Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
New on Bunk
Larry Norman

How the First Ever Christian Rock Album Led to the “Jesus Movement”

Exploring the intersection of family history with the rise of the religious right.
A hand-colored map of lower Manhattan from 1860.

The Time When New York City Seriously Considered Seceding From the United States

A culture clash driven by finances and Old World alignments had the Big Apple contemplating leaving the Union. The Civil War ended that.
A studio portrait of Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, circa 1908. In the background are a Blackfeet family traveling on horseback, Native American students at the Car­lisle Indian Industrial School, and a Blackfeet tribesman on the Glacier National Park reservation in Montana. (Illustration by Paul Spella*)

Who Gets to Be Indian—And Who Decides?

The very American story of Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance.
Nicolás Maduro in the custody of D.E.A. agents.

A History of Inconvenient Allies and Convenient Enemies

Who gets labeled a "narco-terrorist" is all a matter of foreign policy.
The storming of the Bastille with smoke, buildings, and weapons.

How Has the Idea of Revolution Changed?

A new history examines the long history of a radical and sometimes conservative concept.

The Two Faces of Lummie Jenkins

The Alabama sheriff who is remembered as a saint—by everyone who isn’t black.
Painting of a maritime battle between two tall ships, the 'Constitution' and the 'Guerrière.'

Judicial Nation-Building

The Early Republic’s maritime jurisprudence is even more relevant given the immense power of the modern executive.
1895 political cartoon map depicting North America as Uncle Sam about to swallow Cuba.

Homeland Empire

From Venezuela to Minnesota, Trump is trying to create a borderless American power, collapsing the foreign and the domestic into a single domain of impunity.
The flag of Somalia and hands holding money.

How Somalis Became the New ‘Welfare Queens’

Trump has reinvented Reagan’s old attack, with one key twist.
Shawn Walker’s "Man with Bubble, Central Park," a surrealist photograph.

Did We Get the History of Modern American Art Wrong?

The standard story of 1960s art is one of Abstract Expressionism leading into Pop Art and minimalism. The Whitney offers a different one centered on surrealism.
Po'pay’s statue in the U.S. Capitol.

The 17th-Century Pueblo Leader Who Fought for Independence from Colonial Rule

Po'pay, a Tewa religious leader, led the Pueblo Revolt, the most successful Indigenous rebellion in what’s now the United States.
Map of the Sykes-Picot Agreement.
partner

Gaza Proposals Echo History of Outsider Ambitions for Region

Before Donald Trump's takeover proposal for Gaza, another New York real estate magnate had his own plans for the region.
Judah P. Benjamin statue torn off its pedestal.

The Counterlife of Judah P. Benjamin

Enigmatic, bigoted, prominent figure of the Confederacy—and one of the highest-ranking Jew in the history of American government. What do we do with him now?
Two Chinese-American men by a mural celebrating the transcontinental railroad in San Francisco's Chinatown.

The Religious and Anti-Chinese Roots of “Replacement” Theory

Anti-Chinese hate took vicious and violent forms. Religion was at the heart of it.
A excerpt from Amendment number 1282.

That Time Joe Biden Tried to Ban Military Keynesianism

“It is not a proper function of the Department of Defense to make allowances for amounts needed to help stimulate the economy.”
Illustration of a slave rebellion.

The New History of Fighting Slavery

What we learn by tracing rebellions from Africa to the Americas.
Elon Musk waving.

Ford and Musk. They Made Cars. They Backed Fascists.

Each age’s premier industrialist has had appalling politics.
Portrait of Alexander Hamilton.

Limits on Presidential Power from FDR to Trump

What does history tell us about presidents who have tried to push the limits of the system?
Chaos outside the Washington Hilton Hotel after the assassination attempt on President Reagan.

American Idols

Death in the magnetic age.
A young George Washington, on a background of musket barrels and spike defenses depicted as red and white stripes.

A Skirmish Early in George Washington’s Military Career Helped Define Him. It Could Have Killed Him

New evidence helps resolve enduring mysteries about a 1758 incident that nearly cost the future president his life—and shaped his views on the battles to come.
A classroom at Anacostia High School, Washington, D.C., in 1957.

Antisocial Studies

As the war over American social studies classrooms heats up, the curriculum is in the crosshairs.
A pair of hands reaches to grab a globe.

Does Anyone Else Have 1898 Déjà Vu?

Trump has upended a long tradition of claiming, however hypocritically, that foreign intervention is not about power or profit.
Injection pens for the weight-loss treatment Wegovy.
partner

The History Shaping the Debate Over GLP-1s and Insurance

How Americans came to see health as a personal responsibility.
George Washington with an overlay of the American Flag

George Washington’s Foreign Policy Was Built on Respect for Other Nations

Washington believed that civility toward other nations was a strategy to preserve independence, not a concession.
Collage photographs related to the January 6 Capitol Riot.

‘This Is Not a Peaceful Protest!’

A visual archive of Jan. 6, 2021, through the lenses of those who were there.
Cartoon collage of Trump as an emperor with no clothes, triumphantly surveying Greenland, supported by Republicans dressed as Vikings.

Real Men Steal Countries: Inside Trump’s Absurd Greenland Obsession

An underdressed reporter journeys across icy, barren Greenland—and into Trump’s bored, nineteenth-century brain.
Don Francisco de Saavedra

Francisco de Saavedra and the Silver of Havana

The silver raised in Havana helped finance the Yorktown campaign, revealing the imperial foundations of American independence.
Men digging out a car stuck in the mud.

State Visions

North Carolina regional planning in Richard Saul Wurman’s "The Piedmont Crescent" (1968).
A collection of arrowheads.

From Eufaula to Eufaula

A complex history weaves along the Trail of Tears to connect Eufaula, Alabama, with its namesake in Oklahoma.
Boat sailing out of Charleston Harbor

A Southern Underground Railroad

A new book recovers stories of Black Georgians who escaped to maroon communities and Spanish Florida.
Cover of 'Baldwin: A Love Story' by Nicholas Boggs.

Missives Impossible

James Baldwin's fierce attachments.
Painting on a slave ship

Coming to Terms with Liverpool’s Slave Trade

About 1.5 million Africans were carried across the Atlantic in Liverpool ships, but the city's slave trade was barely acknowledged until recently.
Cartoon of Donald Trump holding a pencil, erasing petroglyphs.

Serious Reservations

The Trump administration’s erasure of Indigenous history serves a larger project—yet another plunder of land.
Portraits of Zohran Mamdani and Baruch Charney Vladeck

Mayor Zohran Mamdani Walks in a Rich Jewish Tradition

When I look at Mamdani, I don’t see some radical departure. I see him as an heir to the Yiddish socialism that helped build New York.
New Years Eve Party 1910.
partner

The Lost Tradition of New Year's Day Calling

The colonial Dutch tradition of making social calls on New Year's Day in New York was no match for 19th-century-style partying.
Graph of mentions of threats to democracy over time.

In Pursuit of Democracy

Analyzing every mention of 'democracy' in the Congressional Record.
Audley Moore

The ‘Queen Mother’ of the Reparations Movement Gets Her Due

The story of Audley Moore, “one of the most important activists and theorists of the twentieth century.”
Donald Trump.

Trump Is Reviving a Disastrous, Forgotten Era in U.S. Foreign Policy

His invasion of Venezuela and abduction of Nicolás Maduro recall U.S. imperialism of the early twentieth century—and may similarly lead to global catastrophe.

How the Story of the American Revolution Is Misunderstood

Ken Burns’s new documentary unpacks the Revolutionary War—and explains why history doesn’t repeat, even if human nature never changes.
Barbie and Ken dolls in a pink car with a pink background.

After Barbie’s Creation, Consumers Demanded a Boy Version. There Was Just One Problem.

The story of the "battle of the bulge."
Collage of Bush, Gore, an electoral map 0f the 2000 election, and a picket sign reading "ALL WE ARE SAYING IS LET THE VOTE COUNT."

Bush v. Gore Twenty-Five Years Later

The unintended consequences of the 20th amendment.
Obama hands the Paris Agreement documents to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

The Paris Climate Agreement at 10 Years

Declassified records begin to detail the U.S. negotiating strategy in the historic accord.
Esther Phillips singing.

The R&B Singer Who Recorded the Greatest Country Album You’ve Never Heard

The First Lady of Black country is from Houston, but her name isn’t Beyoncé. It’s Esther Phillips.
A guide to classical learning- or, Polymetis abridged Fleuron
partner

The Practical Humanities

Caroline Winterer tells Peter about a debate over practicality and purpose in higher education after the Civil War, and how the humanities offered a solution.
Headquarters building of the U.S. Mint, Washington, D.C.

U.S. Anniversary Coins Won’t Feature any Black Americans or Notable Women

For years, the U.S. Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee reviewed ideas for commemorative coins marking America’s 250th anniversary.
Albert Einstein collage photo with scientific diagrams.

Albert Einstein’s Brilliant Politics

The physicist fought for the promise of a diverse, meritocratic America. We need his optimism today.
A collage of people speaking and listening.

The Last Days of the Southern Drawl

By the end of my life, there may be no one left who speaks like my father outside the hollers and the one-horse towns.
Donald Trump shaking hands with Benjamin Netanyahu.

America’s Ties to Israel Might Lead It to War With Iran

Donald Trump is once again threatening war with Iran just six months after bombing the Islamic Republic in June.
University of Virginia rotunda
partner

The Dishonor Code

On violence and disorder in the early years of UVA, and the threat it posed to Thomas Jefferson’s vision for American higher education.
The "Lead Me, Guide Me" hymnal sitting on a map of Colorado.

Why a Denver Priest was Wrong to Treat Black Catholic Hymnals Like Garbage

On the racist errors that caused a significantly Black parish in Colorado to lose a hallmark of African-American liturgy.
Filter by:

Categories

Select content type

Time