• Features
  • Reviews
  • Teaching
  • Watch & Listen
  • About

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

Not Even Past

The Public Archive

May 8, 2018

Stylized banner image consisting of a collage of different documents and historical objects

Doing History Online and In Public by Joan Neuberger Millions of tweets and millions of state documents. Intimate oral histories and international radio addresses. Ancient pottery and yesterday’s memes. Historians have access to this immense store of online material for doing research, but what else can we do with it? In Spring 2018, graduate students […]

The Public Archive

Stylized banner image consisting of a collage of different documents and historical objects

Doing History Online and In Public by Joan Neuberger Millions of tweets and millions of state documents. Intimate oral histories and international radio addresses. Ancient pottery and yesterday’s memes. Historians have access to this immense store of online material for doing research, but what else can we do with it? In Spring 2018, graduate students […]

Cynthia Attaquin and a Wampanoag Network of Petitioners

April 25, 2018

Change.org, Ipetition, petitiononline — today, the digital marketplace has spurred the easy distribution of petitions.  While they are significant, modern petitioning campaigns offer a different contribution to public discourse than their nineteenth-century counterparts. For women, people of color, and others who had little access to political movers and shakers, petitioning placed them a signature and […]

Missing Signatures: The Archives at First Glance

April 11, 2018

On February 21, 1831, a petition containing the signatures of over 800 Connecticut residents was submitted  to the United States Congress on behalf of the indigenous population in the South who were facing relocation. The petition acknowledged Native peoples as the “original proprietors of the soil” and its authors claimed that to remain silent would […]

Did Race and Racism Exist in the Middle Ages?

March 1, 2018

For generations, race studies scholars—historians and literary critics alike—believed that race and its pernicious spawn racism were modern-day phenomena only.

We Were Eight Years in Power by Ta-Nehisi Coates (2017)

February 28, 2018

by Brandon Render Prior to the publication of “The Case for Reparations” in 2013, Ta-Nehisi Coates was a little-known blogger turned Senior Editor of The Atlantic magazine. Today, Coates has emerged as not only the top contemporary black intellectual, but a leading American thinker – regardless of race – with stinging critiques of President Barack […]

Historians on Marriage and Sexuality in the United States

February 7, 2018

by Alexander Taft In June 2015, by a vote of 5 to 4, the Supreme Court of the United States resolved decades of debate by declaring marriage a fundamental right regardless of sexual orientation. The Obergefell v. Hodges decision changed the landscape of American marriage law, but what was this landscape in the first place? […]

Collecting the World: Hans Sloane and the Origins of the British Museum by James Delbourgo (2017)

January 17, 2018

Book cover of Collecting the World: The Life and Curiosity of Hans Sloane by James Delbourgo

by Diana Heredia López A biography of an English scientist during the early Enlightenment may not seem like cutting edge scholarship.. In Collecting the World, James Delbourgo tells the multifaceted story of Hans Sloane, an Englishman who amassed a collection of nearly eighty thousand natural objects and curiosities through his work in natural history, commerce, […]

Empire of Cotton: A Global History by Sven Beckert (2015)

November 16, 2017

Book cover of Empire of Cotton: A Global History by Sven Beckert

Sven Beckert places cotton at the center of his colossal history of modern capitalism, arguing that the growth of the industry was the “launching pad for the broader Industrial Revolution.” Beckert follows cotton through a staggering spatial and chronological scope. Spanning five thousand years of cotton’s history, with a particular focus on the seventeenth to […]

The Curious History of Lincoln’s Birth Cabin

October 30, 2017

by Jesse Ritner School children across the United States learn that Abraham Lincoln was born in a log cabin. For seven weeks this past summer I worked at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park in Hodgenville, Kentucky, where that cabin (as legend has it) is encased in a stone monument.  Imposingly large when viewed […]

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Recent Posts

  • Cold War Chronicles
  • Primary Source: How Did Cary Coke Get Her Copy of Queen Catharine?
  • Tapancos and Tradition: Remembering the Dead in Northwestern Mexico
  • “How Did We Get Here” Panel 
  • Hidden Children and the Complexities of Jewish Identity  
NOT EVEN PAST is produced by

The Department of History

The University of Texas at Austin

We are supported by the College of Liberal Arts
And our Readers

Donate
Contact

All content © 2010-present NOT EVEN PAST and the authors, unless otherwise noted

Sign up to receive our MONTHLY NEWSLETTER

  • Features
  • Reviews
  • Teaching
  • Watch & Listen
  • About