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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp015h73q021j
Title: [The 1619 Project: Further responses and defenses]
Keywords: 1619 Project
African Americans—United States—History
Slavery—United States—History
United States—Historiography
United States—Race relations
African Americans—Civil rights
Issue Date: Sep-2021
Publisher: Princeton University Library
Place of Publication: Princeton, N.J.
Description: Following the publication of the New York Times’s 1619 Project, critiques have been offered, and the Times and other outlets have offered a defense of the project. This file compiles a number of the most prominent works published in from 2019 to 2021; it is a complement to the item titled “[The 1619 Project responses and defenses]”. Includes essays: From the editor’s desk: 1619 and all that / Alex Lichtenstein — Letters to the editor of American Historical Review and editor’s response / Sean Willentz, Tom Mackaman, David North, Dolores Janiewski, Victoria Bynum, Alex Lichtenstein — The divisive effect of the 1619 project’s evidence / Ian Feld — Black people have right to claim America as their own / Merrick Hoel — The 1619 Project depicts an America tainted by original sin / John McWhorter — What the 1619 project really means / Timothy Messer-Kruse — The 1619 Project: Believe your lying eyes / Seth Forman — Reframing American history: A lesson from the 1619 Project / Andrew Bacevich — Unoriginal sin: Slavery and the 1619 Project / Graham Daseler — 1619 Project faces renewed criticism—this time from within The New York Times / Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy — Against the 1619 curriculum / Stanley Kurtz — 1619: The danger of a single origin story / Michelle M. Wright — Who’s afraid of 1619?: Pedagogy, race, and class in the United States / Cody R. Melcher — When New York Times fake news replaces American History / Tom Cotton and Ken Buck — Rewriting history to remake America / Steve Byas — History as end / Matthew Karp — The 1619 Project and living in truth / Sean Willentz (Sept 21) — America’s racist founding? An East-European view / Ivo Cerman (Sept 21)
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp015h73q021j
Appears in Collections:Monographic reports and papers (Publicly Accessible)

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