What’s on my Fall to Winter Playlist: A personal exploration of the music history behind my favorite songs for the changing season

Sareena Dubey As the days become shorter and trees shed their leaves, I find warmth in wool and comfort in familiar melodies. During this shift, my voracious exploration of obscure musical genres diminishes as a stronger desire to reconnect with nostalgic tunes takes over. This phenomenon culminates in a seasonal tradition I deem the changing of the playlists where songs from my past hold my … Continue reading What’s on my Fall to Winter Playlist: A personal exploration of the music history behind my favorite songs for the changing season

The Politics of Victory Gardens

Rosie Click During World War II, families in the US planted more than 4.8 million victory gardens to supplement the domestic food supply. The US government encouraged the victory garden program as a way for Americans on the homefront to support the troops by freeing up other food resources to be sent overseas. USDA victory garden promotional documents show that the government considered the various … Continue reading The Politics of Victory Gardens

I’ll Get you my Pretty!: Witches as the Other in Early Modern Europe

Mallory Page “I’ll get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too!” – The Wicked Witch of the West  As a child, I was terrified of the Wicked Witch of the West, hiding under blankets when the witch would pop up and threaten Dorothy and the Munchkins.  If I were to ask you to draw a witch, you would most likely draw an old woman … Continue reading I’ll Get you my Pretty!: Witches as the Other in Early Modern Europe

Trick-or-Treat Through Time: The Ancient Celtic Origins of Halloween

Jenna Marcus Halloween, with its enchanting blend of spooky and playful, is widely adored by millions across the globe. Yet beneath the familiar festivities lies a rich history that sheds light on the worldviews of our ancient predecessors and religious and political influences on cultural evolution. The origins of Halloween can be traced back thousands of years to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain, which … Continue reading Trick-or-Treat Through Time: The Ancient Celtic Origins of Halloween

Corrupted National Identities – Prewar Japanese and Soviet Assimilationist Policies 

 Jason Roeder What ought to distinguish a nation-state from an empire is the people residing in the former’s ability to shape their own futures freely. Should the two be considered opposites? To answer this question, one must observe how empires utilize the vernacular of self-determination as a cover to amalgamate land for the metropole’s “long-term, all-union concerns.”  Prior to the Second World War, Japan and … Continue reading Corrupted National Identities – Prewar Japanese and Soviet Assimilationist Policies 

Many Ways to be Deaf: Situating Deafness in Pre-Modern Chinese History

Oscar Zhenhao Yu Disability has been a burgeoning topic for historians in different fields. Considering disability in Chinese history, few works focus on disability, not to mention exploring the ontology of disability in its pre-modern context. This essay therefore situates disability, and deafness in particular, within pre-modern Chinese history (1644-1912). How did the Chinese perceive deafness before the twentieth century? What sources would be useful … Continue reading Many Ways to be Deaf: Situating Deafness in Pre-Modern Chinese History

Assassin’s Creed: History Porn or Digital Heritage?

Rae Neville This Thursday, the popular video game studio Ubisoft will release the latest installment in the Assassin’s Creed franchise: Assassin’s Creed Mirage. Set in Baghdad in the year 861, the game will feature a world rich with art, culture, and knowledge. Players will follow the story of Basim, a “cunning street thief with nightmarish visions seeking answers and justice,” as they explore and cut … Continue reading Assassin’s Creed: History Porn or Digital Heritage?

Western Medicine’s Internuncio to Japan

Alexander von Kumberg In 1972 sculptor Tadao Koga unveiled his monument to the introduction of Western medicine to Japan in Ōita, a city on the northeastern coastline of Kyushu, Japan. The bronze statue depicts a Japanese patient preparing for his surgery, flanked by a surgeon and his assistant. The surgeon, dressed in Nanban clothes, is Luis de Almeida. But who is this giant of old, … Continue reading Western Medicine’s Internuncio to Japan

The Push to “Improve” Slavery in the British Caribbean

Eamonn Bellin The abolition of the British slave trade in 1807 transformed colonial slavery into a burning issue in British politics. If the slave trade was unjust, how could slavery be sustained? Some thought the enslaved should be emancipated and resettled throughout the Caribbean. However, most leaders of the anti-slave trade campaign balked at immediate emancipation. “It would be…the grossest violation and the merest mockery … Continue reading The Push to “Improve” Slavery in the British Caribbean

The Effect of Australian New Wave Cinema on the “Anzac Legend” of WWI

Josh Downes April 25 is Anzac Day in Australia and New Zealand. This national day is a commemoration in both countries of all those who have served and died in military operations. More specifically, this year marks the 108th anniversary of Australian and New Zealand troops landing on the shores of Gallipoli (in what is now Türkiye) during the First World War. The sacrifice of … Continue reading The Effect of Australian New Wave Cinema on the “Anzac Legend” of WWI