This page features brief excerpts of stories published by the mainstream
media and, less frequently, blogs, alternative media, and even obviously
biased sources. The excerpts are taken directly from the websites cited in
each source note. Quotation marks are not used.
Source: Merritocracy
10/5/2020
Heather Cox Richardson joins host Keri Leigh Merritt to discuss the history behind the 2020 election, and more.
Source: The Nation
10/6/2020
by Manisha Sinha
Heather Cox Richardson's book makes an essential argument that the conceptual distinction between class and race in American history obscures the way that American elites have worked to create and defend oligarchy.
Source: WBUR
10/1/2020
Historian Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Massachusetts History Teacher of the Year N'Dia Riegler, and Director of Literacy and Humanities for the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education discuss how to teach the difficult and conflict-ridden aspects of the national past.
Source: TIME
10/2/2020
Although he would later claim not to know about the "Proud Boys" far-right gang, Trump's debate comments could be seen as a "green light" for political violence, says historian Kathleen Belew.
Source: Associated Press
10/3/2020
History is replete with examples of how presidents have kept the American public in the dark about their ailments and medical conditions.
Source: Washington Post
10/3/2020
by Gillian Brockell
Had he died in the 1790 flu pandemic, the United States might have died with him. The new Constitution lacked detailed instructions on how to treat presidential incapacitation and death. (This was remedied in the 20th century by the 25th Amendment).
Source: The Guardian
10/3/2020
British history educators and scholars discuss a proposal to make Black history a compulsory part of the national history curriculum.
Source: Los Angeles Times
10/2/2020
Historian Stephen Pitti says there is a good deal of skepticism that Hispanic Heritage month is coopted by corporations and is racially exclusionary of indigenous and Afro-latino identity, but it is politically significant for Latinos to be recognized as part of the culture of the United States.
Source: KGW8
10/2/2020
Portland State history professor Marc Rodriguez discusses how the program addressed the United States' agricultural labor needs and started the settlement of Latino communities in new parts of the nation.
Source: The Metropole (Urban History Association)
10/5/2020
David Farber's book examines the entrepreneurial culture of crack cocaine and how the drug trade meshed with Reagan-era changes in urban political economy.
Source: Woodrow Wilson Center
10/5/2020
G. John Ikenberry joins the Washington History Seminar today at 4:00 PM Eastern to discuss "A World Safe For Democracy" and the crisis of the liberal international order.
Source: New York University
10/5/2020
Ibram X. Kendi and Kathleen Belew discuss the threat of white supremacy in a discussion moderated by Linda Gordon, Monday, October 5 at 7:00 PM Eastern.
Source: The New Republic
9/29/2020
Although abortion rights are receiving much of the focus from Amy Coney Barrett's critics, writer Melissa Gira Grant argues that her participation in a decades-long conservative effort to undermine the social safety net will have broad consequences on every dimension of the lives of women who lack Barrett's privilege.
Source: New York Times
10/1/2020
by Retro Report
The looming evictions crisis is prompting housing policy experts to reconsider government programs that would enable the tenants of a building to secure loans to purchase their buildings cooperatively. A video from Retro Report explores how the battle to save the International Hotel in San Francisco for its low-income tenants prefigured today's policy debates.
Source: Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft
9/28/2020
In his new book, Tomorrow, the World, Stephen Wertheim reveals how American leaders suddenly and unexpectedly decided to turn the United States into the world's armed superpower — and never looked back.
Source: Catholic University of America
10/1/2020
Geraldo Cadava will discuss his new book on Hispanic Republicans on October 14 in a virtual seminar hosted by the Catholic University of America.
Source: Organization of American Historians
9/25/2020
"The history we teach must investigate the core conflict between a nation founded on radical notions of liberty, freedom, and equality, and a nation built on slavery, exploitation, and exclusion."
Source: The Atlantic
9/30/2020
Communications scholar Whitney Phillips argues that the irony-drenched culture of the internet allowed serious white supremacy, nazism and misogyny to flourish unchecked. From the Klan to the Nazis, the far right has benefitted from sowing confusion about what was serious and what was a joke.
Source: The Atlantic
9/29/2020
The Supreme Court's artful directive to desegregate with "all deliberate speed" invited many school districts to do so as slowly as possible. Historian Millicent Brown was the first Black student to integrate a white high school in Charleston, South Carolina and has researched a book about the experiences of similar students.
Source: New York Times
9/30/2020
“We put up these Confederate monuments in public squares as a homage to a lost cause that was really a lie. But the real builders of the cities and the states and the nation, their narrative is still not told.”