David C. Carter
OFFICE: Thach 320-E
PHONE: (334) 844-6859
EMAIL: dcarter@auburn.edu
WEBSITE: http://www.auburn.edu/~cartedc/
David Carter, Associate Professor
of History, received his Ph.D. from Duke University in 2001 and a B.A.
with Highest Honors in History from the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill in 1992. Dr. Carter's research interests are in the history
of the civil rights movement, the history of the American South since the
Civil War, and U.S. history since 1945. He is particularly drawn to the
role of race and ideology in shaping American history. Carter is the author
of "The Williamston Freedom Movement: Civil Rights at the Grass Roots
in Eastern North Carolina, 1957-1964," an article in the North
Carolina Historical Review (January, 1999), which won the Robert Diggs
Wimberly Connor Award given by the Review for the best article published
in that journal in the preceding year. His biographical sketches of civil
rights leaders Andrew Young and Julian Bond appear in the two-volume reference
collection Civil Rights in the United States, edited by Waldo Martin and Patricia Sullivan (Macmillan, 2000). More recently he has written the foreword to Frye Gaillard's Prophet from Plains: Jimmy Carter and His Legacy (University of Georgia Press, 2007) and contributed an essay entitled "Romper Lobbies and Coloring Lessons: Grassroots Visions and Political Realities in the Battle for Head Start in Mississippi, 1965-1967" to the collection Making a New South: Race, Leadership, and Community after the Civil War, edited by Paul A. Cimbala and Barton C. Shaw (University Press of Florida, 2007).
Carter's book manuscript, currently under advance contract with the University of North Carolina Press, examines shifting relationships between the presidency of Lyndon Johnson and the civil rights movement in the three years following passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965. Dr. Carter is also involved in collaborative research and writing on Lyndon Johnson's civil rights policies with Kent Germany of the University of South Carolina (formerly of the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia).
Dr. Carter has served as a project consultant on civil rights history for the Persistent Issues in History Network, directed by John Saye of Auburn's College of Education and Tom Brush of Indiana University, which seeks to build a community of master teachers overseeing pre-collegiate history study. In the same vein, he has worked with Auburn and Opelika teachers as part of a Teaching American History grant program.
Prior
to coming to Auburn University in 2000, Dr. Carter taught at Bates College in Lewiston,
Maine and at Duke University. He teaches both undergraduate and
graduate courses at Auburn, covering American history and historiography,
historical methodology, the history of the U.S. South, African American
history and various historical aspects of the civil rights movement in America,
and world history. He served as the faculty advisor to the Auburn chapter of the Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society for six years, from 2000 to 2006, and is a Lifetime Member of the Southern Historical Association and the Alabama Association of Historians. He is also an active member in the Organization of American Historians and the Alabama Historical Association.
David Carter is married to Leslie Martin Carter (Auburn B.S., 1991, M.S., 1993) and has two children, Philip and Anna, who attend Auburn's public schools.
Last updated Sept. 18, 2007.
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