Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
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The starting line of an annual AIDS walk in Minneapolis.

How the Heartland Responded to AIDS and Shaped Queer Politics

Histories of the epidemic tend to focus on coastal cities, but the response was very different in the middle of the country.
Marty Reisman playing table tennis with the ball in the air.

The Real Marty Supreme

Marty Reisman, a brilliant, hustling ping-pong showman, rose from NYC clubs to global fame, clashed with officials, defied the sponge era, and left a legend.
Illustration of draping a Pizza Hut tarp over the Hammer and Sickle.

Pizzastroika

In 1990, one of the great forgotten acts of American subterfuge unfolded. It involved Pizza Hut.
Boy carrying a live turkey over his shoulder.
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No, Thanks

The Thanksgiving meal we consider traditional would have likely disgusted the Pilgrims. What would early Americans have eaten?
An aerial view of the Target store in Ocean Township, NJ.
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Boxed In

On the rise of the modern box store as a rebellion against the carefully controlled world of the department store.
Robert Crumb holding up a cartoon book and pointing to it.

Desperate Character: Rambunctious R. Crumb

Rambunctious and often offensive, R. Crumb draws freely on pre-existing racial and gender stereotypes.
FDR at his desk.

The Invention of American Liberalism

What does it mean to be a liberal in America—and why has that label inspired both devotion and disdain?

The Progress Paradox

Neoliberals long preached that markets and technology reinforce each other. In reality, when one develops, the other tends to stagnate.
William James.

Conscription for Peace

William James’s ‘moral equivalent of war’ a hundred years later.
'A slave auction at the South' by Theodore R. Davis, from Harper’s Weekly, July 1861

Speculation in Human Property

The survival of slave trading during the Civil War suggests that enslaved people remained valuable commodities in a time of economic upheaval.
Governor-General John Kerr speaking to reporters.

Fifty Years Ago, the US Staged a Coup in Australia

In 1975, Australia’s PM Whitlam was dismissed by Governor-General Kerr in a US-influenced, Cold War–era soft coup.
Illustration of 18th century lead miners.

Stephen Douglas’ Fictitious Case: Immigrant Voting in Antebellum Illinois

How an Irish immigrant’s 1838 ballot in Illinois sparked a court battle over voting rights for non-citizens.
Larry Page and Sergey Brin in front of Google's servers.

The Future of Search: Will We Still Google It?

Google grew from a Stanford project into a $3T tech giant, pioneering search, data scaling, and AI, now challenged by regulation and chatbots.
Clyde Stubblefield on drums

More Than James Brown’s Drummer: Clyde Stubblefield, An Unsung Pioneer of R&B

On the enduring influence of one of the genre's most iconic drum riffs.
Andrew Jackson.
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The Men Who Made America’s Self-Made Man

A new myth appeared during the presidential campaign of Andrew Jackson.
Locker room in which men are hiding behind towels and curtains.

The End of Naked Locker Rooms

What we lose when casual nudity disappears.
Police officer wearing a mask, arrests a man who lowered his mask to smoke a pipe, in 1918.

The Mask

How the history of the anti-mask and anti-vaccination movements hang together.
Glen Dash with video game equipment at MIT's NSF-funded Innovation Center.

The Birth of the University as Innovation Incubator

In the 1970s, the National Science Foundation tried to shake up the Cold War research model.
A troop of Japanese American Girl Scouts in an internment camp.
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Complicit in the Business of Indoctrination and Incarceration

By 1943, the Girl Scouts had a presence in every Japanese American internment camp.
Postcard of West Texas State College, 1946.
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The Most Integrated Institution in West Texas

What happened after West Texas State College desegregated its football team in the 1960s.
The Carson Mansion in Eureka, California.

Gloomth

What makes a house feel haunted and why do people keep telling these stories?
The American flag as two speech balloons.

The Ideal That Underlies the Declaration of Independence

Restoring stability to American politics will require reviving an age-old concept: common ground.
Shop window decorated with bride and groom mannequins and wedding paraphernalia, from Baum's "Show Window" magazine.
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The Wonderful Windows of Oz

The story of author L. Frank Baum’s very successful career creating other fantasy lands—department store windows.
Portrait of Morris Hillquit taken between 1910 and 1915.

The Socialist Who Helped Bring Marx to America

The early-20th-century socialist and New York mayoral candidate Morris Hillquit saw liberalism and democracy as a foundation for a transition to socialism.
American Girl dolls in a display booth.

Navigating Preteendom in the Shadow of the American Girl Doll

A writer looks back at the book that shaped her understanding of girlhood, body, and shame.
An illustration of a Black woman elf in a fantasy setting.

Why Elon Musk Needs Dungeons & Dragons to Be Racist

The fantastical roots of “scientific racism.”
Peter Matthiessen.

What Really Happened with the CIA and The Paris Review?

What led Peter Matthiessen from spying to starting a magazine?
John Adams, Jefferson's pamphlet on the Rights of British America, and Franklin's "Join or Die" cartoon.

What Actually Changed in 1776

The most consequential shift that year was not one of battle lines but of ideology.
Battlefield illustration by Keith Negley

What Was the American Revolution For?

Amid plans to mark the nation’s semiquincentennial, many are asking whether or not the people really do rule, and whether the law is still king.
A crowd of Angolan rebels with weapons.

How the US Intervened to Sabotage Angola’s Independence

Fifty years ago today, Angola gained its independence from Portuguese domination. But the US was already working hard to snuff out the hopes of liberation.
James Watson

The Paradox of James Watson

The discovery of DNA was evidence of how deeply interconnected humans are, but the late scientist saw only difference.
ICE officer on a bus full of detainees.
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Habeas Corpus and the Limits of Presidential Power: The Right to a Day in Court

Habeas corpus, the right to challenge unlawful detention, is at the center of a debate over presidential power.
Six stools with increasingly pixilated versions of "The Thinker."

Perplexity

Why is the essential promise of technology and the alleviation of drudgery not enough?
Apples on a branch of an apple tree.

To Understand America, Look to the Everyday Apple

The country is losing neighbourhood orchards—and a connection to its origins.
A Geiger counter intended for Cold War fallout shelters.

A Cold War Kit for Surviving a Nuclear Attack

How the U.S. Post Office took point on civil defense.
Pope Leighey House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.

In Search of Usonia

How the legacy of architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright are disappearing in our modern era.
Capitol building, Constitution, and Congressional record.

Twelve Failed Constitutional Amendments That Could Have Reshaped American History

These proposals sought to change the United States’ name, abolish the presidency, and set a limit on personal fortunes, among other measures.
Leo Frank.

Justice Miscarried: The Trial, Conviction, and Murder of Leo Frank

Leo Frank’s trial, death sentence, eventual commutation, and finally his lynching all show the nation’s problematic history with anti-Semitism.
Staff handing Lyndon Johnson reports in the oval office.

This Whole Thing Really Snuck Up On Us

Looking back, and ahead, on the anniversary of a White House warning.
Washington Crossing the Delaware

Why the American Revolution Was a World War in All But Name

The transnational nature of America's fight for independence.
Armed services edition of "How Green Was My Valley"

How the Second World War Made America Literate

The story of the Armed Services Editions.
The U.S. Capitol building at night.

A Capital History

Washington has long been a disproportionately gay city—a mecca for clever, ambitious young men who want to escape their hometowns’ prying eyes.
Theodore Roosevelt speaking with three reporters.
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The President and the Press Corps

Theodore Roosevelt was the first White House occupant to seek control over how newspapers covered him.
A billboard advertising nice homes while hiding the dilapidated state of the homes behind it.

American Suburbs Have a Financial Secret

Municipal bonds have become an unavoidable part of local governance—and their costs divide rich towns from poor ones.
A teletype portrait of Curtis LeMay.

"I Have Sought to Slaughter as Few Civilians as Possible."

The rabid, apocalyptic Beat poetry that is "Mission with LeMay."
A collage of the American flag.

My Father’s Flag and the Idea of America

Over decades, and through harrowing experiences, my family held on to this bit of cloth as a reminder of everything they believed in—and were running toward.
The French battleship Richelieu being maneuvered by tugboats up the East River for repairs and refitting.

A Helluva Town

A new history of New York City during World War II captures the glory, tawdriness, poverty, narcissism, beauty, and grime of this “aggregation of villages.”
Food stand at a carnival advertising a wide ranging menu.

Why an Abundance of Choice Is Not the Same as Freedom

It’s only in recent history that freedom has come to mean having a huge array of choices in life. Did we take a wrong turn?
Oil painting of George Washington's inauguration as the first American president.

Loyalty Oaths and the Crisis of the American Revolution

The struggle over loyalty oaths reveals how Americans learned to wield faith and coercion in the name of freedom.
Bruce Springsteen playing the guitar.

The Long Road to Nebraska

Springsteen’s 1982 classic has become an American scripture, its ghosts of fathers and highways still haunting today’s America.
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