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Three Times Political Conflict Reshaped American Mathematics
How mathematics has been shaped by wars, politics, dynasties, and nationalism.
by
Della Dumbaugh
via
The Conversation
on
April 2, 2019
My Grandfather Was Welcomed to Pittsburgh by the Group the Gunman Hated
He came to this country a refugee, and paid his debt forward.
by
Amy Weiss-meyer
via
The Atlantic
on
October 29, 2018
The Nuclear Fail
Physicist and writer Leo Szilard was vital to the creation of the atomic bomb. He also did everything he could to prevent its use.
by
Emily Harnett
via
Hazlitt
on
July 30, 2018
original
A Refugee in Puerto Rico, 1942
Claude Lévi-Strauss and the burden of our personal archives.
by
Benjamin Breen
on
October 6, 2017
Closing Our Doors
In 1939, a refugee ban kept 20,000 Jewish children out of the U.S.
by
Ellen Umansky
via
Slate
on
March 8, 2017
How American's Rejection of Jews Fleeing Nazi Germany Haunts Our Refugee Policy Today
On International Holocaust Remembrance Day, it's important to remember why America welcomes refugees.
by
Dara Lind
via
Vox
on
January 27, 2017
What Americans Thought of Jewish Refugees on the Eve of World War II
On the eve of World War 2, most Americans opposed granting asylum to Jewish refugees fleeing Hitler.
by
Ishaan Tharoor
via
Washington Post
on
November 17, 2015
The Slave Trade and the Jews
Jews have long been feared as the power behind inexplicable evils. Responsibility for the African slave trade has recently been added to this list of crimes.
by
David Brion Davis
via
New York Review of Books
on
December 22, 1994
How the Family From Everyone’s Favorite Musical Actually Came to America
And why so many people remember the tale so differently.
by
Rebecca Brenner Graham
via
Slate
on
January 26, 2025
Josie’s Story: From 19th-Century Sitka To Her Escape From The Holocaust
Josie Rudolph’s life, in an era of worldwide migration and colonial ambition, offers a new perspective on the familiar tale of modern Alaska’s birth.
by
Tom Kizzia
via
Anchorage Daily News
on
October 28, 2024
partner
Frances Perkins, Modern Politics, and Historical Memory
The current political moment is reshaping the narrative about the first woman to serve in a presidential cabinet.
by
Rebecca Brenner Graham
via
Made By History
on
October 21, 2024
How Arnold Schoenberg Changed Hollywood
He moved to California during the Nazi era, and his music—which ranged from the lushly melodic to the rigorously atonal—caught the ears of everyone.
by
Alex Ross
via
The New Yorker
on
March 11, 2024
What Holocaust Remembrance Forgets
Popular accounts of the Holocaust overlook its irrationality and often disordered violence.
by
Samuel Clowes Huneke
via
The New Republic
on
January 18, 2024
A People’s Obituary of Henry Kissinger
For decades, Kissinger kept the great wheel of American militarism spinning ever forward.
by
Greg Grandin
via
The Nation
on
November 30, 2023
Henry Kissinger, Who Shaped World Affairs Under Two Presidents, Dies at 100
He was the only person ever to be national security adviser and secretary of state at the same time. He was also the target of relentless critics.
by
Thomas W. Lippman
via
Washington Post
on
November 30, 2023
Jewish Leaders a Century Ago Had Complicated Feelings About Israel
Fierce disagreements over Zionism have played out from the movement’s inception among Jews, including community leaders who worried it would spark antisemitism.
by
Daniel Schulman
via
Retropolis
on
November 19, 2023
What I Don’t Know
At the heart of my family tree are only questions and mysteries.
by
Lynne Sharon Schwartz
via
The American Scholar
on
April 14, 2022
The Status of Refugees
Seventy years after the UN Refugee Convention, the United States should refresh its commitment to displaced people.
by
Linda K. Kerber
via
Dissent
on
August 25, 2021
We Don't Know, But Let's Try It
For economist Albert Hirschman, social planning meant creative experimentation rather than theoretical certainty.
by
Simon Torracinta
via
Boston Review
on
June 17, 2021
Burnout: Modern Affliction or Human Condition?
As a diagnosis, it’s too vague to be helpful—but its rise tells us a lot about the way we work.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
May 17, 2021
The Woman Who Helped a President Change America During His First 100 Days
Frances Perkins was the first female Cabinet secretary in U.S. history, paving the way for the record number of women serving in President Biden’s Cabinet.
by
Ronald G. Shafer
via
Washington Post
on
March 14, 2021
The Cheap Pen That Changed Writing Forever
The replacement of fountain pens was a stroke of design genius perfectly in time for the era of mass production.
by
Stephen Dowling
via
BBC News
on
October 28, 2020
Indian Removal
One of the world's first mass deportations, bureaucratically managed and large-scale, took place on American soil.
by
Claudio Saunt
via
Aeon
on
April 23, 2020
The Life and Times of Franz Boas
The founder of cultural anthropology, Franz Boas challenged the reigning notions of race and culture.
by
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
December 1, 2019
Golden Age Superheroes Were Shaped by the Rise of Fascism
Created in New York by Jewish immigrants, the first comic book superheroes were mythic saviors who could combat the Nazi threat.
by
Art Spiegelman
via
The Guardian
on
August 17, 2019
partner
Why the U.S. Bombed Auschwitz, But Didn't Save the Jews
What did the Roosevelt administration know, and when?
by
Rafael Medoff
via
HNN
on
March 17, 2019
The Unbelievable Story of the Plot Against George Soros
How two Jewish American political consultants helped create the world’s largest anti-Semitic conspiracy theory.
by
Hannes Grassegger
via
BuzzFeed News
on
January 20, 2019
The Globalist
George Soros after the open society.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
n+1
on
June 18, 2018
The Real Refugees of Casablanca
When it came to gathering refugees, the waiting room of the US consulate was probably the closest thing to Rick’s Café Américain.
by
Meredith Hindley
via
Longreads
on
November 23, 2017
The Hollywood Darling Who Tanked His Career to Combat Anti-Semitism
The life and political commitments of screenwriter Ben Hecht.
by
Edward D. White
via
The Paris Review
on
November 3, 2017
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