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History News Network

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Week of May 6, 2013


Up Front

The Politics of Mother's Day
Rebecca Jo Plant
The originator of Mother's Day would be appalled by the commercialization of a "holy" day.
Tags: Mother's Day, radicalism, Anna Jarvis, commercialism
HNN Book of the Month: Sensing the Past by Jim Cullen
Tags: books, Book of the Month, Jim Cullen, Sensing the Past

News at Home

The NYT Ignores USDA Discrimination
Pete Daniel
The USDA discriminated against minority farmers for decades, but critics of the repayments program seek to rewrite history, and the Grey Lady is helping.
Tags: Pigford v. Glickman, discrimination, NYT, USDA

News Abroad

And Then There Was One
Tom Engelhardt
Imperial gigantism and the decline of planet Earth.
Tags: climate change, empire, Soviet Union, United States
Yet Another Reason Afghanistan is Like Vietnam
Jeremy Kuzmarov
U.S.-fueled corruption based on heroin a staple of both Vietnam and Afghanistan.
Tags: CIA, Hamid Karzai, heroin, Vietnam
Keeping Him Upright...
Josh Brown's Life During Wartime
Tags: Life During Wartime, Hamid Karzai, corruption, drones

Historians & History

Trashing Keynes for Being Gay is Nothing New
David Austin Walsh
Niall Ferguson says J.M. Keynes's theories are flawed because he was gay. This argument is surprisingly common amongst conservatives.
Tags: economics, homosexuality, John Maynard Keynes, Niall Ferguson
Getting Beyond the "Clash of Civilizations"
David Cannadine
Samuel Huntington's famous thesis appeals to pundits, but it ignores the nuances of history.
Tags: clash of civilizations, global history, Islam, Samuel P. Huntington
May 8: Victory in Europe Day
Robert Huddleston
Celebrating the final triumph over Nazism with a personal story of the last days of World War II.
Tags: fighters, He 162, planes, VE Day
George Washington: The Forgotten Emancipator
Thomas Fleming
The first president wanted to end slavery, but preserving the Union was more important.
Tags: American Revolution, Civil War, George Washington, slavery
It's Not You, Stonewall, It's Me
Wallace A. Hettle
An open letter on breaking up with Stonewall Jackson.
Tags: Chancellorsville, Civil War, Confederacy, Stonewall Jackson
Philosophy Matters, Because When It Goes Wrong...
Yvonne Sherratt
Philosophers are an oft-ridiculed bunch, but philosophy is dangerous in the wrong hands. Like the Nazis.
Tags: democracy, humanities, Nazism, philosophy
No Kinky Porn, Please -- We're English
Robin Lindley
Julie Peakman's research on eighteenth-century English erotica reveals a surprisingly vanilla attitude to sex.
Tags: England, erotica, interviews, pornography

Education

The Problem with School "Accountability"
Robert L. Urzillo
The education reform movement's obsession with metrics ignores other factors.
Tags: education, education reform, teaching, tests

Culture Watch

Play Ball, Jackie
Steve Hochstadt
How Jackie Robinson captured the heart of Jewish Brooklyn.
Tags: 42, African American history, baseball, Jackie Robinson
A Loving Trip Back to a Different America
Bruce Chadwick
A Trip to Bountiful serves a healthy dose of nostalgia.
Tags: 1947, plays, Texas, theater reviews
Who are You Calling Nancy Boy?
Bruce Chadwick
Nathan Lane is a delight in The Nance, the story of 1930s Broadway camp.
Tags: Nathan Lane, plays, The Nance, theater reviews

Books

Review of Michael J. Gerhardt's The Forgotten Presidents
Jim Cullen
A dry book for dry presidents, but useful nonetheless.
Tags: executive branch, Forgotten Presidents, Jim Cullen, Michael J. Gerhardt
Review of Edward Achorn's The Summer of Beer and Whiskey
Murray Polner
How an unscrupulous German tavernkeeper made baseball America's pastime.
Tags: baseball, beer, Missouri, St. Louis