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Jan. 6 Capitol Riot
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Elijah Lovejoy Faced Down Violent Mobs to Champion Abolition and the Free Press
Lovejoy, who ran a weekly paper called the Observer, was repeatedly targeted by mobs over his persistent writings against slavery.
by
Ken Ellingwood
via
HNN
on
May 2, 2021
Are We Living in an Age of Strongmen?
A new book by Ruth Ben-Ghiat discusses the past and present challenges posed by authoritarianism, but misses the conditions in which it arises.
by
David A. Bell
via
The Nation
on
April 3, 2021
Can America’s Problems Be Fixed By A President Who Loves Jon Meacham?
How a pop historian shaped the soul of Biden’s presidency.
by
Kara Voght
via
Mother Jones
on
April 2, 2021
partner
Is the Two-Century Battle for D.C. Statehood Finally Near an End?
The struggle for autonomy and representation has been full of gains followed by setbacks.
by
Robinson Woodward-Burns
via
Made By History
on
March 23, 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
The Post-Trump Crack-Up of the Evangelical Community
Its embrace of an ignominious president is forcing a long-overdue reckoning with the movement’s embrace of white supremacy and illiberal politics.
by
Audrey Clare Farley
via
The New Republic
on
March 16, 2021
How Will We Remember This?
A COVID memorial will have to commemorate shame and failure as well as grief and bravery.
by
Justin Davidson
via
Curbed
on
March 15, 2021
What Is Happening to the Republicans?
In becoming the party of Trump, the G.O.P. confronts the kind of existential crisis that has destroyed American parties in the past.
by
Jelani Cobb
via
The New Yorker
on
March 8, 2021
The Wasting of the Evangelical Mind
The peculiarities of how American Christianity took shape help explain believers’ vulnerability to conspiratorial thinking and misinformation.
by
Michael Luo
via
The New Yorker
on
March 4, 2021
How the Study of Evangelicalism Has Blinded Us to the Problems in Evangelical Culture
Are the evangelicals who voted for Trump and stormed the Capitol in his defense part of the fringe of evangelicalism, or the core?
by
Christopher D. Cantwell
via
Religion Dispatches
on
March 4, 2021
James Weldon Johnson’s Ode to the “Deep River” of American History
What an old poem says about the search for justice following the Capitol riot.
by
David W. Blight
via
The New Republic
on
March 2, 2021
America’s Political Roots Are in Eutaw, Alabama
When I think about the 1870 riot, I remember how the country rejected the opportunity it had.
by
Adam Harris
via
The Atlantic
on
February 26, 2021
QAnon and the Satanic Panics of Yesteryear
What they can teach us about what to expect.
by
Daniel N. Gullotta
via
The Bulwark
on
February 25, 2021
From Limbaugh to Trump: A Historian of the Right Wing Explains Rush’s Real Legacy
In so many ways, Limbaugh helped sow the seeds of the pathologies we're now living through.
by
Rick Perlstein
,
Greg Sargent
via
Washington Post
on
February 17, 2021
It Would Be Great if the United States Were Actually a Democracy
The pervasive mythmaking about the supposed wisdom of the founders has covered up a central truth: the US Constitution is an antidemocratic mess.
by
Aziz Rana
,
Chris Maisano
via
Jacobin
on
February 16, 2021
partner
McConnell’s Task: Purging the Crackpots and Bigots
The impeachment exposed the need for Republican leaders to banish the extremists and bigots from their movement.
by
Kevin M. Schultz
via
Made By History
on
February 15, 2021
America Must Become a Democracy
The authors of the Constitution feared mass participation would unsettle government, but it’s the privileged minority that has proved destabilizing.
by
David Frum
via
The Atlantic
on
February 15, 2021
How Historians Say Abraham Lincoln Is Quoted and Misquoted
As Presidents' Day approaches, historians look back at the most notable recent uses and misuses of "the Great Emancipator's" words.
by
Olivia B. Waxman
via
TIME
on
February 11, 2021
Phrenology Is Here to Stay
“Pseudoscience,” race, and American politics.
by
Courtney E. Thompson
via
Medium
on
February 11, 2021
Is the US Capitol a 'Temple of Democracy'? Its Authoritarian Architecture Suggests Otherwise
The neoclassical building was inspired by European shrines to imperial power.
by
Megan Goldman-Petri
via
The Conversation
on
February 8, 2021
How the GOP Surrendered to Extremism
Sixty years ago, many GOP leaders resisted radicals in their ranks. Now they’re not even trying.
by
Ronald Brownstein
via
The Atlantic
on
February 4, 2021
New Sheriff in Town
Law enforcement and the urban-rural divide.
by
Jonathon Booth
via
The Drift
on
February 3, 2021
Here’s What Happens to a Conspiracy-Driven Party
The modern GOP isn't the first party to embrace huge conspiracies. But the lessons should be sobering.
by
Zachary Karabell
via
Politico Magazine
on
January 30, 2021
How to Steal an American Election
From Alexander Hamilton to Richard Nixon and more: meddling, fixing, rigging, fraud, and violence.
by
William Hogeland
via
Hogeland's Bad History
on
January 28, 2021
The Persistence of Hate In American Politics
After Charlottesville, the historian Joan Wallach Scott wanted to find out how societies face up to their past—and why some fail.
by
Aryeh Neier
via
The New Republic
on
January 27, 2021
Putting Harriet Tubman on the $20 Bill Is Not a Sign of Progress
It's a sign of disrespect.
by
Brittney C. Cooper
via
TIME
on
January 27, 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
The Caning of Charles Sumner in the U.S. Senate: White Supremacist Violence in Pen and Pixels
Absent social media, the artists of the past shaped public knowledge of historical events through illustrations.
by
Peter H. Wood
,
Harlin J. Gradinn
via
Tropics of Meta
on
January 20, 2021
Why It’s Time to Take Secessionist Talk Seriously
Disunion is hardly a new theme in American politics. In this moment of tumult, it would be unwise to rule out its return.
by
Richard Kreitner
via
New York Review of Books
on
January 19, 2021
The 'Racial Caste System' at the U.S. Capitol
After the Capitol was cleared of insurrectionists on January 6, it wasn't lost on many that cleaning up the mess would fall largely to Black and Brown people.
by
Karen Grigsby Bates
,
James R. Jones
via
NPR
on
January 19, 2021
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