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How The Inquirer Covered the Clearing of West Philadelphia’s Black Bottom
Only one Philadelphia paper covered Black Bottom. And it wasn't The Inquirer.
by
Jake Blumgart
via
Philadelphia Inquirer
on
December 8, 2022
partner
Pearl Harbor was the Site of Black Heroism and Protests Against Racism
The history of segregation in the Navy — and its abolition — show how to combat institutionalized bigotry.
by
Matt Delmont
via
Made By History
on
December 7, 2022
The Question of the Offensive Monument
A new book asks what we lose by simply removing monuments.
by
Erin L. Thompson
via
The Nation
on
December 5, 2022
Pruitt-Igoe: A Black Community Under the "Atomic Cloud"
In the 1950s, the U.S. military conducted unethical radiological experiments on Black communities, including the Pruitt-Igoe public housing complex.
by
Devin Thomas O’Shea
via
Protean
on
November 28, 2022
Murder At the Corner Store: Immigrant Merchants and Law and Order Politics in Postwar Detroit
With seventeen holdups in the past few months, something had to be done. “We will talk to the mayor and the police commissioner. We need more protection".
by
Kenneth Alyass
via
The Metropole
on
November 17, 2022
Fetal Rites
What we can learn from fifty years of anti-abortion propaganda.
by
S. C. Cornell
via
The Drift
on
October 27, 2022
When Texas Cowboys Fought Private Property
When cattle barons carved up Texas with barbed wire in the late 19th century, cowboys formed fence-cutting gangs to preserve the open range.
by
David Griscom
via
Jacobin
on
October 4, 2022
"Until I Am Free"
An online roundtable on a new biography of Fannie Lou Hamer.
by
Danielle L. McGuire
,
Peniel E. Joseph
,
Rhonda Williams
,
Stefan M. Bradley
via
Black Perspectives
on
October 3, 2022
partner
Women Have Always Been Key To the Labor Movement
Solidarity between men and women workers is crucial to advancing the cause of workers in America.
by
Amy Mackin
via
Made By History
on
August 24, 2022
A Deadly World War II Explosion Sparked Black Soldiers to Fight for Equal Treatment
After the deadliest home-front disaster of the war, African Americans throughout the military took action to transform the nation's armed forces.
by
Matt Delmont
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
August 24, 2022
Ask the ‘Coupologists’: Just What Was Jan. 6 Anyway?
Without a name for it, figuring out why it happened is that much harder.
by
Joshua Zeitz
,
Ruth Ben-Ghiat
,
Scott Althaus
,
Matt Cleary
,
Ryan McMaken
via
Politico Magazine
on
August 19, 2022
Sex, Scandal, and Sisterhood: Fifty Years of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders
They’re global icons who have left a lasting imprint on American culture. But do recent controversies threaten the squad’s future?
by
Sarah Hepola
via
Texas Monthly
on
August 15, 2022
partner
The History Missing From the LGBTQ Story Told During Pride Month
Why reinserting race and class into our understanding of Pride is so important.
by
Beau Lancaster
via
Made By History
on
June 20, 2022
Remembering Vincent Chin — And The Deep Roots of Anti-Asian Violence
40 years after Vincent Chin’s murder, the struggle against anti-Asian hate continues.
by
Li Zhou
via
Vox
on
June 19, 2022
20 Years Later, "The Wire" Is Still a Cutting Critique of American Capitalism
The Wire — both stylish and smart, follows unforgettable characters woven into a striking portrait of the depredations of capitalism in one US city.
by
Helena Sheehan
,
Sheamus Sweeney
via
Jacobin
on
June 14, 2022
How to Decolonize the Capitol
Art historians, legislators, and activists have long decried themes of white supremacy in the art collection of the U.S. Capitol. Can this place be decolonized?
by
Marisa Angell Brown
via
Places Journal
on
June 14, 2022
There’s No Freedom Without Reparations
A movement to secure payments for descendants of enslaved people rages on.
by
Fabiola Cineas
via
Vox
on
June 6, 2022
Dire Straits
A new history of Detroit’s struggles for clean air and water argues that municipal debt and austerity have furthered an ongoing environmental catastrophe.
by
Scott W. Stern
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 2, 2022
Grantmaking as Governance
A new book examines how the US government funded the growth of — and delegated governance to — the nonprofit sector.
by
Benjamin Soskis
via
Stanford Social Innovation Review
on
May 26, 2022
U.S. Relations With China 1949–2022
U.S.-China relations have evolved from tense standoffs to a complex mix of intensifying diplomacy, growing international rivalry, and increasingly intertwined economies.
via
Council On Foreign Relations
on
May 26, 2022
We Must Burn Them: Against the Origin Story
"History is written by the victors, but diligent and continual silencing is required to maintain its claims on the present and future."
by
Hazel V. Carby
via
London Review of Books
on
May 26, 2022
partner
The Living Newspaper Speaks
Scripted from front-page news, the Federal Theatre Project’s Living Newspaper plays were part entertainment, part protest, and entirely educational.
by
Betsy Golden Kellem
via
JSTOR Daily
on
May 25, 2022
A People’s History of Baseball
Communists fighting the color line. Baseball players resisting owners. Baseball's untold history of struggles against racial injustice and labor exploitation.
by
Peter Dreier
,
Michael Arria
via
Jacobin
on
May 25, 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
When Did the Ruling Class Get Woke?
A conversation with Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò on his new book, which investigates the co-option of identity politics and the importance of coalitional organizing.
by
Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
,
Ishan Desai-Geller
via
The Nation
on
May 9, 2022
partner
Too Many White Parents Don’t Understand The True Purpose of Public Schools
Black Americans continue to fight for access to the public school systems their forebears created, against a history of white backlash and appropriation.
by
Diana D'Amico Pawlewicz
via
Made By History
on
May 3, 2022
What Makes Laws Unjust
King could not accomplish what philosophers and theologians also failed to—distinguishing moral from immoral law in a polarized society.
by
Randall Kennedy
via
Boston Review
on
April 11, 2022
Evangelical Groundhog Day
The NYT identifies the 'religious fervor in the American right' — around four decades late.
by
Diana Butler Bass
via
Religion Dispatches
on
April 7, 2022
partner
Northern Civil Rights and Republican Affirmative Action
One focus of the 1960s struggle for civil rights in the North were the construction industries of Philadelphia, New York and Cleveland.
by
Thomas J. Sugrue
,
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
March 28, 2022
Henry "Scoop" Jackson and the Jewish Cold Warriors
An alliance between Jewish activists and congressional neocons made Soviet Jewry a key issue in superpower relations—and reshaped American Jewish politics.
by
Hadas Binyamini
via
Jewish Currents
on
February 24, 2022
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