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History course uncovers 'archival silences' of enslaved people | Emory University


The Emory College of Arts and Sciences students who met every Tuesday night in Maria Montalvo’s U.S. history seminar this spring took on a challenge that can be a struggle for experienced historians.
In the class titled “Slavery and the Archive,” they tackled how to read into archival silences, connect small threads from rare or unconsidered primary sources and contextualize their findings, all to offer new stories and perspectives that include one from an enslaved woman from Emory’s own history.
Adding to the challenge was the need to conduct all of their research, and coursework, online.
“Learning this way can make you a more empathetic and critical thinker. It reinforces a simple but challenging notion: that your perception is not the only one,” Montalvo says. ....

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Richard Wright's Novel About Racist Police Violence Was Rejected in 1941; It Has Just Been Published


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Nearly 80 years ago, Richard Wright became one of the most famous Black writers in the United States with the publication of “Native Son,” a novel whose searing critique of systemic racism made it a best-seller and inspired a generation of Black writers. In 1941, Wright wrote a new novel titled “The Man Who Lived Underground,” but publishers refused to release it, in part because the book was filled with graphic descriptions of police brutality by white officers against a Black man. His manuscript was largely forgotten until his daughter Julia Wright unearthed it at the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Yale University. “The Man Who Lived Underground” was not published in the 1940s because white publishers did not want to highlight “white supremacist police violence upon a Black man because it was too close to home,” says Julia Wright. “It’s a bit like lifting the stone and n ....

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'The Field Bazaar' at 125 Years—Sherlock Holmes and the Importance of Trifles


‘The Field Bazaar’ at 125 Years Sherlock Holmes and the Importance of Trifles
The mystery of the story and the character
In 1886, a struggling 27-year-old physician named Arthur Conan Doyle made a fateful decision that was intended simply to pay the bills, but that would end up enriching the world. He published a novella featuring an eccentric consulting detective by the name of Sherlock Holmes. With “A Study in Scarlet” appearing in Beeton’s Christmas Annual in 1887, the stage was set for what would prove one of the greatest archetypical creations in the history of literature.
And yet, it was a creation Doyle would destroy, only to realize later that he had started something too powerful for him to end. And one of the initial white flags that Doyle was forced to wave to appease a disapproving public was a trifle in the form of a charming exchange between Holmes and his friend and colleague, Dr. Watson, titled “The Field Bazaar,” published in 1896, 125 ....

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