Menu
Excerpts
Exhibits
Collections
Originals
Categories
Map
Search
Idea
World War I
348
Filter by:
Date Published
Filter by published date
Published On or After:
Published On or Before:
Filter
Cancel
Viewing 61–90 of 348 results.
Go to first page
The Wobblies and the Dream of One Big Union
A new history examines the lost promise and fierce persecution of the IWW.
by
Michael Kazin
via
The Nation
on
May 15, 2023
On W.E.B. Du Bois and the Disgraceful Treatment of Gold Star Mothers
The symbolic battles of World War I.
by
Chad Williams
via
Literary Hub
on
April 4, 2023
Mass Destruction
Real democratic participation in foreign policy is almost unimaginable today—but this wasn’t always the case.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
Boston Review
on
March 27, 2023
How Edith Wilson Kept Herself—and Her Husband—in the White House
A new book about the first lady reveals how she and the ailing President Woodrow Wilson silenced their critics.
by
Rebecca Boggs Roberts
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
March 7, 2023
partner
Strange, Inglorious, Humble Things
The Cromwell twins fled the constrictions of high society for the freedoms of the literary world. Ravenous for greater purpose, the twins then went to war.
by
Justin Duerr
via
JSTOR Daily
on
November 9, 2022
The Limits of Press Power
To what extent did newspapers influence public opinion in the US and Britain before and during World War II?
by
Geoffrey Wheatcroft
via
New York Review of Books
on
October 22, 2022
How World War I Crushed the American Left
A new book documents a period of thriving radical groups and their devastating suppression.
by
Joanna Scutts
via
The New Republic
on
October 18, 2022
America’s Top Censor—So Far
Woodrow Wilson’s postmaster put papers out of business and jailed journalists. The tools he used still exist.
by
Adam Hochschild
via
Mother Jones
on
October 13, 2022
Do Sanctions Work?
A new history examines their use in the past and considers their effectiveness for the future.
by
James Stafford
via
The Nation
on
October 6, 2022
Crisis, Disease, Shortage, And Strike: Shipbuilding On Staten Island In World War I
How an industry responded to the needs of workers and of the federal government during a time of rapid mobilization for wartime production.
by
Faith D'Alessandro
via
The Gotham Center
on
April 19, 2022
A Century Ago, American Reporters Foresaw the Rise of Authoritarianism in Europe
A new book tells the stories of four interwar writers who laid the groundwork for modern journalism.
by
Deborah Cohen
,
Karin Wulf
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
March 14, 2022
The Modern History of Economic Sanctions
A review of “The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War."
by
Henry Farrell
via
Lawfare
on
March 1, 2022
The Dangerous Ghosts of WWI Research in Spring Valley
World War I saw the advent of chemical weaponry, and a mysterious chapter in the history of American University in Northwest DC.
by
Fontana Micucci
via
Boundary Stones
on
February 25, 2022
partner
Burning Kelp for War
World War I saw the availability of potash plummet, while its price doubled. The US found this critical component for multiple industries in Pacific kelp.
by
Peter Neushul
,
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
January 13, 2022
A Tragedy After the Unknown’s Funeral: Charles Whittlesey and the Costs of Heroism
While he did not die in a war, he can certainly be mourned as a casualty of war—as can the thousands of other veterans who have died by suicide.
by
Jenifer Leigh van Vleck
via
Arlington National Cemetery
on
November 16, 2021
Merchants of Death
From the Nye Committee to Joe Kent, the fight against war profiteering is a constant struggle.
by
Hunter DeRensis
via
The American Conservative
on
November 8, 2021
partner
It Wouldn’t Be Halloween Without Candy. We Have World War I to Thank for That.
Candies of the Halloween season have roots in the sweet treats and real horrors of the Great War.
by
Lora Vogt
via
Made By History
on
October 31, 2021
Songs of the Bad War
Some of the earliest and most powerful anti-war songs of the Sixties era don’t mention Vietnam, but rather World War I.
by
Michael Brendan Dougherty
via
National Review
on
June 11, 2021
Free Speech Wasn't So Free 103 Years Ago
When 'seditious' and 'unpatriotic' speech was criminalized in the U.S.
by
Eric Robinson
via
The Conversation
on
May 13, 2021
Why Do We Forget Pandemics?
Until the Covid-19 pandemic, the catastrophe of the Spanish flu had been dropped from American memory.
by
Nina Burleigh
via
The Nation
on
April 26, 2021
Propagating Propaganda
Toward the end of WWI, as the U.S. peddled Liberty Bonds, a goldfish dealer bred a stars-and-stripes-colored carp: a living, swimming embodiment of patriotism.
by
Laurel Waycott
via
The Public Domain Review
on
March 17, 2021
Rereading 'Darkwater'
W.E.B. DuBois, 100 years ago.
by
Chad Williams
via
National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)
on
February 22, 2021
The Great Migration
1915 marked the beginning of the largest domestic migration in American history. Hundreds of thousands of Black Americans began relocating north.
by
Will Donnell
via
wcd.fyi
on
February 20, 2021
Chemical Warfare’s Home Front
Since World War I we’ve been solving problems with dangerous chemicals that introduce new problems.
by
Elizabeth Kolbert
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 11, 2021
What Happened When Woodrow Wilson Came Down With the 1918 Flu?
The president contracted influenza while attending peace talks in Paris, but the nation was never told the full, true story.
by
Meilan Solly
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
October 2, 2020
Dispatches from 1918
Thinking about our future, we look back on the aftermath of a century-old pandemic.
by
Radiolab
via
WNYC
on
July 17, 2020
The Lost Cause’s Long Legacy
Why does the U.S. Army name its bases after generals it defeated?
by
Michael Paradis
via
The Atlantic
on
June 26, 2020
Eugene Debs Was an American Hero
He forced the country to engage in a three-year conversation about the meaning of free speech that shaped policy and law after World War I.
by
Shawn Gude
,
Ernest Freeberg
via
Jacobin
on
June 16, 2020
Commemorating the Nurses of the 1918 Influenza Pandemic
Female nurses served their country domestically and abroad by caring for soliders striken by the influenza pandemic.
by
Allison S. Finkelstein
via
Arlington National Cemetery
on
June 12, 2020
Americans Coped With ‘Wheatless Wednesdays’ in WWI
When the government urged Americans to cut back on wheat consumption, bakers came up with creative solutions.
by
Emelyn Rude
via
TIME
on
May 13, 2020
View More
30 of
348
Filters
Filter Results:
Search for a term by which to filter:
Suggested Filters:
Idea
Flu Pandemic of 1918
warfare
antiwar protest
soldiers
public health
propaganda
death toll
patriotism
Espionage Act of 1917
censorship
Person
Woodrow Wilson
Michael Kazin
Karl Muck
Theodore Roosevelt
Peter Walther
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Walter Lippmann
A. Scott Berg
Wendy McElroy
David M. Kennedy