Faculty Database History Arts & Sciences Duke University |
||
HOME > Arts & Sciences > History > Faculty | Search Help Login |
| Publications of Adriane D. Lentz-Smith :chronological combined listing:%% Books @book{fds295497, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Freedom Struggles: African Americans & World War I}, Publisher = {Harvard University Press}, Address = {Cambridge, Mass}, Year = {2009}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674062054}, Key = {fds295497} } %% Journal Articles @article{fds327367, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Indispensable histories}, Journal = {Oregon Historical Quarterly}, Volume = {118}, Number = {2}, Pages = {264-264}, Publisher = {Oregon Historical Society}, Year = {2017}, Month = {June}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5403/oregonhistq.118.2.0264}, Doi = {10.5403/oregonhistq.118.2.0264}, Key = {fds327367} } @article{fds355782, Author = {Bradley, SM and Davis, AR and Lentz-Smith, A and Williams, C}, Title = {On the experiences of black historians}, Journal = {Modern American History}, Volume = {4}, Number = {1}, Pages = {91-102}, Year = {2021}, Month = {March}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mah.2021.3}, Doi = {10.1017/mah.2021.3}, Key = {fds355782} } @article{fds326418, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Passports to adventure: African Americans and the US security project}, Journal = {American Quarterly}, Volume = {68}, Number = {3}, Pages = {537-543}, Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press}, Year = {2016}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aq.2016.0049}, Doi = {10.1353/aq.2016.0049}, Key = {fds326418} } @article{fds353251, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {The laws have hurt me violence, violation, and black women's struggles for civil rights}, Journal = {Southern Cultures}, Volume = {26}, Number = {3}, Pages = {42-66}, Year = {2020}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/SCU.2020.0039}, Doi = {10.1353/SCU.2020.0039}, Key = {fds353251} } %% Book Reviews @article{fds295493, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Book Review of Chad Williams. Torchbearerers of Democracy: African American Soldiers and the World War I Era}, Journal = {North Carolina Historical Review}, Volume = {88}, Year = {2011}, Month = {October}, Key = {fds295493} } @article{fds295491, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Book Review of David Levering Lews, Michael Nash, and Daniel Leab, eds. Red Activists and Black Freedom: James and Esther Jackson and the Long Civil Rights Movement}, Journal = {Journal of American Studies}, Volume = {44}, Pages = {809-810}, Year = {2010}, Month = {November}, Key = {fds295491} } @article{fds295494, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Book Review of Elizabeth Smith-Pryor. Property Rites: The Rhinelander Trial, Passing, and the Protection of White Supremacy}, Journal = {Journal of Interdisciplinary History}, Volume = {41}, Number = {3}, Pages = {478-480}, Year = {2011}, Month = {Winter}, Key = {fds295494} } @article{fds295490, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Book Review of Janet Hudson. Entangled by White Supremacy: Reform in World War I-Era South Carolina}, Journal = {Journal of Southern History}, Volume = {76}, Number = {3}, Pages = {770-771}, Year = {2010}, Month = {August}, Key = {fds295490} } @article{fds295489, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Book Review of Kate Dossett, Bridging Race Divides: Black Nationalism, Feminism and Integration in the United States, 1896-1935}, Journal = {North Carolina Historical Review}, Volume = {86}, Number = {4}, Year = {2009}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds295489} } @article{fds295495, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Book Review of Kimberley L. Phillips. War! What Is It Good For? Black Freedom Struggles and the Military from World War II to Iraq}, Journal = {Pacific Historical Review}, Year = {2013}, Month = {August}, Key = {fds295495} } @article{fds295496, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Promise and Peril: America at the Dawn of a Global Age. By Christopher Nichols.}, Journal = {Diplomatic History}, Year = {2014}, Key = {fds295496} } @article{fds295492, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Website Review of Politics of a Massacre: Discovering Wilmington 1898. Created and maintained by Eastern Carolina University}, Journal = {Journal of American History}, Volume = {98}, Number = {1}, Pages = {309-309}, Year = {2011}, Month = {June}, Key = {fds295492} } %% Occasional Writing @misc{fds295488, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {Reid’s Obama Blunder and What it Means}, Journal = {History News Network}, Year = {2010}, Month = {January}, url = {http://hnn.us/articles/122067.html}, Key = {fds295488} } %% Other @misc{fds295486, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {"Charles Young," "Brownsville Riot," "W. E. B. Du Bois"}, Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of War and American Society}, Publisher = {Sage Publications}, Editor = {Karsten, P and al, E}, Year = {2005}, Key = {fds295486} } @misc{fds358686, Author = {Lentz-Smith, A}, Title = {The unbearable whiteness of grand strategy}, Pages = {329-345}, Booktitle = {Rethinking American Grand Strategy}, Year = {2021}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9780190695668}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190695668.003.0017}, Abstract = {This chapter explores grand strategy as an intellectual and cultural project by considering its willful unseeing of race as a political project. To ignore race is to misapprehend how power works in the United States and how domestic formulations of subjectivity, difference, and racialized power imbue American foreign relations. The chapter focuses on African Americans in the era of Cold War civil rights. For Carl Rowan and Sam Greenlee, the two African American veterans who provide concrete cases for thinking about the United States and the world, their blackness and ambitions for their people would color how they interpreted America’s role in political and military struggles in the Third World and beyond. As with other people of color, their encounters with white supremacy shaped their understandings of liberation, violence, and the United States security project. Their perspectives challenge scholars’ conceptions of the Cold War as a period of “defined clear national interests” and “public consensus.” Centering the stories of Rowan and Greenlee highlights not simply ongoing contestation over the myth and history of the Cold War, but, more fundamentally, the unthinking whiteness of grand strategy itself.}, Doi = {10.1093/oso/9780190695668.003.0017}, Key = {fds358686} } | |
Duke University * Arts & Sciences * History * Faculty * Staff * Grad * Reload * Login |