New perspectives on how history is made
How the Reformation looks now.
If you were a slave during the Revolution who would you have been rooting for? The British.
Langston is and Langston ain’t: Thinking about sexuality, black history and the movies.
No one knows if he nailed them to the church door or not.
One celebrates the founding of the USSR, the other Protestantism. They involve theology (as does all politics).
His documentary on Vietnam mocks the young who fought for social change.
“My ideas here may seem odd; they certainly are not realistic. However, our present situation is even more absurd.”
Well, now one war museum has.
Her name was Mildred Lewis Rutherford. She was the historian of the Daughters of the Confederacy.
Her well-timed new book is "Masterless Men: Poor Whites and Slavery in the Antebellum South."
But so far there’s only one.
This is why that is.
Recently, deeply-flawed articles on the website of BBC Ukraine have been passed off as fact.
An interview with clinical psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison on her groundbreaking study of art and illness.
It’s stopping Americans from addressing their real problems.
What the leaders of the Annales School think.
Speech delivered at the Rotary Club of Ashland, Oregon. This week he turns 100.
Ken Burns’s and Lynn Novick’s implicit “honor the troops” undertone makes this documentary a platform for the neo-orthodox culture war players.
In October they’re holding a conference in DC.
Guess who it honors?
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