Founded and edited by Lewis H. Lapham, Lapham’s Quarterly is a New York-based journal of history that seeks to revitalize both our excitement and familiarity with the past. History, as Mark Twain supposedly said, may not repeat itself—but it does rhyme.

Blog Entries by Lapham's Quarterly

Determining a "Just War" in 2009, 1906, and 412 AD

Posted December 14, 2009 | 10:57 AM (EST)


For more on war and peace prizes, please visit our Déjà Vu blog at www.laphamsquarterly.org.

2009: From President Obama’s speech accepting the Nobel Peace Prize.

War, in one form or another, appeared with the first man. At the dawn of history, its morality was not questioned; it...
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1895: When Smoke was a "Healthy Disinfectant" for Cities

1 Comments | Posted December 11, 2009 | 02:09 PM (EST)


For more on climate change, please visit our Déjà Vu blog at www.laphamsquarterly.org

2009: The world's climate and energy experts are gathered this week in Copenhagen to debate the righteousness of an international deal that would cap carbon dioxide emissions. The idea is to make carbon-intensive industrial processes...

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A Call to Arms (and Legs) in the Civil War and in the Iraq War

Posted December 4, 2009 | 03:05 PM (EST)


Kate Daloz received an MFA from Columbia where she also taught undergraduate composition. Her most recent essay, "The Dowser Dilemma," was published in the Spring 2009 issue of The American Scholar. For more on medicine and war, please visit www.laphamsquarterly.org.

War drives innovation, in medicine as in weaponry....

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When Historical Partnerships End Before the Work Is Finished

Posted December 2, 2009 | 11:25 AM (EST)


2009: Born on the same day near the same hour on June 13, 1935, conceptual artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude never flew in a plane together. For two people seemingly fused together and yet fiercely independent, one of the great misconceptions about their art was that the artist was solely Christo....

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The Darkest Days: Black Friday, Saturday, Sunday, And The Rest

3 Comments | Posted November 27, 2009 | 06:21 PM (EST)


Despite the popularity of Black Friday among retailers and the local news media, every day of the week has at some point or another been described as "black." In fact, an entire week can be cobbled together out of the darkness. For more dark days, visit www.laphamsquarterly.org. Our Deja...

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Of Water and Winged Men: Living on the Moon in 2009 and 1835

4 Comments | Posted November 23, 2009 | 02:16 PM (EST)


For more winged moon-men and other historical misfits, please visit www.laphamsquarterly.org.

2009: Last month, NASA scientists crashed a bus-sized satellite into the surface of the moon. On November 13th, they announced that they had found water. As the New York Times reported, "The confirmation of scientists' suspicions is...

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Call-Girls and Courtesans: Getting An Education in 2009 and 1570

1 Comments | Posted November 18, 2009 | 09:04 PM (EST)


For more on historical whores, please visit www.laphamsquarterly.org.

2009: Bestselling author and call-girl Belle du Jour, whose web diary about the fourteen months she lived as a high class prostitute was collected into popular book and a television show, revealed in this Sunday's Guardian that she is Dr....

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1784: When Universal Health Care Was as Simple as Donating Your Body to Science

7 Comments | Posted November 15, 2009 | 10:24 PM (EST)


Colin Dickey is the author of Cranioklepty: Grave Robbing and the Search for Genius and the co-editor (with Nicole Antebi and Robby Herbst) of Failure! Experiments in Aesthetic and Social Practices. He lives in Los Angeles. For more from Lapham's Quarterly, please visit www.laphamsquarterly.org.

One of the earliest...

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1989: A Slip of the Tongue on the Night the Berlin Wall Fell

Posted November 12, 2009 | 11:21 AM (EST)


Peter Foges worked for the BBC in London for fifteen years as a correspondent, anchor, producer, and director, before moving to the U.S. to serve as BBC-TV's Bureau Chief. He later became Director of News and Public Affairs Programming for WNET/Thirteen in New York City. For more from Lapham's Quarterly,...

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Perfecting the Paranoid Style in 500 BC and 2009

5 Comments | Posted November 6, 2009 | 06:28 PM (EST)


Peter Struck is an associate professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Birth of the Symbol: Ancient Readers at the Limits of their Texts. Professor Stuck is a member of the Lapham's Quarterly editorial board.

From Buckley to Beck

Back...

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"Not Caused By The Game": the Costs of Taking a Tackle in 1896 and 2009

Posted October 30, 2009 | 02:16 PM (EST)


"Dementia Risk Seen in Players in N.F.L. Study," The New York Times, Sept. 30, 2009:


A study commissioned by the National Football League reports that Alzheimer's disease or similar memory-related diseases appear to have been diagnosed in the league's former players vastly more often than in...

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Why They Hate Them

Posted December 3, 2008 | 12:33 PM (EST)


To distance itself from last week's terror attacks, Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based organization now held responsible for the violence, issued a missive from "Mujahideen Hyderabad Deccan," a fake terror organization. As The Hindu, India's most circulated periodical, reports, Indian intelligence was not fooled.

• "Terror Mail Analysis Supports Claim of...

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David Foster Wallace, R.I.P.

Posted September 22, 2008 | 01:40 PM (EST)


N.B.: This post was compiled by Lapham's Quarterly intern Andrew Carlson, a former student of Wallace's at Pomona College.

On Friday, September 12, writer David Foster Wallace committed suicide, succumbing to a decades-long struggle with depression. Appraisals of his literary career flourish, many of them including lurid analyses of his...

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Ancient Histories

Posted August 26, 2008 | 06:20 PM (EST)


Ethnically distinct from their Georgian neighbors, South Ossetians were separated from what became North Ossetia (and Russia) in the 13th century, when Mongol invaders pushed them southward into the Caucasus.


A break with Georgia, reports
The New York Times, would potentially let South Ossetians reunite with...

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"Sing to Me of The Man..."

Posted August 18, 2008 | 01:03 PM (EST)


With the swimming competition of the Beijing Olympics completed, the game of finding an athlete comparable to 14-time gold medalist (8 in Beijing) Michael Phelps can begin. Spitz...Armstrong...Secretariat -- all comers (and all species) are welcome.

Phelps's hometown paper, the Baltimore Sun, celebrated its local hero after he completed...

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Give Me A Lever Long Enough...

Posted July 14, 2008 | 05:46 PM (EST)


One of Wall Street's classic modernist designs, the leveraged buy-out (LBO) allows for small, private firms to purchase and take control of enormous corporations, generally with non-existent money (i.e., with billions in incurred debt). Ideally, the firm conducting the LBO uses its newly-won control to improve the performance of the...

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Semiquaver Rest

Posted June 27, 2008 | 12:39 PM (EST)


With an estimated 1.2 million Americans living with HIV, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) reports that the U.S. is home to "one of the largest HIV epidemics in the world." Racial and ethnic minorities represent especially risk-prone populations. In 2005, African Americans accounted for 48% of new...

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Banana Republic

Posted June 19, 2008 | 03:08 PM (EST)


Through two centuries of history guided by the Monroe Doctrine (1823), the Roosevelt Corollary (1905), and the Washington Conventions (1907), no Latin American nation has dangled at the end of the U.S. State Department's marionette strings more wretchedly than Nicaragua. From William Walker's crusading filibuster in the 1850s to the...

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Darkening Continent?

Posted June 13, 2008 | 04:38 PM (EST)


Since the first Portuguese caravel banked eastward from the Azores toward the Gold Coast in the fifteenth century, Africa has been fetishized by both Americans and Europeans as a virgin princess ripe for the taking -- and re-taking. As recently as 1977, historian Bernard Porter characterized, without irony, the early...

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Ninety-nine and a Half Won't Do

Posted June 6, 2008 | 01:47 PM (EST)


Barack Obama's presumptive nomination as the Democratic presidential candidate is perhaps most starkly contrasted with the unbridled hatred encountered by African American politicians during the post-Civil War Reconstruction period between 1865 and 1877.

The Los Angeles Sentinel, the oldest and most influential African American-owned newspaper on the West Coast,...

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