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The U.S. Representative Who Tried to Outlaw War
Jeanette Rankin was the first woman to become a member of the U.S. House of Representatives. And she once tried to outlaw war.
by
Erin Blakemore
,
Harriet Hyman Alonso
via
JSTOR Daily
on
April 2, 2017
What the Fugitive Slave Act Teaches Us About How States Can Resist Oppressive Federal Power
The actions of attorneys general in California and other states have their antecedents in the fight against that draconian law.
by
Eric Foner
via
The Nation
on
February 8, 2017
This Unheralded Woman Actually Organized the Montgomery Bus Boycott
Jo Ann Robinson is unfortunately overlooked by history.
by
Keisha N. Blain
via
Timeline
on
January 19, 2017
The Strange Political History of The ‘Underground’
Subterranean metaphors have been a powerful tool of political resistance. Today, is there anywhere left to hide?
by
Terence Renaud
via
Aeon
on
December 14, 2016
Black Panther Women: The Unsung Activists Who Fed and Fought for Their Community
Judy Juanita on her novel 'Virgin Soul,' which incorporates her experiences as a Black Panther living in San Francisco.
by
Lisa Hix
,
Judy Juanita
via
Collectors Weekly
on
December 2, 2016
Igbo Landing Mass Suicide
In 1803 one of the largest mass suicides of enslaved people took place when Igbo captives from what is now Nigeria were taken to the Georgia coast.
by
Samuel Momodu
via
BlackPast
on
October 25, 2016
Deep in the Swamps, Archaeologists Are Finding How Fugitive Slaves Kept Their Freedom
The Great Dismal Swamp was once a thriving refuge for runaways.
by
Richard Grant
via
Smithsonian
on
September 1, 2016
The Sissies, Hustlers, and Hair Fairies Whose Defiant Lives Paved the Way for Stonewall
In 1966, the queens had finally had enough with years of discriminatory treatment by the San Francisco police.
by
Hunter Oatman-Stanford
via
Collectors Weekly
on
August 15, 2016
Is the Greatest Collection of Slave Narratives Tainted by Racism?
How Depression-Era racial dynamics may have shaped our understanding of antebellum enslaved life.
by
Rebecca Onion
via
Slate
on
July 6, 2016
On Memorial Day, Weaponizing the American Flag
As a young woman, civil rights pioneer Pauli Murray discovered that the flag could be used as a symbol of defiance.
by
Jedediah Britton-Purdy
via
Scalawag
on
May 30, 2016
May Day's Radical History
The date of Occupy's strike has ties to the eight-hour day movement, immigrant workers and American anarchism.
by
Jacob Remes
via
Salon
on
April 30, 2012
The Poetics of History from Below
All good storytellers tell a big story within a little story, and so do all good historians.
by
Marcus Rediker
via
Perspectives on History
on
September 1, 2010
Mohawks, Mohocks, Hawkubites, Whatever
Down and dirty in eighteenth-century London and Boston.
by
Roger D. Abrahams
via
Commonplace
on
January 1, 2008
An Open Letter to My Sister, Miss Angela Davis
Since we live in an age in which silence is not only criminal but suicidal, I have been making as much noise as I can.
by
James Baldwin
via
New York Review of Books
on
January 7, 1971
Martin Luther King Was a Law Breaker
On the second anniversary of MLK's assassination, political prisoner Martin Sostre wrote a tribute emphasizing his radical disobedience.
by
Austin McCoy
,
Martin Sostre
via
Martin Sostre Institute
on
April 1, 1970
Letter from a Birmingham Jail
Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 letter written from prison remains one of his most famous works.
by
Martin Luther King Jr.
via
University of Pennsylvania
on
April 16, 1963
The Freedom-Loving Minutemen of Massachusetts Strike Again
Just down the road from Lexington and Concord, American patriots scurried to defend their immigrant neighbors.
by
Harold Meyerson
via
The American Prospect
on
May 20, 2025
Surviving Bad Presidents
What the Constitution asks of us.
by
George Thomas
via
The Bulwark
on
May 16, 2025
What If It Is Happening Here?
Lessons from the anti-fascist novel in Trump’s second term.
by
David Renton
via
Literary Hub
on
May 12, 2025
The Post-World War II System Was Always Fragile
Franklin Roosevelt warned that even in peacetime, America’s obligations to the world would continue.
by
Julian E. Zelizer
via
Foreign Policy
on
May 12, 2025
The Grim Timeliness of “Noir and the Blacklist”
A new Criterion series of McCarthy-era noir films is a timely collection for an era of rising government repression.
by
Eileen Jones
via
Jacobin
on
May 4, 2025
partner
How We Oversimplified the History of the Vietnam War
Popular memory of the war in both the U.S. and Vietnam tends to cast the fall of Saigon as inevitable.
by
Andrew Bellisari
via
Made By History
on
April 30, 2025
What Spurred the South to Join the American Revolution?
How a dispute with a Scottish lord over westward expansion, gunpowder, and the future of enslaved labor made the southern colonies’ embrace the radical cause.
by
Andrew Lawler
via
Smithsonian
on
April 4, 2025
The Surprising History of Women and Bicycling
It's not about the bike or the bloomers.
by
Maya Rodale
via
Hidden Herstories
on
March 31, 2025
Could Tax Protests Defund the American War Machine?
Tax resistance has long opposed war and empire in North America, and could be a way to resist U.S. funding of violence in Gaza today.
by
Lauren Fadiman
via
Current Affairs
on
March 18, 2025
partner
Indifferent to the Fate of Freedom Elsewhere
Jimmy Carter is known for his defense of human rights worldwide. But in 1979, he threatened to deport thousands of Iranian student protesters.
by
Will Teague
via
HNN
on
March 11, 2025
From Philly to Derry: On the Americans Who Armed the IRA During The Troubles
Vincent Conlon’s secret life in the United States as an operative and gun-running Irish rebel.
by
Ali Watkins
via
Literary Hub
on
March 11, 2025
How the Red Scare Shaped American Television
The fear of communism silenced actors, writers and producers, altering the entertainment industry for decades.
by
Carol Stabile
via
PBS
on
February 28, 2025
The Island Nation Whose History Reflects America’s
Rich Benjamin’s new book reveals a shared spirit between the world’s first Black republic and the United States.
by
Danielle Amir Jackson
via
The Atlantic
on
February 27, 2025
How America Wasted Its Most Powerful Economic Weapon
If world leaders had been clearer about the sanctions Putin would face, they might have deterred his invasion of Ukraine.
by
Edward Fishman
via
The Atlantic
on
February 24, 2025
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