Land-Grab Universities
Expropriated Indigenous land is the foundation of the land-grant university system.
Expropriated Indigenous land is the foundation of the land-grant university system.
Robert Lee, Tristan Ahtone High Country News Apr 2020 25min Permalink
An interview with the historian Robin D.G. Kelley.
Vinson Cunningham Los Angeles Times Mar 2021 10min Permalink
John Muir’s romantic vision obscured Indigenous ownership of the land—but a new generation is pulling away the veil.
Rebecca Solnit Sierra Mar 2021 15min Permalink
On the legacy of Louisiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Bernette Johnson and her battle with the Deep South’s white power structure.
Elon Green The Appeal Mar 2021 40min Permalink
For the past 70 years, the Circle L 5 Riding Club in Fort Worth has been honoring the legacy of its forefathers.
Aislyn Greene Afar Feb 2021 20min Permalink
“Around here the land swallows things.”
Claire Thompson Terrain Feb 2021 15min Permalink
When an 11-year-old Black girl in Jim Crow America discovers a seemingly worthless plot of land she has inherited is worth millions, everything in her life changes—and the walls begin to close in.
Lauren N. Henley Truly*Adventurous Feb 2021 20min Permalink
On the British and American fascination with rocking chairs and upholstery springs in the 19th century.
Hunter Dukes The Public Domain Review Feb 2021 25min Permalink
How Abraham Lincoln’s lifelong struggle with clinical depression was a key to his presidency.
Joshua Wolf Shenk The Atlantic Oct 2005 40min Permalink
The Federal Writers’ Project narratives provide an all-too-rare link to our past.
Clint Smith The Atlantic Feb 2021 30min Permalink
He wants to save classics from whiteness. Can the field survive?
Rachel Poser New York Times Magazine Feb 2021 30min Permalink
Our climate models could be missing something big.
Peter Brannen The Atlantic Feb 2021 Permalink
Last year an antique Depression-era neon sign was excavated in Pasadena—but it dug up a troubling story along with it. On Nat King Cole, hot chicken, and Malibu’s racist past.
Nate Rogers Vice Jan 2021 20min Permalink
The mistakes and the struggles behind America’s coronavirus tragedy.
Lawrence Wright New Yorker Dec 2020 2h Permalink
Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there.
Douglas Preston New Yorker Dec 2020 25min Permalink
A humble Scotsman saw something strange in the water—and daringly set out to catch it—only to have lecherous out-of-towners steal his fame and upend his quest.
Paul Brown Narratively Dec 2020 25min Permalink
A found diary holds a love story—and a mystery.
Christina Lalanne The Atavist Magazine Nov 2020 30min Permalink
COBOL is a coding language older than Weird Al Yankovic. The people who know how to use it are often just as old. It underpins the entire financial system. And it can’t be removed. How a computer language controls the financial life of the world.
Clive Thompson Wealthsimple Magazine Nov 2020 25min Permalink
Henry Orenstein survived three years in concentration camps before creating Transformers and poker cameras.
Abigail Jones Newsweek Dec 2016 25min Permalink
Twenty-five years ago this month, “superpredator” was coined in The Weekly Standard. Media spread the term like wildfire, creating repercussions on policy and culture we are still reckoning with today.
Carroll Bogert, Lynell Hancock The Marshall Project Nov 2020 15min Permalink
On revisionist architecture.
Looking at the statues here, or anywhere, makes one wonder: Is abstraction simply the cardinal feature of any war where the loss is so much greater than whatever can be described as victory?
Jack Hitt Virginia Quarterly Review Sep 2020 30min Permalink
In 2005, Vanessa Mitchell moved into her dream home, a former medieval jail where England’s witches waited to hang and burn. When paranormal phenomena forced her to flee, she became convinced it was possessed by evil spirits.
Jeff Maysh Medium Oct 2020 25min Permalink
How political science understands voters.
Lous Menand New Yorker Aug 2004 Permalink
A bizarre 1970 Arctic killing over a jug of raisin wine shows that we need to think about crime outside our atmosphere now.
Dutch astronomer, mathematician, and inventor Christiaan Huygens’ early work on probability paved the way for his very modern evaluation of what alien life might look like.
Hugh Aldersey-Williams The Public Domain Review Oct 2020 20min Permalink