糖心Vlog

Skip to Main Content
糖心Vlog
First-Year Experience

Scribner Seminar Program
Course Description

American Memories

Instructor(s): Dan Nathan, American Studies (F06, F10, F14, F18 & F21); Greg Pfitzer, American Studies (F08 & F12)

How does memory work? What is the relationship between the past and memory, between memory and history? How do individual and collective memories influence, complement, and contradict one another? How are memories reconstructed, interpreted, transmitted and transformed? In this seminar, we explore disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives on American memories, personal and public, considering some of the many ways Americans have remembered (and forgotten) specific people, places, and events in our national past, such as Abraham Lincoln, colonial Williamsburg, and the Oklahoma City bombing. Students will examine various cultural mechanisms of memory production鈥攎onuments, museums, and movies鈥攁nd will explore the historically distinct ways in which memories have been reconstructed, used and abused.


Course Offered