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“I Called Jane” for a Pre-“Roe” Illegal Abortion
No woman should have to go through what I went through, and no woman should have to overcome barriers to obtain a safe abortion.
by
Carol Chapman
via
The Nation
on
June 29, 2022
How the Personal Computer Broke the Human Body
Decades before 'Zoom fatigue' broke our spirits, the so-called computer revolution brought with it a world of pain previously unknown to humankind.
by
Laine Nooney
via
Vice
on
March 12, 2021
The Fifth Vital Sign
How the pain scale fails us.
by
Gracia Dodds
via
Nursing Clio
on
October 28, 2020
Sicko Doctors: Suffering and Sadism in 19th-Century America
American fiction of the 19th century often featured a cruel doctor, whose unfeeling fascination with bodily suffering readers found unnerving.
by
Chelsea Davis
via
The Public Domain Review
on
July 1, 2020
George Washington's Biggest Battle? With his Dentures, Made From Hippo Ivory and Maybe Slaves' Teeth
The British were a pain, to be sure, but what really caused him trouble were his teeth.
by
William Maloney
via
The Conversation
on
July 2, 2019
The (Historical) Body in Pain
How can we understand the physical pain of others?
by
Cassia Roth
via
Nursing Clio
on
April 9, 2019
partner
Lethal Injection Is Not Based on Science
The history of the three-drug combo used in death-penalty executions.
by
Corinna Barrett Lain
via
HNN
on
April 29, 2025
What the Novels of William Faulkner and Ralph Ellison Reveal About the Soul of America
The postwar moment of a distinctive new American novel—Nabokov’s "Lolita"— is also the moment in which William Faulkner finally gained recognition.
by
Edwin Frank
via
Literary Hub
on
November 19, 2024
An Undulating Thrill
Once lauded as a wonder of the age, cocaine soon became the object of profound anxieties. What happened?
by
Douglas Small
via
Aeon
on
October 4, 2024
How Activists Across the Pacific Northwest Planned the 1999 Seattle WTO Protests
Looking back on the environmentalist and anti-globalization movements of the 1990s.
by
D. W. Gibson
via
Literary Hub
on
June 21, 2024
Burnt Offerings
Aaron Bushnell and the age of immolation.
by
Erik Baker
via
n+1
on
February 29, 2024
For We Were Strangers in the Land of America
Comparing the struggles of Mexican and Greek immigrants to the United States.
by
Paul Apostolidis
via
New Lines
on
January 24, 2024
How Trauma Became America’s Favorite Diagnosis
Psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk’s once controversial theory of trauma became the dominant way we make sense of our lives.
by
Danielle Carr
via
Intelligencer
on
July 31, 2023
The Disabled Founding Father who Put the ‘United’ in ‘United States’
Newly digitized journals reveal the life of Gouverneur Morris, the Constitution preamble writer, vocal opponent of slavery and disabled congressman.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Retropolis
on
July 30, 2023
America Loved Tina Turner. But It Wasn’t Good To Her.
Over the course of her 83 years, the megawatt star that was Tina Turner kept telling us who she was in the hopes that we would see her — all of her.
by
Soraya Nadia McDonald
via
Andscape
on
June 6, 2023
partner
Forced into Federal Boarding Schools as Children, Native Americans Confront the Past
Native Americans demand accountability for a federal policy that aimed to erase Indigenous culture.
via
Retro Report
on
May 11, 2023
The Making of Norman Mailer
The young man went to war and became a novelist. But did he ever really come back?
by
David Denby
via
The New Yorker
on
December 19, 2022
On War and U.S. Slavery: Enslaved Black Women’s Experiences
Enslaved women’s experiences with war must be extended to include the everyday warfare of slavery.
by
Karen Cook Bell
via
Black Perspectives
on
November 7, 2022
Reading Disability History Back into American Girl
The author's personal history with the dolls, and an argument for American Girl to make a new doll with a disability.
by
Marissa Spear
via
Nursing Clio
on
November 1, 2022
Maternal Grief in Black and White
Examining enslaved mothers and antislavery literature on the eve of war.
by
Cassandra Berman
via
Nursing Clio
on
September 22, 2022
The Fire This Time
How James Baldwin speaks to lethal myths of white innocence—and why his work belongs in public-school classrooms.
by
Sana Hashmi
via
The Forum
on
August 30, 2022
The Sects That Rejected 19th-Century Sex
Why three religious groups traded monogamy for celibacy, polygamy, and complex marriage.
by
Stewart Davenport
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
February 14, 2022
Were Early American Prisons Similar to Today's?
A correctional officer’s history of 19th century prisons and modern-day parallels. From Sing Sing to suicide watch, torture treads a fine line.
by
Charles Neal
via
JSTOR Daily
on
January 19, 2022
A Dark Cloud over Enjoyment
Refusing myths of joy and pain in slave narratives.
by
Erin Austin Dwyer
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
December 7, 2021
She Spoke to the Dead. They Told Her to Free the Slaves.
In 1850s Vermont, Achsa Sprague swore that the spirits who helped her walk again also possessed her with a crucial mission: freeing every soul in America.
by
Madeline Bodin
via
Narratively
on
October 21, 2021
Traumatic Monologues
On the therapeutic turn in Indigenous politics.
by
Melanie K. Yazzie
via
The Baffler
on
September 6, 2021
The Persistent Joy of Black Mothers
Characterized throughout American history as symbols of crisis, trauma, and grief, these women reject those narratives through world-making of their own.
by
Leah Wright Rigueur
via
The Atlantic
on
August 11, 2021
The Problem of Pain
It’s easier to blame individuals for the opioid crisis than to attempt to diagnose and cure the ills of a society.
by
Sophie Pinkham
via
Dissent
on
April 5, 2021
Can Historians Be Traumatized by History?
Their secondhand experience of past horrors can debilitate them.
by
James Robins
via
The New Republic
on
February 16, 2021
Ashes to Ashes
Should art heal the centuries of racial violence and injustice in the US?
by
Taylor Rees
via
Psyche
on
October 21, 2020
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