Roundtable

The Rest Is History

Hobo college, the women of Homer, and lots of lox.

By Jaime Fuller

Friday, May 17, 2019

Nova lox, bagel, and cream cheese from Kutsher’s, 1977. Photograph by John Margolies. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, John Margolies Roadside America photograph archive.

• Reminder: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony are not the only women from New York who fought for voting rights. (New York Times)

• “We’re always told that the virtue of the popular history book is that it’s ‘a good story’—that it has narrative value academic history lacks. I disagree with the idea, having read many academic history books that were full of good stories, as well as popular histories that manage to combine critical analysis and storytelling.” (Slate)

• The art that reveals the lives of Chinese empresses: “If you watch the royal wedding in England, it’s a public affair, a spectacle. Back then, imperial women were probably completely invisible to the general public.” (Artsy)

• Play a new version of the Oregon Trail video game, When Rivers Were Trails. (Indian Country Today)

• The latest volley in the Shakespeare authorship debate: Was the Bard a woman? (The Atlantic)

• “Lost Weegee Crime Photos Revealed!” (New York)

• Why the word lox is important. (Nautilus)

• Where did Finnish come from? (Gizmodo)

• Go to hobo college, get more labor knowledge. (JSTOR Daily)

• Welcome back, women of Homer. (Public Books)

• That time Hemingway filed a $187,000 expense claim. (CJR)

• On Notre Dame and deciding which history to preserve. (NewYorker.com)

• This week in obituaries: Doris Day, I.M. PeiDax Cowart, Barbara Marx Hubbard, Peggy Lipton, W.L. Webb, Machiko Kyo, and Unita Blackwell.