Themes / Tracks

Browse by track, not just by date.

That is how the archive stops feeling like a feed and starts feeling like a body of work.

History

Black Women, Resilience Reimagined

Profile-led storytelling built around one word, one proof object, and one reframe.

  • Best for short-form video, series landing pages, and source-backed profiles.
  • Use repeated structure to scale without feeling repetitive.
History

Black Communities & Power

Districts, displacement, preservation, economic systems, and how communities build under pressure.

  • Good home for Greenwood, Sweet Auburn, Bronzeville, Kansas City, and St. Louis work.
  • Strong for maps, timelines, before/after explainers, and stewardship arguments.
Interpretation

Money, Power & Systems

Financial literacy, institutions, incentives, and the mechanics underneath public life.

  • Federal Reserve explainers, interest rate primers, and system-level literacy pieces.
  • Useful for educational series and trust-building evergreen content.
Myth + Interpretation

Myth, History & Hidden Truths

Comparative readings that hold symbolism, cosmology, and historical inquiry in the same frame without confusing them.

  • Tag claim types aggressively so readers always know where they stand.
  • Good for essays, source chains, and controversy-resistant framing.
Storyworld

Mythos / Storyworld

The narrative universe: factions, characters, epochs, archive logic, and symbolic rules.

  • Separate this from documentary material while letting the themes speak to each other.
  • Use this space to develop canon, guides, maps, and character pages.
Longform

Essays & Longform

The place for slower thinking, layered writing, cultural analysis, and the pieces that define the brand voice.

  • Give these pages room to breathe.
  • Pair them with sidebars, related reads, and source notes so readers can keep moving.
Source notes

Receipts / Provenance

A trust layer for source notes, document trails, and how the work was built.

  • This is where skepticism gets answered before it turns into confusion.
  • It also teaches the audience how to read the project.

Lead with the most magnetic entry points.

For version one, feature one essay, one history-led track, one systems piece, one short-form series, and one mythos block.

HeroFlagship statement + clear CTA
FeatureOne anchor essay or video
TracksThree to six browse cards
ReceiptsTrust signal section
JoinNewsletter or contact path