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  • Militarism, Masculinty and Manhood – From The War on Terror to Trump and Hegseth

    Militarism, Masculinty and Manhood – From The War on Terror to Trump and Hegseth

    June 12, 2026
    Articles

    Writing a book like God Forgives, Brothers Don’t during the long twilight of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, journalist Jasper Craven discovered that the pipeline feeding young men into America’s fighting forces wasn’t just a response to war—it was a carefully engineered system. What he found was a sprawling network of military schools, ROTC programs, and a cultural pedagogy that had spent centuries convincing American boys that the path to manhood ran straight through the barracks. The result is a searing investigation into how the US military has become the nation’s primary engine of masculinity, and how that engine is…

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  • The New World Disorder: War, Genocide, and the Failure of the 1990s Peace

    The New World Disorder: War, Genocide, and the Failure of the 1990s Peace

    June 12, 2026
    Military History, Modern History, Political History

    In 1991, George H.W. Bush promised a “new world order” — a world in which law and cooperation would replace force and rivalry. Within three years, 800,000 people had been murdered in Rwanda in a hundred days while the international community watched. The 1990s were not a liberal peace. They were a laboratory for the failures that would define the century to come.

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  • The Personal and the Political: Women’s Liberation and the Remaking of Private Life

    The Personal and the Political: Women’s Liberation and the Remaking of Private Life

    June 12, 2026
    American History, Modern History, Social & Cultural History

    When Betty Friedan named “the problem that has no name” in 1963, she gave language to a dissatisfaction that millions of women had been living without the words to describe. What followed — the women’s liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s — was the most far-reaching cultural revolution of the postwar era. It was also an unfinished one.

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  • The Wall and What Came After: The End of the Cold War and the World It Made

    The Wall and What Came After: The End of the Cold War and the World It Made

    June 12, 2026
    European History, Modern History, Political History

    The fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989 was, in a sense, a bureaucratic accident. But the accident was only possible because the system behind the wall had already ceased to function. This is the story of how the Cold War ended — and why the world it made was so different from what anyone expected.

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  • The Great Reversal: Reagan, Thatcher, and the Dismantling of the Postwar Settlement

    The Great Reversal: Reagan, Thatcher, and the Dismantling of the Postwar Settlement

    June 11, 2026
    American History, Modern History, Political History

    In August 1981, three days after eleven thousand members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organisation walked off the job in defiance of a federal law prohibiting strikes by government employees, President Ronald Reagan fired all of them, banned them from federal employment for life, and ordered the Federal Aviation Administration to begin immediately training replacements. The action was not unprecedented — there was legal authority for it — but no president had previously used that authority in this way against a union of middle-class professionals who had, moreover, endorsed Reagan in the 1980 election. The PATCO strike was broken…

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  • The Year the World Cracked: 1968 and the Limits of the Postwar Settlement

    The Year the World Cracked: 1968 and the Limits of the Postwar Settlement

    June 11, 2026
    American History, Modern History, Social & Cultural History

    In the spring of 1968, something happened that had not happened before and has not happened since: a set of political explosions occurred simultaneously in countries that had almost nothing in common — in their economies, their political systems, their social structures, their histories — but that nonetheless felt, to those participating in them and to those watching from outside, as if they were expressions of a single underlying rupture. Students in Paris built barricades in the Latin Quarter and triggered a general strike that briefly seemed capable of ending the Fifth Republic. Students in Prague celebrated a Communist Party…

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  • The Emperor at the Microphone: Ethiopia, Italy, and the Death of Collective Security

    The Emperor at the Microphone: Ethiopia, Italy, and the Death of Collective Security

    June 11, 2026
    African History, Military History, Modern History

    On 30 June 1936, a small, erect man in a black cloak and a white robe walked to the podium of the League of Nations assembly hall in Geneva and waited for the jeering Italian journalists in the press gallery to be removed before he began to speak. Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia — King of Kings, Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah — had travelled to Geneva to make a personal appeal to the assembled representatives of world civilisation, eight months after Italian forces under Mussolini’s orders had invaded his country, six weeks after Italian troops had…

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  • The Island and the Myth: Cuba, the Revolution, and the Cold War Imagination

    The Island and the Myth: Cuba, the Revolution, and the Cold War Imagination

    June 10, 2026
    Cold War, Latin American History, Modern History

    On New Year’s Day 1959, Fulgencio Batista, the dictator who had ruled Cuba for most of the previous twenty-five years, fled the country in the early hours of the morning, boarding a plane for the Dominican Republic as his regime collapsed around him. The news reached the guerrilla column led by Ernesto Guevara, which had spent the previous weeks fighting its way toward Havana, and the fighters who heard it greeted it with disbelief and then elation.

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  • Room at the Top: The Angry Young Men and the Class War in British Culture

    Room at the Top: The Angry Young Men and the Class War in British Culture

    June 10, 2026
    European History, Modern History, Social & Cultural History

    On the evening of 8 May 1956, the Royal Court Theatre in Sloane Square, London, staged the premiere of a new play by a twenty-six-year-old actor and writer from Fulham named John Osborne. The audience that night included a mixture of established theatre critics and younger spectators who had been drawn in by word of mouth and a sense — difficult to define precisely but real — that something was about to happen.

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  • The City That Fell: Nanjing 1937 and the Atrocity the World Watched

    The City That Fell: Nanjing 1937 and the Atrocity the World Watched

    June 10, 2026
    Asian History, Military History, Modern History

    On the morning of 13 December 1937, Japanese troops entered the Chinese city of Nanjing. The city had been the capital of the Nationalist government, which had fled westward ten days earlier, leaving behind a population of perhaps half a million civilians and a garrison of soldiers who had largely melted away into the city’s streets, stripped of their uniforms.

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