Joseph Murphyfontana Svjetlosti



ORRINGTON - Joseph Jeffery Murphy, 23, of Orrington, passed away suddenly on June 11, 2016. A devoted son, brother, uncle and grandson, Joe graduated from Brewer High School in 2012 and went on to become a motor transport operator in the Army National Guard from 2012 to 2015 as a Specialist E4. I am Joshua Sorbello's Mom. We've just received devastating news that, at the young age of 35, Joshua has Colon Cancer. Joshua has health insurance with a very high out of pocket deductible, and there are so many other costs involved when fighting this awful disease. Joseph Murphy passed away on August 16, 2019 in Lake Ronkonkoma, New York. Funeral Home Services for Joseph are being provided by Moloney's Lake Funeral Home. The Trustees, Faculty and Staff of The Mount Sinai Medical Center are deeply saddened by the death of Joseph Murphy, former Chancellor of the City University of New York.

I am a historian of nineteenth-century American specializing in antislavery politics and the origins of the Civil War and Reconstruction. I received my Ph.D. from the CUNY Graduate Center in 2016 under the advisement of James Oakes, with help from Eric Foner, David Waldstreicher, Andrew Robertson, and Richard Bernstein. My work, broadly speaking, focuses on the “antislavery origins” of the sectional crisis, abolition, and federal Reconstruction policy.

Joseph Murphyfontana Svjetlosti

Joseph Murphy Fontana Svjetlosti Park

My current book project, Neither a Slave nor a King: The Antislavery Project and the Origins of the Civil War, challenges the predominant view of antislavery politics as fundamentally conservative on slavery and the rights of African-Americans. A political history, the book uses the chief platform of antislavery politics - a constitutional program to ground federal policy in the legal presumption of freedom – to interrogate the relationship between radicals and moderates within the “broad” antislavery movement, and to understand the movement’s influence as a whole on the structure of national politics and the progress of the sectional crisis.

Focusing on the institutional side of American antislavery, I show how political abolitionists pushed antislavery politicians to embrace radical policies for universal abolition and black equality, changing the terms of slavery debate in national politics, even as those same politicians translated radical impulses into a viable political project with institutional clout and broad public support. I argue that it was this intra-movement dynamism that made the Republican Party such a potent threat to slaveowners in the 1850s. Working within the confines of the existing constitutional order, Lincoln’s party instituted a dramatic break from contemporary thought and policy on federal power, slavery, and African-American rights. Graco nautilus booster seat instructions. Among other things, the book shows how ideas and policies on the political margins can move to the center of American politics, and how radicals have worked within liberal democracy to reform liberal institutions.

The animating principle in my teaching philosophy is the idea that ability is elastic, that one’s aptitude is constantly stretched by changes in one’s environment and repertoire of ideas. My overarching motivation as a teacher is to impart this theory of growth to students, not just through the knowledge I convey, but through the example I set as a humanist myself – someone who can show students the quiet value of continuous moral and intellectual improvement. Internalizing this belief is, I believe, the rite of passage to the life of the mind.

Joseph Murphyfontana SvjetlostiJoseph

The growth theory of education in turn shapes my chief objective as a history teacher: to help nurture a morally sound and informed citizenry, certainly of the United States, but also of the world. I teach students that, while the United States is at any given moment either more or less democratic or more or less oligarchic, its structure remains that of a republic – a representative democracy – that demands our active participation as citizens. Descargar libro arqueologia prohibida pdf. In practical terms, in a US History classroom, my commitment to humanism and citizenship is refracted through helping students master content and think critically about America’s past, to develop a healthy skepticism for navigating the Syclla of idealism and the Charybdis of cynicism – all essential features of democratic deliberation, to say nothing of the good life.

Joseph Murphy Fontana Svjetlosti Ca

Joseph murphy fontana svjetlosti ca

A central feature of my academic career has been organizing conferences and discussions that foster dialogue between social and cultural historians of abolitionism on the one hand, and political and legal historians of antislavery on the other. 2014’s “Antislavery Bulwark” conference, which I co-organized with John Stauffer and James Oakes, gathered top scholars in the field for a two-day discussion of the antislavery origins of the Civil War. That discussion continued with my AHA roundtable on antislavery politics in early 2015; the “Emancipations, Reconstructions, and Revolutions” conference, on African-American politics in the “long nineteenth century,” in early 2017; and last fall’s “Disunion in Civil War America: Parallels for Today?” conference at Yale, on the political crisis of the 1850s, which I co-organized with David Blight and James Oakes. I’ve discussed the antislavery project at international conferences, including at Leiden and Hull universities, explaining the peculiarities of antebellum American federalism to non-U.S. scholars. Altogether, these conferences embody my professional mission of incorporating scholars’ specialized findings into a larger, more cohesive narrative about nineteenth-century American politics and reform.

Joseph Murphy Fontana Svjetlosti Center

I am currently the Interim Grants Associate at Humanities New York, the state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. During the 2017-18 academic year, I was the NEH Fellow at the New-York Historical Society, where I conducted further research for my book manuscript . Before that I was the Interim Associate Director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography, located at the Graduate Center, CUNY. For over seven years I taught as an adjunct instructor at Hunter College and John Jay College of Criminal Justice, as well as the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, where I taught online graduate courses. Between 2010 and 2013, I was an administrator at the Gotham Center for New York City History.