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Viewing 151–180 of 236 results.
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Those Who Know
On Raoul Peck's "Exterminate all the Brutes" and the limits of rewriting the narrative.
by
Nick Martin
via
The Drift
on
January 27, 2022
The Silences of the Silent Era
We can’t allow the impression of a historical lack of diversity in the art form to limit access to the industry today.
by
Pamela Hutchinson
via
Current [The Criterion Collection]
on
November 30, 2021
Plant of the Month: The Pawpaw
The pawpaw is finding champions again after colonizers' dismissal, increasing globalization and economic needs.
by
Julia Fine
via
JSTOR Daily
on
September 22, 2021
Meet the YouTubers Determined to Find Lost Media
New media meets old.
by
Brendan Bell
via
The Verge
on
September 16, 2021
She Asked President Woodrow Wilson For 22 Suffrage "Favors." She Got 21.
Wilson became a great supporter of the 19th Amendment, but only because he worked alongside a woman who spoke his language.
by
Kimberly A. Hamlin
via
Study Marry Kill
on
August 18, 2021
His Name Was Emmett Till
In 1955, just past daybreak, a Chevrolet truck pulled up to an unmarked building. A 14-year-old child was in the back.
by
Wright Thompson
via
The Atlantic
on
July 22, 2021
What Will Happen to My Music Library When Spotify Dies?
If your entire collection is on a streaming service, good luck accessing it in 10 or 20 years.
by
Joe Pinsker
via
The Atlantic
on
July 19, 2021
Eating Dirt, Searching Archives
There are many black afterlives that are yet to be unearthed.
by
Endia Hayes
via
Southern Cultures
on
July 16, 2021
The Rise and Fall of Black Swan Records
The story of the first major black-owned record label and the mystery behind the man who created it.
by
Joe Richman
via
Radio Diaries
on
June 25, 2021
The House Archives Built
How racial hierarchies are embedded within the archival standards and practices that legitimize historical memory.
by
Dorothy Berry
via
up//root
on
June 22, 2021
Project: Time Capsule
Time capsules unearthed at affordable housing sites offer alternative, lost, and otherwise obscured histories.
by
Camae Ayewa
,
Rasheedah Phillips
via
E-Flux
on
June 14, 2021
The Olympic Star Who Just Wanted to Go Home
Tsökahovi Tewanima held an American record in running for decades, but his training at the infamous Carlisle school kept him from his ancestral Hopi lands
by
Kathleen Sharp
via
Smithsonian
on
May 20, 2021
The Pantomime Drama of Victims and Villains Conceals the Real Horrors of War
Innocent, passive, apolitical: after the Holocaust, the standard for ‘true’ victimhood has worked to justify total war.
by
Dirk Moses
via
Aeon
on
May 10, 2021
Alternative Internets and Their Lost Histories
What has been gained and lost from overlooking histories about the wild heterogeneity of networks that existed for well over a century?
by
Lori Emerson
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
April 12, 2021
The Problem of Pain
It’s easier to blame individuals for the opioid crisis than to attempt to diagnose and cure the ills of a society.
by
Sophie Pinkham
via
Dissent
on
April 5, 2021
America Never Wanted the Tired, Poor, Huddled Masses
The U.S. is a diverse nation of immigrants—but it was not intended to be, and its historical biases continue to haunt the present.
by
Caitlin Dickerson
via
The Atlantic
on
April 5, 2021
You Probably Don’t Remember the Internet
How do we memorialize life online when it’s constantly disappearing?
by
Kaitlyn Tiffany
via
The Atlantic
on
March 22, 2021
The Poetics of Abolition
For poet Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, as for the Black Romantics, history is the repetition of anti-Black violence that has yet to be abolished.
by
Manu Samriti Chander
via
Public Books
on
March 16, 2021
'Pure America': Eugenics Past and Present
Historian Elizabeth Catte traces the history and influence of eugenics from her backyard across the country.
by
Elizabeth Catte
,
Adam Willems
via
Scalawag
on
March 2, 2021
Forgotten Camps, Living History
Reckoning with the legacy of Japanese internment in the South.
by
Jason Christian
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
February 18, 2021
Phrenology Is Here to Stay
“Pseudoscience,” race, and American politics.
by
Courtney E. Thompson
via
Medium
on
February 11, 2021
He Became the Nation’s Ninth Vice President. She Was His Enslaved Wife.
Her name was Julia Chinn.
by
Ronald G. Shafer
via
Washington Post
on
February 7, 2021
The Forgotten History of Black Prohibitionism
We often think of the temperance movement as driven by white evangelicals set out to discipline Black Americans and immigrants. That history is wrong.
by
Mark Lawrence Schrad
via
Politico Magazine
on
February 6, 2021
partner
The Buccaneers Embody Tampa’s Love of Pirates. Is That a Problem?
How brutal outlaws became romanticized.
by
Jamie L. H. Goodall
via
Made By History
on
February 5, 2021
How the First Airmail Pilots Learned to Fly in the Dark
Almost a century ago, a network of signals guided airmail pilots across the country. A photographer documents the remnants of this transcontinental system.
by
Chris Forsyth
,
Daegan Miller
via
Places Journal
on
February 1, 2021
A New Photo Exhibit Looks at Decades of FBI Surveillance on American Citizens
A new book shares a cautionary tale of the American surveillance state.
by
Christopher Gregory-Rivera
,
Pia Peterson
via
BuzzFeed News
on
January 29, 2021
The World's Only Samurai Colony Was Once in California
The families arrived from Japan with fanfare, most disappeared without a trace.
by
Katie Dowd
via
SFGATE
on
January 26, 2021
Preserve (Some of) the Wreckage
We must remember the very real challenges to the preservation of our democracy.
by
Louis P. Nelson
via
Platform
on
January 25, 2021
We’ve Had a White Supremacist Coup Before. History Buried It.
The 1898 Wilmington insurrection showed “how people could get murdered in the streets and no one held accountable for it.”
by
Edwin Rios
via
Mother Jones
on
January 22, 2021
Hungry Like the Rabbit
On the HBO Max streaming service, with their skipped numbers, the episodes omitted from the 31 seasons of Looney Tunes are easy to spot.
by
James Panero
via
The Spectator
on
January 13, 2021
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