香港六合彩资料

September 19, 2024
few clouds Clouds 76 °F

Civil discourse

Blog and books are outlet for Civil War writers

The idea for Emerging Civil War (ECW), a blog edited by Chris Mackowski, PhD 鈥12, didn鈥檛 spring from some high-minded lecture or doctoral thesis 鈥 it was the result of three friends hanging out, shooting the breeze.

鈥淢y co-founder, Kris White, and I were at the Jackson Shrine one night 鈥 it鈥檚 the building where Stonewall Jackson died 鈥 and our friend Jake lived in the caretaker鈥檚 cottage,鈥 Mackowski says. 鈥淎s was often our habit, we were just sitting around on the porch, smoking cigars, drinking a couple of beers, refighting the war. And that鈥檚 where the idea of the blog came from.鈥

That laid-back conversation led to a blog that has been running steadily since 2011. According to its website, , 鈥淓merging Civil War serves as a public history-oriented platform for sharing original scholarship related to the American Civil War.鈥 Unlike more academic-focused Civil War blogs, ECW is meant to be accessible by the general public.

鈥淭ypically, students who go off to grad school and get their PhD in history tend to publish in journals, for each other. Whereas the Civil War has this huge external audience of the general public who like to go to battlefields, watch Civil War movies, read books. So we鈥檙e really trying to reach out to them, trying to really share history, get people interested and connect them with the history,鈥 he says.

But what makes the Civil War so popular compared to, say, other major historical events in America?

It was 鈥渙ur nation鈥檚 great trauma,鈥 Mackowski says. 鈥淚 think people are captured by the inherent drama of the story. I see this particularly in the South 鈥 people are still connected by blood to that story. Their great-great-great grandfather fought for one side or the other. The war is still very real in a lot of ways for a lot of people.鈥

Mackowski started out with a team of eight, which has since ballooned to 30. Managing all of those people, he says, is 鈥渁 lot like herding cats,鈥 but he gets to work with a group of sharp intellectuals who churn out a steady flow of rich and diverse content. The blog posts, on average, two to three times a day.

鈥淥ne of the founding principles that we organized around was 鈥榯he rising tide lifts all boats,鈥 and if a bunch of us aren鈥檛 participating, then I鈥檝e got a bunch of other people who are still carrying the weight. So that collective effort really makes it feel more like a magazine than a traditional blog. It really gives us a lot of variety in our content, too.鈥

The blog isn鈥檛 without its challenges, however. One issue has been connecting to the audience: older males who don鈥檛 typically embrace social media.

鈥淏ridging that disconnect has been one of our challenges. But because we鈥檙e trying to get younger audiences reading and also interested, using social media has been extremely helpful for us in connecting new readers to Civil War history,鈥 he says.

So far it鈥檚 worked out for Mackowski and his team. The blog is thriving, ECW has published a few books and they鈥檒l soon launch a podcast.

鈥淟ast year at our fifth anniversary, Kris鈥 wife said, 鈥楬ey, not too bad for three idiots sitting on a porch,鈥欌 Mackowski says, chuckling.

Posted in: Arts & Culture, Harpur