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15 votes
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Denmark honours Bernhard Arp Sindberg who rescued thousands of Chinese during the Japanese imperial army's orgy of violence in Nanjing in 1937
6 votes -
Navajo code talkers: The last of the living WWII heroes share their stories
11 votes -
Sixty years since rising from the deep – Swedish warship Vasa's preservation still a major challenge
4 votes -
Ottoman Wars - Siege of Buda 1541 and Eger 1552
7 votes -
Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the cutting room floor
4 votes -
Camp Century – Secret Cold War base shifts through Greenland ice
6 votes -
Third Crusade - The Beginning
5 votes -
Forgotten History: Musée des Plans-Reliefs
8 votes -
Carrhae 53 BC - Roman–Parthian War
4 votes -
Norway reportedly detects radioactive leakage from Soviet submarine ‘Komsomolets’ in Arctic
7 votes -
Ottoman Wars - Battles of Gorjani and Castelnuovo 1537
9 votes -
The Soviet superplane that rattled America
6 votes -
In 1989, the Pepsi Company cut a deal with the USSR that left it with a fleet of Russian military ships, making PepsiCo temporarily the sixth-largest Navy in the world
10 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1944/1945
6 votes -
Varangians - Elite bodyguards of the Byzantine emperors
6 votes -
Cyprus Crisis 1974
7 votes -
Siege of Damascus 634 AD: Arab - Byzantine Wars Documentary
5 votes -
A Japanese American newspaper chronicles the ‘searing’ history of immigrant incarceration
8 votes -
Atomic veterans were silenced for fifty Years. Now, they’re talking.
8 votes -
Dinosaur diplomacy: Andrew Carnegie thought fossils could save Europe from World War I
5 votes -
Siege of Jerusalem 70 AD - Great Jewish revolt
6 votes -
How the US military's opium war in Afghanistan was lost
7 votes -
Long-lost shipwreck found off Victorian coast, seventy-seven years after being torpedoed by Japanese submarine in WWII
4 votes -
Caesar in Britannia and Germania
9 votes -
The general was female? ASU professor, colleague uncover 200-year-old mystery from the American Revolution.
10 votes -
M-16: A bureaucratic horror story
8 votes -
Revolutionary War fighting ended in 1781. The last shots exploded two months ago.
10 votes -
Teutoburg Forest 9 AD - Roman-Germanic wars
5 votes -
Sack of Constantinople 1204 - Fourth Crusade
8 votes -
Death and valor on a warship doomed by its own Navy - An investigation into the crash of the USS Fitzgerald
6 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1943/44
5 votes -
Last Sassanids and the anti-Caliphate alliance with Tang
9 votes -
Mystery blast sank the USS San Diego in 1918. New report reveals what happened.
8 votes -
The Roman triumph
12 votes -
One hundred years on, the scars from World War I linger on Australia's streets and in our psyche
6 votes -
At 63, I threw away my prized portrait of Robert E. Lee
9 votes -
Germany's plans to win WWI
3 votes -
Cleopatra and the Siege of Alexandria (48 to 47 B.C.E.)
7 votes -
A band of Polish mathematicians figured out much about how German Enigma encoding machines operated, years before Alan Turing did
6 votes -
WW2 Eastern Front animated: 1942
6 votes -
After a year of rising tensions, protesters tear down Confederate statue on UNC campus
27 votes -
The rise of Rome - How Italy was conquered
2 votes -
The fall of Pompey (48 B.C.E.)
4 votes -
Hiroshima - a 1946 piece exploring how six survivors experienced the atomic bombing and its aftermath
9 votes -
The fallen of World War II
7 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 -
Three myths most Americans believe (Japanese surrender in WW2, Cold War, nuclear bomb threat)
7 votes -
The American Revolution’s greatest leader was openly gay
14 votes -
Bear necessities: The big brown bear who helped Polish troops in WWII
4 votes