Menu
Excerpts
Exhibits
Collections
Originals
Categories
Map
Search
Idea
identity
562
Filter by:
Date Published
Filter by published date
Published On or After:
Published On or Before:
Filter
Cancel
Viewing 151–180 of 562 results.
Go to first page
How Joe Biden Became Irish
The president has skillfully played up his Irish roots, but the story of his ancestry is more complicated.
by
Ben Schreckinger
via
Politico Magazine
on
September 14, 2021
The Roe Baby
After decades of keeping her identity a secret, Jane Roe’s child has chosen to talk about her life.
by
Joshua Prager
via
The Atlantic
on
September 9, 2021
Traumatic Monologues
On the therapeutic turn in Indigenous politics.
by
Melanie K. Yazzie
via
The Baffler
on
September 6, 2021
The Census Has Revealed A More Multiracial U.S. One Reason? Cheaper DNA Tests
DNA testing kits have shifted the way both researchers and the public think about race and identity. This shift is evident in the 2020 U.S. Census data.
by
Hansi Lo Wang
via
NPR
on
August 28, 2021
The Once and Future Temp
What can the history of the temp-work industry teach us about the precarity of modern working life?
by
Eve Zelickson
via
Public Books
on
August 27, 2021
The United States Is Not “a Nation of Immigrants”
Celebrations of multiculturalism obscure the country’s settler colonial history—and the role that immigrants play in perpetuating it.
by
Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
via
Boston Review
on
August 12, 2021
Ralph Waldo Emerson Would Really Hate Your Twitter Feed
For Ralph Waldo Emerson, political activism was full of empty gestures done in bad faith. Abolition called for true heroism.
by
Peter Wirzbicki
via
Psyche
on
August 9, 2021
The Resurrection of Bass Reeves
Today, the legendary deputy U.S. marshal is widely believed to be the real Lone Ranger. But his true legacy is even greater.
by
Christian Wallace
via
Texas Monthly
on
June 22, 2021
Can the 'Tubman Twenty' Help Bring Americans Together?
The new note comes 125 years after the free silver movement tried—and failed—to use currency to forge a national identity.
by
Peter W. Y. Lee
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
June 9, 2021
Lucy Brewer and the Making of a Female Marine
An account of the first female to serve in the U.S. Navy.
by
Maria Connors
via
Past Is Present
on
June 8, 2021
New York's Hyphenated History
Hyphenation became a complex issue of identity, assimilation, and xenophobia amid anti-immigration movements at the turn of the twentieth century.
by
Pardis Mahdavi
via
The Paris Review
on
May 27, 2021
Interrupted Sentiments: The Lost Letters of Civil War Soldiers
The incredible story of thousands of soldier photographs and letters that never made it home.
by
Melissa A. Winn
via
HistoryNet
on
May 12, 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
The Problem With Patriotism
I can’t ignore what this country has done to Black people. How do I find my place in it?
by
Sasha Banks
via
The Atlantic
on
May 6, 2021
Puritanism as a State of Mind
Whatever the “City on a Hill” is, the phrase was not discovered by Kennedy or Reagan.
by
Glen A. Moots
via
Law & Liberty
on
April 30, 2021
What the 'America First Caucus' Gets Wrong on Anglo-Saxon History
"Everything's sort of layered on a false understanding of history."
by
Olivia B. Waxman
,
Mary Rambaran-Olm
via
TIME
on
April 21, 2021
Abolishing the Suburbs
On Kyle Riismandel’s “Neighborhood of Fear: The Suburban Crisis in American Culture, 1975–2001.”
by
David Helps
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
April 13, 2021
‘The Roots of Our Madness’
John Berryman's Dream Songs made explicit the racialization of American poetry's turn—and the whiteness of lyric tradition.
by
Kamran Javadizadeh
via
New York Review of Books
on
April 8, 2021
"Taxpayer Dollars:" The Origins of Austerity’s Racist Catchphrase
How the myth of the overburdened white taxpayer was made.
by
Camille Walsh
via
Mother Jones
on
April 5, 2021
The History of Freedom Is a History of Whiteness
A conversation about whether or not the legacy of liberty can break away from racial exclusion and domination.
by
Tyler Stovall
,
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins
via
The Nation
on
March 17, 2021
St Patrick's Day: Why So Many US Presidents Like to Say ‘I’m Irish’
Joe Biden is just the latest in a long line of US presidents to trace their ancestry back to the Emerald Isle.
by
Richard Johnson
via
The Conversation
on
March 16, 2021
What Do We Do About John James Audubon?
The founding father of American birding soared on the wings of white privilege. How should the birding community grapple with this racist legacy?
by
J. Drew Lanham
via
Audubon
on
February 23, 2021
The Politics of a Second Gilded Age
Mass inequality in the Gilded Age thrived on identity-based partisanship, helping extinguish the fires of class rage. In 2021, we’re headed down the same path.
by
Matthew Karp
via
Jacobin
on
February 17, 2021
The Magazine That Helped 1920s Kids Navigate Racism
Mainstream culture denied Black children their humanity—so W. E. B. Du Bois created The Brownies’ Book to assert it.
by
Anna E. Holmes
via
The Atlantic
on
February 12, 2021
Anna Deavere Smith on Forging Black Identity in 1968
In 1968, history found us at a small women’s college, forging our Black identity and empowering our defiance.
by
Anna Deavere Smith
via
The Atlantic
on
February 9, 2021
The Great White Reunion: On Duncan Bell’s “Dreamworlds of Race”
Could the separation of the Revolutionary War have been patched in the late 19th century? Some powerful men tried...
by
Bassam Sidiki
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
January 26, 2021
On Imagining Gatsby Before Gatsby
How a personal connection to Nick Carraway inspired the author to write the novel "Nick."
by
Michael Farris Smith
via
Literary Hub
on
January 11, 2021
This Land Is Your Land
Native minstrelsy and the American summer camp movement.
by
Asa Seresin
via
Cabinet
on
December 15, 2020
Why Harriet the Spy Had to Lie
An elaborate secret life was a necessity for children’s author Louise Fitzhugh.
by
Jennifer Wilson
via
The New Republic
on
December 8, 2020
A Massive New Effort to Name Millions Sold Into Bondage During The Transatlantic Slave Trade
Enslaved.org will allow anyone to search for individual enslaved people around the globe in one central online location.
by
Sydney Trent
via
Retropolis
on
December 1, 2020
View More
30 of
562
Filters
Filter Results:
Search for a term by which to filter:
Suggested Filters:
Idea
race
inclusion/exclusion
ancestry
American Indians
family
whiteness
racism
writing
stereotypes
personal history
Person
Donald Trump
Pauli Murray
Ta-Nehisi Coates
Aretha Franklin
Francis Fukuyama
Elizabeth Warren
Sheron Rupp
Horatio Alger
Barack Obama
Abraham Lincoln