With support from the University of Richmond

History News Network

History News Network puts current events into historical perspective. Subscribe to our newsletter for new perspectives on the ways history continues to resonate in the present. Explore our archive of thousands of original op-eds and curated stories from around the web. Join us to learn more about the past, now.

The Roundup Top Ten for July 17, 2020

Equal Opportunity is Not Enough

by Elizabeth M. Smith-Pryor

The myth of America as an equal opportunity society has historically allowed white Americans to hold out equality as a promise redeemable in the future but rarely available in the present.

How Should Teachers Handle the Movement to 'Rewrite' High School History? Embrace It

by Jack Doyle and Chris Doyle

America today is a product of the past and not immune from its racist legacy. Combating racism, now, requires suspending overly optimistic narratives of its demise.

Americans Are The Dangerous, Disease-Carrying Foreigners Now

by Erika Lee

For centuries, we have been the ones demonizing foreigners as carriers of infectious disease. And we have been the ones banning immigrants in the name of protecting Americans’ public health.

Facing America's History of Racism Requires Facing the Origins of 'Race' as a Concept

by Andrew Curran

Many of the most rearguard and unscientific European notions regarding race have remained deeply embedded in the American psyche.

When Plague Is Not a Metaphor

by Hunter Gardner

It's not always a blessing when current events make a researcher's specialty suddenly and urgently relevant. 

The Goya Boycott is Something Much More than "Cancel Culture"

by Allyson P. Brantley

What William (Bill) Coors complained was “political persecution” was, for boycotters, a tool of political expression — of refusing to financially support policies that maligned and marginalized their communities and those of their allies.

Veterans Go to Washington--So What?

by Nan Levinson

Speculation about the effects of electing veterans to national office is seldom historically informed. Although it's assumed military experience and leadership would shape a legislator's vote, today's partisanship is probably the biggest influence. 

The Campus Confederate Legacy We’re Not Talking About

by Taulby Edmondson

When a fraternity chapter sued him for defamation for remarking that it actively preserved the "Lost Cause" mythology of the Confederacy, the author went to the archives to defend himself. 

How a History Textbook Would Describe 2020 So Far

by James West Davidson

A historian imagines the chapter high schoolers might read one day about this momentous time.

The Coal Strike That Defined Theodore Roosevelt’s Presidency

by Susan Berfield

To put an end to the standoff, the future progressive champion sought the help of a titan of business: J.P. Morgan.