Humanities, September/October 1998: Contents

Humanities, Sep/Oct 98
The Documentary
About this issue
A Conversation with . . .
Producer Judy Crichton talks about a decade of filmmaking for The American Experience.
Margaret Sanger's "Deeds of Terrible Virtue"
A new film tells how Sanger broke taboos and paved the way for birth control reform. (By Rachel Galvin)
Crossroads of Conflict
The U.S.-Mexican War is retold by both sides in a new documentary. (By Tom Stabile)
"Risen from Our Blood and Tears"
An upcoming series tells how Africans made their mark on America from slavery to abolition. (By Jacob Igor Torgeson)
Cities and Suburbs
Chicago's Encyclopedia Tells the Urban Story
From celebrities to stockyards, a new reference book examines the mystique of the windy city. (By Greg Varner)
Built in a Day
How Aladdin's catalog homes changed the way Americans live. (By Ronica Roth)
Archival Treasure
A Writer's Writer
Katherine Anne Porter's lifetime of letters and manuscripts holds clues for scholars and writers alike. (By Sara E. Wilson)
Around the Nation
State by State
Exhibitions, lectures, films, and conferences throughout the country.
A New Chautauqua Reader
Words from the leaders of the Progressive Era are collected in a book by the Great Plains Chautauqua Society. (By Erin Erickson)
The Canal Builders Who Disappeared
How an ancient people left a legacy of irrigation in the southwest. (By John Bickley)

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