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Watch the September 17 Events
commemorating the 150th anniversary of the preliminary
Emancipation Proclamation.
Websites, apps, and digital projects supported by NEH grants
The great man of science had more than a passing interest in alchemy.
The journalist who pioneered serious film criticism showed a cinematic touch in all of his writing.
How the French Revolution reappropriated the favored playwright of Louis XIV.
Anna Darrow could set a broken leg with some string and a flatiron.
As Germany occupied France, Green brought Paris to life in his superlative diaries.
The battle for Nietzsche's legacy began when Count Hary Kessler met Elisabeth Forster-Nietzsche.
U-boats off the Carolina Coast were part of Germany's attack against American shipping in World War II.
An Appreciation by Mark Bittman
Was the den mother of modernism a fascist?
New collaborations between neuroscientists and humanists look to reunite the "two cultures" of the academy.
A scholar's epic journey to catalog two hundred years of medieval dress.
An NEH-funded documentary inspires a cinematic novel, one to be seen as well as read.
Charles and Ray Eames forged a new sensibility while doing everything and nothing.
The final volume of the Dictionary of American Regional English approaches
The Atlantic Monthly helped establish the expatriate author as a literary great.
Early in the Civil War, the Union narrowly avoided war with Britain.
New translations of the Bible have sought to make it accessible to everyone.
Frederick Law Olmsted designed pastoral escapes for the urban masses.
All things communist -- from the Berlin Wall to Soviet tchotchkes -- find a home at the Wende.
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