Menu
Excerpts
Exhibits
Collections
Originals
Categories
Map
Search
Idea
colonialism
415
Filter by:
Date Published
Filter by published date
Published On or After:
Published On or Before:
Filter
Cancel
Viewing 181–210 of 415 results.
Go to first page
The Enlightenment’s Dark Side
How the Enlightenment created modern race thinking, and why we should confront it.
by
Jamelle Bouie
via
Slate
on
June 5, 2018
The Dark Side of Nice
American niceness is the absolute worst thing to ever happen in human history.
by
D. Berton Emerson
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
April 22, 2018
The Roots of America’s Gun Culture
How 18th-century British arms sales, the slave trade, and the Revolutionary War contributed to the mess we have today.
by
Priya Satia
,
Isaac Chotiner
via
Slate
on
April 19, 2018
Why a Woman Who Killed Indians Became Memorialized as the First Female Public Statue
Hannah Duston was used as a national symbol of innocence, valor, and patriotism to justify westward expansion.
by
Barbara Cutter
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
April 9, 2018
No, the Irish Were Not Slaves Too
The myth of Irish slavery has found fertile ground in Internet memes as a way to derail conversation about the need for affirmative action today.
by
Liam Hogan
,
David M. Perry
via
Pacific Standard
on
March 15, 2018
In Winston Churchill, Hollywood Rewards a Mass Murderer
Are a few bombastic speeches really enough to wash the bloodstains off Churchill’s racist hands?
by
Shashi Tharoor
via
Washington Post
on
March 10, 2018
A Terraqueous Counter-Narrative in US History
For hundreds of years, Florida has had the reputation of being a little unstable.
by
D. Berton Emerson
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
February 18, 2018
Searching for Wakanda
The African roots of the Black Panther story.
by
Thomas F. McDow
via
Origins
on
February 15, 2018
The Troubling Origins of the Skeletons in a New York Museum
The effort to repatriate the remains of thousands of Herero people slaughtered by German colonists at the turn of the century.
by
Daniel A. Gross
via
The New Yorker
on
January 24, 2018
Twilight of Empire
Why the 1969 moon landing signaled the end of the massive American empire of the 20th century.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
Modern American History
on
January 22, 2018
original
Paying for Climate Change
Despite his extreme rhetoric, Trump is merely the latest in a long line of U.S. leaders unwilling to pony up for global environmental accords.
by
Stephen Macekura
on
January 16, 2018
The Story Behind the Poem on the Statue of Liberty
Why so many of the people who quote Emma Lazarus’s Petrarchan sonnet miss its true meaning.
by
Walt Hunter
via
The Atlantic
on
January 16, 2018
partner
Racism Has Always Driven U.S. Policy Toward Haiti
On Haiti, Donald Trump sounds a lot like Thomas Jefferson.
by
Brandon R. Byrd
via
Made By History
on
January 14, 2018
Without Haiti, the United States Would, in Fact, Be a Shithole
And some other things about the country that Donald Trump doesn’t know and doesn’t care to know.
by
Amy Wilentz
via
The Nation
on
January 12, 2018
Statues, National Monuments, and Settler-Colonialism
Connections between public history and policy in the wake of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante.
by
Rose Miron
via
National Council on Public History
on
December 18, 2017
The Brutal Origins of Gun Rights
A new history argues that the Second Amendment was intended to perpetuate white settlers' violence toward Native Americans.
by
Patrick Blanchfield
via
The New Republic
on
December 11, 2017
original
The Other End of the Telescope
Considering astronomy's history from the shadow of the Arecibo Observatory reveals the discipline's intimate ties to imperialism.
by
David Singerman
on
November 24, 2017
Making History Safe Again: What Ken Burns Gets Wrong About Vietnam
Vietnam was not a "tragic misunderstanding" but a campaign of "imperial aggression."
by
Christian G. Appy
,
Patrick Lawrence
via
Salon
on
October 15, 2017
“Kicked About”: Native Culture at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello
Kristine K. Ronan describes her discovery of two Native American statues at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello.
by
Kristine K. Ronan
via
Panorama
on
October 14, 2017
How Columbus, Of All People, Became a National Symbol
Christopher Columbus was a narcissist.
by
William Francis Keegan
via
The Conversation
on
October 6, 2017
Stolen Relations: Recovering Stories of Indigenous Enslavement in the Americas
A tribal collaborative project that seeks to understand settler colonialism and its legacies through the lens of Indigenous enslavement and unfreedom.
by
Linford Fisher
via
Indigenous Slavery
on
October 6, 2017
partner
Decisions More Than a Century Ago Explain Why The U.S. Has Failed Puerto Rico in Its Time of Need
Fears about trade prompted the decision to make Puerto Rico a colony.
by
Marc-William Palen
via
Made By History
on
October 3, 2017
Puerto Rico Syllabus
Essential tools for critical thinking about the Puerto Rican debt crisis.
by
Marisol LeBrón
,
Yarimar Bonilla
,
Sarah Molinari
via
Puerto Rico Syllabus
on
September 27, 2017
Why Would Anyone In Puerto Rico Want A Hurricane? Because Someone Will Get Rich.
How tax breaks and a quasi-colonial status make the island vulnerable to disasters.
by
Yarimar Bonilla
via
Washington Post
on
September 22, 2017
How One College Succeeded at Grappling With a Racist Past
Comparing the methods of Oxford University in the U.K. with those of the University of Mississippi shows there’s much to learn.
by
Timothy W. Ryback
via
The Atlantic
on
September 19, 2017
A World of Weapons: Historians Shape Scholarship on Arms Trading
The early history of American arms trading is missing from most of the scholarship on guns.
by
Kritika Agarwal
via
Perspectives on History
on
September 1, 2017
A New View of Grenada’s Revolution
The documentary, "The House on Coco Road" tells the little-known story of Grenada's revolution and subsequent U.S. invasion.
by
Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 26, 2017
American Consumer Empire in Puerto Rico
Puerto Ricans were forced to become “Porto Ricans” – adopting Anglo customs while subsidizing American profits.
by
William Horne
via
The Activist History Review
on
July 14, 2017
3 Ways to Think About the American Revolution
The complex combination of grievances that fueled the war had to do with taxes, class, and nationalism.
by
Benjamin Studebaker
via
benjaminstudebaker.com
on
July 5, 2017
An Independence Day Alternative
How "enlightened" leaders of the early US ignored an Independence Day speech and set in motion indigenous peoples' brutalization.
by
Nicholas Guyatt
via
Jacobin
on
July 4, 2017
View More
30 of
415
Filters
Filter Results:
Search for a term by which to filter:
Suggested Filters:
Idea
imperialism
American Indians
slavery
exploitation
historiography
Indian removal
white settlers
land ownership
westward expansion
historical memory
Person
Christopher Columbus
Jacob Hurd Smith
Thomas Jefferson
Donald Trump
Adolf Hitler
Emma Lazarus
Winston Churchill
Hannah Duston
Damani Baker
Maurice Bishop