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Antecedent A Brief History of Dangerous Others Wielding the outside agitator trope has always, at bottom, been a way of putting dissidents in their place. New York Review of Books |
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News This One Letter in a Textbook Could Change How Millions of Kids Learn About Race What the capitalization of "Black" will mean for students and their teachers. CNN |
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Explainer UVA and the History of Race: The George Rogers Clark Statue and Native Americans Unlike the statues of Lee and Jackson, these Charlottesville monuments had less to do with memory than they did with an imagined past. UVA Today |
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Vignette Standing on the Crater of a Volcano In 1920, James Weldon Johnson went to Was***ngton, armed with census data, to fight rampant voter suppression across the American South. Census Stories, USA |
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Oral History The Cla*** of RBG The remarkable stories of the nine other women in the Harvard Law cla*** of ’59—as told by them, their families, and a SCOTUS justice who remembers them all. Slate |
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Book Review Married to the Momism Philip Wylie’s "Generation of Vipers," revisited. Lapham’s Quarterly |
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Explainer How to Interpret Historical Analogies They’re good for kickstarting political debate but analogies with the past are often ahistorical and should be treated with care. Aeon |
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About Bunk |
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Who We Are |
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For Educators |
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Jobs |
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Contact |
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