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Dissident Prof Education Project, Inc.

"A New Beginning," or a Revised Past?: Barack Obama's Cairo Speech

"A New Beginning," or a Revised Past?: Barack Obama's Cairo Speech

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On June 4, 2009, President Barack Obama delivered a much-anticipated speech at Cairo University in Egypt.

Coming on the heels of Obama's worldwide "Apology Tour," the speech signaled not only how Obama viewed his country, but how he would set himself apart in "a new beginning" that would change America's course from what he presented as a dangerous and belligerent approach by his predecessor, President George W. Bush.

The version of history that Obama presented, however, cast the Middle East and Islam in a more favorable light than the facts would warrant. The President's Cairo Speech carries great historical and political significance because it set out Obama's Middle East policy and his vision of the United States in the international arena.

It also presents insights into the character of the president. Like George Washington's Farewell Address and John F. Kennedy's Inauguration Speech, the Cairo Speech will likely be studied as an important document in American history. Obama's promise of "a new beginning" cannot yet be evaluated critically. Unfolding events - and the outcome of the promises made -- will determine the greatness of the speech. This happens only in retrospect, with the benefit of historical reflection.

Unfortunately, the Cairo Speech is already being reprinted in anthologies and textbooks and is taught to students as a hallmark of rhetorical brilliance and as an unalloyed diplomatic victory. The cult of personality that has sprung up around President Obama is carried into classrooms where educators "teaching the speech" encourage students to unquestioningly accept the President's calls for action and support.

Such directives stand opposite to American traditions and ideals of independent thinking and self-government, as well as to standards of excellence in scholarship. This Dissident Prof Guide offers resources for critical thinking to students who are being asked to admire, not analyze, Obama's Cairo Speech. The Guide includes a handy point-by-point analysis of the speech, a bibliography of trusted historical sources, and an account of the numerous errors of historical fact, including those pointed out by commentators and historians in the days following the speech's delivery.

It will serve as a handy reference for all who might wish to understand and analyze this pivotal moment in our nation's history.

This book will: Help the student write an A paper without compromising his principles; Help the concerned citizen make informed and reasoned arguments. Dissident Prof Guide Books are written by professors in the field and are designed to give reader-friendly advice in a succinct and lively style. Both authors, Mary Grabar and Brian Birdnow, hold Ph.D.'s (in English and history, respectively) and have each taught at the college level for decades. Both are widely published authors of articles and commentaries in general interest publications as well.

Author: Brian E. Birdnow, Mary Grabar
Publisher: Dissident Prof Education Project, Inc.
Published: 08/14/2012
Pages: 102
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.32lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.21d
ISBN: 9780986018305

About the Author
Mary Grabar earned her Ph.D. in English from the University of Georgia in 2002. She has written extensively on education, politics, and American culture for such publications as Townhall, PJ Media, The Weekly Standard, Roll Call, Minding the Campus, Accuracy in Media, and many others. She has written several reports on radicalism in education and participated in several conferences sponsored by America's Survival. She appears frequently on radio and television to discuss issues in education. In 2011, she launched her non-profit, Dissident Prof Education Project, Inc., and writes for and edits the Dissident Prof website. Mary is also a published poet and fiction writer, and currently teaches English at Emory University. Brian Birdnow earned his Ph.D. in American History from St. Louis University in 2000. His book, The St. Louis Five: The Smith Act, Communism and the Federal Courts in Missouri 1952-1958, was published by the Edwin Mellen Press in 2005. His most recent book, Gerald Ford: The All-American President (Nova Science Foundation), was published in 2011. His other publications include six chapters in the American Presidential Encyclopedia, articles in the Claremont Review and Townhall, and reviews in The Journal of American History. He currently teaches as an adjunct professor of history at Lindenwood University and at Harris Stowe State University, both in Missouri.

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