Sunday Notes
A major entry for the Carnival of Bad History:"Honest, It wasn't Abe's Comment," Washington Post, 16 February. A quotation, falsely attributed to Abraham Lincoln, gets attributed to him 18,000 times.
Robert Fulford,"How Bad Blood led to a Great Musical," National Post, 6 February, tells a remarkable history of Kurt Weill's and Berthold Brecht's Three Penny Opera. YouTube offers renditions of"Mack the Knife" by: Louis Armstrong on"Flip" Wilson's Show, Ysabella Brave, Nick Cave, Bobby Darrin, Ella Fitzgerald doing scat with Duke Ellington, and Mina.
Finally, I should point out two updates on yesterday's post, thanks to Warren Billings and David Fahey. Both updates speak well of the departments concerned. Providence College terminated its doctoral program in history in 1995. It remains in the AHA's Directory because it allowed students in the program to continue and three of them were still in process when the AHA last updated the Directory. The University of New Orleans has never had a doctoral program in history. The information in the AHA's Directory is simply incorrect. UNO has a very highly regarded M.A. program. That, it seems to me, should be the aim of most of the other departments I mentioned.
I fundamentally disagree with my friend, Jeff Vanke, about what a legitimate elitism is and what is an illegitimate elitism. Thinking that a doctoral program is the desired end toward which a state university department inexorably moves is, I think, an illegitimate elitism (to say nothing of a false teleology). Regardless of new access to remote archives, books in other libraries, etc., does anyone seriously think that North Dakota State or the University of Southern Mississippi can offer a student the quality of doctoral education comparable to that of any of the top 100 history departments in the country?