We have a couple of announcements to make with this week’s links round-up. We’re proud to have two new contributing editors joining our team: Disha Karnad Jani and Eric Brandom. Full bios for Disha and Eric are available on our Masthead, along with information about the rest of our editorial team.
Please also take a look at the October issue of the Journal of the History of Ideas, which is available to all via Project Muse.
Erin:
Zeynep Tufekci “Mark Zuckerberg is in Denial” (NY Times)
Rebecca Solnit, Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities (Haymarket Books)
Rhon Manigault-Bryant, “An Open Letter to White Liberal Feminists,” (AAIHS)
Max Nelson, “The Intrusion Artist” (Public Books)
New York Cinephiles: A great series of the Bresson’s films just wrapped up at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.  The swanky new Metrograph has its own series of Bressons on from Nov.23 to Dec. 1. At Anthology Film Archives, an unrelated series of the films of Borges and Casares is on through Nov. 22.
I was disappointed not to attend “What’s Next? Exploring New Ways to Use Digital Early American Manuscripts,” an un-conference sponsored by the Colonial North America at Harvard Library Project.  Details here, or follow the conversation on Twitter, #WhatsNextHarvard.
Emily:
Max Weber, “Politics As a Vocation” (1919) is apposite reading in our times. So is the 1886 parliamentary debate over Gladstone’s first Irish Home Rule bill, which I taught this week.
James McDougall, No, this isn’t the 1930s—but yes, this is fascism (The Conversation)
Wendy Lesser, The Battles over Julia Ward Howe (NYRB)
Allison Miller, Contrary to Popular Belief: Recovering the Grassroots History of American Atheism (Perspectives)
Samuel Moyn, Freud’s Discontents (The Nation)
Andrea Rottmann, Gay Berlin? No, Queer Baden-Württemberg (Notches)
And not least, the BBC’s TV adaptation of Zadie Smith’s NW.
Daniel:
Martin Filler, “Building Dreams and Nightmares” (NYRB)
Richard Florida, “It’s Still about Class and Geography” (CitLab)
Judith Stein, “A Losing Coalition” (Jacobin)
Adolph Reed, “Splendors and Miseries of the Anti-Racist Left” (nonsite.org)
Michael J. Lewis, “The Genius of Winding Paths” (First Things)
Carolyn:
Simone Lässig, “The History of Knowledge and the Expansion of the Historical Research Agenda” (Bulletin of the GHI)
Thorsten Benner, “Germany Can Protect the Liberal Order: Damage After Donald Trump’s Election” (Foreign Affairs)
James Cortada, “Were Farmers America’s First High Tech Information Workers?” (OUP Blog)
Finally, this week I have been enjoying some time with Tony Judt’s take on what has gone wrong with social democracy in the past thirty-six years in Ill Fares the Land, which I would recommend to anyone else still reeling from last week’s election.
Disha:
Toni Morrison, “Mourning for Whiteness” (New Yorker)
Geoff Manaugh, “Why Catholics Built Secret Astronomical Features into Churches to Help Save Souls” (Atlas Obscura)
Eric:
James Schmidt, “Images of the Enlightenment: The Lamp and the Sun” (Persistent Enlightenment)
Robyn Spencer, “‘Revolt at the Source’: Cedric Robinson’s Archive of Resistance” (AAIHS)
Sarah Phillips Castell, “Caribbean LIterature, Jewishness, and Global Holocaust Memory” (AAIHS)
John Lancaster, “Can We Escape from Time?” (NYRB)
Kyle Walker, “9 Great Novels about Anthropologists” (Public Books)
Joshua Cohen, “After Trump” (Boston Review)