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Not Even Past

History Beyond Academia: Series Announcement

October 18, 2025

We are excited to announce the upcoming History Beyond Academia series, curated by Associate Editor Raquel Torua Padilla. This series explores how history reaches people outside universities, showing how it is transmitted, shared, and sustained through public projects, community initiatives, and oral traditions. Contributors will reflect on a range of projects and practices that reveal […]

Beyond the Waters: Oral History and the Save Our Springs Movement of Late-Twentieth-Century Austin

March 12, 2026

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This article is part of the series: History Beyond Academia On June 7, 1990, hundreds of Austin citizens spoke before the Austin City Council in opposition to a proposed 4,000-acre real estate development upstream of Barton Springs, an iconic spring-fed swimming pool in the heart of Austin. The development, spearheaded by flamboyant businessman Jim Bob […]

What is MACRI? Meet the Organization Showcasing Mexican American Civil Rights History in San Antonio and Beyond 

February 8, 2026

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This article is part of the series: History beyond Academia MACRI Executive Director Dr. Sarah Z. Gould will be at UT Austin on February 19th, 2026. You can find more information about her talk at the end of this article. Nestled in the heart of San Antonio, Texas, just west of downtown, lies the Mexican […]

Long Before the Field: Community, Memory, and the Making of Public History

October 20, 2025

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This article is part of the series: History beyond Academia The term “public history” entered my vocabulary only after I moved to the United States, where it designates a well-defined professional field. In Latin America, by contrast, similar practices have long existed without requiring a defined institutional/formal designation. Communities have always engaged in the making and sharing […]

Flawed Assertions and Questionable Evidence: A Critical Examination of Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States

March 22, 2024

In his seminal work, A People’s History of the United States, Howard Zinn presents a compelling alternative perspective on American history. In an important article, Professor Aaron O’Connell, who teaches at UT, made a powerful case for using Zinn in the classroom: To take my students through the long history of violence in America, I […]

Saving History: Cultural Heritage, Preservation and Public Service

October 25, 2023

In 2018, I was on a research expedition in Caracas, Venezuela. My days were filled with scheduling visits to libraries and repositories to start research for my dissertation on foreign oil companies and their activities in twentieth-century Venezuela. One sunny afternoon, an old mentor from my undergraduate years invited me to his private club. We […]

Re-imagining Public History: A Tribute to Joan Neuberger

May 10, 2022

by the Editor of Not Even Past, Adam Clulow As Not Even Past winds down for another academic year, we want to take a moment to celebrate the remarkable contribution of Dr. Joan Neuberger, our Founding Editor, who will be retiring from the University of Texas this summer. Joan guided the magazine for almost a […]

IHS Book Talk: History and Collective Memory in South Asia, 1200–2000

March 23, 2021

The History Faculty New Book Series presents: History and Collective Memory in South Asia, 1200–2000(University of Washington Press, 2019) A book talk and discussion withSUMIT GUHAProfessor of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austinhttps://liberalarts.utexas.edu/history/faculty/profile.php?eid=sg7967 With discussant:ANUPAMA RAOTOW Associate Professor of History,Barnard College and Columbia Universityhttps://history.barnard.edu/profiles/anupama-rao In this far-ranging and erudite exploration of the South Asian past, […]

The Purpose of a History PHD: Lessons Learned from Career Diversity

October 30, 2020

From the editors: Over the past 5 weeks we have been delighted to publish a new series, Navigating the PhD and Beyond: Lessons from the AHA Career Diversity Initiative. The series was presented and curated by Alejandra Garza as part of the AHA Career Diversity for Historians Initiative. As the 2018-20 graduate student fellow, Alejandra’s […]

Navigating the PhD and Beyond: Brian Stauffer

October 23, 2020

By Alejandra C. Garza, Ph.D. candidate, AHA Career Diversity Fellow 2018-2020 This is the fifth post in a wider series, Navigating the PhD and Beyond: Lessons from the AHA Career Diversity Initiative. The series is presented and curated by Alejandra Garza as part of the AHA Career Diversity for Historians Initiative. As the 2018-20 graduate student […]

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Recent Posts

  • Beyond the Waters: Oral History and the Save Our Springs Movement of Late-Twentieth-Century Austin
  • Review of Brown Skins, White Coats: Race Science in India, 1920-66 (2022)
  • Las cosas tienen vida:  Un podcast sobre el rol de los objetos coloniales en nuestras vidas actuales 
  • Las cosas tienen vida: A Podcast About the Role of Colonial Objects in Our Present Lives 
  • Review of Disenfranchised: The Rise and Fall of Industrial Citizenship in China (2019).
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