Articles by Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen | The Washington Post, Time Magazine, Money Magazine Journalist | Muck Rack: Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen
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Perspective | The shutdown is Trump’s ultimate attack on intellectuals
By Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen
washingtonpost.com — The consequences of the shutdown nobody is talking about A sign announcing Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo are closed due to a partial government shutdown is displayed outside the Renwick Gallery in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, Jan. 12, 2019. Photographer: Alex Edelman/Bloomberg (Alex Edelman/Bloomberg) By Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen January 24 at 6:00 AM Today marks day 33 of the government shutdown. 20 DAYS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?
Roundup Top 10!
By Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen, Robert A. Caro, William Cossen, Lauren Haumesser
historynewsnetwork.org — by William S. Cossen Colonizing indigenous land and constructing walls, both figurative and literal, to win public influence and political power is not a new story in American Catholic history. 20 DAYS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?
washingtonpost.com — The consequences of the shutdown nobody is talking about A sign announcing Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo are closed due to a partial government shutdown is displayed outside the Renwick Gallery in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, Jan. 12, 2019. Photographer: Alex Edelman/Bloomberg (Alex Edelman/Bloomberg) By Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen January 24 at 6:00 AM Today marks day 33 of the government shutdown.
historynewsnetwork.org — by William S. Cossen Colonizing indigenous land and constructing walls, both figurative and literal, to win public influence and political power is not a new story in American Catholic history.
historynewsnetwork.org — ; SOURCE: Washington Post 1/24/19 Roundup tags: shutdown, intellectuals, Trump by Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen is the Merle Curti and Vilas-Borghesi Distinguished Achievement professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and author of "The Ideas That Made America: A Brief History". Today marks day 33 of the government shutdown.
lareviewofbooks.org — WITHIN HOURS of Robert Pirsig’s death at age 88 in April 2017, newspapers and internet outlets began announcing the passing of a philosophical enigma and author of the surprise blockbuster Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values (1974).
historynewsnetwork.org — Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen is an associate professor of history at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. ... The #MeToo awakening and academic downsizing may seem like strange bedfellows, but as a female professor, I toggle between their implications daily. That is because I can't help thinking that my chosen profession may be as obsolescent as that of a West Virginia coal miner. We are told to chill out — our job as professors is not to reproduce ourselves.
aeon.co — It’s almost impossible to think about the promises and shortcomings of the United States and not think in terms of the ‘American Dream’. US advertisers promote its seductions of individual freedom and material comfort, while school teachers use it to impart civic values. Even in the rough and tumble world of US Realpolitik there is a special place for the ‘American dream’.
aeon.co — With metronomic regularity, new books about both the strange and the mundane things human beings do with metronomic regularity become bestsellers. The American 'habit' industry produces a huge popular literature examining how habits are formed and how they are broken, how they enable and how they hinder, and how they are a function of heroic self-discipline or a confession of its absence.
time.com — It took about eight years for Chronicling America, a database of historically significant American newspapers launched by the Library of Congress and the National Endowment for the Humanities, to log its 10 millionth newspaper page-not too long considering it took decades for all that news to happen.
time.com — On the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, TIME proclaimed that his death was "the moment that changed America." "There is little doubt that his death and its circumstances set loose the darker instincts of the American psyche," TIME's editor Nancy Gibbs wrote then.
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