4.1 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 10 January 2021
⏱️ 62 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hey, I'm Shannon Rice, the podcast producer here at C-SPAN, and this week lectures in history explores colonial America and how it's remembered through historic sites and monuments. |
0:13.7 | University of Delaware professor Zara Anish Haslin argues that people's assumptions about colonial America are influenced by material and popular culture. |
0:22.1 | These include paintings depicting American history in the U.S. Capitol and statues of Columbus and |
0:26.8 | Pocahontas. This lecture was recorded in December of 2020. Class starts in a moment. |
0:34.4 | So welcome. This is History 318, the History of Colonial America, and I'm Professor Zara Innes Hanslan. |
0:40.3 | Now, at the beginning of this course, I asked each of you to tell me what you think of when you think of colonial American history. |
0:47.3 | Many of you, I'm sure, don't even remember what you put, but I'm going to give you a little synopsis today. |
0:53.3 | Many of you |
0:54.4 | focused on what historians would actually call the American Revolutionary Era rather than the |
0:58.8 | colonial era at large. People like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, |
1:04.9 | issues like taxation without representation, other founders and historical highlights of the |
1:09.7 | imperial crisis in the war all popped up. |
1:12.3 | A few of you also mentioned places like historic Jamestown, Plymouth Plantation in Massachusetts, |
1:18.4 | and Colonial Williamsburg. |
1:19.9 | And a few people mentioned the history of slavery. |
1:22.0 | And what I thought was really interesting was that it was notably because of either or the 1619 project in the summer's Black Lives Matter protests. |
1:32.2 | But what was interesting was that there were a few omissions. |
1:35.3 | No one mentioned individual women, I think, or any individual indigenous people by name. |
1:41.3 | And no one, if I'm recalling correctly, mentioned anything west of the Appalachian |
1:45.4 | Mountains, much less west of the Mississippi or the Rockies or the West Coast. Now, technically |
1:51.2 | speaking, this course runs from before contact of Europeans with indigenous people in the 15th century |
1:56.6 | to 1763, the end of the seven years or French and Indian War, and what is now the territory |
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