
Henry T. Edmondson III
Henry T. Edmondson III, is Carl Vinson Professor of Political Science and Public Administration at Georgia College. He writes in several areas, including Politics and Literature, Educational Philosophy, European Politics, and American Political Thought. His most recent book is The Course of Human Events: American Government for the 21st Century (Kendall Hunt Publishing, August 2020).
Read Henry T. Edmondson III’s Essays
Given that 2025 marks the 160th anniversary of the end of the American Civil War, it seems appropriate to consider one of America’s statesmen, Ulysses S. Grant and his highly regarded Personal Memoirs, written neck break speed, as he was rapidly dying from tongue and throat cancer.
Most histories are written about events that have actually transpired, unless they are fanciful “alternative histories.”
If you want to understand our contemporary politics and culture, you must have a working knowledge of the major revolutions of the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries.
Has the practice of “civility” been left behind? Though it has never been practiced as well as it should, it nonetheless has supported a system of social manners, without which it is difficult to live together.
Tolkien’s collected correspondence was first published in 1981; a new edition was released in late 2023, The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien: Revised and Expanded Edition, which adds more letters to the previous correspondence collection.
Over three football fields in length, almost one football field in width, twenty-five stories high, serving15,000 meals a day, and powered by two state-of-the-art A1B nuclear reactors, the gargantuan USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) is the largest warship in the world.
The men and women of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives love their job so much they are afraid to do it; because if they do it, they may lose it.
The founding of the United States is one of the greatest events in world history.