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The Statue of Liberty Was Created to Celebrate Freed Slaves, Not Immigrants
Lady Liberty was inspired by the end of the Civil War and emancipation. The connection to immigration came later.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Retropolis
on
May 23, 2019
Sentinel
From the day it was inaugurated, the Statue of Liberty has symbolized the tensions between national independence and universal human rights.
by
Francesca Lidia Viano
via
Places Journal
on
October 1, 2018
Who Does She Stand For?
As the Statue of Liberty turned 100, our long battle over immigration was having its moment in Reagan’s America.
by
Paul A. Kramer
via
Slate
on
March 5, 2018
The Story Behind the Poem on the Statue of Liberty
Why so many of the people who quote Emma Lazarus’s Petrarchan sonnet miss its true meaning.
by
Walt Hunter
via
The Atlantic
on
January 16, 2018
How America Tried and Failed to Stay White
100 years ago the U.S. tried to limit immigration to White Europeans. Instead, diversity triumphed.
by
Eduardo Porter
via
Washington Post
on
May 15, 2024
The History of Freedom Is a History of Whiteness
A conversation about whether or not the legacy of liberty can break away from racial exclusion and domination.
by
Tyler Stovall
,
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins
via
The Nation
on
March 17, 2021
partner
What We Get Wrong About the “Poor Huddled Masses”
We can’t fix our immigration policy without understanding its history.
by
Christopher F. Petrella
via
Made By History
on
December 18, 2018
Not Who We Are
The U.S. is neither a land of nativists nor a haven for immigrants. Since the founding, the truth has lain somewhere in between.
by
Paul A. Kramer
via
Slate
on
February 3, 2017
Lady Liberty in Restoration Italy? Crime, Counterfeit, and Carbonari Revolutionary Politics
Following Napoleon’s fall, international secret societies emerged promoting dissent from absolutist forms of power and sharing ideologies and iconographies.
by
Giuseppe Perelli
via
Age of Revolutions
on
June 3, 2024
Before Lady Liberty, There Was Lady Columbia, America's First National Mascot
The forgotten figure symbolized the hopes—and myths—of the early United States.
by
Cari Shane
via
Smithsonian
on
August 30, 2023
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
American Degeneracy
Michael Lobel on Confederate memorials and the history of “degenerate art."
by
Michael Lobel
via
Art Forum
on
June 27, 2020
Immaculately Restored Film Lets You Revisit Life in New York City in 1911
Other than one or two of the world's supercentenarians, nobody remembers New York in 1911.
by
Colin Marshall
via
Open Culture
on
April 20, 2018
Ellis Island's Forgotten Final Act as a Cold War Detention Center
The idealistic interpretation of Ellis Island should be revisited.
by
Brianna Nofil
via
Atlas Obscura
on
February 2, 2016
37 Maps That Explain How America Is a Nation of Immigrants
It's impossible to understand the country without knowing who's been kept out, who's been let in, and how they've been treated once they arrive.
by
Dara Lind
via
Vox
on
January 12, 2015
Remarks at the Signing of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965
President Lyndon B. Johnson, Liberty Island, New York, October 3, 1965.
by
Lyndon Baines Johnson
via
LBJ Presidential Library
on
October 3, 1965
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