#JERFall2024
Rounding out our #JERFall2024 “Meet the Author” is James N. Banner (who likely needs very little introduction!) We’ll be back in the new year with our new #JERWinter2025 issue, and in the meantime, wishing you all a healthy and peaceful holiday and start to 2025.
December 20, 2024 at 6:40 PM
Have you checked out the #JERFall2024 issue yet? If not, here are some highlights from contributor Justin Iverson below!
December 18, 2024 at 5:02 PM
Continuing our #JERFall2024 "Meet The Author" series (yes there are a few more weeks of fall, technically, although the winter break can't come soon enough) is Roger A. Bailey! Learn more about Roger's work, and his new article, below, and check out the #JER through @uncpress.bsky.social ⬇️
December 10, 2024 at 3:45 PM
On this #ElectionDay, if you’re looking for more historical background, check out Jim Banner’s #JERFall2024 essay, “The Election of 1801 and James A. Bayard's Disinterested Constitutionalism,” which is freely accessible through @uncpress.bsky.social and ProjectMUSE: muse.jhu.edu/article/937215
Project MUSE - The Election of 1801 and James A. Bayard's Disinterested Constitutionalism
muse.jhu.edu
November 5, 2024 at 1:03 PM
Starting off our #JERFall2024 "Meet the Author" is Michelle Orihel! Michelle's essay, "#Paine's Yellow Fever," draws upon her extensive research in the early republic. Check out more about her work⬇️
October 29, 2024 at 10:50 AM
With an especially timely #JERComPano, Jim Banner discusses his #JERFall2024 article on the election of 1801, and offers a first-hand example of how current events can offer historians new perspectives on the past: thepanorama.shear.org/2024/10/23/h...
How Past and Present Catch Up With Each Other
Discussing his article on the election of 1801, James M. Banner offers a first-hand example of how current events can offer historians new perspectives on the past.
thepanorama.shear.org
October 24, 2024 at 1:07 PM
In our next #JERFall2024 #JERComPano, Justin Iverson recounts the ways that Black communities utilized kinship ties to mobilize rebellion as in the 1811 German Coast Uprising in “Blood Is Thicker Than Water: Black Family Networks and Slave Insurrections”: thepanorama.shear.org/2024/10/11/b...
Blood Is Thicker Than Water: Black Family Networks and Slave Insurrections
Justin Iverson recounts the ways that Black communities utilized kinship ties to mobilize rebellion in cases like the 1811 German Coast Uprising.
thepanorama.shear.org
October 15, 2024 at 2:52 PM
Starting off our #JERFall2024 issue is Jim Banner's "The Election of 1801 and James A. Bayard's Disinterested Constitutionalism." It provides deep context for the #2024Elections and is freely accessible thanks to UNC Press: muse.jhu.edu/pub/12/artic...
Project MUSE - The Election of 1801 and James A. Bayard's Disinterested Constitutionalism
muse.jhu.edu
October 7, 2024 at 11:38 AM
First up in the #JERComPano #JERFall2024 is a timely essay from Michelle Orihel,"Too Much Opera, Too Many Novels: Writing about Life, Death, and Yellow Fever during COVID-19," where she considers the link between today's music & literature to scholarship: thepanorama.shear.org/2024/10/03/t...
Too Much Opera, Too Many Novels: Writing about Life, Death, and Yellow Fever during COVID-19
By exploring her own engagement with opera and literature during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Michelle Orihel makes a case for why historians might acknowledge the seemingly unrelated music…
thepanorama.shear.org
October 4, 2024 at 12:47 PM
Autumn is here at the #JER! Check out the new #JERFall2024 issue, available now through @uncpress.bsky.social with @ProjectMUSE and look out for exciting materials relating to the new issue in the coming weeks: muse.jhu.edu/issue/53214
Project MUSE - Journal of the Early Republic-Volume 44, Number 3, Fall 2024
muse.jhu.edu
September 27, 2024 at 1:32 PM