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| History : Publications since January 2023List all publications in the database. :chronological alphabetical combined listing:%% Baker, Jeffrey P. @article{fds372721, Author = {Cruz, AT and Baker, JP}, Title = {Forgotten Pediatrics: 8 Disturbing Windows on the Past.}, Journal = {Pediatrics}, Volume = {152}, Number = {3}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2023-062806}, Abstract = {The 75 years since Pediatrics was first published has witnessed an explosion of the scientific knowledge base informing child health. Yet, the path leading to the present has not been linear. We examine several articles that illustrate some of the unexpected twists and turns that have characterized our specialty's history. We hope that it will provide a reminder of the ever-changing nature of scientific knowledge and the need to continually re-evaluate how our own cultural assumptions shape medical practice.}, Doi = {10.1542/peds.2023-062806}, Key = {fds372721} } %% Balakrishnan, Sarah @article{fds376683, Author = {Balakrishnan, S}, Title = {Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana}, Journal = {Journal of Urban History}, Year = {2024}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00961442241235927}, Abstract = {While many scholars have examined the influence of European law, writing, and record-keeping on African land rights and property, few have analyzed semi-textual records such as cemetery gravestones. This essay argues that urban cemeteries, introduced by the British colonial state to the Gold Coast Colony (southern Ghana) in the nineteenth century, became archives in stone. As one of the few public records forums available inside Gold Coast towns, cemeteries offered basic, but crucial, information. They indirectly dated immigration history and reflected ancestral political status. Over the course of colonial rule, Gold Coast citizens petitioned the state to have their elders buried in particular cemeteries to augment their claims to land and authority. This essay demonstrates that urban ownership—the status of belonging to a town as an authochthon—came to depend partly upon cemetery burial. Like any archive, cemeteries were highly curated collections, shaping legal contestations over residency, leadership, and land ownership.}, Doi = {10.1177/00961442241235927}, Key = {fds376683} } @article{fds376892, Author = {Lateef, H and Balakrishnan, S}, Title = {Correction to: Afrocentrism: a Perspective of Positive Development Among Black Youth (Journal of Applied Youth Studies, (2023), 6, 3, (133-145), 10.1007/s43151-023-00101-2)}, Journal = {Journal of Applied Youth Studies}, Year = {2024}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s43151-024-00121-6}, Abstract = {The original online version has been updated to correct Figure 1. Old Figure 1. (Figure presented.) New Fig. 1. (Figure presented.) Proposed pathways of Afrocentric socialization on PYD among Black youth. The model aligns with Murry et al.’s (2018) Black family stress model and Learner’s (2009) Five Cs of positive youth development, incorporating previously published Afrocentric interventions.}, Doi = {10.1007/s43151-024-00121-6}, Key = {fds376892} } @article{fds372960, Author = {Lateef, H and Balakrishnan, S}, Title = {Afrocentrism: a Perspective of Positive Development Among Black Youth}, Journal = {Journal of Applied Youth Studies}, Volume = {6}, Number = {3}, Pages = {133-145}, Year = {2023}, Month = {October}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s43151-023-00101-2}, Abstract = {Afrocentrism is a perspective wherein phenomena, ideas, events, and cultures that influence the lives of people of African descent are centered within the epistemologies of the African descent communities. Afrocentrism as a socialization mechanism for youth has been increasingly endorsed by African descent communities globally but remains nascent within youth studies literature on adolescent development. The omission of Afrocentrism as a perspective on youth development represents an oversight of culturally responsive, anti-racist research with African-descent youth populations. This conceptual article revisits Afrocentrism as a perspective to envision healthy development of Black youth. In doing so, the authors propose that positive development among Black youth intersects not only with the reality of youth developmental universalisms and race-related concerns, but also that Africanness and associated philosophical underpinnings, as will be described, are central to their healthy development. Historical, theoretical, and findings from exemplar Afrocentric programs are presented, with implications for future scholarship.}, Doi = {10.1007/s43151-023-00101-2}, Key = {fds372960} } @article{fds369769, Author = {Balakrishnan, S}, Title = {Prison of the Womb: Gender, Incarceration, and Capitalism on the Gold Coast of West Africa, c. 1500-1957}, Journal = {Comparative Studies in Society and History}, Volume = {65}, Number = {2}, Pages = {296-320}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0010417522000469}, Abstract = {To date, studies of imprisonment and incarceration have focused on the growth of malegendered penal institutions. This essay offers a provocative addition to the global study of the prison by tracing the emergence of a carceral system in West Africa in the nineteenth century that was organized around the female body. By examining archival testimonies of female prisoners held in what were called "native prisons"in colonial Gold Coast (southern Ghana), this essay shows how birthing, impregnation, and menstruation shaped West Africa penal practices, including the selection of the captives, the duration of their time in prison, and how the prison factored into the legal infrastructure around tort settlements for debts and crimes. The term "prison of the womb"is used here to describe how the West African prison held bloodlines captive, threatening the impregnation of a female kin member as a ticking clock for tort settlement. Furthermore, it will be shown that this institution was imperative to the spread of mercantile capitalism in nineteenth-century Gold Coast.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0010417522000469}, Key = {fds369769} } %% Balleisen, Edward J. @article{fds372812, Author = {Balleisen, EJ}, Title = {AMERICA’S ANTI-FRAUD ECOSYSTEM AND THE PROBLEM OF SOCIAL TRUST: PERSPECTIVES FROM LEGAL PRACTITIONERS}, Journal = {Northwestern University Law Review}, Volume = {118}, Number = {1}, Pages = {51-88}, Year = {2023}, Month = {August}, Abstract = {This contribution revives an autobiographical genre present in law reviews roughly a half-century ago, in which seasoned legal practitioners offered perspective on vital issues. Here, a senior deputy attorney general, a former federal prosecutor, a corporate defense attorney, and a legal aid lawyer each draw on their career experience to explore what they see as significant problems related to the law of consumer and investor fraud and the nature of consumer and investor trust. Their reflections emphasize the significance of law in action—how key actors seek to deploy legal mechanisms related to fraud and adjust their strategies in light of institutional changes, with powerful implications for legal culture and the practical workings of the legal system. They also offer sometimes conflicting recommendations for how American law might better respond to the enduring, thorny problem of deception in marketplaces. The practitioners all agree about the importance of leveraging data analytics to focus attention on the most problematic practices and firms, as well as the need to design disclosure rules that take behavioral realities into account. But there is instructive disagreement about the extent to which current rules appropriately balance the capacity of individuals who have experienced fraud-related harms to gain redress, against the imperative of shielding innocent firms from abusive allegations of wrongdoing. A brief analytical introduction emphasizes the advantages of an ethnographic approach as a means of understanding both positive and normative dimensions of fraud law.}, Key = {fds372812} } @article{fds371250, Author = {Balleisen, EJ and Howes, L and Wibbels, E}, Title = {The impact of applied project-based learning on undergraduate student development}, Journal = {Higher Education}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10734-023-01057-1}, Abstract = {A growing body of research suggests that “high-impact practices” such as project-based and experiential learning make important contributions to undergraduate student development and outcomes. However, most attempts to evaluate such programs are based on qualitative or self-reported data generated from small samples. This study examines the impact on student development of a large university program that incorporates project-based learning into applied, vertically integrated, interdisciplinary research teams. We deploy a range of evidence, including self-reported assessments with a comparison group, a matched-pairs analysis of educational outcomes, participant surveys, and an alumni survey. By including a counterfactual comparison, our study demonstrates that applied projects can foster intellectual growth and positive academic outcomes among undergraduate students by: (1) contributing to skill development in relation to research, teamwork, and critical thinking; (2) developing closer relationships among students, faculty, and others within the university; (3) increasing the likelihood that a student graduates with distinction; and (4) contributing to career discernment that shapes students’ post-graduate trajectories, often predisposing students toward careers in public service. We comment on the most important factors for faculty and universities seeking to replicate this model: an emphasis on team organization and operations; the opportunity for students to develop close relationships aided by layered mentoring; and applied research. We also lay out the case for developing a general structure of evaluation for such programs to facilitate comparisons across educational contexts.}, Doi = {10.1007/s10734-023-01057-1}, Key = {fds371250} } %% Barnes, Nicole E. @article{fds370454, Author = {Barnes, NE}, Title = {The Many Values of Night Soil in Wartime China}, Journal = {Past &Amp; Present}, Volume = {259}, Number = {1}, Pages = {194-228}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtac021}, Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>In March 1940, leaders of the Chongqing night-soil trade union sent a petition to the governor of China’s Sichuan province to contest health officials’ attempts to seize the night-soil industry. Cleanliness in Chongqing, the national capital during the War of Resistance against Japan (1937–45), held profound significance for China’s hygienic modernity, but Nationalist authorities failed to ensure it. On their part, the petitioners failed to recognize the centrality of odour in health officials’ agenda. These joint failures left the wartime capital mired in muck. This article employs microhistorical analysis of the 1940 petition to highlight a significant shift in olfactory sensibility. Comparison with a similar instance in nearby Hankou eleven years later, when Communist cadres succeeded in breaking the local night-soil gang, elucidates key distinctions between the Nationalist and Communist states. The conclusion considers what might be possible if we imagine using night soil to fertilize soils not as an anti-modern practice but as a sustainable means of processing waste and caring for our planet. To regain a portion of night soil’s many values, we must conquer the obstacles of disease transmission and disgust. The former is a technical problem for which solutions already exist; the latter is a formidable social problem.</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.1093/pastj/gtac021}, Key = {fds370454} } %% Daly, Samuel Fury Childs @article{fds363303, Author = {Daly, SFC}, Title = {War as Work: Labor and Soldiering in History}, Journal = {International Labor and Working Class History}, Volume = {103}, Pages = {375-380}, Year = {2023}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0147547922000035}, Abstract = {In the decade since International Labor and Working-Class History (ILWCH) published its special issue on Labor and the Military, treating military service as a problem of labor has grown from a provocation into a major debate. By surveying five recent books on soldiering as a form of labor, this essay poses a set of questions about warfare and work. Is military service best understood as a form of labor, and what might that perspective reveal, or occlude? How do militaries draw the line between those who work and those who fight? Where does that line become blurry? How do soldiers themselves understand the peculiar forms of work that war demands? War and work are not separate domains of experience, as these books show. But in some respects, they still demand different tools of analysis.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0147547922000035}, Key = {fds363303} } @article{fds365639, Author = {Daly, SFC}, Title = {GHANA MUST GO: NATIVISM AND THE POLITICS OF EXPULSION IN WEST AFRICA, 1969-1985}, Journal = {Past &Amp; Present}, Volume = {259}, Number = {1}, Pages = {229-261}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2023}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtac006}, Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Beginning in the late 1960s, the Nigerian and Ghanaian governments staged a series of massive forced removals of one another’s nationals. The first was in Ghana in 1969, and the largest was Nigeria’s 1983 deportation of over one million Ghanaians. A further expulsion from Nigeria happened in 1985, and smaller ones took place in the years that followed. Each was an enactment of the state’s sovereign right to define its national community — and a devastating blow to the principle of free movement in Africa. Using records from Nigeria and elsewhere, ‘Ghana Must Go’ places the expulsions in the longer history of law and nationality policy in the British Empire. Mass expulsions were made possible by colonial-era jurisprudence that tied political membership to indigeneity, often through codified, neo-traditional ‘customary’ laws. The mass deportations of the 1960s–1980s were underwritten by this jurisprudence, even though their immediate causes lay in economic resentment, the failure of regional co-operation, and Ghana and Nigeria’s rocky diplomatic relationship.</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.1093/pastj/gtac006}, Key = {fds365639} } %% French, John D. @article{fds365458, Author = {French, JD}, Title = {Epilogue: Authoritarianism and the Specter of Democracy}, Journal = {International Review of Social History}, Volume = {68}, Number = {1}, Pages = {173-175}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020859022000608}, Doi = {10.1017/S0020859022000608}, Key = {fds365458} } @article{fds365686, Author = {French, JD}, Title = {Common Men, Exceptional Politicians: What Do We Gain from an Embodied Social Biographical Approach to Leftist Leaders Like Germany's August Bebel and Brazil's Luis Inácio Lula da Silva?}, Journal = {International Review of Social History}, Volume = {68}, Number = {1}, Pages = {111-121}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020859022000554}, Abstract = {Lula and His Politics of Cunning explores the origin, roots, and evolution of Luis Inácio Lula da Silva's vision, discourse, and practice of leadership as a process of becoming. This commentary invites historians of labor movements and the left to think beyond their geographical and chronological specializations. It argues that there is much to gain from thinking globally if we wish to achieve meaningful causal insights applicable to the sweep of capitalist development.}, Doi = {10.1017/S0020859022000554}, Key = {fds365686} } %% Gilmintinov, Roman @article{fds374909, Author = {Gilmintinov, RR and Chupin, MY}, Title = {RESETTLEMENT ADMINISTRATION AND SOPS ON THE “RATIONALIZATION OF NATURE MANAGEMENT” IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF SIBERIA (1900–1910s and 1970–1980s)}, Journal = {Ural'skij Istoriceskij Vestnik}, Volume = {81}, Number = {4}, Pages = {76-85}, Publisher = {Institute of History and Archaeology of Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Science}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.30759/1728-9718-2023-4(81)-76-85}, Abstract = {The article analyzes the approaches to nature management of two departments responsible for the development of Siberia in the Russian Empire and the USSR: the Resettlement Administration and the Council for the Study of Productive Forces (Sovet po izucheniyu proizvoditel’nyh sil – SOPS). Both structures were established in the late imperial period, carried out practice-oriented research on the outskirts for the purpose of economic planning and development of Asian regions, and then, to varying degrees, were integrated into the Soviet system. Comparison of the views of the experts from these two structures makes it possible to reveal the peculiarities of understanding the problems of nature management in the late imperial and late Soviet periods, the development of Asian regions, continuity and gaps between the two regimes. Studying the approaches of the Resettlement Administration and SOPS to nature management demonstrates that the development of Siberia was a way to build not only a new society, but also new approaches to the interaction between society and the environment. The article concludes that the goals of the experts of the Resettlement Administration and SOPS were not purely commercial in nature, their expertise contributed to the solution of political, social, environmental issues, such as the shortage of land in the European part of the Russian Empire; the danger of transferring this problem to the east; dependence on resource exports; uneven distribution of hazardous industries and the associated with it excessive concentration of pollution in industrialized regions. Thus, the deconcentration of the population and industries and their more even distribution, according to the experts, would not only contribute to the development of regions on the periphery, but also weaken environmental problems in the center.}, Doi = {10.30759/1728-9718-2023-4(81)-76-85}, Key = {fds374909} } @article{fds375843, Author = {Gilmintinov, RR}, Title = {“Accept Costs as an Exception”: Social Costs in Soviet Land Management with Reference to Conflicts around the Reconstruction of the Bachatsky Surface Mine in the Late 1960s — 1970s}, Journal = {Izvestia of the Ural federal university. Series 2. Humanities and Arts}, Volume = {25}, Number = {4}, Pages = {200-217}, Publisher = {Ural Federal University}, Year = {2023}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/izv2.2023.25.4.069}, Abstract = {<jats:p>This article uses the concept of social costs to analyse the features of Soviet land use in the 1960s–1970s. This concept is based on the study of the mechanisms of modern economies, in which shifting costs to society becomes the most important way to increase profits for producers. Resources depletion and environmental pollution are inevitable costs of any economic activity, but they are usually borne not by the manufacturer, but by third parties and society. The concept of social costs makes it possible to carry out a comprehensive analysis and highlight the complex picture of the actors involved in nature management: those who are the source of social costs, who bear them, and who becomes an agent of redistribution. The empirical material in the article is the conflicts around the reconstruction of the Bachatsky surface coal mine. Its expansion and transformation into one of the largest enterprises of the Soviet coal mining in the late 1960s required withdrawal of significant land plots from nearby farms. The study of conflicts around land allotment, reclamation and compensation demonstrates the following dynamics. In different contexts, the coal industry at all its institutional levels acted as a source of social costs: the ministry, the Kuzbasskarierugol trust, and the Bachatsky mine itself. The Ministry of Agriculture and farms, which directly incurred costs due to the expansion of the mine, did not participate in conflicts on their own behalf. Other actors acted as agents of redistribution: first of all, the Kemerovo Regional Executive Committee, as well as regional Soviet authorities and the State Planning Committee of the USSR. At the same time, each of these bodies had its own vision of the volumes and forms in which coal miners had to compensate social costs.</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.15826/izv2.2023.25.4.069}, Key = {fds375843} } %% Glymph, Thavolia @article{fds372664, Author = {Glymph, T}, Title = {“I’m a Radical Black Girl”: Black Women Unionists and the Politics of Civil War History}, Pages = {399-418}, Booktitle = {Unequal Sisters: A Revolutionary Reader in U.S. Women’s History: Fifth Edition}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9780367514723}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003053989-29}, Abstract = {The history of southern women in the Civil War remains white-centered, mirroring wartime and postwar accounts that placed white women at the forefront of the battle for the home front. The politics of the “radical” women of Gonzalez, Texas, like the politics of the women Barkley Brown studies in Richmond, Virginia, was born on antebellum antislavery ground. Black women’s memories of past struggles and the sometimes damnable bargains enslaved people were forced to make concretely informed their wartime rebellion. The Civil War cast into sharp relief the character of the plantation house as a militarized space and enslaved women’s longstanding fight for freedom. Slavery had allowed enslaved people only cramped room to breathe, but in that narrow space they created and nurtured resistance and a sense of family and community that defied slaveholders’ desires that the black family exist principally as a unit for the reproduction of an enslaved labor force.}, Doi = {10.4324/9781003053989-29}, Key = {fds372664} } %% Ha, Polly R. @article{fds371015, Author = {Ha, P}, Title = {Reorienting English Protestantism}, Journal = {Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies}, Volume = {53}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-23}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10829636-10188987}, Doi = {10.1215/10829636-10188987}, Key = {fds371015} } @article{fds376317, Author = {Ha, P}, Title = {Who Owns the Hebrew Doctors? Oriental Scholarship, Historical Proportionality, and the Puritan “Invention” of Avant-Garde Conformity}, Journal = {Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies}, Volume = {53}, Number = {1}, Pages = {55-85}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10829636-10189015}, Doi = {10.1215/10829636-10189015}, Key = {fds376317} } %% Hacohen, Malachi H. @article{fds368105, Author = {Hacohen, M}, Title = {Agassi and Popper on Nationalism – and Beyond}, Journal = {Philosophy of the Social Sciences}, Volume = {53}, Number = {1}, Pages = {60-71}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00483931221128549}, Abstract = {Popper and Agassi diverged on nationalism. Popper was a trenchant critic whereas Agassi formed a theory of liberal nationalism. At the root of their disagreement was Popper’s refusal of Jewish identity and rejection of Zionism, in contrast with Agassi’s affirmation of progressive Jewishness and liberal Zionism. Both Agassi and Popper, however, rejected ethnonationalism. To hedge against it, they ignored the claims of ethnocultural communities. This essay will highlight Agassi’s liberal theory of the nation state but urge that we overcome Critical Rationalists’ instinctive aversion to ethnicity, and accommodate ethnocultural communities. We should also explore again both Popper’s democratic imperialism and cosmopolitan diasporas, to think a future beyond nationalism.}, Doi = {10.1177/00483931221128549}, Key = {fds368105} } %% Hasso, Frances S. @article{fds376132, Author = {Hasso, FS}, Title = {Beyond the Treatment Room: The Psyche-Body-Society Care Politics of Cairo’s El-Nadeem}, Journal = {Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society}, Volume = {49}, Number = {1}, Pages = {7-35}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/725840}, Doi = {10.1086/725840}, Key = {fds376132} } %% Hogan, Wesley @article{fds375992, Author = {Hogan, W and Mason-Hogans, D and Augusto, G}, Title = {Learning within freedom movements: using critical oral history methodology}, Pages = {128-143}, Booktitle = {Handbook of Research Methods and Applications for Social Movements}, Publisher = {Edward Elgar Publishing}, Editor = {Cox, L and Szolucha, A and Arribas Lozano and A and Chattopadhyay, S}, Year = {2024}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9781803922010}, Abstract = {Addressing practice-oriented questions, this Handbook engages with both theoretical and political dimensions, unpacking the multidimensional nature of social movement research for new and established scholars alike and for movement-based as ...}, Key = {fds375992} } %% Krylova, Anna @article{fds371702, Author = {Krylova, AY and Sewell, W and Walkowitz, J and Eley, G and Zimmerman, A and Tejada, V}, Title = {The Agency Dilemma}, Journal = {American Historical Review}, Volume = {128}, Number = {2}, Pages = {883-937}, Year = {2023}, Month = {June}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhad230}, Doi = {10.1093/ahr/rhad230}, Key = {fds371702} } %% Lee, Esther K. @article{fds369154, Author = {Lee, EK and Odom, G and Dharwadker, AB}, Title = {A conversation about new directions in studies of modernity and theatre}, Journal = {Studies in Theatre and Performance}, Volume = {43}, Number = {1}, Pages = {108-119}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14682761.2022.2145679}, Doi = {10.1080/14682761.2022.2145679}, Key = {fds369154} } %% Lovelace, H. Timothy @article{fds376810, Author = {Lovelace, HT and Fletcher, G-GS}, Title = {Corporate Racial Responsibility}, Journal = {Columbia Law Review}, Volume = {124}, Number = {2}, Pages = {361-429}, Year = {2024}, Key = {fds376810} } %% Martin, John J. @article{fds376726, Author = {Martin, JJ and Bragagnolo, M}, Title = {Physiognomy and Visual Judgment in Medieval and Early Modern Europe}, Journal = {Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies}, Volume = {54}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-7}, Year = {2024}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10829636-10948440}, Doi = {10.1215/10829636-10948440}, Key = {fds376726} } @article{fds376727, Author = {Martin, JJ}, Title = {The Art of Conjecture: A Window into the Heart}, Journal = {Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies}, Volume = {54}, Number = {1}, Pages = {33-56}, Year = {2024}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10829636-10948466}, Doi = {10.1215/10829636-10948466}, Key = {fds376727} } @misc{fds241761, Author = {Martin, J}, Title = {Venice's hidden enemies: Italian heretics in a Renaissance city}, Pages = {1-287}, Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, ISBN = {9780520077430}, Abstract = {How could early modern Venice, a city renowned for its political freedom and social harmony, also have become a center of religious dissent and inquisitorial repression? To answer this question, John Martin develops an innovative approach that deftly connects social and cultural history. The result is a profoundly important contribution to Renaissance and Reformation studies. Martin offers a vivid re-creation of the social and cultural worlds of the Venetian heretics-those men and women who articulated their hopes for religious and political reform and whose ideologies ranged from evangelical to anabaptist and even millenarian positions. In exploring the connections between religious beliefs and social experience, he weaves a rich tapestry of Renaissance urban life that is sure to intrigue all those involved in anthropological, religious, and historical studies-students and scholars alike.}, Key = {fds241761} } %% Mazumdar, Sucheta @article{fds371499, Author = {Mazumdar, S}, Title = {Colonial impact and Punjabi emigration to the United States}, Pages = {316-336}, Booktitle = {Labor Immigration under Capitalism: Asian Workers in the United States Before World War II}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, ISBN = {9780520362383}, Key = {fds371499} } %% Mestyan, Adam @book{fds369013, Author = {Mestyan, A}, Title = {Modern Arab Kingship Remaking the Ottoman Political Order in the Interwar Middle East}, Publisher = {Princeton University Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {August}, ISBN = {9780691190976}, Abstract = {How the “recycling” of the Ottoman Empire’s uses of genealogy and religion created new political orders in the Middle East In this groundbreaking book, Adam Mestyan argues that post-Ottoman Arab political orders were not, as many ...}, Key = {fds369013} } @misc{fds369040, Author = {Mestyan, A}, Title = {Fu'ad I}, Journal = {Encyclopaedia of Islam, Three}, Pages = {22-24}, Publisher = {Brill}, Year = {2023}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_27200}, Doi = {10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_27200}, Key = {fds369040} } %% Olcott, Jocelyn @misc{fds376283, Author = {Olcott, J}, Title = {Solidarity struggles: Transnational feminisms and Cold War lefts in the Global South}, Pages = {173-188}, Booktitle = {Leftist Internationalisms: a Transnational Political History}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9781350247918}, Key = {fds376283} } @article{fds371701, Author = {Olcott, J}, Title = {Decolonizing development: Women of the Global South campaigning in the latter years of the Cold War}, Journal = {Clio: Histoire, Femmes et Societes}, Volume = {57}, Number = {1}, Pages = {197-208}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds371701} } %% Partner, Simon @book{fds376133, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {Koume's World}, Pages = {1-289}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376133} } @misc{fds376138, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {THE ARTIST'S LIFE}, Pages = {164-188}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376138} } @misc{fds376139, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {IN THE SHADOW OF THE BLACK SHIPS}, Pages = {62-93}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376139} } @misc{fds376134, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {A YEAR OF CALAMITIES}, Pages = {41-61}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376134} } @misc{fds376135, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {KOUME'S WORLD THE LIFE AND WORK OF A SAMURAI WOMAN BEFORE AND AFTER THE MEIJI RESTORATION CONCLUSION}, Pages = {227-252}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376135} } @misc{fds376136, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {WAR AND REVOLUTION}, Pages = {124-163}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376136} } @misc{fds376137, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {KOUME'S WORLD THE LIFE AND WORK OF A SAMURAI WOMAN BEFORE AND AFTER THE MEIJI RESTORATION PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS}, Pages = {VII-+}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376137} } @misc{fds376140, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {GROWING UP IN KISHU DOMAIN}, Pages = {12-40}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376140} } @misc{fds376141, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {ACROSS THE DIVIDE}, Pages = {189-226}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376141} } @misc{fds376142, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {WORK AND FAMILY}, Pages = {94-123}, Booktitle = {KOUME'S WORLD}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {978-0-231-21185-7}, Key = {fds376142} } @book{fds374345, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {Koume’s World The Life and Work of a Samurai Woman Before and After the Meiji Restoration}, Pages = {203 pages}, Publisher = {Columbia University Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {December}, ISBN = {9780231559102}, Key = {fds374345} } @book{fds295603, Author = {Partner, S}, Title = {Assembled in Japan: Electrical goods and the making of the Japanese consumer}, Pages = {1-317}, Publisher = {Berkeley: University of California Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, ISBN = {9780520219397}, url = {http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0520219392/qid=1095715377/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/102-1008339-5256135?v=glance&s=books}, Abstract = {Assembled in Japan investigates one of the great success stories of the twentieth century: the rise of the Japanese electronics industry. Contrary to mainstream interpretation, Simon Partner discovers that behind the meteoric rise of Sony, Matsushita, Toshiba, and other electrical goods companies was neither the iron hand of Japan's Ministry of International Trade and Industry nor a government-sponsored export-led growth policy, but rather an explosion of domestic consumer demand that began in the 1950s. This powerful consumer boom differed fundamentally from the one under way at the same time in the United States in that it began from widespread poverty and comparatively miserable living conditions. Beginning with a discussion of the prewar origins of the consumer engine that was to take off under the American Occupation, Partner quickly turns his sights on the business leaders, inventors, laborers, and ordinary citizens who participated in the broadly successful effort to create new markets for expensive, unfamiliar new products. Throughout, the author relates these pressure-cooker years in Japan to the key themes of twentieth-century experience worldwide: the role of technology in promoting social change, the rise of mass consumer societies, and the construction of gender in advanced industrial economies.}, Key = {fds295603} } %% Philipsen, Dirk @article{fds368488, Author = {Philipsen, D}, Title = {What Counts—Why Growth Economics is Failing Us}, Journal = {Journal of Consumer Culture}, Volume = {23}, Number = {3}, Pages = {536-554}, Year = {2023}, Month = {August}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14695405221136235}, Abstract = {A rapidly growing body of research suggests that modern economies find themselves at existential crossroads: both prosperity and survival are a function of consumption-fueled economic growth. Prosperity seemingly depends on it; survival is made increasingly impossible by it. Economists measure economic growth by what is generally recognized as a deeply flawed yet still hegemonic economic performance indicator—GDP. This paper suggests that growth based in increased consumption is in need of reconceptualization no matter what the measure, and invites the research community of the Journal of Consumer Culture to investigate what such a research agenda might look like. Economic logic itself, this essay argues, needs to be re-embedded in science, rather than operate as a self-referential logic outside of natural boundaries. Biophysical limits force us to question economic growth as a goal. A wide range of social pathologies, furthermore, from inequality to stress to loneliness, raise deep questions about the desirability of growth. The essay is a self-conscious provocation to the discipline of economics: there is an emerging need to move beyond a conceptualization of the economy as a self-contained system of monetary market exchanges defining the relations between production, distribution, and consumption.}, Doi = {10.1177/14695405221136235}, Key = {fds368488} } %% Ramaswamy, Sumathi @book{fds241852, Author = {Ramaswamy, S}, Title = {Passions of the tongue: Language devotion in Tamil India, 1891-1970}, Pages = {1-343}, Publisher = {University of California Press, Berkeley}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, ISBN = {9780520208049}, Abstract = {Why would love for their language lead several men in southern India to burn themselves alive in its name? Passions of the Tongue analyzes the discourses of love, labor, and life that transformed Tamil into an object of such passionate attachment, producing in the process one of modern India's most intense movements for linguistic revival and separatism. Sumathi Ramaswamy suggests that these discourses cannot be contained within a singular metanarrative of linguistic nationalism and instead proposes a new analytic, "language devotion." She uses this concept to track the many ways in which Tamil was imagined by its speakers and connects these multiple imaginings to their experience of colonial and post-colonial modernity. Focusing in particular on the transformation of the language into a goddess, mother, and maiden, Ramaswamy explores the pious, filial, and erotic aspects of Tamil devotion. She considers why, as its speakers sought political and social empowerment, metaphors of motherhood eventually came to dominate representations of the language.}, Key = {fds241852} } @article{fds372621, Author = {Ramaswamy, S}, Title = {Bernard Bate; E. Annamalai, Francis Cody, Malarvizhi Jayanth, and Constantine V. Nakassis (eds.). Protestant Textuality and the Tamil Modern: Political Oratory and the Social Imaginary in South Asia.}, Journal = {The American Historical Review}, Volume = {128}, Number = {2}, Pages = {1049-1050}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2023}, Month = {June}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhad207}, Doi = {10.1093/ahr/rhad207}, Key = {fds372621} } @article{fds374121, Author = {Ramaswamy, S}, Title = {A Historian among the Goddesses of Modern India}, Pages = {297-330}, Booktitle = {HOW SECULAR IS ART}, Year = {2023}, Key = {fds374121} } %% Reddy, William M. @article{fds370108, Author = {Reddy, WM}, Title = {TO FLY THE PLANE: LANGUAGE GAMES, HISTORICAL NARRATIVES, AND EMOTIONS}, Journal = {History and Theory}, Volume = {62}, Number = {1}, Pages = {30-61}, Year = {2023}, Month = {March}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hith.12289}, Abstract = {The common Western distinction between reason and emotion (which is not found outside Western-influenced traditions) tends to obscure an important distinction between two kinds of thinking: logical and mathematical reasoning, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, what is sometimes called “situational awareness,” a kind of thinking that involves striving to take into account multiple simultaneously true descriptions of a situation. Emotion, as understood in appraisal theory (that is, as inherently cognitive and intentional), is one kind of thinking that contributes to—indeed, is crucial to—situational awareness in this sense. Intention also belongs to situational awareness. Whatever long-term goals we pursue, present action must be attuned to immediate circumstances. One is faced with an indefinite number of ways to describe what is going on at any moment, and this second kind of thinking involves striving to identify a crucial subset of these true descriptions that one can respond to via an intentional action, procedure, or plan. Maintaining situational awareness in this sense is the goal of “crew resource management” (CRM), a flight crew teamwork strategy and emotional regime aimed at ensuring airline safety. The philosophical works of Wittgenstein, Anscombe, Austin, Habermas, and Danto, among others, help explain the remarkable successes of crew resource management. This article tests this explanation's applicability to nonmodern contexts by briefly discussing the letters of Antoine de Bourbon and Jeanne d'Albret between 1551 and 1562.}, Doi = {10.1111/hith.12289}, Key = {fds370108} } %% Rigsby, Kent J. @book{fds285338, Author = {Rigsby, KJ}, Title = {Asylia: Territorial inviolability in the Hellenistic World}, Pages = {1-672}, Publisher = {Univ of California Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, ISBN = {9780520200982}, Abstract = {In the Hellenistic period certain Greek temples and cities came to be declared "sacred and inviolable." Asylia was the practice of declaring religious places precincts of asylum, meaning they were immune to violence and civil authority. The evidence for this phenomenon-mainly inscriptions and coins-is scattered in the published record. The material has never been collected and presented in one publication until now. Kent J. Rigsby lays out these documents and discusses their historical implications in a substantial introduction. He argues that while a hopeful intention of military neutrality lay behind the institution of asylum, the declarations did not in fact change military behavior. Instead, "declared inviolability" became a civic and religious honor for which cities across the Greek world competed during the third to first centuries B.C.}, Key = {fds285338} } %% Rose, Deondra @book{fds375314, Author = {Rose, D}, Title = {The Power of Black Excellence: HBCUs and the Fight for American Democracy}, Pages = {352 Pages pages}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press}, Year = {2024}, Month = {August}, Key = {fds375314} } %% Shapiro, Karin @misc{fds376916, Author = {Shapiro, K}, Title = {'A Doer of the Word of God': Archbishop Walter Paul Khotso Makhulu}, Booktitle = {Life History, Political Biography and Struggle History}, Publisher = {African Minds}, Year = {2025}, Key = {fds376916} } @misc{fds376866, Author = {Shapiro, K}, Title = {Campus Activism at Yale: Fragmentary Memories and Reflections on the 1980s}, Booktitle = {Struggle for a Free South Africa Campus Anti-Apartheid Movements in Africa and the United States, 1960–1994}, Publisher = {Routledge}, Year = {2024}, ISBN = {9781032684253}, Key = {fds376866} } @article{fds376917, Author = {Shapiro, K}, Title = {Investing in Research Experiences}, Year = {2023}, Month = {April}, Key = {fds376917} } %% Shutzer, Matthew @article{fds372512, Author = {Shutzer, M}, Title = {Oil, Money and Decolonization in South Asia}, Journal = {Past & Present}, Volume = {258}, Number = {1}, Pages = {212-245}, Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, Year = {2023}, Month = {February}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtac001}, Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Why did oil become a privileged object for debating economic sovereignty during the Cold War? Recent scholarship has attempted to answer this question by drawing attention to decolonizing struggles for oil nationalization across Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. At the core of these inquiries is the presumption that a global proliferation of oil production after 1945 — now referred to as ‘the great acceleration’ — reflected a growth in global demand for fossil fuels, and that oil’s economic significance thus motivated new political claims over national oil reserves. This article takes a different position by turning to one of the earliest projects to build a post-colonial national oil programme, India’s Oil and Natural Gas Commission, under the socialist politician K. D. Malaviya. Using Malaviya’s project to trace the international politicization of oil in the 1950s and 1960s, it demonstrates how sovereignty over oil was used to contest the structures of unequal currency valuation and foreign debt enforced by the Bretton Woods institutions and the Western bloc. Rather than a source of fuel, Indian politicians understood the struggle over oil as a struggle about money, and the power of global financial interdependence in demarcating the political horizons of post-colonial sovereignty.</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.1093/pastj/gtac001}, Key = {fds372512} } @article{fds376227, Author = {Acker, A and Chatterjee, E and Becker, L and Shutzer, M and Capellini, N}, Title = {Fossil Fuels from Extraction to Emissions}, Pages = {229-243}, Booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Environmental History}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9781032003597}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003189350-19}, Abstract = {When fossils became fuels, the path towards the current crisis of climate change might seem to have been set. However, their use as energy sources and the unfolding of the current climate crisis was neither inevitable nor predetermined, but rather the result of complex historical processes and decisions. To truly understand the all-encompassing position fossil fuels have come to take in modern societies, we must understand their entire lifecycle from extraction to emission and how these processes engendered dynamics of dependency and domination on our way into the Anthropocene. By approaching this topic from diverse perspectives located within the Global South, this chapter highlights the global and interconnected character of this phenomenon. In re-mapping the historical structures underlying fossil fuel expansion, the chapter shows that they paradoxically centre both on processes of empire making and unmaking and in patterns of colonial resource exploitation continuing in altered forms in the construction of postcolonial developmental regimes. In this way the aim is not only to tease out the genealogy of the climate crisis, but also to demonstrate the importance and utility of history as a discipline within environmental debates, helping understand our current situation and our future still unknown.}, Doi = {10.4324/9781003189350-19}, Key = {fds376227} } @article{fds372513, Author = {Shutzer, M and Kodiveri, A}, Title = {“A Vast Bed of Combustible Fuel”}, Journal = {Radical History Review}, Volume = {2023}, Number = {145}, Pages = {13-36}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01636545-10063567}, Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Does climate change pose a crisis for the concept of nation-state sovereignty? This article explores how contemporary debates about climate and sovereignty are connected to deeper histories of empire and capitalism in the global South. Arguing against recent critical appraisals of sovereignty that emphasize the elision of nature from formal political and legal theory, the article reconstructs a genealogy of sovereign power in the major fossil fuel-producing territories of India spanning the nineteenth century to the present day. It brings to light three historical articulations of sovereignty that undergird contemporary modes of extractive dispossession enforced by the Indian state: the discovery of fossil fuels as subjects of sovereign power during an early colonial project to build prison complexes in Indian coal mines; the juridical remaking of “land” under Benthamite-inspired laws of “real property;” and the politicization of fossil fuels as an underground commons belonging to the abstract entity of the postcolonial nation.</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.1215/01636545-10063567}, Key = {fds372513} } %% Siegel, Jennifer @article{fds371098, Author = {Siegel, J}, Title = {“Planning for International Financial Order: The Call for Collective Responsibility at the Paris Peace Conference.”}, Booktitle = {Peacemaking and International Order after the First World War}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, Editor = {Jackson, P and Sluga, G and Mulligan, W}, Year = {2023}, Month = {March}, ISBN = {9781108830508}, Key = {fds371098} } %% Silverblatt, Irene @article{fds373006, Author = {Silverblatt, I}, Title = {Interpreting women in states: New feminist ethnohistories}, Pages = {140-171}, Booktitle = {Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge: Feminist Anthropology in the Postmodern Era}, Year = {2023}, Month = {September}, ISBN = {9780520070936}, Key = {fds373006} } %% Sosin, Joshua D. @article{fds376279, Author = {Sosin, JD}, Title = {Manumission at Chaironeia}, Journal = {Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik}, Number = {227}, Pages = {81-96}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds376279} } %% Starn, Orin @article{fds371615, Author = {Starn, O}, Title = {Lane C}, Journal = {Anthropology and Humanism}, Volume = {48}, Number = {2}, Pages = {417-418}, Year = {2023}, Month = {December}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/anhu.12451}, Abstract = {This poem for the “hundreds” in honor of Kathleen Stewart is about anthropology, life and death, and doing fieldwork in an Amazon.com warehouse.}, Doi = {10.1111/anhu.12451}, Key = {fds371615} } @article{fds371428, Author = {La Serna and M and Starn, O}, Title = {Beyond the Gonzalo Mystique: Challenges to Abimael Guzmn's Leadership inside Peru's Shining Path, 1982-1992}, Journal = {Latin American Research Review}, Volume = {58}, Number = {4}, Pages = {743-761}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/lar.2023.25}, Abstract = {From the moment it launched its armed insurgency in 1980 until the death of its former leader in September 2021, Peru's Shining Path mesmerized observers. The Maoist group had a well-established reputation as a personality cult whose members were fanatically devoted to Abimael Guzmán, the messianic leader they revered as Presidente Gonzalo. According to this narrative, referred to here as the Gonzalo mystique, Shining Path zealots were prepared to submit to Guzmán's authority and will - no matter how violent or suicidal - because they viewed him as a messiah-prophet who would usher in a new era of communist utopia. Drawing on newly available sources, including the minutes of Shining Path's 1988-1989 congress, this article complicates the Gonzalo mystique narrative, tracing the unrelenting efforts by middle- and high-ranking militants to challenge, undermine, disobey, and even unseat Guzmán throughout the insurgency. Far from seeing their leader as the undisputed cosmocrat of the popular imagination, these militants recognized Guzmán for who he was: a deeply flawed man with errant ideas, including a dubious interpretation of Maoism, problematic military strategy, and a revolutionary path that was anything but shining.}, Doi = {10.1017/lar.2023.25}, Key = {fds371428} } %% Stern, Philip J. @book{fds369394, Author = {Stern, PJ}, Title = {Empire, Incorporated The Corporations That Built British Colonialism}, Publisher = {Belknap Press}, Year = {2023}, Month = {May}, ISBN = {0674988124}, Abstract = {Philip Stern turns this view on its head, arguing that corporations drove colonial expansion and governance, creating an overlap between sovereign and commercial power that continues to shape the relationship between nations and ...}, Key = {fds369394} } | |
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