-
6 votes
-
Thoughts on the World Wars
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things...
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things have come close to painting a cohesive picture.
Most of it focuses on hot spots like Verdun, Pearl Harbor, Dunkirk, Normandy, the haulocaust, the atomic bomb, enigma, u-boats, the luftwaffe, Stalingrad... And I can see why. Even on a microcosm level, the conditions of the stories are unimaginable.
The issue I'm having is that I feel like our cultural memory of these events his been eroded over time. We have these impressions of what we think it was like, but not an overarching understanding of the complex series of events throughout the 20th century. We have an overabundance of records, photographs, film, and documentation in general, but maybe it's the overabundance that makes the digestion such an insurmountable undertaking.
What are your experiences with studying this time period? How do you feel about the quality of your understanding? And finally, do you have any recommendations for myself and others?
14 votes -
How did Easter Islanders lift statues' thirteen-ton hats? Researchers may have the answer.
7 votes -
Three myths most Americans believe (Japanese surrender in World War II, Cold War, nuclear bomb threat)
7 votes -
The American Revolution’s greatest leader was openly gay
14 votes -
A fascinating map of medieval trade routes
12 votes -
Traumatic license: An oral history of Action Park
6 votes -
No gods no masters: A history of anarchism (part 1 of 3)
5 votes -
What would happen if historians made their research notes public?
9 votes -
Bear necessities: The big brown bear who helped Polish troops in WWII
4 votes -
Truth and consequences: In complicated times, a case for more skepticism
6 votes -
The last slave ship survivor gave an interview in the 1930s. It just surfaced in the form of a new book.
3 votes -
Chasing the Pearl of Lao Tzu — A tale of ancient philosophers, alien abductions, murder-for-hire and how the world’s largest pearl came to be the centerpiece of an 80-year-old hoax
3 votes -
Black Achilles - The Greeks didn’t have modern ideas of race. Did they see themselves as white, black – or as something else altogether?
5 votes -
The Battle of Ilerda (49 B.C.E.)
4 votes -
Nat Turner Rebellion
4 votes -
Ninety-eight years of mail fraud - how the postal letter became a tool for ingenious criminality
4 votes