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An Oral History of How Alex Trebek Became America’s Most Beloved Game-Show Host
Four decades of “Jeopardy!” contestants tell the story of Alex Trebek’s rise from affable Canadian TV host to cultural icon.
by
Emily Yahr
via
Washington Post
on
November 17, 2020
An Eradication: Empire, Enslaved Children, and the Whitewashing of Vaccine History
Enslaved children were used in medical trials for early smallpox vaccines. They have been forgotten.
by
Farren E. Yaro
via
Age of Revolutions
on
December 7, 2020
What Henry Adams Understood About History’s Breaking Points
He devoted a lifetime to studying America’s foundation, witnessed its near-dissolution, and uncannily anticipated its evolution.
by
Dan Chiasson
via
The New Yorker
on
November 30, 2020
Cicely Was Young, Black and Enslaved – Her Death Has Lessons That Resonate in Today's Pandemic
US monuments and memorials have overlooked frontline workers and people of color affected by past epidemics. Will we repeat history?
by
Nicole S. Maskiell
via
The Conversation
on
December 2, 2020
McCarthyism Was Never Defeated. Trumpism Won’t Be Either.
Censure brought down a crusading anti-communist senator but fired up his followers.
by
Beverly Gage
via
Washington Post
on
December 4, 2020
Minority Rule Cannot Last in America
It never has.
by
Kenneth Owen
via
The Atlantic
on
December 2, 2020
partner
Trump and Biden Both Want to Repeal Section 230. Would That Wreck the Internet?
Today's heated political arguments over censorship and misinformation online are rooted in a 26-word snippet of a law that created the Internet as we know it.
via
Retro Report
on
November 30, 2020
Oh Nancy, Nancy!
The mysterious appeal of my first detective.
by
Sam Leith
via
The Spectator
on
February 1, 2020
An Inflammation of Place
On the symptoms and spread of Newyorkitis.
by
Charlee Dyroff
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
February 10, 2020
Game Day at the Ohio Pen
Remembering the Ohio State Penitentiary Hurricanes—and the day my father played against them in 1965.
by
David Martin
via
Belt Magazine
on
January 31, 2020
The History of the StairMaster
The 1980s brought about America's gym obsession—and a machine that demands a notoriously grueling cardio workout
by
Michelle Delgado
via
Smithsonian
on
January 31, 2020
Judges Gone Wild
Bribery! Impeachment! Drug smuggling! Gambling! Justices getting drunk in the chambers!
by
Dylan Taylor-Lehman
,
Justin Klanke
,
Brendan Spiegel
via
Narratively
on
January 30, 2020
Joe Biden Tried to Cut Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare for 40 Years
Joe Biden was once a New Deal Democrat. Then he “evolved” and starting backing decades of Republican plans to cut Medicare and Social Security.
by
Branko Marcetic
via
Jacobin
on
January 29, 2020
Keeping the Country
In southwest Florida, the Myakka River Valley — a place of mystery and myth — is under threat of development.
by
Michael Adno
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
January 28, 2020
The Secret History of Facial Recognition
Sixty years ago, a sharecropper’s son invented a technology to identify faces. The record of his role all but vanished. Who was Woody Bledsoe, and who was he working for?
by
Shaun Raviv
via
Wired
on
January 21, 2020
How Trees Made Us Human
More than iron, stone, or oil, wood explains human history.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The New Republic
on
December 1, 2020
Why Do American Presidential Transitions Take Such a Ridiculously Long Time?
Horseback travel time is only part of the story.
by
Sara Georgini
,
Rebecca Onion
via
Slate
on
December 2, 2020
What I Learned by Following the 1918-19 ‘Spanish’ Flu Pandemic in (Almost) Real Time
Once the COVID crisis is over, it may take us quite some time to process and psychologically recover from this tragedy.
by
Ethan J. Kytle
via
Tropics of Meta
on
September 25, 2020
Staring at Hell
The artists of our time, with their ruin-porn coffee-table books, offer the world a glossy, anesthetized image of abandoned infrastructure from Chernobyl to Detroit.
by
Kate Wagner
via
The Baffler
on
January 6, 2020
The Storied History of Giving in America
Throughout American history, philanthropy has involved the offering of time, money and moral concern to benefit others, but it carries a complicated legacy.
by
Amanda Bowie Moniz
via
Smithsonian
on
November 23, 2020
The Forgotten Feminists of the Backlash Decade
The activists of the 1990s worked so diligently that they were written out of history.
by
Maggie Doherty
via
The New Republic
on
September 24, 2020
Taverns and the Complicated Birth of Early American Civil Society
Violent, lively and brash, taverns were everywhere in early colonial America, embodying both its tumult and its promise.
by
Vaughn Scribner
via
Aeon
on
November 23, 2020
A Crashing Monument and the Echoes of War
The collapse of John C. Calhoun's statue created a sound not unlike artillery in the war he influenced.
by
Justin Bristol
via
Muster
on
October 20, 2020
Minneapolis and the Rise of Nutrition Capitalism
The intertwining of white flour, nutrition science, and profit.
by
Michael J. Lansing
via
The Metropole
on
October 20, 2020
“It is History and It Is Fascinating”
Katherine Fite and the Nuremberg War Crime Trials, 1945.
by
Tammy Williams
via
U.S. National Archives
on
November 19, 2020
partner
Joe Biden's Harshest Critics Are Likely To Be Some of His Fellow Catholics
The fight between Biden and conservative Catholics will be about more than policy.
by
Theresa Keeley
via
Made By History
on
November 30, 2020
A Massive New Effort to Name Millions Sold Into Bondage During The Transatlantic Slave Trade
Enslaved.org will allow anyone to search for individual enslaved people around the globe in one central online location.
by
Sydney Trent
via
Retropolis
on
December 1, 2020
A Quest to Discover America’s First Science-Fiction Writer
It’s been two hundred years since America’s first sci-fi novel was published. But who wrote it?
by
Paul Collins
via
The New Yorker
on
November 28, 2020
The Secrets of Deviled Eggs
A food writer cracks into the power of food memories and what deviled eggs might tell us about who we are and who we might become.
by
Emily Strasser
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
November 12, 2020
The Alchemy of Conquest: Science, Religion, and the Secrets of the New World
How scientific thought informed colonization and religious conversion during the Age of Discovery.
by
Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra
via
Not Even Past
on
September 22, 2020
partner
Yes, President Trump, Confederate Base Names Celebrate Heritage — a Shameful One
Why removing the names of Confederates from military bases matters.
by
Chad Williams
via
Made By History
on
July 2, 2020
John Brown: The First American to Hang for Treason
The militant abolitionist's execution set a precedent for armed resistance against the federal government with implications for those who had condemned him.
by
Heather Cox Richardson
via
We're History
on
December 2, 2014
Shamalot
Jack Kennedy, we hardly know ye—and to know ye is not to love ye.
by
P. J. O'Rourke
via
Commentary
on
November 18, 2020
The Removal of Monuments: What about Kit Carson?
The West and the nation need worthier, more honest memorials.
by
Susan Lee Johnson
via
We're History
on
November 24, 2020
We're Celebrating Thanksgiving Amid a Pandemic. Here's How We Did it in 1918 and What Happened Next.
Many Americans were living under quarantines, and officials warned people to stay home for the holiday.
by
Grace Hauck
via
USA Today
on
November 24, 2020
partner
Channeling Lincoln’s Ideological Balancing Act Will Lead Biden to Success
In his time, the 16th president drew comparisons to a famous tightrope walker.
by
David S. Reynolds
via
Made By History
on
November 20, 2020
How Weird Was Frank Zappa?
Alex Winter’s new documentary about the musician fails to capture his deeply conventional streak.
by
John Semley
via
The New Republic
on
November 26, 2020
The 10th President’s Last Surviving Grandson: A Bridge to The Nation’s Complicated Past
At 91, Harrison Ruffin Tyler demonstrates that "long ago" wasn't so long ago.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Retropolis
on
November 29, 2020
This is an Experiment About How We View History
How does color influence our perception of time?
by
Matthew Daniels
,
Jan Diehm
via
The Pudding
on
October 31, 2020
How Woody Guthrie’s Mother Shaped His Music of the Downtrodden
Gustavus Stadler on Nora Belle Guthrie's battle with Huntington's Disease.
by
Gustavus Stadler
via
Literary Hub
on
November 16, 2020
What the Greatest Generation Had That the Covid Generation Lacks
Americans are no more selfish in 2020 than they were in the 1940s, the difference between the two moments is about national leadership, not national character.
by
Nicole Hemmer
via
CNN
on
November 18, 2020
partner
Health Risks of Vaping: Lessons From the Battle With Big Tobacco
Like cigarette manufacturers decades ago, e-cigarette makers have pitched their products as fun and safe. But nobody knows what the risks are.
via
Retro Report
on
November 17, 2020
The Hotel at the Heart of the Hudson River School
An unearthed guest register from the Catskill Mountain House sheds light on the artists who spent the night there.
by
Rebecca Rego Barry
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
November 18, 2020
Susie Walking Bear Yellowtail and Histories of Native American Nursing
Yellowtail, the first Crow registered nurse, fought for the inclusion of Native medicine and healing knowledge in reservation hospitals.
by
Brianna Theobald
via
Nursing Clio
on
November 19, 2020
Thank the Pilgrims for America's Tradition of Separatism, Division, and Infighting
They were not the nation's first settlers, but they were the most fractious.
by
Richard Kreitner
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
November 25, 2020
Republicans Rediscover the Dangers of Selling Bunk to Their Constituents
Cynical public speech aimed at winning political power has consequences.
by
Rachel Shelden
via
The Atlantic
on
November 25, 2020
When the Enslaved Went South
How Mexico—and the fugitives who went there—helped make freedom possible in America.
by
Alice L. Baumgartner
via
The New Yorker
on
November 19, 2020
Whose History? AI Uncovers Who Gets Attention in High School Textbooks
Natural language processing reveals huge differences in how Texas history textbooks treat men, women, and people of color.
by
Edmund L. Andrews
via
Stanford University
on
November 17, 2020
Diners, Dudes, and Diets
How gender and power collide in food media and culture.
by
Emily J. H. Contois
via
Nursing Clio
on
November 17, 2020
partner
Republicans Won’t Speak Out Against Trump Because They’re Afraid Politically
And history says they have a reason to be.
by
Michael Koncewicz
via
Made By History
on
November 20, 2020
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