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

Not Even Past

The Global United States

November 1, 2014

Charting the rise of the United States from a peripheral, comparatively weak power in the late nineteenth century to the pinnacle of its military, diplomatic, and cultural influence in the early twenty-first. How and why did this momentous transformation occur? Who resisted and why? What were the attitudes of foreign nations as the United States became a great power of the first order and then surpassed them all?

The Revolution will televise football

September 24, 2014

As football returns to living rooms across the United States, it’s worth remembering that the sport has an international appeal for many who have spent time in this country. Fifty years ago, one such foreign fan led a revolution from Tanzania.

Why We Don’t Go to the Moon Anymore: The Space Program and the Challenge to Scientific Thinking

July 30, 2014

by Matthew Tribbe This month marks the forty-fifth anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing. To understand Apollo’s place in history, it might be helpful to go back forty-four rather than forty-five years, to the very first anniversary of the event in 1970. That July, several newspapers conducted informal surveys that revealed large majorities of […]

#BringBackOurGirls: A History of Humanitarian Intervention in Nigeria

May 16, 2014

by Brian McNeil #BringBackOurGirls has become ubiquitous on the internet, with a wide gamut of politicians and celebrities taking up the cause of the nearly 300 Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by the terrorist organization Boko Haram. While the efficacy of this sort of hashtag activism, or slacktivism, has been questioned by scholars—and openly mocked by some […]

Omens of Adversity: Tragedy, Time, Memory, Justice, by David Scott (2014)

May 12, 2014

by Lauren Hammond On October 19, 1983, members of Grenada’s People’s Revolutionary Army assassinated Prime Minister Maurice Bishop of Grenada and seven of his associates, triggering the sequence of events that led to the sudden end of the Grenada Revolution. With the prime minister dead, the hastily established ruling military council unsuccessfully attempted to restore […]

Persuasion, Propaganda, and Radio Free Europe: The New Archive (No. 9)

March 20, 2014

By Charley S. Binkow How does a nation fight a war of ideas?  When the battlefield is popular opinion, how does a state arm itself?  In 1949, the United States found its answer.  Their weapon: the airwaves.  The CIA launched Radio Free Europe in 1949 with the hopes of encouraging Eastern Europeans to defect from […]

Getz/Gilberto Fifty Years Later: A Retrospective

February 26, 2014

Album cover of Getz/Gilberto by Stan Getz and Joao Gilberto featuring Carlos Jobim

Getz/Gilberto was not North America’s first encounter with bossa nova, the lyrical fusion of samba and cool jazz emanating from the smoky nightclubs, recording studios, and performance halls of Rio de Janeiro in the mid-1950s. Yet the eight-track LP was by far the most successful.

The 1980 Moscow Olympics and my Family

February 24, 2014

My mother, Rae Straw, and her friend Pam had an odd assignment in 1979 for two travel agents from Houston: selling the Soviet Union to American tourists. For travel agents, such familiarization or “FAM” trips were a regular occurrence, but going to the Soviet Union during the preparations for the 1980 Moscow Olympics was a unique experience.

The Latest from Longhorn PhDs

February 12, 2014

Photograph of the front facade of Garrison Hall on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin

In November we wrote to everyone who received a PhD in History at UT Austin since 2000 to find out what they were doing.  We are curious about our former students’ careers and adventures and we want to celebrate their achievements in whatever line of work they pursued. And we still do! We hope everyone […]

Domesticating Ethnic Foods and Becoming American

February 10, 2014

How to Cook and Eat in Chinese was the earliest popular, English-language guide to Chinese cooking. First published in 1945 and reprinted several times, it remains in wide use today.

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