Copy of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, an antisemitic publication that purports to describe the fabricated plans of Jewish leaders to secretly rule the world.
Read a list of eligibility requirements for those interested in volunteering with the Unitarian Church during their 1930s European refugee aid project.
Political cartoon by Thomas Nast printed during The Reconstruction Era.
The Birth of a Nation, a 1915 film portraying D.W. Griffith's racist vision of life in the South during the Civil war era, summarizes Reconstruction.
Still image from the silent expressionist film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. This horror film follows a mentally ill hypnotist who uses a hypnotized person to commit murders. The writers, Hans Janowitz and Carl Mayer, derived the idea for the script from their experiences with authority and obedience in the military during World War I.
The Fallen Man (Der Gesturzte) by Wilhelm Lehmbruck, c. 1915-1916
Der heilige Berg (The Holy Mountain, 1926) -- Leni Riefenstahl's first film. The film is about a dancer who meets a man at his mountain cottage and falls in love with him.
Nine African American students in Little Rock, Arkansas, prepare for their first day of school at Central High School. Elizabeth Eckford is circled in the center.
The Pillars of Society by George Grosz (1926). This painting features nightmarish caricatures of the elite classes of Germany: businessmen, clergy, and generals.
Contemporary cartoon from the Washington Post commemorating 70 years since the transatlantic liner "The St. Louis" was denied entry to Cuba and the United States. See full-sized image for analysis.
Like his colleague Otto Dix, George Grosz was profoundly influenced and deeply affected by serving in the army during World War I. He was admitted to a military asylum for the shell-shocked and insane just before the war ended. This painting is a haunting portrait of a fanatical Prussian general. Grosz made dozens of satirical drawings of the officer class.