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Viewing 421–431 of 431 results.
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A Treasure Trove of Trials
This collection of piracy trials comprises documents that were published before 1923 and that are part of the holdings of the Law Library of Congress.
by
Francisco Macías
via
Library of Congress
on
September 5, 2017
Woodcuts and Witches
On the witch craze of early modern Europe, and how the concurrent rise of the mass-produced woodcut helped forge the archetype of the broom-riding crone.
by
Jon Crabb
via
The Public Domain Review
on
May 4, 2017
A Popular '40s Map of American Folklore Was Destroyed by Fears of Communism
The government saw Red when looking at William Gropper's painting of the United States.
by
Kyle Carsten Wyatt
via
Atlas Obscura
on
March 27, 2017
The Suburban Horror of the Indian Burial Ground
In the 1970s and 1980s, homeowners were terrified by the idea that they didn't own the land they'd just bought.
by
Colin Dickey
via
The New Republic
on
October 19, 2016
A Hamilton Skeptic on Why the Show Isn’t As Revolutionary As It Seems
"It's still white history. And no amount of casting people of color disguises the fact that they're erasing people of color from the actual narrative."
by
Lyra Monteiro
,
Rebecca Onion
via
Slate
on
April 5, 2016
American Hippopotamus
A bracing and eccentric epic of espionage and hippos.
by
Jon Mooallem
via
The Atavist
on
November 28, 2013
Mythologizing Fatherhood
Ralph LaRossa explains the problems with mythologizing modern dads and the stereotypes present within views of fatherhood of the past.
by
Ralph LaRossa
via
National Council On Family Relations
on
March 1, 2009
Searching for Robert Johnson
In the seven decades since his mysterious death, bluesman Robert Johnson’s legend has grown.
by
Frank DiGiacomo
via
Vanity Fair
on
October 1, 2008
What Was Africa to Them?
How historians have understood Africa and the Black diaspora in global conversations about race and identity.
by
Kwame Anthony Appiah
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 27, 2007
Willie Nelson at 70
"The Essential Willie Nelson" compilation demonstrates the continuity of Nelson's style across a variety of musical genres.
by
Gene Santoro
via
The Nation
on
October 30, 2003
The Mythical Fortune That Fuelled America’s Greatest Fraud
Oscar Hartzell convinced thousands of Americans that they could get a piece of the Sir Francis Drake estate—a multibillion-dollar inheritance that didn’t exist.
by
Richard Rayner
via
The New Yorker
on
April 15, 2002
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