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  • 'Unfamiliar Fishes' and Professor Vowell?

    By Joshua Kim March 27, 2011 5:37 pm EDT

    Would Unfamiliar Fishes be assigned to read in a history course?

    Would Sarah Vowell by hired as a history professor?

    Probably no on both counts, and that makes me a little sad.

    Sarah Vowell writes great history books. Unfamiliar Fishes traces the long-term results for the Hawaiian people, and monarchy, of the decision of a few New England evangelists to move to the archipelago in the early 19th century. The end results, including the loss of sovereignty and the eventual annexation by the U.S. may be predictable - but few of us (certainly not myself), know the details of the story. Sarah Vowell, as always, is the perfect person to teach us some history.

    Don't get me wrong. Sarah Vowell doesn't really need academia. She is doing just fine on her own. But we need Sarah Vowell, or at least more people like her. Scholars who perhaps do not take themselves so seriously, but can still manage to draw on primary sources to tell new stories.

    I imagine Sarah Vowell's lack of terminal credentials, in addition to the first person narrative and frequent insertions of hilarious personal details into her historical narratives, would somewhat disqualify her from the professional historian club.

    Our loss.

    Any other Sarah Vowell fans out there?

    What are you reading?

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Comments on 'Unfamiliar Fishes' and Professor Vowell?

  • Posted by Midwest prof on March 28, 2011 at 12:45pm EDT
  • Yes! Sarah Vowell is wonderful. She has that perfect so-nerdy-she's-kinda-cool vibe. Why not assign her work? Historians (and our students) would be better off if sometimes, just sometimes, we took ourselves a little less seriously and learned to tell better stories. They are no less significant for being told well.
  • Unfamiliary Fishes
  • Posted by Tom Ward , Professor of History at Spring Hill College on March 30, 2011 at 12:45pm EDT
  • Unfamiliar Fishes is being marketed by Penguin Academic and I assume it will end up as assigned reading in a number of history courses. I'm considering using it myself.