FAQ's

Frequently Asked Questions:

WHAT'S HNN'S PRIVACY POLICY ?

HNN takes the privacy of our readers seriously . The only information we collect from our users is the email address they use to subscribe to our newsletters . We do not collect information about the choices individual users make on the site . We do not leave cookies on their computers to track their online behavior .

WHICH WAY DOES HNN TILT, LEFT OR RIGHT ?

The History News Network (HNN) features articles and excerpts by historians from both the left and the right. Some weeks we may appear to tilt one way or the other simply because of serendipity. But our aim is to present a wide mix of views. Click here to read our mission statement.  Click here to understand our old-fashioned commitment to an ideologically diverse website.

HOW IS HNN ORGANIZED?

HNN is divided into numerous different departments. The main departments are listed in a row at the top of every page.  This is a list of our main departments:

News  This department features news about historians and news about history.  For the sake of simplicity, we divide news into two categories:  Historians in the News and Breaking News.  You can access this department from the drop down menu at the top row of buttons or from the news widget on the right-hand rail. 

U.S.  This department features op eds written by professional historians on topics concerning News at Home.  Most of these pieces are written expressly for HNN.  The op eds appear on HNN's homepage. (What's an op ed?  It's an essay of about 1,000 words that takes a clear point of view.  It's called an "op ed" because essays of this sort appear in the New York Times print edition opposite the editorial page.  The Times's convention has become an industry standard.) 

World This department features op eds written by professional historians concerning News Abroad.  Once again, most of these pieces are written expressly for HNN.  These op eds also appear on HNN's homepage.

History This department features op eds written by professional historians concerning particular topics in history.  Historians like to argue about history.  This is where we track debates that are currently taking place.

Features This department is a collection of a rich variety of special pages devoted to various subjects, including famous quotes about historyquestions people are Googling, and hot topics.

Books This department features book reviews written by professional historians expressly for HNN.

Roundup This department features content found on other websites about subjects in the news.  As we like to say at HNN, we surf the web so our readers don't have to.  The department features excerpts from articles with links back to the original sources. Click here to read more about this department.

Blogs This department features a variety of blogs run by professional historians.  Blogs gives readers the opportunity to commune with some of their favorite historians.

Please keep in mind that we feature a broad range of ideological views .

If you ever have any questions about HNN, please feel free to contact editor Rick Shenkman . We welcome suggestions!

WHAT RULES GOVERN COMMENTS ?

When a new employee asked Thomas Edison what the rules at his lab were, Edison reportedly cracked, We don't have rules. We're trying to accomplish something . Great line, but in practice rules sometimes are needed . These are the rules HNN has implemented to govern the posting of comments on our threaded discussion boards .

Please do not post any comments that are defamatory, obscene, pornographic, abusive, bigoted, or unlawful . If you violate the law or are guilty of defamation you may be held legally responsible .

Please do not post any comments that are anti - Semitic or racist . Please do not malign ethnic or religious groups .

Please do not post any advertisements for commercial products or services .

Please do not use our boards to promote surveys, contests, or chain letters .

Please be civil . No ad hominem attacks .

Please do not post comments that are irrelevant to the subject under discussion .

We reserve the right to bounce any person who violates our rules and to delete their comments .

Flagrant violators of HNN's standards will be banned. Offensive comments will be deleted.

NOTE: Posts to HNN's blogs may be deleted if the bloggers find the posts irritating, offensive, or distracting, whether the posts violate HNN's rules of civility or not.

Disclaimer: We do not attest to the accuracy or truthfulness of any of the views or facts posted on our discussion boards. Nor do we monitor every posted comment.

DO YOU ACCEPT ADVERTISING?

Yes, we welcome advertisers! We also accept help from underwriters (just as PBS does). If you would like either to advertise or make an underwriter's donation to HNN, please let us know by dropping an email to the < a href="mailto:editor@hnn.us" > editor .

HNN will gladly post a notice on our site or in our newsletter indicating your participation in our underwriting program .

WHAT KIND OF NEWS STORIES DO YOU COVER ?

The Breaking News page features news stories reported in the English - language press . The result is that the page is heavily skewed toward subjects that draw the attention of English - speaking readers, leading to a heavy concentration of stories from the United States and Western Europe . Click here to view the lists of media sources HNN interns use to track news stories we cover .

HOW DO I APPLY FOR AN INTERNSHIP AT HNN ?

Here are the basic facts: Internships are for a minimum term of two quarters . You should expect to put in around 10 hours a week . INTERNS DO NOT HAVE TO WORK AT HNN'S OFFICES, though interns located in the Washington D.C. area are encouraged to work directly with the editor at our Washington office. Interns will communicate with the editor(s) through e-mail, Skype, and the telephone. Basically, if you have access to the Internet, you can be an intern at HNN!

All internships are unpaid, but class credit can be arranged.

Click here to read about intern responsibilities.

As you'll see, this is not a make - work job . You'll do real work; nothing Mickey Mouse.

If you are interested in applying for an internship please send your resume to the editor, Rick Shenkman. BE SURE TO INCLUDE THE INTERNSHIP YOU wish to apply for.

IS HNN CONSIDERED A SCHOLARLY JOURNAL?

HNN was created to give historians the opportunity to reach a national audience on issues of public concern. It is not a scholarly journal. It is a vehicle for scholars seeking to enrich the public debate.

WHY SHOULD THE PUBLIC WANT TO HEAR FROM HISTORIANS?

Historians are not entitled to be heard from simply because they are scholars. They must have something to say. But neither can the fact that they are scholars deprive them of the right to weigh in on matters of vital public importance. Indeed, the fact that they bring to the public debate a special expertise and sensibility derived from their studies is all the more reason to give them a hearing. Leaving the public square to people who lack the scholar's knowledge diminishes democracy .

Responding to news events in a timely and wise manner is a great challenge, of course . Fortunately, none of our contributors fail at the task all of the time and most succeed at it at least some of the time . That they may fail on occasion is no reason to conclude they should therefore never be given the chance to succeed ever again .

CAN I REPRINT ARTICLES POSTED ON HNN ?

HNN publishes original pieces on our homepage. Because HNN is committed to the wide dissemination of information, we encourage our authors to allow other publications to reprint their work. Nearly all agree to do that.  You can assume that our original content may be reprinted unless you see that an author has expressly invoked copyright protection.  In those cases a notice will appear at the bottom of the article.  

Publications that reprint HNN original content are required to include a link back to HNN.

HNN also excerpts articles in the Roundup Department that were published elsewhere . We do not own the copyright of these articles. Please contact the listed SOURCE of the article to find out if it can be reprinted .

WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF THE ROUNDUP DEPARTMENT ?

HNN originally was conceived as primarily a national platform for historians wishing to comment on current events . This remains our primary function as is evident on our homepage, where week after week historians write about news subjects within their area of expertise .

But as the website evolved we added various features that we thought our readers would find interesting and useful . The most popular feature has turned out to be ROUNDUP , which includes excerpts and articles from the media about various issues related in some way to history .

We don't vouch for the accuracy or scholarship of the excerpts or articles. We simply reprint them. The purpose is to give readers in one handy place a broad sampling of American (and indeed world) opinion. In effect, we turn every reader into his own Walt Whitman, strolling through the alleys of the Internet to see what strange and wonderful and often ugly things the world has to offer. Everyman his own journalist, to paraphrase Carl Becker.

But even the ugly?

Walter Lippmann in the 1920s pointed out that journalism is about creating pictures in our minds of what the real world is like, a most difficult task. How much more difficult, indeed impossible, it is to attain that goal if we blind ourselves to sights that make us shudder or shrink in horror.

At the same time we do not publish the views of Holocaust Deniers in Roundup--or authors who take similarly extreme positions. Including them in Roundup would indirectly give them a credence they do not deserve. We do of course from time to time run articles, excerpts and news stories about people who hold obnoxious views like Holocaust Deniers.

HOW DO I SUBMIT AN ARTICLE TO HNN FOR PUBLICATION?

HNN reaches a large number of readers. The website attracts some 300,000 unique visitors a month and 6 million hits. Writing for HNN can help you find an audience for your ideas and publications.

HNN encourages readers to send in articles for possible publication concerning subjects in their area of expertise. Because we need to be able to assure our readers that writers are experts in the areas they discuss, we request that all submissions be accompanied by a resume.

Articles should either tell the reader something new or frame an old issue in a new way. Articles may include the author's opinion but primarily serve as vehicles for informed analysis with an emphasis on history .

HNN encourages the wide dissemination of information and therefore allows other publications to reprint our articles unless the author expressly requests copyright protection .

Writers should know that HNN allows search engines such as Google and Yahoo to use spiders to search the archives and post search results .

The editor reserves the right to select the title of any piece published by HNN .

Once a piece has been published the author relinquishes the right to withdraw it .

Please be sure to tell us how you would like to be identified .

If your article draws on research you have published in a book we'll happily feature the book's jacket and a link to the website of your choice .

If possible, articles should be forwarded by email as a Microsoft WORD attachment . If this is impossible, please simply paste the article into an email . Submissions should be sent to Rick Shenkman at the following address: editor@historynewsnetwork.org .

Article length may vary depending on subject matter . Most articles run about 1,000 words .

Authors should disclose in advance to the editor any potential conflict of interest they have which may affect their objectivity--or may appear to do so .

DOES HNN FEATURE RSS FEEDS ? (WHAT IS RSS ?)

In an attempt to make our content more easily accessible, HNN is now providing RSS feeds for most departments . Huh ?

RSS feeds allow users with an RSS reader to keep track of websites every time specific pages are updated. Say, for instance, you like HNN's Breaking News page and want to be notified every time we post a new story. By using an RSS reader you will be notified the moment a new entry is posted. The system even allows you to find out every time one of the Roundup pages has been updated with new material or when our homepage is updated. With an RSS reader you can see which of your favorite sites have been updated at-a-glance without having to go through the trouble of surfing each site one by one.