Here is the Harvard historian‘s recent interview with NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly: KELLY: We’re glad to have you with us. I want to go back and try to figure out how this started that Americans became such champion consumers. And […]
Archives for November 2021
How members of Congress used violence to silence their political adversaries
Joan E. Greve of The Guardian interviews Yale historian Joanne Freeman about violence in Congress. If any of my U.S. history survey students are reading this post, this is what we talked about in class yesterday. Here is a taste […]
Yet another student sues Liberty University for failing to investigate her rape
Last summer twelve former students and employees of Liberty University sued the school for “creating a campus environment where sexual assaults and rapes are forseeably more likely to occur than they would in the absence of Liberty policies.” Today we […]
Jill Lepore on the state of “society”
Here is a taste of the Harvard historian’s recent piece at The Guardian: In March 2020, Boris Johnson, pale and exhausted, self-isolating in his flat on Downing Street, released a video of himself – that he had taken himself – […]
Tweet of the Day
Andrew Wehrman nails it:
It’s “Giving Tuesday”! Why not consider joining Current‘s community of patrons?
In a recent survey of Current patrons we learned that some folks support the site in the way they would buy a subscription to a magazine or newspaper. Indeed, as a so-called “little magazine,” Current is a small business. (We […]
Current Associate Editor Felicia Wu Song publishes Restless Devices: Recovering Personhood, Presence and Place in the Digital Age
Congratulations to Felicia Wu Song, Professor of Sociology at Westmont College and Associate Editor of Current on the publication of Restless Devices: Recovering Personhood, Presence and Place in the Digital Age (InterVarsity Press). Here is the IVP Press: We’re being […]
Sex, Shame, and the Gift of Large Heads
Does “sex positivity” offer hope to creatures like us?
Lauren Boebert shows us what “Christian” politics looks like these days
Sadly, Lauren Boebert was elected to the Congress with the help of evangelical Christians. She loves God: She hates her neighbor: In case you haven’t heard, “Let’s Go Brandon” is code for “F— You, Joe Biden.”: And don’t forget this:
Pro-life feminism
Here is Tish Harrison Warren at The New York Times: We need to broaden the tent of feminism. If, in order to be a feminist, one cannot simply be against the oppression of women but also must affirm abortion or […]
The Author’s Corner with William Kiser
William Kiser is Associate Professor of History at Texas A&M University. This interview is based on his new book, Illusions of Empire: The Civil War and Reconstruction in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021). JF: What led you […]
Evangelical roundup for November 29, 2021
What is happening in Evangelical land? The old Trump court evangelicals are divided over vaccine mandates for soldiers. It looks like “Elite Evangelicalism” is now “Big Evangelicalism”: Chik-fil-A and the National Prayer Breakfast. Agreed: Kristin responds to her critics: And […]
Why It Took a Pro-Choice Politician to Remind Pro-Lifers of “Human Dignity and Value”
The progressive pro-life voices of the early 1970s echo in surprising ways
Sunday night odds and ends
A few things online that caught my attention this week: A book banned in China and Texas. Thomas Jefferson and women The New Yorker interviews Allen Guelzo on Robert E. Lee AOC and “The Squad” vs. James Madison The benefits […]
What do we know about the Omicron variant?
“Almost nothing.” But it still warrants attention. Here is Katherine Wu at The Atlantic: Scientists around the world are still scrambling to gather intel on three essential metrics: how quickly the variant spreads; if it’s capable of causing more serious […]
How climate change is threatening the National Museum of American History
Some of the strongest critics of climate change policy are also some of the people most concerned about how our kids learn American history. Here is Chrisopher Flavelle at The New York Times: Nearly two million irreplaceable artifacts that tell […]
What is popular this week at Current?
Here are the most popular features of the week at Current: Ellen Tucker, Good Teachers Don’t Preach Critical Race Theory Alan Jortner, I Can’t Believe McAuliffe’s Fundraising Emails Didn’t Win the Election Calvin Cummings, No Adults in the Room Daniel G. […]
The Author’s Corner with John Bodnar
John Bodnar is Emeritus Professor of History at Indiana University Bloomington. This interview is based on his new book, Divided by Terror: American Patriotism after 9/11 (The University of North Carolina Press, 2021). JF: What led you to write Divided […]
Commonplace Book #201
I argue that the rhetoric of prophetic indictment is best understood as a sort of moral chemotherapy, a reaction to a potentially life-threatening distortion in ordinary, day-to-day moral discussion. Deliberative discourse is, in fact, that ordinary form of moral discussion. […]
What if Bruce Springsteen did a song about public transportation?
“Baby We Can Take the 1” Learn more about this video here.