Friday, December 6, 2013

Live Long and Prosper



Greetings, everyone. Matt Craft, Award-winning Man, Myth, Legend, Historical Investigator, here. Hope you’ve all had a wonderful semester – and for those of you who are returning next semester, I hope spring 2014 will be great as well. I also hope that you’ve all enjoyed joining me as we journeyed through history; I have enjoyed being your guide for two semesters in a row.
            But now, the December gray has arrived, and I must burst my Belmont bubble and venture into the brave, new world[1] beyond. I stride across the Curb Event Center stage on Friday, December 13. But do not fret. I’m sure someone is taking up the torch and mantle of history blogger, and I’m also sure he or she will do a great job.
Besides, you can’t get rid of me that easily – did you forget? I’m MML, HI, and I am the father of The Bruin History Blog, built it from scratch. I am confident that I shall return – in some shape, form, or fashion.
Until then, Live Long and Prosper,[2] Fellow Lovers of History!
AW MML, HI
PS.
You can check me out in the Belmont University newspaper The Vision[3] and on the Belmont English Department’s blog, Belmont English: News and Notes from the English Department at Belmont University.[4]


[1] An allusion to Aldous Huxley’s 1931 novel, Brave New World.
[2] In the popular science fiction franchise, Star Trek, U.S.S. Enterprise Captain James Tiberius Kirk’s first officer Sock often utters this phrase.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Seth Russell Ross-Granda: Don’t Knock It Until You Try It Part II



Hey, fellow lovers of history! AW MML, HI, here. As promised, here is part two of my very exclusive interview with Mr. Seth Ross-Granda is below. So, you can read and read to your heart’s desire!

CRAFT: What role do you think history plays in all levels of education?
GRANDA: I’m not sure I can answer that question with much authority, but I think that the study of history is critical to a holistic education and understanding of how we as individuals fit into the world. Studying history doesn’t simply require that a student be able to memorize immense volumes of facts as some might believe. Rather, a devoted student of history learns how to implement many skills such as researching various types of sources, extracting information, organizing findings, analyzing complex details, thinking critically, and deducing acute inferences. Each of these skills not only allows the history student to make educated statements about the state of things in the past, but it gives her a better understanding of how her individual life fits into the present day historical narrative.
CRAFT: Do you feel history gets enough attention or focus in all levels of school?
GRANDA: Well I think the answer to that question requires a lot of research, but, to speak generally, I think history deserves a great deal of focus in in every person’s education. Without a student’s knowledge of history, I think, at the very least, they will be passing up a great opportunity to improve skills of reading, comprehending, reasoning, and deducing.
CRAFT: In your opinion, what role does writing play in history and other disciplines?   
GRANDA: With regards to history, it’s been tremendously important and responsible for the wealth of sources from which we are able to rely upon today; prior to the introduction of writing in human civilization, history was probably passed down orally, and with the rise and fall of civilizations, so too probably went the histories of those people and times. Thanks to man’s dedication to the skill of writing, in all of its many forms (hieroglyphics, typing, etc.), we have better understanding and modes of communicating ideas about history of the people in ancient and modern societies alike.
CRAFT: Where is the gap in the average person’s historical knowledge the widest? Where is it the narrowest?
GRANDA: Well, considering that the majority of my understanding of what constitutes the average person’s historical knowledge is derived largely from offhand conversations that sometimes delve into topics of history, I would say that most people, at least people our age, don’t really appreciate the history of the geographical area known today as Russia. Perhaps, that’s a generational generalization I’m making because I believe our parents’ generation was probably a little more concerned with the history of the U.S.S.R. because of the Cold War and its narrative place in American culture beginning mainly in the 1950s leading up to the 1990s. Our generation, on the other hand, doesn’t have quite as much focus on Russia probably because of the ostensible diffusion of tension between the great superpowers after the fall of the Soviet Union in the 1990s.
CRAFT: In your opinion, has popular culture ever accurately portrayed history?
GRANDA: Wow, that’s a rangy question that could be the basis of a doctoral thesis for a student in a Ph.D. program, but I’ll try and answer it in a couple of sentences. Yes and no. I believe that historical accuracy can be a very difficult thing to obtain in terms of removing biases and the subjective elements out of works in popular culture (I assume we’re talking movies). Depending on which viewpoint you are taking, a historical episode may seem more accurate to a particular person’s perspective and less accurate to another’s. Various events can be objectively presentable in terms of what actually happened (i.e. a B-2 dropping an atom bomb and the resulting destruction), but the way in which the event is conveyed so as to create a morality play can skew our understanding. I think these problems are largely inherent in our society’s presentation of art because most everything is propaganda in the sense that it’s trying to make a statement about the current state of affairs, but by utilizing a historian’s critical eye, I think it’s possible to accept certain aspects of cinema when it attempts to portray a historical event.
CRAFT: In your opinion, why have the War of 1812 and World War I received less attention in both popular culture and education than say the American Revolution or World War II?
GRANDA: Well, my opinion regarding why World War II has received more attention in pop culture and education than World War I is probably because of the relevant level of involvement that the United States had in the war. Additionally, the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor, which ignited the American entry into the Second World War, ensured that the war would have a very important place in the American memory. In World War I, the United States was not provoked to enter the war in quite the same way. Additionally, I think humans consider beginnings of processes to be more interesting. The Revolutionary War was the war that first established the supreme independence of the American colonists against the British Empire. The Revolutionary War receiving more attention in scholarship than the War of 1812 is like the book of Genesis receiving more sermon time than the story of Moses in Deuteronomy. One represented the beginning; the other was just more of the story. That is not, however, to say that one is actually more important than the other.
CRAFT: What do you read for pleasure?
GRANDA: I’ve done a poor job at actually finishing the works I’ve attempted to read in years past, but among some of the works that I’ve completed are Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men, The Man Who Was Thursday by G.K. Chesterton, Ernest Hemingway’s A Movable Feast, Franny and Zooey by J.D. Salinger, a few of Stuart Woods’ Stone Barrington Novels, and John Grisham’s The Confession. To answer your question, I read a blend of current best-selling legal thrillers, modern American historical fiction, and a couple of British allegorical tales.
CRAFT: What book of historical nature would you recommend that everyone read?
GRANDA: Assuming that we’re talking about primary sources, I would recommend the Bible, but the answer really depends on what the individual person is interested in learning. I do think it’s important for everyone to actually read primary sources upon which so much of our society depends such as the Constitution, statutes, and local ordinances. I think many people would be surprised to know what the law actually says, and the ways in which it creates and confines American freedom.
CRAFT: What book would you recommend that any president should read?
GRANDA: Constitutional Law for Dummies.
CRAFT: What is your opinion or view of the Bible? Are the events depicted/recorded in the Bible history to you? Just the living Word of God? Or both?
GRANDA: The Bible is a crucially important text. It’s arguably the most influential printed work in the history of the world. I personally believe that the Bible includes some factual historical information, and I also believe that there are some divinely inspired passages within it. I believe that there is great wisdom in the words of Jesus.
CRAFT: Do you know any foreign languages and/or alphabets? If so, what are they, and how many?
GRANDA: I understand some Spanish, but I wish that I were more proficient with regards to foreign languages. I consider it inexcusable that both of my parents are, at the very least (my mother speaks English, Spanish, and Portuguese) bilingual, yet I am barely unilingual.
CRAFT: Was it difficult for you to write collegiate history papers and law school papers?
GRANDA: There is a slight similarity between writing collegiate history papers and law school papers. That is that a prepared and well-researched writer should have little trouble in writing. Once the research and note-taking phase is complete, all that remains is the actual application of the findings into a coherent and decipherable product (that’s the difficult part). With regards to writing papers in law school, as in undergrad, the difficulty stems more from the balancing act of having other highly demanding classes to tend to. Thus, devising a work schedule and diligently sticking to it are key goals that lead to completing the papers with quality when they are due. I wasn’t entirely successful in undergrad at creating study plans for my history assignments and sticking to them, but I’ve since learned my lesson and improved my diligence when it comes to writing papers in law school. I recommend that students incorporate proper research organization and work habits into their repertoire now. And, remember, don’t put off until tomorrow that which can be done today.
CRAFT: What advice would you give to lower-class history majors and minors?
GRANDA: Down with the bourgeoisie. Take Dr. Schafer’s Russian Revolution class for many great jokes, Comrade. Additionally, take the opportunity to sit in on one of Dr. Kuryla’s lectures. That man is just plain cool. If he can’t get you interested in history, then you’re lost, man (sorry for the heteronormative address).
CRAFT: What advice would you give to upper-class history majors and minors?
GRANDA: Read as much as you can. You won’t regret it. Also, if you’re struggling with anything school-related or just need general advice, schedule a visit with one of the history professors. While they are of course very respected intellectuals in their respective historical areas, they are equally wonderful, genuine, and caring people. I can remember specific instances with each of the history professors in which I was given golden nuggets of wisdom. Dr. Jackson-Abernathy, specifically, was my guardian angel throughout my Belmont education. Dr. Jackson cares deeply for each of her students, and she gives you her full attention and some really great pointers on life as well as how to be a successful student.
CRAFT: What advice would you give to pre-collegiate students interested in and/or passionate about history?
GRANDA: Don’t knock it until you try it! Also, a history degree is not merely for people who know they want to teach or pursue a Ph.D. (although those are highly respectable goals). I think I’m someone who can attest well to that.

Thanks a million for reading, peeps. Hope you’ve enjoyed getting to know my man Seth. Peace! AW MML, HI

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Seth Russell Ross-Granda: Don’t Knock It Until You Try It Part I


Greetings, fellow lovers of history! Hope you’ve all had a terrific Thanksgiving, and hope that you all overstuffed yourselves. Besides, it wouldn’t be Thanksgiving if we didn’t overstuff ourselves. So, I guess we should be thankful for the ability to overstuff ourselves. LOL!
            Hope you’ve enjoyed reading my very close nursing major friend’s very groovy character profile, “Diana Rogut: Communication Is Key.” Because I enjoyed writing it. If you didn’t enjoy it, then, I’ll knock some sense into you. Just kidding LOL! Besides, she wouldn’t let me get away with it anyway. Nothing I do gets past her. LOL! Anywho, this week, The Bruin History Blog profiles another friend of mine – my good buddy Seth Russell Ross-Granda!
Hailing from “various pockets of [the] greater Nashville [area] (Bell Meade, Bellevue, Brentwood, and Green Hills),”[1] Seth is quite the veteran Bruin. Currently a first-year law school student, or 1L, he selected Belmont University for both his undergraduate and graduate education. I asked him why he chose Belmont over Middle Tennessee State University, Vanderbilt University, or some other school, and he told me,
Honestly, I hadn’t given much thought to attending college prior to the last few months of high school. A good friend of mine asked me if I wanted to attend Belmont University and be his roommate, and so I did a little research. After touring the beautiful campus and interviewing with some of the school faculty and officials, I couldn’t deny that the school had everything I could have asked for in a university.[2]

I’m glad that Seth chose Belmont – really, I am. But I asked him: Why did you decide to attend law school after I repeatedly protested otherwise? (I asked him that because I personally think the world has one too many lawyers, and I know tons of them – such as my father, my brother Zach, and a good family friend named Larry, just to name a few. Plus, I agree with my father that Seth’s too nice to be an attorney. LOL!) Anywho, in response to my question, Seth said, “I’m incorrigible, Matt. You know that better than most, with the exception of maybe my mother, and my wife.”[3]
As you plainly see, fellow lovers of history, Seth did not heed my protest. Ironically, he remarked,
I hadn’t really desired to put myself through more school after finishing the undergraduate program in May of 2012. Initially, I thought I might like to teach abroad. Some of my friends from undergrad had gone to southeastern Asia to teach English, which I thought would be a very rewarding venture, but before I could make a firm decision, I took the opportunity to travel Europe and serve a church in Perth, Australia for a few months. In part, I’d hoped that my time spent traveling and serving would give me clarity of purpose about what I should do regarding my profession upon my return, but even after my time away I remained unsure about what occupation to pursue. One thing that did become clear to me during my trip abroad was that I wanted to marry the love of my life, Kelsey. After I proposed on our four-year anniversary in September of 2012, I gave some thought to pursuing a legal degree. Throughout my last two years of undergraduate school, I studied for the LSAT because a law degree would provide me with a dynamic education that would provide me with many benefits: the ability to be an advocate for people who need legal help, an education that would utilize some of the critical thinking skills I garnered as a history student, and I could always pursue a career as a teacher later in life.[4]

But Seth also told me,
I’m not exactly sure just yet [what I want to do with my history and law degrees]. I’d still like to teach someday, but, in the meantime, I’d like to serve in some capacity as an advocate for the less fortunate in our society. I also have a great sympathy for young people caught in between family turmoil and would be happy to serve as a counselor or advisor of some kind to them in their time of sorrow and need. Quite alternatively, I have a deep love for music and the arts. It would be a great joy if I could find some way to meld my education and career with something that brings me as much pleasure as music.[5]
Whatever Seth decides to do after law school, I wish him the best.
And now, my exclusive interview with Mr. Seth Russell Ross-Granda!

CRAFT: Have you always been interested in history?
GRANDA: Yes. For as long as I can remember, I’ve been intrigued by the world, and how the current state of social, cultural, and political affairs came into being. I suppose you could say I’m curious to know how the stories of both the people who lived in the years before us and during our lifetimes relate to our individual conditions.
CRAFT: Why history?  What first got you interested?
GRANDA: Throughout my childhood, my father made efforts to impart his passion for history onto me by telling me stories from history during dinnertime. My father would recount narratives about various historical periods. One night, it was about Alexander the Great’s Conquests in Persia, and the next it would be about William Sherman’s March to the Sea (obviously we skipped around a bit). In my opinion, my father’s interest in history was probably due to a desire to better understand his own identity. In the late 1950s, my father, a thirteen-year-old at the time, along with his family fled Cuba after the coup d’état led by Fidel Castro.[6] I think it was this watershed event in the history of my father’s home country – an event that so directly affected the outcome of his own life – that fueled his passion for learning about the times and places before our existence. For me, too, history really came to life when I wanted to know more about myself, my father, and the genealogy from which we hailed. One way of getting to pursue that knowledge was to research Cuban history and, more specifically, the history of the Cuban Diaspora following the fall of the Batista government. In short, my father is the primary reason I became interested in history.
CRAFT: Is there a specific avenue or focus of history you find most interesting, and why?
GRANDA: Cuban-American History in the Twenty-first Century because of my father’s heritage.
CRAFT: What role did history play in your pre-collegiate education?
GRANDA: It played the role of socializing me to the world, primarily. I think my interaction with the study of history was a way to help me analyze current world events through the scope of the question “how did we get to this point in history?” As you are well aware, our generation was faced with a lot of questions after the events in New York City on September 11, 2001. I was merely 11 years old at the time, and when neither my parents nor my teachers could give me adequate answers about what exactly happened on that day and why, I wanted to know more about the history of the tenuous relationship between the United States and the Middle East.
CRAFT: If you can remember, what history did you learn in your pre-collegiate days?
GRAND A: In high school, I took World History as a freshman, and I took American History as a junior.
CRAFT: What and how many history courses have you taken here at Belmont? Please provide the course names and numbers if you can (e.g. HIS 4670 – The Tudor Monarchy, 1485-1603).
GRANDA: Freshman year (prior to becoming a history major – “boo”):
(1)HIS 1990 –Episodes in American Civil Rights History with Dr. Kuryla was the class that made me want to become a history major; I took this as part of a linked cohort class with Dr. David Curtis, the [Belmont University] English Department chair, who taught a phenomenal course on African American Literature.
Sophomore year (after becoming a history major – “yay”):
(2)HIS 2020 –The American Experience Since Reconstruction
(3)HIS 1010– World History to 1500
Junior year:
(4)HIS 3800 Latin America – The National Period
(5)HIS 2050– The Craft of History
(6)HIS 3540 –Modern China
(7)HIS 4950 –Eastern Europe: Holocaust & WWII
Senior year (finally):
(8)HIS 4650 –Russian Revolution & Civil War
(9)HIS 4320 –Seminar in the American West
(10)HIS 3050– Writing History
(11)HIS 4020 –History Internship
(12)HIS 3300 –1920s’ America
CRAFT: What is the most important thing you left your history classes with?
GRANDA: My gratitude for the patience and grace of the professors in relaying to us some very complicated historical narratives and details.
CRAFT: Is there a person you admire or model yourself after? Dr. Jackson-Abernathy? Dr. Schafer?  Dr. Mrs. Bisson? Dr. Mr. Bisson? Dr. Burgess?  None of the above?
GRANDA: Genghis Khan, mainly… But since you mentioned some of our esteemed history professors, I should say that each of them represents academic excellence in their own way. Any student at Belmont could learn something about the meaning of scholarship from taking a class taught by any one of the mentioned professors, and the students would be better for it.
CRAFT: Who is your favorite intellectual or historian? Why? Where do you see their historic relevance and importance?
GRANDA: Noam Chomsky.[7] Although I disagree with his views on a variety of issues, his research has yielded some results that interested me quite a bit. As part of the final project in Sociological Theory, an elective class I took during my senior year at Belmont, Dr. Ken Spring allowed us to choose one of several documentaries through which we would then analyze various sociological theories and issues. I chose to watch a documentary called Manufacturing Consent, a film based on the book of the same name composed by Noam Chomsky in the late 1980s. Manufacturing Consent presents evidence that raises the viewer’s eyebrows regarding the role of the mainstream media in the United States. If nothing else, it challenges us to think about how mainstream media news sources relate to our personal opinions regarding current events. I would encourage anyone to watch it at least once (don’t try to do it all in one sitting though, as it lasts several hours in duration).
CRAFT: Who is your favorite American president and/or politician, both past and recent/current, and why?
GRANDA: Past: Martin Van Buren;[8] no president since has been neither bold nor hairy enough (with the exception of maybe Rutherford B. Hayes)[9] to sport sideburns of such a tremendous caliber. For more information, consult Dr. Kuryla, a facial hair expert of American Presidents and intellectuals.
Recent: I can’t pick just one. First, it would have to be Bill Clinton.[10] Although I am repulsed by much of the man’s personal choices and some of his political leanings, the man had a great sense of humor, and the nostalgic America of our childhood flourished during his tenure. Alternatively, I have to say Ronald Reagan[11] because of his charm and his leadership throughout a critical period during the Soviet-American standoff.
CRAFT: Did you join the national honor history society, Phi Alpha Theta?
GRANDA: Yes, I did, and I can say that with great pride because I was inducted during the same class as you, Mr. Craft.
CRAFT: Did you join the campus social club, the Belmont History Society, during your undergraduate days at Belmont?
GRANDA: Regretfully, I must admit that I did not join the Belmont History Society during my undergraduate career. Some of my best friends and esteemed peers within the Department were a part of it, however, and I was overjoyed to observe their fruitful efforts as they resolved to build a rich tradition of academic excellence within the student body and History Department at Belmont.
CRAFT: How did you feel about helping me present my “Eugene V. Debs: The ‘Forgotten Red Saint’” academic research paper for the spring 2013 Phi Alpha Theta annual regional conference?
GRANDA: Words cannot do justice to describe how honored I was to be receive an invitation to be the orator of your tremendous research work. It was a great pleasure of mine that I will not forget.
CRAFT: What did you expect at the PAT conference?
GRANDA: A thrilling presentation from each of our prestigious department’s bright young scholars.
Thanks for reading, fellow lovers of history. But it ain’t over yet. Part two of my very exclusive interview with Mr. Seth Ross-Granda is next. So, stay tuned!
AW MML, HI



[1] Seth Russell Ross-Granda, personal interview, November 2013.
[2] Granda.
[3] Granda.
[4] Granda.
[5] Granda.
[6] Fidel Castro (1926-present) – Cuban revolutionary, prime minister (1959-1976), president (1976-2008).
[7] Noam Chomsky (1928-present) – multifaceted American scholar.
[8] Martin van Buren (1782-1862) – eighth President of the United States (18137-1841).
[9] Rutherford B. Hayes (1822-1893) – nineteenth President of the United States (1877-1881).
[10] Bill Clinton (1946-present) – forty-second President of the United States (1993-2001).
[11] Ronald Reagan (1911-2004) – fortieth President of the United States (1981-1989).