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: BBC
7/3/2020
A popular British historian faces criticism for saying that the slave trade was not genocidal because "so many damn blacks" survived.
Source: The New York Times
7/1/2020
When historian Kerri K. Greenidge was trying to publish her book on William Trotter, publishers responded with "who was going to read a book about a Black man that nobody had ever heard about?"
Source: NJ.com
7/1/2020
On Wednesday, the student of the past makes history himself by becoming the first Black president of Rutgers University, founded in 1766.
Source: The New Yorker
6/29/2020
The evidence of David’s life is sparse. Was he an emperor? A local king? Or, as Biblical archaeologist Israel Finkelstein claims, a Bedouin sheikh?
Source: NPR
7/1/2020
The statue should be moved into a museum, historian Ibrahim Sundiata says.
Source: WBUR
7/1/2020
In light of Trump's plans to hold a July 4th celebration at Mount Rushmore on Friday, historian John Taliaferro discusses the monument's complex legacy.
Source: CNN
7/1/2020
"For the first third of our nation's history, from about 1777 to 1861, it was almost unheard of for individual Americans to fly the flag," says historian Marc Leepson.
Source: Council on Foreign Relations
7/1/2020
Richard Haass: History is not a cookbook. It doesn't give you exact recipes to understand the present or predictive future. But what it does is give you context, it gives you comparisons, it gives you perspective.
Source: New York Times
6/26/2020
by Jamelle Bouie
The histories of Reconstruction by W.E.B. Du Bois and Eric Foner, as well as the later speeches and writings of Martin Luther King, Jr. demonstrate that the cause of racial justice has never been separable from closing the vast economic gulf between owners and workers in America.
Source: New York Magazine
7/30/2020
A panel of experts including historians Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Simon Balto, Max Felker-Kantor, Carl Suddler, Stuart Schrader and Melanie Newport assemble a reading list for understanding policing and its relationship to racism and social class in the US.
Source: New York Times
7/1/2020
Historian Gene A. Smith and Oglala Lakota activist Nick Tilsen offer contest for the creation of the monument, its relationship to tribal lands, and the legacies of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt from an indigenous point of view.
Source: WBUR
6/30/2020
Julian Zelizer discusses Princeton's decision to rename its school of Public Policy.
Source: KCET
6/30/2020
“East of East” draws on scholarship in disciplines such as history, cultural studies and urban geography. However, its strength lies in its ability to amplify the voices and expressions of those generally excluded from official archival histories to provide a “new archive” of the region’s historical and contemporary significance.
Source: TIME
6/26/2020
“Asian Americans owe so much of their presence in this country to the Black struggle for freedom — from birthright citizenship to the ability to tell our stories in education and the culture to the civil rights we enjoy,” says author Jeff Chang.
Source: TIME
6/30/2020
Doctoral student Lily Scherlis traced the evolution of the term in a “social history of social distancing,” from the earliest reference she could find in English—in the 1831 translation of Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne’s memoirs of his friendship with Napoleon—to the Social Distance Scale that sociologist Emory Bogardus created in the aftermath of the Red Summer of 1919.
Source: Washington Post
6/30/2020
In recent years, even as activists have decried Confederate monuments and flags, developers have continued using “plantation” in neighborhood names to evoke elegance. But now plantation place names and the word itself are under new scrutiny.
Source: Yale News
6/29/2020
The American Council of Learned Societies has named Nichole Nelson one of 22 new Mellon/ACLS Public Fellows for 2020.
Source: History.com
6/29/2020
Historians Margaret Ellen Newell and Christy Clark-Pujara show that slavery was both practiced in many northern colonies and states and was integral to their economic development.
Source: Baltimore Sun
6/29/2020
Historians Paul Finkelman, Martha S. Jones, and Kirk Savage discuss the legacies of such monuments and suggest how to reckon with the damage they, and the figures they represent, have caused.
Source: Greater Greater Washington
6/30/2020
On July 16, historian Derek Musgrove and ex-Post columnist Bob Levey will discuss how statehood became the top strategy to gain full citizenship for DC.