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: New York Times
5/30/2021
The popular internet site Atlas Obscura has undertaken to rewrite many of its articles to include more diverse perspectives on the unusual places they describe.
Source: Washington Post
5/24/2021
Established as a settlement of free Black men and women in the early 1800s, San Domingo is believed to be the first and oldest such community in the state of Maryland.
Source: Bloomberg CityLab
5/28/2021
"Emerging scholarship on Greenwood is showing that Black women were as critical to building Greenwood as they were to helping Black people survive the massacre, and rebuild the neighborhood afterward."
Source: The New Yorker
5/28/2021
Mary E. Jones Parrish and Eddie Faye Gates researched and published some of the most important accounts of the Greenwood massacre in Tulsa, but their names and work were consigned to obscurity as white authorities suppressed knowledge of the events.
Source: New York Times
5/21/2021
Jonathan Stevenson's new book on Philip Agee, who left the CIA and exposed its operations in Latin America, struggles to portray the complex mix of principle and egotism that drove its subject.
Source: New York Times
5/28/2021
Randall Kennedy reviews Carol Anderson's "The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America," and charges that Anderson overstates the influence of suppressing slave rebellion on the drafting of the Second Amendment.
Source: NBC News
5/28/2021
Some intellectual historians argue that the "social studies wars" are entering their second century. But today's political polarization makes the struggle over what can be taught in history classrooms even more contentious.
Source: The Nation
5/28/2021
by David M. Perry
Karlos Hill has researched the Tulsa race massacre and developed an institute to train teachers to examine it in their classrooms. This experience has led him to question whether objectivity can be a core principle of historiography.
Source: The New Yorker
5/24/2021
Writer Kelefa Sanneh examines recent books that diagnose America's polarization as a product of a "rights revolution" under which Americans have been trained to identify their social and political preferences with absolute rights. Does the language of rights discourage Americans from working out pragmatic solutions to disagreements?
Source: In These Times
5/27/2021
by Hamilton Nolan
A conversation with Elizabeth Hinton, author of “America On Fire: The Untold History of Police Violence and Black Rebellion Since the 1960s.”
Source: Irish Times
5/24/2021
"Men should have been treated as prisoners of war, according to historian Gabriel Doherty of University College Cork."
Source: UChicago News
5/25/2021
Technological innovation in the 1960s allowed more people to shoot video and push for community-based television. University of Chicago scholars are working to digitize and preserve "guerrilla television."
Source: The Public's Radio
5/25/2021
Two New Orleans area activists, Raynard Sanders and documentary filmmaker Katherine Cecil, head the Claiborne Avenue History Project which aims to document and publicize the street's history.
Source: CBS News
5/24/2021
Historian Scott Ellsworth's new book "The Ground Breaking" documents efforts by White Tulsans to conceal and deny the 1921 riot that destroyed much of the city's Black commercial district.
Source: KXII TV
5/24/2021
Local historians and activists want the town of Sherman, TX to place a historical marker at the site of a riot in which a Black man was killed and the courthouse burned down.
Source: New York Times
5/22/2021
Daniel Ellsberg disclosed a page from a 1966 study of the 1958 Taiwan Strait crisis that indicate many military leaders were anticipating the necessity of using nuclear weapons to defend Taiwan against the People's Republic of China.
Source: The Guardian
5/25/2021
"Whatever their motives, today’s reactionaries are picking up the mantle of generations of Americans who have fought to ensure that white children are taught a version of America’s past that is more hagiographic than historic."
Source: National History Center and Woodrow Wilson Center
5/25/2021
Jeremy Brown’s June Fourth takes a historical approach to the events of 1989 in China, arguing that the Beijing massacre was neither necessary nor inevitable, and tracing alternative paths that could have led to different outcomes. He addresses the National History Center's Washington History Seminar on June 1.
Source: The New Yorker
5/24/2021
A group of younger progressive activists is seeking to push the Democratic Party to see a new political alignment where active government and public programs are no longer considered impossible. Some members of the group of historians and scholars who met with President Biden in March also relayed that message.
Source: CNN
5/25/2021
Oklahoma Senator Fred Harris, the last surviving member of the Kerner Commission, discusses the commission's findings and how they were ignored. Historians including Jelani Cobb, Julian Zelizer and Steven Gillon also comment.