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Viewing 361–390 of 407 results.
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Detroit Autoworkers’ Elusive Postwar Boom
The men who made the cars could not afford to buy them.
by
Daniel Clark
via
The Metropole
on
January 30, 2020
The Queer South: Where The Past is Not Past, and The Future is Now
Minnie Bruce Pratt shares her own story as a lesbian within the South, and the activism that occurred and the activism still ongoing.
by
Minnie Bruce Pratt
via
Scalawag
on
January 27, 2020
How a Humble Stone Carries the Memory of an African American Uprising Against the Fugitive Slave Law
Stories about the past can help communities create an identity of which they can be proud. This was certainly the case at Christiana.
by
James Delle
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
January 16, 2020
Why Historical Analogy Matters
If the idea of historical incommensurability is right, then analogical reasoning in history becomes an impossibility.
by
Peter E. Gordon
via
New York Review of Books
on
January 7, 2020
partner
What Attorney General Barr Gets Wrong About the American Revolution
The revolutionaries were fighting against arbitrary power and for checks and balances.
by
Michael D. Hattem
via
Made By History
on
November 22, 2019
Secret US Intelligence Files Provide History’s Verdict on Argentina’s Dirty War
Recently declassified documents constitute a gruesome and sadistic catalog of state terrorism.
by
Peter Kornbluh
via
The Nation
on
November 18, 2019
The Treason of the Elites
For much of our clerisy, the nation is an anachronism or disgrace.
by
Rich Lowry
via
National Review
on
October 24, 2019
Why It’s Time To Retire The Whitewashed Western
The original cowboys were actually Indigenous, Black and Latinx, but that's not what Hollywood has generally led us to believe.
by
Inez Franco
via
BESE
on
October 24, 2019
partner
A Grave Injustice
Ed Ayers visits Manzanar, the largest of the WWII-era internment camps for Japanese Americans, and speaks to those keeping the memories of detainees alive.
via
Future Of America's Past
on
August 15, 2019
Hundreds of Black Deaths in 1919 are Being Remembered
America in the summer of 1919 ran red with blood from racial violence, and yet today, 100 years later, not many people know it even happened.
by
Jesse J. Holland
via
AP News
on
July 24, 2019
Ronald Reagan’s Reel Life
Did the movies ever matter? They did to Ronald Reagan.
by
J. Hoberman
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 29, 2019
Writing Gay History
How the story itself came out.
by
Jim Downs
via
Humanities
on
June 27, 2019
Racial Terrorism and the Red Summer of 1919
The Red Summer represented one of the darkest and bloodiest moments in American history.
by
Ben Railton
via
The Saturday Evening Post
on
June 19, 2019
For Some, School Integration Was More Tragedy Than Fairy Tale
Almost 60 years later, a mother regrets her decision to send her 6-year-old into a hate-filled environment.
by
Jarvis Deberry
via
nola.com
on
May 29, 2019
The 'Clotilda,' the Last Known Slave Ship to Arrive in the U.S., Is Found
The discovery carries intense, personal meaning for an Alabama community of descendants of the ship's survivors.
by
Allison Keyes
via
Smithsonian
on
May 22, 2019
Her Ancestors Fled to Mexico to Escape Slavery 170 Years Ago. She Still Sings in English.
The oldest living member of the Mascogos still sings songs in a language she doesn't understand.
by
Kevin Sieff
via
Washington Post
on
April 12, 2019
What We Don’t Know About Sylvia Plath
On revelations from a chance graveside encounter.
by
Emily Van Duyne
via
Literary Hub
on
January 22, 2019
Martin Luther King Jr. and the Meaning of Emancipation
He was a revolutionary, if one committed to nonviolence. But nonviolence does not exhaust his philosophy.
by
Asad Haider
via
n+1
on
January 18, 2019
Hand Signals
Deaf history and the birth of umpiring gestures in baseball.
by
Rebecca A. R. Edwards
via
Perspectives on History
on
October 24, 2018
History for a Post-Fact America
A review of Jill Lepore's new book, which she has called the most ambitious single-volume American history written in generations.
by
Alex Carp
via
New York Review of Books
on
October 19, 2018
partner
Who Gets to Tell the Story?
Christine Blasey Ford, the Kavanaugh confirmation hearings, and battles over America's history.
by
Rachel Wheeler
via
Made By History
on
October 17, 2018
partner
How Pocahontas—The Myth and the Slur—Props Up White Supremacy
The roots of the attacks on Elizabeth Warren.
by
Honor Sachs
via
Made By History
on
October 16, 2018
‘They Was Killing Black People’: A Century-Old Race Massacre Still Haunts Tulsa
Even as Black Wall Street gentrifies, unresolved questions remain about one of the worst episodes of racial violence in U.S. history.
by
DaNeen L. Brown
via
Washington Post
on
September 28, 2018
In the Dismal Swamp
Though Donald Trump has made it into a catchphrase, he didn’t come up with the metaphor “drain the swamp.”
by
Sam Worley
via
Popula
on
September 20, 2018
The Environmental Roots of Jim Crow in Coastal South Carolina
On the origins of the Lost Cause of the Lowcountry.
by
Caroline Grego
via
Environmental History Now
on
September 13, 2018
Reliving Johnny Cash's 'At Folsom Prison' at 50: An Oral History
Eyewitnesses to the Man in Black's legendary 1968 concerts at the California prison recall Cash's shining moment.
by
Michael Streissguth
via
Rolling Stone
on
May 7, 2018
A Tale of Two Hiroshimas
Two of the earliest films to depict the bombing of Hiroshima show how politics shapes national mourning.
by
Kazu Watanabe
via
Current [The Criterion Collection]
on
May 3, 2018
How American Racism Influenced Hitler
Scholars are mapping the international precursors of Nazism.
by
Alex Ross
via
The New Yorker
on
April 25, 2018
Martin Luther King Jr.: 50 Years Later
Activists today are taking up Dr. King’s mantle and reviving the Poor People’s Campaign.
by
Michael K. Honey
via
The Nation
on
April 3, 2018
The Fight Over Virginia’s Confederate Monuments
How the state’s past spurred a racial reckoning.
by
Benjamin Wallace-Wells
via
The New Yorker
on
December 4, 2017
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