Civil Rights and Citizenship
Craig Steven Wilder, professor of history at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, speaks to New York City teachers about the influence of school districting on the racial segregation of Brooklyn neighborhoods.
At the Professional Staff Congress's CUNY and Race Forum, attorney and professor Frank Deale provides historical context for issues surrounding affirmative action and the City University of New York.
Historian Vincent DiGirolamo discusses the historiography of early 20th-century immigration through Ellis Island.
Professor, curator, photographer Deborah Willis discusses the pictorial record and a "new memory of photography."
Historian Mary Niall Mitchell uses less known and difficult to understand photographs to discuss the use of photography as propaganda during the Civil War.
Art historian, curator, and photographer Anthony Lee provocatively examines Civil War era photography by way of one case study.
Historian Martha Sandweiss challenges assumptions and uses of Civil War photographs as historical documents.
Historian Graham Hodges discusses the life of David Ruggles, a radical black abolitionist living and working in New York City during the 1830s.
Historian Gregory Downs explains how grassroots political movements powered both the radical political possibilities and the ultimate violent defeat of Reconstruction.
Historian Scott Reynolds Nelson presents three rarely explored aspects of the Civil War.