an audience across the political spectrum. Ultimately, though, Witham is more interested in Hofstadters style than his substance, missing opportunities to see their relationship. If these were professional and political contradictions, as Witham writes, Hofstadter embraced them as much as he embraced anythingas a writing problem. (One of his students once described to me a teaching practice that included both close editingSurely there must be a more felicitous way of making this point?and lecturing directly from his own manuscripts.) I am really a suppressed litterateur, Hofstadter wrote to Alfred Kazin sometime in the early 1950s. Excavating Hofstadters own developing understanding of his method from his letters, Witham shows how he embraced artistic genres like caricature while blurring the literary boundaries between scholarly and popular writing. He also considered himself unusual among historians in both trying and succeeding at this, even though he clearly owed much to a tradition of Progressive debunking, from the 1890s to the 1930s.

These lessons were not lost on Foner (also his student) or on Zinn, who was still quoting him approvingly in 1995. With Foner we get the rigor and political savvy, if more rarely the irony; with Zinn, the debunking and the caricatures. Perhaps what has been lost is the felicitous balance, already under great pressure as Hofstadter matured and the political contexts for his writing changed.

In Boorstin, Hofstadter had an alter ego on the moving-right side of the political spectrum, one who agreed with his view of a relative absence of real growth in the American Political Tradition. Eventually, in the last, self-critical, yet forward-looking chapter of The Progressive Historians (1968), Hofstadter made Boorstin the foremost negative example of the consensus school with which he felt he had been mistakenly lumped. The skepticism was mutual and built over time. Boorstin had publicly mocked Hofstadters incorporation of social science (and literary flair) in Age of Reform; Hofstadter objected privately to his doppelgangers smug nationalism and his anti-intellectualism. Witham agrees that Boorstins emphasis on no-nonsense capitalist practicalities in his The Americans trilogy meant ironing out, or simply ignoring, much of the conflict and violence in U.S. historysomething Hofstadter could never be accused of, despite his emphasis on a capitalist ideological consensus. Hofstadter returned to themes of violence and tragedy at the end of his career, in response to students and to the conflicts of the 1960s. Boorstin fled them.

Boorstins own trademark use of irony, like Hofstadters, made it possible for him to be read appreciatively yet differently by different people. Reading Witham on these two historians, I felt I finally understood what both had in common with celebrated fiction writers of the same years, like J. D. Salinger or even Vladimir Nabokov. Or to put it differently: these guys were the Rod Serlings of popular, synthetic, but high-end American history, guiding young and old into the twilight zone of the distant and the near pasts where everything was familiar yet weird. The problems with detachment and irony, however, are more evident with Boorstin, much of whose work has not stood the test of time.

Daniel Boorstin was a liberal who punched left so hard and so often that his other hand withered.

Boorstin was a liberal who punched left so hard and so often that his other hand withered. He famously swore before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) that despite his brief Communist Party membership in 193839, his Lost World of Thomas Jefferson (1948) promoted the unique virtues of American democracy. (He also ratted out names of other Communist Party members he had known.) Two decades later, historian John Patrick Diggins observed that had the committee actually read the book, they would have been outraged at the academics deliberate misdirection, for the book actually criticized Jeffersons idealism. Boorstins Genius of American Politics (1953) similarly argued against modern abolitionists and their idealist schemes, and he gave Pennsylvania Quakers the same treatment in The Americans: The Colonial Experience (1958). For Boorstin, the usable past lay in pragmatism, not dreams, even dreams of equality or democracy: the nation simply had no philosophy that could be exported to the rest of the world, he wrote. And if anybody did have an ideologywell, too bad for them, because history just doesnt go according to plan. The genius of America was not to have genius (which meant: theory, intellectuals, real European-style or anticolonial revolutions).

With no ideology but practicality, there was no need, Boorstin thought, to look for classes or alliances underneath the seeming consensus. Take Boorstins 1966 introduction to An American Primer, a collection of the eighty-three most important documents of the American past with generous prefaces and afterwards by contemporary historians:

This is a book of Citizens History. Our American past always speaks to us with two voices: the voice of the past, and the voice of the present. . . . Historians history is the patient, endless effort to resurrect the dead past.

But the citizen cannot wait. . . . The good historian warns against a too-simple moral, a too-clear answer to any question. The citizens duty is to think and feel and act promptly. The historian who refuses to draw conclusionsuntil more evidence is in, or because we can never knowis fulfilling his vocation. . . .

Much of the history of our national testament consists in the ironies and the whimsies by which slogans cried up in one cause become shibboleths of quite other causes, causes which as often as not their original authors would have fought against. To read these remarkable Afterlives is to acquire a sobering humility about our power over our grandchildren, and to discover the extent and the limits of our ancestors power over us. But it is also to realize our great power and our need, in every generation, to rediscover and to re-create our tradition.

Theres little room here for politics or reform informed by rigorous history: the default is going to be myth and more myth as Boorstin reinscribes the very divide that his primer sets out to transcend. For Boorstin, history should make us wary, skeptics of change rather than agents of it, and the past and the present have to be kept separate by historians even if they wont be by citizens. Everything misfires except going with the middlebrow flowand maybe wise men who take a knowing, worldly, long-term view. This is patriotism with ironic detachment, and by the time Boorstin wrote, it had long since reeked of reaction. Hofstadter had more respect for his readersand for students and colleagues. While Boorstin helped run the pathbreaking bottom-up historian Jesse Lemisch out of the University of Chicagobecause, as Lemisch recounted, he enjoyed what he called my sea stories but could not abide my introduction of the notion of classHofstadter encouraged Foner and Michael Wallace, among others who went on to write definitive histories during the later twentieth century.

And yet, Boorstins observation that slogans could be interpreted in ways their creators might recoil from applies to his own work. His democracy of consumers and individualists provided grist for critics as well as conservatives, much as Hofstadters ironies could reassure those who thought fundamental change either undesirable or unlikely in America. Harvey Neptune, for example, has brilliantly interpreted The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson, which the Jefferson establishment of the time hated, as a mocking takedown of emerging racial science. Witham cites but doesnt really engage Neptunes bold thesis that Boorstin later pursued an un-American, indeed postcolonial, critique of American exceptionalism in his comparisons of the new nation to other former colonies in the Americas. Perhaps Boorstins years at the University Chicago taught him, la the acolytes of Leo Strauss, to send different messages to the masses and to the philosophers.

Boorstin seems to have enjoyed the personal inscrutability and distance from politics that many postPopular Front creatives cultivated. He identified not as a lawyer, a historian, or an administrator, though he worked at all these, but as a writer. Or was the slipperiness born of distrust and fear of the mob, from the son of a lawyer who had to get out of Atlanta after defending Leo Frank in court before his lynching? What Witham calls Boorstins indifference to entrenched racial inequalities in the United States, despite growing up in Tulsa during and after the pogrom of 1921, suggests a distinct and not minor, though less often highlighted, case of twentieth-century Jewish assimilation. Witham does not solve the puzzle of Boorstin, in part because he seems unequipped to deal with the varieties of Jewish American experience represented by four of his five historians. But by following the middle of Boorstins career, he illustrates how historians aiming for the middlebrow intervened ambitiously yet ambiguously in politics even when they were distancing themselves from the vulgarities they associated with student activism.

In his own red-white-and-blue Vintage paperback of 1968, Staughton Lynd, who died last November, explicitly identified radicals in search of a usable past as his intended audience. His title, Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism (1968), suggested pluralities in a broader left traditionin marked contrast to Bailyns singular story in The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1967). The second part of Popularizing the Past pivots to three historians who wrote explicitly for alternative audiences of such activist readers. Witham finds not one tradition, but several related ones. Again he emphasizes the successes of the work rather than the ironies.

Though John Hope Franklin was skeptical of interdisciplinary Black studies, radicals found his liberal Afrocentrism useful enough.

John Hope Franklin found a sweet spot in an audience across the color line for a rigorous and comprehensive history of African Americans,From Slavery to Freedom, first in 1948 to tell the story of the process by which the Negro has sought to cast his lot with an evolving American civilizationa clear integrationist, proCivil Rights agendaand then, after 1969, in a paperback, which Franklin insisted on to compete with cheap, polemical alternatives beginning to flood the market. Trained at Harvard by Progressive historians and influenced by Black left historians like W. E. B. Du Bois, C. L. R. James, and Eric Williams, Franklin was liberal and optimistic about progress. He didnt seek controversy but adapted to it, much as he managed to fit in at North Carolina Central, Howard University, Brooklyn College, the University of Chicago, Duke University, and Bill Clintons presidential commissions on race.

Though Franklin was skeptical of interdisciplinary Black studies and of cultural nationalism, radicals and nationalists found his liberal Afrocentrism useful enough. As Robin D. G. Kelley has put it, cloaked in the protective armor of judicious prose was a surprisingly radical interpretation of American history in which African Americans were central to the national story and in which many if not most of their gains derived from their own efforts. His books origins and continuing use as a course textbook allowed for regular, careful, and unapologetic revisionsseven editions through 1994in response to fundamental disputes over questions of racial politics, including his own resistance to the use of Black instead of Negro. Witham is sensitive to all this, but more discussion of Franklins actual interpretations of U.S. history would have clarified that Franklin furthered a long tradition of Black studya tradition that didnt depend on New Yorks downtown and midtown publishers.

Franklins persistence complicates the emphasis on generational conflict in histories of the civil rights movement, as well as the assumed academic/pop culture divide. At the same time, Witham ignores Franklins close ties to Boorstin, who published Franklins short history of Reconstruction in a series he edited and helped bring Franklin to Chicago. They remained friends for the rest of their lives and even planned to write a book together. When he penned his memoir forty years later, Franklin was still disgusted by students leafletting Boorstins classes with excerpts from his HUAC testimony. Either both their stories are more complex than radical-versus-conservative or general-versus-activist readers, or something is missing from Withams account. That something is also suggested by the fact that when John Lewis was arrested in Selma, he was carrying a copy of The American Political Tradition in his backpack. Sometimes Witham, like a savvy publisher, puts his historians into boxes that both authors and readers resisted.

Howard Zinns clear intentions provoked what now looks like the prehistory of attacks on wokeness as unpatriotic propaganda.

Witham sees Zinn similarly, as a generational bridge between the Old and New Left. The very notion of A Peoples History of the United States (1980) owed much to the Popular Front. To a paleo-progressive suspicion of militarism and imperialism, Zinn added his early New Left experience in the South, where he taught at Spelman College and encouraged students to organize (from 1956 until he was fired in 1963), which led him to highlight both oppression and resistance. Like his friend Lynd, he appealed to activists by putting radicals and radicalisms front and center, over a long arc. In his 1964 book on the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Zinn was one of the first to (approvingly) call civil rights protesters The New Abolitionists.

The basic idea was to go over or under the head of the establishment and its textbooks that pushed a seemingly neutral view that was actually the ideology of an oppressive establishment. Zinn embraced controversy and deliberately politicized history. He believed in protest and illustrated how business leaders and politicians responded violently to initiatives from below. Accordingly, he wasnt especially focused on college-educated readers: he looked younger and broader, not least because he understood youth itself as a radical political force. He and his publisher, Harper & Row, gradually conceptualized their readership as members of a politicized community of activists who might be teenagers or their teachers but could be anybody tired of patriotic bromides that papered over genocide, slavery, exploitation, and the sins of industrial capitalism and the state.

These choices opened Zinn to criticisms from professionals, including next-wave labor and social historians, for being romantic and simplistic. But theres no denying the inspiration that so many have drawn from Zinns popularization of Old and New Left themes. The function, for Witham, mirrored that of Franklins generative textbook, even if the audience only partially overlapped and the style differed. Zinns clear intentions, and the radical uses of his widely popular book, also provoked what now looks like the prehistory of attacks on wokeness as unpatriotic propaganda.

There was a cost. Increased controversy often led to interchanges where his arguments . . . were reduced to soundbites, most notably with A Peoples History as an iconic text, an apt symbol of a culture war that anyone could fight. In Zinns new world, one that may be more familiar to a new generation of historians qua op-ed writers and podcasters, popularity was synonymous with controversy. Zinn himself became something of a peoples history brand. But he was always more than that. In Doing History from the Bottom Up (2014), Lynd reminds us that after their Spelman experience (Zinn had hired him, only to be first fired for his activism), his friend directly addressed the way that the myth of a unitary Southern continuity and culture fooled people into thinking that attitudes had to be changed slowly, not precipitated through alterations in law and behavior. No wonder they looked again at the debates in antebellum antislavery. Nodding to Betty Friedan, Zinn called this book The Southern Mystique (1964). Among the experts on race and Southern history he cited was Franklin, whose book Zinn and Lynd used in the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Schools curriculum.

Popularizing the Past broadens its ambit with a final chapter on Gerda Lerner, an indispensable pioneer of womens history and a contemporary of the four male historians born during or shortly after World War I. It might be obvious to those who have read her that Lerner combined Franklins scholarly precision with Zinns activism and a commitment to feminism as both politics and a mode of inquiry, but it is less well known that she shared the literary ambitions of Hofstadter and Boorstin. As a Jewish migr from Austria, Lerner had first been an activist and aspiring fiction writer, and coauthor of an off-Broadway musical Singing of Women (1951) and the screenplay of John Howard Griffins Black Like Me (1961), before deciding to go to graduate school during the early 1960s. Looking back on her career, she would repeatedly emphasize how womens history needed rigor, clarity, and style to gain the popular audience, and political effects, it must have. Lerner forms a fitting conclusion to Popularizing the Past because she combined all the trends Witham specifies, with the exception of the ironic veilsomething she could not afford given the struggle Lerner faced, as a woman writing about women, to break into the mainstream of American historical writing.

Womens history, for Gerda Lerner, had to be more than the story of the womens rights movement. It became all of womens experience.

Witham rightly emphasizes the breadth and sheer learnedness as well as radicalism of Lerners project: first, a pathbreaking biography of the feminist-abolitionist Grimk sisters, but even more impressively, her two-volume study of The Creation of Patriarchy (1986) and The Creation of Feminist Consciousness (1993). Her most-thumbed work, however, may be her mass-marketed Black Women in White America: A Documentary History (1972), which prioritized female experience but also highlighted the intersection of race and class. Witham also points out that the growth of the popular audience for good and useful womens history depended not so much on university curricula as the proliferation of feminist bookstores and consciousness-raising. (And perhaps the evolution of the professional-managerial class. My own used copy of Lerners last essay collection, Living with History/Making Social Change (2009), has a bookplate from the Executive Women in Government 2009 Annual Summit and Training Conference.)

Womens history, for Lerner, had to be more than the story of the womens rights movement. It became all of womens experience and also equally concerned with men and women, a transformative way of looking at national and world historywhat sometime colleague Joan Wallach Scott would theorize as a gendered approach to power. In a sense, with her patriarchy-to-feminism synthesis, Lerner circled back to an ambitious, scholarly, yet popular search for an educated general readerbuilding out from an activist base. There wasnt any point at all in even entertaining the notion that this work was not political to the core. Nor was there any denying that Lerner, like Franklin and Zinn, achieved something that many of their academic colleagues had begun to say was impossible: grand narratives that reflected the new work in many subfields.

Withams readings of these five figures offer sensitive analysis and point to the key questions about politics and publishing, but his interpretation of what it all adds up to will probably strike some readers as banal. There were and are multiple and competing publics for popular history, Witham concludes. The audiences for history simultaneously broadened and diversified in the late twentieth century in ways that blurred the line historians drew between the popular and academicand perhaps even rendered that tension meaningless.

Though historiansof all peopleshould know better, we sometimes still talk, and write, as if there is a single national audience for popular history. There wasnt and isnt, at least not any more than there is for a novel or a play. By illustrating the strategies and the successes of these five historians, Witham takes down the heated if not hysterical tone of both historians and pundits about presentism and the politicization of history.

What if historians had more than the smallest fraction of the public support given to social scientists or scientists?

Still, it is hard not to wonder what Withams study might suggest if he had dealt with some examples that cut across his categories of general versus activist historians and readers, followed their entire careers or backlists as such, or even looked more closely at their relationships with each other. Hofstadter, after all, is still often read as essentially antipopulist and antiradical, but he seemed to take a more critical turn (or return?) in 1968, as he began working on a multivolume history of the United States. Unfortunately, he died of leukemia in 1970, so all we have is his extended prologue, America at 1750: A Social Portrait. Would this have been the lost synthesis, stylistically and interpretively, Americanists are still trying to find? Witham treads lightly over Boorstins conservative third act, implying more consistency than Boortsin actually demonstrated: timing, and the rightward turn of U.S. politics, usually explains these things, but in Witham it is strangely absent, as if historians not only make their audiences but also their eras. What if he had considered C. Vann Woodward, the southerner as liberal who by the early 1990s (much like Wilentz now) came to serve as a historian-cop of race discourse from a perch at the New York Review of Books?

Meanwhile, Lynd, a decade younger than the historians who are Withams focus, wrote accessibly and influentially, but his actual activism pushed him onto a blacklist (with assists from Woodward and Genovese), from which he could not pen the kind of ambitious histories of the Revolution and the politics of slavery for which he laid the groundwork during the 1960s. In autobiographical writings Lynd reasons that he was more committed to politics than to writing history. Yet for a half century after he lost his job at Yale and was ostracized after nearly being hired at five Chicago-area institutions, he chose to keep experimenting with history from the bottom up. What if Knopf, the National Endowment for the Humanities, or Yale had gotten over Lynds antiwar activism and given him a fellowship to write more about radicalism, antislavery, the Revolution, the Civil War, and the American political tradition? What if, indeed, historians had more than the smallest fraction of the public support given to social scientists or scientists? Debate about these issues would have been richer for it, and the 1619 Project would have had more to work with. In that possible world, the rhetorical situation facing historians today almost certainly would have been very differentso different, perhaps, that the 1619 writers might not have made the overstatements that certain of our would-be Woodwards have seized upon in a specious bid to reject the whole effort out of hand.

The new divide, in any case, seems to be not so much academia versus public sphere or scholarship versus presentism (or activism) as hagiography versus iconoclasm, harder right versus harder left, and whiteness versus its substantive or performative rejection. Maybe the false choices Witham writes against remain the same because, as Hofstadter and Lynd understood, our politics goes in cycles and doesnt change quite so much as it may seem. Looking back in 1993 at his career, and bemoaning how social history has become too academicized and deactivated, Lemisch asked waggishly if it might help were another such time as The Sixties to come, to clear our heads and help us to see the world plainly. Maybe that time has come: maybe it is now.

Were interested in what you think. Submit a letter to the editors at letters@bostonreview.net. Boston Review is nonprofit, paywall-free, and reader-funded. To support work like this, please donate here.

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Who Is History For? - Boston Review

Categories Leo Frank

At BroadwayCon in Midtown, Jewish actors dish on identity and … – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

(New York Jewish Week) A woman dressed as Fanny Brice from Funny Girl and another dressed as Fruma Sarah from Fiddler on the Roof were among the 100-plus people who filed into a Midtown conference room on Friday morning to discuss Jewish identity on Broadway.

The Jewish fans whose real names were Jackie and Michelle, and declined to share their last names were dressed as their favorite Jewish musical characters, and were attending one of the first panel discussions of BroadwayCon 2023. The conference, at the New York Marriott Marquis hotel in Times Square, is an annual gathering in the vein of ComicCon that brings thousands of fans and industry professionals for a weekend of celebration, singing, discussion and meet-and-greets.

The panel, called Jewish Identity and Broadway, came together in less than a week, its organizer Ari Axelrod a Jewish actor, singer and educator told the New York Jewish Week. He said he organized it in response to the July 11 casting announcement for the national tour of Funny Girl, in which a non-Jewish actress had been chosen to play Fanny Brice, a role made famous by Barbra Streisand. Brice, a pioneering Jewish comedian in the early 20th century, struggled with her Jewish identity in her rise to fame.

In the aftermath of the casting announcement, the debate over whether or not non-Jews can play Jewish characters a term actress and comedian Sarah Silverman dubbed Jewface resurfaced online.

Amid the hubbub, Somebody had said to me, You should host something, Axelrod told the New York Jewish Week. It was in direct response to the casting.

While there have been Jewish-focused panels at BroadwayCon since the annual conference began in 2015, the past year has been a landmark one for Jewish stories on Broadway particularly those that deal with antisemitism, including Parade and Leopoldstadt, which both won Tony Awards. Parade, about the real-life antisemitic lynching of Jewish factory superintendent Leo Frank in 1915, saw a neo-Nazi protest outside of the theater while it was in previews.

Michelle (dressed as Fruma Sarah) attends the conference every year, and said she was interested in the event because she is Jewish and became interested in Jewish representation on Broadway during a BroadwayCon panel she attended in 2020.

There was a rabbi who was an actor. He said that there was a time he wasnt cast to play a rabbi because he didnt look Jewish enough, she recalled. I thought, Hes a rabbi, how can you get more Jewish than that? It just really made me realize how much of an issue representation is for us.

Speaking on the hour-long panel was Axelrod, who was named to the New York Jewish Weeks 36 Under 36 (now known as 36 to Watch) in 2021; Talia Suskauer, who starred as Elphaba in the Broadway run and national tour of Wicked; Shoshanna Bean, who was nominated for a Tony Award last year for her performance in Mr. Saturday Night; Brandon Uranowitz, who last month won the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play for Leopoldstadt; Zachary Prince, who has been in several Broadway shows and recently performed in A Transparent Musical, based on the Jewish-themed TV show, in Los Angeles; and Alexandra Silber, who played Tzeitel in the most recent Broadway revival of Fiddler on the Roof. Moderating the panel was Becca Suskauer, a New York-based Jewish actress.

The wide-ranging discussion touched on Jewish representation, identity, pride and joy during a period of rising antisemitism. Panelists also noted that the goal of the conversation was to talk about how Broadway actors and insiders can actively uplift Jewish stories as well as those from other oppressed groups.

Suskauer emphasized that people should listen before you speak and listen before you immediately go to pass judgment on something, while Bean encouraged attendees to be introspective towards their own internalized prejudices if they are nervous to speak out on issues affecting marginalized groups.

Axelrod echoing Michelles comment spoke of the double standard that he feels exists within the industry the idea that Jews are sometimes deemed not Jewish looking enough to play Jewish roles, but too Jewish to be cast in other roles. He also said there was a perceived double standard in that its considered acceptable for non-Jewish performers to be cast in Jewish roles, something that is frowned upon regarding other ethnic groups.

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There is this fear amongst the Jewish community that we can be Jewish, just not too Jewish, Axelrod said. We have a responsibility to dismantle that entire internalized assimilation within ourselves, because its important to show the world who we are. But to show them the world we can take multitudes, we first have to believe in ourselves.

The Funny Girl casting only came up with 20 minutes left in the discussion. And while the actors made a point of noting that the actress chosen for the role, a Latina woman named Katerina McCrimmon, was very talented, they said it was nonetheless disappointing and worrisome to have a non-Jewish person playing Fanny Brice, who was a real person who often played on Jewish stereotypes to garner laughs from mainstream audiences.

I was so excited for the role of Fanny Brice to be played by someone who is able to live so solidly and steadfastly and their Jewishness and who can bring that on the national tour to places that dont have a lot of Jews, Suskauer said. I got immediately so scared when I heard that someone not Jewish was going to be playing at this Jewish stereotype. She can do this research, she can try to do it as respectfully as possible, but at the end of the day, shes going to be playing at a stereotype while wearing bagels on her body. (Suskauer was referring to Private Schwartz from Rockaway, a number in which Fanny imagines herself as a Jewish soldier and dances with bagels strung around her body.)

But the panel ended on a positive note. To live is an actionable decision that we get to make every day, and when we say lchaim, we are literally saying to life, Axelrod said. I think it is imperative to every single person in this room that when you clink your Manischewitz, or your Kedem grape juice, and you say lchaim, mean it. Take those words as a call to action and do it, literally. Go do something that reminds you that youre a Jewish person who was living your life.

Rho and Maddy, teenage twins from New Jersey who declined to share their last names, said they attended the panel for the potential to meet Uranowitz, one of their favorite actors. They were surprised at how much the panel resonated with them. It was really great to hear everyones opinions, Rho said. Im so glad I came.

Especially as someone who is half-Jewish, theres a lot of assimilation and sometimes being told and believing youre not really Jewish, or that doesnt count, Maddy said. [This panel] definitely showed me I want to and can be an activist for my community.

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At BroadwayCon in Midtown, Jewish actors dish on identity and ... - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Categories Leo Frank

At BroadwayCon in Midtown, Jewish actors dish on identity and … – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

(New York Jewish Week) A woman dressed as Fanny Brice from Funny Girl and another dressed as Fruma Sarah from Fiddler on the Roof were among the 100-plus people who filed into a Midtown conference room on Friday morning to discuss Jewish identity on Broadway.

The Jewish fans whose real names were Jackie and Michelle, and declined to share their last names were dressed as their favorite Jewish musical characters, and were attending one of the first panel discussions of BroadwayCon 2023. The conference, at the New York Marriott Marquis hotel in Times Square, is an annual gathering in the vein of ComicCon that brings thousands of fans and industry professionals for a weekend of celebration, singing, discussion and meet-and-greets.

The panel, called Jewish Identity and Broadway, came together in less than a week, its organizer Ari Axelrod a Jewish actor, singer and educator told the New York Jewish Week. He said he organized it in response to the July 11 casting announcement for the national tour of Funny Girl, in which a non-Jewish actress had been chosen to play Fanny Brice, a role made famous by Barbra Streisand. Brice, a pioneering Jewish comedian in the early 20th century, struggled with her Jewish identity in her rise to fame.

In the aftermath of the casting announcement, the debate over whether or not non-Jews can play Jewish characters a term actress and comedian Sarah Silverman dubbed Jewface resurfaced online.

Amid the hubbub, Somebody had said to me, You should host something, Axelrod told the New York Jewish Week. It was in direct response to the casting.

While there have been Jewish-focused panels at BroadwayCon since the annual conference began in 2015, the past year has been a landmark one for Jewish stories on Broadway particularly those that deal with antisemitism, including Parade and Leopoldstadt, which both won Tony Awards. Parade, about the real-life antisemitic lynching of Jewish factory superintendent Leo Frank in 1915, saw a neo-Nazi protest outside of the theater while it was in previews.

Michelle (dressed as Fruma Sarah) attends the conference every year, and said she was interested in the event because she is Jewish and became interested in Jewish representation on Broadway during a BroadwayCon panel she attended in 2020.

There was a rabbi who was an actor. He said that there was a time he wasnt cast to play a rabbi because he didnt look Jewish enough, she recalled. I thought, Hes a rabbi, how can you get more Jewish than that? It just really made me realize how much of an issue representation is for us.

Speaking on the hour-long panel was Axelrod, who was named to the New York Jewish Weeks 36 Under 36 (now known as 36 to Watch) in 2021; Talia Suskauer, who starred as Elphaba in the Broadway run and national tour of Wicked; Shoshanna Bean, who was nominated for a Tony Award last year for her performance in Mr. Saturday Night; Brandon Uranowitz, who last month won the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play for Leopoldstadt; Zachary Prince, who has been in several Broadway shows and recently performed in A Transparent Musical, based on the Jewish-themed TV show, in Los Angeles; and Alexandra Silber, who played Tzeitel in the most recent Broadway revival of Fiddler on the Roof. Moderating the panel was Becca Suskauer, a New York-based Jewish actress.

The wide-ranging discussion touched on Jewish representation, identity, pride and joy during a period of rising antisemitism. Panelists also noted that the goal of the conversation was to talk about how Broadway actors and insiders can actively uplift Jewish stories as well as those from other oppressed groups.

Suskauer emphasized that people should listen before you speak and listen before you immediately go to pass judgment on something, while Bean encouraged attendees to be introspective towards their own internalized prejudices if they are nervous to speak out on issues affecting marginalized groups.

Axelrod echoing Michelles comment spoke of the double standard that he feels exists within the industry the idea that Jews are sometimes deemed not Jewish looking enough to play Jewish roles, but too Jewish to be cast in other roles. He also said there was a perceived double standard in that its considered acceptable for non-Jewish performers to be cast in Jewish roles, something that is frowned upon regarding other ethnic groups.

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There is this fear amongst the Jewish community that we can be Jewish, just not too Jewish, Axelrod said. We have a responsibility to dismantle that entire internalized assimilation within ourselves, because its important to show the world who we are. But to show them the world we can take multitudes, we first have to believe in ourselves.

The Funny Girl casting only came up with 20 minutes left in the discussion. And while the actors made a point of noting that the actress chosen for the role, a Latina woman named Katerina McCrimmon, was very talented, they said it was nonetheless disappointing and worrisome to have a non-Jewish person playing Fanny Brice, who was a real person who often played on Jewish stereotypes to garner laughs from mainstream audiences.

I was so excited for the role of Fanny Brice to be played by someone who is able to live so solidly and steadfastly and their Jewishness and who can bring that on the national tour to places that dont have a lot of Jews, Suskauer said. I got immediately so scared when I heard that someone not Jewish was going to be playing at this Jewish stereotype. She can do this research, she can try to do it as respectfully as possible, but at the end of the day, shes going to be playing at a stereotype while wearing bagels on her body. (Suskauer was referring to Private Schwartz from Rockaway, a number in which Fanny imagines herself as a Jewish soldier and dances with bagels strung around her body.)

But the panel ended on a positive note. To live is an actionable decision that we get to make every day, and when we say lchaim, we are literally saying to life, Axelrod said. I think it is imperative to every single person in this room that when you clink your Manischewitz, or your Kedem grape juice, and you say lchaim, mean it. Take those words as a call to action and do it, literally. Go do something that reminds you that youre a Jewish person who was living your life.

Rho and Maddy, teenage twins from New Jersey who declined to share their last names, said they attended the panel for the potential to meet Uranowitz, one of their favorite actors. They were surprised at how much the panel resonated with them. It was really great to hear everyones opinions, Rho said. Im so glad I came.

Especially as someone who is half-Jewish, theres a lot of assimilation and sometimes being told and believing youre not really Jewish, or that doesnt count, Maddy said. [This panel] definitely showed me I want to and can be an activist for my community.

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At BroadwayCon in Midtown, Jewish actors dish on identity and ... - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Categories Leo Frank

Stars on Broadway: Daniel Radcliffe, Jeremy Strong, and More – IndieWire

Its always a delight when a major star comes to Broadway.

This past season saw Jessica Chastain and Arian Moayed in a bare bones revival of A Dolls House, as well as Jodie Comer win a Tony for her performance in one-woman show Prima Facie. There was Sara Bareilles in Into the Woods and Laura Linney in Summer 1976 and now, a whole new roster of famous names are joining them, including Daniel Radcliffe, Jeremy Strong, and more.

Its exhausting but also invigorating, Chastain told the Today Show about the theater. I love doing theater. Its what I first wanted to do. The opportunity that I could live in New York City and do theater, I feel so excited after a performance. Im so exhausted but I cant take a nap. I have too much adrenaline!

Below, check out a list of just a few of the famous faces currently appearing in Broadway shows this summer and beyond. Theyll surely agree with Chastain about the joy and intensity (eight shows a week!) thats required to make an impact on the Great White Way.

Horror? On Broadway? Fans of scary movies will find plenty to love in this creepy haunted house play. A couple (Tatiana Maslany and Paul Sparks) stumbles into a cottage in the middle of a storm and quickly learns they arent alone. Ghosts, generational trauma, and more than a few jump-scares abound. Two-time Tony winner Laurie Mefcalf, of course, is excellent as an eerie mother figure of a group of children that have more to them than meets the eye Written by Levi Holloway and directed by Tony winner Joe Mantello, the show closes on Broadway July 23.

Some quick musical history: While the show has always had its fans, until recently it was considered a bit of a flop in Stephen Sondheims brilliant oeuvre, considered to have a great score but only a so-so story. This new production finally cracks it, with many critics noting modern audiences are more open to tricky (and sometimes just depressing!) musical material than they were when this show originally premiered in 1981, only lasting 16 performances. Expect this version, which stars Jonathan Groff, Daniel Radcliffe, and Lindsay Mendez (stellar, all three of them), to last quite a bit longer. Watch it to prep for the film version(!) coming out in, oh, about 20 years or so starring Ben Platt and Beanie Feldstein directed by Richard Linklater. First Broadway preview: Sept. 19

You may have heard about the brouhaha with this buzzy revival. Originally starring Beanie Feldstein, she was replaced with Michele in September 2022, and the production kicked into high gear with her tour de force performance as Fanny Brice (to the surprise of exactly zero Glee fans). Candidly, the musical itself isnt the greatest, but Micheles big voice more than makes up for any production shortcomings. Directed by Michael Mayer (who also directed Michele in Spring Awakening), fans will have to hurry if they still want to see her: The production will close September 3.

Jeremy Strongs post-Succession move? A return to Broadway, where he will lead Amy Herzogs new adaptation of An Enemy of the People in early 2024. The play follows Strong as a local doctor who attempts to alert the public that the nearby spa water is poisoned, and the ensuing backlash from the financially-incentived town that follows. So, yes, look out for a painfully timely exploration of truth and power. The play will mark a reunion for Strong and Herzog, who previously collaborated on the 2012 off-Broadway play The Great God Pan.

God thats good! Sweeney fans have been waiting ages for a giant extravaganza take on Stephen Sondheims bloody, murder-y musical, and this more than delivers in getting the taste of the incredibly mid 2007 movie version with Johnny Depp out of fans mouth. Directed by Tommy Kail (Hamilton) its easy to see why Josh Groban has one of the voices of his generation, and why Annaleigh Ashford is well-regarded as a musical theater comedy genius. Gaten Matarazzo from Stranger Things and Jordan Fisher from To All The Boys also more than hold their own in the massive cast.

Ben Platt won a Tony for his role in Dear Evan Hansen on Broadway, so its no surprise that theater fans were eagerly awaiting his follow up (the less said about the film version of Evan Hansen, the better). Happily, the Theater Camp star picked a great one for his return, portraying the real-life Leo Frank in the musical Parade. The show about a factory owner wrongly accused of murdering a young girl is a deep exploration of antisemitism and groupthink in the South in the 1910s. Unfortunately, you dont have to squint too hard to see the parallels to today even moreso than when this musical, with music by Jason Robert Brown, originally premiered in 1998. Platt received another Tony nomination for his work here, and the musical won Best Revival at the 2023 Tonys.

The former Book of Mormon co-stars are returning to Broadway in September in a new musical comedy Gutenberg! The two have, of course, been in a bunch of separate TV and movie projects lately, and itll be a treat to see their comedy chemistry together again. Gutenberg! is a new musical and its the story of two best pals named Bud and Doug who put on a show together because they just love each other so damn much, per the offiicial website. Its art imitating life imitating art! And its the funniest thing to come to Broadway since 1448! (Which is the year the printing press was invented by Johannes Gutenberg, who is the subject of the musical that Bud and Doug write.)

Eric McCormack leads an all-star cast of Broadway faves (Laura Bell Bundy! Lilli Cooper!) in the new comedy The Cottage, which follows a woman who decides to expose her latest affair to both her husband and her lovers wife. Hijinks, we assume, clearly ensue. Directed by Jason Alexander, the play will mark McCormacks third time on Broadway. Thats a charm.

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Stars on Broadway: Daniel Radcliffe, Jeremy Strong, and More - IndieWire

Categories Mary Phagan

Leo Frank and ‘Parade’: When theater and reality overlap – opinion – The Jerusalem Post

I was in Manhattan as New York celebrated the Fourth of July with fireworks over the East River, together with tens of thousands of New Yorkers and tourists, representing the plethora of ethnicities and languages in New York. All rushed to the river banks to watch Americas spectacular 247th birthday show.

The following day, I was brought into contact with a different side of America while attending the revival of the Broadway musical Parade at the 96-year-old Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre. The theater is named after the late Jewish Harlem-born, long-time president of the Shubert theater organization. On the Jacobs stage, Ben Platt and Micaela Diamond were the first Jewish actors to portray Leo and Lucille Frank. No relation to Anne Frank.

The musical is based on a book by Alfred Fox Uhry, the Jewish playwright who also wrote Driving Miss Daisy. The central theme takes place, not on July 4 but on April 26: Confederate Memorial Day. Certain southern states continue to mark the anniversary of when the major Confederate field army surrendered at Bennett Place, North Carolina, in 1865.

Parade opens during the Civil War. A soldier parts from his lover to join Confederate troops as a haunting ballad is sung, nostalgic for the rushing of the Chattahoochee River and the purity of the red hills of Georgia. Let all the blood of the North spill upon them, Til theyve paid for what theyve wrought, taken back the lies theyve taught.

Then the scene shifts forward 48 years. The soldier is old and battered. Georgia is celebrating Confederate Memorial Day with the Confederate flag unfurled.

Leo Frank, a Jewish Cornell-graduate engineer from the North, doesnt want to share a Memorial Day picnic with his wife. Instead, he heads to the factory he runs to catch up on his work.

THIS IS theater, but the story is real enough. Leo Max Frank went south to Atlanta at the urging of his wealthy uncle Moses Frank, to develop the American Pencil Factory in which the uncle invested. The South was becoming more industrialized, resented by some.

The real Leo Frank prepared for this job by studying pencil-making in Germany. He worked his way up doing various jobs to become superintendent of the large factory. He married Lucille Selig, a Jewish Georgian from a prominent Atlanta family. He became president of the local Bnai Brith chapter.

On that fateful Confederate Memorial Day, the battered body of a 13-year-old employee named Mary Phagan, whose job was to attach erasers, was found in the factory. Frank was indicted for murder, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged. During the trial, cries of Hang the Jew sounded outside the courthouse.

The trial made national news. Court appeals were unsuccessful. Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and Jane Addams were among those who spoke in Franks defense. Georgia governor John M. Slaton, at the cost of his career, commuted Franks sentence to life, certain that he would eventually be released when the truth [of his innocence] came out.

Five thousand people protested outside the governors mansion and had to be held back by police from storming it. Jewish families fled Atlanta.

Local vigilantes who called themselves the Knights of Mary Phagan kidnapped Leo Frank from prison, drove him 100 miles to Marietta, Georgia, and hanged him.

The Broadway musical portrays the tragic events of the story. Projections on the back curtains display real photographs of the events and the setting so that history and theater overlap.

The Leo Frank case reignited the nefarious Ku Klux Klan. It also strengthened the creation of the American Defamation League.

I GREW up in Connecticut, where we had a deep appreciation of American history. But not in school nor in my years in Hebrew school or the Young Judaea youth movement did I ever hear of this antisemitic chapter of American Jewish history.

Nor, before seeing the play, did I realize that in real life, 110 years after the trial, the Leo Frank case isnt closed.

In 1986, the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles pardoned Frank, without finding him innocent. They only judged that his being hanged truncated his rights to future appeals.

In 2019, Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard formed an eight-member panel called the Conviction Integrity Unit to investigate the case and make recommendations on whether it should be re-adjudicated.

Type Leo Frank in your search engine, and youll find current white supremacist propaganda debasing Leo Frank and the failed Jewish resources that tried to help him prove his innocence.

At the Jacobs Theatre, in an unusual gesture, Parade star Ben Platt stays on stage during the 15-minute intermission between acts. In an April interview in Playbill, the magazine distributed in theaters, Platt explained why.

Its a way I can pay homage to Leo nightly. Its a very ritualistic thing for me. He has become this symbol and martyr, but that 15 minutes is the moment every night where I can remember that this was a man who was, for the last two years of his life, stuck in a room by himself, then wrongfully murdered. It just personifies him for me and never lets his story get too big or too far in my head.

Michaela Diamond, who plays Lucille Frank, said in the same Playbill interview: Parade fits in a unique place in the Broadway canon because its not about the Holocaust or the Jewish Diaspora. Its just about a very specific American hatred for Jews.

Indeed, in February 2023, neo-Nazis protested and harassed theater-goers at the Jacobs Theatre before the preview performance of the Parade revival.

Onstage, as Leo Frank, the character, is about to be hanged, he is allowed one last statement. I brace myself. I sense what is coming. The Jewish pledge of allegiance.

Using the melody that echoes the opening Old Red Hills of Georgia song and not the traditional tune, Platt sings out: Shema Yisrael, hashem elokeinu hashem ahad (Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One). And then, slowly and forcefully, he adds the second line: Baruch shem kevod malchuto lolam vaed (Blessed be the name of the glory of His kingdom forever and ever).

The audience isnt as varied as the crowds at the Fourth of July fireworks, but its certainly not all Jewish. I wonder what the non-Jewish make of these potent Hebrew words.

For me, they resonate long after the curtain closes.

The writer is the Israel director of public relations and communications at Hadassah, the Womens Zionist Organization of America. Her latest book is A Daughter of Many Mothers.

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Leo Frank and 'Parade': When theater and reality overlap - opinion - The Jerusalem Post

Categories Mary Phagan

Broadway’s ‘Parade’ will leave you in tears – review – The Jerusalem Post

Parade, winner of the 2023 Tony Award for Best Musical Revival, is an absolute must-see Broadway hit. Starring Jewish performers Ben Platt and Micaela Diamond and supported by a colorful and passionate cast at New Yorks Bernard B. Jacobs Theater, the revival of this show is not only timely but an absolute necessity for theater enthusiasts and history buffs alike.

Parade tells the story of a community shaken by tragedy and in search of answers, turning to scapegoat local minorities because the pain of an unsolved case is too unbearable and of course, because of the engrained mindset of post-Civil War Georgia.

The show starts out with a symbolic love scene between a Confederate soldier and a woman of the era. Although not graphic, it is clear what they were doing. What is unclear is just what this detail does for the show, but it certainly catches the attention of the audience.

The productions historical context humanizes the creative version of real-life events. This is aided by the presence of historical portraits of the real-life characters each player depicts. Every character has a historical connection in the story and their photo and name are illuminated at the back of the stage. They are key figures in the story and prosecution of Leo Frank, a Jewish man falsely accused of the murder of 14-year-old Mary Phagan, found dead in the basement of her place of work, the National Pencil Company, on Confederate Memorial Day in April 1913.

Platt plays Leo, the superintendent of the company and an easy scapegoat for a grieving community in search of answers not as much because of his place of work as because of his heritage.

Leo, from Brooklyn, married to a southern Jewish woman from Marietta, Georgia, part of the greater Atlanta area. He runs the National Pencil Company in Atlanta because his in-laws have afforded him the opportunity and he attends work on a state holiday to earn extra money, trying to save up so that he and his wife can have a baby.

On that particular day, his employee, Mary Phagan, comes to collect her pay, neither of them aware that it will be her last. She is found, deceased, in the basement of the factory that night by the night watchman, a Black man named Newt Lee.

A trial ensues with trusted neighbors, colleagues, and employees attacking Leo and his character. Their house cleaner, the boy who flirted endlessly with Mary, as well as many factory workers, come forward to give testimony that not only appears false but is also suspiciously similar to the testimonies of others.

In an interview with Playbill, Platt discussed the overlap in his own Jewish heritage and playing a role at such a time.

Its a way I can pay homage to Leo nightly. Its a very ritualistic thing for me, he said. He has become this symbol and martyr, but that 15 minutes is the moment every night where I can remember that this was a man who was, for the last two years of his life, stuck in a room by himself, then wrongfully murdered. It just personifies him for me, and never lets his story get too big or too far in my head.

In its multiple runs from Broadway and back again, audiences do not stray from their overwhelming love of the production.

Ben Platt and Michaela Diamond were Tony-worthy, [plus] the score was fantastic, said Melissa Solomon, a resident of Roslyn Estates, New York. Its never been more timely to have a show about antisemitism back on Broadway.

Her mother, Eileen Adler of Atlantic Beach, New York, added, Its an important play in this day and age. I actually saw it in 1998. I truly didnt appreciate a play with this topic back then, especially as a musical. However, I read a book about the case and I see things through a more enlightened lens [now.],

Parade leaves its mark on the hearts of audience members. Whether you are looking for true crime, songs to belt out with passion, history, or an equal amount of laughter and intense tears, this is the show for you.

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Broadway's 'Parade' will leave you in tears - review - The Jerusalem Post