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W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963)
This long overdue tribute honors historian W. E. B. Du Bois, who died on August 27, 1963.
by
David Levering Lewis
via
Perspectives on History
on
December 6, 2022
“The Times Requires This Testimony”: William Still’s 'The Underground Railroad'
Still’s detailed record of radical abolitionist action remains a model for creating freedom out of community and community out of freedom.
by
Julia W. Bernier
via
Black Perspectives
on
December 5, 2022
Who Owns the Narrative? Texas Law Enforcement Versus Tejano Journalists
At the turn of the century, Mexican American publications paid a price for challenging the local sheriff and elements of the Texas Rangers.
by
Isabella Van Trease
via
Texas Monthly
on
December 1, 2022
Bleeding Hearts and Blind Spots
What the story of the Grimke family tells us about race in the United States.
by
Kellie Carter Jackson
via
The Nation
on
November 30, 2022
Walking with Enslaved and Enslavers at Pickett’s Charge (and Retreat)
Today, it’s still nearly impossible to see the Black people whose presence, tramped down for a century and a half, is why this commemorative landscape exists.
by
Scott Hancock
via
Muster
on
November 8, 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
Gordon Parks' View of America Across Three Decades
Two new books and one expanded edition of Gordon Parks' photographs look at the work of the photographer from the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s.
by
Robert E. Gerhardt
via
Blind
on
October 28, 2022
Atlanta, Georgia, Was a Center of Anti-Apartheid Organizing
The common picture we get of the US South is one of resolute conservatism. But the region has a radical history, too.
by
Zeb Larson
via
Jacobin
on
October 10, 2022
The Local Politics of Fannie Lou Hamer
By age 44, most people are figuring out how to live and die peacefully. That was certainly not the case with sharecropper and hero Fannie Lou Hamer.
by
Stefan M. Bradley
via
Black Perspectives
on
October 6, 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
Trouble in River City
Two recent books examine the idea of the Midwest as a haven for white supremacy and patriarchy.
by
Caroline Fraser
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 29, 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
Locked Up: The Prison Labor That Built Business Empires
Companies across the South profited off the forced labor of people in prison after the Civil War – a racist system known as convict leasing.
by
Margie Mason
,
Robin McDowell
via
AP News
on
September 19, 2022
Imani Perry’s Capacious History of the South
Contrary to popular belief, the South has always been the key to defining the promise and limits of American democracy.
by
Robert Greene II
via
The Nation
on
September 17, 2022
‘Hell, Yes, We Are Subversive’
For all her influence as an activist, intellectual, and writer, Angela Davis has not always been taken as seriously as her peers. Why not?
by
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 1, 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
What The 1836 Project Leaves Out in Its Version of Texas History
The legislature established a committee last year to “promote patriotic education.” Drafts of one of its pamphlets reveal an effort to sanitize history.
by
Michael Phillips
,
Leah LaGrone
via
Texas Monthly
on
August 25, 2022
The Mexican Revolution as U.S. History
Making the case for why U.S. history only makes sense when told as a binational story.
by
Jonna Perrillo
via
Boston Review
on
August 4, 2022
The Mapping of Race in America
Visualizing the legacy of slavery and redlining, 1860 to the present.
by
Anika Fenn Gilman
,
Catherine Discenza
,
John Hessler
via
Library of Congress
on
July 28, 2022
The Proletarian Poet
A new book on Claude McKay is part of an effort to place the poetry of the Harlem Renaissance within the Black radical tradition.
by
Jennifer Wilson
via
Dissent
on
July 25, 2022
Who Digs the Mines?
A new book recognizes the global character of Asian exclusion.
by
Andrew Liu
via
London Review of Books
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
Jackie Robinson Was a Radical – Don't Listen to the Sanitized Version of History
Before Colin Kaepernick, Jackie Robinson wrote, ‘I cannot stand and sing the anthem. I cannot salute the flag; I know that I am a Black man in a white world.’
by
Peter Dreier
via
The Conversation
on
April 14, 2022
Governor William Franklin: Sagorighweyoghsta, “Great Arbiter” or “Doer of Justice”
The actions of one New Jersey royal governor demonstrate a rare case of impartial justice for Native Americans.
by
Joseph E. Wroblewski
via
Journal of the American Revolution
on
April 7, 2022
partner
Activists Have Always Been Frustrated at Allies’ Insistence on Gradual Change
Why abolitionist Lydia Maria Child raged at President Lincoln’s political calculations.
by
Lydia Moland
via
Made By History
on
March 28, 2022
partner
The Hidden History That Explains Why Team USA is Overwhelmingly White
Exclusion and violence in Western U.S. states help explain the Whiteness of winter sports.
by
Sherri Sheu
via
Made By History
on
February 17, 2022
The Lasting Legacy Of Redlining
We looked at 138 formerly redlined cities and found most were still segregated — just like they were designed to be.
by
Ryan Best
,
Elena Mejía
via
FiveThirtyEight
on
February 9, 2022
Remembering Dr. Martin Luther King
The King holiday is more than a time for reflection. It’s really a time for provocation.
by
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
via
The Daily Princetonian
on
January 17, 2022
Lucille Clifton and the Task of Remembering
The poet’s memoir Generations is both a chronicle of her ancestral lineage and lesson in the centrality of Black women to the story of American history.
by
Marina Magloire
via
The Nation
on
January 12, 2022
70 Years Ago Black Activists Accused the U.S. of Genocide. They Should Have Been Taken Seriously.
The charges, while provocative, offer a framework to reckon with systemic racial injustice — past and present.
by
Alex Hinton
via
Politico Magazine
on
December 26, 2021
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