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Charles Dickens
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A Christmas Carol
: In Prose. A Ghost Story of Christmas.
Charles Dickens
1843
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A Christmas Carol In Nineteenth-Century America, 1844-1870
What were Americans' immediate responses to "A Christmas Carol," and how did Dickens' reading tours and eventual death reshape its meaning?
by
Thomas Ruys Smith
via
Comparative American Studies
on
July 27, 2023
Charles Dickens, America, & The Civil War
What might Charles Dickens have thought about the American Civil War and the American struggle for abolition and social reforms?
by
Sarah Kay Bierle
via
Emerging Civil War
on
February 23, 2018
Charles Dickens Had Serious Beef with America and Its Bad Manners
How Charles Dickens' unpleasant trip to Boston led to "A Christmas Carol."
by
Samantha Silva
via
Literary Hub
on
December 21, 2017
Bottled Authors
The predigital dream of the audiobook.
by
Matthew Rubery
via
Cabinet
on
March 16, 2021
Postures of Transport: Sex, God, and Rocking Chairs
What if chairs could shift our state of consciousness, transporting the imagination into distant landscapes and ecstatic experiences, both religious and erotic?
by
Hunter Dukes
via
The Public Domain Review
on
February 3, 2021
The War on Christmas
A brief history of the Yuletide in America.
by
Charles Ludington
via
The American Scholar
on
December 28, 2020
A Frederick Douglass Reading List
Reading recommendations from a lifelong education.
by
Jaime Fuller
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
February 21, 2019
A Plea to Resurrect the Christmas Tradition of Telling Ghost Stories
Though the practice is now more associated with Halloween, spooking out your family is well within the Christmas spirit.
by
Colin Dickey
via
Smithsonian
on
December 15, 2017
A Brief History of Solitary Confinement
Dickens, Tocqueville, and the U.N. all agree about this American invention: It’s torture.
by
Jean Casella
,
James Ridgeway
via
Longreads
on
February 2, 2016
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
The Paris Games' Mascot, the Olympic Phryge, Boasts a Little-Known Revolutionary Past
The Phrygian cap, also known as the liberty cap, emerged as a potent symbol in 18th-century America and France.
by
Greg Daugherty
via
Smithsonian
on
June 18, 2024
When Deadly Steamboat Races Enthralled America
Already prone to boiler explosions that regularly killed scores of passengers, steamboats were pushed to their limits in races that valued speed over safety.
by
Greg Daugherty
via
Smithsonian
on
April 26, 2023
The First Statue Removed From the Capitol
Long before monuments to enslavers were removed, lawmakers decided to relocate a scandalous, half-naked depiction of George Washington in a toga.
by
Ronald G. Shafer
via
Retropolis
on
January 22, 2023
Edgar Allan Poe Needs a Friend
Revisiting the relationships of “a man who never smiled.”
by
Matthew Redmond
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
September 7, 2021
“In 1934, My Life Snapped”
Hollywood has long abused conservatorships. I spent the past decade studying one of the darkest cases.
by
Liz Brown
via
Slate
on
July 19, 2021
Are All Short Stories O. Henry Stories?
The writer’s signature style of ending—a final, thrilling note—has the touch of magic that distinguishes the form at its best.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
June 28, 2021
partner
How Cruelty Became the Point of Our Labor and Welfare Policies
Why do so many politicians think people only work if threatened or forced into doing so?
by
Gail Savage
via
Made By History
on
May 26, 2021
partner
Stagecoaches Could Fix Our Electric Car Problem
One solution to climate change may come from our pre-automotive past.
by
Woody Holton
via
Made By History
on
May 18, 2021
The Complex Origins of Little Orphan Annie
"No one story can completely explain Annie."
by
Jeet Heer
via
Literary Hub
on
August 3, 2020
The Wilde Woman and the Sunflower Apostle: Oscar Wilde in the United States
Victoria Dailey looks back at Oscar Wilde’s wild ride through the United States in the early 1880s.
by
Victoria Dailey
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
February 8, 2020
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