Conspiracy Theories in American History and the 2024 Presidential Election

Anna Maggi In the wake of the 2024 Presidential election, one thing surprised me more than anything else: the immediate conspiracy-mongering of the left. Within hours of Vice President Harris’s concession speech, Democrats were parroting conspiracy theories initially peddled by Donald Trump and his followers after the 2020 election. Across Tiktok and X, posts with over 10 million viewers spread conspiracy theories about the election … Continue reading Conspiracy Theories in American History and the 2024 Presidential Election

Vampyrus Serviensis: The First Vampire Craze in the Habsburg Monarchy

Tyler Isgar “Between 1730 and 1735,” wrote Voltaire in his Dictionnaire Philosophique, “nothing was spoken about more than vampires — how they were hunted down, their hearts torn out, and their bodies burnt. They were like the martyrs of old; the more of them that they burnt, the more of them they found.” The popular culture craze for vampires from the turn of the twenty-first … Continue reading Vampyrus Serviensis: The First Vampire Craze in the Habsburg Monarchy

An Open Letter To National Archives Museum From A Journalist

Archit Mehta In Fall 2023, Archit authored “Decoding Systemic Racism in the Artifact ‘Slaves Build Capital and White House’ at the National Archives Museum” for the Critical Discourse Analysis class at Georgetown University’s MA Communication, Culture and Technology. Since then he has presented this work at the 2024 annual conference of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH – the founders of … Continue reading An Open Letter To National Archives Museum From A Journalist

Review of Do Not Say We Have Nothing

Jenna Marcus Madeleine Thien’s Do Not Say We Have Nothing is a stunning work of historical fiction that brings to life twentieth century China in heartfelt, thought-provoking, and beautifully devastating ways. Spanning seven decades, the story traces three generations of two interconnected families amidst the backdrop of the Chinese Civil War, Mao’s Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution, the Tiananmen Square protests, and modern-day China and Hong … Continue reading Review of Do Not Say We Have Nothing

The Witch of Northampton: On ancestry research and family lineage

Maddie Densmore My interest in genealogy began well before I became a historian. In fact, it began well before I fully understood what it even was. As a child, I found myself watching a documentary show with my mom from time to time — “Who Do You Think You Are.” Adapted from a British version of the same name, it follows celebrities as they team up … Continue reading The Witch of Northampton: On ancestry research and family lineage

The Past, in the Present: The Conundrum of Historical Memory

Megan Huang 2024 marks the bicentennial of the return of Gilbert du Motier, the Marquis de Lafayette, to the United States, almost fifty years after he first sailed for North America to aid the American Revolution. Lafayette had dreamed of coming back to the United States for years, but having been deeply enmeshed in the considerable turmoil and change of his home country of France, … Continue reading The Past, in the Present: The Conundrum of Historical Memory

The Voodoo Queen Marie Laveau: A Historical Figure Caught Between Myth and Reality 

Megan Emery For those who haven’t watched American Horror Story season three, I highly recommend firing up your Hulu subscription. For those who’ve watched it, this article addresses one of the season’s most beloved and feared protagonists—the Voodoo Queen, Marie Laveau. American Horror Story frequently takes artistic liberty with real historical figures. Season three includes Madame Delphine LaLaurie, a New Orleans socialite who tortured her … Continue reading The Voodoo Queen Marie Laveau: A Historical Figure Caught Between Myth and Reality 

Review of Genocide in Libya: Shar, a Hidden Colonial History

Vishnu Raghavan Note: This article contains descriptions of violence, torture, genocide, and death. After World War II, Italians associated with Mussolini and the dictatorship did not undergo criminal trials as far-reaching, prominent, or punishing as those faced by the Nazis at Nuremberg. Additionally, Italian anti-Jewish legislation emerged much later than similar laws in Nazi Germany, with the passage of the Italian Racial Laws in 1938. As a result, … Continue reading Review of Genocide in Libya: Shar, a Hidden Colonial History

Graduate Students Reflect on Their Summer Research

From DC to Krakow, Georgetown history graduate students spent their summers conducting research across the globe. We sat down with Megan Huang (second-year MA), Maddie Densmore (second-year MA), and Megan Emery (second-year PhD) to discuss their experiences and tips and demystify the historical research process.  Tell us about your summer research! What is your research topic and where did you go? Megan Huang: I interned … Continue reading Graduate Students Reflect on Their Summer Research

When We All Burn: Understanding the “Long 2010s” with “Long 1960s” U.S. in the World Historiography

Philip LaRue It was the “mass protest decade”—not the “long 1960s,” but the “long 2010s,” beginning with 2008’s global financial crisis. Journalist Vincent Bevins traveled the globe in search of lessons from the past decade’s global street revolt in 2023’s If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution. Bevins argues that “by taking a truly global approach, we can see which factors … Continue reading When We All Burn: Understanding the “Long 2010s” with “Long 1960s” U.S. in the World Historiography