Background
Levine, Lawrence William was born on February 27, 1933 in New York City. Son of Abraham and Anne (Schmookler) Levine.
("The future is certain," according to an old Soviet joke,...)
"The future is certain," according to an old Soviet joke, "it is only the past that is unpredictable." But it is not solely in totalitarian societies that the past is contested terrain. Disagreements about the meaning and significance of past events and people have been part of the landscape in our own society from its inception. To the historian, therefore, the unpredictability of the past is no laughing matter. Indeed, so protracted have historical disputes become in recent years that there has been a growing conviction among many that the venerable craft of history is in a state of crisis. In this brilliant new collection of essays, Lawrence W. Levine, one of our premier writers of history and President-Elect of the Organization of American Historians, offers an incisive response to the controversy which rages in the academy today. This debate among historians does not concern, as one might think, conflicting interpretations of the past, but rather concentrates upon which past events, peoples, and cultures are significant enough to deserve our attention. Taking issue with those who desire "synthesis" above all else, Levine's book constitutes a passionate call for inclusion, a history that extends the traditional focus on the centers of political, economic, and social power to embrace the panoply of ethnic, racial, regional, occupational, class, and gender groups that have been ignored or distorted in the past, and subject areas--like folk and popular culture--that have been by-passed or denigrated as trivial. The fourteen essays included here seek not to erect new fences and shut more doors but to expand our knowledge, supplement our approaches, and broaden our historical vision. The Unpredictable Past offers eloquent discussions of American history and historiography at large, African-American culture, and, perhaps most fascinating, the times of the Great Depression during which film, radio, photography, and even the comic strip emerged as significant manifestations of a changing American popular culture. There are also trenchant examinations of folk songs and folktales, Marcus Garvey's role as a black leader in the 1920s, jazz and American culture, Hollywood's unique view of national government in Washington (especially as seen in the films of Frank Capra), even Shakespeare's role as the most popular playwright in nineteenth-century America. The immediacy of each essay is enhanced by the brief introductions that place each one not only in the context of Levine's career, but in that of American history as a whole. Through the course of the book, Levine demonstrates how history, from generation to generation, is viewed through the prism of an ever-changing present and rather than distorting our vision, offers us new ways of seeing things, fresh insights not only into the past, but into the present and the future as well. The Unpredictable Past is a remarkably wide-ranging lens for viewing the richly textured history of America.
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(EARLY HISTORY OF INDUSTRY & SCIENCE. Imagine holding hist...)
EARLY HISTORY OF INDUSTRY & SCIENCE. Imagine holding history in your hands. Now you can. Digitally preserved and previously accessible only through libraries as Early English Books Online, this rare material is now available in single print editions. Thousands of books written between 1475 and 1700 can be delivered to your doorstep in individual volumes of high quality historical reproductions. Ac...
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00FDVQGVS/?tag=2022091-20
Levine, Lawrence William was born on February 27, 1933 in New York City. Son of Abraham and Anne (Schmookler) Levine.
Bachelor of Arts, City College of New York, 1955; Master of Arts, Columbia University, 1957; Doctor of Philosophy, Columbia University, 1962.
Lecturer, City College of New York, 1959-1961;
instructor, Princeton University, 1961-1962;
assistant professor, University of California-Berkeley, 1962-1967;
associate professor, University of California-Berkeley, 1967-1970;
professor department history, University of California-Berkeley, 1970-1984;
Margaret Byrne professor, University of California-Berkeley, since 1984. Visiting professor U. East Anglia, Norwich, England, 1967-1968, Free U., Berlin, West Germany, 1977. National advisory board Center American Culture Studies Columbia University, 1983-1984.
Delivered the Massey lectures in American Culture, Harvard University, 1986, Merle Curli lectures, University of Wisconsin, 1991.
("The future is certain," according to an old Soviet joke,...)
(EARLY HISTORY OF INDUSTRY & SCIENCE. Imagine holding hist...)
(Book by Levine, Lawrence)
Author: Defender of the Faith, 1965, Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Folk Thought from Salvery to Freedom, 1977 (Chicago Folklore prize 1977), High Brow/Low Brow: The Emergence of Cultural Hierarchy in America, 1988, The Unpredictable Past: Explorations in American Cultural History, 1993, The Opening of the American Mind: Canons, Culture and History, 1996. Co-author: (with Cornelia Levine) The People and the President: America's Conversation with F.D.R., 2002. Co-editor: The Shaping of 20th-Century America, 1964, The National Temper, 1968.
Associate editor Journal American Folklore, 1985-1990. Editorial board: Societas: A Journal of Social History, 1970-1980.
President Congregation Beth El, Berkeley, 1979-1982. Member American Academy Arts and Sciences, American Studies Association (national council 1980-1982), American History Association (member council 1987-1990), Organization American Historians (executive board 1984-1987, 91-2006, president elect 1991-1992, president 1992-1993), American Folklore Society, American Film Institute, Society of America Historians.
Married Cornelia Roettcher, May 29, 1964. Children: Joshua, Issac. 1 stepson, Alexander Pimentel.