
Features
- When Memorials Come Down, Ghosts Remain
James J. Ward | Feb 21, 2023
- Hope in the Dark
Scott G. Bruce | Feb 15, 2023
- Phantom Encounters
Lucy Barnhouse | Feb 16, 2023
On the Cover
With the right light, walls cast long shadows. The wounds which the Wall gouged through Berlin from 1961 to 1989 linger in the social fabric, haunting residents long after the physical structure disappeared from the landscape. If objects have lives—at least metaphorically speaking—they just as surely have afterlives, living on after the destruction of their original physical form in memory and memorials. The Berlin Wall lives through remnants and memorials; in the forgetful memory of the city it once divided, and in the divide between Russia and the West that has not even begun to heal after three decades. How much longer will its shade linger?
Hubert Gajewski/Flickr/CC BY-NC 2.0
From the Editor
- Townhouse Notes
L. Renato Grigoli | Feb 7, 2023
From the President
- When Ghosts Come Knocking
Edward Muir | Feb 14, 2023
From the Executive Director
- The Integrity of History Education
James Grossman and Jeremy C. Young | Feb 8, 2023
News
- An Uncertain Trend
Julia Brookins | Feb 23, 2023
- Advocacy Briefs
Rebecca L. West | Feb 28, 2023
AHA Activities
- Trading on Justice
Mark Philip Bradley | Feb 22, 2023
- AHA Council, Divisions, and Committees for 2023
Compiled by Liz Townsend | Mar 2, 2023
In Memoriam
- Robert L. Tignor (1932–2022)
Heather J. Sharkey | Feb 28, 2023
Long Overdue
- Marion Thompson Wright (1902–62)
Graham Hodges | Feb 28, 2023
Everything Has a History
- The Ghost of Ash Lawn
Mariaelena DiBenigno | Feb 27, 2023