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Posts about History

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r/HistoryMemes
7.5m members
A place for history memes.
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r/AskReddit
41.7m members
r/AskReddit is the place to ask and answer thought-provoking questions.
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r/politics
8.3m members
/r/Politics is for news and discussion about U.S. politics.
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r/Showerthoughts
27.6m members
A subreddit for sharing those miniature epiphanies you have that highlight the oddities within the familiar.
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r/EconomicHistory
983k members
Welcome to r/EconomicHistory! Economic history is the study of economic phenomena in the past. This is a subreddit for any journal articles, news articles, discussions, questions, or other media pertaining to this discipline. If you are looking to become more familiar with key topics in economic history, please consider reviewing our Reading List!
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r/AskHistory
111k members
For asking casual questions about History. Also see r/History or r/AskHistorians.
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r/todayilearned
32.0m members
You learn something new every day; what did you learn today? Submit interesting and specific facts about something that you just found out here.
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r/HistoryAnecdotes
60.1k members
Home to the most interesting, and often humorous, anecdotes and short accounts from history.
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r/MorbidHistory
32.8k members
This is a community intended for the study of morbid history, or history of morbidity. This involves death, violence, suffering and cruelty related to events such as war, genocide, crime, disaster, accident and disease.
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r/nba
7.8m members
A community for NBA discussion.
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r/Documentaries
20.4m members
/r/Documentaries has gone private due to Reddit's decision to effectively kill 3rd party applications with their API costs. If or when /r/Documentaries returns will depend on Reddit's continued responses to the situation. More information on the blackout: https://redd.it/1476fkn
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r/MedievalHistory
48.4k members
Welcome to r/MedievalHistory
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r/SquaredCircle
795k members
Reddit's largest professional wrestling community
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r/ArtHistory
135k members
This is a community of art enthusiasts interested in a vast range of movements, styles, media, and methodologies. Please feel free to share your favorite articles, essays, and discussions on artists and artworks.
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r/nfl
4.2m members
The place to discuss all NFL related things
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r/IndianHistory
77.1k members
Welcome to r/indianhistory, a community dedicated to exploring and discussing the rich and diverse history of India and the Indian subcontinent. Please familiarize yourself with the rules in the sidebar before posting, and let's learn and engage with each other in respectful and meaningful dialogue. Currently going dark to protest the reddit API changes.
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r/memes
26.2m members
Memes! A way of describing cultural information being shared. An element of a culture or system of behavior that may be considered to be passed from one individual to another by nongenetic means, especially imitation.
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r/Conservative
1.0m members
The largest conservative subreddit. https://discord.gg/conservative
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r/HistoryWhatIf
102k members
Welcome to HistoryWhatIf! We're here to explore alternate history scenarios in interesting ways.
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r/videos
26.7m members
/r/videos is for videos with titles that contain swearing No porn/nudity/gore
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r/badhistory
297k members
Badhistory is your one-stop shop for casual dissertations on the historicity of everything from bestselling books to zero-budget adult films!
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r/IrishHistory
72.3k members
A place for discussions about Irish history. This is a somewhat more serious subreddit compared to many others. Make sure to familiarize yourself with our rules and guidelines BEFORE participating. We invite you to submit interesting articles, tell us about an interesting book you just read, or start a discussion about a subject you know a lot about or don't and would like to know more about!
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r/History_Mysteries
19.7k members
This subreddit is for posting mysteries from history (sorry for the cliche rhyme). Post things that have baffled historians, are interesting events or artifacts, and whatever else is not 100% agreed on.
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r/baseball
2.4m members
The subreddit for the bat-and-ball sport played between two teams of nine players. America's pastime. Mike Trout **For the best user experience, we recommend disabling the Reddit redesign.**
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r/soccer
4.6m members
The football subreddit. News, results and discussion about the beautiful game.
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r/ThisDayInHistory
89.1k members
A place to commemorate and discuss historical events which took place on this calendar day.
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r/MedievalHistoryMemes
34.6k members
We post memes which are more in touch with the Middle Ages rather than the common WW1, WW2, and Cold War memes or anything during the Industrial Revolution.
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r/hockey
1.6m members
Discuss the NHL, AHL, PHF, IIHF, and every other hockey league you can think of! We are the premier subreddit to talk everything hockey!
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r/teenagers
2.9m members
r/teenagers is the biggest community forum run by teenagers for teenagers. Our subreddit is primarily for discussions and memes that an average teenager would enjoy to discuss about. We do not have any age-restriction in place but do keep in mind this is targeted for users between the ages of 13 to 19. Parents, teachers, and the like are welcomed to participate and ask any questions!
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r/AmericanHistory
14.4k members
Dedicated to the history of the Western Hemisphere through the year 2003. We encourage friendly discourse, debates, questions, articles, discoveries, or anything else relevant to the Americas within the given time period.
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Posted by12 days ago
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396 comments
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Posted by16 days ago
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146 comments
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Posted by1 day ago

Is a history degree worth it?
For context, I am 18, live in South Africa and I am in my final year of high school. I have always had an immense interest in and fascination for history. Heck, I even have a geeky YouTube channel based on it! However, the response to this question varies, and there's a stereotype floating around that history degrees are useless and you won't end up being successful or landing a job! It scares me. I am a young man lost in this world. In school, I have always gotten praise from my English teachers for my essays and fluent functional analysis of poems and books. I take visual art history at school and get tremendous marks for it. These are where my talents are, there's no changing that. History has a sentimental part in my heart. It brings me joy every day. In my free time I have downloaded multiple university history book pdfs that range from the medieval era to the civil war era. I read and analyzed those books for fun. So without a doubt history is something I am passionate about.
That being said I don't mind not landing a job in a history field. The knowledge I gain will forever remain in my mind. It will be great to write books or make more informative YouTube videos with that knowledge. Obviously to be a historian will be amazing although it is quite hard and unforgiving as heard from others online. However, what bothers me is the fear of not getting any job outside of a history field! Being broke and never having money to cater to a possible family or even for my own needs! It breaks me and instills fear in me. So can anyone give me guidance and an informative answer? Apologies for the rather lengthy writing.

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Posted by24 days ago
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Posted by8 days ago

The thing that has stuck with me the most from any art class I’ve taken is the idea of the panopticon. The panopticon is this idea of a round prison with a guard tower in the center. The prisoners do not know when there is a guard watching, and as a result, they self-regulate.

The office I worked in had an open lay-out, and I couldn’t help but think about this idea. I worked, and I was always worried that my co-workers or boss could see me, and it made me uncomfortable at times. I ended up becoming a bit stricter with myself over my time working there, which is probably good in the long run as a future employee, but I always felt a little stifled by the feeling of being watched.

On TikTok, a similar thing happens. Many people will avoid saying words such as sex, drugs, or murder in order to avoid being banned or having their video taken down. Instead, they replace them with “seggs” or “unaliving.” In reality, TikTok doesn’t have a list of banned phrases at all. The creators just believe that there is someone watching and moderating their content in this way and act accordingly. Sure, there are some guidelines, but they don’t go to this extent.

From a feminist lens, I think there are some similarities with the concept of the panopticon and the male gaze. The idea of the male gaze is used in art and visual media to describe the way that women are depicted as sexual objects. There is a Margaret Atwood quote that states “You are a woman with a man inside watching a woman. You are your own voyeur.” Atwood is poking at the idea of women internalizing societal views of women and then applying it to themselves, essentially acting as a version of the male gaze themselves. This is in line with the idea of panopticon and self-regulation as a woman alters their actions and way of being because they are being watched by a man. In my own life, it appears as thinking I look ugly at home or going out and feeling like I have to be perceived as attractive by others.

Anyhow, once I learned about this concept, I was able to apply it to so many things in my own life, so I thought it would be worthwhile to share.

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