“The series lets people go back to school for one class, to be a fly on the wall so viewers can get that classroom experience for one day,” said American History TV Coordinating Producer John McArdle. He notes that there is no dearth of college professors in the Washington, D.C. area—where C-SPAN is based—who they can feature.
“Michael came on my radar from his new book, ‘The End of Public Execution,’” said McArdle. “We’re always trying to find new faces and new places, and I saw that we had never been to Ithaca College before, so as we were formulating our series for the fall, I looked up his course and syllabus.”
Trotti’s teaching and research explore a range of issues in the American past—political, economic, and social—but he is particularly interested in pursuing the social implications of change. Once he agreed to the taping, Trotti tailored the syllabus for his Founding a Nation: U.S. History to 1877 course so it would fall on his lecture titled “Colonial Wars and Tensions,” in which he spends the first half of the class in the persona of a British citizen before switching to the perspective of a colonist.
“I chose this lecture for the C-SPAN taping because it is a particularly apt example of the way that people with different perspectives can look at the same events in entirely different ways,” said Trotti. “The students were great. They showed up, participated like it was a normal class, and altogether represented IC in a really nice way. If our teaching is getting plaudits in the press, it is in part due to the energy and hard work of our students.”
And the Lectures in History aren’t limited to the television screen, as McArdle says they are also one of C-SPAN’s most popular podcasts.
“These are what people want in a podcast: someone well-versed on a topic, with a little back and forth and Q and A with the students, and it lasts about an hour—about a commuter-length drive. People get to learn something new each time.”