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Corky Lee and the Work of Seeing
Lee's life and work suggested that Asian American identity did not possess—and did not need—any underlying reality beyond solidarity.
by
Ken Chen
via
n+1
on
January 25, 2023
How the Drug War Convinced America to Wiretap the Digital Revolution
How the FBI's doomed attempt to stop criminal activity conducted via mobile phones shaped the regime of ubiquitous backdoor surveillance under which we live today.
by
Brian Hochman
via
Humanities
on
January 6, 2023
Why Did Gay Rights Take So Long?
A quiet movement that began in the 1920s didn’t disappear—it just went underground.
by
Michael Waters
via
The Atlantic
on
November 9, 2022
The Blackest City
Not just in Riverside, but in all of the Inland Empire!
by
Candice Mays
via
Mapping Black California
on
October 18, 2022
Hat Havoc in the Big Apple
The Hat Riots of 1922 show how arbitrary, elite rules can spur civil unrest.
by
Katrina Gulliver
via
Law & Liberty
on
September 9, 2022
partner
Jayland Walker’s Killing Didn’t Spur Expected Protests. Here’s Why.
An effective media strategy has often been crucial to rallying the public behind Black victims of fatal violence.
by
Kate L. Flach
via
Made By History
on
July 13, 2022
TV's Rural Craze & The Civil Rights Movement
At the same time that MLK was using TV to brand Southern sheriffs as obstacles to progress, a Southern sheriff was one of the medium's most beloved characters.
by
Bijan Bayne
via
RogerEbert.com
on
June 21, 2022
partner
Bernhard Goetz and the Roots of Kyle Rittenhouse’s Celebrity on the Right
Why vigilante violence appeals politically.
by
Pia Beumer
via
Made By History
on
June 15, 2022
The Long Crisis on Rikers Island
A new book about Rikers Island is essentially a labor history, revealing how jail guards seized control from managers, politicians, and judges.
by
Brendan O'Connor
via
The Baffler
on
May 12, 2022
partner
Oprah’s Shows on the L.A. Riots Reveal What We’ve Lost Without Her Program
The power of daytime talk shows — especially “The Oprah Winfrey Show.”
by
Leah Wright Rigueur
,
Kellie Carter Jackson
via
Made By History
on
May 2, 2022
Scars and Stripes
Philadelphia gave America its flag, along with other enduring icons of nationhood. But for many, the red, white and blue banner embodies a legacy of injustice.
by
Martha S. Jones
via
Philadelphia Inquirer
on
April 6, 2022
How the Drug War Dies
A few decades ago, the left and the right, politicians and the public, universally embraced the criminalization of drug use. But a new consensus has emerged.
by
Maia Szalavitz
via
The Nation
on
March 21, 2022
The Conservative and the Murderer
Why did William F. Buckley campaign to free Edgar Smith?
by
Sam Adler-Bell
via
The New Republic
on
March 7, 2022
How a Confederate Daughter Rewrote Alabama History for White Supremacy
Marie Bankhead Owen led campaigns to purge anti-Confederate lessons from Southern classrooms, and all but erased Black history from the Alabama state archives.
by
Kyle Whitmire
via
al.com
on
February 16, 2022
The Plot Against American Democracy That Isn't Taught in Schools
How the authors of the Depression-era “Business Plot” aimed to take power away from FDR and stop his “socialist” New Deal.
by
Jonathan M. Katz
via
Rolling Stone
on
January 1, 2022
American Vigilantism
In the early 20th century, labor unrest and strike breaking were done not by the government, but by private agencies and self-appointed vigilantes.
by
Michael Mark Cohen
,
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
December 26, 2021
When Humane Societies Threw Christmas Parties for Horses
Held across the U.S. in the early 20th century, the events sought to raise awareness about workhorses' poor living conditions.
by
Eliza McGraw
via
Smithsonian
on
December 17, 2021
The Black Panthers Fed More Hungry Kids Than the State of California
It wasn’t all young men and guns: the Black Panther Party’s programs fed more hungry kids than the state of California.
by
Suzanne Cope
via
Aeon
on
December 10, 2021
Not Humane, Just Invisible
A counter-narrative to Samuel Moyn’s "Humane": drone warfare and the long history of liberal empire blurring the line between policing and endless war.
by
Priya Satia
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
December 3, 2021
Kyle Rittenhouse Is an American
Our country's legal history renders the teen's case familiar if not inevitable.
by
Patrick Blanchfield
via
Gawker
on
November 16, 2021
An AIDS Activist's Archive
June Holmes was in her late twenties, working as a social worker on Long Island, when she first heard about “this thing called AIDS.”
by
Scott Wasserman Stern
via
New York Review of Books
on
October 29, 2021
Confessions of a Loan Shark
One of the last survivors of Boston’s Gangland War of the 1960s opens up about his notorious past.
by
Springs Toledo
via
City Journal
on
October 7, 2021
The Atlanta Way
Repression, mediation, and division of Black resistance from 1906 to the 2020 George Floyd Uprising.
by
Sarah Abdelaziz
,
Kayla Edgett
via
Atlanta Studies
on
October 4, 2021
Occupy Wall Street at 10: What It Taught Us, and Why It Mattered
It basically started the wave of activism that revived the left—and taught people to get serious about power.
by
Micah L. Sifry
via
The New Republic
on
September 17, 2021
The Rise of the UniverCity
Historian Davarian Baldwin explains how universities have come to wield the kind of power that were once hallmarks of ruthless employers in company towns.
by
Davarian L. Baldwin
,
Meagan Day
via
Jacobin
on
September 2, 2021
New Documents Reveal the Bloody Origins of America's Long War On Drugs
When President Nixon launched the war on drugs in 1971, it set off a bloody chain reaction in Mexico as new documents reveal.
by
Benjamin T. Smith
via
TIME
on
August 24, 2021
Feb 6 1934/Jan 6 2021
What do the two events really have in common?
by
John Ganz
via
Unpopular Front
on
July 15, 2021
How the Asian American Movement Learned a Lesson in Liberation from the Black Panthers
In 1968, Chicago grabbed the eyes of the world when fifteen thousand Vietnam antiwar protesters vowed to shut down the National Democratic Convention.
by
Nobuko Miyamoto
via
Densho: Japanese American Incarceration and Japanese Internment
on
July 12, 2021
A Century Ago, West Virginia Miners Took Up Arms Against King Coal
In 1921, twenty thousand armed miners in West Virginia marched on the coal bosses and were met with bombs and submachine guns.
by
Arvind Dilawar
,
Chuck Keeney
via
Jacobin
on
June 23, 2021
Photographing the Tulsa Massacre of 1921
Karlos K. Hill investigates the disturbing photographic legacy of the Tulsa massacre and the resilience of Black Wall Street’s residents.
by
Karlos K. Hill
via
The Public Domain Review
on
May 21, 2021
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