Tag Archives: American

America on the Road: The Family Vacation by Car | Library of Congress Blog

July 26, 2021 by Neely Tucker

Alaska postcard in the 1950 travel journal of sociologist Rilma Oxley Buckman. Manuscript Division.

This is a guest post by Joshua Levy, a historian in the Manuscript Division.

In 1960, John Steinbeck set out on a months-long road trip to reacquaint himself with his country. He returned not with clear answers but with his head a “barrel of worms.”

The America he saw was too intertwined with how he felt in the moment, and with his own Americanness, to permit an objective account of the journey. “External reality,” he wrote, “has a way of being not so external after all.”

Pandemics aren’t the only reason Americans have found sanctuary in our homes, or the only anxious times we’ve itched to escape them. The American road trip was first popularized during the auto camping craze of the 1920s, with its devotion to freedom and communing with nature, but it was democratized after World War II.

The golden age of the American family vacation came during the very height of the Cold War. It was a time when, according to historian Susan Rugh, the family car became a “home on the road… a cocoon of domestic space” in which families could feel safe to explore their country.

Source: America on the Road: The Family Vacation by Car | Library of Congress Blog

Hemingway on War and Its Aftermath | National Archives

Spring 2006, Vol. 38, No. 1

Editor’s Note: Older article, but still good article on historical details and the exhibit…

Source: Hemingway on War and Its Aftermath | National Archives

Superman Teaches Diversity in This Beautifully Restored Poster

In response to real-world tragedies, a number of people online have turned to Superman for a lesson in diversity and respect. Now, DC has shared some history and a beautiful restoration of a classic poster.

Source: Superman Teaches Diversity in This Beautifully Restored Poster

These are the American people Trump calls enemies of the American people – The Washington Post

#FreePress #Journalism #Journalists #NotOurEnemies #Media


The Post newsroom is filled with people of all backgrounds, from the military to delivering pizzas.

Source: These are the American people Trump calls enemies of the American people – The Washington Post

A History of US Public Libraries · DPLA Omeka

 

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For many Americans, their fondest memories revolve around a library card. From searching through the stacks, to getting a return date stamped on the back of a new favorite book, libraries are a quintessential part of how Americans learn and engage with their local communities. Since this country’s founding, public libraries have received broad and consistent popular support for their democratic missions and services. The ability to access free information has become a core ideal of what it means to be an American citizen, despite periods of historic inequality. Libraries help make this access possible by placing public benefit at the center of their work and continually adapting their strategies to meet changing public needs over time.This exhibition tells the story of the American public library system, its community impact, and the librarians who made it possible—from the founding of the first US libraries through the first one hundred years of service.

Source: A History of US Public Libraries · DPLA Omeka