Logo for WREG channel 3 of Memphis, TN.I gave an interview in 2010 on the Day of Dialogue at the University of Mississippi on February 22nd. You can watch the interview here.

Date: February 22, 2010
Time: 09:00-09:15 a.m.
Appearance: 2010 Interview on Memphis’s WREG, Channel 3’s Live at 9 Morning Show
Outlet: Memphis's WREG, Live at 9 Morning Show
Location: Memphis, TN
Format: Television

If you'd like to invite me to come speak with your group, visit my Speaking page.

Gave a 2013 interview on SVT Nyheter, Sweden’s national TV news service, talking about corporal punishment in Mississippi. You can watch the interview here.

Date: August 29, 2013
Appearance: Interview in 2013 on corporal punishment for the Swedish National TV News Service
Outlet: SVT Nyheter, Sweden's National TV news service
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Format: Television

If you want me to come speak with your group, visit my Speaking page.

The logo for WDAM Hattiesburg, MS, channel 7.Looking forward to giving an interview about Uniting Mississippi on WDAM’s television news, channel 7.

 

Date: January 29, 2016
Time: 11:45 a.m. -12:20 p.m.
Appearance: Interview on Uniting Mississippi with WDAM of Hattiesburg, MS
Outlet: WDAM, Channel 7, Hattiesburg, MS
Location: Hattiesburg, MS
Format: Television

If you're interested in inviting me to speak with your group, visit my speaking page.

In August of 2013, I participated in an interview with Swedish National TV News service, SVT Nyheter, on the subject of corporal punishment in Mississippi schools. If you click on the video here above, you’ll see their piece from the start. You can also jump to my interview, 2 min’s in (the rest of the piece is in Swedish). SVT’s news article is online in Swedish here. I’ve made an imperfect Google Translate version in English, which you can open as a PDF file here.

 

Guest View: Don’t gut the Dewey Center

Eric Thomas Weber, first published in The Southern Illinoisan, April 26, 2015, 12A.

I am an alumnus of SIUC’s Ph.D. program in philosophy. I am writing to urge you to continue full support for the Center for Dewey Studies. I understand that the center has been asked to prepare a budgetary plan for a reduction of its support by 50 percent. Were that reduction to be applied, it would incapacitate the center. That would be a truly terrible mistake.

This is the scan of my op-ed in The Southern Illinoisan, titled 'Don't Gut the Dewey Center.'

The Center for Dewey Studies is one of the jewels of SIUC. As I said in a recent interview with the Daily Egyptian, it is simply the best resource in the world of its kind. John Dewey’s work remains deeply important. Presently, Penguin Books is in contract negotiations with me to release a collection of Dewey’s public writings, in part because of help I received from the center, its director, and its relationship with the SIU Press. Dewey was America’s greatest public philosopher, and next year marks the 100th anniversary of his master work, Democracy and Education. There is also a burgeoning movement in public philosophy for which Dewey is the exemplar to whom people will be looking with increasing interest. This is not the time to cut support for the center, but to increase it.

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Photo of Admiral Ackbar (from Star Wars) in a blue and red campaign image, featuring the words "Ole Miss."Extended version of ESPN’s 2010 Ole Miss Star Wars commercial

I’m finally getting around to posting videos that I’ve done or been in. This one is mainly cute, not a contribution to public philosophy…

It was fun to do. I come in around 3 minutes in, for the extended version of the ad, but my soundbite didn’t make the shorter version that aired on TV.

This commercial was of interest to ESPN, as they were covering the issue of sports fandom. At the University of Mississippi, we had not had a mascot for years, since the prior one was removed from the field, given his allusion to the plantation-owning Colonel in the Rebel army.

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Sometimes Heritage Does Harm

Eric Thomas Weber, first published in The Clarion Ledger on June 27, 2015, 5C.

This article was published online with the title “Sometimes Heritage Does Harm,” and in print, with the title “‘Heritage’ Argument Overlooks History.” It is republished here with permission. Click on the image or here to open a scan of the printed version, or here for a PDF of the online version. The text from the online version is included here below.

This is a photo of the cutout of the printed version of my article in the Clarion Ledger, titled 'Sometimes Heritage Does Harm.' The title for the printed version was ''Heritage' Argument Overlooks History.'

 

Flags communicate pride for heritage, but, for some, so do nooses.

Unqualified love of heritage inflames America’s deepest moral wounds. Heritage is palpable in places like Mississippi and South Carolina, where it is prized wholesale, the good with the bad. In the wake of Charleston’s mass murders, it could not be clearer that heritage is harming the country.

In 2012, James Craig Anderson was murdered out of racial hatred in Jackson,. Two years later, young men hung a noose and the old Georgia flag, featuring the Confederate stars and bars, on the statue of civil rights pioneer James Meredith in Oxford. Some courageous public officials and university leaders have begun to speak up about the need to transform our cultural symbols, while others stand in the way of progress.

In the name of loving heritage, those opposed to moving forward leave out the unpleasant parts of our history. Mississippi and South Carolina were among the states most honest about their defense of slavery in their justifications for secession. Nevertheless, South Carolina until this week flew the Confederate flag in the state’s capital. Mississippi’s state flag bears the stars and bars alluding to the Confederacy.

Symbols matter.

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“The Law and Morality”
by Cherita Brown, Richard Gershon, and Eric Thomas Weber

Sorry, listening to the audio on this website requires Flash support in your browser. You can try playing the MP3 file directly by clicking here.

The cover of 'Uniting Mississippi,' featuring University of Mississippi students participating in a 2012 candlelight vigil in Oxford, MS.

This is the interview I gave Cherita Brown of Mississippi Public Broadcasting, MS’s NPR affiliate, and Professor Richard Gershon of the University of Mississippi School of Law on the relationship between the law and morality. Cherita also interviewed me about my forthcoming book, Uniting Mississippi: Democracy and Leadership in the South.

I hope to joint them again soon, as I had a great time. This is just one example of the collaborations I’ve enjoyed with the School of Law at the university, now that I’m an affiliate faculty member there.

Weber sitting at his desk.

Logo of the Clinton School for Public Service.Looking forward to visiting folks at the Clinton School for Public Service at the University of Arkansas, in Little Rock, where I’ll be talking about Uniting Mississippi: Democracy and Leadership in the South.

Date: October 19, 2015
Time: 12:00-01:00 p.m.
Event: Book signing and talk on 'Uniting Mississippi'
Topic: Book signing
Sponsor: University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service
501.683.5200
Venue: Sturgis Hall
501.683.5200
Location: 1200 President Clinton Ave
Little Rock, AR 72201
Public: Public