Roundup Top 10!
What Really Killed William Henry Harrison? A new look at the evidence through the lens of modern epidemiology makes it far more likely that the real killer lurked elsewhere — in a fetid marsh not far from the White House. NYT |
The World Is Much Safer Than 20th-Century Historians Would Have You Believe We should heed historians' warnings, but we should also appreciate the progress that global security has made in the intervening century. New Republic |
The Walter Benjamin Brigade How an obscure and maddeningly opaque German Jewish intellectual became a thriving academic industry. Mosaic Magazine |
Why science is better than history You're probably going to get through about 1,000 books in your 4,000 weeks on earth--and you want to read history? Telegraph |
Auden's secret revealed "I learned about it mostly by chance." NY Review of Books |
Where David Brion Davis fits in the historiography of slavery Since the middle of the twentieth century, our understanding of the American past has been revolutionized, in no small part because of our altered conceptions of the place of race in the nation’s history. NY Review of Books |
Japan's shocking embrace of textbook "reforms" Abe Shinzo's long campaign against textbooks that tell the truth about Japan's history. Japan Focus |
These are the 6 books about the Middle East everybody should read Events have propelled a few books into the limelight, and these six, for better or worse, had an impact, influenced perceptions, and may have changed history. Sandbox |
Paul Ryan Debate Needs Context, Not Self-Help Bromides Our ongoing dialogue about race in America—most recently sparked by Rep. Paul Ryan’s comments—requires us to better understand African-American history. The Root |
US History Books that Won in Vietnam With typical clarity of purpose, our 8th-grade textbook, America: Land I Love, explains exactly why America had to fight in Vietnam. Wonkette Blog |
The Nativist Origins of Philippines Independence This week marks the 80th anniversary of the passage of the Tydings-McDuffie Act, which established conditions for the United States to grant the Philippines its independence after nearly five decades of American rule. Truthout |