Browse All Records(190 total)
Rebecca Grant: Inside the Abortion Underground
Rebecca Grant discusses her book, Access: Inside the Abortion Underground and the Sixty-Year Battle for Reproductive Rights. Grant traces the reproductive freedom movement from feminist organizing before Roe through the seismic impact of Dobbs. The stories in Access span four continents, tracing strategies across generations and borders. Working above ground, underground, and in legal gray areas, these activists helped people travel across state lines for care, established telehealth practices,…
Tyler Leeds: 1619 Project and Fox News Panic
Tyler Leeds discusses his article, “The 1619 Project Moral Panic: The Role of Cable News.” Over a two year period, Fox News-led a transformation of the New York Times' 1619 Project. By analyzing an original archive of 567 news segments, Leeds examines how a publication with anti-racist ambitions was transformed into plot threatening schoolchildren. Tyler Leeds, assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the University of Delaware.
Michael E Brooks: History of Hate in Ohio
Michael E. Brooks discusses his co-authored book, A History of Hate in Ohio: Then and Now. Ohio’s great history of abolitionism is widely known, but there is also a long history of white supremacist activity. Brooks analyzes the historical origins of white supremacy in Ohio and the emergence of the earliest hate groups, covering the colonial period into the 1970s. Michael E. Brooks is professor of teaching at Bowling Green State University
Heather Ann Thompson talks her new book, Fear and Fury: The Reagan Eighties, the Bernie Goetz Shootings, and the Rebirth of White Rage. In it she explores a pivotal moment in American history when new conservative media landscape is emerging, the Reagan Revolution is recoding racism, and the social fabric of the New deal is unraveling, all which helps contextualize a vigilante shooting on a NYC subway train on Dec 22 1984. Heather Ann Thompson is a historian at the University of Michigan and…
Ahilan Arulanantham: Immigration Law and Racist Precedent
Ahilan Arulanantham discusses his article, "Reversing Racist Precedent." In the article he examines how racist precedent remains a key feature of our legal system and how racism sits at the very center of US immigration law. Immigration law is originally tainted by two cases at the heart of the Chinese Exclusion Act. Courts could create a new exception in stare decisis doctrine: cases would be denied precedential force if they were motivated by racial animus. How these changes would…
Dorothy A. Brown: A Reparations Roadmap
Dorothy A. Brown discusses her book, Getting to Reparations: How Building A Different America Requires a Reckoning With Our Past, in it she demonstrates a clear precedent for paying reparations. She cites other times in American history reparations were paid - whether it was Italian immigrants, interned Japanese Americans, or slave owners in Washington DC. Professor Brown ends by offering a compelling and detailed legal and political strategy that could realistically achieve this…
Matthew Boedy: Seven Mountains Mandate and Turning Point USA
Matthew Boedy is a leading expert on the right-wing political activities of Turning Point USA and its founder Charlie Kirk. He discusses his book, The Seven Mountains Mandate: Exposing the Dangerous Plan to Christianize America and Destroy Democracy, in which he details the development of the Christian Nationalist idea of the Seven Mountains and how that became the leading ideology of Turning Point USA. Matthew Boedy is assistant professor in the Department of English at the University of…
Daniel Rachel: Rock 'n' Roll and the Swastika
Daniel Rachel, author and musician, talks about his book, This Ain't Rock'n'Roll: Pop Music, The Swastika, and the Third Reich. What do John Lennon, the Animals, the Rolling Stones, the Clash, Lady Gaga, Blondie, & Pink Floyd have in common? They all flirted with the imagery and theater of the Third Reich. From Keith Moon and Vivian Stanshall running around London in Nazi uniforms to Siouxsie Sioux and Sid Vicious brandishing swastikas in the pomp of punk, generations of…
Stephen Kenny: Slave Hospitals
Professor Stephen Kenny discusses his article, “A Dictate of Both Interest and Mercy”: Slave Hospitals in the Antebellum South.” Beginning on the shores of West Africa, White doctors began to systematize racialized medicine in the service of slavery. Establishing institutions of idealized models of slave care, the story of slave hospitals became a self-serving lie of enslaver benevolence and racial difference. Plantation hospitals were rooms or shacks, while urban spaces resembled prisons. The…
Gabriel Schwartz: Evictions and Health Risks
Gabriel L. Schwartz discusses his work on “Eviction as a Community Health Exposure.” and “Moving due to unaffordable housing and disrupted social safety net access among children.” He talks about how moving and evictions lead to sometimes catastrophic health outcomes based on losing access to social safety net programs. Evictions upend people’s lives and the effect on children is great. Gabriel L. Schwartz, Assistant Professor Health Management & Policy, Drexel FIRST Program at Drexel…
