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February 15, 2016 (February 10, 2016)

Lincoln on Jefferson

american history biography Lincoln

Presidents have the unique perspective on other presidents. After all, a president—living or dead, current or former—belongs to a club that remains very small, and intimately knows a job that’s unlike […]

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February 14, 2016 (February 10, 2016)

Ask the Bolshevik

radical studies

Meet the UI Press is a recurring feature that delves into issues affecting academic publishing, writing, education, and LOVE. Today, industry advice columnist The Bolshevik answers your questions. Dear Bolshevik, Well, […]

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February 12, 2016 (February 10, 2016)

Ain’t Valentine’s Day

film music

Love can be hard in real life. It’s always hard in film noir. As the essays in the starry-eyed UIP release Kiss the Blood Off My Hands show, getting involved with guys and/or […]

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February 10, 2016 (February 9, 2016)

The fate of Mr. Pitner

american history Illinois / regional women's history

In the new UIP release The Dumville Letters, Anne M. Heinz and John P. Heinz bring us the antebellum-era correspondence of Ann Dumville and her daughters Hepzibah, Jemima, and Elizabeth, as well as their […]

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February 9, 2016 (January 27, 2016)

A less than perfect murder

american history Chicago

How to get away with the perfect murder is one of those bull session perennials, a topic of unending fascination. Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, a pair of University of […]

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February 8, 2016 (February 3, 2016)

Q&A with Team Chemistry author Nathan Michael Corzine

american history author commentary authors sports history

Nathan Michael Corzine is an instructor in history at Coastal Carolina Community College. He recently answered some questions about his book Team Chemistry: The History of Drugs and Alcohol in Major League […]

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February 5, 2016 (February 4, 2016)

Not our first Zika

american history asian american studies immigration

To judge when an emerging pathogen enters the historical record, we look to medical journals and the Centers for Disease Control. To judge when an emerging pathogen enters the zeitgiest, […]

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February 4, 2016 (February 4, 2016)

Throwbacklist Thursday

american history public health southern history

The Zika virus. It’s making headlines and provoking anxieties. A disease-causing pathogen carried by Aedes mosquitoes—the culprits behind yellow fever, dengue, and chikungunya, among other ills—Zika was isolated in Uganda in […]

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February 4, 2016

Winning the War for Democracy receives Griot Award

american history authors awards black studies labor history

David Lucander, author Winning the War for Democracy: The March on Washington Movement, 1941-1946, was recognized by the African American Historical Society of Rockland County (NY) with this year’s Griot […]

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February 3, 2016 (February 3, 2016)

Brick and mortar

publishing

You’ve heard some version of the rumors by now. Amazon, online giga-retailer to us all, intends to open brick-and-mortar bookstores that may or may not expand upon the ideas found in the […]

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February 2, 2016 (February 1, 2016)

Survey Says! Beyond Art School

art

Roger Cardinal coined the term outsider art in 1972 as an English-language parallel to art brut, the raw art or rough art Jean Dubuffet described earlier. Britannica defines it thus: “Any […]

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February 1, 2016 (February 1, 2016)

Big ideas

publishing science fiction

We like science fiction. We admire science fiction. We always stay on the lookout for more scholarly work on science fiction. Behold! Over the weekend a new journal hit the […]

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