Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
New on Bunk
Crumbling headstones in a field of golden grass.

Confronting the Afterlife of Jim Crow

"The older I got, the more I realized that our acceptance was . . . fragile, conditional. The signs were small but telling.”
A still from the Sound of Fury of two men fighting.

Dangerous Work

Cy Endfield, film noir, and the blacklist.
A collage featuring Kwame Nkrumah, Martin Luther King Jr., and Africa.

What Pan-Africanism Can Teach Us Now

A biography of Ghanaian leader Kwame Nkrumah casts the post-WWII era as a Black liberation epic rather than a psychodrama between Moscow and Washington.
Nancy Pelosi and other Democrat members of Congress wearing kente cloth and kneeing in the capitol building.

Blinded by Righteous Outrage

From the 1994 Crime Act to Trump 2.0.
Still from the "Last Temptation of Christ" depicting Jesus on the cross.

Among the Blasphemers

The ’80s I thought I remembered now feel very different to me.
Bruce Lee and Kareem Abdul Jabbar practicing martial arts.

When Bruce Lee Trained With Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

When Bruce Lee met Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, he was still known as Lew Alcindor, the most hyped young basketball star in history.
The Wikipedia logo surrounded by a wide variety of images from the encyclopedia.

Wikipedia Is Under Attack — and How It Can Survive

The site’s volunteers face threats from Trump, billionaires, and AI.
Collage of women from different time periods and ages protesting for abortion rights.

A History of Abortion Undergrounds—and a Guide to Starting One

Journalist Rebecca Grant shifts the abortion conversation away from laws and morals to focus on access: getting people the care they seek.
an organ player and his wife and dog drawing from 1495.

The Real Housewives of Church History

How pastors’ wives use power and submission.
Janis Joplin, Kris Kristofferson, Barbara McKee.

Me and Bobbie McKee

The story of the woman who inspired Janis Joplin’s signature song, then slipped away.
Smithsonian Museum and sign on a cloudy day.

The Super-Weird Origins of the Right’s Hatred of the Smithsonian

The Trump administration has stepped up its antagonism of America’s treasured museums.
Rows of men seated at computer terminals at Kennedy Space Center, 1967.
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America’s Privacy Policy

Recent news coverage has called the Privacy Act of 1974 “Watergate-inspired,” but such framing misses the big picture.
Painting of Renaissance poets reading and chatting together.

The Strange History of University Autonomy — and Why We Need It More Than Ever

Academic freedom from the Middle Ages to apartheid South Africa to now.
Illustrated poster of two men building a Sky Scraper

Ben Shahn’s Rough-Hewn Canvases Pulled No Punches

An exhibit at the Jewish Museum reveals an artist for his time — and ours.
The Israeli flag covering the word "antisemitism."

How “Antisemitism” Became a Weapon of the Right

At a time when allegations of antisemitism are rampant and often incoherent, historian Mark Mazower offers a helpfully lucid history of the term.
A woman showing another woman how to throw a bowling ball.
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The Bowling Alley: It’s a Woman’s World

Even when it was considered socially unacceptable, American women were knocking down pins on the local lanes.
President Woodrow Wilson delivers an address in, 1915.

Democratization and Congressional Decline

To understand Congress’s abdication, look at the history of presidential selection.
Bill of Rights, 1791.
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The Bill of Rights: Annotated

Proposed as a compromise to ensure the ratification of the new US Constitution, the Bill of Rights has become a critical protector of civil liberties.
Drawing of Adolph Hitler with its shadow being the pointed hood worn by members of the Ku Klux Klan.

When the Black Press Stood by the Jews Against the Nazis

This important but little-known chapter of Black-Jewish history in the United States is worth remembering.
An anti-capitalist political cartoon depicting a capitalist rhinoceros blocking the tracks for a train of the people.

How Capitalism Survives

According to John Cassidy’s century-spanning history "Capitalism and Its Critics," the system lives on because of its antagonists.
President-elect Franklin Roosevelt and Raymond Moley in February 1933.

The New Deal's Radical Uncertainty

The New Deal didn’t solve the economic problems behind the Great Depression—it made them worse.
Commercial and tourist docks of St. George's, Grenada.
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Grenada: When the Cold War Got Spicy

The 1983 invasion of Grenada raised questions about the legitimacy of American reactions to a communist presence on the island.
Afeni Shakur holding a camera.

Afeni Shakur Took on the State and Won

Pregnant and facing decades in prison, the mother of Tupac Shakur fought for her life — and triumphed — in the trial of the Panther 21.
George Washington in front a map of the United States.

The Storm Over the American Revolution

Why has a relatively conventional history of the War of Independence drawn such an outraged response?
The ceremony marking the completion of the first transcontinental railroad.

Breaking the Myth About America’s ‘Great’ Railroad Expansion

Historian Richard White on the greed, ineptitude and economic cost behind the transcontinental railroads, and the implications for infrastructure policy today.
An anti-vaccination protest.

The COVID Anti-Vax Movement Has History on Its Side

Today’s “medical freedom” warriors are drawing on a centuries-old American tradition.
Sam Francis in front of a Confederate flag.

Only Power Matters

How Samuel Francis wrote the recipe for MAGA.
Nervous stock traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in 2008.
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The 2008 Financial Crisis Explained: Housing Bubble to Bailout

Risky loans, regulatory gaps, and Wall Street practices fueled the 2008 financial crisis and led to the Great Recession.
Page excerpting Louisiana's Reconstruction constitution and featuring portraits of its Black legislators.

The Long Struggle for Equality in the American South: Louisiana as a Test Case

Louisiana’s 1845 and 1852 conventions reveal partisan tensions over the economy that shaped Black struggles and opportunities for decades.
Collage of photos from a Holocaust survivor.

Uncanny Testimony

As the last Holocaust survivors approach the end of their lives, an AI scholar grapples with technology that promises to freeze them in time.
Four men model two-button suits of 1963 Paris.

The Economic, Political, and Cultural History of Menswear

Where Western men’s clothing traditions came from, how they have evolved, and how they're being continually reinterpreted.

A History of Smoking

The Right's habit of defiance.

The Dawn of the Post-Literate Society

And the end of civilisation.
Soldiers scan the horizon in Vietnam.

My Lai Memorial

Amid bluster about warfighting and lethality, it is important to recall the moral burdens of war.
Robert Barnwell Rhett; Richmond burning in April 1865.

Beware Today’s ‘Fire-Eaters’

There are echoes in our political rhetoric of the men who helped talk the United States into civil war.
Adolf Eichmann taking an oath in 1961, during his trial.

The Uses and Abuses of “Antisemitism”

How a term coined to describe a nineteenth-century politics of exclusion would become a diagnosis, a political cudgel, and a rallying cry.
George McGovern at the Democratic National Convention in 1972

Magnificent Obsessions

How the Democrats have alienated a growing number working-class voters.
Joseph Smith reading the Book of Mormon to followers.

Leveraging Belief

Joseph Smith, religious innovator.
Julianne Moore posing in the movie "Far from Heaven."

Acting Up: A Conversation with Todd Haynes

On his films and the way they provocatively confronted the evils of the times in which they were made.
Arrows circling the word "Invasion"

The “Invasion” Invention: The Far Right’s Long Legal Battle to Make Immigrants the Enemy

Trump allies push “invasion” claims to justify suspending habeas corpus, a far-right legal effort years in the making.
A large gathering of people and parked cars in the undeveloped Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles, California.

Engineering Nature, Igniting Risk

LA’s fires and a century of landscape manipulation.
Books lined up.

How Translations Sell: Three U.S. Eras of International Bestsellers

A translation renaissance in US publishing just ended. And you probably missed it.
Andrew Mellon
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This 1920s Treasury Secretary Helped Big Business Drive the Economy

The economic vision of American industrialist Andrew Mellon loomed large over the boom and bust of the 1920s.
ILGWU parade float bearing the union label, December 7, 1960.

Look for the Union Label

Clothing labels have often played a political role in the fight for the rights of garment workers.
Young Donald Trump by the staircase in his fancy home.

The Real Estate Roots of Trumpism and the Coming Clash With Democratic Socialism

Trump’s brand of authoritarianism emerges out of New York City’s real estate industry. As mayor, Zohran Mamdani vows to curb that sector’s outsized power.
USS Boxer, at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, 1905.
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Still Coming Out Under Fire

Revisiting the lessons of Allan Bérubé’s 1990 history of queer solders during World War II.
Ruins of Mrs. Henry’s House, Battlefield of Bull Run.
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Reactionary Revolutionaries

In the mid-19th century, governments on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border set out to recast North America’s political landscape.
Harp and banjos.

Rhiannon Giddens and Kristina Gaddy “Go Back and Fetch It”

The pair’s new book recovers the sound of early Black music.
First Houses public housing in New York.

Land Value Politics

What New York City can learn from its past about the potential for urban growth that is not hostage to the preferences of the largest private owners.
Cover of "The Citizen: Official Journal of the Citizens' Councils of America."

The White Civility Council

Media focus on Charlie Kirk's presentation style while downplaying what he said and did is reminiscent of 1950s strategies for legitimizing Jim Crow.
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