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Viewing 511–540 of 591 results.
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The Evangelical Abortion Myth
The rhetoric about abortion being the catalyst for the rise of the Religious Right collapses under scrutiny.
by
Randall Balmer
via
Religion Dispatches
on
August 30, 2021
partner
Every American Needs to Take a History of Mexico Class
Learning the history of Mexico can help Americans better understand themselves.
by
Gabriela Soto Laveaga
via
Made By History
on
July 22, 2021
Out to Sea
Since the 1970s, the U.S. and Russia have used marine mammals to further their military objectives, sparking protest from animal rights activists.
by
Susanna Space
via
Guernica
on
July 15, 2021
'The Myth Itself Becomes a Stand-in.' What Can the Alamo's History Teach Us About Teaching History?
What’s new about the controversy over the Alamo’s history, and how the way Texans tell its story relates to how Americans see each other.
by
Olivia B. Waxman
via
TIME
on
July 13, 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
All the President’s Historians
Joe Biden has met with scholars to discuss his presidency and likely legacy—but what are we to make of his special relationship with historian Jon Meacham?
by
Daniel N. Gullotta
via
The Bulwark
on
April 20, 2021
Pimento-cracy
The history of pimento cheese as a working class fixture and a symbol of Southern culture as seen through mystery novels.
by
Cynthia R. Greenlee
via
Oxford American
on
March 23, 2021
An Honest History of Texas Begins and Ends With White Supremacy
One Texas Republican state House member wants to create a “patriotic” education project to celebrate the Lone Star State—and whitewash its ugly past.
by
Casey Michel
via
The New Republic
on
March 12, 2021
"Bad History and Worse Social Science Have Replaced Truth"
Daryl Michael Scott on propaganda and myth from ‘The 1619 Project’ to Trumpism.
by
Daryl Michael Scott
,
Len Gutkin
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
March 10, 2021
Experiments in Self-Reliance
Thoreau’s life is a lesson not in self-reliance, but in discerning whom and what to rely on, whether you’re one person or a state of 29 million.
by
Jonathan Malesic
via
Commonweal
on
February 24, 2021
You Can Now Explore the CIA's 'Entire' Collection of UFO Documents Online
Thousands of pages of declassified records are available for anyone to peruse.
by
Isis Davis-Marks
via
Smithsonian
on
January 15, 2021
The Hour of the Barbarian
What happened on January 6 was profoundly American, emerging as it did from our long and very specific history. No one did this to us.
by
Vincent Bevins
via
n+1
on
January 11, 2021
How Young America Came to Love Beethoven
On the 250th anniversary of the famous composer’s birth, the story of how his music first took hold across the Atlantic.
by
Nora McGreevy
via
Smithsonian
on
December 16, 2020
The End of the Businessman President
Donald Trump’s catastrophic tenure will be the nail in the coffin of the worst idea in politics: that the government can be run like a corporation.
by
Kyle Edward Williams
via
The New Republic
on
December 9, 2020
Whitewashing the Great Depression
How the preeminent photographic record of the period excluded people of color from the nation’s self-image.
by
Sarah Boxer
via
The Atlantic
on
November 15, 2020
Legacies of the Sagebrush Rebellion
A conversation about the roots of organized resistance to federal regulation of public lands in the American West.
by
Robert Lundberg
,
Alexandra Lakind
,
Jonathan P. Thompson
via
Edge Effects
on
November 10, 2020
Walking Into New Worlds
Native traditions and novel discoveries tell the migration story of the ancestors of the Navajo and Apache.
by
Karen Coates
via
Archaeology Magazine
on
October 1, 2020
partner
"Heroes of Our America": Reading a "Patriotic" History of the United States
This 1952 textbook serves as an example of the "patriotic history" that Donald Trump grew up with and calls for today.
by
Alan J. Singer
via
HNN
on
September 27, 2020
partner
Political Debates: What Unforgettable Moments Reveal
High-stakes debates put candidates in the hot seat. But are they helpful to voters?
via
Retro Report
on
September 24, 2020
Trump’s Vision for American History Education Is a Nightmare
But it’s one historians know all too well.
by
L. D. Burnett
via
Slate
on
September 18, 2020
The Myth of Native American Extinction Harms Everyone
Cluelessness about Native people is rampant in New England, which romanticizes its Colonial heritage.
by
Mali Obomsawin
via
Boston Globe Magazine
on
September 15, 2020
How Americans Were Taught to Understand Israel
Leon Uris's bestselling book "Exodus" portrayed the founding of the state of Israel in terms many Americans could relate to.
by
Amy Kaplan
,
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
August 29, 2020
Many Tulsa Massacres
How the myth of a liberal North erases a long history of white violence.
by
Anna-Lisa Cox
,
Christy Clark-Pujara
via
National Museum of American History
on
August 25, 2020
How the GOP Became the Party of Resentment
Have historians of the conservative movement focused too much on its intellectuals?
by
Patrick Iber
via
The New Republic
on
August 11, 2020
The Black Legend Lives
A review of "Escalante’s Dream: On the Trail of the Spanish Discovery of the Southwest."
by
Jeremy Beer
via
Commonweal
on
July 1, 2020
The Western Origins of the “Southern Strategy”
The untold story of the ideological realignment that upended the nation.
by
Bruce Bartlett
via
The New Republic
on
June 29, 2020
American Fascism: It Has Happened Here
Americans of the interwar period were perfectly clear about one fact we have lost sight of today: all fascism is indigenous, by definition.
by
Sarah Churchwell
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 22, 2020
What Liberty Meant to the Pilgrims
Most adult men could aspire to participation in the religious and political government of the colony. But this communal liberty did not imply personal liberty.
by
Nathanael Blake
via
National Review
on
June 18, 2020
Rewriting Country Music's Racist History
Artists like Yola and Rhiannon Giddens are blowing up what Giddens calls a “manufactured image of country music being white and being poor.”
by
Elamin Abdelmahmoud
via
Rolling Stone
on
June 5, 2020
Cast in Iron?
Rethinking our historical monuments.
by
Jaime Fuller
via
AdirondackLife
on
June 1, 2020
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