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Viewing 181–210 of 231 results.
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The Paranoid Style: Rereading Richard Hofstadter in the Aftermath of January 6
How a book of essays from 1964 explains what happened at the Capitol.
by
Bennett Parten
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
July 13, 2021
How Joni Mitchell Shattered Gender Barriers When Women Couldn't Even Have Their Own Credit Cards
Joni Mitchell might not have wanted to be the glamorous bard of women’s rising consciousness, but with “Blue,” she became just that.
by
Jessica Hopper
via
Los Angeles Times
on
June 22, 2021
Charlie Brown Tried to Stay Out of Politics
Why did readers search for deeper meaning in the adventures of Snoopy and the gang?
by
Scott Bradfield
via
The New Republic
on
June 2, 2021
Weary of Work
When factories created a population of tired workers, a new frontier in fatigue studies was born.
by
Emily K. Abel
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
April 28, 2021
The Lure of the White Sands
Francisco Vázquez de Coronado, Geronimo, Robert Oppenheimer, Steven Spielberg, and the mysteries of New Mexico's desert.
by
Rich Cohen
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 29, 2021
'It Shook Me to My Core': 50 Years of Carole King's Tapestry
James Taylor, Roberta Flack, Tori Amos, Joan Armatrading, Rufus Wainwright and more on the 70s masterpiece.
by
Dave Simpson
,
Laura Snapes
via
The Guardian
on
February 12, 2021
Bring Back the Nervous Breakdown
It used to be okay to admit that the world had simply become too much.
by
Jerry Useem
via
The Atlantic
on
February 8, 2021
On Imagining Gatsby Before Gatsby
How a personal connection to Nick Carraway inspired the author to write the novel "Nick."
by
Michael Farris Smith
via
Literary Hub
on
January 11, 2021
Why Just 'Adding Context' to Controversial Monuments May Not Change Minds
Research shows that visitors often ignore information that conflicts with what they already believe about history.
by
Erin L. Thompson
via
Smithsonian
on
December 18, 2020
The Desert Keeps Receipts
A dispatch from a tour of a Cold War-era nuclear test site in the Mojave Desert.
by
B. Erin Cole
via
Contingent
on
October 8, 2020
Faulkner Couldn’t Overcome Racism, But He Never Ignored It
That’s why the privileged White novelist’s work is still worth reading, Michael Gorra argues.
by
Chandra Manning
via
Washington Post
on
October 2, 2020
The Mod Squad, Kojak, Real-Life Cops, and Me
What I relearned (about well-meaning liberalism, race, my late father, and my young gay self) rewatching the TV cop shows of my 1970s youth.
by
Mark Edward Harris
via
Vulture
on
September 8, 2020
Mark Twain’s Mind Waves
Mark Twain was a prankster, but his belief in telepathy was real enough that he worried about unintentional telepathic plagiarism.
by
Chantel Tattoli
via
The Paris Review
on
August 25, 2020
50 Years Later: How the Chicano Moratorium Changed L.A.
Upon the 50th anniversary of the Chicano Moratorium, participants reflect back on the movement that changed their lives and L.A. culture forever.
via
Los Angeles Times
on
August 23, 2020
The 1918 Flu Pandemic Killed Millions. So Why Does Its Cultural Memory Feel So Faint?
A new book suggests that the plague’s horrors haunt modernist literature between the lines.
by
Rebecca Onion
,
Elizabeth Outka
via
Slate
on
May 3, 2020
How Pandemics Seep into Literature
The literature that arose from the influenza pandemic speaks to our current moment in profound ways, offering connections in the exact realms where art excels.
by
Elizabeth Outka
via
The Paris Review
on
April 8, 2020
How the 1918 Pandemic Frayed Social Bonds
The influenza pandemic did long-lasting damage to relationships in some American communities. Could the mistrust have been prevented?
by
Noah Y. Kim
via
The Atlantic
on
March 31, 2020
At the Very Beginning of the Great Alaska Earthquake
People’s stories described a sluggish process of discovery: you had to discover the earthquake, even though it had already been shaking you for what felt like a very long time.
by
Jon Mooallem
via
Literary Hub
on
March 24, 2020
The School Shooting That Austin Forgot
In 1978, an eighth grader from a prominent Austin family killed his teacher. His classmates are still haunted by what happened that terrible day and after.
by
Robert Draper
via
Texas Monthly
on
March 18, 2020
Can Slavery Reënactments Set Us Free?
Underground Railroad simulations have ignited controversy about whether they confront the country’s darkest history or trivialize its gravest traumas.
by
Julian Lucas
via
The New Yorker
on
February 10, 2020
What Do We Want History to Do to Us?
Zadie Smith on Kara Walker, blackness and public art.
by
Zadie Smith
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 6, 2020
‘1917’ and the Trouble With War Movies
"Every film about war ends up being pro-war," Francois Truffaut once said.
by
Adam Nayman
via
The Ringer
on
January 29, 2020
Keeping the Country
In southwest Florida, the Myakka River Valley — a place of mystery and myth — is under threat of development.
by
Michael Adno
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
January 28, 2020
What The Mississippi Delta Teaches Me About Home—And Hope
Finding struggle and resilience on a road trip through the birthplace of the blues.
by
Wright Thompson
via
Fellow Travelers
on
January 6, 2020
I Was Poised to be the First Black Astronaut. I Never Made it to Space.
Ed Dwight Jr. trained to go to the moon, but racism in the selection process kept him out of space.
by
Ben Proudfoot
via
New York Times Op-Docs
on
December 19, 2019
Margaret Morse Nice Thought Like a Song Sparrow and Changed How Scientists Understand Animal Behavior
This 20th century ornithologist earned the respect of her contemporaries for her animal behavior research that went against the grain of traditional science.
by
Kristoffer Whitney
via
The Conversation
on
December 13, 2019
If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Batuu
To work, a theme park needs to collapse the mythic pasts that it depicts with the pasts of our own lives.
by
Deanna Day
via
Contingent
on
December 6, 2019
On Inventing Disaster
The culture of calamity from the Jamestown Colony to the Johnstown Flood.
by
Cynthia Kierner
,
Anna Faison
via
UNC Press Blog
on
November 20, 2019
The Women Who Helped Build Hollywood
They played essential behind-the-scenes roles as the American movie industry was taking off. What happened?
by
Margaret Talbot
via
The New Yorker
on
October 28, 2019
The Conflicted Love Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Margaret Fuller
How an intense unclassifiable relationship shaped the history of modern thought.
by
Maria Popova
via
The Marginalian
on
June 5, 2019
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