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“The Black Woman”
Black women activism within documentary films in the 1960s United States.
by
Manar Ellethy
via
Journal of the History of Ideas Blog
on
April 10, 2024
When Do We Stop Finding New Music? A Statistical Analysis
When does our taste in music stagnate?
by
Daniel Parris
via
Stat Significant
on
April 10, 2024
The Cosmopolitan Modernism of the Harlem Renaissance
The world-spanning art of the Harlem Renaissance.
by
Rachel Himes
via
The Nation
on
April 9, 2024
The End of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Marks the End of an Era
Larry David is the last of his kind—and in several ways.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
The Nation
on
April 8, 2024
How the American Jeremiad Can Restore the American Soul
One of the country’s greatest rhetorical traditions still has the power to remind us of our founding principles.
by
Sam B. Girgus
via
Bulwark+
on
March 29, 2024
Spreading the Bad News
Right-wing evangelicalism’s moral and religious descent into Trumpism has been near-total. Is there a way out?
by
Soong-Chan Rah
via
Democracy Journal
on
March 22, 2024
The Shoah After Gaza
Jewish suffering at the hands of Nazis are the foundation on which most descriptions of extreme ideology and atrocity have been built.
by
Pankaj Mishra
via
London Review of Books
on
March 21, 2024
Deafness Is Not a Silence
On the suppression of sign language.
by
Sarah Marsh
via
The Millions
on
March 14, 2024
partner
A Federal Court Has Ruled Blood Cannot Determine Tribal Citizenship. Here’s Why That Matters.
The struggle over blood and belonging in American Indian communities.
by
Alaina E. Roberts
via
Made By History
on
March 9, 2024
Tales From an Attic
Suitcases once belonging to residents of a New York State mental hospital tell the stories of long-forgotten lives.
by
Sierra Bellows
via
The American Scholar
on
March 4, 2024
The Forgotten History of American Jewish Dissent Against Zionism
In resurrecting stories of non- and anti-Zionist critics, a new book shows American Jews how questioning Israel is deeply rooted in their community.
by
Shaul Magid
via
+972 Magazine
on
February 14, 2024
How Nellie Bly and Other Trailblazing Women Wrote Creative Nonfiction Before It Was a Thing
On the early origins of a very American kind of writing.
by
Lee Gutkind
via
Literary Hub
on
January 23, 2024
Two Colonists Had Similar Identities, But Only One Felt Compelled to Remain Loyal
What might appear to be common values about shared identities can serve not as a bridge but a wedge.
by
Abby Chandler
via
The Conversation
on
January 4, 2024
Equal Rights Amendment Was Introduced 100 Years Ago — and Still Waits
America’s feminists felt confident when the Equal Rights Amendment was put before Congress 100 years ago this week. For a century, it’s failed to be enacted.
by
Frederic J. Frommer
via
Retropolis
on
December 12, 2023
Surviving a Wretched State
A discussion on the difficulty of keeping faith in a foundationally anti-Black republic.
by
Melvin L. Rogers
,
Neil Roberts
via
Boston Review
on
November 15, 2023
A Shotgun Wedding
Barely-disguised hostilities sometimes belied the rebels’ declared identity as the United States of America.
by
Lynn Uzzell
via
Law & Liberty
on
November 9, 2023
'Are You Still Living?'
Who is counted by the census, how, and for what purpose, has changed a lot since 1790.
by
Kasia Boddy
via
London Review of Books
on
October 19, 2023
Why Generational Thinking Isn't Bull
Reflections on Pavement, Nirvana, the very meaning of history, and the end of neoliberalism.
by
Charles Petersen
via
Making History
on
October 8, 2023
The Long History of Jewface
Bradley Cooper’s prosthetic nose is the latest example of the struggles around Jewish representation on the stage and screen.
by
Jody Rosen
via
The New Yorker
on
October 7, 2023
Where Identity Politics Actually Comes From
Nationalism, not postmodernism, is the fount of today's politics of recognition.
by
Jason Blakely
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
October 3, 2023
Putting Chinatown on the Map: Resisting Displacement through Infrastructural Advocacy
How San Francisco's Chinatown community used infrastructure as a conduit for identity, empowerment, and resilience.
by
Deland Chen
via
Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center
on
September 15, 2023
The South’s Jewish Proust
Shelby Foote, failed novelist and closeted member of the Tribe, turned the Civil War into a masterpiece of American literature.
by
Blake Smith
via
Tablet
on
September 6, 2023
De-Satch-uration
Louis Armstrong’s complicated relationship with New Orleans.
by
Ricky Riccardi
via
64 Parishes
on
August 31, 2023
Black Class Matters
Class conflict undermines assumptions about political solidarity.
by
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
via
Hammer & Hope
on
August 30, 2023
Who's Afraid of Social Contagion?
Our ideas about sexuality and gender have changed before, and now they’re changing again.
by
Hugh Ryan
via
Boston Review
on
July 31, 2023
Baseball in the Garden of Eden
“Who controls the past,” George Orwell wrote, “controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.” So it has been with baseball.
by
John Thorn
via
Our Game
on
July 17, 2023
Where Does the South Begin?
A new history cuts against stereotypes, to show a region constantly changing—and whose future is up for grabs.
by
Scott Wasserman Stern
via
The New Republic
on
June 26, 2023
James Baldwin in Turkey
How Istanbul changed his career—and his life.
by
Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi
via
The Yale Review
on
June 12, 2023
My Generation
Anthem for a forgotten cohort.
by
Justin E. H. Smith
via
Harper’s
on
June 9, 2023
I Was the First Latina on Sesame Street. Now I Have My Own Ideas About Bringing Representation to TV
"I thought, surely after the success of 'Sesame Street' and my contribution to it, all kinds of Latinx talent would flood the media. Not so."
by
Sonia Manzano
via
HuffPost
on
June 4, 2023
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