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The Roundup Top Ten for April 8, 2022

What's Happening in Ukraine Is Genocide. Period

by Eugene Finkel

"I am well aware of the need for caution, and in the past have criticized the governments of many post-Soviet states — including Ukraine, where I was born — for misusing the term. Not now."

While "Anti-Grooming" Rhetoric Seems to Come from the Fringe, it Can be Influential

by Mical Raz and Paul M. Renfro

The latest culture war battle revives historical efforts to use the law to institutionalize the slander that LGBTQ people pose an inherent danger to children and families. 

Nationwide, Faculty Fight for Academic Freedom

by Ellen Schrecker

"When they act collectively, professors have the power to protect academic freedom and the desire to teach the truth. Let us hope they also have the will."

With Amazon Union, What's Old is New Again

by Rosemary Feurer

The victory of the Amazon Labor Union in Staten Island doesn't represent a revival of "the 1930s insurgency," but a new generation finding guidance from some of the bottom-up solidarity building strategies from that decade. Today's unionism will have to avoid some mistakes of the CIO to endure.

The White Nationalist Fringe is Moving to the Center of the Republican Party

by Annika Brockschmidt

The embrace of the white nationalist right by the Republican Party is reflected in the fact that Marjorie Taylor Greene's political endorsement is, second to Trump's, the most sought-after for party candidates. 

Over a River Strangely Rosy: Reading Poetry in Wartime

by Joan Neuberger

"It’s my job to explain things about Russia and its various incarnations of empire. I know how to do that — I’ve been doing it for a long time. But, in this moment, analysis seems to me to be somehow incomprehensible and profoundly unsatisfying."

Blaming the "Third Rome" Doctrine for Putin's Invasion Distorts His Motives

by Matthew Lenoe

"Bogus theories about an innate Russian drive to expand will only complicate negotiations with Moscow, especially a possible post-Putin Moscow."

The Radical MLK and a Usable Past

by Robert Greene II

"Above all, King’s “usable past” was part of a long tradition of Black Americans claiming a place for themselves in the larger tapestry of American history and memory."

What I Learned when Donald Trump Tried to "Correct" the Record

by Julian Zelizer

"As an academic historian, I never expected to find myself in a videoconference with Donald Trump."

Winslow Homer: The Melville of American Panting

by Susan Tallman

A new exhibition reframes Homer, once seen as a visual poet of American innocence, as an artist who grappled with the bitter conflicts at the heart of the nation.