Upcoming Fireside Chats
july
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august
15aug7:00 pm8:00 pmFIRESIDE CHAT: The Memory of ’76: The Revolution in American History Free
Event Details
Fireside Chat with Dr. Michael D. Hattem The Memory of ’76: The Revolution in American History Thursday, August 15, 2024 7:00 PM ET Virtual Event |
Event Details
Fireside Chat with Dr. Michael D. Hattem
The Memory of ’76: The Revolution in American History
Thursday, August 15, 2024
7:00 PM ET
Virtual Event | Free
While the American Revolution is the agreed-upon beginning of our nation’s origins, the meaning of that revolution has never achieved anywhere near the same degree of consensus. For almost as long as the United States has existed, a wide range of political and social actors have narrativized and reimagined the Revolution to match their current climates and personal agendas. Through revealing the Revolution’s singular presence as an American national myth, Dr. Hattem reveals the ever-changing nature of the Revolution’s meaning, how the nation’s founding is used far more often as a divisive tool than a unifying one, and how reinventing the past is a central and long-lived American sociopolitical pastime.
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Time
(Thursday) 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm(GMT-04:00)
september
Event Details
Fireside Chat with Dr. Michael A. Blaakman Speculation Nation: Land Mania in the Revolutionary American Republic Wednesday, September 25, 2024 7:00 p.m. ET Virtual Event |
Event Details
Fireside Chat with Dr. Michael A. Blaakman
Speculation Nation: Land Mania in the Revolutionary American Republic
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
7:00 p.m. ET
Virtual Event | Free
In the first twenty-five years after its founding, the United States experienced an extreme wave of land speculation, so intense that people referred to it as a “mania” both then and now. Dr. Michael A. Blaakman’s Speculation Nation (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023) traces the revolutionary origins of this real-estate fanaticism in a catalogue of ambition, corruption, capitalism, and politics that spanned millions of acres and was intrinsically tied to Native American land dispossession. Dr. Blaakman follows the schemes of these speculators from boom to bust, and in doing so creates a picture of the economic realities that underpinned (and underpin) U.S. settler colonialism: a frontier defined by profit first, and land second, where the conventions of the era firmly rooted land theft as an axiom of the American republic and made speculative capitalism intrinsic to the land of the free.
Sponsored by the Program in Early American Economy and Society
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Time
(Wednesday) 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm(GMT-04:00)
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january
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