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Viewing 271–300 of 1240 results.
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Oh, the Humanity
Yale's John Fabian Witt pens a review of Samuel Moyn's new book, Humane.
by
John Fabian Witt
via
Just Security
on
September 8, 2021
Like Washington and Jefferson, He Championed Liberty. Unlike the Founders, He Freed his Slaves
The little-known story of Robert Carter III.
by
Eliot C. McLaughlin
via
CNN
on
September 5, 2021
How Transatlantic Slave Trade Shaped Epidemiology Today
Slave ships and colonial plantations created environments that enabled doctors to study how diseases spread.
by
Jim Downs
via
TIME
on
September 2, 2021
Whose Freedom?
On the ways that people have conflated freedom with whiteness but pays too little attention to the force of freedom as a concept.
by
David A. Bell
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 2, 2021
The Anti-Lee
George Henry Thomas, southerner in blue.
by
Kenly Stewart
via
Emerging Civil War
on
September 2, 2021
Desert Plantations
A review of “West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire."
by
Tom Prezelski
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
August 29, 2021
Daddy Issues
The murderous hysteria over white patrimony is inseparable from the private capture of both economic opportunity and political authority.
by
Bethany Moreton
via
Dissent
on
August 25, 2021
History Was Never Subject to Democratic Control
Elite merchants put up a statue of a British slave trader. A band of protesters toppled it. Who decides what happens now?
by
Helen Lewis
via
The Atlantic
on
August 9, 2021
The Fate of Confederate Monuments Should Be Clear
We know why they were built and why they have to come down.
by
Eric Herschthal
via
The New Republic
on
August 9, 2021
The Color Line
W.E.B. Du Bois’s exhibit at the 1900 Paris Exposition offered him a chance to present the dramatic gains made by Black Americans since the end of slavery.
by
Annette Gordon-Reed
via
New York Review of Books
on
August 5, 2021
Julia Dent Grant’s Personal Memoirs as a Plantation Narrative
Her memoirs contribute to the inaccurate post-Civil War memory of the Southern plantation.
by
Nick Sacco
via
Muster
on
July 20, 2021
Black Women and American Freedom in Revolutionary America
The relationship between enslaved women and the Revolutionary war.
by
Karen Cook Bell
via
Black Perspectives
on
July 13, 2021
The Declaration of Independence’s Debt to Black America
When African Americans allied themselves with the British, the Patriots were enraged, and they acted.
by
Woody Holton
via
Washington Post
on
July 2, 2021
partner
‘Help Wanted’ Signs Indicate Lack of Decent Job Offers, Not People Unwilling to Work
The 19th-century antecedent to today’s complaints of labor shortage.
by
Samuel Niu
via
Made By History
on
June 30, 2021
After the Lost Cause
Why are politics so consumed with the past?
by
Benjamin Wallace-Wells
via
The New Yorker
on
June 24, 2021
Juneteenth Is About Freedom
On Juneteenth, we should remember both the struggle against chattel slavery and the struggle for radical freedom during Reconstruction.
by
Dale Kretz
via
Jacobin
on
June 19, 2021
On Juneteenth, Three Stirring Stories of How Enslaved People Gained Their Freedom
Millions of Americans gained freedom from slavery in a slow-moving wave of emancipation during the Civil War and in the months afterward.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Washington Post
on
June 19, 2021
The Truth About Black Freedom
This year’s Juneteenth commemorations must take a deeper look at the history of Black self-liberation to understand what emancipation really means.
by
Daina Ramey Berry
via
The Atlantic
on
June 18, 2021
America’s ‘Great Chief Justice’ Was an Unrepentant Slaveholder
John Marshall not only owned people; he owned many of them, and aggressively bought them when he could.
by
Paul Finkelman
via
The Atlantic
on
June 15, 2021
George Washington Williams and the Origins of Anti-Imperialism
Initially supportive of Belgian King Leopold II’s claim to have created a “free state” of Congo, Williams changed his mind when he saw the horrors of empire.
by
Mohammed Elnaiem
via
JSTOR Daily
on
June 10, 2021
To Find the History of African American Women, Look to Their Handiwork
Our foremothers wove spiritual beliefs, cultural values, and historical knowledge into their flax, wool, silk, and cotton webs.
by
Tiya Miles
via
The Atlantic
on
June 8, 2021
The Black Hero Behind One of the Greatest Supreme Court Justices
John Marshall Harlan's relationship with an enslaved man who grew up in his home showed how respect could transcend barriers and point a path to freedom.
by
Peter S. Canellos
via
Politico Magazine
on
June 6, 2021
A Radical Gettysburg Address
A behind-the-scenes look at Lincoln's Gettysburg Address.
by
David T. Dixon
via
Emerging Civil War
on
May 18, 2021
Why Confederate Lies Live On
For some Americans, history isn’t the story of what actually happened; it’s the story they want to believe.
by
Clint Smith
via
The Atlantic
on
May 10, 2021
Meet Benjamin Banneker, the Black Scientist Who Documented Brood X Cicadas in the Late 1700s
A prominent intellectual and naturalist, the Maryland native wrote extensively on natural phenomena and anti-slavery causes.
by
Nora McGreevy
via
Smithsonian
on
May 7, 2021
Black America’s Neglected Origin Stories
The history of Blackness on this continent is longer and more varied than the version I was taught in school.
by
Annette Gordon-Reed
via
The Atlantic
on
May 4, 2021
The Entwined History of Freedom and Racism
Liberty for some has always entailed a lack of liberty for many others.
by
Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
via
The Nation
on
May 3, 2021
New England Kept Slavery, But Not Its Profits, At a Distance
Entangled with, yet critical of, colonial oppression and the evils of slavery, the true history of Boston can now be told.
by
Mark A. Peterson
via
Aeon
on
May 3, 2021
The Birth of Black Power
Stokely Carmichael and the speech that changed the course of the civil rights movement.
by
Sally Greene
via
The American Scholar
on
April 26, 2021
The Men Who Turned Slavery Into Big Business
The domestic slave trade was no sideshow in our history, and slave traders were not bit players on the stage.
by
Joshua D. Rothman
via
The Atlantic
on
April 20, 2021
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