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Viewing 61–89 of 89 results.
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The Polling Imperilment
Presidential polls are no more reliable than they were a century ago. So why do they consume our political lives?
by
Rick Perlstein
via
The American Prospect
on
September 25, 2024
Batting by the Numbers
The evolution of baseball’s perfect lineup.
by
Neil Paine
,
Michelle Pera-McGhee
via
The Pudding
on
September 24, 2024
On Recipes: Changing Formats, Changing Use
Wayfinding through history and design of the cookbook.
by
Julia Skinner
via
Mold
on
August 29, 2024
partner
Mastering the Art of Reading an Old Recipe
For every moment of historical significance, there is a figure — often hidden — who fed the figures we do remember.
by
Avery Blankenship
via
HNN
on
July 9, 2024
Trinity Fallout
The U.S. government’s failure to recognize nuclear Downwinders in New Mexico is part of a broader failure to reckon with the legacies of the Manhattan Project.
by
Nora Wendl
via
Places Journal
on
June 18, 2024
From Fire Hazards to Family Trees: The Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps
Created for US insurance firms during devastating fires across the 19th and 20th centuries, the Sanborn maps blaze with detail the aspects of American cities.
by
Tobiah Black
via
The Public Domain Review
on
June 12, 2024
Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon
This tale of two girlhoods, Shirley Temple’s and Lindsay Lohan’s, sheds light on what “woman” means in the world of eroticized youth.
by
Katherine Fusco
via
Dilettante Army
on
April 16, 2024
The Fellowship of the Tree Rings: A ClioVis Project
The disparate and intriguing connections found in environmental history, one tree ring at a time.
by
Aidan Dresang
via
Not Even Past
on
February 20, 2024
Better, Faster, Stronger
Two recent books illuminate the dark foundations of Silicon Valley.
by
Ben Tarnoff
via
New York Review of Books
on
August 31, 2023
They Did It for the Clicks
How digital media pursued viral traffic at all costs and unleashed chaos.
by
Aaron Timms
via
The New Republic
on
April 18, 2023
The Origins of Creativity
The concept was devised in postwar America, in response to the cultural and commercial demands of the era. Now we’re stuck with it.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
April 17, 2023
Race and Early American Medical Schools: Review of "Masters of Health"
Medical schools in the antebellum U.S. were critical in the formation of a medical community that shared ideas about racial science.
by
Natalie Shibley
via
Nursing Clio
on
February 14, 2023
partner
‘Effective Altruism’ Isn’t As Newfangled As It Seems
Times have changed since the days of Carnegie and Rockefeller, but much in philanthropy has remained the same.
by
John R. Thelin
,
Richard W. Trollinger
via
Made By History
on
February 6, 2023
Elite Universities Gave Us Effective Altruism, the Dumbest Idea of the Century
The result has been reactionary, often racist intellectual defenses of inequality.
by
Linsey McGoey
via
Jacobin
on
January 19, 2023
The World John von Neumann Built
Game theory, computers, the atom bomb—these are just a few of things von Neumann played a role in developing, changing the 20th century for better and worse.
by
David Nirenberg
via
The Nation
on
November 28, 2022
The Mapping of Race in America
Visualizing the legacy of slavery and redlining, 1860 to the present.
by
Anika Fenn Gilman
,
Catherine Discenza
,
John Hessler
via
Library of Congress
on
July 28, 2022
Ben Franklin Put an Abortion Recipe in His Math Textbook
To colonial Americans, termination was as normal as the ABCs and 123s.
by
Molly Farrell
via
Slate
on
May 5, 2022
Bad Economics
How microeconomic reasoning took over the very institutions of American governance.
by
Simon Torracinta
via
Boston Review
on
March 9, 2022
Without Context, COVID Tallies Are Misleading
Counting both uninfected and infected people helps us better understand a pandemic.
by
Jim Downs
via
Los Angeles Times
on
December 19, 2021
Face Surveillance Was Always Flawed
On the origins, use, and abuse of mugshots.
by
Amanda Levendowski
via
Public Books
on
November 20, 2021
partner
What's in a Number? Some Research Shows That a Lower B.M.I. Isn't Always Better.
Biased ideas about a link between body size and health have led many people to dismiss unexpected scientific findings.
via
Retro Report
on
November 17, 2021
New Dating Method Shows Vikings Occupied Newfoundland in 1021 C.E.
Tree ring evidence of an ancient solar storm enables scientists to pinpoint the exact year of Norse settlement.
by
Brian Handwerk
via
Smithsonian
on
October 20, 2021
partner
What Scaremongering About Inflation Gets Wrong
Inflation isn't inexorably a bad thing. In fact, it used to be considered good.
by
Rebecca L. Spang
via
Made By History
on
May 25, 2021
There’s Truth in Numbers in Policing – Until There Isn’t
To hold the police accountable for misconduct, data related to police violence must not only become more accessible, it must also become more reliable.
by
Carl Suddler
via
Brookings
on
June 26, 2020
The Evolution of the American Census
What changes each decade, what stays the same, and what do the questions say about American culture and society?
by
Alec Barrett
via
The Pudding
on
March 30, 2020
At the Very Beginning of the Great Alaska Earthquake
People’s stories described a sluggish process of discovery: you had to discover the earthquake, even though it had already been shaking you for what felt like a very long time.
by
Jon Mooallem
via
Literary Hub
on
March 24, 2020
How Credit Reporting Agencies Got Their Power
In an economy based on doing business with strangers, monitoring people's trustworthiness quickly became very profitable.
by
Josh Lauer
,
Livia Gershon
via
JSTOR Daily
on
September 19, 2017
Oil Barrels Aren't Real Anymore
Once a cask that held crude, the oil barrel is now mostly an economic concept.
by
Brian Jacobson
via
The Atlantic
on
September 8, 2017
So Long, Shaker Pint: The Rise and Fall of America's Awful Beer Glass
How the entire U.S. came to drink out of a vessel never meant for human lips.
by
Laura Bliss
via
CityLab
on
September 24, 2014
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