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Nicholas T. Rinehart

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  • Watercolor painting of enslaved people walking barefoot on a forced march, with white men on horseback at the front and back of the line.

    Reparative Semantics: On Slavery and the Language of History

    Scholarly accounts of slavery have been changing, but these correctives sometimes say more about historians than the historical subjects they're writing about.
    by Nicholas T. Rinehart via Commonplace on January 4, 2022
  • Black Beethoven and the Racial Politics of Music History

    How the attempt to claim Beethoven as Black actually recycles racist tropes.
    by Nicholas T. Rinehart via Transition on November 13, 2013

Related Excerpts

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Edit of Grammarly language change suggestions

Why Grammarly’s New Language Suggestions Miss the Mark

Slavery’s a sensitive subject, but so is the question of who gets to be an authority about language.
by Rebecca Onion via Slate on February 8, 2022
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