Columbia Area League of Women Voters Book Club, March 16, 2022.
“From the Lost Cause to the Civil Rights Movement: A True Story of Bravery and Betrayal,” Russell Lecture, Alfred University, March 23, 2021.
“Sisters and Rebels: A Struggle for the Soul of America,” Boston Athenaeum, March 17, 2021.
“Sisters and Rebels,” American Philosophical Society, March 11, 2021.
“Who Makes History? A Conversation with Janice P. Nimura and Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, moderated by Susan Crane” Tucson Festival of Books, March 6, 2021.
March 5, 2021, 3:00-4:00 p.m. , “From Revolt Against Chivalry to Sisters and Rebels: A Life in Southern and Women’s History,” Summersell Prize Webinar, University of Alabama.
“Meet the Author,” Georgia Writers Museum, Virtual Event with Bruce. E. Baker, discussing Katharine Du Pre Lumpkin’s Eli Hill: A novel of Reconstruction, which we edited and published in 2020, Feb. 2, 2021.
“Writing a Way Home: A Life in Southern and Women’s History,” Keynote address, Southern Association for Women Historians, 50th anniversary Webinar, Southern Historical Association Annual Meeting, Memphis, TN, Nov. 20, 2020. Address begins at the 25.33 mark.
Webinar with Carol Berkin, Center for Women’s History Salon, New York Historical Society Museum and Library, October 9, 2020.
Top of Mind, with Julie Rose, BYU Radio, Aug. 14, 2020. Segment begins at 52.25 mark.
National Humanities Center, Virtual Book Club Series: Race and Injustice, July 15, 2020.
Labor and Working Class History Association, Pandemic Book Talk, Zoom, May 21, 2020.
PEN America Literary Awards Ceremony, Town Hall, New York, NY, March 3, 2020. Announcement of the 2020 PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld Award for Biography begins at 1:57:16 mark.
Katharine Du Pre Lumpkin Induction into Georgia Women Hall of Fame, Video, March 2020.
Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, “Sisters and Rebels: A Struggle for the Soul of America,” Caroliniana Columns, University of South Caroliniana Society Newsletter (Spring 2020).
“Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Sisters and Rebels: A Struggle for the Soul of America,” Working History Podcast, with Beth English, producer and host, sponsored by the Southern Labor Studies Association (available on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher and Soundcloud), January 2020.
Jacquelyn Hall, et al., “The Cutting Room Floor,” in Joanne Meyerowitz, “From the President,” The American Historian (December 2019), 1-2.
Kristen Bowman, “The Women’s College hosts book reading from author Jacquelyn Dowd Hall,” Sept. 10, 2019.
Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, “Sisters and Rebels: A Struggle for the Soul of America,” University of South Carolina, a book talk and signing jointly sponsored by University of South Carolina Libraries and the University South Caroliniana Society, Columbia, SC, October 3, 2019.
Patty Courtright, “Second Acts,” College Magazine from the College of Arts and Sciences at UNC-Chapel Hill (Fall 2019).
Author Discussion on the Civil War and the South at the Mississippi Book Festival, , C-SPAN, August 17, 2019.
“On the Rebel Southern Daughter Who Fought to Expose White Supremacy: Jacquelyn Dowd Hall Revisits Katharine Du Pre Lumpkin’s The Making of a Southerner,” Literary Hub, May 22, 2019.
“A True Story of Bravery and Betrayal,” The State of Things, with Frank Stasio, WUNC, May 21, 2019.
Jacquelyn Hall, Member Spotlight in Perspectives on History, the news magazine of the American Historical Association (April 2019).
Retirement event, with Natalie Fousekis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, September 20, 2014.
Consultant and speaker, “The Durrs of Montgomery,” Alabama Public Television, 2011-12.
“Legacies of the Civil Rights Movement,” Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History online videos series posing “Essential Questions About American History to leading historians, March 21, 2012.
“Good to Great” video podcast with Chancellor James Moeser, UNC-Chapel Hill, November 2, 2012.
Panelist, “Moral Mondays: Scholars Speak Out on North Carolina’s New Social Movement,” Scholars for North Carolina’s Future, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Sept. 19, 2013. Jacquelyn Hall appears around the 22:30 mark.