Showing posts with label tony horwitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tony horwitz. Show all posts

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Slaughtering Each Other by the Hundreds of Thousands

Tony Horwitz, who speaks at the New York State Museum tonight, talked Tuesday on the PBS NewsHour about his new book on John Brown's raid.


"I think we still struggle to understand how it is that Americans who shared a common language and culture and for the most part religion came to slaughter each other by the hundreds of thousands in the 1860s. And I think John Brown and his raid on Harpers Ferry give us a window into that story." More

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

John Brown's Bloody Raid, Tomorrow, NYS Museum

Tony Horwitz, Pulitzer-winning journalist, will present his bold retelling of John Brown's anti-slavery raid on Harper's Ferry, Virginia, tomorrow at the New York State Museum, free and open to the public.

November 17 (Thursday)Reading/Discussion — 7:30 p.m., Clark Auditorium, NYS Museum, Cultural Education Center.

Tony Horwitz, the featured speaker for the 2011 Researching New York Conference, will discuss his new book, Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid That Sparked the Civil War (2011). As a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, Horwitz received the Pulitzer Prize in 1994. He is the author of four national nonfiction bestsellers including A Voyage Long and Strange (2008), Blue Latitudes (2002), Confederates in the Attic (1998), and Baghdad Without a Map (1991).

Sponsored by UAlbany’s Department of History, the NYS Archives Partnership Trust, the NYS Writers Institute and NYS Museum. For additional information on the Researching New York Conference click here.

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Neither Hero Nor Terrorist, or Maybe Both

"When pressed to characterize Brown as an American hero or an American terrorist, Horwitz refused. 'He was neither,' he said. 'Or both. He was a complicated man.'"

The Washington Post Arts Blog covered Tony Horwitz's book release party last Saturday for Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid That Sparked the Civil War (2011). More.

Horwitz speaks tomorrow, Thursday, Nov. 17, at the New York State Museum downtown.

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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

A Spanish Thanksgiving in St. Augustine, Florida

"Spaniards also held a thanksgiving, 56 years before the Pilgrims, when they feasted near St. Augustine with Florida Indians, probably on stewed pork and garbanzo beans."

"The early history of Spanish North America is well documented, as is the extensive exploration by the 16th-century French and Portuguese. So why do Americans cling to a creation myth centered on one band of late-arriving English — Pilgrims who weren't even the first English to settle New England or the first Europeans to reach Plymouth Harbor? (There was a short-lived colony in Maine and the French reached Plymouth earlier.)"

In the New York Times in 2008, Tony Horwitz, who visits Thursday 11/17, discusses Thanksgiving in light of the current immigration debate, and in light of what we know of Spanish activity in the North America. More.

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Monday, November 14, 2011

Tony Horwitz on the Failure of Textbook History

"My complaint is that textbooks do a fine job of communicating the facts that students need to know to pass tests. But they don't do enough to make history exciting and engaging to students. Here's a story [John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry] that's got vivid characters -- men and women, white and black -- risking their lives for a cause they passionately believe in. You've got a violent, dramatic climax with the raid and wonderful speeches by Brown and others."

"It's also a great teaching tool, because Brown and his raid spur eternal questions that are great for the classroom. Do ends ever justify means? Is violence ever appropriate in resisting evil? Who was right? I think it's a pity that this episode isn't used more appropriately in textbooks."

Read more of Elizabeth Floyd Mair's conversation with Tony Horwitz (who visits Thursday 11/17) in Friday's Times Union.

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Gunpowder, Bacon Grease and Hardcore B.O.

Authentic Civil War reenactors never take a bath, as Tony Horwitz informs us in his "Deep South Diary." Horwitz visits Thursday 11/17 to talk about his new book on abolitionist John Brown's bloody raid on Harper's Ferry.

Horwitz goes off to war with one of the hard-core Civil War reenactors featured in his bestselling book, Confederates in the Attic:

"Rob's Civil War jacket hasn't been washed since last year's hard campaigns. "Gunpowder, bacon grease, coffee grounds," Rob says, sniffing his sleeve. "Mostly, though, it's hardcore B.O."

"What's with the hair?" I ask him. Rob's long black ringlets are shimmery and moist.

"Just gel," he confides. "In the War, soldiers were naturally greasy so they didn't have to do this." More.

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Thursday, November 10, 2011

That Stone in the Shoe of Our History

"Brown really touches many of the hot buttons in our history and culture: violence, race, religious fundamentalism, the right of the individual to defy their government," Horwitz says. "He's that stone in the shoe of our history."

Pulitzer-winning journalist Tony Horwitz, who visits Thursday, November 17, talks with NPR about his new book, Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid That Sparked the Civil War. More.

And click here to visit the John Brown Farm State Historic Site in the Adirondacks.

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