Marsha Barrett will contextualize the decline of moderation in U.S. politics
Craig Chamberlain, Illinois News Bureau
April 8, 2019
Marsha Barrett
Illinois history professor Marsha Barrett specializes in the study of modern U.S. political and African American history. Her ACLS Fellowship will support work on a book about Nelson Rockefeller, in which she examines his career as New York’s governor to contextualize the decline of centrism and moderation in U.S. politics. (Photo by L. Brian Stauffer.)

University of Illinois history professor Marsha Barrett is the recipient of a 2019 fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.

A specialist in modern U.S. political and African American history, Barrett is one of only 81 fellows chosen from more than 1,100 applicants, according to an ACLS news release.

The ACLS Fellowship supports scholars for six to 12 months of full-time research and writing. Barrett will use hers during the 2020 calendar year to complete a book manuscript on former New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, moderate Republicanism and racial liberalism during and after the civil rights movement.

Her book will consider the gubernatorial career of Rockefeller (1959-73) – also a frequent presidential candidate and later a vice president – to contextualize the decline of centrism and moderation in American politics, particularly in the Northeast, after the passage of mid-1960s federal civil rights legislation. (See the ACLS page on her fellowship.)

“My work reimagines the traditional political history that focuses solely on elected leaders and high politics by incorporating the concerns of social history, with an emphasis on racially inflected policies related to welfare, drug policies, policing and mass incarceration,” Barrett said. “I'm seeking to understand how and why punitive policies known for their disproportionate effect on racial minorities originated with a moderate governor who first made his name as an advocate for civil rights legislation.”

Founded in 1919, the ACLS is a nonprofit federation of 75 scholarly organizations, advancing American scholarship in the humanities and related social sciences. ACLS employs its $140 million endowment and $35 million annual operating budget to support scholarship in the humanities and social sciences, and to advocate for the centrality of the humanities in the modern world.

Read article: "Do what matters to you”
"Do what matters to you”
 When history professor Leslie J. Reagan entered her graduate program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison she and the other students in her cohort were told it was unlikely they would ever get an academic job. The field of women's history was...
Read article: What can we learn from the "The American Revolution" documentary?
What can we learn from the "The American Revolution" documentary?
 Filmmaker Ken Burns’ new documentary — a six-part series on the American Revolution — aired on PBS in November and is now streaming. The documentary describes the American Revolution as “a...
Read article: Historic Native American robes — the subject of an Illinois-led project — to be displayed at Versailles exhibition
Historic Native American robes — the subject of an Illinois-led project — to be displayed at Versailles exhibition
 Stunning robes created more than 300 years ago by Inohka, or “Illinois people” — Native American tribes whose homelands include Illinois — will be on public display at a special exhibition at the Palace of Versailles in France that opens this month. The exhibition will include one of the most...