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Reckoning With Our Past Means Commemorating Violent Histories
The history of resistance to racial oppression includes armed, violent resistance.
by
K. Stephen Prince
via
Made By History
on
April 5, 2021
Revolution and Progress on Lexington Green
The American Revolution’s first battle is a reminder that liberty isn't the result of inevitable progress but a prize won by those willing to fight for it.
by
Richard Samuelson
via
Law & Liberty
on
April 25, 2025
Echoes of Lexington and Concord
The 250th anniversary of "the shot heard round the world" is a reminder of the rights the Patriots fought for.
by
Richard Alan Ryerson
via
Law & Liberty
on
April 1, 2025
From Philly to Derry: On the Americans Who Armed the IRA During The Troubles
Vincent Conlon’s secret life in the United States as an operative and gun-running Irish rebel.
by
Ali Watkins
via
Literary Hub
on
March 11, 2025
America Is Not America Yet
On American history and the history of the word “America.”
by
Alexander Aviña
via
The Dial
on
October 3, 2024
Chiquita Must Pay for Its Crimes in Latin America
70 years since President Árbenz was ousted for standing up to Chiquita, the firm might finally be held to account for its ties to a far-right paramilitary group in Colombia.
by
Klas Lundström
via
Jacobin
on
July 10, 2024
Harriet Tubman and the Most Important, Understudied Battle of the Civil War
Edda L. Fields-Black sets out to restore the Combahee River Raid to its proper place in Tubman’s life and in the war on slavery.
by
Eric Herschthal
via
The New Republic
on
February 23, 2024
How Broadway Helped the Zionist Revolt Against Britain
In the 1940s, the Irgun went to the heart of American culture to garner support for its campaign of violent insurrection.
by
James A. S. Sunderland
via
New Lines
on
February 2, 2024
The Men Who Started the War
John Brown and the Secret Six—the abolitionists who funded the raid on Harpers Ferry—confronted a question as old as America: When is violence justified?
by
Drew Gilpin Faust
via
The Atlantic
on
November 13, 2023
A Plea for Genuine Peace in Liberation
To address these atrocities and treat Jewish victims, survivors, and families with dignity, we must confront Israel’s subjugation of Palestine.
by
William Horne
via
In Case Of Emergency
on
October 12, 2023
Declassified Documents Uncover Yet Another Mexican President’s CIA Ties
Recently declassified documents have exposed former Mexican president José López Portillo as a CIA asset.
by
Fernando Herrera Calderón
via
Jacobin
on
June 13, 2023
How World War I Inspired Black Americans to Fight for Dignity at Home
The war marked a sea change in how black men viewed their own citizenship.
by
Victor Luckerson
via
Literary Hub
on
June 1, 2023
The Siege of Wounded Knee Was Not an End but a Beginning
Fifty years ago, the Oglala Sioux Civil Rights Organization invited the American Indian Movement to Pine Ridge and reignited a resistance that has not left.
by
Nick Estes
,
Benjamin Hedin
via
The New Yorker
on
May 6, 2023
A Fire Started in Waco. Thirty Years Later, It’s Still Burning.
Behind the Oklahoma City bombing and even the January 6th attack was a military-style assault in Texas that galvanized the far right.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The New Yorker
on
May 1, 2023
A Return to the Wounded Knee Occupation, 50 Years Later
The new era of social consciousness and racial activism in the 1970s would play a pivotal role in the events leading up to the 71-day occupation.
by
Dennis Zotigh
via
Smithsonian
on
February 27, 2023
How the Right Got Waco Wrong
Militia groups have long used Waco as a rallying cry. But it was never the example of whiteness under siege that they invoke.
by
Paul M. Renfro
via
The New Republic
on
January 31, 2023
The Counterinsurgent Imagination
A new book examines military manuals as a genre to understand what armed counter-revolutionaries think of as the right way to do what they do.
by
Tom Furse
,
Joseph Mackay
via
Journal of the History of Ideas Blog
on
January 6, 2023
How Would Crazy Horse See His Legacy?
Perhaps no Native American is more admired for military acumen than the Lakota leader. But is that how he wanted to be remembered?
by
Pekka Hämäläinen
via
Smithsonian
on
November 2, 2022
Where Will This Political Violence Lead? Look to the 1850s.
In the mid-19th century, a pro-slavery minority used violence to stifle a growing anti-slavery majority, spurring their opposition to respond in kind.
by
Joshua Zeitz
via
Politico Magazine
on
October 29, 2022
The 1962 Missile Crisis Was a Turning Point for the Cuban Revolution
The missile crisis led Cuba’s leaders to distrust their Soviet ally—an attitude that ultimately helped their revolutionary system to outlast the USSR’s.
by
Antoni Kapcia
via
Jacobin
on
October 17, 2022
The Anarchist Who Authored the Mexican Revolution
A new history of the rebels led by Ricardo Flores Magón emphasizes the role of the United States in the effort to take them down.
by
Geraldo Cadava
via
The New Yorker
on
October 5, 2022
The Irrevocable Step
John Brown and the historical novel.
by
Willis McCumber
via
The Baffler
on
May 2, 2022
partner
The Formerly Enslaved Man Whose Faith Inspired a Slave Revolt
Denmark Vesey expressed the Bible’s anti-slavery messages.
by
Jeremy Schipper
via
Made By History
on
April 7, 2022
Soldiers of Solidarity
Giles Tremlett tells the story of the foreigners who joined the first line of defense against fascism in Europe.
by
Dan Kaufman
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 3, 2022
Examining Public Opinion during the Whiskey Rebellion
This armed uprising in 1794, over taxation by the fledgling new government, threatened to destroy the new union within six years of the Constitution’s ratification.
by
Jonathan Curran
via
Journal of the American Revolution
on
September 7, 2021
What Made the Battle of Blair Mountain the Largest Labor Uprising in American History
Its legacy lives on today in the struggles faced by modern miners seeking workers' rights.
by
Abby Lee Hood
via
Smithsonian
on
August 25, 2021
A Century Ago, West Virginia Miners Took Up Arms Against King Coal
In 1921, twenty thousand armed miners in West Virginia marched on the coal bosses and were met with bombs and submachine guns.
by
Arvind Dilawar
,
Chuck Keeney
via
Jacobin
on
June 23, 2021
Mark Rudd’s Lessons From SDS and the Weather Underground for Today’s Radicals
The famous activist reflects on what radicals like him got right and got wrong, and what today’s socialists should learn from his experiences.
by
Mark Rudd
,
Micah Uetricht
via
Jacobin
on
March 29, 2021
We Lionize Abraham Lincoln – But John Wilkes Booth Still Embodies a Part of America’s Soul
How the insurrection on January 6th brought a legendary assassin back to life.
by
Bennett Parten
via
Public Seminar
on
March 18, 2021
This Guilty Land: Every Possible Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln is widely revered, while many Americans consider John Brown mad. Yet it was Brown’s strategy that brought slavery to an end.
by
Eric Foner
via
London Review of Books
on
December 17, 2020
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