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Not Even Past

The Prisoner of Events in Vietnam

April 24, 2013

In the months following his resounding electoral triumph over Barry Goldwater in November 1964, President Lyndon Baines Johnson made momentous decisions to escalate U.S. military involvement in Vietnam.  Most consequentially, he ordered the bombing of North Vietnam: first retaliatory strikes following a National Liberation Front attack on the U.S.

Digital History: A Primer (Part 2)

April 14, 2013

Historians won’t be giving up their visits to archives or their days picking notebooks and letters out of boxes any time soon. But the path to those boxes has changed dramatically as institutions and history enthusiasts have been digitalizing and posting their treasures online.

Lady Bird Johnson, In Her Own Words

April 11, 2013

Between 1977 and 1991, Michael L. Gillette, executive director of Humanities Texas and former director of the LBJ Library Oral History Program, sat down with Lady Bird Johnson to discuss her childhood, family life and experiences as First Lady. For the first time anywhere, Not Even Past is publishing audio segments from these incredible conversations.

Digital History: A Primer (Part 1)

March 31, 2013

Internet technology is starting to have a profound influence on the ways we do history. Historians have found new places to write history, new ways to make sources available, and some historians have mastered the digital technology to create new kinds of data and new kinds of sources for asking new kinds of questions about the past.

The Lives of Erich Fromm: Love’s Prophet by Lawrence J. Friedman (2013)

March 10, 2013

Book cover of The Lives of Erich Fromm: Love's Prophet by Lawrence J. Friedman

Perhaps one day some whimsical people with money will get together and honor books for their subtitles. Lawrence Friedman’s new biography of Erich Fromm, subtitled “Love’s Prophet,” wins for getting the total picture; for, in just two words, capturing a imagewhole life. But it couldn’t have been a difficult choice.

Lady Bird Johnson interviewed by Michael Gillette

March 1, 2013

I had already conducted the first five oral history interviews with Lady Bird Johnson when she telephoned my LBJ Library office one day in the spring of 1978. Her first words were “Hello, Mike.

Philippa Levine on Eugenics Around the World

January 31, 2013

Early in the twentieth century governments all over the world thought they had found a rational, efficient, and scientific solution to the related problems of poverty, crime, and hereditary illness. Scientists hoped they might be able to help societies control the social problems that arose from these phenomena. From Mexico to Maine, from Switzerland and Scandinavia to South Carolina, from India to Indiana, the science-turned-social-policy known as eugenics became a base-line around which social services and welfare legislation were organized.

The Ottoman Age of Exploration by Giancarlo Casale (2010)

January 27, 2013

Book cover of The Ottoman Age of Exploration by Giancarlo Casale

In The Ottoman Age of Exploration, Giancarlo Casale contests the prevailing narrative that characterizes the Ottoman Empire as a passive bystander in the sixteenth-century struggle for dominance of global trade.

The Emancipation Proclamation and its Aftermath

January 1, 2013

A compilation of works referred to by this month's featured authors on Slavery, Emancipation, Abolition and their legacy in US History.

The text of the Emancipation Proclamation 

Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained (2012)

January 1, 2013

We all know that films on historical subjects distort events for the sake of entertainment. The goal of this review is to examine this latest rendition of slavery in popular culture from a historian's point of view to see how those distortions are used and what affect they may have on popular ideas about slavery.

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