Our public libraries keep communities together.
Tocqueville is still trenchant.
on the evolution of a common language for science.
Neal Gabler on the genius of Walt Disney
In the nineteenth century, making scrapbooks wasn't just for the hoi polloi. Celebrities like Mark Twain clipped and pasted, too.
Bon voyage, armchair travelers! Carla Zecher follows the perigrinations of an eighteenth-century French lieutenant.
Non-Indiana Jones-style archaeology takes a bow in southern Virginia.
NEH-funded book on veeps.
Western Americanist and native Californian David Igler on sea captains who sought their fortunes
With Susan Shillinglaw on the 75th anniversary of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath
2017 Winter
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What Sets Italian Americans Off From Other Immigrants?
Family and work for starters, according to a new TV documentary.
By Vincent J. Cannato
The Strange Politics of Gertrude Stein
Was the den mother of modernism a fascist?
By Barbara Will
King Andrew and the Bank
Andrew Jackson stares down the national bank and wins.
By Daniel Feller
The Quiet Greatness of Eudora Welty
Even toward the end of her life, the writer revealed a youthful zest for life and art.
By Danny Heitman
Why Spinoza Was Excommunicated
Before writing a single book, Bento de Spinoza was considered a dangerous thinker
By Steven Nadler