Today’s guest post comes from C.C. Borzilleri, who is a 2019 graduate of Georgetown University with a BA in History and Government. A lifelong ...
This Junto Profile is part of an ongoing series of short Q&As that provide some background on various individuals who participate regularly in the ...
Yesterday Princeton historian Sean Wilentz published his latest piece opposing the 1619 Project at The Atlantic. In it, Wilentz argues that he—along ...
The Temple Early Atlantic Seminar presents a day-long symposium The Long Game of U.S. Historiography: A Century of Competing Interpretations ...
Each Thursday in the Disquiet Junto music community, a new compositional challenge is set before the group’s members, who then have five days to ...
Kacy Tillman, Stripped and Script: Loyalist Women Writers of the American Revolution (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2019). Studies of ...
Siena College’s McCormick Center for the Study of the American Revolution will award a one-year Postdoctoral Teaching and Research Fellowship for the ...
Today, The Junto features a Q&A with Brooke Newman, author of A Dark Inheritance: Blood, Race, and Sex in Colonial Jamaica (Yale, 2018), which ...
A special edition of #ColonialCouture, a Junto roundtable on fashion as history in early American life. The Antigua-born Penelope Royall Vassall ...
Photograph in Charles Knowles Bolton, The Private Soldier Under Washington, New York, Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1902, p. 162 and detail from The ...