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: The Chronicle of Higher Education
9-28-17
Graduate programs in the humanities have faced withering criticism for churning out a surplus of doctorates despite a tight academic job market. Now fewer students are applying.
Source: Public Seminar
9-27-17
He should know. He wrote on himself!
Source: Mondoweiss
9-26-17
"The issuance of the Balfour Declaration thus marked the beginning of what I would describe as a century long colonial war in Palestine supported by an array of outside powers which continues to this day."
Source: The Bookseller
9-26-17
The winner will receive a prize of $75,000.
Source: Radio Free Europe
9-25-17
"I Believe It Was Genocide"
Source: The Daily Signal
9-25-17
by Jarrett Stepman
"His narrative is based on the idea that not only was Columbus a villain, but the product of his discovery was also an evil."
Source: The New Yorker
9-24-17
by Jelani Cobb
Trump’s selective patriotism "drives him to curse at black football players but leaves him struggling to create false equivalence between Nazis and anti-Fascists in Charlottesville."
Source: NPR
9-24-17
"You know, we thought we'd get 4,000 people a day. We're getting 6,000, 7,000, 8,000 a day. I didn't expect that.”
Source: TribLIVE
9-24-17
Of course, it’s a myth.
Source: The Times (London)
9-24-17
“This networked world is not going to be a harmonious one. It will be characterised by polarisation and, frankly, by conflict.”
Source: Yale News
9-22-17
Department leaders say that the new undergraduate series is meant to reflect global history’s growing prominence.
Source: The Salt Lake Tribune
9-20-17
W. Paul Reeve is researching early black converts.
Source: Youtube
9-18-17
Foner, author of “Battles for Freedom: The Use and Abuse of American History,” discusses confederate monuments, the role of the historian and the lies of omission.
Source: The University Daily Kansan
9-128-17
“I am mostly trained as a historian, but a historian of women, gender and sexuality.” – Nicholas Syrett
Source: Perspectives on History (AHA)
9-18-17 (accessed)
by Robert B. Townsend
History departments are not sitting idly by as their numbers decline.
Source: The New Orleans Advocate
9-17-17
Professor-Emeritus Dr. Raphael Cassimere was the first black instructor hired at the University of New Orleans where he served for 37 years.
Source: Missouri S&T
9-15-17
It’s a warning to be skeptical about newspaper sources.
Source: Moyers & Company
9-15-17
by Peter Dreier
The organizers, activists, artists, writers, athletes, judges and occasional elected officials who fought to make the United States a more humane and inclusive country often go unacknowledged.
Source: AEI
9-15-17
They believed in studying nature to improve the human lot – a new idea in the 1500s, he says.
Source: The Atlantic
9-18-17
by Emma Green
In a new book Max Perry Mueller profiles blacks who became Mormons.