Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
New on Bunk
Sketch of Samuel Green.

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.
Nicolás Maduro.

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.
The White House in Washington, DC. (Volodymyr Tverdokhlib/Shutterstock)

Historical Perspective on the Unitary Executive

Article II of the Constitution offered significant concessions to those who preferred a more plural executive.
General George Washington before the Battle of Trenton.

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.
NYPD officers in front of an American flag sculpture.

The Police Were a Mistake

Law enforcement agencies have become the standing armies that the Founders feared.
The U.S. Marine Corps marching band plays during a ceremony in 2004.

American Music, American War

A roundtable discussion about David Suisman’s “Instrument of War.”
An early rating scale in education by James Burt Miner.

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.

When RAND Made Magic in Santa Monica

RAND’s halcyon days lasted two decades, during which the corporation produced some of the most influential developments in science and American foreign policy.
Illustration of a Black woman offering a leaflet promoting a liquor store boycott.

Harlem's 'Whiskey Rebellion,' the Civil Rights Campaign for Black Liquor Salesmen

The fight against 'Jim Crow jobs' took blood, sweat, tears, and boycotts.
William F. Buckley Jr. at his desk in 1965.

"A Practical Fanatic"

How William F. Buckley shaped modern conservatism through his organizational skills and charisma.
A New York City subway station in 1980s.

The Day Bernie Goetz Shot Four Unarmed Teenagers on the Subway

Chronicling the vigilante crime that shook 1980s New York City.
1917 NAACP Silent Protest Parade

Remembering the NAACP's Silent Protest Parade, a 1917 March Against Racial Terror

Yale's Beinecke Library marks the centennial of 10,000 people marching through New York City, one of the earliest African American civil rights demonstrations.
CB radio

Waves of Interference

The PC industry first landed on the FCC’s radar not for the computers themselves, but for the electrical noise they emitted. Blame the CB radio.
Alex Jones shouts into a megaphone in front of a US map full of US Border Patrol officers.

Welcome to the Jade Helm Presidency

Conservatives once panicked about a supposed federal plot to invade their communities and quash dissent. Now they’re cheering it.
Donald Trump

Can Trump Really Use the Insurrection Act?

An expert on Presidential emergency powers discusses the history and legality of military deployments in American cities.
Victor Berger

When the Sewer Socialists Struggled for Racial Equality

A close examination of the writings of Wisconsin's Victor Berger shows that his views on race changed dramatically over time.
Art piece of two black women and a motif of kente cloth and cowrie shells.

The Black Feminist Collective That Gave Us Identity Politics

The Combahee River Collective’s 1977 statement reshaped the politics of the Black left and beyond.
Jackie Robinson and Paul Robeson.

One Legend to Another: When Jackie Robinson Testifed Against Paul Robeson in Congress

On black leadership and interracial heroism during the Cold War.
Coretta Scott King standing in front of many microphones.

On Coretta Scott King’s Path to Civil Rights Activism

Coretta Scott King would become one of the nation’s most visible—and, to some, most dangerous—critics of America’s rapidly expanding war in Vietnam.
Portrait of two men staring out in the open

The Gay Black American Who Stared Down Nazis in the Name of Love

One of the most brilliant minds of the Harvard class of ’35, Reed Peggram met his soulmate on the eve of World War II and risked everything to stay by his side.
Lead Belly playing a guitar

Kurt Cobain, Lead Belly and "Grey Goose"

The greatest song that Cobain never sang.
Sheet music arranged in a circle and titled "Connection."

Writing William Billings

When historical details are nonexistent, make them up. Not usually considered sound advice to historians, but possibly warranted under these circumstances.
Gracie Mansion.

The Ghosts of Gracie Mansion, Which Zohran Mamdani and Rama Duwaji Now Call Home

“The house has been home to some of the greatest mayors in our city’s history,” Eric Adams tells Vanity Fair, “and it truly radiates that energy."
ChongLy Scott Thao taken from his home this week by ERO.

Into the Abyss

The correct response to Dachau was not better training for the guards.
Elizabeth Short.

The Worst Thing About the Black Dahlia Case

Before her murder made her a true-crime obsession, Elizabeth Short was a real person. A new book tries to separate truth from myth in the infamous case.
Jarvis McInnis in a library, smiling at the camera.

Afterlives of the Plantation: An Interview with Jarvis C. McInnis

McInnis discusses what inspired his new book on the role of the Black South in the contruction of Black modernity.
Florida governor Ron DeSantis signs the “Stop WOKE Act” bill in April 2022.

Curriculum Wars

A ‘new history’ of the politicized classroom misses the mark.
A protestor climbs the flagpole to remove the American flag during an Anti-Vietnam War rally in 1971.

Another Country: Visions of America

The rise of a violent authoritarian state under Trump unveils a deep uncertainty over what America is.
Ruins of the Al Azhar University in Gaza.

Historians Have a Duty to Condemn Scholasticide in Gaza

Leaders of the American Historical Association overruled a motion to condemn scholasticide in Gaza, opting for cowardice over ethical clarity.
Engraving of enslaved Christians in Algiers, 1815

“The Greatest Eloquence”: James Cathcart and the Power of Words in Eighteenth-Century Barbary

Cathcart's moves through the slave hierarchy to a position of comfort and prosperity were accomplished through his diplomatic skill and the power of literacy.
Poster for 1954 Animal Farm film.

Short Cuts: The CIA’s Animal Farm

The CIA secretly funded the 1954 Animal Farm film, reshaping Orwell’s ending to push anti-Soviet messaging during early Cold War politics.
The Eureka machine

Inside the Long History of Technologically Assisted Writing

On the eternal tension between human creativity and mechanical efficiency.
Ludwig von Mises.

Champions of Apathy

The first neoliberals distrusted Christianity. Their heirs have tried to revise it.
Department of Justice logo on a wall.

Work in Progress: Resignations

DOJ civil rights lawyers' resignations after leaders' refusal to probe ICE murder echo past revolts as administrations tried to politicize the Division.
From a 1886 newspaper ad titled “The 13 Useless Doctors”.

How the Nineteenth-Century Patent Medicine Industry Exploited Women

Today’s therapeutic ketamine clinics echo the tactics patent medicines once used to exploit women.
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.
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