By Jacqueline Antonovich
-The Harrison Act at 100.
-The history behind Monopoly.
-Sitting in radioactive dirt in the 1950s.
-20 disgusting vintage holiday recipes.
-Med students translate Ferguson jargon.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-The Harrison Act at 100.
-The history behind Monopoly.
-Sitting in radioactive dirt in the 1950s.
-20 disgusting vintage holiday recipes.
-Med students translate Ferguson jargon.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-Sinister Santas.
-The Titanic of the Golden Gate.
-A Victorian sanitary picture book.
-Ebola, women, and the risk of care.
-What books did WWII soldiers read?
-Sex, public memory, and Aaron Burr.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-AIDS history: I want more!
-Remembering Pearl Harbor.
-When disability and race intersect.
-Remember the 1990s power lines panic?
-A presidential daughter you could pick on.
-A history of health disparities in Ferguson.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-Plague riddled pigeons.
-What did Gettysburg smell like?
-Airport food used to be a big deal.
-Remember the Sand Creek Massacre.
-Mass imprisonment and public health.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-Practicing narrative medicine.
-When Thanksgiving was weird.
-How do you memorialize a mob?
-Theories of the first topsy-turvy dolls.
-A November feast in medieval Europe.
-The ethics of healthcare worker strikes.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-The strange dating games of 1914.
-The evolution of the doctor’s office.
-The men who built the Berlin Wall.
-Dress designs lost in the Holocaust.
-Are your medical records top secret?
-How Kodak set the skin-tone standard.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-Historiography via Ebony.
-The rise and rise of sexology.
-A brief history of the tampon.
-Video chatting with Communists.
-A history of religion and cosmetics.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-Cold War Nazis.
-A dose of witchcraft.
-The history of candy corn.
-The history of funeral food.
-Man and Mummy: a romance.
-The doctor who starved her patients to death.
If you haven’t already heard, the New York Times recently interviewed retired Princeton historian of the Civil War James McPherson for the newspaper’s “By the Book” feature. McPherson is a well-respected legend in the field, yet many historians were left scratching their collective heads over his responses to such questions as “Who are the best historians writing today?” and “What are the best books about African American history?” Suffice it to say, his answers seemed very white, very male, and well, very dated.
By Jacqueline Antonovich
-The pirates of Lake Michigan.
-The 16th-century dance plague.
-Down Syndrome isn’t just cute.
-A history of blood transfusions.
-The “headhunters” of Coney Island.
-Help preserve history in just one click.
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