The Hidden Structural Racism in the American Response to Public Health Emergencies

Facing a disproportionate death rate among Black people from COVID-19, President Trump shrugs: “What, me, worry?”

When faced with emerging epidemics related to HIV/AIDS in the 1970s, to crack cocaine in the 1980s, to Ebola in 2014 and 2018, the U.S. government was slow to intervene on behalf of homosexual populations, or urban poor populations, or African populations, who respectively were most-affected by those public health ...
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The Hidden Structural Racism in the American Response to Public Health Emergencies

Toppling Andrew Jackson From His Pedestal

A racist who championed ethnic cleansing

In today’s moment of Black Lives Matter and peaceful protests over racial injustice, more Americans than ever are tearing down statues across the country: Confederate heroes, dismantled; icons of Jim Crow, removed. Now, even former presidents aren’t immune. Consider Andrew Jackson -- one of President Trump’s personal models, who is also ...
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Toppling Andrew Jackson From His Pedestal

Taking Children

An excerpt from Taking Children: A History of American Terror by Laura Briggs

The past stalks the present, the ghost in the machine of memory. This is why history writing matters; it gives us ways to understand the specters already among us and to assemble tools to transform our situation. Things change; the epidemic of child taking in the context of mass incarceration ...
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Taking Children

This Body Is a Gift: Natalie Diaz

The award-winning poet on her new book, Postcolonial Love Poem

To celebrate this achievement, we're reprinting this interview with the author, originally posted in April 2020. Native Americans account for just 0.8 percent of the population of the United States. Yet according to four decades’ worth of data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, almost 2 percent of ...
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This Body Is a Gift: Natalie Diaz

Reconsidering the History of Race through Peyote

How categories of belonging are made in Mexico

Loyalties begin with a sense of belonging, a sense of who is on the inside and who is on the outside. I suppose that historians almost invariably interrogate notions of loyalty as we imagine our historical subjects; how they experienced their connections and obligations, and how this in turned shaped ...
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Reconsidering the History of Race through Peyote

Classical Statues, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” and Oklahoma Land Rights

Past Present Episode 159

In this episode, Neil, Niki, and Natalia discuss the disputed whiteness of classical statues, the Emmy Award-winning show The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and Native American claims to land rights in Oklahoma. Here are some links and references mentioned during this week’s show: A small cadre of archaeologists and art historians are ...
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Classical Statues, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” and Oklahoma Land Rights

Is Elizabeth Warren Native American?

What the DNA controversy reveals about race, identity politics, and the Native American present

It’s Monday morning. I open up my Twitter feed and see the video Elizabeth Warren made to answer charges made by Donald Trump, taken up by Trump enthusiasts everywhere, that she has pretended to be a Native American. I thought: this video is pretty good. If you haven’t seen it, you ...
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Is Elizabeth Warren Native American?

Summer Camps, Boarding Schools and the Ideology of Family Separation in the U.S.

Family separation is part of American history

For many American parents gearing up for sleepaway camp season, the usual jitters are accompanied by a guilty unease: it’s hard to be anything but horrified by the profound difference between the experiences of affluent kids heading off for a summer of campfires and canoeing and those of the more than ...
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Summer Camps, Boarding Schools and the Ideology of Family Separation in the U.S.