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Market Solutions to Ancient Sins
Freedom and prosperity are the most effective cure for the scars of slavery and racism.
by
Jason Jewell
via
Law & Liberty
on
June 28, 2022
The Racist Roots of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Sex Scandal “Apocalypse”
The Southern Baptist Convention is tearing itself apart over its leaders’ long-running cover-up of abusers in its ranks. But there’s a deeper reckoning below.
by
Audrey Clare Farley
via
The New Republic
on
May 30, 2022
When Right-Wing Attacks on School Textbooks Fell Short
Some essential lessons from an earlier culture war.
by
Jonathan Zimmerman
via
The Nation
on
May 18, 2022
partner
The L.A. Uprisings Sparked an Evangelical Racial Reckoning
But it remains unfinished.
by
Jane H. Hong
via
Made By History
on
April 29, 2022
How a Confederate Daughter Rewrote Alabama History for White Supremacy
Marie Bankhead Owen led campaigns to purge anti-Confederate lessons from Southern classrooms, and all but erased Black history from the Alabama state archives.
by
Kyle Whitmire
via
al.com
on
February 16, 2022
Fugitive Pedagogy
Jarvis Givens rediscovers the underground history of black schooling.
by
Lydialyle Gibson
via
Harvard Magazine
on
February 11, 2022
Just Give Me My Equality
Amidst growing suspicion that equality talk is cheap, a new book explains where egalitarianism went wrong—and what it still has to offer.
by
Teresa M. Bejan
via
Boston Review
on
February 7, 2022
Looking for an American Myth
The fevered hunt for basic symbols.
by
John Ganz
via
Unpopular Front
on
February 6, 2022
How Picking On Teachers Became an American Tradition
And why spying on the “bums” has been terrible for schools.
by
Adam Laats
via
Slate
on
January 28, 2022
Remembering Dr. Martin Luther King
The King holiday is more than a time for reflection. It’s really a time for provocation.
by
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
via
The Daily Princetonian
on
January 17, 2022
The International MLK
“The social revolution which is taking place in this country is not an isolated, detached phenomenon. It is part of a worldwide revolution that is taking place.”
by
Robert Greene II
via
Black Perspectives
on
January 17, 2022
Teaching (amid a) White Backlash
A brief scholarly overview to understand the contours of white backlashes, their historical impact, and the ways they shape the world we inherit.
by
William Horne
via
Clio and the Contemporary
on
January 12, 2022
The Conservative War on Education That Failed
A century ago, the most effective school-ban campaign in American history set the pattern: noise and fear, but not much change in what schools actually teach.
by
Adam Laats
via
The Atlantic
on
November 23, 2021
partner
Virginia’s Governor’s Race May Hinge on Debates About Public Schools
Channeling conservative, white anger about public schools is a long-running political strategy.
by
Elizabeth Gillespie McRae
,
Lisa Levenstein
via
Made By History
on
November 2, 2021
Closer Together
Across party lines, Americans actually agree on teaching “divisive concepts.”
by
Pete Burkholder
via
Slate
on
October 15, 2021
partner
Violence Over Schools is Nothing New in America
Schools have long been ideological and physical battlegrounds — especially when it comes to citizenship and civil rights.
by
Sherman Dorn
via
Made By History
on
September 29, 2021
When a Battle to Ban Textbooks Became Violent
In 1974, the culture wars came to Kanawha County, West Virginia, inciting protests over school curriculum.
by
Ashawnta Jackson
,
Carol Mason
,
Paul J. Kaufman
via
JSTOR Daily
on
September 27, 2021
Whose Freedom?
On the ways that people have conflated freedom with whiteness but pays too little attention to the force of freedom as a concept.
by
David A. Bell
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 2, 2021
The Rise of the Elite Anti-Intellectual
For decades, “common sense” has been a convenient framing for conservative ideas. The label hides a more complicated picture.
by
Simon Brown
via
Dissent
on
August 20, 2021
"The Culture Wars— They’re Back!"
Divisive concepts, critical race theory, and more in 2021.
by
Laura Ansley
via
Perspectives on History
on
August 11, 2021
The Incoherence of American History
We ascribe too much meaning to the early years of the republic.
by
Osita Nwanevu
via
The New Republic
on
August 11, 2021
The Slippery Matter of ‘Truth’ in Patriotic Education
Laws against teaching critical race theory might backfire on Republicans.
by
Timothy Messer-Kruse
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
August 5, 2021
American Education Is Founded on White Race Theory
The conservative hysteria over critical race theory is a refusal to acknowledge that American schools have always taught a white-centric view of U.S. history.
by
Anthony Conwright
via
The New Republic
on
July 29, 2021
The People’s Bicentennial Commission and the Spirit of (19)76
The Left once tried to own the legacy of America’s Bicentennial, but ran into ideological and structural roadblocks all too familiar today.
by
Jason Tebbe
via
Tropics of Meta
on
July 26, 2021
3 Tropes of White Victimhood
Leading conservative pundits today are pounding themes that were popular among opponents of Reconstruction.
by
Lawrence B. Glickman
via
The Atlantic
on
July 20, 2021
partner
Conservatives Are Once Again Trying to Erase Black History
The battles over Critical Race Theory and Southern heritage are really about a narrow, exclusionary reading of our past.
by
Tyler D. Parry
via
Made By History
on
July 14, 2021
The Right May Be Giving Up the “Lost Cause,” but What’s Next Could Be Worse
The GOP’s new embrace of Lincoln, emancipation, and Juneteenth is no sign of progress.
by
Rebecca Onion
,
Matthew Karp
via
Slate
on
June 25, 2021
After the Lost Cause
Why are politics so consumed with the past?
by
Benjamin Wallace-Wells
via
The New Yorker
on
June 24, 2021
The Importance of Teaching Dred Scott
By limiting discussion of the infamous Supreme Court decision, law-school professors risk minimizing the role of racism in American history.
by
Jeannie Suk Gersen
via
The New Yorker
on
June 8, 2021
What’s Missing From the Discourse About Anti-Racist Teaching
Black educators have always known that their students are living in an anti-Black world and that their teaching must be set against the order of that world.
by
Jarvis R. Givens
via
The Atlantic
on
May 21, 2021
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