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The Hamilton Cult
Has the celebrated musical eclipsed the man himself?
by
Robert Sullivan
via
Harper’s
on
October 1, 2016
The Gay Marriages of a Nineteenth-Century Prison Ship
What seemed to enrage a former inmate most was the mutual consent of the men he lived with.
by
Jim Downs
via
The New Yorker
on
July 2, 2020
The Surprising Cross-Racial Saga of Modern Wealth Inequality
Why the “racial wealth gap” fails to explain economic inequality in black and white America.
by
Adolph Reed Jr.
via
The New Republic
on
June 29, 2020
100 Years of Edith Wharton's "The Age of Innocence"
Where does Edith Wharton's idea of innocence fall into our own world?
by
Rachel Vorona Cote
via
Jezebel
on
June 24, 2020
Stories in the Shine
"Moonshine" is now a big thing in the liquor biz. But it takes a visit to West Virginia to get a sense of the complex stories in every barrel.
by
Mickie Meinhardt
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
June 30, 2020
Why It's Right That the Theodore Roosevelt Statue Comes Down
Like the museum behind it, the monument was designed in large part to train white people in a fundamentally racist way of seeing.
by
Nick Mirzoeff
via
Hyperallergic
on
June 30, 2020
Confederates in the Capitol
The National Statuary Collection announced the unification of the former slave economy’s emotional heartland with the heart of national government.
by
William Hogeland
via
Boston Review
on
June 29, 2020
partner
The Mainstreaming of Christian Zionism Could Warp Foreign Policy
How the history of dispensationalism shapes U.S. foreign policy today.
by
Jeffrey Rosario
via
Made By History
on
June 30, 2020
The Vanishing Monuments of Columbus, Ohio
Last week, the mayor announced that the city’s most prominent statue of Christopher Columbus would be removed “as soon as possible.”
by
Hanif Abdurraqib
via
The New Yorker
on
June 24, 2020
The Ancestry Project
Sometimes I learned more Black history in a week at home than I did in a lifetime of Februarys at school.
by
Mariah Stovall
via
The Paris Review
on
June 29, 2020
A Different Kind of Expert
An 1813 correspondence demonstrates that medical expertise in early America was not limited to men or physicians.
by
Sarah E. Naramore
via
Nursing Clio
on
June 25, 2020
What the Protesters Tagging Historic Sites Get Right About the Past
Places of memory up and down the East Coast also witnessed acts of resistance and oppression.
by
Lindsay M. Chervinsky
via
Smithsonian
on
June 26, 2020
The Confederates Loved America, and They’re Still Defining What Patriotism Means
The ideology of the men who celebrated the United States while fighting for its dissolution is still very much alive.
by
Richard Kreitner
via
The New Republic
on
June 30, 2020
Dreams of a Revolution Deferred
How African-Americans in Early America celebrated the Declaration of Independence's ideals, even as basic freedoms were denied to them.
by
Derrick R. Spires
via
Uncommon Sense
on
June 30, 2020
The Korean War Atrocities No One Wants to Talk About
For decades they covered up the U.S. massacre of civilians at No Gun Ri and elsewhere. This is why we never learn our lessons.
by
Jim Bovard
via
The American Conservative
on
June 26, 2020
The Indebted Dead
Tracing the history of the Grateful Dead folktale and the evolving obligations of being alive.
by
Colin Dickey
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
June 29, 2020
Asian Americans Are Still Caught in the Trap of the ‘Model Minority’ Stereotype
Generations of Asian Americans have struggled to prove an Americanness that should not need to be proven.
by
Viet Thanh Nguyen
via
TIME
on
June 26, 2020
partner
Liberal Reform Threatens to Expand the Police Power – Just as it Did in the Past
How calls for “real reforms” have resulted in measures that further shield police from real accountability.
by
Max Felker-Kantor
via
HNN
on
June 28, 2020
Was El Monte Really Founded by White Pioneers?
A new book explores the history of the people who have been written out of the L.A. suburb's longtime origin story.
by
Steve Chiotakis
via
KCRW
on
June 24, 2020
Tangled Up in Bob Stories: A Dylan Reading List
The author reflects on his own journey with Dylan, and shares some of his favorite pieces of Dylanology.
by
Aaron Gilbreath
via
Longreads
on
June 24, 2020
Confederate Battle Flag Comes Down in Mississippi; ‘Medgar’s Wings Must Be Clapping.’
Myrlie Evers began to weep when she heard the Mississippi Legislature vote to remove the Confederate battle emblem from the state flag.
by
Jerry Mitchell
via
Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting
on
June 28, 2020
Makers of Living, Breathing History: The Material Culture of Homemade Facemasks
Masks have a history associated with disease, status, gender norms, and more.
by
Erika L. Briesacher
via
Nursing Clio
on
June 24, 2020
There’s Truth in Numbers in Policing – Until There Isn’t
To hold the police accountable for misconduct, data related to police violence must not only become more accessible, it must also become more reliable.
by
Carl Suddler
via
Brookings
on
June 26, 2020
Our First Authoritarian Crackdown
A new book persuasively argues that the Federalists’ attempt to squash opposition and the free flow of ideas was even more nefarious than we thought.
by
Brenda Wineapple
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 23, 2020
The Power of Empty Pedestals
After Governor Northam announced its removal, two Richmond historians reflect on the legacy of the Lee Monument.
by
Gregory D. Smithers
,
Michael Dickinson
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
June 23, 2020
How Tear Gas Became a Staple of American Law Enforcement
In 1932, the “Bonus Army” of jobless veterans staged a protest in Washington, DC. The government dispersed them with tear gas.
by
Lauren Vespoli
via
JSTOR Daily
on
June 24, 2020
Yes, the Freedmen’s Memorial Uses Racist Imagery. But Don’t Tear It Down.
Keep in mind what it meant to the people who created it.
by
David W. Blight
via
Washington Post
on
June 25, 2020
Bleachman Says, "Clean It With Bleach!"
Education campaigns for HIV/AIDS hold lessons for COVID-19.
by
Lindsey Passenger Wieck
via
Perspectives on History
on
June 22, 2020
partner
The Explicit Anthem of Anti-Racist Protest
Rap group N.W.A. understood vulgarity and controversy were necessary to draw attention to police brutality.
by
Felicia Angeja Viator
via
Made By History
on
June 22, 2020
America’s Long War on Children and Families
Trump’s family separation policy belongs to a much longer history of U.S. government forces taking children from families that don't match the American ideal.
by
Paul M. Renfro
via
Boston Review
on
June 22, 2020
The History That James Baldwin Wanted America to See
For Baldwin, the past had always been bent in service of a lie. Could a true story be told?
by
Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
via
The New Yorker
on
June 19, 2020
The Confederacy Was an Antidemocratic, Centralized State
The actual Confederate States of America was a repressive state devoted to white supremacy.
by
Stephanie McCurry
via
The Atlantic
on
June 21, 2020
Civil Rights Has Always Been a Global Movement
How allies abroad help the fight against racism at home.
by
Brenda Gayle Plummer
via
Foreign Affairs
on
June 19, 2020
An Enemy Until You Need a Friend
The role of "big government" in American history.
by
Steven Conn
via
Origins
on
November 1, 2014
Why This Mexican Village Celebrates Juneteenth
Descendants of slaves who escaped across the southern border observe Texas’s emancipation holiday with their own unique traditions.
by
Wes Ferguson
via
Texas Monthly
on
June 20, 2019
How USDA Distorted Data to Conceal Decades of Discrimination Against Black Farmers
An investigation found that USDA promoted misleading historical data which ultimately cost black farmers land, money, and agency.
by
Nathan Rosenberg
,
Bryce Wilson Strucki
via
The Counter
on
June 26, 2019
The Living History of Juneteenth, Our Next National Holiday
A celebration of emancipation in Texas is taking hold in the minds of Americans everywhere.
by
Brandon R. Byrd
via
GQ
on
June 19, 2020
Growing Up with Juneteenth
How a Texan holiday became a national tradition.
by
Annette Gordon-Reed
via
The New Yorker
on
June 19, 2020
Why the Confederate Flag Flew During World War II
As white, southern troops raised the battle flag, they showed that they were fighting for change abroad—but the status quo at home.
by
Matt Delmont
via
The Atlantic
on
June 14, 2020
The First Motto on United States Coins: “Liberty—Parent of Science and Industry”
Faces on coins tell stories —as do words, especially in mottoes.
by
Robert J. Stern
via
Athenaeum Review
on
June 16, 2020
Rumor Mill
Watching fake news spread in 1942.
by
Tracy Campbell
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
May 20, 2020
The Real Story Behind “Because of Sex”
One of the most powerful phrases in the Civil Rights Act is often viewed as a malicious joke that backfired. But its entrance into law was far more savvy.
by
Rebecca Onion
,
Christina Wolbrecht
via
Slate
on
June 16, 2020
Military Industrial Sexuality
How a passionate thirty-one-year-old systems analyst and a militant World War II veteran pushed the military to bend toward justice.
by
Ryan Reft
via
Boom California
on
December 20, 2018
Rewriting Country Music's Racist History
Artists like Yola and Rhiannon Giddens are blowing up what Giddens calls a “manufactured image of country music being white and being poor.”
by
Elamin Abdelmahmoud
via
Rolling Stone
on
June 5, 2020
The United States Has a Long History of Mutual Aid Organizing
On the roots of the community-based model that reemerged in the COVID era to counter the absence of adequate state support.
by
Maya Adereth
via
Jacobin
on
June 14, 2020
More UFOs Than Ever Before
What explains the apparently sudden spike in intergalactic traffic after WWII? If Cold War anxieties are to blame, why have sightings persisted?
by
Rich Cohen
via
The Paris Review
on
August 26, 2019
Balancing the Ledger on Juneteenth
The reparations debate highlights what Juneteenth is about: freedom and demanding accountability for past and present wrongs.
by
Vann R. Newkirk II
via
The Atlantic
on
June 19, 2019
Reunion, Juneteenth and the Meaning of the Civil War
What would it mean to define the Civil War as a necessary and crucial final step in the long, even more tragic history of slavery in America?
by
Ben Railton
via
The Saturday Evening Post
on
June 16, 2020
The Unpresident and the Unredeemed Promise
A combination of historical surpluses—the afterlives of slavery, of the deranged presidency—has raised the stakes in the present struggle.
by
Fintan O’Toole
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 12, 2020
You Know Karen
She's been having a moment — and that's not a good thing. Using baby name data, we found other names that are equally as “Karen” as Karen.
by
Jan Diehm
,
Sara Stoudt
,
Amber Thomas
via
The Pudding
on
July 16, 2020
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