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What Do We Do About John James Audubon?
The founding father of American birding soared on the wings of white privilege. How should the birding community grapple with this racist legacy?
by
J. Drew Lanham
via
Audubon
on
February 23, 2021
At William & Mary, a School for Free and Enslaved Black Children is Rediscovered
Opened in 1760, the school may be the oldest still-standing building of its kind.
by
Joe Heim
via
Washington Post
on
February 25, 2021
The History of Cities Is About How We Get to Work
From ancient Rome to modern Atlanta, the technologies that allow people to commute in about 30 minutes have defined the shape of cities.
by
Jonathan English
via
CityLab
on
August 29, 2019
Why New York City Stopped Building Subways
Nearly 80 years ago, a construction standstill derailed the subway into its present crisis.
by
Jonathan English
via
CityLab
on
April 16, 2018
How Should We Understand the Shocking Use of Stereotypes in the Work of Black Artists?
It's about the satirical tradition of 'going there.'
by
Richard J. Powell
via
Artnet News
on
February 16, 2021
The Secret Life of the White House
The residence staff, many of whom have worked there for decades, balance their service of the First Family with their long-term loyalty to the house itself.
by
Susannah Jacob
via
The New Yorker
on
February 24, 2021
Experiments in Self-Reliance
Thoreau’s life is a lesson not in self-reliance, but in discerning whom and what to rely on, whether you’re one person or a state of 29 million.
by
Jonathan Malesic
via
Commonweal
on
February 24, 2021
What Maketh a Man
How queer artist J.C. Leyendecker invented an iconography of twentieth-century American masculinity.
by
Tyler Malone
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
June 10, 2019
The Racist History Behind El Paso’s XII Travelers Memorial
Protesters in El Paso have focused on toppling The Equestrian, a monument to a racist colonizer. But the story behind the monument goes deeper.
by
David Dorado Romo
via
Texas Observer
on
September 28, 2020
Black Political Activism and the Fight for Voting Rights in Missouri
Nick Sacco takes a moment to remember the 15th Amendment.
by
Nick Sacco
via
Muster
on
September 29, 2020
Claudia Jones and the Price of Anticommunism
During the Cold War era, communist activists and their families suffered from harassment by the federal government.
by
Denise Lynn
via
Black Perspectives
on
September 30, 2020
Backlash Forever
It’s time to abandon the assumption that workers have a “natural” home on the center-left.
by
Gabriel Winant
via
Dissent
on
February 1, 2021
QAnon and the Satanic Panics of Yesteryear
What they can teach us about what to expect.
by
Daniel N. Gullotta
via
The Bulwark
on
February 25, 2021
George R. Lawrence, Aeronaut Photographer
George R. Lawrence captured one of the most iconic photos of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. That was only one event in his very interesting life.
by
Christopher Turner
via
Cabinet
on
November 21, 2008
What Happens When a President Really Listens?
Jonathan Alter on Jimmy Carter ditching politics for truth.
by
Jonathan Alter
via
Literary Hub
on
September 30, 2020
Blight by Association: Why a White Working-Class Suburb Changed Its Name
The stretches one Detroit suburb made to justify a name change — the ‘burb’s supposedly colorblind arguments were anything but.
by
Kenneth Alyass
via
The Metropole
on
October 1, 2020
It Would Be Great if the United States Were Actually a Democracy
The pervasive mythmaking about the supposed wisdom of the founders has covered up a central truth: the US Constitution is an antidemocratic mess.
by
Aziz Rana
,
Chris Maisano
via
Jacobin
on
February 16, 2021
Faulkner Couldn’t Overcome Racism, But He Never Ignored It
That’s why the privileged White novelist’s work is still worth reading, Michael Gorra argues.
by
Chandra Manning
via
Washington Post
on
October 2, 2020
Anna Deavere Smith on Forging Black Identity in 1968
In 1968, history found us at a small women’s college, forging our Black identity and empowering our defiance.
by
Anna Deavere Smith
via
The Atlantic
on
February 9, 2021
China and the American Revolution
Explaining the global impact of British-Chinese relations during the colonial period.
by
Simon Hill
via
Journal of the American Revolution
on
December 7, 2017
How the Cold War Shaped the Design of American Malls
America's first mall was designed as an insular utopia, providing shelter and a controlled environment during uncertain times.
by
Marni Epstein-Mervis
via
Curbed
on
June 11, 2014
Why Superheroes Are the Shape of Tech Things to Come
Superman et al were invented amid feverish eugenic speculation: what does the superhero craze say about our own times?
by
Iwan Rhys Morus
via
Aeon
on
March 5, 2020
The Limits of Barack Obama’s Idealism
“A Promised Land” tells of a country that needed a savior.
by
Thomas Meaney
via
The New Republic
on
February 15, 2021
The “Indianized” Landscape of Massachusetts
In Massachusetts, the inclusion of Native American names and places in local geography has obscured the violence of political and territorial dispossession.
by
Mark Jarzombek
via
Places Journal
on
February 1, 2021
America Must Become a Democracy
The authors of the Constitution feared mass participation would unsettle government, but it’s the privileged minority that has proved destabilizing.
by
David Frum
via
The Atlantic
on
February 15, 2021
How the First Airmail Pilots Learned to Fly in the Dark
Almost a century ago, a network of signals guided airmail pilots across the country. A photographer documents the remnants of this transcontinental system.
by
Chris Forsyth
,
Daegan Miller
via
Places Journal
on
February 1, 2021
The Arch of Injustice
St. Louis seems to define America’s past—but does it offer insight for the future?
by
Steven Hahn
via
Public Books
on
February 16, 2021
Immigration Hard-Liner Files Reveal 40-Year Bid Behind Trump's Census Obsession
The Trump administration tried and failed to accomplish a count of unauthorized immigrants to reshape Congress, the Electoral College and public policy.
by
Hansi Lo Wang
via
NPR
on
February 15, 2021
Forgotten Camps, Living History
Reckoning with the legacy of Japanese internment in the South.
by
Jason Christian
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
February 18, 2021
The Magazine That Helped 1920s Kids Navigate Racism
Mainstream culture denied Black children their humanity—so W. E. B. Du Bois created The Brownies’ Book to assert it.
by
Anna E. Holmes
via
The Atlantic
on
February 12, 2021
partner
The 1925 Dinosaur Movie That Paved the Way for King Kong
During a slow day at work, a young marble cutter named Willis O’Brien began sculpting tiny T-Rex figurines.
by
Kristin Hunt
via
JSTOR Daily
on
October 10, 2019
The Legacy of Malcolm X
Malcolm X died fifty-one years ago today, just as he was moving toward revolutionary ideas that challenged oppression in all its forms.
by
Ahmed Shawki
via
Jacobin
on
February 21, 2016
Can Historians Be Traumatized by History?
Their secondhand experience of past horrors can debilitate them.
by
James Robins
via
The New Republic
on
February 16, 2021
The Lost Rivers of Owens Valley
Water—who owns it, who uses it—has shaped this landscape from the Paiutes’ irrigation canals to the Los Angeles aqueduct.
by
Frederic Wehrey
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 16, 2021
Why Martha Washington's Life Is So Elusive to Historians
A gown worn by the first First Lady reveals a dimension of her nature that few have been aware of.
by
Alexis Coe
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
February 17, 2021
When the Black Panthers Came to Algeria
In "Algiers, Third World Capital," Elaine Mokhtefi captures a world of camaraderie, shared ideals, and frequent miscommunication.
by
Elias Rodriques
via
The Nation
on
May 7, 2019
Ping Pong of the Abyss
Gerd Stern, the Beats, and the psychiatric institution.
by
Gabby Kiser
via
The Beat Museum
on
February 9, 2021
partner
Biosphere 2: A Faulty Mars Survival Test Gets a Second Act
In 1991, eight people sealed themselves inside a giant glass biosphere to practice space living. By the time they emerged, they had “suffocated, starved and went mad.”
via
Retro Report
on
August 3, 2018
What Are Magazines Good For?
The story of America can be told through the story of its periodicals.
by
Nathan Heller
via
The New Yorker
on
February 16, 2021
Malcolm’s Ministry
At the end of his remarkable, improbable life, Malcolm X was on the cusp of a reinvention that might have been even more significant than his conversion.
by
Brandon M. Terry
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 4, 2021
American Solitude
Notes toward a history of isolation.
by
Jeffrey Mathias
via
Perspectives on History
on
February 17, 2021
From Limbaugh to Trump: A Historian of the Right Wing Explains Rush’s Real Legacy
In so many ways, Limbaugh helped sow the seeds of the pathologies we're now living through.
by
Rick Perlstein
,
Greg Sargent
via
Washington Post
on
February 17, 2021
A Disgruntled Federal Employee's 1980s Desk Calendar
A nameless Cold Warrior grew frustrated in his Defense Department job, and poured out his feelings in an unusual way.
by
Ted Widmer
via
The Paris Review
on
June 13, 2018
The Politics of a Second Gilded Age
Mass inequality in the Gilded Age thrived on identity-based partisanship, helping extinguish the fires of class rage. In 2021, we’re headed down the same path.
by
Matthew Karp
via
Jacobin
on
February 17, 2021
Quarantine in Nineteenth-Century New York
As COVID-19 races through New York, we asked Lorna Ebner to tell us about previous attempts to mitigate disease in the city.
by
Lorna Ebner
via
Books, Health and History
on
April 14, 2020
Fight the Pandemic, Save the Economy: Lessons from the 1918 Flu
We examine the 1918 flu to understand whether social distancing has economic costs or if slowing the spread of the pandemic reduced economic severity.
by
Sergio Correia
,
Stephan Luck
,
Emil Verner
via
Liberty Street Economics
on
March 27, 2020
All-Black Towns Living the American Dream
Rare footage from the 1920s, when Oklahoma was home to some 50 African-American towns.
by
Rhea Combs
via
National Geographic
on
October 2, 2016
partner
The Crossroads Facing Country Music After Morgan Wallen’s Use of a Racist Slur
Will the industry remain a bastion of conservatism, or take advantage of the opportunity to broaden its base?
by
Amanda Marie Martinez
via
Made By History
on
February 17, 2021
Pranksters and Puritans
Why Thomas Morton seems to have taken particular delight in driving the Pilgrims and Puritans out of their minds.
by
Christopher Benfey
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 15, 2021
How America Rediscovered a Cookbook From the Harlem Renaissance
Arturo Schomburg's work is still inspiring researchers and cooks today.
by
Mayukh Sen
via
Atlas Obscura
on
May 1, 2020
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