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Gotham

The World That Fear Made: Interview with Jason T. Sharples

The World That Fear Made: Interview with Jason T. Sharples

Interviewed by Madeline Lafuse

Today on the blog, Madeline Lafuse speaks with Jason T. Sharples, author of the recently published The World That Fear Made : Slave Revolts and Conspiracy Scares in Early America, about how the fear of slave conspiracies shaped New York City and early America.

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Interview with Douglas J. Flowe on Uncontrollable Blackness: African American Men and Criminality in Jim Crow New York

Interview with Douglas J. Flowe on Uncontrollable Blackness: African American Men and Criminality in Jim Crow New York

Interviewed by Willie Mack

African American men in early 20th-century New York City faced social and economic segregation, and a racist criminal justice system punctuated by violence by the police and white citizens. In Uncontrollable Blackness: African American Men and Criminality in Jim Crow New York, Dr. Douglas Flowe interrogates the effects that segregation, crime, and violence had on black men, and how these men were forced to navigate the “crucible of black criminality” in Jim Crow Era New York City in order to survive.

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Prehistoric and Ahead of Her Time: Sapphasaura at the Museum of Natural History

Prehistoric and Ahead of Her Time: Sapphasaura at the Museum of Natural History

By Rachel Pitkin

In the summer of 1973, members of the newly formed Lesbian Feminist Liberation (LFL) group were engaged in a unique construction project in the Upper West Side backyard of one of its members, Robin Lutsky. A physically onerous labor of love, the project unfolded over ten days of round-the-clock attention, a last-ditch protest effort to gain the attention of one of New York’s most celebrated yet controversial institutions: the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH).

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Prohibition New York City: An Interview with David Rosen

Prohibition New York City: An Interview with David Rosen

Interviewed by David Huyssen

Today on the blog, editor David Huyssen speaks with David Rosen, independent writer and historian, about his new book Prohibition New York City: Speakeasy Queen Texas Guinan, Blind Pigs, Drag Balls and More (Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2020), his third book on transgression in American life, and second focusing on New York City.

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Reconnecting with the Harlem River

Reconnecting with the Harlem River

By Scot McFarlane

Recently, I led the first digital history walk of the Harlem River, with Duane Bailey-Castro and Nathan Kensinger. Using their photos to explore the river’s history, we focused on how the Harlem has been disconnected from its community, and what can be done to reconnect with it. But I also used the experience to clarify the value of river history more generally. If there’s one thing the COVID-19 pandemic has made clear, it’s that the virus has exacerbated existing inequalities in our country.

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Review: Homer Venters’ Life and Death in Rikers Island

Incarceration Harms Health

Reviewed by Ezelle Sanford III

At this moment, the United States confronts multiple crises. COVID-19 has killed more than 200,000 people and infected more than six million, though these numbers are certainly undercounted. The virus’s impact, though indiscriminate, is disproportionately felt in communities of color who are more likely to experience serious illness, hospitalization, and death.

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Myles Cooper and “the Din of War”

Myles Cooper and “the Din of War”

By Christopher F. Minty

Rev. Charles Inglis was distraught. “I cannot express the Distress I felt at hearing of your Embarkation for England, & the Cause of it,” he wrote. It was June 1775 and Myles Cooper, his close friend and colleague, had recently departed Manhattan for Britain. Cooper, one of the city’s most prominent and outspoken loyalists, and had long been targeted by revolutionaries. Just a few months before, he was among five New Yorkers who were warned in a April 25, 1775 letter from “Three Millions” that Parliament’s “Repeated insults and unparalleled oppressions” had reduced colonial Americans “to a state of desperation.”

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Review of Jeffrey Broxmeyer's Electoral Capitalism: The Party System in New York’s Gilded Age

Party Profits: Political Machines as Money-Making Ventures in Gilded Age New York

Reviewed by Atiba Pertilla

The 2020 presidential campaign is coming to a close with controversies swirling over the alleged and established entanglement of the two main candidates, Joe Biden and Donald Trump, in a variety of schemes to use their political position to benefit themselves or their families. At the heart of these concerns lies a conviction that profiting from political connections is a primary driver of Americans’ loss of faith in their elected representatives. Electoral Capitalism, a new book by Jeffrey Broxmeyer, focuses on public graft and political machines in Gilded Age New York and is a timely look at how earlier voters faced similar questions.

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Pushing Back: Interview with Ariella Rotramel

Pushing Back: Interview with Ariella Rotramel

Interviewed by Hongdeng Gao

Today on the blog, Gotham editor, Hongdeng Gao interviews Ariella Rotramel, author of Pushing Back: Women of Color–Led Grassroots Activism in New York City. The book explores women of color’s grassroots leadership in organizations that are not singularly identified with feminism. Centered in New York City, Pushing Back brings an intersectional perspective to communities of color as it addresses injustices tied to domestic work, housing, and environmental policies and practices.

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Review: Thomas J. Shelley's Upper West Side Catholics: Liberal Catholicism in a Conservative Archdiocese: The Church of the Ascension, New York City, 1895-2020

Parish History on New York City's Upper West Side

Reviewed by Susie Pak

Thomas J. Shelley has added to his already substantial oeuvre of New York Catholic history with the publication of Upper West Side Catholics: Liberal Catholicism in a Conservative Archdiocese: The Church of the Ascension, New York City, 1895-2020 (New York: Empire State Editions, 2020).[1] His deep and broad understanding of New York’s Catholic institutions provides the context for his study of the Church of the Ascension, which was founded in 1895 on the Upper West Side. While his history of Ascension starts from its founding, Shelley’s book offers an extended view of the neighborhood during the 1960s and 1970s, a period when demographic transition overlapped with economic decline and produced immense political conflicts that destabilized New York’s institutions, including the Catholic Church.

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