Multi-Volumes
Eighteen months ago, we had a very lively discussion at Cliopatria about whatever happened to the Oxford History of the United States. First conceived almost fifty years ago by Richard Hofstadter and C. Vann Woodward, the Oxford History was to be a multi-volume series that would be the point of reference for the best of scholarship in American history. Only five of a projected eleven volumes have ever been published. Atlantic Monthly's literary editor, Bernard Schwartz, and, in"The Rejection Bin of History," Boston Globe, 24 December, Christopher Shea have taken up our question about what happened. Shea's account is replete with the names and the triumphs, hopes and frustrations of some of the most important American historians of the last three generations. The story is well worth reading. Thanks to Alfredo Perez at Political Theory Daily Review for the tip.