Menu
Excerpts
Exhibits
Collections
Originals
Categories
Map
Search
Person
Nikhil Pal Singh
Bylines
America’s Crisis-Industrial Complex
Are alarmist narratives about a “new civil war” obscuring the real battle in US politics: the fight for democracy?
by
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
New Statesman
on
June 30, 2022
Racial Metaphors
If colorblindness rests on the claim that the civil rights movement changed everything, the idea that racism is in our DNA borders on a fatalistic proposition that it changed nothing.
by
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
Dissent
on
August 30, 2021
The Radicalism of Randolph Bourne
Bourne’s affinity with outsiders drove his vision of making North America a united states of communities. His writings have become more relevant than ever.
by
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
New Statesman
on
January 8, 2020
Enough Toxic Militarism
Decades of militarization in U.S. foreign policy have fueled violence at every level of American society.
by
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
Quincy Institute for Responsible State Craft
on
December 4, 2019
The Pervasive Power of the Settler Mindset
More than simple racism, the destructive premise at the core of the American settler narrative is that freedom is built upon violent elimination.
by
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
Boston Review
on
November 26, 2019
Banking on the Cold War
The Cold War says more about how U.S. elites imagined their “freedom” than it does about enabling other people to be free.
by
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
Boston Review
on
March 14, 2019
Universalizing Settler Liberty
America is best understood not as the first post-colonial republic, but as an expansionist nation built on slavery and native expropriation.
by
Aziz Rana
,
Nikhil Pal Singh
via
Jacobin
on
August 4, 2014
Related Excerpts
Viewing 1–3 of 3
‘We Know Occupation’: The Long History of Black Americans’ Solidarity with Palestinians
Why the Black Lives Matter movement might help shift the conversation about a conflict thousands of miles away.
by
Sam Klug
via
Politico Magazine
on
May 30, 2021
America’s Long War on Children and Families
Trump’s family separation policy belongs to a much longer history of U.S. government forces taking children from families that don't match the American ideal.
by
Paul M. Renfro
via
Boston Review
on
June 22, 2020
The Left's Embrace of Empire
The history of the left in the United States is a history of betrayal.
by
Lyle Jeremy Rubin
via
The Nation
on
March 28, 2018