“Even God Cannot Hear Us Here”: What I Witnessed Inside an ICE Women’s Prison
Tufts University doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk opens up about her 45 days in a South Louisiana processing facility—and the generous and compassionate women she met.
Rümeysa is one of the kindest, most compassionate people I have ever met. Many of you came to know her first and foremost as an ICE abductee, seized by a state that wanted to strip her of her humanity. I would like for you to know her in her own words, which are resoundingly human.
17.07.2025 13:34 — 👍 1039 🔁 508 💬 14 📌 53
Just spent 10 minutes trying to find this thread of recommended books, so now that I have, here's a boost:
17.07.2025 08:58 — 👍 11 🔁 5 💬 1 📌 0
One for the ages. The only anthology of High Tang poetry that was actually compiled during the High Tang, now translated into English by Paul Kroll.
13.07.2025 05:18 — 👍 37 🔁 14 💬 0 📌 0
Historians as a profession are facing the same crunch as journalists and other professions in the digital age where there is plenty of demand but an economic model that remunerates the people who do the final repackaging for the public while funding for the production of original work dries up.
10.07.2025 08:28 — 👍 155 🔁 57 💬 2 📌 2
Starting the week by facilitating engagements with the very latest scholarship in Middle East Studies. If you're the #author of a new book on the Middle East, or oversee a list regarding the region as an #editor, don't hesitate to reach out. I'd love to learn more about recent and exciting work!
07.07.2025 19:31 — 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0
Gable section from a bed tent embroidered with many different birds and flower motifs.
Embroidery with checkerboard bands of black and white squares and miniature crenellations divides this panel into eight sections, each with an eight-pointed star within a 'wheel of life' medallion.
Embroidered cushion cover showing a man riding a horse, surrounded by decorative motifs of flowers.
🧵We're excited to announce a new section of the Cambridge Digital Library for the Fitzwilliam Museum’s collection of Mediterranean embroideries.
View the full collection: https://loom.ly/BPvABM4
07.07.2025 06:05 — 👍 99 🔁 33 💬 0 📌 4
Return to Syria: what I found amid the ruins of Homs
Living in exile, Ammar Azzouz studied urban destruction in war. Then he returned to the ruins of his own city
Really powerful piece in the FT magazine this weekend from @britishacademy.bsky.social Postdoctoral Fellow Ammar Azzouz - a researcher of urban destruction who returns to the ruins of his own city in Syria.
on.ft.com/3TozwJO
06.07.2025 19:45 — 👍 69 🔁 19 💬 1 📌 1
Islamic Televangelism: A Preliminary Sketch
Matthew J. Kuiper PhD, Hope College, Michigan, USA While they are not alone among the world’s religions in fostering and encouraging preaching, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are unquestionably “pre...
My latest just dropped: A discussion of modern Islamic televangelism (yes it’s a thing) situated in longer Islamic history. It's a *preliminary* sketch & preview of a forthcoming chapter. Thanks to the good folks at Predicmo & Aix-Marseille University. (AI was not used in any aspect of this piece) 🗃️
03.07.2025 23:02 — 👍 18 🔁 5 💬 2 📌 0
All I’m asking, as an American, is for another set of Americans on a hill to have the moral courage and tenacity to fight for the Republic
At the end of the day, this is the experiment of democracy
03.07.2025 01:37 — 👍 1255 🔁 213 💬 21 📌 12
I’ve long loved this quote. What a catastrophe
02.07.2025 18:11 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
📢 New publication! July's 𝘋𝘰𝘤𝘶𝘮𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘰𝘧 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘔𝘰𝘯𝘵𝘩 is now available at bit.ly/InvisibleEastQurans
🔍 Alya Karame looks at Qur'anic fragments from the Islamicate East that represent a turning point in the history of the Qur'an.
#documents #quran #firuzkuh #bamiyan
02.07.2025 15:08 — 👍 2 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
A problem with this decision that goes way beyond the law is that we live in a country where decidedly NON-religious viewpoints are increasingly bolted onto religion. When your church is saying climate change is a lie and vaccines are evil it's untenable to teach anything under this model
27.06.2025 15:05 — 👍 202 🔁 49 💬 5 📌 3
I want to reiterate that countless conservative judges issued universal injunctions against the Biden administration, and the Supreme Court never halted the practice. Now, barely five months into Trump's second term, the court puts an end to these injunctions. A brazen double standard.
27.06.2025 14:11 — 👍 7410 🔁 2637 💬 133 📌 163
all of my immersive language study came out of federal funding.
Cuts to humanities funding will have long-term consequences across a lot of fields. It is tragic. Already only 40% of citizens hold a passport. w/out scholars who study world lang, politics, history, culture there’s only navel gazing
24.06.2025 20:43 — 👍 9 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 1
“The Bildungsroman Emperor”
19.06.2025 18:53 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
This historiographical review is brilliant. In my teaching the vast, diverse, and prone-to-endless-misunderstandings-and-misuses territory called ‘The Crusades’, I’ve used Tyerman’s pointed but accessible Crusades: A Very Short Introduction. Students… 1/
19.06.2025 12:36 — 👍 14 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 1
📕📘📙 ATLAS-cities NEW BOOK:
¿CIUDADES INVISBLES? Paisajes urbanos de la Antigüedad tardía (siglos III-VIII)
📍 Sabine Panzram - Laurent Brassous 📌 CCV 201; 2025 ‼️
A co-production of 30 authors: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, The Netherlands, Tunisia, USA etc.
books.openedition.org/.../libro/ci...
13.06.2025 17:23 — 👍 4 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Researching the Post-Imperial City in a Post‑Transformation World, 2000–2023
Introduction: Epochs and Regions
Writing an essay that reflects the state of the field is a tightrope act. The sheer number of publications, research projects, and excavation reports that are being published every year makes it difficult to keep up with individual developments. However, there is little doubt that taking stock is a productive and useful endeavour, as every field requires a certain degree of self-reflection. On a more specific level, Late Antique and Early Medieval urbanism has been fortunate when it comes to such overviews of research. From studies giving summaries of the direction of inquiry to broader monographs that reflect on the whole epoch, recent years have seen a significant drive to reevaluate the state of the field. The purpose of this essay is not to replace these studies. Instead, building on them it will offer a continuation. I can only echo the sentiment of my predecessors and say that this will be a subjective and idiosyncratic perspective and not one that claims comprehensiveness. Here I will focus mainly on works from the last two decades. This essay should then not be seen as an exhaustive survey of the research on urban spaces of the latter two thirds of the first millennium. Instead, in the tradition of the history of historiography, it is a reflection on the state of the art as a valuable research goal in and of itself, an attempt to understand how we got where we are in the first place. The examples from scholarly literature given here will be, by necessity, selective and illustrative.
The city is often a mirror of our scholarly approaches. Therefore, very excited to see this out—my overview of the recent views of late antique and early medieval urban worlds and a sketch of new methodologies for the city in the first millennium. In open access: books.openedition.org/cvz/54316
16.06.2025 14:54 — 👍 53 🔁 13 💬 2 📌 0
How Mediterranean Economies Were Shaped in the Early Middle Ages
The clichéd image of the premodern Mediterranean economy is stagnation until the twin forces of capitalism and Industrial Revolution kick-started growth an
My review article, "How Mediterranean Economies Were Shaped in the Early Middle Ages" in the American Historical Review is out. This was a lot of fun and I try to make sense of 500+ years of recent economic histories. Find it: doi.org/10.1093/ahr/.... 1/
12.06.2025 12:01 — 👍 67 🔁 19 💬 6 📌 3
Join us for a film screening & panel discussion on the ethical and practical challenges facing scholars and heritage institutions today.
Registration is essential via bit.ly/InvisibleTreasures
Information on hybrid access will follow.
#invisibletreasures #heritage #skystorian #provenance
10.06.2025 15:44 — 👍 4 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
not the main issue here but i'd really appreciate it if democratic politicians spoke out in support of big-city life and culture with the same energy and reverence that all politicians have for small towns
los angeles is "real america" and so are all the other big cities the president hates
08.06.2025 22:48 — 👍 28158 🔁 5897 💬 376 📌 378
I had a new-atheist student think he had come up with a really clever “gotcha” question about how Muslim astronauts pray. Answered the question and talked about how religious jurisprudence handles the modern world. Just found out that there’s even a kids’ book about it.
06.06.2025 00:50 — 👍 23 🔁 2 💬 2 📌 2
Writing about economic history at https://unevenandcombinedthoughts.substack.com
The foreign policy views of the people's champ. AKA Great One, Flex Kavana, and Brahma Bull. Might be Dwayne Johnson, could be Harold Brown. Views my own. Substack⬇️
https://secretaryrofdefenserock.substack.com/
pretty good writer. philipchristman.substack.com. https://bookshop.org/p/books/why-christians-should-be-leftists-phil-christman/22293923?ean=9780802884053&next=t; https://www.arcadiapublishing.com/collections/vendors?q=Phil%20Christman&contributorID=22914
Host of all podcasts. Independent Journalist. Hollywood’s Ultimate Insider. The post is probably a joke, really it’s obvious.
The Cenobite of Sharing
The Black Blood of the Earth and Steins of Science guy. Everyone’s friendly internet laser safety officer and health physicist. Happy to answer Antarctica questions.
www.funraniumlabs.com
Reporter on the investigations team at the NYT. I always have a China-focused story in the works. Co-author of bestselling “When McKinsey Comes to Town”. Navy veteran. Send tips to Michael.forsythe@nytimes.com. DM for Signal.
Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellow, History, University of St Andrews
Own lefty views
Iron Age, late antique, medieval, early-modern archaeologist ⁊ historian; toponomist, sociologist, cartographer, copy-editor; ❤ cats ⁊ books
sé/he/il/er/han
UChicago political scientist, amateur bee photographer, Carnegie South Asia nonresident scholar, despairing Bulls fan, public school parent, etc. http://www.paulstaniland.com
Just asking questions.
Senior Editor, Lawfaremedia.org.
Send story ideas and tips to anna.bower@lawfaremedia.org
Signal username: annabower.24
Yinzer ambassador to the west coast • Moo Deng’s spiritual successor • Tallest Italian with chronic intractable migraine • What you fail to see, Mr Pope
Don't fuck with me. I'll spend another three hours in Excel. I don't care.
political theologian at the ministry for the future
interests: classics, history, philosophy, conflict + IR, economics, foreign policy, climate change, east asia (korea + japan)
words: Foreign Policy + LiberalCurrents
“guards, seize he/him!”
managing editor @sojo.net.
https://tylerhuckabee.substack.com/
I'm an editor/correspondent for NPR. Mostly smart on the radio. Mostly stupid on everywhere else.
ChatGPT describes me as: "Aerospace Sleuth, Nuclear Nerd, and NPR Superfan — with a Side of Surreal Humor."
Signal: https://signal.me/#eu/PoRoBSPUsb1fVLiml
Chief Foreign-Affairs Correspondent, The Wall Street Journal. 📕Author of No Country for Love, Our Enemies Will Vanish, Siege of Mecca and Faith at War 📕 Yarotrof.com
Professor of Ancient History at @unihh | Director of Toletum, @atlas_cities, RomanIslam @RomIsl_center | #romanspain #socialhistory #urbanstudies #lateantiquity
Professor of Hebrew Bible, Yale University.
the pool is to swim the horses
https://normalmenpodcast.com
At the Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures and its Cluster of Excellence Understanding Written Artefacts, we conduct cross-disciplinary research on handwritten artefacts from all periods and regions of the world.
https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/
I write Extra Points, a newsletter about off-the-field stories in college sports. I also (badly) make computer games, woodworking projects, and jokes.
Chicago.