David Rosen
Bottoms-Up American History
By David RosenThaddeus Russells new book, A Renegade History of the United States, is a collection of great stories about some of the countrys grand down-and-outersand many others neither down nor outwho normally are either not mentioned or only marginally referred to in more conventional histories.
POINTS OF MORAL FRICTION
When Classes Confront Each Other
By David Rosen
The Great Recession officially started in December 2007 and ended in June 2009. It was the gravest financial crisis the nation has faced since the Great Depression of the 1930s. It fostered what many call the New Normal, the unspoken sense that America is stuck, if not in decline.
THE GOOD OLD 70S: The End of the Amerian Century
By David RosenWe live in the shadow of the 1970s. If at all, most Americans remember the long decade, the period from 1968 to 1981, by a scattering of historical occurances and a handful of iconic images. A careful reconsideration reveals a lot more.
The 1920s: The Good Times?
By David RosenThe 1920s are back, bigger and better than ever.
ARE YOU WHAT YOU WEAR?
The Politics of Fashion
By David Rosen
In the decade spanning the mid-1930s to mid-40s, a new male fashion emerged and gained popularity thoughout the country. It also provoked much controversy. It was the new style of the youthful sharpie, the jitterbuger, the zoot suiter.
WR: The Wanderings of a Lost Soul
By David RosenOn August 23, 1956, agents of the Federal Drug Administration (F.D.A.) seized six tons of scholarly literature from a Greenwich Village warehouse, transported it to the New York Sanitation Departments Gansevoort Street incinerator, and burned it.
Another Prohibition: Uncovering the Real 1920s
By David RosenThe popularity of HBOs Boardwalk Empire and PBSs Prohibition, one a multi-season drama series, the other a multi-hour documentary series, has ignited popular interest in the legendary Prohibition era of the Roaring 20s.
URBAN COMBUSTION: When Morality & Politics Mix
By David RosenNot unlike today, late 19th century America was an age of robber barons, of white, Christian moral absolutists, of foreign immigration and domestic migration, and of a progressive movement contesting capitalisms excesses.
City at War
By David RosenIn Jules Dassins 1948 black-and-white noir classic, The Naked City, the narrator ends the film with the famous lines: There are eight million stories in the naked city. This has been one of them. Steven Jaffes well-written and very informative work, New York at War, is also one of those stories.
A City in Crisis
By David RosenThai Jones’s More Powerful Than Dynamite is written in the spirit of a-year-in-the-life of Gotham, tracking events, both minimal and momentous, that took place in 1914 (give or take a few years). A century can seem a very long time ago, yet, in Jones’s book, 1914 seems almost like yesterday.
The Body Politic
By David RosenNancy Cohens book Delirium is a carefully researched and rigorously argued account of the role of sex-related issues in shaping modern American politics.
THE PARTYS OVER: Welcome to the New Normal
By David RosenIn a famous editorial in Life magazine of February 17, 1941, Henry R. Luce, founder of Time Inc., called upon Americans to abandon their deep-seated fear of international entanglements and support Britain through lend-lease during the early days of World War II. The son of Christian missionaries spreading the gospel in China, Luce was infused by an abiding belief in the white mans burden.
PORN WARS: The F.B.I.s Hidden Campaign to Police Morality
By David RosenIf you caught Clint Eastwoods less-than-compelling biopic, J. Edgar, you would have never learned about J. Edgar Hoovers (and the F.B.I.s) war against pornography. This missing story is the subject of Douglas Charless well-intentioned, if too narrowly drawn study, The FBIs Obscene File.
Cyber Wars 2.0
By David RosenIf you are reading this review from the Rail’s website, you should pick up a copy of Evgeny Morozov’s The Net Delusion. Once you get past the author’s straw-man bashing of those he dubs “cyber-utopians” and the foreign-policy establishment’s Manichean antinomies of “democracy” and “authoritarian” countries, you can learn much about how the “dark side” of the Internet works.
Perversion Is No Longer Perverse
By David RosenOne of the most celebrated houses of ill repute in London during the 1820s 1830s was the flagellation parlor owned and operated by Mrs. Theresa Berkley at 28 Charlotte Street. According to Mary Wilson, a fellow brothel owner and author of a memoir, Venus School Mistress, Mrs. Berkley possessed the first grand requisite of a courtesan, viz., lewdness.
Deviant Reflections: A Voice for Sexual Freedom
By David RosenFinally: a collection of Gayle Rubins writings. It is long overdue and sorely needed.
The Not-So Roaring Twenties
By David RosenSpeakeasies were social venues of transgression during Prohibition and are once again the in-places for New York hipsters; hipsters were those who carried an alcohol-filled hipflask during the Roaring Twenties.
STEWARDS NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND
By David RosenIn the decades following the nations third sexual revolution of the 1960s-1970s (following those of the 1830s-1840s and 1910s-1920s), sexual practices once ignored or derided by many Americans, such as the female orgasm and homosexuality, became part of mainstream culture.
What Academic Freedom?
By David RosenToday, we take the concept of academic freedom for granted.
Village People
By David RosenJohn Strausbaugh has assembled a treasure trove of personality profiles and gossipy tidbits covering the nearly 400-year history of what is broadly identified as Greenwich Village.
Eyes Everywhere
By David RosenYou are constantly being tracked, monitored, and surveilled. Increasingly, aspects of what Americans long took as personal privacy, especially with regard to their communications, are being eroded at an alarming pace. Heidi Boghosians new book, Spying on Democracy: Government Surveillance, Corporate Power, and Public Resistance, will only deepen your sense of paranoia.
Throwaway Lives
By David RosenRobert Kolkers Lost Girls: An Unsolved American Mystery is a moving account of the lives and deaths of five prostitutes who represent the sad reality of sex work. The book is an act of resurrection, of turning women who are often dismissed as things back into human beings, people with real lives.
Double Identity
By David RosenBeau Riffenburgh loves to dig into dusty archives and uncover the lost stories of fascinating historical characters. He shifts course a bit in his latest book, Pinkertons Great Detective, about James McParland, one of the nations earliest private agents.