Type of site | Subreddit, Question-and-answer site |
---|---|
Available in | English |
Founded | August 28, 2011; 12 years ago |
Founder(s) | u/Artrw |
URL | www |
Users | 2.0 million members |
r/AskHistorians is a subreddit on Reddit where users may ask questions about history. [1] It is one of the internet's largest history forums. [2] [3] [4]
The subreddit was founded in 2011 and has remained active ever since, with over 2 million subscribers as of February 23, 2024. Unlike other Reddit communities, it aims to "provide serious, academic-level answers to questions about history" and is strictly moderated. Therefore, discussions not directly pertaining to the question being asked are routinely removed by the moderators.
r/AskHistorians was founded August 28, 2011 as a question and answer forum for sharing historical knowledge. [5] It grew to be one of the largest online history forums. [3] [4] [2] The site's rules state that all answers must be serious and based in reliable academic sources, and regular contributors who demonstrate an expert level of knowledge in their field are given a "flair" which displays their expertise next to their username. [6] Although many of AskHistorians' contributors are professional historians, anyone is allowed to contribute to the site provided that they produce answers that meet AskHistorians' standards. [7] Scholars Roel Konijnendijk, [8] Mike Dash, [9] and Alex Wellerstein [10] are regular contributors to AskHistorians.
AskHistorians has received praise for its commitment to unbiased and well-sourced history, and for making academic history accessible to a broad audience, with the American Historical Association stating that "AskHistorians is, in effect, a training ground for historical thinking facilitated by the moderators and experts". [4] Many of AskHistorians' most popular posts deal with common historical myths and misconceptions, such as the theory that lead caused the fall of the Roman Empire. [11] [12]
AskHistorians is strictly moderated, with rules related to civility and academic rigor. [4] Though initially only lightly moderated, the subreddit has added moderators and rules as its subscriber count grew. Questions and answers are limited to events that occurred at least twenty years ago. [13]
AskHistorians has been noted for its commitment to combating Holocaust denial, in comparison with the more lax policies of Facebook. [14] The moderators of AskHistorians are outspoken about their policy of banning all Holocaust deniers and Nazi sympathisers from the platform, and preventing Nazi apologism or manipulation of historical facts surrounding The Holocaust. [15] AskHistorians' contributors also write in-depth explorations of the circumstances in which the Holocaust occurred, and its historical weight. [16]
AskHistorians regularly hosts expert Q&A panels called AMAs (short for "Ask Me Anything"). These panels include both regular contributors to AskHistorians and outside guest experts. [17]
Some notable guests on AskHistorians include Kate Williams, James F. Brooks, John Lukacs, Eleanor Dickey, Juan Cole, Erica Armstrong Dunbar, James M. McPherson, Brad Lepper, Gavriel Rosenfeld, Eric H. Cline, Benerson Little, and Jack Weatherford. [18] AskHistorians has also featured organizations such as American Battlefield Trust, Ohio History Connection, Osprey Publishing. On November 25, 2014 Timothy Potts (then director of the J. Paul Getty Museum) hosted an AMA on the Getty Museum. [19] In 2019, the American Archive of Public Broadcasting hosted an AMA on AskHistorians to discuss the value of cultural resources and historical media. [20]
In September 2020 AskHistorians organized the first ever virtual conference on Reddit. The topic was "Business as Unusual: Histories of Rupture, Chaos, Revolution and Change." The three-day event included AMAs, networking events and panels, with speakers encompassing academics and museum professionals. [21] [22] According to the organizers, the event reached an audience of approximately 30-40,000 people, over 90% of whom were likely to be attending their first history conference. [3] A further conference, on the theme of '[Deleted] & Missing History: Reconstructing the Past, Confronting Distortions', was held in 2021.
AskHistorians launched its own dedicated history podcast on December 20, 2016. [23] The podcast features 30–90 minute interviews with dedicated members of the r/AskHistorians community, as well as academics and published experts in the fields of history, anthropology, and archaeology. Since August 2018, it also features AskHistorians Aloud, shorter episodes which focus on narrating answers to questions from their subreddit. [24]
Historical negationism, also called historical denialism, is falsification or distortion of the historical record. This is not the same as historical revisionism, a broader term that extends to newly evidenced, fairly reasoned academic reinterpretations of history. In attempting to revise the past, historical negationism acts as illegitimate historical revisionism by using techniques inadmissible in proper historical discourse, such as presenting known forged documents as genuine, inventing ingenious but implausible reasons for distrusting genuine documents, attributing conclusions to books and sources that report the opposite, manipulating statistical series to support the given point of view, and deliberately mistranslating texts.
Holocaust denial is an antisemitic conspiracy theory that asserts that the Nazi genocide of Jews, known as the Holocaust, is a fabrication or exaggeration. Holocaust denial includes making one or more of the following false claims:
The Institute for Historical Review (IHR) is a United States–based nonprofit organization which promotes Holocaust denial. It is considered by many scholars to be central to the international Holocaust denial movement. Self-described as a "historical revisionist" organization, the IHR promotes antisemitic viewpoints and has links to several neo-Nazi and neo-fascist organizations.
David John Cawdell Irving is an English author who has written on the military and political history of World War II, especially Nazi Germany. He was found to be a Holocaust denier in a UK court in 2000 as a result of a failed libel case.
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AskReddit, sometimes stylized as Ask Reddit or Ask Reddit..., is a subreddit on the website Reddit, where users can submit open-ended questions to which other users can then reply. The subreddit describes its focus as "to ask and answer questions that elicit thought-provoking discussions". As of July 2015, AskReddit was the most popular subreddit on all of Reddit, and as of September 2021, it has 33.5 million members. In November 2018, Kevin Wong of Complex wrote:
Reddit bills itself as the front page of the Internet. If one were to extend this metaphor, then AskReddit would be the headline splashed across the top of that front page, because there is nothing as consistently exciting, absorbing, and cringe-worthy as the posts on AskReddit.
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