March Into Romance: New Releases to Fall in Love With!
Raymond Arsenault
Raymond Arsenault is the John Hope Franklin Professor of
Southern History, Director of the University Honors
Program, and Co-Director of the Florida Studies Program at
the University of South Florida, St. Petersburg, where he
has taught since 1980. A specialist in the political,
social, and environmental history of the American South, he
has also taught at the University of Minnesota, Brandeis
University, and at the Universite d’Angers, in France,
where he was a Fulbright Lecturer in 1984-85. From 1980 to
1987, he was the co-director of the Fulbright Commission’s
Summer Institute on American Studies at the University of
Minnesota; he has served as a consultant for numerous
museums and public institutions, including the National
Park Service, the National Civil Rights Museum, the Rosa
Parks Museum, and the United States Information Agency; and
he has lectured on American history and culture in a number
of countries, including France, Great Britain, Belgium,
Germany, Greece, Norway, Turkey, and Jordan.
Arsenault was educated at Princeton University (B.A. 1969)
and Brandeis University, where he received his Ph.D. in
1981. He is the author of two prize-winning books–The Wild
Ass of the Ozarks: Jeff Davis and the Social Bases of
Southern Politics (1984, pbk 1988) and St. Petersburg and
the Florida Dream, 1888-1950 (1988, pbk. 1998), and of “The
End of the Long Hot Summer: The Air Conditioner and
Southern Culture,” Journal of Southern History (1984),
which won the Southern Historical Association’s Green-
Ramsdell Prize. An edited volume, Crucible of Liberty: 200
Years of the Bill of Rights, was published during the 1991
Bicentennial of the Bill of Rights. His recent publications
include Paradise Lost? (2005) an anthology (co-edited with
Jack Davis) on the environmental history of Florida, The
Changing South of Gene Patterson: Journalism and Civil
Rights, 1960-1968 (2002), co-edited with Roy Peter Clark,
and “The Public Storm: Hurricanes and the State in
Twentieth-Century America,” in Wendy Gamber, et al. eds.,
American Public Life and the Historical Imagination
(2003). He is currently working on two books: Freedom
Riders, which will be published by Oxford University Press
in 2005; and Landmarks of American Sports, co-edited with
Randall Miller. Since 1996 he and USF history colleague
Gary Mormino have served as the co-editors of the
University Press of Florida’s highly acclaimed “Florida
History and Culture” book series. An active member of the
Florida affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union
since the early 1980s, he served two terms as state
president (1998-2000) and received the Nelson Poynter Civil
Liberties Award in 2003.