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Historicizing Dystopia: Suburban Fantastic Media and White Millennial Childhood
On the nostalgic and technophobic motives of the recent boom in suburban fantastic media.
by
Angus McFadzean
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
August 30, 2021
The Photographer Who Captured the Birth of Hip-Hop
As a teen-ager, Joe Conzo, Jr., took intimate pictures of the Bronx music scene. He’s lived several lives in the time since.
by
Hua Hsu
via
The New Yorker
on
June 12, 2021
I Want My Mutually Assured Destruction
How 1980s MTV helped my students understand the Cold War.
by
Tom Nichols
via
The Atlantic
on
May 8, 2021
What Caused the Roaring Twenties? Not the End of a Pandemic (Probably)
As the U.S. anticipates a vaccinated summer, historians say measuring the impact of the 1918 influenza on the uproarious decade that followed is tricky.
by
Lila Thulin
via
Smithsonian
on
May 3, 2021
Abolishing the Suburbs
On Kyle Riismandel’s “Neighborhood of Fear: The Suburban Crisis in American Culture, 1975–2001.”
by
David Helps
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
April 13, 2021
partner
Shamed Over Sex, a Generation Confronts the Past
Former followers of an evangelical “purity” movement that promoted a strict view of abstinence are grappling with aftershocks.
via
Retro Report
on
April 6, 2021
The Emergence Of Gangsta Rap
A review of "To Live and Defy in LA: How Gangsta Rap Changed America."
by
Katherine Rye Jewell
via
The Metropole
on
March 30, 2021
You Probably Don’t Remember the Internet
How do we memorialize life online when it’s constantly disappearing?
by
Kaitlyn Tiffany
via
The Atlantic
on
March 22, 2021
First-Person Shooter Ideology
The cultural contradictions of Call of Duty.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
The Drift
on
February 2, 2021
Punk Versus Reagan
A new book on American punk paints the movement as the last gasp of left-wing cultural resistance in the 1980s.
by
Alexander Billet
via
Jacobin
on
November 9, 2020
The Children of 9/11 Are About to Vote
What the youngest cohort of American voters thinks about politics, fear and the potential of the country they’ve grown up in.
by
Garrett M. Graff
via
Politico Magazine
on
September 11, 2020
The My Generation: An Oral History Of Myspace Music
Myspace changed the way we discovered music and fell apart after conquering the world.
by
Michael Tedder
via
Stereogum
on
March 30, 2020
Here's What People Thought of YouTube When It First Launched in the Mid-2000s
It took a while for pundits and other observers to truly understand the power of the new platform.
by
Matt Novak
via
Paleofuture
on
February 14, 2020
Wanna-Beats: In 1959, Café Bizarre Gave Straights an Entree Into Beatnik Culture
“At the remove of time, it’s really hard to tell the difference between beat and beatsploitation.”
by
Ben Marks
via
Collectors Weekly
on
January 2, 2020
Set the Country to Stamping
The origins of the Big Apple dance.
by
Robert Greene II
via
Oxford American
on
November 19, 2019
The Big Data of Big Hair
We investigated a dataset of more than 30,000 high school yearbook photos from 1930–2013 to find out when big hair was at its height.
by
Jan Diehm
,
Elle O'Brien
via
The Pudding
on
November 1, 2019
Dead Kennedys in the West: The Politicized Punks of 1970s San Francisco
The new punk generation made the hippies look past their prime.
by
Lincoln A. Mitchell
via
Literary Hub
on
October 22, 2019
What’s Left of Generation X
To be Gen X was to be disaffected from the consumer norms of the 1980s, but to be pessimistic about any chance for social transformation.
by
Kim Phillips-Fein
via
Dissent
on
October 8, 2019
Made for Misfits: The Colorful History of the Black Leather Jacket
“Leather-laden outlaws struck fear into the hearts of civilians and cops alike, as they tore through towns with gleeful irreverence.”
by
Lydia Sviatoslavsky
via
Collectors Weekly
on
October 2, 2019
The Misconception About Baby Boomers and the Sixties
Other than being alive during the 1960s, the baby boomers had almost nothing to do with the era's social and political upheaval.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
August 18, 2019
Golden Age Superheroes Were Shaped by the Rise of Fascism
Created in New York by Jewish immigrants, the first comic book superheroes were mythic saviors who could combat the Nazi threat.
by
Art Spiegelman
via
The Guardian
on
August 17, 2019
Why Were the 1970s So… Weird?
When the counterculture optimism receded, things got ugly.
by
Erik Davis
via
Literary Hub
on
August 12, 2019
partner
Why We Scapegoat Video Games for Mass Violence and Why It’s a Mistake
It lets us avoid harder questions about our culture.
by
Carly A. Kocurek
via
Made By History
on
August 9, 2019
When Science Was Groovy
Counterculture-inspired research flourished in the Age of Aquarius.
by
W. Patrick McCray
,
David I. Kaiser
via
Science
on
August 5, 2019
What the Popularity of 'Fortnite' Has in Common With the 20th Century Pinball Craze
Long before parents freaked over the ubiquitous video game, they flipped out over another newfangled fad.
by
Clive Thompson
via
Smithsonian
on
November 29, 2018
Why Did American Music Festivals Almost Disappear in the 1970s and ’80s?
In a few short years, American festivals went from cultural phenomena to endangered species.
by
Tyler Clark
via
Consequence of Sound
on
July 18, 2018
'What Soldiers Are for': Jersey Boys Wait for War
Essays published in a high school paper reflect the boys' efforts to prepare themselves for fighting in the Civil War.
by
James Marten
via
Muster
on
June 19, 2018
Before Colin Kaepernick, There Was Eartha Kitt
How the entertainer was blacklisted for standing up to the President.
by
Hilal Isler
via
Medium
on
June 6, 2018
Why Do People Sign Yearbooks?
Commemorative class books evolved from practical notebooks into collections of hair clippings, two-line rhymes, and summer wishes.
by
Jennifer Billock
via
The Atlantic
on
June 3, 2018
King's Death Gave Birth to Hip-Hop
The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. led directly to hip-hop, an era that is often contrasted with his legacy.
by
Vann R. Newkirk II
via
The Atlantic
on
April 8, 2018
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