The cover of The Truffle Eye by Vaan Nguyen

The Poet Who Writes About Vietnam in Hebrew

Vaan Nguyen’s poetry examines exile and memory through the lens of her family’s journey from Vietnam to Israel.
The Bostonians Paying the Excise-man, or Tarring and Feathering, 1774

Tarring and Feathering, American Style

What began as a European folk practice became a distinctly American ritual of public punishment.
Portraits of victims at the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Santiago, Chile

Memory’s Role in Chile’s Democratic Rebirth

In post-Pinochet Chile, public memory became a pathway to accountability.
The morning after the Battle of Waterloo on June 19, 1815, by John Heaviside Clark

Souvenir Hunting on the Battlefield of Waterloo

At Waterloo, a site of immense bloodshed, tourists quickly turned the aftermath of war into collectibles.
A bridge spanning a river collapses beneath the passage of a train, in a scene from the United Artists film 'The General', directed by and starring Buster Keaton, 1927

A History of Fakery on Film

Concerns about AI-made images have deep roots in the earliest years of filmmaking.
Diverse human hands holding speech bubbles.

Disavowing Politics While Doing Politics

People often claim to be “nonpolitical” even as they seek policy change, a stance that supports civic action but narrows democratic debate.
Second Street north from Market St. with Christ Church, Philadelphia, 1800

Contesting American Citizenship… in 1784

The Longchamps Affair shows how early Americans struggled to define citizenship amid conflicting laws and revolutionary values.
Eirene and Ploutos

In Pursuit of Peace, Ancient Athens Created a Goddess

In the aftermath of the Peloponnesian War, Athenians worshipped Eirene. Her cult reflects the political role of religion in Ancient Greece.
Colorful landscape with colorful mountains and sun

Rights of Nature: A Reading List

What would it mean for rivers, forests, and animals to have legal rights? A global movement is rethinking law’s relationship to nature.
Portrait of Sir Banastre Tarleton by Joshua Reynolds, 1782

A Brief History of Men Showing Leg

The story of the modern suit begins with tight pants, as men’s legs became markers of class, civility, and sexuality.