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Viewing 301–316 of 316 results.
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How Theaters and TV Networks are Changing the Way They Show Gone With the Wind
After almost 80 years, America is finally rethinking how it screens its favorite movie.
by
Aisha Harris
via
Slate
on
October 22, 2017
Everyone Needs to See The Roots' Schoolhouse Rock-Style Slavery Lesson From 'Black-ish'
"I'm Just a Slave" is a necessary song about Juneteenth.
by
Matt Miller
via
Esquire
on
October 4, 2017
Charlottesville and the Trouble with Civil War Hypotheticals
Only by the most specific, immediate definition can we consider the Confederacy to have lost the Civil War.
by
Jelani Cobb
via
The New Yorker
on
August 16, 2017
Trump To Display Letter From Nixon In Oval Office: Report
Nixon sent Trump the letter in 1987 after he impressed the former first lady on television.
by
Mark Hensch
via
The Hill
on
December 12, 2016
The Story of the First Copycat Mass Shooter
Robert Benjamin Smith inaugurated murder for the media age.
by
Meagan Day
via
Timeline
on
November 7, 2016
Little Government in the Big Woods
Melissa Gilbert's lost bid for Congress and the forgotten political history of 'Little House on the Prairie.'
by
Mary Pilon
via
Longreads
on
July 1, 2016
How “Fifty Nifty United States” Became One of the Greatest Mnemonic Devices of All Time
How you, your friends, and Lin-Manuel Miranda all learned this catchy, state-naming tune.
by
L. V. Anderson
via
Slate
on
November 30, 2015
Ghosts are Scary, Disabled People are Not: The Troubling Rise of the Haunted Asylum
Tourist-driven curiosity about the so-called "haunted asylum" has led many to overlook the real people who once were institutionalized within these hospitals.
by
Sarah Handley-Cousins
via
Nursing Clio
on
October 29, 2015
The War to Start All Wars
How the U.S. invasion of Panama ushered in the post-Cold War era of military unilateralism and preemptive war.
by
Greg Grandin
via
Common Dreams
on
December 22, 2014
Green House: A Brief History of “American Poetry”
Tracing its emergence of as a distinct cultural institution.
by
Frank Guan
via
Prelude
on
September 22, 2014
Among the Tribe of the Wannabes
A closer look at non-Native Americans that appropriate, fabricate, and invent Native identities for themselves.
by
Russell Cobb
via
This Land Press
on
August 26, 2014
partner
Fierce Urgency of Now
Exploring the origins and impacts of the "March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom," on that event's 50th anniversary.
via
BackStory
on
August 23, 2013
How Barry Levinson’s Diner Changed Cinema, 30 Years Later
With Diner, Barry Levinson turned a film about nothing into a male-bonding classic, launched careers, and spawned hits from Seinfeld to The Office.
by
S. L. Price
via
HWD
on
February 10, 2012
George W. Bush Declares a War on Terror
Bush’s 2002 State of the Union address kicked off a war that continued well into the 21st century.
via
Voices & Visions
on
January 29, 2002
partner
The Black Filmmaker
A look at racism in movie-making.
by
Black Journal
via
American Archive of Public Broadcasting
on
September 28, 1970
partner
Confronted: A Black Family Moves In
Northern whites reveal their deep-seated prejudice when a black family moves into their neighborhood.
by
WGBH
via
American Archive of Public Broadcasting
on
December 2, 1963
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