Autumn 2025
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            Virtue and Rhetoric: Rethinking Justice, Persuasion, and Methodology in Plato’s Republic/ Philosophy Aayan Mittal ’26 Pine Crest School Florida, United States 
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            Operation Ajax and the United States: Incentives, Actors, and Anti-Communist Foreign Policy/ International Relations, US History Peyson Bilimoria ’25 Commonwealth School Massachusetts, United States 
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            Before the Camps: A Sociocultural Analysis of Japanese American Pre-Internment Psychology/ Sociology Hayne Kim ’26 The American School in Japan Chofu, Japan 
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            Kent State’s Contested Truth: Nixon’s Cold War Rhetoric and Domestic Control/ US History, Politics Bethany Zhao ’26 The College Preparatory School California, United States 
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            La Raza: A Stain on Dominican Racial History/ Latin American History, Ethnic Studies Anshul Nadendla ’26 Barrington High School Illinois, United States 
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            Ghost Daughters and Bar Girls: Negotiating Marginal Womanhood in Taiwan/ Gender Studies, Anthropology Lian Benz ’26 Avenues The World School New York, United States 
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            Architects of the Right to Life: The Catholic Church’s Enduring Influence on Abortion Policy/ US History, Public Policy Brooke Soderbery ’26 Sacred Heart Schools California, United States 
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            Friedrich Engels: The First Marxist/ History of Philosophy Taeyoon Song ’26 Brighton College East Sussex, United Kingdom 
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            Art as Praxis: Visualizing and Actualizing Change Through The Great Wall of Los Angeles/ Art History, Sociology Nina Zaldivar ’26 Francis W Parker School Illinois, United States 
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            A Habit of Acquiescence: The Roots of Czechoslovakia’s 1938 and 1968 Capitulations/ European History Filipp Kvitko ’26 Windermere Preparatory School Florida, United States 
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            The Metamorphosis of Ovid’s Metamorphoses/ Classics Yineng Shao ’26 Concord Academy Massachusetts, United States 
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            Partitioned Dreams and Plastic Fantasies: Subaltern Identity in Contemporary Screen Media/ Film and Media Studies, Cultural Studies Shiven Jain ’25 Indus International School Pune, India 
Author Spotlights
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Brooke SoderberyAs someone who’s been attending a Catholic school for almost a decade, I’ve always been fascinated by the politics of the Catholic Church. In required religion classes, I’ve often gotten... Brooke SoderberyAs someone who’s been attending a Catholic school for almost a decade, I’ve always been fascinated by the politics of the Catholic Church. In required religion classes, I’ve often gotten... 
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Lian BenzWhile spending 10th grade abroad in Taiwan, I increasingly realized that the nature of womanhood and how feminism was perceived there varied dramatically from what I had gotten accustomed to... Lian BenzWhile spending 10th grade abroad in Taiwan, I increasingly realized that the nature of womanhood and how feminism was perceived there varied dramatically from what I had gotten accustomed to... 
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Filipp KvitkoTo my mind, human history has three inexplicable phenomena that have had the greatest influence on European civilization: the rise of Athenian democracy, the emergence of Renaissance art, and the... Filipp KvitkoTo my mind, human history has three inexplicable phenomena that have had the greatest influence on European civilization: the rise of Athenian democracy, the emergence of Renaissance art, and the... 
Featured Essay
Latin American History, Ethnic Studies
La Raza: A Stain on Dominican Racial History
Anshul Nadendla ’26 | Barrington High School | Illinois, United States
Prejudice plagues nations across the world, and the Dominican Republic is by no means immune. This paper examines La Raza—the prejudicial ideology that has consumed the Dominican Republic since the colonial era. La Raza, which has had extensive influence on the actions of Dominican leaders since the nation’s inception, is rooted in anti-African and anti-Haitian biases. Specifically, La Raza’s doctrine clearly delineates between Dominican identity and Haitian identity, categorically casting the former as better than the latter. Haitian-Dominican communities, however, have complex identities that do not adhere to La Raza’s racial ideals. Accordingly, Dominican government leaders have employed the ideology to persecute those of Haitian descent within the Dominican Republic. Current literature extensively analyzes the use of La Raza in specific periods, but much less is done to portray La Raza as a continuing force. This is an important gap in the understanding of anti-Haitian prejudice in the Dominican Republic because it fails to showcase the true extent to which this form of racism is present in the country. This paper contends that the concept of La Raza has inflicted a continuous injury on Haitians throughout Dominican history, addressing a crucial gap in the scholarship. This position is substantiated through an analysis of key events such as the Haitian occupation of 1822 to 1844, the 1937 Massacre, and the more recent 2013 Dominican Tribunal Ruling. In doing so, the research provides a crucial framework for analyzing the enduring impact of anti-Haitian racism on Dominican identity and policy, contributing a vital perspective to the discourse on racial formation in the Caribbean.
Notable Essays
Selected from the 2024-2025 Collection
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            Understanding the Historical Significance of the GI Bill in Postwar AmericaRahul MadgavkarUS History 
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            Liberté, Fraternité, Inégalité? The Validation of Grammatical Gender in the French Foreign ServiceCamilla ZabikhodjaevaSociolinguistics 
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            The Decline of Ecclesiastical Authority in the Italian Healthcare SystemGiulia ScolariEuropean History, Public Policy 
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            Community, Family, Nation: Confucian Exacerbation of Homophobia in Chinese Queer LiteratureXiaoyao (Marcus) LuGender Studies, Literature, Philosophy 
The Breadth of Our Scholarship
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            PhilosophyHistory: Greco-Roman, US, European, WorldArt HistoryLiterature, Literary Theory, ClassicsPublic PolicySociology: Political Sociology, SociolinguisticsContents updated periodically. 
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            With every new publication, our collections deepen and broaden. Find your next insight among our ever-increasing range of subjects in the humanities and social sciences.
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            Shifting Tides: Politics, Global Order, and Ecological FuturesThe study of politics, conflict, and governance that shape the world and the natural environment at national and international levelsPolitics, War Studies, IR, Environmental Studies
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            The Cultural Fabric: Shaping Art, Culture, and Public ImaginationThe exploration of creative expressions and the policies and programs that shape cultural activitiesCultural Policy, Film & Media Studies, Musicology
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            Constructing Realities: Identity, Gender, and the Human PsycheThe investigation of cultural practices, beliefs, and social structures that influence and are influenced by human societiesAmerican Studies, Gender Studies, Anthropology, Psychology
 
              