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On language and modes of communication.
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The False Narratives of the Fall of Rome Mapped Onto America
Gravely inaccurate 19th-century depictions of the destruction of Rome are used to illustrate parallels between Rome and the U.S.
by
Sarah E. Bond
via
Hyperallergic
on
July 3, 2019
Noah Webster’s Civil War of Words Over American English
What would an American dictionary meen for the men and wimmen of America?
by
Peter Martin
via
Aeon
on
June 24, 2019
Maligned in Black and White
Southern newspapers played a major role in racial violence. Do they owe their communities an apology?
by
Mark I. Pinsky
via
Poynter
on
May 8, 2019
The Trigger Presidency
How shock jock comedy gave way to Donald Trump’s Republican Party.
by
Ben Schwartz
via
The New Republic
on
April 24, 2019
partner
Columbine at 20: Media Attention and Copycat Killers
The impact of Columbine on today's youths -- and how the media has shifted its coverage of school shootings.
by
Anne Checler
,
Erik German
,
Olivia Katrandjian
via
Retro Report
on
April 18, 2019
20 Years Later, Columbine Is The Spectacle The Shooters Wanted
Searching for meaning in the shooters’ infamous “basement tapes.”
by
Andy Warner
via
The Nib
on
April 17, 2019
An Early Run-In With Censors Led Rod Serling to 'The Twilight Zone'
His failed attempts to bring the Emmett Till tragedy to television forced him to get creative.
by
Jackie Mansky
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
April 1, 2019
A Frederick Douglass Reading List
Reading recommendations from a lifelong education.
by
Jaime Fuller
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
February 21, 2019
partner
The “Miscegenation” Troll
The term “miscegenation” was coined in an 1864 pamphlet by an anonymous author. It turned out to be an anti-abolition hoax.
by
Mark Sussman
via
JSTOR Daily
on
February 20, 2019
Before It Conquered the World, Facebook Conquered Harvard
On Facebook's 15th anniversary, Harvard students and faculty reflect on being the first users of Earth's largest social network.
by
Alexis C. Madrigal
via
The Atlantic
on
February 4, 2019
Where Does Truth Fit into Democracy?
In modern democracies, who gets to determine what counts as truth—an elite of experts or the people as a whole?
by
David A. Bell
via
The Nation
on
January 24, 2019
Brothels for Gentlemen: Nineteenth-Century American Brothel Guides, Gentility, and Moral Reform
Brothel guides’ descriptions of brothelgoers asked that if respectable men could enjoy sexual pleasure for sale in American cities, why couldn’t their readers?
by
Katherine Hijar
via
Commonplace
on
December 1, 2018
The Forgotten Story of the Julian Assange of the 1970s
Decades before WikiLeaks, Philip Agee’s magazine blew the cover of more than 2,000 CIA officers.
by
Steven T. Usdin
via
Politico Magazine
on
November 28, 2018
The Racist Politics of the English Language
How we went from “racist” to “racially tinged.”
by
Lawrence B. Glickman
via
Boston Review
on
November 20, 2018
Why is Everyone Suddenly Saying 'Y'all'?
Or better put, why is it something so many outside of the South have recently adopted?
by
Bill Black
via
MEL
on
November 12, 2018
The Ku Klux Klan and America’s First "Fake News" Crisis
When the white-supremacist group terrorized the South during Reconstruction, many people denied that it even existed.
by
Matt Ford
via
The New Republic
on
October 30, 2018
How Americans Described Evil Before Hitler
Commentators compared the Nazi leader to Napoleon, Philip of Macedon, and Nebuchadnezzar.
by
Gavriel Rosenfeld
via
The Atlantic
on
October 9, 2018
partner
The Wildfire That Burned Yellowstone and set off a Media Firestorm
30 years ago, it was a huge fire in Yellowstone National Park that stoked media attention and political controversy.
via
Retro Report
on
July 9, 2018
Spanish Has Never Been a Foreign Language in the United States
The call to “speak English” in America has a long history that often drowns out our even longer history of diverse language use.
by
Rosina Lozano
via
Los Angeles Times
on
May 29, 2018
What Happened to the “Free World”?
Pundits can't seem to define what exactly the term refers to. Turns out it was developed for a very particular historical moment.
by
Peter Slezkine
via
The New Republic
on
May 22, 2018
Why the “Golden Age” of Newspapers Was the Exception, Not the Rule
"American journalism is younger than American baseball."
by
John Maxwell Hamilton
,
Heidi Tworek
via
Nieman Lab
on
May 2, 2018
An Embarrassment of Witches
What's the real history behind Trump's 'witch hunt' tweets?
by
Mary Beth Norton
via
Perspectives on History
on
April 10, 2018
What the Press and 'The Post' Missed
Leslie Gelb supervised the team that compiled the Pentagon Papers. He explains what Steven Spielberg's new film gets wrong.
by
Brooke Gladstone
,
Leslie Gelb
via
WNYC
on
January 12, 2018
Why The 'War On Christmas' Just Isn't What It Used To Be
The battle between "Happy Holidays" and "Merry Christmas" goes way deeper than you think.
by
Sophie Kleeman
via
Bustle
on
December 21, 2017
partner
The New York Times Journalist Who Secretly Led the Charge Against Liberal Media Bias
The untold story of the double agent who attacked the paper from within.
by
Sid Bedingfield
via
Made By History
on
December 11, 2017
'We Need a Day.' Meet the Man Who Helped Create World AIDS Day
A conversation with the man behind World AIDS Day.
by
Jim Bunn
,
Olivia B. Waxman
via
TIME
on
November 30, 2017
The Small Business Myth
Small businesses enjoy an iconic status in modern capitalism, but what do they really contribute to the economy?
by
Benjamin C. Waterhouse
via
Aeon
on
November 8, 2017
The Preacher and Vietnam: When Billy Graham Urged Nixon to Kill One Million People
The disclosure of Billy Graham's recommendation of war crimes did not exicte any commotion.
by
Alexander Cockburn
,
Jeffrey St. Clair
via
CounterPunch
on
September 27, 2017
"To Undertake a News-Paper in This Town"
How printers in the 1770s assembled the news for their papers, how they used the postal system, and how they may have approached Twitter.
by
Emily Sneff
via
Declaration Resources Project
on
September 20, 2017
Behind Barbed Wire
Japanese-American internment camp newspapers.
by
Chris Ehrman
,
Heather Thomas
via
Library of Congress
on
August 31, 2017
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