Michael Rockland Interview: "The Other Jersey Shore: Life on the Delaware River"

Professor Angus Gillespie recently interviewed Michael Rockland on his television show about Rockland's new book The Other Jersey Shore: Life on the Delaware River. You can watch at this link: https://youtu.be/f6E6n7qceog.

Prof. Angus Gillespie publishes Port Newark

The American Studies department congratulates Prof. Angus Gillespie on the publication of Port Newark and the Origins of Container Shipping. This fascinating study traces the birth of containerization to Port Newark, New Jersey, in 1956 when trucker Malcom McLean thought of a brilliant new way to transport cargo. It tells the story of how Port Newark grew rapidly as McLean’s idea was backed by bot...

Prof. Carla Cevasco publishes Violent Appetites

The American Studies department congratulates Prof. Carla Cevasco on the publication of Violent Appetites: Hunger in the Early Northeast. In the book Cevasco reveals the disgusting, violent history of hunger in the context of the colonial invasion of early northeastern North America. Locked in constant violence throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Native Americans and English and F...

Gillian Dauer '22: Good and Useful Women

The American Studies department congratulates Gillian Dauer '22 for her award-winning outstanding senior thesis. Titled “‘Good and Useful Women’: The Rutgers Female College and Nineteenth-Century Women’s Higher Education Reform,” Dauer excavated the largely unknown history of Rutgers Female College. Founded as the Rutgers Female Institute in 1838, the Rutgers Female College was the first instituti...

Asian American Studies

The American Studies department debuted a new minor in Asian American Studies, with the first student to complete program graduating in Spring 2022. The minor came in response, in part, to student activism on Asian American issues. In 2021, Jillian Cuzzolino, a student in the School of Arts and Sciences and a leader at the Rutgers Asian Student Council, approached Jeff Decker, then the undergradua...

Remembering Louise Barnett

Louise Barnett, a long-time member of the Rutgers faculty and American Studies department, passed away in September. I wanted to share a few memories from those of us who were lucky to know Louise’s scholarship, respect her as a colleague, and consider her a friend. With a heavy heart…. –Jeff Decker (Chair) “Louise came to Rutgers about the same time I did, around 1970. The colleges were alive the...

Happy Anniversary Port Authority

By Angus Kress Gillespie Today marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. It was the first interstate agency ever created under a clause in the U.S. Constitution that permits compacts between two states with congressional approval. The Port Authority’s area of jurisdiction was called “The Port District,” a 17-county bi-state region within a 25-mil...

Scholars Talk Writing: Louis P. Masur

I met Louis P. Masur in 1988, just before his first book, Rites of Execution, was published by Oxford University Press, where I was then an acquisitions editor. We hung out at the annual meeting of the Organization of American Historians in Reno, Nev., and he taught me how to play blackjack. Let’s just say he was very, very good at the game. The skills required to be an excellent card player seem...

RUPA Presents: Legend Has It

While some of the stories told here are based on factual records and real persons, they are being told purely for entertainment purposes, and are embellished with folklore and rumor. Safety precautions to abate risk inherent to these filming locations and interpersonal contact during a national health crisis were implemented and followed.

NJFF’s Virtual Folk Fest 2020

On Saturday, April 25, The New Jersey Folk Festival hosted a series of online activities with artists of various crafts. Click here for video links to the activities on the NJFF website. The videos are also available on Youtube.

What Abraham Lincoln can teach us about resilience in the face of crisis

"The President quite unwell," reported John Hay on November 26, 1863. On his return from the dedication of Gettysburg National Cemetery, where he delivered "a few appropriate remarks" that would stand to define the war and the meaning of America, Abraham Lincoln had taken ill with varioloid fever, a mild but highly contagious form of smallpox. Even the New York World, a virulent anti-administratio...

I Will Never Let Go of Emmett Till's Story

By Christine Clark Zemla   I never knew Emmett Till. Not his mischievous smile, or his fun-loving, fearless attitude, or the stutter when he got nervous. I was just a young white girl growing up in New Jersey when the Black 14-year-old from Chicago went to visit family in the Deep South in 1955.Though I never knew him, I can vividly recall the first time I heard his name. I had just returned to coll...

The deportation of an Iranian student shows the unchecked power of Customs and Border Protection

College campuses have been gearing up for start of the spring 2020 semester. But this week, Mohammad Shahab Dehghani Hossein Abadi, an Iranian student with a valid visa to study at Northeastern University in Boston, was stopped by Customs and Border Protection, detained and then deported — despite a federal court order that should have delayed his removal. His attorneys have no idea why CBP decide...

Michael Aaron Rockland on his latest book The George Washington Bridge: Poetry in Steel

Since opening in 1931, the George Washington Bridge, linking New York and New Jersey, has become the busiest bridge in the world, with over 100 million vehicles passing over it each year. Many people also consider it the most beautiful bridge in the world, yet remarkably little has been written about it. In this installment of Leonard Lopate at Large on WBAI, Michael Aaron Rockland talks about his...

Professor Kennedy Discusses Christmas Traditions

Did you know yuletide caroling began 1,000 years before Christmas existed? Or how about the fact that mistletoe was used to represent immortality long before the holiday reached Europe? And before there was eggnog, the medieval English drank wassail made from mulled ale. Maria Kennedy, an instructor of folklore at Rutgers University–New Brunswick’s Department of American Studies in the School of Ar...

Bringing a Native American Perspective to American Studies

Written by John Chadwick | SAS Senior Writer   Jameson “Jimmy” Sweet, the first Native American professor in the Department of American Studies at Rutgers University, had initially set out to become an architect.“That was my dream when I was in high school,” says Sweet, who joined the School of Arts and Sciences faculty in 2018. “It didn’t occur to me at that age that I could make history or America...

Rutgers Course Explores How Mississippi Delta Is Still Healing 64 Years After Emmett Till’s Murder

What would justice look like for Emmett Till 64 years after his death became a symbol of the U.S. civil rights movement? Rutgers scholar Christine Zemla traveled to the Mississippi Delta to pose that question to the Rev. Wheeler Parker Jr., Till’s cousin and the last living eyewitness to his abduction, in preparation for her new fall course, “Remembering Emmett Till.” “Till’s story is Trayvon Mart...

Springsteen at 70: Remembering When The Boss Rocked New Brunswick

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ - Many people may call themselves Bruce Springsteen’s biggest fan, but Louis Masur has legitimate claim to that title. This fall, the Distinguished Professor of American Studies and History at Rutgers–New Brunswick will share his admiration for the music icon in his course, “Springsteen's American Vision.”Masur said the class will explore how Springsteen’s vision illustrates a ge...

NJ Folk Fest Promo 2019

NJ Folk Fest Promo 2019

Old Ways in New Jersey

Interview with Professor Carla Cevasco Interview with Professor Jimmy Sweet Interview with Professor Maria Kennedy Interview with Professor Michael Rockland Interview with Professor Nicole Fleetwood Interview with Professor Sylvia Chan-Malik