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‘Live All You Can’
The reflections of Emerson, Thoreau, and William James one finds a characteristically nineteenth-century American sense of resilience and regeneration.
by
John Banville
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 15, 2024
The Right to Grieve
To demand the freedom to mourn—not on the employer’s schedule, but in our own time—is to reject the cruel rhythms of the capitalist status quo.
by
Erik Baker
via
Jewish Currents
on
March 13, 2023
How Grief and Revenge Made Geronimo Into a Legendary War Chief
Before Geronimo met any white Americans or came to think of them as enemies of the Apaches, he spent years fighting Mexicans.
by
H. W. Brands
via
Literary Hub
on
November 8, 2022
The Book That Unleashed American Grief
John Gunther’s “Death Be Not Proud” defied a nation’s reluctance to describe personal loss.
by
Deborah Cohen
via
The Atlantic
on
March 8, 2022
Mary Lincoln Wasn’t ‘Crazy.’ She Was a Bereaved Mother, New Exhibit Says.
The Lincolns had four sons. Mary buried three of them. A new exhibit at President Lincoln's Cottage sheds light on bereaved parents, then and now.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Washington Post
on
May 1, 2021
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
A Hero in the Midst of Cowards
The righteous rage of John Brown.
by
Jonathan Burdick
via
The Erie Reader
on
December 4, 2019
Joe Biden's Audacity of Grief
On the mournful threads connecting his half-century in politics.
by
George Blaustein
via
The New Republic
on
May 16, 2019
History in the Face of Catastrophe
After my son died, how could I know anything for certain?
by
Stéphane Gerson
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
February 4, 2018
For Those Who Would Be Real
James Baldwin’s testimony in images.
by
Harmony Holiday
via
Harper’s
on
April 29, 2025
What Happens When the U.S. Declares War on Your Parents?
The Black Panthers shook America before the party was gutted by the government. Their children paid a steep price, but also emerged with unassailable pride.
by
Ed Pilkington
via
The Guardian
on
March 25, 2025
Infectious Diseases Killed Victorian Children at Alarming Rates. Novels Show the Fragility of Health
Between 40% and 50% of children didn’t live past 5 in the US during the 19th century. Authors documented the common but no less gutting grief of losing a child.
by
Andrea Kaston Tange
via
The Conversation
on
December 11, 2024
Lost in the Five Stages of Grief
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s “On Death and Dying” sparked a revolution in end-of-life care. But soon she began to deny mortality altogether.
by
Colin Dickey
via
The New Republic
on
April 24, 2024
The Visions of Alice Coltrane
In the years after her husband John’s death, the harpist discovered a sound all her own, a jazz rooted in acts of spirit and will.
by
Marcus J. Moore
via
The Nation
on
March 21, 2024
The Ghost-Busting 'Girl Detective' Who Awed Houdini
As an undercover investigator, Rose Mackenberg unmasked hundreds of America’s fake psychics.
by
Nina Strochlic
via
Atlas Obscura
on
March 14, 2024
Glad to the Brink of Fear
A new biography reveals how Ralph Waldo Emerson gave Americans a vocabulary to understand themselves in an era even more tempestuous than our own.
by
Nicole Penn
via
American Purpose
on
March 13, 2024
How the Memory of a Song Reunited Two Women Separated by the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
In 1990, scholars found a Sierra Leonean woman who remembered a nearly identical version of a tune passed down by a Georgia woman’s enslaved ancestors
by
Joshua Kagavi
via
Smithsonian
on
February 29, 2024
When Your Childhood Belongs to Everyone: Growing Up in a Manhattan That Changed Forever on 9/11
Loft life above the Fulton Fish Market and the day that everything changed.
by
Emma Dries
via
Literary Hub
on
February 22, 2024
To Walden
Two new books attempt to grasp Thoreau’s seeming contradictions without reconciling them too easily.
by
Todd Shy
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
November 7, 2023
He Wasn’t Like the Other New England “Witches.” His Story Explains a Lot.
The little-told tale of the 1651 trial of Hugh and Mary Parsons.
by
Colin Dickey
via
Slate
on
October 31, 2022
The Elitist History of Wearing Black to Funerals
Today, mourning attire is subdued and dutiful. It wasn’t always that way.
by
Katie Thornton
via
The Atlantic
on
September 26, 2022
The Country That Could Not Mourn
The Covid-19 pandemic has shown just how hard it is for Americans to grieve.
by
Sarah Jaffe
via
The New Republic
on
September 23, 2022
Maternal Grief in Black and White
Examining enslaved mothers and antislavery literature on the eve of war.
by
Cassandra Berman
via
Nursing Clio
on
September 22, 2022
Throngs of Unseen People
A new history of spiritualism during the Civil War era suggests an unexpected link between the Lincoln family and that of John Wilkes Booth.
by
David S. Reynolds
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 15, 2022
He Was an All-Time Genius at Finding Tyrannosaurus Rexes. His Story Will Break Your Heart.
Why Barnum Brown could not stop collecting.
by
David K. Randall
via
Slate
on
July 4, 2022
The Day The Civil-Rights Movement Changed
What my father saw in Mississippi.
by
David Dennis Jr.
via
The Atlantic
on
May 4, 2022
Frost at Midnight
A new volume of Robert Frost’s letters finds him at the height of his artistic powers while suffering an almost unimaginable series of losses.
by
Dan Chiasson
via
New York Review of Books
on
November 24, 2021
The Persistent Joy of Black Mothers
Characterized throughout American history as symbols of crisis, trauma, and grief, these women reject those narratives through world-making of their own.
by
Leah Wright Rigueur
via
The Atlantic
on
August 11, 2021
His Name Was Emmett Till
In 1955, just past daybreak, a Chevrolet truck pulled up to an unmarked building. A 14-year-old child was in the back.
by
Wright Thompson
via
The Atlantic
on
July 22, 2021
Flu, 1918
Remembering a year of hell and devastation—the year of the Spanish flu.
by
Rose Riegelhaupt
via
Jewish Currents
on
June 14, 2021
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