Ronald M Johnson
Title
Professor Emeritus
Department
HISTORY DEPARTMENT
General profile
Portrait

Phone
202-687-6061
Location
609 ICC
Bio
Ronald Johnson is a specialist in nineteenth-century (19th) American cultural history with an emphasis in gender, race, and post-Civil War culture.
He is the co-author (with Abby Arthur Johnson) of Propaganda and Aesthetics: the Literary Politics of African American Periodicals in the Twentieth Century (University of Massachusetts Press, rev. ed. 1992) and is currently working (with Abby Arthur Johnson) on a cultural history of Congressional Cemetery, Washington D.C. as the first national cemetery in the United States. Professor Johnson has served on the American Studies Committee since 1975 and was director/chair from 1979-85 and 19892000.
Professor Johnson offers courses on the American cultural experience, focusing on literary developments, such as his course on "Mark Twain's America, 1870-1900," or technological and reform history as in his "Perfecting America: Reform, Technology, and Society, 1830-1900." He also teaches a course on "What Is An American? -- Studies in Cultural Identity in the United States."
He is the co-author (with Abby Arthur Johnson) of Propaganda and Aesthetics: the Literary Politics of African American Periodicals in the Twentieth Century (University of Massachusetts Press, rev. ed. 1992) and is currently working (with Abby Arthur Johnson) on a cultural history of Congressional Cemetery, Washington D.C. as the first national cemetery in the United States. Professor Johnson has served on the American Studies Committee since 1975 and was director/chair from 1979-85 and 19892000.
Professor Johnson offers courses on the American cultural experience, focusing on literary developments, such as his course on "Mark Twain's America, 1870-1900," or technological and reform history as in his "Perfecting America: Reform, Technology, and Society, 1830-1900." He also teaches a course on "What Is An American? -- Studies in Cultural Identity in the United States."
Education
- Ph.D. (1970) University of Illinois,
- M.A. (1965) University of Kansas,
- B.A. (1961) College of Emporia, Emporia, Kansas,
Upcoming Events
- Dec 3, 12:45pm-2:30am: Faculty Meeting
- Dec 3, 12:45pm-2:30am: Faculty Meeting
- Dec 11, 4:30pm-6:30pm: Russian History Seminar -Kelly O'Neill

