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2 votes
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In 1965, Teté-Michel Kpomassie left his Togo homeland for a new life in Greenland; the first African man to set foot there
5 votes -
While millions of children all over the world wait eagerly for Father Christmas or Santa Claus on Christmas Eve, youngsters in Iceland start receiving their presents on Dec. 11th
3 votes -
Six indigenous Greenlanders taken as children to Denmark in a failed social experiment in 1951 are demanding compensation from the Danish state
8 votes -
Witness History spoke to photographer Mark Edwards, who was given unique access to document a famously photo shy community of Christiania in Denmark
11 votes -
Human computer: The forgotten women's profession
5 votes -
Denmark's hippie, psychedelic oasis Christiania turns fifty – celebration over four days includes parades, speeches, exhibitions, workshops, shows and concerts
4 votes -
The Roe baby
19 votes -
How did you find niche stuff before the Internet?
Over in the topic on the perceptions of teenage boys, it was asked, “How did you find niche stuff before the internet?” I thought this was an interesting question and wanted to open it up to hear...
Over in the topic on the perceptions of teenage boys, it was asked, “How did you find niche stuff before the internet?” I thought this was an interesting question and wanted to open it up to hear others’ memories about this.
Edit: Somewhat related, I saw this post today: The most unbelievable things about life before smartphones
21 votes -
Do you know any books, articles, videos, etc. about how relationships (friendships, dating, etc) worked in the past? If so, then why do they rarely appear when people talk about them?
Occasionally people here get into discussions about social relationships, namely dating, and what quickly comes up is how both of those seem to be less common and harder to 'get'. This more...
Occasionally people here get into discussions about social relationships, namely dating, and what quickly comes up is how both of those seem to be less common and harder to 'get'. This more frequently happens in overtly dating and relationship subreddits and similar dedicated spaces, albeit, of course, this also pops up in more general communities, alongside any community where social relationships are an important topic, like communities about social ideologies like feminism or the manosphere or about genders because heterosexuality.
One thing I often find is missing is some historical context. A lot of talk about loneliness and lack of platonic or romantic relationships is basically limited to the recent past, if it even talks about the past at all. It seems like it would be helpful to look at what relationships and dating were like 10, 20, 30 years ago when it comes to talking about the problems or just general state of both today. So do you know of good sources of information concerning relationships in the past? If so, then why do you think they don't pop up in discussions about dating?
14 votes -
The ‘Men’s Liberation’ movement time forgot: Nowadays, the Men’s Rights movement runs the gamut from incels to red pillers, but in the 1970s, men's libbers looked something like… feminists?
11 votes -
King of the Hill, again | Men of the Hill
12 votes -
Nearly a decade after becoming an advice animal, "10 guy" Connor Sinclair reveals his identity and gives full account of his image
10 votes -
I am getting sick of writing these pieces to respond to people like Rick Santorum
13 votes -
When Israel banned Nazi-inspired ‘Stalag’ porn
10 votes -
Black intimacy at the card table
7 votes -
Sámi National Day – National day that falls on February 6th. This date was when the first Sámi congress was held in 1917 in Trondheim, Norway
11 votes -
A picture of what dating looked like in the 1950s
4 votes -
How to resign, via Letters of Note
8 votes -
The folkloric roots of the QAnon conspiracy
5 votes -
Living legacy
4 votes -
Kulning – The often high-pitched herding calls of the Nordic fäbod culture; a group of labor songs developed out of needs rather than musical expression
9 votes -
Two feet from Clearwater's past, father's funny legacy leaves a deep impression
5 votes -
Loving the alien - How UFO culture took over America
5 votes -
Our country is in chaos. But it's a great time to be an American
12 votes -
You want a Confederate monument? My body is a Confederate monument (sexual assault trigger warning)
20 votes -
Why Finnish people tell the truth – in Finland, people are assumed to be honest all the time, and trust is implicit unless proven otherwise
13 votes -
Ahmaud Arbery was lynched: He was killed in the street by White men. That’s how lynchings work
13 votes -
An ode to the unexpected whimsy (and strength) of your mail delivery
7 votes -
The woman who founded Mother's Day in the US eventually came to regret it
12 votes -
When Minneapolis segregated
4 votes -
Lovers in Auschwitz, reunited seventy-two years later. He had one question
7 votes -
On October 24, 1975 over ninety percent of Icelandic women refused to work – to show how much society depended on women's labor, from farms and factories to the home
10 votes -
Ringed on all sides by the UK but not actually part of it, residents of the Isle of Man value their independence
9 votes -
Ten years ago, Balloon Boy captivated the country. For the first time, we reveal the true story behind the hoax.
14 votes -
A group of Chinese international students say they take little notice of politics or historical events, with one admitting to not having heard of the Tiananmen Square Massacre
12 votes -
How Jamaican dancehall queens twerk for a living
4 votes -
In parts of Europe from the 14th to 19th centuries, some divorces were decided through "Impotence Trials"
10 votes -
I am a Jewish Arab
9 votes -
How apartheid killed Johannesburg's cycling culture
11 votes -
A short history of manly beauty products for masculine men
15 votes -
The fight for rent control
5 votes -
What it felt like: If “living history” role-plays in the classroom can so easily go wrong, why do teachers keep assigning them?
6 votes -
Sex strikes have a long and controversial history as a tool of women's protest
8 votes -
Behind Gor, a ‘slave master’ subculture of sexual deviance
14 votes -
From 2003 to 2007 a 24 year old Iraqi woman in Baghdad kept an online diary. In chronicling life under occupation the blogger "Riverbend" gave a perspective largely missing from English media.
15 votes -
Mini Stories: Volume 6
3 votes -
Third-wave anti-racism makes sense, but it’s a dead end
11 votes -
The strange and curious tale of the last true hermit
9 votes -
The love story that upended the Texas prison system
8 votes