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New on Bunk
How the NY Post and the NY Daily News Turned Victims Into Criminals
The role of tabloid journalism in shaping the racist narrative of the 1984 Bernie Goetz subway shooting.
by
Heather Ann Thompson
via
Literary Hub
on
January 28, 2026
Prelude to a Revolution, Part One
How maps, scarcity, and severe weather combined to shape the new American Republic—and a revolution we’re still waiting on.
by
Charlotte Leib
via
Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center
on
January 28, 2026
What Is the History of American Progress without a History of Its Workers?
How the Lowell mill working girls are being remembered in Trump's America.
by
Eileen Boris
via
HARPPing On History
on
February 5, 2026
The Dirt Bikers Who Went to War on Desert Conservation
Today’s anti-environmentalists are following the tracks of the ‘Phantom Duck’ and the Barstow-to-Vegas race.
by
Julia Sizek
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
February 9, 2026
Trump Is Tearing Apart the North American Auto Industry
In the 1960s, the Auto Pact deal integrated the US and Canada’s auto sectors. Donald Trump’s trade war will all but guarantee its unraveling.
by
Taylor C. Noakes
via
Jacobin
on
February 10, 2026
Martha Washington’s Enslaved Maid Ona Judge Made a Daring Escape to Freedom
The National Park Service has erased her story from Philadelphia exhibit.
by
Timothy Welbeck
via
The Conversation
on
February 11, 2026
The Making of the Deportation Machine
The pillars aren’t new. They were built over decades, with bipartisan consensus.
by
Marie Gottschalk
via
Boston Review
on
February 10, 2026
Passage To A Better World
The meaning of “revolution” has shifted between feared upheaval and hopeful progress, and its promises often bring violence and mixed results.
by
Richard Bourke
via
Literary Review
on
February 12, 2026
Lucky Corner
How Fiorello La Guardia and a popular front of radicals and reformers transformed New York City.
by
Michael Kazin
via
The Nation
on
February 9, 2026
After the Earthquakes
The fundamental problem of the present is complicity.
via
Equator
on
February 11, 2026
Of Course The Country Was Stolen
It should not be controversial to acknowledge the hideous injustice done to Native Americans through colonization.
by
Nathan J. Robinson
via
Current Affairs
on
February 11, 2026
How Elite Colleges Aided Censorship During the Red Scares
Powerful organizations during the Red Scares crafted a world where “academic freedom” was conditional on political allegiance.
by
Dominique J. Baker
via
Inside Higher Ed
on
February 10, 2026
Race, Labor, and Statues
What is “the process” for taking down Confederate statues? There isn’t one.
by
Jack Christian
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
March 12, 2022
Thomas Jefferson Couldn’t Resist the Allure of Fame
The Founding Father desired to be remembered by history.
by
Andrew Burstein
via
Literary Hub
on
January 29, 2026
How Up with People Paved a Super Bowl Path for Bad Bunny
Once upon a time, a group of 600 young adults smiled as one, danced in pastel outfits and sang about positivity during the Super Bowl halftime show.
by
Elizabeth Merrill
via
ESPN.com
on
February 1, 2026
Pittsburgh’s Fight For Fair Housing
A brief history of Pittsburgh’s first fair housing law.
by
Dan Holland
via
The Metropole
on
February 4, 2026
Fighting Abroad and At Home: Remembering the Experiences of Black Vietnam Veterans
The long history of Black heroism and service—and the current efforts to erase it.
by
Wil Haygood
via
Literary Hub
on
February 6, 2026
Never Again, Once Again
Invoking the memory of Jewish persecution to denounce the assault on immigrants today is not an offense but a moral imperative.
by
Peter E. Gordon
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 7, 2026
In Response to the ICE Killings, Another Bad Use of Our Founding History
An examination of Alex Pretti’s killing by ICE to challenge the idea that the Second Amendment safeguards liberty and deters government tyranny.
by
William Hogeland
via
Hogeland's Bad History
on
February 10, 2026
Bad Bunny’s Stunning Redefinition of “America”
His joyous, internationalist, worker-centered vision was a declaration of war against Trumpism.
by
Greg Grandin
via
The Nation
on
February 10, 2026
Deadlier Than Gettysburg
How the cruelty of the Confederacy’s prison camps gave rise to the rules of war.
by
Drew Gilpin Faust
via
The Atlantic
on
February 8, 2026
America’s 250th Isn’t Just a Birthday
Our reticence to name the civic occasion we are marking this year points to a deeper uncertainty about how to relate to American history.
by
Yuval Levin
via
The Free Press
on
January 19, 2026
A Seat At The Top: Book Review Of "Lunch On A Beam"
Chronicling the history behind the famous photograph.
by
Michael Liss
via
3 Quarks Daily
on
January 26, 2026
What America Lost When It Lost Mother Fletcher
With nearly all of the victims of the Tulsa Race Massacre now dead, the country must find other ways to rectify its wrongs.
by
Caleb Gayle
via
The Atlantic
on
January 28, 2026
How One Black Labor Union Changed American History
The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters launched a union drive against a railroad giant, forever entwining the causes of labor and black civil rights.
by
Paul Prescod
via
Jacobin
on
December 6, 2025
Return to the 19th-Century Custom of the Spicy ‘Vinegar Valentine’
Victorians found a way to anonymously tell people they didn’t like exactly how they felt.
by
Beth Daley
via
The Conversation
on
February 9, 2026
Lincoln As You’ve Never Known Him
Matthew Pinsker reveals how the 16th president carefully built a partisan base essential to his rise.
by
Caroline E. Janney
via
Washington Post
on
February 7, 2026
How America Got So Sick
The health of a nation reflects the health of a democracy.
by
Vann R. Newkirk II
via
The Atlantic
on
February 9, 2026
Kansas City Invented the Crime of ‘Jaywalking,’ Leading the National War Against Pedestrians
In 1912, Kansas City became the first U.S. city to arrest jaywalkers. Pushed by industry propaganda, it helped shift streets toward cars, not people.
by
Mackenzie Martin
via
A People's History Of Kansas City
on
January 29, 2026
The Console Wars, As Told By '90s Nintendo And Sega Advertisements
On the adolescent aesthetics that the federal government is co-opting to promote ICE.
by
Nicole Carpenter
via
Aftermath
on
February 4, 2026
Equity on the Rocks: Using the Past to Stir Up New Possibilities
Discussion of how liquor licensing has shaped Black economic opportunity and equity from antebellum oyster cellars to modern Boston.
by
Mackenzie Tor
via
The Panorama
on
January 28, 2026
Over There, Again
The American Legion at home and abroad.
by
Daniel Kovacs
via
Contingent
on
February 3, 2026
The Medical Doctor Who Triggered the Salem Witch Trials of 1692
There is little historical information about Dr. Griggs, but what little there is, is significant.
by
Benjamin Ray
via
Commonplace
on
February 3, 2026
Who Owns the Founding? Akhil Reed Amar’s "Born Equal: Remaking America's Constitution"
Politics keeps refighting the Founding: Amar says liberals inherit originalism, but that tale smooths 19th-century contradictions.
by
Ahmed Ahmed
via
Liberal Currents
on
February 3, 2026
How W.E.B. DuBois and James McCune Smith Helped Combat Medical Racism in America
From McCune Smith to Du Bois, Black scholars used data to debunk scientific racism and prove health inequality was social, not biological.
by
Michelle A. Williams
via
Literary Hub
on
February 4, 2026
Historical Parallels
Discussing effective historical analogies for the second Trump administration.
by
John Ganz
via
Unpopular Front
on
February 5, 2026
Visiting the Old Country by Way of Kew Gardens, Queens
My grandmother lived in Kew Gardens, Queens. It was just an average New York commute, but for me it meant stepping out of one reality and into another.
by
Jane Ziegelman
via
Literary Hub
on
January 20, 2026
Playing the Grinch at America’s 250th Birthday Party
How do we celebrate America's 250th anniversary as ICE and the Border Patrol threaten and abuse ordinary Americans?
by
Jack Rakove
via
Washington Monthly
on
February 5, 2026
The Theology of Roe
Far from the bastion of secularism many people today assume it to be, the landmark abortion ruling enacted the values of liberal mainline Protestantism.
by
Matthew Schmitz
via
First Things
on
January 22, 2026
The Path to the Trump Doctrine
From Syria to Lebanon to Gaza, the coercion central to the new regime has been incubated in the Middle East.
by
Aziz Rana
,
Aslı Ü. Bâli
via
Boston Review
on
January 29, 2026
How the Bernie Goetz Shootings Explain the Trump Era
A notorious event in 1984 divided New Yorkers in ways that feel extremely familiar four decades later.
by
Heather Ann Thompson
via
The Atlantic
on
January 26, 2026
Trump's War on History
As America’s 250th anniversary approaches, the president wants to control the country’s future by bulldozing its past.
by
Dan Friedman
,
Amanda Moore
via
Mother Jones
on
February 3, 2026
Accountability for ICE and CBP
However bad you think the corruption and misconduct at ICE and CBP is — the reality is far far worse.
by
Garrett M. Graff
via
Doomsday Scenario
on
February 1, 2026
Samuel Green Freed Himself and Others From Slavery. Then He Was Imprisoned Over Owning a Book
He covertly assisted conductors on the Underground Railroad, but it was his possession of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” turned that him into an abolitionist hero.
by
Victor Luckerson
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
January 14, 2026
When Did Everything Become Terrorism?
How actual terrorists like Trump and ICE have expanded the definition of terrorism to include everyone they don’t like.
by
Lily Balloffet
,
Cinthya Martinez
via
Tropics of Meta
on
February 3, 2026
Historical Perspective on the Unitary Executive
Article II of the Constitution offered significant concessions to those who preferred a more plural executive.
by
George W. Liebmann
via
Law & Liberty
on
February 5, 2026
Arms and the Common Man
The founders distrusted standing armies and favored militias. But over time, the Second Amendment shifted from militia defense to broad individual gun rights.
by
Lawrence Goldstone
via
Law & History Review
on
December 11, 2024
The Police Were a Mistake
Law enforcement agencies have become the standing armies that the Founders feared.
by
Matt Ford
via
The New Republic
on
June 2, 2020
American Music, American War
A roundtable discussion about David Suisman’s “Instrument of War.”
by
Gayle F. Wald
,
Matt Delmont
,
David Suisman
,
Gustavus Stadler
,
Joseph M. Thompson
,
Lisa Gilman
,
Deborah Paredez
via
Public Books
on
December 4, 2025
Why the HR Office Works for the Boss
And more on how the first "Big Men on Campus," Herbert Hoover, and friends, kept charge in the university, in the workplace, and on the national stage.
by
Charles Petersen
via
Making History
on
October 16, 2023
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