Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
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Director Edwin Carewe and studio owner Louis B. Mayer on a film set.

Moguls: Did the Jews Invent Hollywood?

Anti-Hollywood rhetoric often echoed anti-Jewish stereotypes. Carr shows how fears of Jewish “control” shaped debates over movies, culture, and politics.
A small, lit candle being cupped in a hand.

The Racist Roots of the Death Penalty

Racial injustice was central to the establishment of the U.S. death penalty. Ending racial injustice must be central to its abolition.
Bill Haast and a cobra.

Venom in His Veins

Bill Haast, the Florida man who tried to milk medical miracles from deadly snakes.
Photo of Anne Frank and museum descriptions.

What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank Hiding From ICE

Is it reasonable to invoke the memory of the horrors Frank suffered outside of a strictly Jewish context?
A Fresno Bee Newspaper from 1948 with photos of a plane crash that killed deportees.

The Once and Future Deportation Flight?

78 years ago, a US plane deporting 28 Mexican nationals crashed into California’s Los Gatos Canyon, killing all aboard.
ASCII art of "We the People" by Paul Sahre.

Is the Constitution ‘Dead, Dead, Dead’?

The difficulty of amending the Constitution does not mean that it is a flawed and outdated relic of a distant past.
Sprawl on the cover of "Silicon Valley and the Environmental Inequalities of High-Tech Urbanism."

Dirty Digits and “Pleasant Landscapes”

After reading Jason A. Heppler’s book, Patrick McCray decides that Silicon Valley should really be called Arsenic Valley.
1859 lynching of Harvey Braden and James Daley

Mapping the Rise of Extralegal Collective Killing in the United States, 1783-1865

A digital history project uses geospatial data to show how killing became a deliberate and communicative tool of extralegal mob violence.
Oscar Micheaux on set in 1923

Building an Empire

On the pioneering and problematic career of Oscar Micheaux.
Hands containing a tiny explosion, on a poster "For a Sane Nuclear Policy" by Saul Bass.

The Puzzle of Non-Proliferation

Today, only nine countries have nuclear weapons. That outcome was hardly inevitable, and the story of how we arrived there holds important lessons for AI.
A paved road, being reclaimed by the forest around it.

The Rebirth of Pennsylvania’s Infamous Burning Town

Sixty years into the fire that left the town condemned, Centralia is now a haven for wild plants and butterflies.
Three avocados on the sidewalk.

Why the Hass Variety Reigns as Avocado Royalty

From ugly duckling to Super Bowl favorite, a Whittier postman's discovery transformed California agriculture.
Pixilated image of Alexander Hamilton.

The Rise of the Tech Hamiltonians

The political coalition that has formed under Trump’s banner has the potential to reshape American politics.
A typical sugar plantation in the 18th century, engraved by Robert Bénard.

How Reason Cultivated Abstraction: The Plantation Roots of Economic Modernity

Exploring the non-human markers of colonial expansion and the emergence of modern capitalism through sugar plants and plantation landscapes.
Collage of a museum, a gold frame, and a reinterpreted former Confederate statue.

The Real Fight for the Smithsonian

Its museums, more than any others, shape the nation’s narrative. No wonder the country argues about it.
Photos of radical revolutionaries.

Lessons From the Extremists Who Hijacked the 1970s

If calls for radical change aren’t given a political outlet, violence will always return.
President of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro with First Lady Cilia Flores and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López.

The Constitution's Check on Warmaking

Critics of Nicolás Maduro's capture would be on much stronger footing if they were originalists.
Plastic car on the board game "Life," with two blue and two pink pins representing a family in the car.

The Myth of Pro-Family America

Trump's allies incite moral panic about shrinking white families, even as the state dismantles families of color— a paradox rooted in slavery and eugenics.
Brian Keith as Theodore Roosevelt putting his hand on a globe in a 1975 film.

The American Grizzly

What "The Wind and the Lion" can teach us about our new era of rough-riding foreign policy.
Hubert H. Humphrey, shakes hands with Martin Luther King, Jr., as Coretta Scott King looks on.

Don’t Overlook Coretta Scott King

Coretta Scott King condemned the brutality of the Vietnam War and criticized how it drained money from housing, health care, and jobs.
Museum visitors at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice.

Those Who Try to Erase History Will Fail

Montgomery shows what’s possible when museums aren’t subject to capricious executive orders.
John Sayles and the cover of his 2025 book "Crucible"

Motor City Burning: A Conversation with John Sayles about “Crucible”

A new novel explores the labor and social relations forged in Detroit from the introduction of the Model A in 1927 through the 1943 race riot.
Illustration protestors holding signs.

Against War: The Mysterious Death of Student Protestor, Timothy MacCarry

An anti-war student’s strange death decades ago and how it resonates on college campuses today.
Robed Ku Klux Klan members on horseback, in a scene from "Birth of a Nation."

First Movie in the White House: ‘Birth of a Nation’

A book traces how the 1915 film reshaped cinema, fueled white supremacy, and sparked protests, censorship battles, and lasting cultural debate.
Graph of Nuclear Weapons Test Data since 1945.

The Illogic of Nuclear Escalation

How much is enough? It’s the most basic question in the nuclear arms race. For over sixty years, few have asked it, and even fewer have received an answer.
Striking workers march in San Francisco during the general strike, July 16, 1934.

The Citywide General Strike Has a Rich History in America

In response to the killing of Renee Good and the ICE invasion, the Minneapolis labor movement has called for a citywide general strike call in nearly 80 years.
Two astronauts looking out over an earth landscape, in the style of a national park poster.

Why Science Fiction Can’t Predict the Future (And Why That’s a Good Thing)

The project of science fiction and the creation of modern mythology.

We Are Living Through Regime Change

The old, postwar world is being dismantled by its American overlord.

Return of the Silver Shirts

In ICE's invasion of Minneapolis, an echo of a dark past.
Teenager holding a U.S. flag while scaling a flagpole.
partner

How a 1964 Student Protest Reshaped the Fight Over the Panama Canal

How a dispute between American and Panamanian high school students over which country’s flag to fly escalated into days of violence.
Amy Coney Barrett holding a senate report.

This Is the History of Anti-Trans Bigotry Amy Coney Barrett Doesn’t Want to Talk About

Barrett thinks transgender people have experienced “relatively little” discrimination. A brief filed in the trans sports cases aims to set the record straight.
Bayard Rustin addressing a crowd in New York City in 1965. (Library of Congress/Interim Archives/Getty Images)

The Lasting Legacy of Bayard Rustin

Why does the influential African-American organizer and strategist continue to speak to us, three and a half decades after his death?
Police officer looking at Viola Liuzzo’s car after the march from Selma to Montgomery.

From Selma to Minneapolis

On M.L.K. Day, the death of Renee Good calls to mind another woman who died protesting for the rights of others.
Police turn fire hoses on nonviolent youth civil rights demonstrators in Alabama.

Minnesota Had Its Birmingham Moment

In 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. outlined a strategy to expose official brutality. Anti-ICE protesters are following it—and it’s working.
Illustration of James K. Polk with maps in the background.

Trump Wants to Be the New Polk

His interest in the 11th president’s legacy has conjured up the specter of manifest destiny.
Hitler, Goebbels, and a film projector.

Business as Usual: Hitler in Hollywood

Hollywood kept distributing films in Nazi Germany, facing pressure from both the regime and US censors. Some studios resisted, others complied.
16-year-old Lino Rivera standing with police lieutenant Samuel J. Battle

Harlem in Disorder: A Spatial History of How Racial Violence Changed in 1935

A multi-layered, hyperlinked narrative that maps Harlem residents' challenges to white economic and political power, and the responses they provoked.
Hydraulic mining, 1866.

Silicon Valley’s Gold Rush Roots

Silicon Valley likes to think of itself as sui generis. But there’s a clear line from tech’s knowledge economy to the Bay Area’s first economy: gold mining.
Political cartoon of women in the eastern US reaching for a suffragist who is carrying a torch from the western US.

The Progressive Era Revolution

Progressive Era reformers hoped to amend the Constitution. The democratic reforms that they achieved are well known. But what about their failures?
Hailee Seinfeld in Apple TV's "Dickinson" (2019-2021).

Dickinson's Hair

Exploring the follicular politics of gender, race, and poetics in the revisionist fantasy television series Dickinson.
Bonus Army veterans heading to Washington, D.C., on the outside of a freight train, 1932.

A Painful Paradox: Hoover and the Bonus March

How a president poised to lead a prosperous nation came to use the army against American citizens desperate for economic relief.
Hand putting a ballot in a ballot box.

The Fifteenth Amendment

And southern politicians' failed attempts to repeal it.
Cover of Chervinsky's book, "Making the Presidency"

John Adams and the Making of the Presidency

In Making the Presidency, Lindsay Chervinsky shows how Adams made decisions when no structure or precedent offered guidance.
Left: General Bonaparte firing at insurgents on steps of a church in Paris; right: George Washington kneeling to pray.

A Revolution Not Made but Prevented

“The major issue of the American Revolution was the true constitution of the British Empire.”
Group of men including General Manuel Asúnsolo, General Emiliano Zapata, Abraham Martínez

Workers' Rights Have Long Been A Tenet Of U.S. Democracy

Mexico’s 1910 Revolution showed that democracy endures only when economic justice is upheld through workers’ and peasants’ rights.
Walter Lippmann.

The Overrated Father of Modern Liberalism

A new biography of the journalist Walter Lippmann bashes conservatives but adds value.
"Help Please" sign taped on a window.

A Matter of Acceleration

Remembering Katrina to face today's storms.
Archibald J. Motley, Jr.'s 1929 painting entitled "Blues," from 1929 depicting Black musicians and dancers.

How Harlem Saw Itself

On the Metropolitan Museum of Art's exhibition of ‘The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism.’
Illustration of enslaved people and animals presented to the Pharaoh in ancient Egypt.

Pharaohs in Dixieland – How 19th-Century America Reimagined Egypt to Justify Racism and Slavery

Southern businessmen and thinkers were inspired by ancient Egypt: To them, it served as proof that all great civilizations were sustained by enslaved labor.
Friends and family of Theresa P. Babb in a group photo by the shore in 1900.

The Myth of the Loneliness Epidemic

Are we really living through a uniquely lonely moment? When it comes to friendship, this isn’t the first time that authorities have cried wolf.
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