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The Historian Who Lost Her Memory of a Hijacking
At 12 years old, Martha Hodes was on board a hijacked plane and was taken hostage for a week. How did she forget much of the experience?
by
Jacob Bacharach
via
The New Republic
on
July 25, 2023
Decoding Barbie’s Radical Pose
The “Barbie” movie glides over the history of dolls as powerful cultural objects.
by
Alexandra Lange
via
The New Yorker
on
August 2, 2023
The Nature Trade
Dan Flores reminds us that modern North Americans still walk in the footsteps of our fellow animals.
by
Michelle Nijhuis
via
New York Review of Books
on
August 1, 2023
How Stanford Helped Capitalism Take Over the World
The ruthless logic driving our economy can be traced back to 19th-century Palo Alto.
by
Sammy Feldblum
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
July 20, 2023
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and the Art of Persuasion
Stowe’s novel shifted public opinion about slavery so dramatically that it has often been credited with fuelling the war that destroyed the institution.
by
Annette Gordon-Reed
via
The New Yorker
on
June 6, 2011
The Monumental Improvisations of Sonny Rollins
Rollins never wavered in his determination to get things right, and often that meant reinventing himself and, along the way, jazz as well.
by
Gene Seymour
via
The Nation
on
July 24, 2023
American Carnage
A new book about Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City bombing traces the path from Ronald Reagan’s antigovernment ideology to today’s radicalized right.
by
Sean Wilentz
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 25, 2023
Visiting a Forgotten Chapter in American History
Sean Mirski terms the Monroe Doctrine “revolutionary” in his impressively erudite "We May Dominate the World."
by
David J. Garrow
via
The Spectator World
on
July 22, 2023
Martha Graham’s Movement
A recent biography dives into the choreographer's role as both an artist and figure of early American modernism.
by
Emily Hawk
via
The Nation
on
July 19, 2023
The Corporatization of Creativity
Our ways of thinking about thinking are a product of postwar business culture.
by
Charlie Tyson
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
July 24, 2023
Who Is History For?
What happens when radical historians write for the public.
by
David Waldstreicher
via
Boston Review
on
July 25, 2023
The Neoliberal Superego of Education Policy
Institutional reform is no match for pervasive structural inequality.
by
Christopher Newfield
via
Boston Review
on
January 18, 2023
The Curse of Bigness
Until more Americans know what happened in periods such as the Gilded Age, they can’t protect themselves from those who abuse history to advance poor policy.
by
Amity Shlaes
via
National Review
on
July 10, 2023
Mass Destruction
Real democratic participation in foreign policy is almost unimaginable today—but this wasn’t always the case.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
Boston Review
on
March 27, 2023
Secret Histories
Don DeLillo's Cold Wars.
by
Siddhartha Deb
via
The Nation
on
June 26, 2023
What the 1990s Did to America
The Law and Economics movement was one front in the decades-long advance of a revived free-market ideology that became the new American consensus.
by
Henry M. J. Tonks
via
Public Books
on
May 17, 2023
L.A. and the Birth of Car Culture
On Darryl Holter and Stephen Gee’s “Driving Force: Automobiles and the New American City, 1900–1930.”
by
Gary Cross
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
July 15, 2023
Impossible Systems: On Carly Goodman’s “Dreamland”
The visa lottery reveals the inherent myths and contradictions at play in the US immigration system.
by
Tim Hirschel-Burns
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
July 13, 2023
The Kingdom of Private Equity
The 2007–2008 crisis was an epic clusterfuck. The rise of private equity has only made things worse.
by
George Scialabba
via
The Baffler
on
July 11, 2023
The Localist
Why did Chicago become the headquarters of free market fundamentalism? Adam Smith offers a clue.
by
Jonathan Levy
via
Boston Review
on
June 28, 2023
The Students Who Went to Sea
"The Floating University: Experience, Empire, and the Politics of Knowledge"
by
William H. Whyte
via
Literary Review
on
July 7, 2023
The Myth of Reagan’s Cold War Toughness Haunts American Foreign Policy
Hawks may claim that uncompromising defense policies won the Cold War. But his pursuit of peace was more important.
by
Sean T. Byrnes
via
The New Republic
on
July 6, 2023
Keeping Speech Robust and Free
Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit against Fox News' coverage of claims that the company had rigged the 2020 election may soon become an artifact of a vanished era.
by
Jeffrey Toobin
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 7, 2023
When FDR Took On the Supreme Court
The standard narrative of Roosevelt's court-packing efforts casts them as a failure. But what if they were a success?
by
John Fabian Witt
via
The Nation
on
June 27, 2023
A Historian Forgotten
A new biography of William Still show how the abolitionist documented the underground railroad as he helped people through it.
by
Bennett Parten
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
May 7, 2023
Dusting Off the Declaration
The Declaration of Independence seems to Pauline Maier to be "peculiarly unsuited" for the role that it eventually came to play in America.
by
Gordon S. Wood
via
New York Review of Books
on
August 14, 1997
Death by Northern White Hands
On Philip Dray’s “A Lynching at Port Jervis.”
by
Adolf Alzuphar
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
June 26, 2023
Losing the Genetic Lottery
How did a field meant to reclaim genetics from Nazi abuses wind up a haven for race science?
by
Padmini Raghunath
via
Distillations
on
April 6, 2023
Pathologies of a President
A new book revisits Freud’s analysis of Woodrow Wilson to ask: how much do leaders’ psychologies shape our politics?
by
Adam Hochschild
via
New Statesman
on
June 19, 2023
Where Does the South Begin?
A new history cuts against stereotypes, to show a region constantly changing—and whose future is up for grabs.
by
Scott Wasserman Stern
via
The New Republic
on
June 26, 2023
Confronting Georgetown’s History of Enslavement
In “The 272,” Rachel L. Swarns sets out how the country’s first Catholic university profited from the sale of enslaved people.
by
Paul Elie
via
The New Yorker
on
June 27, 2023
Beyond the Binary
The long history of trans.
by
Stephanie Burt
via
The Nation
on
June 25, 2023
The Ironic Radical: On Hayden White’s “The Ethics of Narrative”
The kinds of narratives historians tend to fall back on constrain our ability to imagine alternatives to the way things have been, and to the way things are.
by
Michael S. Roth
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
June 2, 2023
Do Cartels Exist?
A revisionist view of the drug wars.
by
Rachel Nolan
via
Harper’s
on
June 20, 2023
How the John Birch Society Won the Long Game
The American right doesn’t need the John Birch Society these days, but that is because it’s adopted the Birchers’ extremism wholesale.
by
Nathan J. Robinson
via
The Nation
on
June 8, 2023
Who Freed the Slaves?
For some time now, the answer has not been the abolitionists.
by
Stephanie McCurry
via
The Nation
on
September 13, 2016
A Topic Best Avoided
After the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln faced the issue of sorting out a nation divided over the issue of freed slaves. But what were his views on it?
by
Nicholas Guyatt
via
London Review of Books
on
December 1, 2011
A Better Journalism?
‘Time’ magazine and the unraveling of the American consensus.
by
Paul Baumann
via
Commonweal
on
May 28, 2023
Life Is Short. Indexes Are Necessary.
In 1941 an ambitious Philadelphia pediatrician, the wonderfully named Waldo Emerson Nelson, became the editor of America’s leading textbook of pediatrics.
by
Fara Dabhoiwala
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 1, 2023
Brains on Drugs
Between the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, drug use to expand one’s consciousness went from an intellectual pastime to an emblem of social decay.
by
John Semley
via
The Baffler
on
June 14, 2023
The Upper West Side Cult That Hid in Plain Sight
In the sixties and seventies, the Sullivanian Institute had a winning sales pitch for young New Yorkers: parties, sex, low rent, and affordable therapy.
by
Jessica Winter
via
The New Yorker
on
June 14, 2023
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
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