The Dimensions of the Midwestern History Revival: A Discussion of Between Loving and Leaving: Essays on the New Midwestern History

AHA Session 263
Sunday, January 11, 2026: 9:00 AM-10:30 AM
Williford B (Hilton Chicago, Third Floor)
Chair:
Jon Lauck, University of South Dakota
Papers:
The Midwest in World Perspective
Timothy Dean Draper, Waubonsee Community College
The Midwestern Small Town as an Interpretative Problem
Jason Stacy, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Toward an Artistic Anatomy of the Midwest
Jason Weems, University of California, Riverside
Comment:
Megan E. Birk, University of Tennessee

Session Abstract

The American Midwest is known as the “lost region” in American history, the place that has been the least studied in the nation despite its great size and influence. A decade ago, a group of scholars came together in an attempt to revive the study of the American Midwest and founded the Midwestern History Association and the journal Middle West Review. The annual meetings of the MHA over the past decade have generated a new corpus of work on the Midwest that is in need of assessment and discussion. To facilitate this discussion after a decade of work, several scholars contributed to a new collection of essays about the history of the region titled Between Loving and Leaving: Essays on the New Midwestern History (University of Oklahoma Press, fall 2025). This panel will analyze the past decade’s effort to revive Midwestern history and use the book Between Loving and Leaving to guide the discussion. Chicago is the ideal location for such a discussion. The book will be released shortly before the meeting.
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