The cover of the book "The Sandinista Revolution"

The Sandinista Revolution, Reconsidered

A new book from historian Mateo Jarquín seeks to decouple Nicaragua’s unique socialist uprising from reductive Cold War clichés.
The Song of Songs of the Allfather: A Germanic Creed by Adolf Knoll, Jena 1918. Odin Germanic mythology heathenism neopaganism Voelkisch. German National Library. Unidentified illustrator.

“Border Science” vs. Commercial Occultism: A Nazi Debate

Occultism was widely embraced under the Third Reich, complicating Nazi attempts to wield it as a weapon against internationalism and other undesirable ideologies.
Illustration of a reception room by M. H. Baillie Scott, 1904

Arts and Crafts Democracy

The Arts and Crafts and Slow Food movements twinned pleasure and democracy though supporters of these artisanal crusades developed a reputation for elitism.
Federal encampment on Cumberland Landing, Pamunkey River, VA, 1862

How the Union Lost the Remembrance War

The victors of the American Civil War failed to write their story into the history books, leaving a gap for the mythologizing of the Confederacy.
Russian dissident Bukovsky during a press conference at Schiphol Airport, 1977

Dissident Memoirs Across Rust-Iron Curtains

Soviet dissident memoirs, like their authors, had to cross the Iron Curtain—an iron curtain of meaning and interpretation.
Jonathan Swift by Charles Jervas

What Was Behind Jonathan Swift’s Modest Proposal?

Swift’s savage animosity towards the Irish Protestant elites is front and center in his biting (perhaps literally) critique of the landlord class.
Pekinese competitors arrive in the arms of their owners at the Wimbledon Dog Show, 1912

The Surprising Imperial History of the Pekingese Dog

Upper-class British women in the early 1900s participated in a craze for Pekingese dogs, signalling the role of empire in their social identities.
Clorosi by Sebastià Junyent

Green Sickness, the Disease of Virgins

In the mid-seventeenth century, John Graunt, the “father of English statistics,” claimed dozens of young women in London died of green sickness every year.
Arthur C. Clarke, 1965

Arthur C. Clarke’s Scuba Adventures and Ocean Frontiers

Clarke’s interest in oceanic exploration in the 1950s was, like his undersea fiction, often neglected by an audience focused on the race for outer space.
Copy of the signature page of the Declaration of Sentiments, 1848

“Declaration of Sentiments”: Annotated

The document that came out of the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention extended the long-lived and hard-fought movement for women’s rights in the United States.