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The past is never dead. It's not even past

Not Even Past

Kalashnikov’s Lawn Mower: The Man behind the Most Feared Gun in the World

January 13, 2014

In his latter years Kalashnikov still very much liked to tinker, and to reflect on his most popular invention. Though he denied any responsibility for what he described as the misuse of his weapon, he did come to express some regret for what it had become: a symbol and weapon of choice for terrorists and revolutionary groups the world over. “I would prefer to have invented a machine that people could use and that would help farmers with their work - for example a lawnmower.”

Hitler’s Army: Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the Third Reich (1991)

October 28, 2013

At the Battle of Stalingrad in January 1943, the German Wehrmacht looked hopeless.

Soviet Baby Boomers: An Oral History of Russia’s Cold War Generation by Donald Raleigh (2013)

September 30, 2013

Recalling his formative years as an American baby boomer and the influence the Cold War and the Soviet Union had on his worldview, Donald Raleigh asks what life was like for people his age in the Soviet Union? What were their concerns about the future? How did they spend their time and what did Cold War ideological battles mean for their daily lives?

The Hadamar Trial: Inadequacies of Postwar Justice

July 10, 2013

The Hadamar War Crimes Case, formally known as United States of America v. Alfons Klein et al., commenced in early October of 1945 and figured as the first postwar mass atrocity trial prosecuted in the American-occupied zone of Germany.

Mark Metzler on Post-War Japan

April 30, 2013

In the fifteen years after World War II, Japan made an astounding transition from wartime devastation to the boom known as the “Era of High-Speed Growth.” Japan’s High-Speed Growth system was an epoch-making innovation, that opened the current Asian age of world industrialization.

Was Iraq War Worth It? 10 Years after Invasion, It’s Too Early to Know

March 18, 2013

What might a future national monument to the Iraq war look like? This month marks 10 years since that conflict began on March 20, 2003. From a decade on, we can only begin to see how future historians and future generations will interpret the war and what questions they will ask. For now, Americans seem inclined to put it behind them.

Pinching and Swiping, or How I Won the Digital War

February 1, 2013

I have been refighting the Second World War my entire life. My campaign began with the board game Axis and Allies and continued on the computer with Panzer General and Close Combat. I spent hours as a teenager designing scenarios for the war in Civilization II, with a computer mouse in one hand and my history textbook in the other.

The Second World War by Antony Beevor (2012)

July 31, 2012

Acclaimed British historian Antony Beevor’s recently published The Second World War is a masterful account of the worst conflict in human history, when truly the entire world became engulfed in the flames of war. Having written previously on various aspects of the era, Beevor’s work attempts to synthesize his prior research into a detailed narrative of World War II.

Before Red Tails: Black Servicemen in World War I

February 13, 2012

Book cover of Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I by Adriane Lentz-Smith

Moviegoers who recently flocked to cinemas around the country to take in George Lucas’ World War II aviation blockbuster, Red Tails, may be unaware of the long and checkered history of black servicemen in the American military in the decades before the ascendance of the now famous Tuskegee Airmen.

A History of Islam in America: From the New World to the New World Order by Kambiz GhaneaBassiri (2010)

January 20, 2012

Book cover of A History of Islam in America by Kambiz GhaneaBassiri

In the last decade, the history of Muslims in America has come into its own and A History of Islam in America provides one of the most comprehensive and even-handed treatments of the subject. Many previous studies breezily pit “Islam” against the “West.”

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