The Latest 
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A Personal Message from the Editor
2020 showed how important history is for understanding the news. If HNN was an important source of insight and information for you in 2020, please support our work for 2021.
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Stop the Music
Richard H. Kohn
President-Elect Biden has allowed too much speculation about his choices for Secretary of Defense and unwisely floated the name of a retired Army general for the job. He needs to make a quick commitment to a nominee whose national defense experience comes from the civil, not the military, arena.
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Recognizing an Unrecognized Chinese American WWII Veteran
A.J. Wong
This week, Congress will honor all Chinese American World War II veterans with the Congressional Gold Medal, and some of their families will be eligible to receive a replica medal in their names. Hoy You Lim (林開祐) was killed in action in France in 1944. None of his survivors could complete the paperwork to receive his medal. The granddaughter of another Chinese American veteran wants to recognize his service.
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How Wood Helped America Become Great – But Mislay its Sense of History
Roland Ennos
Industrializing America's infrastructure was much more likely than Europe's to be made of wood. This accident of nature and geography helped drive rapid expansion, but today means much of the 19th century built environment of the United States has vanished.
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Let America Be America Again
Ed Simon
Outpourings of joy on November 7 when it became apparent Joe Biden had defeated Donald Trump don't mean that the nation's problems are solved, but spontaneous, collective celebration means people still have the capability to recognize our shared fate and work together.
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Plus ça change...? Alienation and Violence from Both Sides of Labor's Rise and Fall
James Ottavio Castagnera
Violence in the Pennsylvania coal fields in the 1870s may or may not have been the work of an Irish secret society, but showed the anger and frustration that fueled the rise of the American labor movement. What will become of social anger today when that movement is moribund?
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Is There Anything Left to Learn about Hitler?
James Thornton Harris
Volker Ullrich presents a picture of a leader whose "egocentrism... inability to self-criticize…tendency to overestimate himself... contempt for others and lack of empathy" made him willing to destroy his nation along with himself, but warns that the Third Reich was "a dictatorship of consent."
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Character was Trump's Achilles Heel
John C. Waugh
Explaining Donald Trump's reversal of fortune between 2016 and November 3 could be as simple as recognizing that the presidency gave his character no place to hide.
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The Roundup Top Ten for December 4, 2020
HNN Staff
The week's top op-eds by historians or about history from around the web.
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The Rise (and Fall?) of Trump's Viral Death Cult
Brian Glyn Williams
Trump's cult-leader response to COVID-19 is causing the equivalent of a Jonestown every day.
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UCLA Historian Carla Pestana Debunks Myths About the Pilgrims and the Plymouth Colony
James Thornton Harris
Alert Tom Cotton: Plymouth Rock, the Mayflower Compact, and the origins of Thanksgiving are just a few of the things Professor Carla Pestana finds in need of historical revision.
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The Devil and Mary Lease
Alan J. Singer
Populist and feminist agitator Mary Lease advised farmers to "raise less corn and more hell." Her brand of hell-raising, however, included a strong current of antisemitism that needs to be widely known.
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Blog
Nuclear Deterrence and Things Left to Chance
(R)evolutionary Biology
A beguiling, if horrifying, paradox of nuclear deterrence theory is that the credibility of a nuclear threat requires introducing uncertainty into the equation; one party must convince the other th...
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Biden will Confront Systemic Conservatism Despite a Mandate for Change
Steven F. Lawson
If Joe Biden wants to implement progressive change, he'll be stopped not by a lack of popular support, but by the conservatism built into American institutions.
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A Surprise Encounter with Zora Neale Hurston
Fred Zilian
The genius of Zora Neale Hurston has fascinated recent scholars, but one reader found traces of her legacy in an unexpected place.
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Take a Lesson from the Persistence of the Founder of Modern Thanksgiving
William Lambers
Sarah Josepha Hale pushed Abraham Lincoln to declare a national Thanksgiving holiday as a day to seek healing and unity. Fighting to end hunger is a way to recommit to the spirit of the holiday.
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Blog
I Dare Call it Treason
Steve Hochstadt
Having a traitor in the White House was the fantasy of the TV thriller “Designated Survivor”. Now life imitat...
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HNN Will Be Off for the Week
History-related news will return on November 30, along with HNN's annual fund drive--until then, enjoy a restful and safe holiday!
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The Roundup Top Ten for November 20, 2020
The week's top op-eds by historians from around the web.
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Reckoning with Marcus Whitman and the Memorialization of Conquest
Cassandra Tate
The same period that saw the public affirmation of the Confederate Lost Cause myth saw a proliferation of monuments that portrayed the conquest of the indigenous people of the west as virtuous pioneering. The case of Marcus Whitman shows a national reckoning is in order.
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Recovering Acts of Progressive Patriotism: Teaching Through Protest Music
Matthew Lindaman
A history professor reflects on a course teaching critical perspectives on patriotism through protest and music that articulates an inclusive and progressive nationalism.
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A Medieval Perspective on the Public Acceptance of Women as Leaders
Erika Graham-Goering
Whether in medieval France or in modern democracies, women's exercise of leadership has been constrained by gendered ideas of who can lead.
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Blog
How John Hersey Exposed the Human Face of Nuclear War: Lesley Blume on Her New Book "Fallout: The Hiroshima Cover-Up and The Reporter Who Revealed It to The World"
Robin Lindley
HNN interviews Lesley M.M. Blume about her new book on John Hersey and the government's effort to control the public perceptions of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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Affirmative Action Goes Down to Defeat in Deep Blue California
James Thornton Harris
The defeat of California's Proposition 16 exposes some significant fault lines in the multiethnic coalition the Democratic Party hopes will support its future success.
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Can the COVID Crisis Create a New Civilian-Military Trust in Argentina?
David M. K. Sheinin y Cesar R. Torres
Many Argentinians have been suspicious of military involvement in civil affairs since the end of the country's military dictatorship in 1983. Two scholars ask if the COVID crisis presents an opportunity for healing and reimagining the military's role in Argentina.
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Why the Odds Are Good that Biden Can Reduce Our Political Polarization
Walter G. Moss
A recent HNN essay took a pessimistic view of President-Elect Biden's ability to govern a polarized nation. Walter Moss takes a longer view and finds more cause for optimism.
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Blog
Who Will Form the Biden Cabinet?
Ronald L. Feinman
A presidential and political historian suggests choices for a Biden cabinet that will please (most) of the Democratic base, have a chance to win nomination by the Senate, not put any Democratic Sen...
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Roundup Top Ten for November 13, 2020
The top opinion writing by historians from around the web this week.
News
- 50 Essential Civil Rights Speeches
- Fishermen Catch WWII Mine, Extremely Satisfying Explosion Ensues
- Hit by COVID-19, Colleges Do the Unthinkable and Cut Tenure
- How Hanukkah Returned to Amsterdam’s Royal Concert Hall Decades After the Holocaust
- US Supreme Court to Hear Two Cases Related to Holocaust Restitution
- The Contentious History of U.S. Presidential Pardons—From the Whiskey Rebellion to Watergate
- Performance Anxiety: How Cold War Men’s Adventure Magazines Shaped Soldiers’ (Mis)Understandings of the Vietnam War (Review)
- Of the 700 Attempts to Fix or Abolish the Electoral College, this One Nearly Succeeded
- Historians Fact-Check 'Mank': Who Really Wrote 'Citizen Kane?' And Does 'Rosebud' Have A Hidden Meaning?
- Europe’s Most Terrible Years






