May/June 2015
In This Issue May/June 2015
The Coney Island Exhibition That Captures Its Highs and Lows
For more than a century, Coney Island has stirred our senses.
Volume 36, Issue 3
Robert Riggs’s July 4 at Coney Island, 1938. Read how Coney Island has inspired the American imagination.
—Private collection
-
Features
Those Slippery Snake Stories
One story morphs into many when the newspapers get involved.
By Andie TucherVirginia Woolf Was More Than Just a Women’s Writer
“A Room of One’s Own is a formative feminist document, but critic Robert Kanigel argues that men are cheating themselves if they don’t embrace the book, too.”
By Danny HeitmanFor a Brief Time in the 1930s, Radio Station WLW in Ohio Became America’s One and Only “Super Station”
The Nation’s Station.
By Katy June-FriesenMadam Sacho: How One Iroquois Woman Survived the American Revolution
General George Washington gave the orders to destroy towns and take prisoners in Sullivan’s Campaign, but her story lives on.
By Sarah M. S. Pearsall -
Departments
Statements
Life-Sized Portraits of the Kings and Queens of Nigeria
A hoto exhibit at the Newark Museum.
By Mary Jo PattersonPicturing the Farms of Ohio and Pennsylvania
An itinerant artist chronicles farm life in America.
By Dorothy ShinnOne-Off
In Mid Twentieth Century, Folly Cove Artisans Reunited Designers and Craftsmen
Local aesthetic caught eye of national retailers.
By Steve MoyerMurty Classical Library of India Sheds Light on Sixteenth-century Lyrical Poet Surdas
Poems in the style proliferated for centuries.
By Steve MoyerPennsylvania’s Simon Cameron Staged Honorific Tribute of Black Troops After Civil War
Review in Harrisburg was a capital idea.
By Steve MoyerImpertinent Questions
Now in English: The Memoir of a Robinson Crusoe à la française
Bon voyage, armchair travelers! Carla Zecher follows the perigrinations of an eighteenth-century French lieutenant.
By Edited by Steve MoyerExecutive Function
Nina Kemppel Came Home to Lead Alaska Humanities Forum
The humanities have a big impact on Alaskan life.
By Kathleen McCoyEdNote