UMBC Department of American Studies

UMBC Department of American Studies This is the official page for UMBC's Department of American Studies. All faculty, staff, alum, and current majors are invited to join.

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Check out the Sabor de Highlandtown project done in collaboration with Prof. Sarah Fouts’s Food Ethnography course, Sout...
05/28/2024

Check out the Sabor de Highlandtown project done in collaboration with Prof. Sarah Fouts’s Food Ethnography course, Southeast CDC, and Maryland Traditions MSAC. Go eat in Highlandtown and be a part of these exciting stories!

A food ethnography project about the most recent history of immigrant communities living in Highlandtown, Baltimore and their foods.

Remembering Ed Orser (1941 – 2024)“How do you ground the American experience in something you can get your hands around?...
01/12/2024

Remembering Ed Orser (1941 – 2024)

“How do you ground the American experience in something you can get your hands around?” asks Orser. “I always thought it was helpful to bring things down to a certain scale. Maybe because that’s as much as I could try to get my mind around, but also it is because in some ways, that’s where we live our lives.”

– W. Ed Orser, quoted in Locale Hero, UMBC Review, by Richard Byrne https://umbc.edu/stories/locale-hero/

It is with great sadness that we share the news that W. Edward (Ed) Orser passed away on Monday, January 8, 2024. Ed was a beloved professor and researcher in the Department of American Studies at UMBC for over forty years. Upon his retirement in 2010, and in his honor, the Orser Center for the Study of Community, Place, and Culture was established at UMBC to foster innovative collaborations among scholars, students, and local community organizations across the disciplines whose research and teaching explore place-based study, especially focused on the Baltimore region.

Ed Orser earned a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of New Mexico and came to UMBC in 1969, just four years after the university was formed, as one of the founding faculty members of the Department of American Studies. He served numerous terms as chair of the department and developed foundational courses still taught today.

Ed’s teaching and research interests were always closely connected. His courses on “Community in American Culture” and “American Environments: Landscape and Culture” not only became central parts of the American Studies curriculum, but led to a variety of research projects with students and to themes that became the focus of his own scholarship. Ed’s work as a publicly-engaged scholar in the local community was an inspiration for the Minor in Public Humanities for the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), which is fittingly located in the Orser Center in American Studies. https://cahss.umbc.edu/publichumanities/

Ed’s publications explore the social and cultural dynamics of the Baltimore region. His examination of the phenomenon of massive racial change in West Baltimore during the 1950s and 1960s led to the first book-length study of blockbusting and its consequences in post-World War II cities: Blockbusting in Baltimore: The Edmondson Village Story (University Press of Kentucky, 1994, 1997). Blockbusting in Baltimore was an influential, and widely imitated, text that is still cited in emerging scholarship on Baltimore and cities like it. https://www.kentuckypress.com/9780813109350/blockbusting-in-baltimore/

A collaborative research and teaching project with Professor Joseph Arnold of the History Department, resulted in an on-campus exhibition and the co-authored publication of From Village to Suburb: Catonsville, 1880-1940 (Donning Publishing Company, 1989). His first book, Searching for a Viable Alternative: The Macedonia Cooperative Community, 1937-1958 (Burt Franklin, 1981) explored the effort by a group of pacifists to establish an alternative community in North Georgia during and following World War II. https://www.arcadiapublishing.com/collections/the-history-press-1/products/9781596294769

https://www.balmori.com/portfolio/the-gwynns-fall-trail-masterplan

Articles on related topics have appeared in such journals as American Studies, Church History, the Maryland Historical Magazine, the International Journal of Oral History, the Public Historian, and the Journal of Urban History. Ed’s interest in environmental history in the Baltimore area resulted in publication of The Gwynns Falls: Baltimore Greenway to the Chesapeake Bay (The History Press, 2008) and the article, “A Tale of Two Park Plans: The Olmsted’s Vision for Baltimore and Seattle, 1903” (Maryland Historical Magazine, Winter 2003). His public history activity included co-authorship of The Gwynns Falls Trail Master Plan (with Diana Balmori, et al., 1995).

Ed received the UMBC Presidential Teaching Award in 1999 and the University System of Maryland Regents Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2003. The Baltimore Historical Society conferred Historian Honors recognition upon him in 2007.

Though deeply committed to Baltimore and UMBC, Ed also taught American Studies in a variety of international settings. In 1990-1991 he served as Senior Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Zagreb in Yugoslavia. In 2007, he taught in the American Studies Department at the University of Swansea in Wales. Prior to coming to UMBC, Ed served as a United States Peace Corps Volunteer teacher in Ethiopia. In his substantial service role at UMBC he was President of the Faculty Senate (1996-8) and a member of numerous university committees.

In retirement Ed served as president of the Friends of Maryland’s Olmsted Parks & Landscapes, a preservation and advocacy organization, and as Coordinator of the Urban Resources Initiative Internship program, which places interns with projects in Baltimore’s Department of Recreation and Parks and the Parks & People Foundation. https://www.olmstedmaryland.org/

Ed and his wife Jo lived for many years in the Hunting Ridge neighborhood of Baltimore and he was known to bike to the UMBC campus. Ed and Jo recently moved to Charlestown Senior Living in Catonsville, where Ed continued to enjoy connecting with UMBC alumni and faculty.

Ed will be remembered for his contributions to how we understand cities, especially Baltimore, and issues of environmental justice. He influenced generations of students and mentored many faculty members. His kindness, humility, and generosity will be greatly missed in the Department of American Studies, the Orser Center, and across the UMBC campus.

We send our sincere condolences to Ed’s beloved family and invite the UMBC community to attend a memorial service celebrating Ed's long and rich life at 11 a.m. on Saturday, January 20, at Salem Lutheran Church, 905 Frederick Road in Catonsville. All who knew and loved him are invited to attend. In lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions be made to Salem Lutheran Church https://salem-catonsville.org/ or the Charlestown Scholars' Fund https://ccicharlestown.org/giving/scholars-fund-april-may/

In honor of Ed’s long contributions to the fields of urban and American studies, the Department of American Studies and the Orser Center are co-sponsoring a Humanities Forum lecture by noted urban historian Davarian Baldwin on May 1, 2024. https://dreshercenter.umbc.edu/events/upcoming/event/124826/

American Studies & the Orser Center will continue to find ways to recognize the work of Ed Orser and his engagement with the study of place and community in the Baltimore region. A donation can be made to support that work in Ed’s name on the Department’s Giving Page, https://amst.umbc.edu/alumni/give/

You can read Ed’s obituary here: https://www.cremationsocietyofmd.com/obituaries/William-Edward-Orser?obId=30314855

Congratulations to Prof. Nicole King and Sonia Eaddy who were awarded the 2023 Owners’ Council of America Crystal Eagle ...
02/16/2023

Congratulations to Prof. Nicole King and Sonia Eaddy who were awarded the 2023 Owners’ Council of America Crystal Eagle Award for their work to preserve Baltimore’s Poppleton Neighborhood!

From the Owners’ Council:
“The award commemorates their efforts to save the historic black neighborhood of Poppleton from being destroyed and replaced by an ill-conceived, poorly planned, and largely failed urban renewal project. …They intend to continue their grassroots community effort to force the City to consider the needs and desires of all stakeholders in any redevelopment that should take place, but particularly the residents of Poppleton.”

Join us tonight at Mera Kitchen Collective for an evening of delicious food, stories from Mera and Baltimore Field Schoo...
11/29/2022

Join us tonight at Mera Kitchen Collective for an evening of delicious food, stories from Mera and Baltimore Field School 2.0.

You don't want to miss this!
Free to attend, 6:30-9pm at 1301 N Calvert St

Baltimore Field School presents: Stories of Mera Kitchen Collective along with a showcase of Baltimore Field School projects!

Did you catch Professor Fouts on WBAL last Friday? If you missed it, don't worry-- it's online!WBAL visited Pedro Silva,...
10/13/2022

Did you catch Professor Fouts on WBAL last Friday? If you missed it, don't worry-- it's online!

WBAL visited Pedro Silva, owner of Tex Mex Corner Deli and Grocery on South Highland Avenue. Silva is featured in a project designed by Fouts and UMBC students called, "Sabor de Highlandtown”

During this Hispanic Heritage Month, residents and visitors might want to check out Highlandtown.

Learn more about the important public humanities work of Department of American Studies assistant professor Dr. Sarah Fo...
06/22/2022

Learn more about the important public humanities work of Department of American Studies assistant professor Dr. Sarah Fouts:

“In collaboration with Black and Brown food vendors, Project Neutral Ground will showcase the culture, complexities, and potential futures of post-disaster economies,” says Fouts. “We seek to dismantle barriers and foster dialogue to build networks across factors like race, gender, and class in order to foment an understanding of these vendors as they occupy and vie for city spaces.”

The success of taco trucks and Soul Food pop-ups in post-Katrina New Orleans has raised complex questions about food truck regulation, worker rights, immigration issues, and local vs. tourist experiences that often pit these communities against each other. UMBC's Sarah Fouts and local organizers Toy...

We are proud to announce our May 2022 graduates, Alex Tomlinson and Rebecca Noppenberger! Thanks for being such an impor...
05/25/2022

We are proud to announce our May 2022 graduates, Alex Tomlinson and Rebecca Noppenberger! Thanks for being such an important part of our AMST Team and wishing you all the best on your next steps!

We are reopening the Program Management Specialist position In the Department of American Studies. We are a great small ...
05/18/2022

We are reopening the Program Management Specialist position In the Department of American Studies. We are a great small department with a lot of cool public humanities projects and social justice work in Baltimore. Please share with anyone who has 2 years of admin experience and may be interested:

What kind of position are you looking for? Staff Faculty – Link to listing on Higheredjobs.com UMBC Faculty Jobs Note: UMBC is in the process of developing a new website for Faculty Jobs. Please check both links when looking for a position. Thank you. Librarians Part-time Instructor/Adjunct Facult...

Spread the word about this amazing hybrid course with UMBC alum Prof. Courtney Hobson working with Community Fellow Bett...
04/19/2022

Spread the word about this amazing hybrid course with UMBC alum Prof. Courtney Hobson working with Community Fellow Betty Bland-Thomas of Sharp-Leadenhall, one of Baltimore's oldest Black neighborhoods. It's going to be fantastic. Summer 2022.

Congratulations to Tamara Bhalla, associate professor, American studies, for winning the Marilyn E. Demorest Award for F...
04/08/2022

Congratulations to Tamara Bhalla, associate professor, American studies, for winning the Marilyn E. Demorest Award for Faculty Advancement... Dr. Bhalla will collaborate with the campus leadership to host a series of junior faculty book workshops.

At UMBC’s 2022 Presidential Faculty and Staff Awards (PFASA), Tamra Mendelson said she loves “getting to the core of a concept” in her research and teaching. As awardee after awardee addressed the audience, both in person and online, it became clear that all shared the same “core concept” ...

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