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Viewing 241–270 of 564 results.
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V-Mail: A Photo-Based Technological Triumph in Wartime Communication
During World War II, the revolutionary V-Mail leveraged cutting-edge microfilm technology to streamline correspondence.
by
Matthew Williams
via
PetaPixel
on
November 22, 2024
Today’s Echoes of the First ‘America First’
Charles Lindbergh’s ideology prefigured Donald Trump’s—and was rightly disgraced.
by
Casey Michel
via
The Bulwark
on
November 13, 2024
You Had to Be There
Whose side is the war correspondent on?
by
Zoë Hu
via
The Baffler
on
November 5, 2024
partner
Perhaps the Most Influential Single Propagandist for Fascism
On the lengths newspaper publishers took to reach new subscribers — and then drive them away — in the 1930s.
by
Terry Kirby
via
HNN
on
November 4, 2024
There’s a Very Specific Issue Haunting This Election. No One Is Talking About It.
You can bury it. But you can’t escape it.
by
Grady Hendrix
via
Slate
on
October 31, 2024
How Congress Is Written Out of History
Congress's role in shaping policies like the Affordable Care Act and exonerating Port Chicago sailors is often overlooked, overshadowed by the president.
by
John A. Lawrence
via
Perspectives on History
on
October 31, 2024
The Horrors of Hepatitis Research
The abusive experiments on mentally disabled children at Willowbrook State School were only one part of a much larger unethical research program.
by
Carl Elliott
via
New York Review of Books
on
October 31, 2024
partner
Postcolonial Pacific: The Story of Philippine Seattle
The growth of Seattle in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is inseparable from the arrival of laborers from the US-colonized Philippines.
by
H. M. A. Leow
,
Dorothy Fujita-Rony
via
JSTOR Daily
on
September 29, 2024
Why Recycling Is Mostly Garbage
In two new books, the rise of recycling is a story of illusory promises, often entwined with disturbing political agendas.
by
Daniela Blei
via
The New Republic
on
September 27, 2024
How Racist Policies Destroyed Public Housing and Created the American Suburbs
The systematic post-war displacement of communities of color.
by
Tracy Rosenthal
,
Leonardo Vilchis
via
Literary Hub
on
September 25, 2024
A Black Woman’s Activism in Postwar (West) Germany
Why one journalist worked with Black American families to adopt mixed-race German children after World War II.
by
Silke Hackenesch
via
Black Perspectives
on
September 18, 2024
Ghosts, Seen Darkly
Remembering my father’s imprisonment at a Japanese prison camp.
by
Richard Flanagan
via
Literary Hub
on
September 16, 2024
On Richard Scarry and the Art of Children's Literature
Scarry’s guides to life both reflected and bolstered kids’ lived experience, and in some cases even provided the template for it.
by
Chris Ware
via
The Yale Review
on
September 9, 2024
partner
The Complex History of American Dating
While going out on a date may seem like a natural thing to do these days, it wasn't always the case.
by
Ashawnta Jackson
,
Beth Bailey
via
JSTOR Daily
on
August 8, 2024
Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Was a Family Star Until Tragedy Struck in 1944
Eighty years ago this month, the Kennedy who might have been president was killed on a secret mission over England.
by
Michael E. Ruane
via
Retropolis
on
August 1, 2024
Homing Devices: Women’s Home Planning Scrapbooks, 1920s—1950s
Women on the homefront planned future homes with scrapbooks, blending wartime duty with dreams of postwar prosperity and modern comforts.
by
Andrew M. Shanken
via
Platform
on
July 22, 2024
Learned Hand’s Spirit of Liberty
Eighty years ago, Americans embraced a new definition of their faith: “The spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too sure that it is right.”
by
Lincoln Caplan
via
The New Yorker
on
July 4, 2024
How George Orwell Paved Noam Chomsky’s Path to Anarchism
On the profound impact of Orwell's "Homage to Catalonia" on Noam Chomsky's early embrace of left-libertarian and anarchist ideologies.
by
Robert F. Barsky
via
The MIT Press Reader
on
July 3, 2024
How The U.S. Military Built San Francisco's LBGTQ+ Legacy
Many LGBTQ+ veterans settled in the city as it was a common point of disembarkation and a place of gender nonconformity.
by
Solcyré Burga
via
TIME
on
June 21, 2024
The Anxious History of the American Summer Camp
The annual rite of passage has always been more about the ambivalence of adults than the amusement of children.
by
Ashley Stimpson
via
Atlas Obscura
on
June 20, 2024
How Ice Cream Made America
Over the centuries, the beloved treat has become an integral part of our national identity.
by
Linda Rodriguez McRobbie
via
The Saturday Evening Post
on
June 19, 2024
The Forgotten Hero of D-Day
Waverly Woodson treated men for 30 hours on Omaha Beach, but his heroism became a casualty of entrenched racism, bureaucracy and Pentagon record-keeping.
by
Garrett M. Graff
via
Politico Magazine
on
June 3, 2024
The Problem With TV's New Holocaust Obsession
From 'The Tattooist of Auschwitz' to 'We Were the Lucky Ones,' a new wave of Holocaust dramas feel surprisingly shallow.
by
Judy Berman
via
TIME
on
May 8, 2024
This Chinese American Aviatrix Overcame Racism to Fly for the U.S. During World War II
A second-generation immigrant, Hazel Ying Lee was the first Chinese American woman to receive her pilot's license.
by
Susan Tate Ankeny
via
Smithsonian
on
April 23, 2024
Slouching Towards Tax Day
How did taxes become something we "do"?
by
Brian Domitrovic
via
Law & Liberty
on
April 15, 2024
Big Government Country
Connie B. Gay and the roots of country music militarization.
by
Brock Schnoke
via
UNC Press Blog
on
April 11, 2024
Harry Truman's Train Ride
A whistle-stop train tour, and some plain speaking spur Harry Truman's come from behind win in 1948 over Thomas Dewey.
by
Michael Liss
via
3 Quarks Daily
on
March 25, 2024
Recovering the Left-Wing Free Trade Tradition
Free trade has been defended primarily by neoliberals who cared little about social justice or democracy. An examination of its history paints a different picture.
by
Marc-William Palen
via
LPE Project
on
March 21, 2024
The Nuclear Fallout Maps That Revealed a Contaminated Planet
The first maps of the nuclear contamination of the world reinforced our understanding of the entire biosphere as a radically interconnected ecological space.
by
Sebastian V. Grevsmühl
via
The MIT Press Reader
on
March 12, 2024
The Story Wars
The conflict between Red and Blue America is a clash of national mythologies.
by
Richard S. Slotkin
via
The Yale Review
on
March 11, 2024
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