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by Dr. Brian Regal

Teaching history is one of the most important jobs in the world. It might just save us all. In the year 2021 we need historians and history teachers more than ever. This is because so much pseudohistory and falsehoods about the past are being put forward by various quarters (rarely historians themselves) for cultural, political, and religious reasons. Here at Kean University we produce teachers for secondary and high schools who will go to positions around the region and the country.


There are states, such as Texas, which are currently banning or trying to ban the teaching of history about slavery, racism, and other of the darker aspects of our past. South Dakota wants to eliminate mentions of the lives of Native people. They think that not telling people about these horrors somehow makes our country great. This, of course, is absurd. Ignorance does not make one a better person or citizen. Ignoring evil does not make it disappear. To neglect those who suffered so we could have a better life is insulting to them and us. The way to counter this is to teach this material as much as we can.


The past isn’t always pretty, or nice, or fun, or uplifting. It can be downright awful, depressing, and enraging sometimes. Learning history is not about feeling better about yourself. It’s about learning what happened before so we can make better judgments about what is to come. It’s about holding people accountable for their deeds, both good and bad. When history does enrage us it is hoped that will lead to action to make it better. Engaging with the past is one of the things that makes a good citizen and a healthy country.


The Roman author Cicero famously said “To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. For what is the worth of human life, unless it is woven into the life of our ancestors by the records of history?” Childhood is okay when you’re a child, but eventually we must all grow up. Part of that growing is learning to accept history and holding it up into the light. That’s the lesson history teachers teach.


Teaching history is not just a job. You are having a huge impact upon your students often in ways we don’t even notice, and by extension the people your students will have an impact on. What we teach students sticks with them. We can never move forward as a society until we acknowledge and discuss our past, both good and bad. Not doing so is as foolish as refusing to take a vaccine that prevents a terrible disease. Teaching the unpleasant parts of our past might make people uncomfortable, but so does getting a broken arm reset: it hurts for a while, but in the long run you’re better for it.


Teaching history isn’t easy. It takes a lot of training, study, and hard work. You train to become an expert, a specialist. It’s not for everyone. For those brave enough to do it, you are making a crucial contribution to our society. We know history’s importance, it’s the teacher’s job to convey that to students. If we don’t then awful people will. That’s part of how our world wound up in the position it’s in: allowing non-teachers, non-experts, and the biased, and the hypocritical, and those with terrible agendas do the teaching.

But it’s all worth it, because teaching history is one of the most important jobs in the world, and it just might save us all.


 

Dr. Brian Regal is on the history faculty of Kean University. His next book on American discovery myths will be published in 2022 by Palgrave-Macmillan.


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by Dr. C. Brid Nicholson


This new academic year 2021-2022 is one like no other.


We are back on campus finally. We are back in our new building in the Liberty Hall Academic Center. We are back in the classroom: face to face for the first time since March 2020. We had barely moved in, when we moved out.


Yet while we have returned, things are not quite the same.


So much has happened since we all last gathered in person. So many world events: so many changes, so many losses, so much that needs to be explained.


Though we are historians, we study change, and we research causes of change, we discuss the consequences of change, yet much of what we are living through is deeply personal, very frightening, and uncomfortable.


We have lost family members, and friends.


Jannette Belan, our vibrant, fun, oh so competent former Graduate Assistant died as a result of complications from Covid on April 21, 2021. May her name, and the name of so many more never be forgotten. May her memory, and the memory of too many others be a blessing.


But while the doors of the University were closed, our virtual halls of learning were wide open, and we all learned how to do things differently. Our teaching and learning continued, and now as we are back in person, we will continue to expand our knowledge, increase our learning, and education.


Things have changed also within our Department, College, and University.


Dr. Elizabeth Hyde, is now the acting-Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts.


Kean now has a new Provost, and we welcome Dr. David Birdsell to Kean. His B.A. was in History, so we look forward to showing him around LHAC, and meeting with the Department.


After all, once a historian, always a historian.


And while Dr. Lamont Repollet, has been President of our University for over a year now, we want him to know that we look forward to working even more closely with him, as he moves Kean forward. We are excited about his plans for Kean. We are thrilled that Kean is working towards R2 status.


I have taken over the role as Chair from Dr. Hyde. I am grateful to my colleagues for their trust in me. I am truly humbled by their support.


Dr. Frank Argote-Freyre is now the Assistant Chair of the Department, and I know that you join with me in thanking him for taking on this role.


Dr. Nicole Schroeder has joined our Department. We are very excited by her hire as she is part of the first class of Equity in Action Presidential Postdoctoral Fellows.


Sadly, the most important member of the History Department team decided to retire: Mrs Mary Woubneh. Mary, as you all know, ran the department. She knew how to do everything. She knew everyone. We miss her terribly but we wish her every happiness as she can now spend more time with her family, particularly her grandchildren, and her garden.


The History Department is excited to share with you some of our plans for this year.


Our Community Forum series will be beginning again soon. Along with our expert faculty, in History, our colleagues in Political Science, and elsewhere on campus, we are looking forward to continuing our conversations on national and international events.


We have paid research opportunities available for students. Some of these will involve actual historical research, while other positions will involve helping in the creation and implementation of databases and apps. Watch out for that email soon.


The Department is beginning the process of hiring two new members for our Department: one person will be appointment to Kean Ocean, while the other will be teaching Africa and Middle East History initially at the Union Campus


Longer term we are beginning the process of introducing a 5 year BA/MA History degree option. This will take some time, but such a program at both Union and Ocean Campuses has been asked about for a long time, and we feel it is time to move on this.


We will keep you informed of all that is happening. We also look forward to seeing you at a variety of events this semester!


Most important of all, stay safe and well,


C. Brid Nicholson


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by Dr. Marguerite Mayhall, Modern Latin American Art Historian, Art History Program


Fifteen years ago this spring, students in the Art History capstone course designed and installed an exhibition called Ser Latino: Being Latino in New Jersey. The students in the class included: Vanessa (Chippendale) Lopez, Joseph Field, Megan Hamill, Lia Hempel, Charles Laskowski, April Perez, and Amy Wenzel. The exhibition gave students hands-on experience in art history, and several of these students have gone on to careers in the arts and academia – Joseph Field teaches art history at Brooklyn College, is an instructor at the 92nd Street Y and worked as Supervisor and Coordinator of Gallery Guides at the Guggenheim, and Vanessa Lopez has worn many hats, including that of Art Teacher, at the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey in Summit, New Jersey. Lia Hempel is now Assistant Director of Gift Planning at Wellesley College in Boston.


Everything about the show was student run and organized, from contacting the artists, meeting them in their studios and interviewing them, to choosing the works to be exhibited. In some cases, students (and my husband!) helped transport the works to the Howe Gallery in the Vaughn Eames building.


We designed the exhibition installation and did the installation ourselves. Students also produced a catalog and wrote essays on the artists and their work, which you see above. The opening for the show was well attended. It was featured on the news on WMBC and written up in the Star Ledger (23 October 2005), and in both The Tower and the Cougar’s Byte: https://issuu.com/cougarsbyte/docs/kean1107.



Ser Latino en Nueva Jersey/Being Latino/a in New Jersey,Howe Gallery, October 2005.








On the 15th anniversary of that show, students in the Modern Latin American Art and Architecture class this semester interviewed artists from the Neo-Latino Collective as their final project. The blog posts that follow are based, in part, on interviews with the following artists: José Rodeiro, Josephine Barreiro, Gabriel Navar, Nelson Alvarez, Rita Jiménez, and the late Raúl Villareal (the only artist to have works exhibited in Ser Latino). Some artists elected to answer interview questions by email, some via video call.






















The students in the class this semester are:


Musa Ali

Ashley Bacchus

Alenis Baez

Stephanie Calixto

Sarah Copeland

Isis Day

Chelsea Doyle

Alec Duerr

Angela Figueroa

Jasmin Finney-Tillman

Samantha Jezowicz

Rob Looby

Melanie Luengas

George Moreno

Joseph Noda

Mary Padiernos

Joanna Szpernoga

Edward Tengwall


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