The Ladder Up
A restless history of Washington Heights.
A restless history of Washington Heights.
Carina del Valle Schorske Virginia Quarterly Review Dec 2019 25min Permalink
Half a century on from the summer of love, marijuana is big business and mindfulness a workplace routine. Nat Segnit asks how the movement found itself at the heart of capitalism
Nat Segnit 1843 Dec 2019 15min Permalink
In 1997, the former Soviet leader needed money, and Pizza Hut needed a spokesman. Greatness ensued.
Paul Musgrave Foreign Policy Nov 2019 15min Permalink
For 40 years, journalists chronicled the eccentric royal family of Oudh, deposed aristocrats who lived in a ruined palace in the Indian capital. It was a tragic, astonishing story. But was it true?
Ellen Barry New York Times Nov 2019 30min Permalink
On the author of How the Irish Became White.
Jay Caspian Kang New Yorker Nov 2015 15min Permalink
How the Lyubov Orlova became the infamous “cannibal-rat ghost ship.”
Randi Beers CBC News Nov 2019 20min Permalink
The history of a sundown town.
Logan Jaffe ProPublica Nov 2019 25min Permalink
How did feeling good become a matter of relentless, competitive work; a never-to-be-attained goal which makes us miserable?
Cody Delistraty Aeon Nov 2019 15min Permalink
People said that women had no place in the Grand Canyon and would likely die trying to run the Colorado River. In 1938, two female scientists set out to prove them wrong.
Melissa L. Sevigny The Atavist Magazine Oct 2019 45min Permalink
How demons destroyed a Florida school.
Jeff Maysh Medium Oct 2019 30min Permalink
A white friend admitted that she had never seen a single photo of a lynching. I was shocked, but not surprised. A lynching was a warning. She didn’t need to be warned.
Maurice Carlos Ruffin Oxford American Sep 2019 15min Permalink
On the meaning of an ancient practice: collecting seashells.
Krista Langlois Hakai Magazine Oct 2019 15min Permalink
Twenty years ago my hometown made national headlines when the local college staged an internationally acclaimed play about gay men and the AIDS crisis. The people I grew up with are still feeling the aftershocks.
Wes Ferguson Texas Monthly Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Retracing the writer’s life nearly 60 years after her death.
Michael Adno The Bitter Southerner Sep 2019 35min Permalink
Power worship blurs political judgement because it leads, almost unavoidably, to the belief that present trends will continue. Whoever is winning at the moment will always seem to be invincible. If the Japanese have conquered south Asia, then they will keep south Asia for ever, if the Germans have captured Tobruk, they will infallibly capture Cairo; if the Russians are in Berlin, it will not be long before they are in London: and so on. This habit of mind leads also to the belief that things will happen more quickly, completely, and catastrophically than they ever do in practice. The rise and fall of empires, the disappearance of cultures and religions, are expected to happen with earthquake suddenness, and processes which have barely started are talked about as though they were already at an end.
George Orwell Polemic May 1946 Permalink
According to the movie version, they died side by side, guns blazing, in the crosshairs of half a Bolivian regiment. It’s a great Hollywood ending that happens to be true, mostly: they left America… then died in Bolivia. What Hollywood didn’t know is that Butch and Sundance escaped.
Patrick Symmes The Daily Beast Sep 2019 Permalink
The unlikely rise of the 1983 national croquet champions.
Julian Smith Deadspin Sep 2019 20min Permalink
Decades on, a massive half-built monument in the Black Hills remains controversial.
Brooke Jarvis New Yorker Sep 2019 Permalink
In the days after 9/11, a photo of an unknown man falling from the South Tower appeared in publications across the globe. This is the story of that photograph, and of the search to find the man pictured in it.
On what is recorded and what is left out.
Zuzana Justman The New Yorker Sep 2019 30min Permalink
On the “white gold” that fueled slavery.
Khalil Gibran Muhammad New York Times Magazine Aug 2019 30min Permalink
On the history and origin of the crab rangoon.
Dan Nosowitz Atlas Obscura Aug 2019 10min Permalink
A friendship born out of the ruins of a nation, a dangerous journey home, and a 40-year search for the truth.
Brent Crane The Atavist Aug 2019 40min Permalink
In 1910, East Texas saw one of America’s deadliest post-Reconstruction racial purges. One survivor’s descendants have waged an uphill battle for generations to unearth that violent past.
Michael Barajas Texas Observer Jul 2019 20min Permalink
The black men from Pittsburgh who made up America’s original paramedic corps wanted to make history and save lives—starting with their own.
Kevin Hazzard The Atavist Magazine Jul 2019 40min Permalink