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Michael Aaron Rockland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael Aaron Rockland
Born1935 (age 88–89)
EducationB.A., 1955, M.A., 1960, Ph.D., 1968
Occupation(s)Author, journalist, professor

Michael Aaron Rockland is a writer and Professor of American Studies at Rutgers University. Despite the variety of his books and articles, the recurring interests in his writing—whether scholarship, memoir, journalism or fiction—are New Jersey culture and America on the international stage.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Dr. Michael Rockland - Mobility in America and New Jersey's identity crisis
  • The Authors Corner - An American Diplomat in Franco Spain (Extended Interview)

Transcription

(music playing) Dr. Michael Rockland: Well, I've been at Rutgers, come January it will be 40 years. I came here, hired as a Dean, originally. A lot of people say, well, don't you specialize in anything, I mean are you just all over the place? Well, you know, when I look over my work, my film work, and my fictional work, and my journalistic work, and my scholarly work, there probably is one common denominator. The one thing that runs through it all is the issue of mobility. They all have something to do with being on the road or being mobile or studying mobility. I wrote with my colleague Angus Gillespie about department, we wrote a book some years ago called "Looking for America on the New Jersey Turnpike." So, that's mobility, all my other work there's a mobility factor, I think in virtually all of it. I never set out to say "I'm going to do mobility" in everything I do, but it pretty well has turned out that way. Next spring I'm teaching a course called On the Road: Mobility in America, so I'm continuing that interest even in my teaching as well. Sometimes the most interesting research opportunity is somebody either lands or I help them land a terrific internship somewhere, where they get real experience, and we're going to give them 3 credits. However, half of what they have to do is to write a major paper with me, and I had one student there one time, and we came up with her project that was going to be as follows: New Jersey monthly has a circulation of about 100,000. Philadelphia Magazine, which is sold also in South Jersey, in South Jersey also has a circulation of about 100,000. New York Magazine, which is also sold in North Jersey, has a circulation of about 100,000. Right there you have New Jersey's problems in a nutshell. We're caught between these two giant cities. If you have people buying regional magazines and only one of them are buying New Jersey monthly, one third of them are buying New Jersey monthly, and the other two thirds of them are buying New York or Philadelphia, this tells us something of our problem that this state has. Anytime anybody bought New York Magazine in North Jersey or Philadelphia Magazine in Philadelphia, ask them, have a questionnaire, say look I have a question, I only have 5 questions I need to ask you, even walking them to their train. You know, why did you buy New York or why did you buy Philadelphia's instead of New Jersey if you live n New Jersey? The whole idea had to do with New Jersey's image, its identity crisis, or problems with identity, which I think have greatly improved in recent years. New Jersey identity, it's not really a crisis, it's a perpetual thing, which has improved. You don't hear as many Jersey jokes anymore as you used to. In a way I almost miss the Jersey jokes. We've become so much more popular than we were before, outside the state and inside the state. So, I think we've come a long way, I think we have a lot to proud of here. A lot of problems, a lot to be proud of. Announcer: If you'd like to learn more about Professor Rockland, please go to amerstudies.rutgers.edu/faculty/m_rockland.htm (music playing)

Life and career

Born in New York City, Rockland attended Hunter College. Upon graduation, he was drafted into the U.S. Navy and served two years in Yokosuka, Japan as a medic working in a locked psychiatric ward for American military personnel. This experience gave rise to his memoir, Navy Crazy.[1]

Honorably discharged in 1957, he began work on his Masters and Ph.D. in American Studies at the University of Minnesota. He was then attracted to government by John F. Kennedy.[2] Entering the diplomatic service in 1961, Rockland served seven years, including two with the American embassy in Argentina as a cultural officer and four with the embassy in Spain as both a cultural officer and Director of the Casa Americana.[3]

Leaving the diplomatic service in 1968 because of differences over the Vietnam War, he accepted a position in New Jersey as Executive Assistant to the Chancellor of Higher Education. Rutgers University then hired him as a dean whose main function would be negotiating peace between an increasingly rebellious, anti-Vietnam student body and faculty and the state legislature.[4]

After several years as a dean, he gave up administration, became a professor, and has ever since alternated between writing for scholarly and general audiences.

New Jersey culture

Four of Rockland's books and a movie focus on New Jersey. The first, which he co-authored, was Looking for America on the New Jersey Turnpike. The book documented the Turnpike as "the purest expression of a distinctly American industrial esthetic".[5]

Snowshoeing Through Sewers included stories such as "Afoot in New Jersey", about an ambulatory pilgrimage he made across the state. The author urges such urban adventures "through our own habitat" as equal to the traditional wilderness based ones.[6] The book, with ten such adventures, followed the PBS-funded movie, Three Days on Big City Waters, which concerned two Rutgers professors who paddled across New Jersey until they land among the ruins of Ellis Island and, eventually, reach Manhattan.[7] Rockland co-wrote the script for this film and acted the role of one of the professors.

Another New Jersey-oriented book, ethnically oriented and co-written, was titled The Jews of New Jersey: A Pictorial History.[8]

He was moved to write The George Washington Bridge: Poetry in Steel, an "affectionate history" of the bridge, when discovering that there had been countless books on the Brooklyn Bridge, while there had never been one on the George Washington.[9] The George Washington is still the busiest bridge in the world, and he considered it equal in importance to the Brooklyn from an historical, engineering, and aesthetic perspective.[10]

Rockland has been interviewed about these books on NPR, PBS, and other national and international media. All of Rockland's New Jersey writings argue for the importance of the state, contradicting its many critics who often regard it as a national joke.[11] Robert Pirsig, author of the classic, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, wrote about one of his New Jersey-oriented works, "Rockland isn't just observing ... he's in it all the way, fighting the old cliquès."[12]

In addition to his books, Rockland has written some sixty feature stories on New Jersey for the Sunday New York Times, for several general circulation magazines, but especially for New Jersey Monthly magazine, for which he is a contributing writer. Rockland also wrote the article in the Encyclopedia of New Jersey on New Jersey's image.[13]

Rockland pioneered the term and the course "Jerseyana" at Rutgers University and served for years as the cultural commentator on PBS's New Jersey Nightly News.

He has long argued for dropping New Jersey's nickname "The Garden State" (a misnomer for America's most densely populated state), in favor of the "Bill of Right's State", since New Jersey was first to ratify the first ten amendments to the Constitution.[14]

America on the international stage

As already suggested, Rockland's interest in America and the international scene began during his diplomatic career. His first book, Sarmiento's Travels in the United States in 1847, concerned the Argentine President, Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, and his friendship with Americans such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Horace Mann, about which virtually nothing had been known before. In this book he argued that the United States had all but ignored its sister nations of the hemisphere and that the time had come for Americans to "look South."[15]

Rockland next edited America in the Fifties and Sixties: Julián Marías on the United States, after Marías, then Spain's leading living philosopher, recruited him to take on this project.[16]

Rockland's years in Spain were the inspiration for a memoir, An American Diplomat in Franco Spain.[17] The memoir includes chapters on days Rockland spent essentially alone with Martin Luther King and Senator Edward Kennedy in Madrid, as well as the embassy's involvement in an infamous Cold War incident where the United States accidentally dropped four unarmed hydrogen bombs on Spain.

Much of the action in Rockland's first novel, A Bliss Case, takes place in and concerns India. The New York Times called it "written with a light touch and a near-perfect ear for humbug".[18]

Regardless of the literary form he employs, Rockland is a strong proponent of writing and teaching about the United States from a transnational perspective. He has been aided in this endeavor through invitations to lecture abroad in numerous countries.

Awards and honors

Being awarded four Fulbright fellowships—to Argentina, Uruguay, Peru, and Norway—has also enhanced his transnationally oriented focus. Other awards have included the Mary C. Turpie National Teaching Award in American Studies in 1997[19] and the Scholar-Teacher Award of Rutgers University in 2003.

Rockland's book, Sarmiento's Travels in the United States in 1847 was chosen by The Washington Post as one of the "Fifty Best Books of the Year".[20] Similarly, his novel, A Bliss Case, was chosen by The New York Times as one of the "Fifty Notable Books of the Year".[21]

Rockland's long career writing and teaching about New Jersey was recognized in 2013 when he received the Governor Richard J. Hughes Award from the New Jersey Historical Commission for "lifetime achievement and contributions to New Jersey history".[22]

Major works

Scholarship

  • Sarmiento's Travels in the United States in 1847 (1970) Princeton UP
  • America in the Fifties and Sixties: Julián Marías on the United States (1972) Penn. State UP
  • The American Jewish Experience in Literature (1975). University of Haifa
  • Homes on Wheels (1980). Rutgers UP
  • Looking for America on the New Jersey Turnpike (1989). With Angus Kress Gillespie. Rutgers UP
  • What's American About American Things? (1996). University of Leon
  • Popular Culture: Or Why Study Trash? (1999). University of Leon
  • The Jews of New Jersey: A Pictorial History (2002). With Patricia Ard. Rutgers UP
  • The George Washington Bridge: Poetry in Steel (2008) Rutgers UP

Memoir

  • Snowshoeing Through Sewers (1994) Rutgers UP
  • An American Diplomat in Franco Spain (2012) University of Valencia 92011); Hansen Publishing (2012)
  • Navy Crazy (2014) Hansen Publishing

Fiction

  • A Bliss Case (1989). Coffee House Press
  • Stones (2009) Hansen Publishing

Screenplay

  • Three Days on Big City Waters (1974). With Charles Woolfolk. Producer-Director, Clark Santee. P.B.S.

References

  1. ^ Cutler, Jacqueline (Sep 21, 2014). "Memories from a mental ward". The Star Ledger.
  2. ^ Illingworth, Shaun. "Rutgers Oral History Interview". Rutgers Oral History Archive. Retrieved June 14, 2015.
  3. ^ Illingworth, Shaun. "Rutgers Oral History Interview". Rutgers Oral History Archive. Retrieved June 14, 2015.
  4. ^ McMahon, Josh (January 27, 2013). "RU prof takes his readers from N.J. to Franco's Spain". No. sec 2/p.6. The Star Ledger.
  5. ^ Allen, Edward (November 19, 1989). "Meet me at the Walt Whitman Rest Area". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Rockland, Michael. Snowshoeing. pp. 11, 7.
  7. ^ Three Days on Big City Waters.
  8. ^ Rockland. The Jews of New Jersey.
  9. ^ "The Approval Matrix". No. 116. New York Magazine. January 5–12, 2009.
  10. ^ Mazzocchi, Sherry (January 28, 2009). "Writing the History of the GWB". No. 16. Manhattan Times.
  11. ^ Rockland, Michael (April 1979). "What's so Funny About New Jersey?". No. 49. New Jersey Monthly.
  12. ^ Rockland. Snowshoeing, back cover.
  13. ^ Ed. Maxine N. Laurie and Marc Mapppen (2004). Image. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP. p. 402.
  14. ^ Rockland, Michael (January 2014). "Happy Birthday NJ!". No. 38. New Jersey Monthly.
  15. ^ Rockland. Sarmiento's Travels. p. 6.
  16. ^ Rockland. America in the Fifties.
  17. ^ Rockland. An American Diplomat in Franco Spain.
  18. ^ McWilliam, Candia (Oct 15, 1989). "Don't Call the Swami 'Dad'". The New York Times.
  19. ^ "American Studies Association". American Studies Association. Retrieved June 14, 2015.
  20. ^ The Washington Post. No. 16. Dec 26, 1971. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. ^ "Notable Books of the Year". The New York Times. No. BR48. Dec 3, 1989.
  22. ^ Nidhi, Patel (Nov 2, 2014). "Professor Gets Nomination for Public History". The Daily Targum.

External links

This page was last edited on 12 June 2022, at 00:54
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