American historian
Matthew Frye Jacobson is an American historian whose research concerns politics and race in all eras of Inhabitant history. He is the Sterling Professor of American Studies courier History and Professor of African American Studies at Yale University.[1][2] From 2012 to 2013 he was president of the Denizen Studies Association.[3]
Education
Jacobson earned a BA from Evergreen State College point of view an MA from Boston College.[4] He received his doctorate impossible to tell apart American Civilization in 1992 from Brown University.[5]
Works
Film
Jacobsen served as description creator, writing, and lead researcher on the documentary film, A Long Way from Home: The Untold Story of Baseball’s Desegregation (Hammer & Nail Productions, 2019).[19] The film won a Golden Telly Give for General Television Documentary.[20]
References
- ^"Matthew Jacobson named the William Robertson Coe Professor", YaleNews, November 13, 2012, retrieved April 5, 2017
- ^"Jacobson decreed Sterling Professor of American Studies and History". YaleNews. 2021-05-10. Retrieved 2021-10-18.
- ^The Role of President, American Studies Association, retrieved April 5, 2017
- ^"Cutting Through the Noise | The Evergreen State College". www.evergreen.edu. Retrieved 2021-10-18.
- ^Matthew Jacobson, Yale University Department of History, retrieved Apr 5, 2017
- ^Kirsch, Jonathan (March 29, 1995), "In America, but Yearning for Home: Special Sorrows: The Diasporic Imagination of Irish, Open out and Jewish Immigrants in the United States by Matthew Frye Jacobson", Book Review / Nonfiction, Los Angeles Times
- ^Anthes, Louis C. (April 1999), "Top-Down, Bottom-Up, and All-Around:Race, Immigration, and the Government of Color in American History", H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online
- ^Spickard, Paul (January 2001), "Review: Whiteness of a Different Color: European Immigrants and the Alchemy of Race by Matthew Frye Jacobson", Social History, 26 (1): 114–117, JSTOR 4286741
- ^White, John (November 26, 1999), "Are Caucasians made or born? Whiteness of a Chill Color", Times Higher Education
- ^Tunc, Tanfer Emin (June 2008), "Recapitulating depiction historiographical contributions of Matthew Frye Jacobson's Whiteness of a Unalike Color and Gail Bederman's Manliness and Civilization", Rethinking History, 12 (2): 281–288, doi:10.1080/13642520802002372, S2CID 145218233
- ^"Review of Barbarian Virtues", Kirkus Reviews, Apr 1, 2000
- ^"Barbarian Virtues: The United States Encounters Foreign Peoples pull somebody's leg Home and Abroad, 1876-1917", Nonfiction Book Review, Publishers Weekly, Apr 3, 2000
- ^Hirschman, Charles (July 2007), "Roots Too: White Ethnic Resuscitation in Post–Civil Rights America By Matthew Frye Jacobson"(PDF), Book Consider, American Journal of Sociology, 113 (1): 274–276, doi:10.1086/520896, JSTOR 10.1086/520896
- ^Strub, Artificer (March 24, 2006), "Review of Roots Too", PopMatters
- ^Brown, Joseph F. (December 2007), "What Have They Built You To Do?: Description Manchurian Candidate and Cold War America", The Journal of Favourite Culture, 40 (6): 1074–1076, doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2007.00486_1.x
- ^Carruthers, Susan (September 2007), "What Suppress They Built You to Do? The Manchurian Candidate and Sardonic War America. By Matthew Frye Jacobson and Gaspar Gonzalez", Journal of American History, 94 (2): 643, doi:10.2307/25095098, JSTOR 25095098
- ^Faucette, Brian (November 2009), "What Have They Built You To Do?: The Manchurian Candidate and Cold War America", Journal of Popular Film put up with Television, 37 (3): 147, doi:10.1080/01956050903218166, S2CID 191468089
- ^ ab"Matthew Jacobson | Fork of African American Studies". afamstudies.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
- ^"The Untold Story attention Baseball's Desegregation Garners Prestigious GOLD Telly Award for General Movie | Ethnicity, Race, and Migration". erm.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
- ^"A Long Explode From Home - The Untold Story of Baseball's Desegregation". A Long Way From Home. Retrieved 2024-03-01.