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Viewing 61–90 of 337 results.
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The Secret History
An investigation of the US’s mass internment of Japanese Americans.
by
Harmony Holiday
via
Bookforum
on
December 10, 2024
Can Land Repair the Nation’s Racist Past?
California’s approach to Black reparations shifts toward land access, ownership and stewardship.
by
Alexis Hunley
via
High Country News
on
December 1, 2024
The Midnight World
Glenn Fleishman’s history of the comic strip as a technological artifact vividly restores the world of newspaper printing—gamboge, Zip-A-Tone, flongs, and all.
by
Michael Chabon
via
New York Review of Books
on
November 28, 2024
Texas’ Hotbed of Taiwanese Nationalism
For decades, Houston families like mine have helped keep the flame of independence burning.
by
Josephine Lee
via
Texas Observer
on
November 25, 2024
The Complex Politics of Tribal Enrollment
How did the U.S. government become involved in “adjudicating Indianness”?
by
Rachel Monroe
via
The New Yorker
on
November 20, 2024
How Black Workers Challenged the Mafia
A story of intrigue and power involving union organizers, Black laundry workers, the Mafia, and the FBI in 1980s Detroit.
by
Keith Kelleher
via
The Forge
on
November 19, 2024
Josie’s Story: From 19th-Century Sitka To Her Escape From The Holocaust
Josie Rudolph’s life, in an era of worldwide migration and colonial ambition, offers a new perspective on the familiar tale of modern Alaska’s birth.
by
Tom Kizzia
via
Anchorage Daily News
on
October 28, 2024
Anthony Bourdain on the Life and Legacy of a Truly Infamous Cook: Typhoid Mary
“Mary Mallon was a cook. And her story, first and foremost, is the story of a cook.”
by
Anthony Bourdain
via
Literary Hub
on
October 15, 2024
Eroticize the Hood
A new book revamps Newark's reputation as unsexy, violent, destitute, defiantly declaring it “a place of desire, love, eroticism, community, and resistance.”
by
José Sanchez
via
n+1
on
October 8, 2024
How Green Day’s American Idiot Pitted Punk Against George W Bush
Twenty years ago, a trio of Calfornian stoners released a polemic against Republican America that politicised a generation.
by
Pippa Bailey
via
New Statesman
on
September 30, 2024
Freedom Seekers: Stories of Black Liberation in the American Revolutionary Era and Beyond
A new digital project shows how those who escaped slavery were important actors in the challenge not just to their own enslavement but to slavery more broadly.
by
Billy G. Smith
,
Simon Newman
,
Antonio T. Bly
,
Gloria McCahon Whiting
via
Commonplace
on
September 24, 2024
Love in the Time of Hillbilly Elegy: On JD Vance’s Appalachian Grift
Justin B. Wymer knows a snake when he sees one.
by
Justin B. Wymer
via
Literary Hub
on
August 27, 2024
Riding With Mr. Washington
How my great-grandfather invented himself at the end of Reconstruction.
by
David Nicholson
via
The American Scholar
on
August 22, 2024
75 Years Ago, the KKK and Anti-communists Teamed Up to Violently Stop a Folk Concert in NY
Racist mobs attacked a 1949 concert in Peekskill, NY, raising anti-communist fervor and showing how hatred could gain legitimacy amid today’s political turmoil.
by
Nina Silber
via
The Conversation
on
August 20, 2024
Bring American Communists Out of the Shadows — and Closets
In the 20th century, American Communists were seen as an enemy within. In reality, they were ordinary people with complex lives that deserve to be chronicled.
by
David Bacon
via
Jacobin
on
August 15, 2024
Driving While Female
Is the car our most gendered technology?
by
Leann Davis Alspaugh
via
The Hedgehog Review
on
July 31, 2024
In Search of the Real Hannah Crafts
"The Bondwoman’s Narrative" is the first novel by a Black woman to describe slavery from the inside. Recently, scholars have discovered her true identity.
by
Brenda Wineapple
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 25, 2024
How the Vietnam War Came Between Two Friends and Diplomats
Bill Trueheart's battles with friend and fellow Foreign Service officer Fritz Nolting illustrate the American tragedy in Southeast Asia.
by
Timothy Noah
via
Washington Monthly
on
June 24, 2024
Imperfecta
Her brother’s disease leads a writer to challenge how we conceive of human abnormality in the emerging era of gene editing.
by
Pamela Haag
via
The American Scholar
on
June 20, 2024
A Sweeping History of the Black Working Class
By focusing on the Black working class and its long history, Blair LM Kelley’s book, "Black Folk," helps tell the larger story of American democracy.
by
Robert Greene II
via
The Nation
on
June 12, 2024
Christian Science as Jewish Tradition
Why did so many American Jewish women find Christian Science appealing?
by
Noah Berlatsky
via
The Revealer
on
June 11, 2024
The Lost Abortion Plot
Power and choice in the 1930s novel.
by
Julia Cooke
via
The Point
on
June 11, 2024
From Suspect to Perpetrato
How history shaped the modern U.S. Border Patrol agent.
by
Ernesto Chávez
,
Ervin A. Zubiate-Rocha
via
Public Books
on
June 5, 2024
At the Webster Apartments: One of Manhattan’s Last All-Women’s Boarding Houses
A look inside an enduring home for women 100 years after its doors first opened to residents.
by
Tess Little
via
The Paris Review
on
May 28, 2024
The Lynching That Sent My Family North
How we rediscovered the tragedy in Mississippi that ushered us into the Great Migration.
by
Ko Bragg
via
The Atlantic
on
May 20, 2024
She Was No ‘Mammy’
Gordon Parks’s most famous photograph, "American Gothic," was of a cleaning woman in Washington, D.C. She has a story to tell.
by
Salamishah Tillet
via
The Atlantic
on
May 8, 2024
Nell Irvin Painter’s Chronicles of Freedom
A new career-spanning book offers a portrait of Painter’s career as a historian, essayist, and most recently visual artist.
by
Elias Rodriques
via
The Nation
on
May 7, 2024
Deb Haaland Confronts the History of the Federal Agency She Leads
As the first Native American Cabinet member, the Secretary of the Interior has made it part of her job to address the travesties of the past.
by
Casey N. Cep
via
The New Yorker
on
April 29, 2024
Photographing a Lost New York
When I moved to Lower Manhattan in 1967, I decided to make a picture of every building in the neighbourhood before the city knocked it down.
by
Danny Lyon
via
New York Review of Books
on
April 25, 2024
Cesar Chavez, Family and Filmmaking with Luis Valdez
Luis Valdez on his friendship with Cesar Chavez, his works in the National Film Registry, and a lifetime of activism.
by
Luis Valdez
,
Stacie Seifrit-Griffin
via
Library of Congress Blog
on
March 27, 2024
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