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Archived Websites, March 2014-ongoing
Extent
Scope and Content Note
The Radical History Review was established by the Mid-Atlantic Radical Historians Organization (MARHO) in 1974. The articles published in the Radical History Review "address issues of gender, race, sexuality, imperialism, and class, stretching the boundaries of historical analysis to explore Western and non-Western histories." In addition to articles on the theme of any given issue, the journal is often comprised of sections dedicated to teaching and public history, as well as reviews of television, books, museum exhibitions, and other media. The website contains call for proposals for future issues, descriptions of recent issues, subject guides, and back issues.
The Abusable Past is the blog of the Radical History Review. It publishes "original content related to the praxis of radical history in this social and political moment." Topics featured on the blog include peer review, Mauna Kea, U.S.-Mexico Border, renaming of the Carr Building at Duke University, Jeju Uprising and Massacre, university campus policing, public history, author interviews, mass incarceration, and syllabi. The blog dates back to 2019.
Accruals
New site crawls are accrued semiannually.
Appraisal
Crawl was limited to domains and subdomains of radicalhistoryreview.org, http://www.radicalhistoryreview.org, and abusablepast.org in order to remain within the collection scope and data constraints.
Externally hosted content
https://wayback.archive-it.org/6334/*/http://www.radicalhistoryreview.org/
Externally hosted content
https://wayback.archive-it.org/6334/*/https://abusablepast.org/