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American Mythology
Is the United States a prisoner of its own mythology?
by
Tom Zoellner
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
October 4, 2024
Knots, Ties, and Lines: “The Downward Spiral” at Thirty
Nine Inch Nails, the Manson Family, and the contradictions of Los Angeles.
by
Gianni de Falco
via
Cleveland Review of Books
on
July 16, 2024
In Need of a New Myth
Myths to explain American history and chart a path to the future once helped to bind the country together. Today, they are absorbed into the culture wars.
by
Eric Foner
via
London Review of Books
on
June 26, 2024
“A Theory of America”: Mythmaking with Richard Slotkin
"I was always working on a theory of America."
by
Kathleen Belew
,
Richard S. Slotkin
via
Public Books
on
April 19, 2024
The Story Wars
The conflict between Red and Blue America is a clash of national mythologies.
by
Richard S. Slotkin
via
The Yale Review
on
March 11, 2024
Tracing the Evolution of Celebrity Memoirs, from Charles Lindbergh to Will Smith
Creating a personal myth allows celebrities to create just that—a myth.
by
Landon Y. Jones
via
Literary Hub
on
May 9, 2023
The Myth of American Individualism
How the utopian notion of the U.S. as a meritocracy became so ingrained in the American psyche.
by
Eric C. Miller
,
Alex Zakaras
via
Arc: Religion, Politics, Et Cetera
on
February 21, 2023
partner
The Fight for Accurate Western History is about Inclusion Today
Distortions in Western history have long obscured the region’s Black communities.
by
Anthony W. Wood
via
Made By History
on
February 2, 2023
This Photo of U.S. Immigration Isn’t What You Think
There is more to Alfred Stieglitz’s iconic photograph “The Steerage” than meets the eye.
via
The Bigger Picture
on
October 3, 2022
How Did Guns Get So Powerful?
Decade by decade, firearms have become deadlier—and tightened their grip on our collective imagination.
by
Phil Klay
via
The New Yorker
on
June 11, 2022
Myths Distort the Reality Behind a Horrific Photo of the Vietnam War and Exaggerate Its Impact
The ‘Napalm Girl’ photo is much more than powerful evidence of war’s indiscriminate effects on civilians.
by
W. Joseph Campbell
via
The Conversation
on
June 2, 2022
Looking for an American Myth
The fevered hunt for basic symbols.
by
John Ganz
via
Unpopular Front
on
February 6, 2022
Daniel Boone: A Frontiersman in Full
The life of Daniel Boone underlines how the North America of the era was a welter of conflict among and between natives and Europeans.
by
Rich Lowry
via
National Review
on
December 16, 2021
The Lure of the White Sands
Francisco Vázquez de Coronado, Geronimo, Robert Oppenheimer, Steven Spielberg, and the mysteries of New Mexico's desert.
by
Rich Cohen
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 29, 2021
The Long Reinvention of the South Bronx
Peter L'Official on the Mythologies Behind Urban Renewal.
by
Peter L'Official
via
Literary Hub
on
August 3, 2020
The Real Calamity Jane Was Distressingly Unlike Her Legend
A frontier character's life was crafted to be legendary, but was the real person as incredible?
by
Sam Leith
via
The American Spectator
on
February 6, 2020
The Wild West Meets the Southern Border
At first glance, frontier towns near the U.S.-Mexico border seem oblivious both of history and of the current political reality.
by
Valeria Luiselli
via
The New Yorker
on
June 3, 2019
The Sanitizing of Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks
On the uses and abuses of civil rights heroes.
by
Jeanne Theoharis
,
Jeremy Scahill
via
The Intercept
on
October 8, 2017
Burns and Novick, Masters of False Balancing
In promoting healing instead of a search for truth, “The Vietnam War” offers misleading comforts.
by
Jerry Lembcke
via
Public Books
on
September 15, 2017
American Sphinx
Civil War monuments erased an emancipated Black population, but the Sphinx looked to an integrated Africa and America.
by
Colin Dickey
via
Longreads
on
August 31, 2017
The Pernicious Myth of the ‘Loyal Slave’ Lives on in Confederate Memorials
Statues don’t need to venerate military leaders of the Civil War to promulgate false narratives.
by
Kevin M. Levin
via
Smithsonian
on
August 17, 2017
The Real Story Behind "Johnny Appleseed"
Johnny Appleseed was based on a real person, John Chapman, who was eccentric enough without the legends.
by
Matthew Wills
,
William Kerrigan
via
JSTOR Daily
on
October 22, 2016
Mythologizing Fatherhood
Ralph LaRossa explains the problems with mythologizing modern dads and the stereotypes present within views of fatherhood of the past.
by
Ralph LaRossa
via
National Council On Family Relations
on
March 1, 2009
The Moral Distortions of the Official Korean War Narrative
June 25 marks the 75th anniversary of the start of the Korean War. But the truth is that the US was a willing partner in mass murder across the peninsula.
by
Grace M. Cho
via
The Nation
on
June 24, 2025
Lone Star Futures
Texas might have been a place to start a conversation about widening the scope of civil liberties, but it has also been a place where those liberties end.
by
Emma Pask
via
Public Books
on
June 19, 2025
Bad Curls, Bad Character
The charged meaning of hair in 19th-century America.
by
Sarah Gold McBride
via
Literary Hub
on
June 9, 2025
Neither Marine nor Maggot
"Full Metal Jacket" and the crisis of masculinity.
by
Chris Deutsch
via
Nursing Clio
on
June 4, 2025
America’s Broken Commonwealth
The nation’s founding myth was based on faith and solidarity – but it also contained the roots of today’s democratic crisis.
by
Rowan Williams
via
New Statesman
on
May 22, 2025
Who Invented the “Founding Fathers?”
The making of a myth.
by
George Dillard
via
Looking Through The Past
on
May 21, 2025
How Social Reactionaries Exploit Economic Nostalgia
Conservatives think we need traditional hierarchies to reverse social decline; But it’s the economic equality created by strong unions that Americans miss.
by
Meagan Day
via
Jacobin
on
May 20, 2025
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