Welcome to the web page for the American Historical Association roundtable
discussion "The Atlantic World: Emerging Themes in a New Teaching Field."
This panel is cosponsored by the Forum on European Expansion and Global
Interaction (FEEGI), an AHA-affiliated society.
The panel is scheduled for Sunday, January 9, 2000, at 11 a.m., at the Marriott
Hotel, Chicago Ballroom Salon D.
Our panel proposal explains the rationale for this discussion, as well as
the contribution that each participant will make:
SUMMARY OF THE PANEL THEME
The 1990s have seen the emergence of Atlantic history as an ever more popular
interpretive framework in which to understand early modern history in the
western hemisphere. More than a handful of history departments in the United
States and Europe now offer some version of a Ph.D. in Atlantic history.
At least one professional organization, the Forum on European Expansion and
Global Interaction (FEEGI), has been formed in the 1990s to promote Atlantic
history (as well as European expansion into Asia). And the Mellon Foundation
has recently renewed its funding for Harvard University's International Seminar
on the History of the Atlantic World, 1500-1800.
What remains to be seen, however, is whether this trend will flourish into
the twenty-first century or perish as yet another historiographical fad.
Will the field solidify and be widely recognized as indispensable, and will
more and more history departments advertise positions in the Atlantic world
and offer undergraduate and graduate courses on the Atlantic world? Whatever
the outcome may be, we believe that the annual meeting of the American Historical
Association in 2000, on the cusp of the next millennium and with the theme
of "History for the Twenty-First Century," offers an excellent opportunity
to discuss with a wide audience the emerging field of the Atlantic world,
particularly in terms of its teaching potential, but also as a research field.
All the participants in this roundtable discussion are proponents of the
Atlantic world as a teaching model and research area that liberates historians
and their students from narrower views of the past and raises exciting issues
about the interconnectedness of Africans, Americans, and Europeans since
1492. All of us have classroom experience teaching courses with the Atlantic
world as a theme, yet we come from four continents of specialization with
an even wider variety of research interests. As practitioners of Atlantic
history, the panelists will explain the challenges and advantages of using
the Atlantic world as an interpretive device. While proponents all, we are
also candid about the difficulties of reshaping curricula to include the
Atlantic world and of teaching courses that cover more ground (and water)
than existing courses that teach history based on current national boundaries.
The chair will strictly limit each presentation to ten minutes. Since syllabi
will be distributed in advance through a web site and in a packet at the
session itself, the presentations need not be longer. Six presenters are
necessary, however, to represent the geographical components of the Atlantic
world and the perspective of teachers at two-year, four-year, and graduate
institutions. Bernard Bailyn will respond to the presentations, then at least
forty-five minutes will remain for discussion with the audience. FEEGI, an
AHA-affiliated society, has agreed to co-sponsor this panel if it is approved.
STATEMENT ON TEACHING
History teaching in the twenty-first century seems destined to be more globally
oriented, yet the majority of historians will likely be trained in programs
that continue to use national or continental paradigms that have dominated
our organization of the past. As our title asks, is the Atlantic world a
teaching model that will survive, or is it a passing fad in the rush to globalize
the curriculum in departments with few, if any, historians trained in world
history? Just how can a Latin Americanist, for instance, profit from an Atlantic
perspective, and what might a history course with this perspective look like?
The panelists in this roundtable discussion are all teachers of Atlantic
history. Though trained in narrower fields, they have all committed to teaching
courses that cross the ocean and modern political borders. Their primary
goal is to share information about the courses they teach with members of
the audience and to continue the dialogue about the usefulness of the Atlantic
world model in history teaching. Thus, every Atlantic continental perspective
is represented, as is every level of college teaching, from two-year to graduate
institutions. The panelists will address such questions as:
1. What is Atlantic history? Is it a field in itself?
2. How can the interpretive framework of the Atlantic world improve American
history surveys, other introductory courses, and upper-division and graduate
courses in African, European, Latin American, and North American history?
3. What themes or issues give coherence and utility to the Atlantic world,
and how can historians trained in one continental area hope to master these
themes and issues?
4. What practical advice can you give if I decide to teach a course with
an Atlantic perspective?
5. What is the future of graduate programs in Atlantic history?
An unusual feature of this panel, should it be approved, will be the posting
of syllabi on a web site (either the chair's or the web site for Harvard's
International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World) in advance, with
the address printed in the meeting program, so that those who wish to attend
can view the courses that will be discussed and those who are unable to attend
can still benefit from the panel. Copies of the syllabi will also be distributed
at the discussion itself. Institutions with graduate programs in Atlantic
history will also be contacted and invited to distribute information about
their programs to the audience.
In these ways, we believe, a two-hour discussion can have a considerable,
far-reaching impact for those teachers in attendance as well as those who
visit the web site from remote locations.
ABSTRACTS OF PRESENTATIONS
-
Alison Games, Georgetown University, "Atlantic History As an Introductory
Survey Course": In the fall of 1998, students enrolled in Georgetown University's
College of Arts and Sciences, School of Business, and School of Foreign Languages
and Linguistics were able to fulfill their general education history requirement
for the first time with a course other than a full year of European history.
One option to fill half the requirement was a one-semester survey class on
the Atlantic world from 1492 to 1800. Professor Games proposed and taught
this freshman survey class. Her contribution to the roundtable discussion,
then, will be to talk specifically about teaching Atlantic history as an
introductory survey, in a large lecture course. She will talk about teaching
Atlantic history in both theory and practice, given the constraints of
synthesizing the four continents bordering the Atlantic Ocean for a bright
student population unfamiliar with many aspects of the histories contained
within the Atlantic world in the early modern period. As Atlantic history
is "history without borders," a story told from no one vantage point and
about no single representative place, it can be particularly confusing to
undergraduatesno nation states, no single narrative, but instead multiple
and often conflicting narratives presented from different perspectives. By
the end of the semester her students were able to discern patterns within
the Atlantic world, to assess the experiences of the different populations
contained therein, and to explain important transformations within the Atlantic.
She hopes to share this experience at our roundtable and to argue that Atlantic
history is far from a fad but rather a way of organizing the most logical
unit of analysis if we are able to begin to comprehend the variables shaping,
creating, defining, sabotaging, and destroying people and cultures in the
four continents of the Atlantic world.
-
Benjamin Schmidt, University of Washington, "The Atlantic World from Europe":
Atlantic world history? North Atlantic world history? Anglo-American history
with an interest in slavery or native contacts? As a Europeanist, American
colonial history has always looked like Atlantic world history to Professor
Schmidt, who teaches undergraduate courses and advises graduate students
interested in the Atlantic world of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
This has worked better, in fact, with students who tend to have a more relaxed
view of historiographic boundaries than program coordinators or even colleagues.
In his teaching, Schmidt has sought to introduce the variety of European,
African, and American voices to the discussion. In his research in Dutch
history, he has tried to assert a more broadly European perspective to the
largely English or Spanish versions of encounter. He will discuss a large
lecture course that he is now developing on the Atlantic world, which he
may offer in tandem with a Pacific world course, as an alternative to the
Western civilization sequence.
-
Rosemary Brana-Shute, College of Charleston, "The Atlantic World from Latin
America": Professor Brana-Shute (co-associate director of the Program
in the Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World at her institution) came to
the Atlantic world from several directions in her graduate training: African
history, early modern Europe, Latin American literature, and Caribbean history.
She now teaches a two-semester course in Caribbean history (early to present),
team teaches with an archaeologist "pre-Atlantic history" (Aztecs, Mayas,
and their ancestors), and is developing new courses called "Pirates and
Buccaneers of the Atlantic World," "Women in Latin American History," and
"Comparative Slave Systems." From these many experiences in the classroom,
Professor Brana-Shute will make several assertions about what the Atlantic
world means to her. First, even Peru is part of the Atlantic world; membership
does not depend on Atlantic beach-front property, but rather on the colonial
conquest and subsequent integration into Spain's imperial economy. Second,
although the "documented" Atlantic world was initially born with European
exploration and conquest in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the study
of the Atlantic world is not the study of European expansion. Third, although
it is easier for some to perceive an Atlantic world when studying the sixteenth
through the eighteenth centuries, teaching an Atlantic world should not stop
with the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade. Some topics that are "Atlantic"
and which can be fruitfully explored with students are the Pan-African movement,
revolutions, Christianity and Islam, nationalism, and migration. The Atlantic
has become something of an echo chambercultural developments, in
particular, resonate; think of music, how global, how African and Caribbean
it has become as a result of the echoes, the ongoing conversation artists
have with each other. This is the Atlantic world.
-
John Thornton, Millersville University of Pennsylvania, "The Atlantic World
from Africa": As the author of Africa and Africans in the Making of
the Americas, Professor Thornton is widely known for his research in Atlantic
history from the starting point of Africa. Less known are his teaching efforts
at Millersville, where he offers courses in Atlantic and African history.
He will explain the nexus between his teaching and current research into
recovering African identities in the Americas, which until now have remained
largely undifferentiated in American history. Unraveling how language came
to be a means of identity in America when it was not so in Africa--what sort
of solidarity Africans built with those from the same language group--is
a challenge historians are working on at the present. The role of the "nation"
or "country" as a social group among Africans, and its gradual disappearance
as second and third generation African Americans abandoned their languages
in favor of colonial languages and devoted attention to family rather than
countryman, is becoming clear. This topic exemplifies the ability of an Atlantic
perspective to bring together divergent trends in the African diaspora and
to show students the diversity of African experiences in the Atlantic world.
-
Hal Friedman, Henry Ford Community College, "The Atlantic World at Community
Colleges": Atlantic history as an American survey course for the community
college is a wonderful idea, Dr. Friedman believes. It would force history
instructors to divide the American survey into three segments, with the Atlantic
world ending between 1763 and 1800, the middle segment ending in either 1877
or 1900, and the last covering the twentieth century. While he is in principle
opposed to this kind of division because of a tendency to give too much attention
to post-Civil War history, such a division would allow history instructors
to give more thorough treatment to the colonial period and not feel the need
to "rush to the Revolution." Most important for this panel, however, is that
instructors from four-year institutions realize that they are driving the
agenda. Community colleges can only create new survey courses when they know
that the courses are up and running at four-year institutions and that those
colleges will accept the courses from transferring students. Until Atlantic
history is fully accepted at the four-year schools as a new but standard
freshman survey course, community college instructors can only watch and
cheer from the sidelines.
-
David Armitage, Columbia University, "The Atlantic World As a Graduate Field":
There are three kinds of Atlantic history, Professor Armitage believes:
circum-Atlantic, trans-Atlantic, and cis-Atlantic. He will explain the meaning
of each and explore the differences in relation to teaching and research
about the Atlantic world. As a co-teacher of a graduate colloquium (with
North Americanist Richard Bushman) in British and American history, 1600-1765,
Armitage has taught graduate students the histories of early modern Britain
and early America viewed as an integrated subject. He will discuss the ways
in which he urges graduate students to view topics such as slavery and race,
labor, the economy, imperial government, religion, and landscapes from an
Atlantic perspective, and the successes and disappointments he has had in
doing so.
-
Bernard Bailyn, Harvard University, Commentator: Professor Bailyn, a former
president of the AHA, Adams University Professor Emeritus at Harvard, and
director of the International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World,
1500-1800, is eminently qualified, both from his own research and from his
direction of three Atlantic World Seminars (with more to come), to speak
to the topic and to respond to the presentations.
As promised, we will distribute sample syllabi during the discussion
on January 9. For a preview, click on the names of the participants
below. You are welcome to copy and print any syllabus you wish, giving
credit where credit is due, of course.
Alison Games, Georgetown University, "The Atlantic World
as an Introductory Survey Course"
Benjamin Schmidt, University of Washington, "The Atlantic
World from Europe"
Rosemary Brana-Shute, College of Charleston, "The Atlantic World from Latin
America" [syllabus not available]
John Thornton, Millersville University, "The Atlantic World from
Africa" [syllabus not available]
Hal Friedman, Henry Ford Community College, "The
Atlantic World at Community Colleges"
David Armitage, Columbia University, "The Atlantic
World as a Graduate Field"
If you are interested in this roundtable discussion, you may wish to visit
the website of Harvard University's
International Seminar
on the History of the Atlantic World, 1500-1800.
Thank you for your interest. If you wish to contact the chair of the
panel and author of this page, please feel free to do so:
Jim Williams at Middle Tennessee
State University.
This page was created on October 12, 1999.