I've been warning bloggers to remember that people may actually read what they write--and so to be cautious about what we write. Now, lo and behold I hear people are talking about Michelle Obama's 1985 senior thesis at Princeton! Talk about ancient history. (Via Politico, the thesis is up in four parts here, here, here, and here.) Not sure that we can draw a lot of inferences from what a college student wrote, twenty-two years ago. However, I'm also excited to hear discussion that links literary output with ideology. This is central to the mission of those of us who study "the history of the book."
This reminds me that some are looking even further back to Senator Clinton's Wellesley senior thesis. I wrote a little bit about Senator Clinton's thesis last fall over at propertyprof and I'm going to post a little bit of it here....
We were talking in my seminar the other day about the engagement of people in the nineteenth century with legal ideas--how newspapers published excerpts from judicial opinions, for instance. One of my students suggested that he thought the internet was, perhaps, bringing back some of that engagement (or at least the internet allows members of the public greater access to legal knowledge). Then he mentioned Hillary Clinton's senior thesis as an example of literature that people are now reading on the internet.
I hadn't heard this, so naturally I was excited, in part because it opens up for discussion the question whether what people write (or hear) when they are in college can be used as a gauge of their later beliefs. This is a topic I have great interest in for the nineteenth century. A couple years ago I spent an some time mining college literary addresses at the University of Alabama as a gauge of ideas in circulation around this place in the antebellum era. It resulted in an essay, "The Law of the Descent of the Mind: Law, History, and Civilization in Antebellum Literary Addresses." Pretty fun project, though the confidence intervals for drawing inferences may be broad (and hence perhaps you can't tell a whole lot). I'm still working on a much larger project on literary addresses in antebellum northern colleges and a book on antebellum moral philosophy and jurisprudence, based in significant part on readings of college texts.
Moreover, one of my favorite recent works of history, Peter Carmichael's The Last Generation draws heavily upon student writing to understand the hopes and ideas of antebellum Virginians on the eve of Civil War. Brilliant book--it's a great read. I wrote a review of it last year in Reviews in American History--I titled it "God and Man at the University of Virginia." All of this makes me think of our nation's loss of William Buckley this morning.
And I've spoken here already about the inferences one might draw about Justice Alito from his student note in the Yale Law Journal. (Not many according to the Justice himself, though.)
At any rate, through the magic of the internet we now have access to Senator Clinton's senior thesis, "There is only the Fight: An Analysis of the Alinsky Model." Draw your own inferences, though I suspect you'll find it tough to extrapolate much from this limited set of data.
Now, when is someone going to scan "Serving Honestly and Faithfully: A Quantitative Analysis of Indentured Servitude in Mid-Eighteenth Century Pennsylvania" and put it up on the net?
Alfred L. Brophy
Blogs are good for every one where we get lots of information for any topics nice job keep it up !!
Posted by: digital dissertation | January 05, 2009 at 07:10 AM