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Professor, Author, Graduate Adam Rothman ’89 Will Be Heyburn
Speaker in History |
| November 2005 |
Adam
Rothman, Milton Academy Class of 1989, associate professor of American
history at Georgetown University, and author of the recently published
Slave Country will come to Milton on November 30. Professor
Rothman is the 2005–2006 Henry Heyburn Speaker.
Reviewed in the most recent Milton Magazine by Academic
Dean David Ball ’88, Slave Country looks at how the
institution of slavery flourished in the early national United States.
“The slave population more than tripled in the 50 years after
independence,” Mr. Ball summarizes. Slave Country
focuses on the Deep South, “where the growth and evolution
of slavery was most pronounced,” he writes.
Professor Rothman states that by 1820, the region that included
Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama had emerged as “the leading
edge of a dynamic, expansive slave regime incorporated politically
into the United States and firmly tied to the transatlantic system
of commodity exchange.” He argues that “contingent global
forces, concrete policies pursued by governments and countless small
choices made by thousands of individuals” drove the expansion
of slavery.
In reviewing Professor Rothman’s book, Mr. Ball notes that
“even as Adam [Rothman] makes arguments about economic forces
and political deal-making he returns regularly to the lived experience
of the people who by choice or by coercion shaped the Deep South.”
Professor Rothman’s courses at Georgetown indicate the area
of his scholarship within American history: History of the Atlantic
World; History of New Orleans; and Society and Politics in Jeffersonian
America, and Slavery and Abolition in the Atlantic World, for example.
Professor Rothman earned M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in American History
from Columbia University. He did his undergraduate work at Yale,
and graduated in 1993 Magna Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa, with Distinction
in the Major.

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