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The Birth of the Minimum Wage
On the legal background to the federal minimum wage, established by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
via
BackStory
on
August 29, 2014
John Roberts’s Dream Is Finally Coming True
The chief justice has been working to neuter the Voting Rights Act since the beginning of his career.
by
David Daley
via
The Atlantic
on
December 10, 2025
partner
The First Futurists and the World They Built
From Saint-Simon to Silicon Valley, the urge to forecast the future has always masked a struggle over who gets to define it.
by
Jake Pitre
via
JSTOR Daily
on
December 3, 2025
Can the “Sistine Chapel of the New Deal” Be Saved From Trump?
Precious murals by Ben Shahn, Philip Guston, and others are even more endangered than we knew.
by
Timothy Noah
via
The New Republic
on
December 10, 2025
How the Republican Party Slipped Its Leash
The Republican Party’s descent into chaos is a product of capitalist fragmentation.
by
Meagan Day
via
Jacobin
on
December 10, 2025
The Diplomatic Battle to Win World War II
Defeating the Nazi war machine necessitated not just military might, but also skillful diplomacy.
by
Joel Nelson
via
Law & Liberty
on
December 10, 2025
Make Your Own Job
A new book examines Americans' long obsession with the enticing and oppressive concept of entrepreneurship.
by
Andrew Hartman
via
Society for U.S. Intellectual History
on
November 30, 2025
Jefferson Divided
Though his writings grappled with the contradiction between bondage and liberty, Thomas Jefferson’s life was indebted to those he enslaved.
by
Annette Gordon-Reed
via
New York Review of Books
on
December 1, 2025
Women's Work
How a century of undervaluing women’s labor echoes in policy today.
by
Alycia Asai
via
Civics & Coffee
on
December 3, 2025
An Antifascist Education
Black women’s radicalism has been fascism’s enemy for 200 years.
by
Jeanelle K. Hope
via
Lux Magazine
on
December 4, 2025
Sven Beckert’s Chronicle of Capitalism’s Long Rise
Capitalism is a global economic system, so a proper chronicle of its rise to dominance has to examine the entire world.
by
Nelson Lichtenstein
via
Jacobin
on
December 4, 2025
FIREstorm
A conversation on the wave of landlord perpetrated arson in the Bronx during the 1970s.
by
Bench Ansfield
,
Andrew Anastasi
via
History & Political Economy Project
on
December 9, 2025
Questioning Parental Divorce: The Surprising Origins of a Contentious Debate
The century-long debate over whether parental divorce harms or helps children.
by
Kristin Celello
via
Process: A Blog for American History
on
November 6, 2025
A Republic, If We Can Afford It
The framers of the United States Constitution envisoned economic discipline that they thought was a requirement for a republic to endure.
by
Larry Schwartz
via
Public Seminar
on
November 6, 2025
McCarthyism Is Back. You Can Thank This Woman.
History has overlooked the real architect of Joe McCarthy’s purges: his wife.
by
Joshua Kendall
via
Politico Magazine
on
November 9, 2025
Padding Out History: Menstrual Management in the Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century
How mobile and working women managed menstruation in the nineteenth and early twentieth century.
by
Caroline Greer
via
Commonplace
on
November 18, 2025
My Search for Barbie’s Aryan Predecessor
The original doll was not made by Mattel but by a business that perfected its practice making plaster casts of Hitler.
by
Tarpley Hitt
via
The Nation
on
December 6, 2025
Southern Strategies
You're misreading Lee Atwater’s infamous “southern strategy” quote as a confession.
by
Kevin M. Kruse
via
Campaign Trails
on
December 7, 2025
From Aid to Trade
What U.S. policymakers should know about U.S.-Africa relations.
by
Leigh Gardner
via
Perspectives on History
on
December 2, 2025
Declaration of Independence’s Promises Ring Out Today as Loudly as They Did for 249 Years
Americans have looked to the Declaration of Independence when they sought to remedy contemporary problems and create new visions for the country’s future.
by
Graeme Mack
via
The Conversation
on
December 4, 2025
Give Me Independence: On 1776, the Pivotal Year For What Would Become America
Why 1776 became the year Americans declared themselves an independent nation.
by
Edward J. Larson
via
Literary Hub
on
December 5, 2025
What America’s 19th-Century Reformers and Radicals Missed
The dangers of confusing self-improvement with institutional change.
by
Brenda Wineapple
via
The Nation
on
April 18, 2017
“Filmitis”
When movie fandom became a medical condition.
by
Diana W. Anselmo
via
Nursing Clio
on
November 19, 2025
Why Is the Establishment Ignoring the Recently Declassified JFK Files?
The documents show how CIA spymaster James Angleton hid Oswald’s movements, hid a secret Israeli liaison, and lied to Congress for decades.
by
Harrison Berger
via
The American Conservative
on
November 28, 2025
How Police Harassed and Infiltrated Civil Rights Groups
Efforts to surveil and undermine activists went far beyond infamous operations such as Cointelpro.
by
Piper French
via
The New Republic
on
December 1, 2025
Operation Condor: A Network of Transnational Repression 50 Years Later
How Condor launched a wave of cross-border assassinations and disappearances in Latin America.
by
Peter Kornbluh
via
The Nation
on
December 3, 2025
Honest Truths From Wrongful Deaths
Left-wing intellectuals' early responses to the 9/11 terror attacks.
by
Jeremy Varon
via
Public Seminar
on
December 3, 2025
Crabgrass Catholicism
A discussion with Father Stephen M. Koeth about religion and suburbanization.
by
Colin Woodard
,
Stephen M. Koeth
via
The Metropole
on
December 3, 2025
The US Propped Up the Shah’s Dictatorship to the Bitter End
The shah of Iran faced a secular opposition that wanted to restore constitutional government.
by
Afshin Matin-Asgari
via
Jacobin
on
December 3, 2025
Inside the Battle Over 'Napalm Girl'
What we have long accepted about one of the most galvanizing war photographs of all time may not be true. Can history be rewritten?
by
Gary Knight
via
Rolling Stone
on
August 1, 2025
How Redistricting Turned a Setback Into a Bloodbath
The 1894 election cycle holds some key lessons for partisan gerrymanders today.
by
Alan Greenblatt
via
Politico Magazine
on
November 10, 2025
Shades of Kent State
From Nixon to Trump.
by
Paul Baumann
via
Commonweal
on
December 2, 2025
The Real Story Behind ‘Death by Lightning’ and the Assassination of President James A. Garfield
The series dramatizes the brief tenure of the 20th president, who was fatally shot by Charles Guiteau, a lawyer who believed he’d secured Garfield’s election.
by
Zachary Clary
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
November 6, 2025
“Death by Lightning” Dramatizes the Assassination America Forgot
The new Netflix miniseries makes the 1881 killing of President James Garfield feel thrillingly current.
by
Inkoo Kang
via
The New Yorker
on
November 11, 2025
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Deploying Federal Troops to U.S. Cities Is a Second Amendment Issue
But not because the founders wanted to see more guns in the hands of Americans.
by
Noah Shusterman
via
HNN
on
December 3, 2025
The Man Incapable of Writing a Bad Sentence
Friends, enemies and lovers animate more than 60 years of the John Updike’s remarkable correspondence.
by
John Banville
via
The Guardian
on
November 17, 2025
The Incoherence of Ken Burns’s ‘The American Revolution’
Ken Burns has set himself the impossible task of retelling a national origin story that all Americans will embrace as their own.
by
Adam Rowe
via
Compact
on
December 1, 2025
Surrealism Against Fascism
A century ago, artists who survived the trenches captured humanity’s capacity for destruction. What can they teach us in a new age of genocide?
by
Naomi Klein
via
Equator
on
November 26, 2025
Patriot Acts
What Ken Burns gets wrong about the war that made America.
by
Andrew Lawler
via
The American Scholar
on
November 24, 2025
Renaissance Man
Doctor, writer, musician, and orator: Rudolph Fisher was a scientist and an artist whose métier was Harlem.
by
Harriet Washington
via
The American Scholar
on
December 1, 2025
The Man Who Wanted to Believe in Life on Mars
The Mars craze is a case study in twisting evidence and defying facts.
by
Cass R. Sunstein
via
The New Republic
on
November 24, 2025
What RFK Jr. Didn’t Tell You About the False Flag Operation He Loves to Denounce
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. leaves out his father's role in pushing false flag plans for a war with Cuba.
by
Ken Hughes
via
The Conversation
on
November 24, 2025
On the Sweeping Supreme Court Decision That Led to Widespread High School Censorship
A look at the long history of censorship in public school yearbooks.
by
Kate Eichhorn
via
Literary Hub
on
November 25, 2025
The Man Who Was Supposed to Kill Martin Luther King Jr.
For years, one man complicated the official story of who murdered the civil-rights leader. Just before he died in October, he offered a jaw-dropping revelation.
by
Nina Gilden Seavey
via
Slate
on
December 1, 2025
When Donald Trump Fired David Rubenstein
The private-equity billionaire spent decades building influence in the capital. Then his philanthropy collided with the president.
by
Michael Powell
via
The Atlantic
on
December 1, 2025
Finding Sophie
How a historian identified a Lakota child from a single photograph.
by
Martha A. Sandweiss
via
Princeton University Press
on
November 19, 2025
How Religious Food Movements Paved the Way for MAHA
A window into the ways that religious people have participated in and shaped the alternative food movement.
by
Adrienne Krone
via
UNC Press Blog
on
November 19, 2025
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Radical Religion and Radical Politics
On the intersection of spiritualism with 19th century social reform movements.
via
BackStory
on
October 30, 2015
partner
The Things They Carried
How soldiers returning from World War I brought the Spanish flu back with them.
via
BackStory
on
February 19, 2016
Silent Night?
How German immigrants brought Christmas celebrations to the United States.
by
Kathleen Brady
via
Commonweal
on
November 20, 2025
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