[n° ou bulletin]
| Titre : |
v. 120, No 2 - April 2015 |
| Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
| Importance : |
xxii p., p. 407-786, 22 p. |
| Format : |
27 cm |
| Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
| Note de contenu : |
IN THIS ISSUE.-–IN BACK ISSUES.--ARTICLES: Medieval law and materiality: shipwrecks, finders, and property on the Suffolk coast, ca.1380-1410 / Tom Johnson.--Atlantic history and the slave trade to Spanish America / Alex Borucki, David Eltis & David Wheat.--Self-Determination: how a German Enlightenment idea became the slogan of national liberation and a human right / Eric D. Weitz.--"Cuba, my love": the romance of revolutionary Cuba in the Soviet sixties / Anne E. Gorsuch.--AHA EXCHANGE: ON THE HSITORY MANIFESTO: Introduction.--The History Manifesto: a critique / Deborah Cohen & Peter Mandler; The History Manifesto: a reply to Deborah Cohen and Peter Mandler / David Armitage & Jo Guldi.--FEATURED REVIEWS: A new history of the humanities: the search for principles and patterns from Antiquity to the present, de Rens Bod.--Philology: the forgotten origins of the modern humanities, de James Turner / Ann Blair.--The return of Comrade Ricardo Flores Magón, de Claudio Lomnitz / Mark Wasserman.--The americanization of narcissism, d'Elizabeth Lunbeck / Ian Dowbiggin.--Capital in the twenty-first century, de Thomas Piketty / Mary O'Sullivan.--REVIEWS OF BOOKS: Methods/Theory: Clio among the muses: essays on history and the humanities, de Peter Charles Hoffer / Donald A. Yerxa; Ways of sensing: understanding the senses in society, de David Howes & Constance Classen / Matthew Milner; Walter Benjamin: a critical life, de Howard Eiland & Michael W. Jennings / Charles Bambach; Open Standards and the digital age: history, id ology, and networks, d'Andrew L. Rossell / James W. Cortada; Caught on camera: film in the courtroom from the Nuremberg Trials to the trials of the Khmer Rouge, de Christian Delage / Michelle Casewell; Justice among nations: a history of international law, de Stephen C. Neff / Bonny Ibhawoy; Bondage: labor and rights in Eurasia from the sixteenth to the early twentieth centuries, d'Alessandro Stanzani / Alison K. Smith; London: the Selden map and the making of a global city, 1549-1689, de Robert K. Batchelor; Mr. Selden's map of China: decoding the secrets of a vanished cartographer, de Timothy Brook / Kären Wiegen; Buildings of empire, d'Ashley Jackson / Eugenia W. Herbert; The whispers of cities: information flows in Istanbul, London, and Paris in the age of William Trumbull, de John-Paul Ghobrial / Anna Suranyi; Two troubled souls: an eighteenth-century couple's spiritual journey in the Atlantic world, d'Aaron Spencer Fogleman / S. Scott Rohrer; Censors at work: how states shaped literature, de Robert Darnton / Peter D. McDonald; Cables, crises, and the press: the geopolitics of the new international information system in the Americas, 1866-1903, de John A. Britton / James Schwoch; Power, law, and the end of privateering, de Jan Martin Lemnitzer / Dirk Bönker; Uncommonly savage: civil war and remembrance in Spain and the United States, de Paul D. Escott / Robert Cook; Dealing with Darwin: place, politics, and rhetoric in religious engagements with evolution, de David N. Livingstone / Martin Wellings; Ottomans imagining Japan East, Middle East, and non-Western modernity at the turn of the Twentieth Century, de Renée Worringer / Patricia Risso; The shock of America: Europe and the challenge of the century, de David W. Ellwood / Martha L. Hildreth; Cold War Christians and the spectre of nuclear deterrence, 1945-1959, de Jonathan Gorry / David Coleman; Mapping the end of empire: American and British strategic visions in the postwar world, d'Aiyaz Husain / W. Taylor Fain; Searching for Sasquatch: crackpots, eggheads, and cryptozoology, de Brian Regal / Harriet Ritvo; Lamaze: an international history, de Paula A. Michaels / Tricia Starks; Torpedo: inventing the military-industrial complex in the United States and Great Britain, de Katherine C. Epstein / Kurt Hackemer.--Asia.--Oceania and the Pacific Islands.--Canada and the United States.-–Caribbean and Latin America.-–Europe: Antiquity and Medieval.–-Europe: Early Modern and Modern.--Middle East and Northern Africa: Slavery, the state, and Islam, de Mohammed Ennaji / Elisabeth McMahon; Empire and power in the reign of Süleyman: narrating the sixteenth-century Ottoman world, de Kaya Sahin / Christine Isom-Verhaaren; Geographical knowledge and imperial culture in the early modern Ottoman empire, de Pinar Emiralioglu / Zayde Antrim; Blood ties: religion, violence, and the politics of nationhood in Otoman Macedonia, 1878-1908, d'Ipek Yosmaoglu / Eben Boyar; Iraq in wartime: soldiering, martyrdom, and remembrance, de Dina Rizk Khoury / Orit Bashin; Iran between Islamic nationalism and secularism: the constitutional revolution of 1986, de Vanessa Martin / Fakhreddin Azami; Historiography in Saudi Arabia: globalization and the state in the Middle East, de Jörg Matthias Determann / Malek Abisaab; Moroccan noir: police, crime, and politics in popular culture, de Jonathan Smolin / James E. Genoa; Starvation and the state: famine, slavery, and power in Sudan, 1883-1936, de Steven Serels / Stacy E. Holden.--Sub-Saharan Africa: Missionary, masculinity, 1870-1930: the Norwegian missionaries in South-East Africa, de Kristin Fjelde Telle / Derek R. Peterson; Violent intermediaries: African soldiers, conquest, and everyday colonialism in German East Africa, de Michelle R. Moyd / Daniel J. Walther; Foreign intervention in Africa: from the Cold War to the War on Terror, de Elizabeth Schmidt to Ryan M. Irwin; Political history of Guinea since World War Two, de Mohamed Saliou Camara / Elizabeth Schmidt; Stones of contention: a history of Africa's diamonds, de Todd Cleveland / David M. Gordon; The concentration camps of the Anglo-Boer War: a social history, d'Elizabeth van Heyningen / John Laband; The founders: the origins of the ANC and the struggle for democracy in South Africa, d'André Odendaal / Daniel Magaziner.--COLLECTED ESSAYS: Methods/Theory: Science and emotions after 1945: a Transatlantic perspective /, éd. Frank Biess & Daniel M. Gross; Martyrdom and terrorism: pre-modern to contemporary perspectives, de Dominic Janes & Alex Houen.--Comparative/World/Transnational: Civil disabilities: citizenship, membership, and belonging, éd. Nancy J. Hirschmann & Beth Linker; Sanctioning modernism: architecture and the making of postwar identities, éd. Vladimir Kulic, Timothy Parker & Monica Penick; Navigating colonial orders: Norwegian entrepeneurship in Africa and Oceania, éd. Kirsten Alsaker Kjerland & Bjørn Enge Bertelsen; Energy capitals: local impact, global influence, éd. Joseph A. Pratt, Martin V. Melozi & Kathleen A. Brosnan; Anywhere but here: Black intellectuals in the Atlantic world and beyond, éd. Kendahl Radciffe, Jennifer Scott & Anja Werner; The new nationalism and the First World war, éd. Lawrence Rosenthal & Vesna Rodic.--Asia.--Canada and the United States.--Caribbean and Latin America.--Europe: Antiquity and Medieval.--Europe: Early Modern and Modern.--Middle East and Northern Africa: Choreographies of shared sacred sites: religion, politics, and conflict resolution, éd. Elazar Barkan & Karen Barkey.--DOCUMENTS AND BIBLIOGRAPHY: Comparative/World/Transnational: The art of peacemaking: political essays by István Bibó, tr. Péter Pásztor, éd. Iván Zoltán Dénes; Between worlds: the travels of Yusuf Khan Kambalkosh, éd. Mushirul Hasan & Nishat Zaidi.--Canada and the United States.--Europe: Ancient and Medieval.--Europe: Early Modern and Modern.--OTHER BOOKS RECEIVED.-–COMMUNICATIONS.–-INDEX TO AMERICAN VOLUME 120, no 2.-–INDEX OF ADVERTISERS. |
[n° ou bulletin]
v. 120, No 2 - April 2015 [texte imprimé] . - xxii p., p. 407-786, 22 p. ; 27 cm. Langues : Anglais ( eng)
| Note de contenu : |
IN THIS ISSUE.-–IN BACK ISSUES.--ARTICLES: Medieval law and materiality: shipwrecks, finders, and property on the Suffolk coast, ca.1380-1410 / Tom Johnson.--Atlantic history and the slave trade to Spanish America / Alex Borucki, David Eltis & David Wheat.--Self-Determination: how a German Enlightenment idea became the slogan of national liberation and a human right / Eric D. Weitz.--"Cuba, my love": the romance of revolutionary Cuba in the Soviet sixties / Anne E. Gorsuch.--AHA EXCHANGE: ON THE HSITORY MANIFESTO: Introduction.--The History Manifesto: a critique / Deborah Cohen & Peter Mandler; The History Manifesto: a reply to Deborah Cohen and Peter Mandler / David Armitage & Jo Guldi.--FEATURED REVIEWS: A new history of the humanities: the search for principles and patterns from Antiquity to the present, de Rens Bod.--Philology: the forgotten origins of the modern humanities, de James Turner / Ann Blair.--The return of Comrade Ricardo Flores Magón, de Claudio Lomnitz / Mark Wasserman.--The americanization of narcissism, d'Elizabeth Lunbeck / Ian Dowbiggin.--Capital in the twenty-first century, de Thomas Piketty / Mary O'Sullivan.--REVIEWS OF BOOKS: Methods/Theory: Clio among the muses: essays on history and the humanities, de Peter Charles Hoffer / Donald A. Yerxa; Ways of sensing: understanding the senses in society, de David Howes & Constance Classen / Matthew Milner; Walter Benjamin: a critical life, de Howard Eiland & Michael W. Jennings / Charles Bambach; Open Standards and the digital age: history, id ology, and networks, d'Andrew L. Rossell / James W. Cortada; Caught on camera: film in the courtroom from the Nuremberg Trials to the trials of the Khmer Rouge, de Christian Delage / Michelle Casewell; Justice among nations: a history of international law, de Stephen C. Neff / Bonny Ibhawoy; Bondage: labor and rights in Eurasia from the sixteenth to the early twentieth centuries, d'Alessandro Stanzani / Alison K. Smith; London: the Selden map and the making of a global city, 1549-1689, de Robert K. Batchelor; Mr. Selden's map of China: decoding the secrets of a vanished cartographer, de Timothy Brook / Kären Wiegen; Buildings of empire, d'Ashley Jackson / Eugenia W. Herbert; The whispers of cities: information flows in Istanbul, London, and Paris in the age of William Trumbull, de John-Paul Ghobrial / Anna Suranyi; Two troubled souls: an eighteenth-century couple's spiritual journey in the Atlantic world, d'Aaron Spencer Fogleman / S. Scott Rohrer; Censors at work: how states shaped literature, de Robert Darnton / Peter D. McDonald; Cables, crises, and the press: the geopolitics of the new international information system in the Americas, 1866-1903, de John A. Britton / James Schwoch; Power, law, and the end of privateering, de Jan Martin Lemnitzer / Dirk Bönker; Uncommonly savage: civil war and remembrance in Spain and the United States, de Paul D. Escott / Robert Cook; Dealing with Darwin: place, politics, and rhetoric in religious engagements with evolution, de David N. Livingstone / Martin Wellings; Ottomans imagining Japan East, Middle East, and non-Western modernity at the turn of the Twentieth Century, de Renée Worringer / Patricia Risso; The shock of America: Europe and the challenge of the century, de David W. Ellwood / Martha L. Hildreth; Cold War Christians and the spectre of nuclear deterrence, 1945-1959, de Jonathan Gorry / David Coleman; Mapping the end of empire: American and British strategic visions in the postwar world, d'Aiyaz Husain / W. Taylor Fain; Searching for Sasquatch: crackpots, eggheads, and cryptozoology, de Brian Regal / Harriet Ritvo; Lamaze: an international history, de Paula A. Michaels / Tricia Starks; Torpedo: inventing the military-industrial complex in the United States and Great Britain, de Katherine C. Epstein / Kurt Hackemer.--Asia.--Oceania and the Pacific Islands.--Canada and the United States.-–Caribbean and Latin America.-–Europe: Antiquity and Medieval.–-Europe: Early Modern and Modern.--Middle East and Northern Africa: Slavery, the state, and Islam, de Mohammed Ennaji / Elisabeth McMahon; Empire and power in the reign of Süleyman: narrating the sixteenth-century Ottoman world, de Kaya Sahin / Christine Isom-Verhaaren; Geographical knowledge and imperial culture in the early modern Ottoman empire, de Pinar Emiralioglu / Zayde Antrim; Blood ties: religion, violence, and the politics of nationhood in Otoman Macedonia, 1878-1908, d'Ipek Yosmaoglu / Eben Boyar; Iraq in wartime: soldiering, martyrdom, and remembrance, de Dina Rizk Khoury / Orit Bashin; Iran between Islamic nationalism and secularism: the constitutional revolution of 1986, de Vanessa Martin / Fakhreddin Azami; Historiography in Saudi Arabia: globalization and the state in the Middle East, de Jörg Matthias Determann / Malek Abisaab; Moroccan noir: police, crime, and politics in popular culture, de Jonathan Smolin / James E. Genoa; Starvation and the state: famine, slavery, and power in Sudan, 1883-1936, de Steven Serels / Stacy E. Holden.--Sub-Saharan Africa: Missionary, masculinity, 1870-1930: the Norwegian missionaries in South-East Africa, de Kristin Fjelde Telle / Derek R. Peterson; Violent intermediaries: African soldiers, conquest, and everyday colonialism in German East Africa, de Michelle R. Moyd / Daniel J. Walther; Foreign intervention in Africa: from the Cold War to the War on Terror, de Elizabeth Schmidt to Ryan M. Irwin; Political history of Guinea since World War Two, de Mohamed Saliou Camara / Elizabeth Schmidt; Stones of contention: a history of Africa's diamonds, de Todd Cleveland / David M. Gordon; The concentration camps of the Anglo-Boer War: a social history, d'Elizabeth van Heyningen / John Laband; The founders: the origins of the ANC and the struggle for democracy in South Africa, d'André Odendaal / Daniel Magaziner.--COLLECTED ESSAYS: Methods/Theory: Science and emotions after 1945: a Transatlantic perspective /, éd. Frank Biess & Daniel M. Gross; Martyrdom and terrorism: pre-modern to contemporary perspectives, de Dominic Janes & Alex Houen.--Comparative/World/Transnational: Civil disabilities: citizenship, membership, and belonging, éd. Nancy J. Hirschmann & Beth Linker; Sanctioning modernism: architecture and the making of postwar identities, éd. Vladimir Kulic, Timothy Parker & Monica Penick; Navigating colonial orders: Norwegian entrepeneurship in Africa and Oceania, éd. Kirsten Alsaker Kjerland & Bjørn Enge Bertelsen; Energy capitals: local impact, global influence, éd. Joseph A. Pratt, Martin V. Melozi & Kathleen A. Brosnan; Anywhere but here: Black intellectuals in the Atlantic world and beyond, éd. Kendahl Radciffe, Jennifer Scott & Anja Werner; The new nationalism and the First World war, éd. Lawrence Rosenthal & Vesna Rodic.--Asia.--Canada and the United States.--Caribbean and Latin America.--Europe: Antiquity and Medieval.--Europe: Early Modern and Modern.--Middle East and Northern Africa: Choreographies of shared sacred sites: religion, politics, and conflict resolution, éd. Elazar Barkan & Karen Barkey.--DOCUMENTS AND BIBLIOGRAPHY: Comparative/World/Transnational: The art of peacemaking: political essays by István Bibó, tr. Péter Pásztor, éd. Iván Zoltán Dénes; Between worlds: the travels of Yusuf Khan Kambalkosh, éd. Mushirul Hasan & Nishat Zaidi.--Canada and the United States.--Europe: Ancient and Medieval.--Europe: Early Modern and Modern.--OTHER BOOKS RECEIVED.-–COMMUNICATIONS.–-INDEX TO AMERICAN VOLUME 120, no 2.-–INDEX OF ADVERTISERS. |
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