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Messiah University Honors Program

One University Avenue
Suite 3044
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055

 

Email: honorsprogram@messiah.edu
Phone: 717-766-2511
Fax: 717-796-4790

Staff

James B. LaGrand
James B. LaGrand

Director of the Honors Program; Professor of American History

James B. LaGrand

Director of the Honors Program; Professor of American History

JLaGrand@messiah.edu 717-766-2611 ext.7381

Educational Background

  • Ph.D., U.S. History, Indiana University, 1997
  • M.A., U.S. History, Indiana University, 1992
  • B.A., History, Calvin College, 1990

Biography

James B. LaGrand is a historian of modern America. He teaches a wide range of courses on American history since the mid-nineteenth century, and his research and writing focuses on the intertwining of political and social history during this time. He serves as a referee, editorial reviewer, and consultant for journals, scholarly presses, and textbooks. Before moving to Pennsylvania to teach at Messiah College in 1997, he lived in Boston; Ottawa, Canada; Grand Rapids, Michigan; and Bloomington, Indiana. He and his wife, Betsy, and their three children live in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.

Courses Taught

  • HIST 142: U.S. History, 1865-present
  • HIST 151: "The Wild, Wild West": Battles Over the American West and the Western Image
  • HIST 154: Vietnam War America
  • HIST 258: Historical Methods (History sophomore seminar)
  • HIST 346: U.S. History, 1890-1945
  • HIST 347: U.S. History, 1945-present
  • HIST 351: Native American History
  • HIST 352: African-American History since 1865
  • HIST 355: U.S. Urban History
  • HIST 393: Public History
  • HIST 399: Nationalism and its Discontents in Modern America
  • HIST 401: Historiography and the Philosophy of History (History senior seminar)
  • HONR 497: My Country, Right or Wrong? America and its Critics (honors senior seminar)
  • IDCR 151: Created and Called for Community (first-year core course)
  • IDWV 300: The Wages of Sin is Death: Breaking Bad as the New American Tragedy

Selected Publications

 

  • . Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 2002. Paperback edition: 2005.
  • The Cresset Vol. 80, No. 5 (Trinity 2017): 20-27.
  • “The Problems of Preaching through History.” In Confessing History: Explorations in Christian Faith and the Historian’s Vocation, edited by John Fea, Jay Green, and Eric Miller. Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press, 2010. pp. 187-213.
  • “Indian Work and Indian Neighborhoods: Adjusting to Life in Chicago during the 1950s.” In Enduring Nations: Native Americans in the Midwest, edited by R. David Edmunds. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 2008.
  • “Urban Indians in the U.S. and Indian Identity: An Examination of Chicago from the 1940s through the 1970s.” In Not Strangers In These Parts: Urban Aboriginal Peoples, edited by David Newhouse and Evelyn Peters. Ottawa: Policy Research Initiative, 2003. Translated and published in French as “L’identité amérindienne urbaine dans une grande ville des États-Unis: Le Cas de Chicago des Années 1950 aux années 1970.” In Des Gens D’ici: Les Autochtones en Milieu Urbain.
  •  Public Discourse (November 7, 2016).
  •  The Federalist (March 15, 2016).
  •  The Federalist (May 19, 2014).
  •  Patheos (October 15, 2012).

Selected Presentations

  • “Bach’s Bible and Ours,” Baylor Symposium on Faith and Culture, Baylor University, October 2017.
  • “Insiders and Outsiders in American Indian History,” American Society for Ethnohistory annual meeting, Nashville TN, November 2016.
  • “Revisiting Harrisburg’s City Beautiful Movement amid the Digital Turn,” Pennsylvania Historical Association annual meeting, Grantville PA, October 2015.
  • “The War on Poverty at 50,” Harrisburg Rotary Club, February 2014.
  • “Martin Luther King’s ‘Letter from Birmingham Jail’ Across the 海角乱伦社区,” Association for Core Texts and Courses (ACTC) annual conference, Ottawa, Canada, April 2013.
  • “The Promise and Problems of Progressivism in Industrial America,” Center for Vision and Values Lecture Series, Grove City College, March 2012.
  • “Protestant-Inspired Reform in the City: The Search for Solidarity and Connection,” Conference on Faith and History biennial meeting, George Fox University, October 2010.

Current Activities

James is currently working on a project entitled “Reform in the American Grain: The Idea of the Nation in Modern Social Movements” which explores the role played by American nationalism and national identity in various social movements--including the labor movement, anti-war movements, the civil rights movement, and the New Left and New Right. A second project focuses on the progressive movement from early-twentieth-century America and the ways in which its themes of connection, solidarity, and moral reform continue to be heard in contemporary social, political, and religious life.

Cris Mizerak

Honors Program Assistant

Cris Mizerak

Honors Program Assistant

cmizerak@messiah.edu 717-766-2511 ext. 7099