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Through Hell and High Water: Katrina's First Responders Oral History Project
A collection of interviews with rescue workers who responded to the disaster.
via
The Historic New Orleans Collection
on
June 27, 2020
The Birth of Breaking News
On May 10th, 1869, the entire nation was waiting for the moment a silver hammer struck a golden spike, creating the first massive breaking news story.
by
Aric Allen
via
YouTube
on
June 14, 2015
Stealing the Show
Why conservatives killed America’s federally funded theater.
by
Charlie Tyson
via
The Yale Review
on
June 10, 2024
Lady Liberty in Restoration Italy? Crime, Counterfeit, and Carbonari Revolutionary Politics
Following Napoleon’s fall, international secret societies emerged promoting dissent from absolutist forms of power and sharing ideologies and iconographies.
by
Giuseppe Perelli
via
Age of Revolutions
on
June 3, 2024
partner
The Massive Cultural Changes That Made Dr. Ruth Possible
Dr. Ruth left a legacy of sexual candor and the need to defend pleasure as a universal right—a conversation that is more relevant today than ever.
by
Rebecca L. Davis
via
Made by History
on
July 19, 2024
The Peculiar Legacy of E.E. Cummings
Revisiting his first book, "The Enormous Room," a reader can get a sense of everything appealing and appalling in his work.
by
David B. Hobbs
via
The Nation
on
July 22, 2024
The Racist, Xenophobic History of "Excited Delirium"
A new book takes on a diagnosis invented to cover up police killings: that men of color are “combusting as a result of their aggressiveness.”
by
Julia Métraux
,
Aisha M. Beliso-De Jesús
via
Mother Jones
on
July 23, 2024
The Supreme Court Fools Itself
The Roberts Court has made the current crisis of American democracy perpetual.
by
Adam Serwer
via
The Atlantic
on
July 24, 2024
Jared Kushner’s Grandparents Relied on Aid and Shelter as Refugees, Documents Show
Kushner was a top official in a Trump administration that sharply restricted immigration and refugee admissions. His grandparents were Holocaust refugees.
by
Andrew Silverstein
via
Retropolis
on
July 22, 2024
Good Deeds Unpunished
American law should protect the right of individuals to engage in charitable acts.
by
Mark David Hall
,
Adam J. Macleod
via
Law & Liberty
on
July 22, 2024
Ill-Suited to Reality: NATO’s Delusions
It has suddenly become popular to cast NATO as the first benign military alliance in history, without concealed politics.
by
Tom Stevenson
via
London Review of Books
on
August 1, 2024
Are We Living Through Another 1850s?
It’s difficult to see how these profound antipathies and fears will dissipate soon through any normal political processes.
by
Robert W. Merry
via
The American Conservative
on
July 22, 2024
Are Hollywood’s Jewish Founders Worth Defending?
Jews in the industry called for the Academy Museum to highlight the men who created the movie business. A voice in my head went, Uh-oh.
by
Michael Schulman
via
The New Yorker
on
July 17, 2024
Why Do We Keep Using the Word “Caucasian”?
When a term signifies something that does not exist, we need to examine our use of it.
by
Yolanda Moses
via
Sapiens
on
February 1, 2017
partner
The Republican National Convention That Shocked the Country
The pulsating anger in San Francisco 60 years ago became the party's animating spirit.
by
Charles J. Holden
via
Made by History
on
July 17, 2024
“Weapons of Health Destruction…” How Colonialism Created the Modern Native American Diet
On the impact of systematic oppression on indigenous cuisine in the United States.
by
Andrea Freeman
via
Literary Hub
on
July 24, 2024
Thomas Jefferson's Quest to Prove America's Natural Superiority
French theorists said that American native species were inferior to European ones—the former President went to great lengths to show that they were wrong.
by
Andrea Wulf
via
The Atlantic
on
March 7, 2016
partner
All Hale Thanksgiving
In the 1820s, Sarah Hale, a New England widow and the editor of Godey’s Ladies Book made it her mission to get Thanksgiving recognized as a national holiday.
via
BackStory
on
November 15, 2016
partner
The Woman’s War
Gender dynamics on the home front, and the ways in which the Civil War is distinct from other American conflicts.
via
BackStory
on
March 31, 2011
Were Pirates Foes of the Modern Order—or Its Secret Sharers?
We’ve long viewed them as liberty-loving rebels. But it’s time to take off the eye patch.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The New Yorker
on
July 15, 2024
Why Are Presidential Assassins Such Sad Sacks?
What would-be killers of the US commander in chief have in common is that they aren’t fervent ideologues; they’re outcasts.
by
Zack Budryk
via
The Nation
on
July 22, 2024
How Machines Came to Speak (and How to Shut Them Up)
On the intertwined history of free speech law and media technology.
by
Alex Sayf Cummings
via
Society for U.S. Intellectual History
on
September 24, 2023
Fifty Years of Living with America’s Unexploded Bombs
Laos was collateral damage in the U.S.' secret war. The wounds are visible in the land and in generations still waiting on justice.
by
Sera Koulabdara
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
December 21, 2023
The Golden Age of the Paranoid Political Thriller
On the grand tradition of movies reflecting a deep distrust of those in charge.
by
Keith Roysdon
via
CrimeReads
on
March 25, 2024
The “Long Attica Revolt”
The resistance inside prisons is an integral part of the struggle against white supremacy and for Black liberation beyond the walls.
by
Robert J. Boyle
via
Against the Current
on
June 30, 2024
Separated By More Than A Century, Two Musicians Share A Complaint
What happens when the automation of music makes it too easy to create and too easy to consume?
by
Mark R. DeLong
via
3 Quarks Daily
on
July 15, 2024
The Secret That Dr. Ruth Knew
She left exactly when we need her most.
by
Stephen Marche
via
The Atlantic
on
July 21, 2024
Looking Back at Wisconsin's Long History with the Republican Party
The one-room schoolhouse that was one of the birthplaces of the GOP.
by
Chuck Quirmbach
via
WUWM
on
July 13, 2024
partner
The Real History Behind 'Twisters'
For as long as scientists have studied tornadoes, researchers have dreamed of controlling them.
by
Kate Carpenter
via
Made by History
on
July 19, 2024
The Myth America Show
The anthology drama provided a venue for discourses on American national identity during the massive cultural, economic, and political changes occurring at midcentury.
by
Josie Torres Barth
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
July 13, 2024
How Judy Blume’s "Deenie" Helped Destigmatize Masturbation
On self-pleasure and sex education in children's literature.
by
Rachelle Bergstein
via
Literary Hub
on
July 16, 2024
partner
Women Have the Daring to Be Real Life Savers
How a tragedy in New York City convinced Americans to learn how to swim.
by
Vicki Valosik
via
HNN
on
July 16, 2024
Doodle Nation: Notes on Distracted Drawing
Humans have doodled for as long as they have written and drawn, but psychoanalysis began to imagine the doodle as a key to understanding the unconscious mind.
by
Polly Dickson
via
The Paris Review
on
July 17, 2024
A War Meteorologist’s Riveting Account of How the Allies Averted a D-Day Disaster
The D-Day landings turned the tide of the war, but their success rested on the uncertain calculations of Allied meteorologists.
by
Marco Alessi
,
Anthony Wilks
via
Aeon
on
July 17, 2024
How a Generation of Women and Queer Skateboarders Fought for Visibility and Recognition
On defying gender norms and expectations in extreme sports.
by
Deborah Stoll
via
Literary Hub
on
July 18, 2024
Did Robert Gould Shaw Have to Volunteer the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts to Prove Their Bravery?
Questions linger about the assault on Fort Wagner, which took place on this day in 1863.
by
Kevin M. Levin
via
Civil War Memory
on
July 18, 2024
There Has Been Nothing Like This in American History
Joe Biden is hardly the first president who has decided not to seek a second term—but the circumstances this time are unique.
by
Fred Kaplan
via
Slate
on
July 21, 2024
Anatomist of Evil
Lyndsey Stonebridge’s book hurls us deeper into Hannah Arendt’s thinking, showing us that there was muddle rather than method at the heart of it.
by
Stuart Jeffries
via
Literary Review
on
February 1, 2024
partner
Overexposed
What happened to privacy when Americans gained easy access to cameras in the Gilded Age?
by
Sohini Desai
via
HNN
on
July 2, 2024
Seattle’s Japantown Was Once Part of a Bustling Red Light District — Until Residents Were Pushed Out
The erased histories of the communities that built Seattle.
by
Nina Wallace
via
Densho: Japanese American Incarceration and Japanese Internment
on
March 18, 2024
partner
The Rise of the College Application Essay
The essay component of American college applications has a long history, but its purpose has changed over time.
by
Sarah Stoller
via
Made by History
on
July 11, 2024
After Wildfires Destroyed Lahaina, the Battle to Restore an Ancient Ecosystem Will Shape Its Future.
A wetland restoration project is bringing hope to Maui residents who want to honor Lahaina’s history and return water to the town after last year’s fires.
by
Reis Thebault
via
Washington Post
on
July 11, 2024
Expanding the Boundaries of Reconstruction: Abolitionist Democracy from 1865-1919
Sinha enlarges the temporal boundaries students are accustomed to by covering the end of the 19th century into the Progressive era with the 19th Amendment.
by
Erik J. Chaput
,
Russell J. DeSimone
via
Commonplace
on
July 16, 2024
Philanthropy’s Power Brokers
An in-depth reckoning with the Gates Foundation as a discrete actor is long overdue.
by
John Miles Branch
via
Public Books
on
July 17, 2024
A Portrait of New York City by Air in 1924
Long before Google Maps, an intrepid inventor with three camera-equipped biplanes captured a groundbreaking view of Gotham in its Jazz Age glory.
by
Thomas J. Campanella
via
Bloomberg
on
June 29, 2024
Apollo 11 Launch: "If You Can Survive the Simulations, the Mission is a Piece of Cake"
The grueling, relentless simulations astronauts that prepared the astronauts for quick decision-making in space.
by
Myles Burke
via
BBC News
on
July 15, 2024
The Man Who Created the Trade Paperback
On the life and times of Jason Epstein, cofounder of “The New York Review of Books.”
by
Michael Castleman
via
Literary Hub
on
July 18, 2024
How George Orwell Paved Noam Chomsky’s Path to Anarchism
On the profound impact of Orwell's "Homage to Catalonia" on Noam Chomsky's early embrace of left-libertarian and anarchist ideologies.
by
Robert F. Barsky
via
The MIT Press Reader
on
July 3, 2024
In 1917, Columbia’s Clampdown Remade the Antiwar Movement
When police raided Columbia University in May, commentators drew parallels to the 1968. But the school’s hostility to the antiwar movement traces back to 1917.
by
Dan La Botz
via
Jacobin
on
July 11, 2024
Bring Back the Freeze-Frame Ending!
Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F spends its final moments on a thrilling cinematic trope of the ’80s, one that I would argue is due for a comeback.
by
Chris Stanton
via
Vulture
on
July 15, 2024
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