Today’s What We’re Reading features the anniversary of a historic concert, a history of urban squirrels, an illustrated guide to the PhD, NASA’s love affair with bacon, and much more!
History Links
Denied a Stage, She Sang for a Nation
Marian Anderson’s historic concert at the Lincoln Memorial held 75 years ago.
America’s City Squirrels Have Humans to Thank for Giving Them a Home
Washington Post columnist John Kelly interviewed environmental historian and AHA member Etienne Benson about urban squirrels. See Benson’s blog for images from a 1904 Post article about squirrels in Central Park.
What Really Killed William Henry Harrison?
Apparently it was raw sewage!
In the 1870s And ’80s, Being a Pedestrian Was Anything But
Before baseball became the national sport, Americans watched men walk. NPR interviews Matthew Algeo, author of the book Pedestrianism.
An Oral History of the Green Mill
The Chicago Reader looks at the history of a Chicago establishment that survived Prohibition, murder attempts backstage, and decades of neglect.
Stop Comparing the NSA to 1984 (and Start Comparing It to Philip K. Dick)
Noah Berlatsky in the Atlantic on the PEN study which found that journalists use just one literary analogy for their stories on surveillance—the wrong one, according to Berlatsky.
Women in Science Wednesday: Florence Barbara Seibert
The Smithsonian continues its series of short bios of women scientists from its archives. This week features Florence Barbara Seibert, who developed the skin test for tuberculosis.
Museums
Washington Group Sees a Cutting-Edge Museum in a Vacant School Building
The Franklin School will be reused as a museum, the home of the Institute for Contemporary Expression.
The National Women’s History Museum Is Swamped in Controversy, Without Even Existing
The National Journal discusses the recent controversy brewing between historians and museum organizers over the role of historians in the creation of the museum. The AHA has published a letter expressing concern, which you can read more about here.
Popular Culture
The Geography of Small Talk, Questions That Are Asked across America upon Meeting a Stranger
The Atlantic explores regional differences in small talk. Opening questions range from “What’s your story?” to “Who your mama?” to “Where do you go to church?”
Elissa Shevinsky in the New York Times Magazine: “For years, all I wanted to do was work and code and make software. That’s why I didn’t care about feminism. I just wanted to build stuff.” A recent controversy over a misogynist app convinced her “that was no longer a viable option. We had to address our culture, because something was really not working.”
The Art of the Dissertation
Three Minute Dissertation Video Contest
The Society for the History of Technology is sponsoring its first ever three-minute-video contest for PhD students and recent graduates whose dissertations touch on the history of technology.
The Illustrated Guide to a PhD
University of Utah professor Matt Might illustrates the intellectual impact of a PhD.
27 Vintage Fashions You Need Upside Your Head Right Now
Vintage pics of historically bad fashion.
Bacon Was the First Thing Ever Eaten on the Moon
Food historians take note: “It turns out that, like any good U.S. organization, NASA has somewhat of a love affair with bacon.”
This post first appeared on AHA Today.
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