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History
A Feminist Oral History of the 1972 Democratic National Convention
Clara Bingham Chronicles the Failed Fight to Include Abortion Rights in the Party’s Platform
By
Clara Bingham
| July 30, 2024
The First Lesbian: How Sappho’s Poetry Paved the Way for Modern Queer Literature
Daisy Dunn on Sappho's Genre-Defying Verses and the Invention of the Term “Lesbian”
By
Daisy Dunn
| July 30, 2024
From Senegal to the Virgin Islands: The Weirdness of Having Fun While Writing About Historical Trauma
Mai Sennaar on Alfred Hitchcock, Cheikh Anta Diop, and an Unexpected Antidote to Writer’s Block
By
Mai Sennaar
| July 30, 2024
Did You Know That Poetry Used to Be an Actual Olympic Sport?
And the First Openly Gay Olympic Medalist Was a Poet
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| July 29, 2024
Cool merch for classic novels.
By
James Folta
| July 24, 2024
“Weapons of Health Destruction...” How Colonialism Created the Modern Native American Diet
Andrea Freeman on the Impact of Systematic Oppression on Indigenous Cuisine in the United States
By
Andrea Freeman
| July 24, 2024
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
What the
Epic of Gilgamesh
Reveals About Sumerian Society
By
Paul Cooper
| July 24, 2024
A Better Way to Teach History: On Adapting James Loewen’s “Lies My Teacher Told Me”
By
Nate Powell
| July 22, 2024
How America’s Sex Education—and Oversexed Culture—Continues to Fail Women
By
Natalie Lampert
| July 19, 2024
How a Generation of Women and Queer Skateboarders Fought for Visibility and Recognition
Deborah Stoll on Defying Gender Norms and Expectations in Extreme Sports
By
Deborah Stoll
| July 18, 2024
The Man Who Created the Trade Paperback
Michael Castleman on the Life and Times of Jason Epstein, Cofounder of “The New York Review of Books”
By
Michael Castleman
| July 18, 2024
How Did Phrenology Get So Popular in Victorian Society?
Michael Taylor on the Known and Anonymous Scientific Radicals of 19th Century Britain
By
Michael Taylor
| July 17, 2024
In Praise of
Ginkgo Biloba
, China’s Ancient, Everlasting Tree
Amy Stewart Talks to Jianming (Jimmy) Shen, the Ginkgo Chronicler of Hangzhou
By
Amy Stewart
| July 17, 2024
How Judy Blume’s
Deenie
Helped Destigmatize Masturbation
Rachelle Bergstein on Self-Pleasure and Sex Education in Children's Literature
By
Rachelle Bergstein
| July 16, 2024
What the All-American Delusion of the Polygraph Says About Our Relationship to Fact and Fiction
Justin St. Germain Considers the Blurry Borders Between Memory, Memoir and Myth
By
Justin St. Germain
| July 15, 2024
How the Continual Movement of Wildlife Regulates the Natural World
James Bradley on the Integral Role of Migratory Patterns to Human and Environmental Wellbeing
By
James Bradley
| July 15, 2024
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Page 32 of 220
6 Thrillers That Reveal the Dark Sides of Fame
January 21, 2026
by
Jessie Garcia
Ellie Levenson on the Beautiful Realism of Ambiguous Endings in Narratives
January 21, 2026
by
Ellie Levenson
Crime on the High Seas: 8 Historical Mysteries with Pirates and Smugglers
January 21, 2026
by
Linda Wilgus
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"