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The Pirate as Conquistador: Plunder and Politics in the Making of the British Empire
As the British Empire's power expanded, piracy became criminalized.
by
Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra
via
Arcade
on
May 6, 2019
Sleepwalking to Madness in Mid-Century America
On Audrey Clare Farley’s “Girls and Their Monsters.”
by
Ellen Wayland Smith
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
June 13, 2023
A Poisonous Legacy
Two new books reveal the story of Stanford University’s early years to be rife with corruption, autocracy, incompetence, white supremacy, and murder.
by
Jessica Riskin
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 1, 2023
Queer History Now!
“Queer” has experienced a loss of meaning and a curdling of political potential. To reinvigorate it, we need a new approach to history.
by
Ben Miller
via
The Baffler
on
June 7, 2023
Ego-Histories
The more that historians make their own experiences an explicit part of their work, the harder it will become to let the sources speak clearly.
by
David A. Bell
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 1, 2023
Not How He Wanted to Be Remembered
Two decades passed before the ghosts of the Rosenbergs came back to haunt Irving Kaufman, the judge who sentenced them to death.
by
Linda Greenhouse
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 1, 2023
Eyewitness Accounts of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake
The heart of this book is the sharp and disjointed accounts of survivors, their experience not yet shorn of its surprise.
by
Sasha Archibald
via
The Public Domain Review
on
May 23, 2023
The Dank Underground
In the late Sixties, countercultural media was distributed by the Underground Press Syndicate and bankrolled by marijuana.
by
J. Hoberman
via
New York Review of Books
on
May 26, 2023
An Anthropologist of Filth
On Chuck Berry.
by
Ian Penman
via
Harper’s
on
May 4, 2023
The Long Afterlife of Libertarianism
As a movement, it has imploded. As a credo, it’s here to stay.
by
Benjamin Wallace-Wells
via
The New Yorker
on
May 29, 2023
Should We Psychoanalyze Our Presidents?
Sigmund Freud once applied his Oedipal theory to the leader of the free world.
by
Franklin Foer
via
The Atlantic
on
May 28, 2023
'Footnotes' Review: Spotlight on ‘Shuffle Along’
When a pair of college friends with a knack for comedy met up with a musical double act, they had the ingredients for a sensation.
by
John Check
via
The Wall Street Journal
on
May 21, 2021
Escape from the Market
Far from spelling the end of anti-market politics, basic income proposals are one place where it can and has flourished.
by
Simon Torracinta
via
Boston Review
on
May 19, 2023
The Two Constitutions
James Oakes’s deeply researched book argues that two very different readings of the 1787 charter put the United States on a course of all but inevitable conflict.
by
David W. Blight
via
New York Review of Books
on
May 18, 2023
The Question of the Offensive Monument
A new book asks what we lose by simply removing monuments.
by
Erin L. Thompson
via
The Nation
on
December 5, 2022
The Little Man’s Big Friends
A new book seeks to explain why many Americans, especially but not exclusively in the South, have understood freedom as an entitlement for white people.
by
Eric Foner
via
London Review of Books
on
May 24, 2023
Getting Sacagawea Right
New evidence suggests that Sacagawea had a longer life than most historians have believed — fifty-seven years longer.
by
Thomas Powers
via
New York Review of Books
on
May 18, 2023
Ron DeSantis’s Context-Free History Book Vanished Online. We Got A Copy.
Ron DeSantis, who has attacked Florida history lessons and aims to run for president, dismisses slavery in his 2011 book as a “personal flaw” of the Founding Fathers.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Retropolis
on
May 21, 2023
1619 Rightly Understood
David Hackett Fischer's book "African Founders" should be the starting point for any reflection on the enduring African influence on American national ideals.
by
Wilfred M. McClay
via
First Things
on
May 13, 2023
The Birth of the Personal Computer
A new history of the Apple II charts how computers became unavoidable fixtures of our daily lives.
by
Kyle Chayka
via
The New Yorker
on
May 18, 2023
The Shame of the Suburbs
How America gave up on housing equality.
by
David Denison
via
The Baffler
on
May 9, 2023
The Wobblies and the Dream of One Big Union
A new history examines the lost promise and fierce persecution of the IWW.
by
Michael Kazin
via
The Nation
on
May 15, 2023
Abe’s Ambitious Religious Creed
Through the tragedies and uncertainties of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln may have found a deepened connection to his religious faith.
by
Barton Swaim
via
The Wall Street Journal
on
May 5, 2023
Escaping from Notes to Sounds
The saxophonist Albert Ayler revolutionized the avant-garde jazz scene, drastically altering notions of what noises qualified as music.
by
Andrew Katzenstein
via
New York Review of Books
on
April 20, 2023
The Lost Music of Connie Converse
A writer of haunting, uncategorizable songs, she once seemed poised for runaway fame. But only decades after she disappeared has her music found an audience.
by
Jeremy Lybarger
via
The New Republic
on
April 24, 2023
Blues, Grays & Greenbacks
How Lincoln's administration financed the Civil War and transformed the nation's decentralized economy into the global juggernaut of the postwar centuries.
by
Nicholas Guyatt
via
New York Review of Books
on
May 4, 2023
Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Perilous Power of Respectability
We revere the man and revile the strategy, but King knew what he was doing.
by
Kelefa Sanneh
via
The New Yorker
on
May 8, 2023
The Frontier Justice
William O. Douglas was a strong advocate of conservation, but as a Supreme Court justice his involvement in such issues was often ethically questionable.
by
Jed S. Rakoff
via
New York Review of Books
on
May 4, 2023
Pitching the Big Tent
The secret, often missing ingredient to building a majoritarian progressive coalition.
by
Nicole Hemmer
via
Democracy Journal
on
March 22, 2023
‘Easy Money’ Review: The Currency and the Commonwealth
Saddled with debt and forbidden by the crown to mint money, Boston’s Puritans dreamed up a novel monetary system that we still use today.
by
Adam Rowe
via
The Wall Street Journal
on
March 31, 2023
Traffic Jam
Ben Smith’s book on the history of the viral internet doesn’t truly reckon with the costs of traffic worship.
by
Leah Finnegan
via
The Baffler
on
May 2, 2023
What If There Was Never a Revolution?
A new book considers the possible alternative outcomes of the battles in America's war for independence.
by
Katrina Gulliver
via
Law & Liberty
on
May 2, 2023
The Making of Jackie Kennedy
As a student in Paris and a photographer at the Washington Times-Herald, the future First Lady worked behind the lens to bring her own ideas into focus.
by
Thomas Mallon
via
The New Yorker
on
May 1, 2023
Has Black Lives Matter Changed the World?
A new book makes the case for a more pragmatic anti-policing movement—one that seeks to build working-class solidarity across racial lines.
by
Jay Caspian Kang
via
The New Yorker
on
April 21, 2023
The Great American Poet Who Was Named After a Slave Ship
A new biography of Phillis Wheatley places her in her era and shows the ways she used poetry to criticize the existence of slavery.
by
Tiya Miles
via
The Atlantic
on
April 22, 2023
The Liberal Discontents of Francis Fukuyama
“The End of History?” was an announcement of victory. But a quarter-century later, its author remains unsure if liberalism truly won.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
The Nation
on
April 17, 2023
The Origins of Creativity
The concept was devised in postwar America, in response to the cultural and commercial demands of the era. Now we’re stuck with it.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
April 17, 2023
They Did It for the Clicks
How digital media pursued viral traffic at all costs and unleashed chaos.
by
Aaron Timms
via
The New Republic
on
April 18, 2023
The Forgotten Drug Trips of the Nineteenth Century
Long before the hippies, a group of thinkers used substances like cocaine, hashish, and nitrous oxide to uncover the secrets of the mind.
by
Claire Bucknell
via
The New Yorker
on
April 17, 2023
Means-Testing Is the Foe of Freedom
After Emancipation, Black people fought for public benefits like pensions that would make their newly won citizenship meaningful.
by
Matthew E. Stanley
via
Jacobin
on
April 17, 2023
Spoken Like a True Poet
In Joshua Bennett’s history of spoken word, poetry is alive and well thanks to a movement that began in living rooms and bars.
by
Stephen Kearse
via
Poetry Foundation
on
March 27, 2023
What Are the Lessons of “Roe”?
A new book chronicles the decades-long fight to legalize abortion in the United States.
by
Moira Donegan
via
The Nation
on
April 4, 2023
The Cult of Secrecy
America’s classification crisis.
by
Patrick Radden Keefe
via
Foreign Affairs
on
February 13, 2023
Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Gold-Bug” (1843)
Poe’s story of a treasure hunt, revealing the fantastical writer’s hyper-rational penchant for cracking codes.
via
The Public Domain Review
on
July 18, 2019
Killing Democracy to Save It
How an idealistic defense intellectual concluded that democracy is often its own worst enemy.
by
John Ganz
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
July 6, 2018
Winging It: The Battle Between Reagan and PATCO
The true economic legacy of the Reagan years is not tax cuts but union busting.
by
Chris Lehmann
via
The Nation
on
March 21, 2012
Law, Medicine, Women’s Authority, and the History of Troubled Births
A new book "examines legal cases of women accused of infanticide and concealment of stillbirth."
by
Lara Freidenfelds
via
Nursing Clio
on
March 22, 2023
The Epic Life of Nicholas Said, from Africa to Russia to the Civil War
Dean Calbreath’s biography, “The Sergeant,” relates the improbable adventures of a brilliant 19th-century Black man.
by
Martha Anne Toll
via
Washington Post
on
March 30, 2023
Pittsburgh Reformers and the Black Freedom Struggle
Historian Adam Lee Cilli effectively illustrates the centrality of Black Pittsburgh within the larger Black Freedom Struggle.
by
Ashley Everson
via
Black Perspectives
on
February 9, 2023
The Pocahontas Exception: America’s Ancestor Obsession
The ‘methods and collections’ of genealogists are political because they have a great deal in common with genealogy as a way of doing history.
by
Thomas W. Laqueur
via
London Review of Books
on
March 30, 2023
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