|
Books > History
Bodies of Evidence: The Practice of Queer Oral History is the first
book to provide serious scholarly insight into the methodological
practices that shape lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer
oral histories. Each chapter pairs an oral history excerpt with an
essay in which the oral historian addresses his or her methods and
practices. With an afterword by John D'Emilio, this collection
enables readers to examine the role memory, desire, sexuality, and
gender play in documenting LGBTQ communities and cultures.
The historical themes addressed include 1950s and '60s lesbian bar
culture; social life after the Cuban revolution; the organization
of transvestite social clubs in the U.S. midwest in the 1960s;
Australian gay liberation activism in the 1970s; San Francisco
electoral politics and the career of Harvey Milk; Asian American
community organizing in pre-AIDS Los Angeles; lesbian feminist "sex
war" cultural politics; 1980s and '90s Latina/o transgender
community memory and activism in San Francisco; and the war in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
The methodological themes include questions of silence, sexual
self-disclosure and voyeurism, the intimacy between researcher and
narrator, and the social and political commitments negotiated
through multiple oral history interviews. The book also examines
the production of comparative racial and sexual identities and the
relative strengths of same-sexuality, cross-sexuality, and
cross-ideology interviewing.
Communism Unwrapped is a collection of essays that unwraps the
complex world of consumption under communism in postwar Eastern
Europe, featuring new work by both American and European scholars
writing from variety of disciplinary perspectives. The result is a
fresh look at everyday life under communism that explores the ways
people shopped, ate, drank, smoked, cooked, acquired, exchanged and
assessed goods. These phenomena, the editors argue, were central to
the way that communism was lived and experienced in its widely
varied contexts in the region. Consumption pervaded everyday life
far more than most other political and social phenomena. From
design, to production, to retail sales and black market exchange,
Communism Unwrapped follows communist goods from producer to
consumer, tracing their circuitous routes. In the communist world
this journey was rife with its own meanings, shaped by the special
political and social circumstances of these societies. In examining
consumption behind the Iron Curtain, this volume builds on a new
field of study. It brings dimension and nuance to our understanding
of the communist period and a new perspective to our current
analyses of consumerism.
How do perceptions of the past-not just of particular events, but
of the trajectory of history as a whole-shape our experience of the
world? To answer this (and other) questions, Jim Cullen looks
closely at the work of what might be considered an unlikely source
of historical insight-the work of six major Hollywood stars.
Indeed, Cullen offers a fascinating portrait of pivotal movements
that have shaped our history as reflected in the work of Clint
Eastwood, Daniel Day-Lewis, Denzel Washington, Tom Hanks, Meryl
Streep, and Jodie Foster. By focusing on the career choices made by
these powerful actors, all of whom have the rare ability to put
their personal stamp on their work, Cullen reveals a discrete set
of historical narratives, including a surprising strain of
Jeffersonian communitarianism that runs through Eastwood's work, a
sense of how the frontier shaped American character as reflected in
the roles chosen by Day-Lewis, the Lincoln-styled belief in
institutions and the power of ordinary people that runs through the
films of Tom Hanks (like Jimmy Stewart before him), and the history
of liberal feminism of the last century captured in the movies of
Meryl Streep. That these historical patterns emerge in the work of
these six artists-almost certainly unintentionally-sheds much light
on the way that, for all of us, historical forces can shape our
understanding of the world without our being aware of them.
In ad 330 the Emperor Constantine consecrated the new capital of
the eastern Roman Empire on the site of the ancient city of
Byzantium. Its later history is well known, yet comparatively
little is known about the city before it became Constantinople and
then Istanbul. Although it was just a minor Greek polis located on
the northern fringes of Hellenic culture, surrounded by hostile
Thracian tribes and denigrated by one ancient wit as the 'armpit of
Greece', Byzantium did nevertheless possess one unique advantage -
control of the Bosporus strait. This highly strategic waterway
links the Aegean to the Black Sea, thereby conferring on the city
the ability to tax maritime traffic passing between the two.
Byzantium and the Bosporus is a historical study of the city of
Byzantium and its society, epigraphy, culture, and economy, which
seeks to establish the significance of its geographical
circumstances and in particular its relationship with the Bosporus
strait. Examining the history of the region through this lens
reveals how over almost a millennium it came to shape many aspects
of the lives of its inhabitants, illuminating not only the nature
of economic exploitation and the attitudes of ancient imperialism,
but also local industries and resources and the genesis of
communities' local identities. Drawing extensively on Dionysius of
Byzantium's Anaplous Bosporou, an ancient account of the journey up
the Bosporus, and on local inscriptions, what emerges is a
meditation on regional particularism which reveals the pervasive
influence which the waterway had on the city of Byzantium and its
local communities, and which illustrates how the history of this
region cannot be understood in isolation from its geographical
context. This volume will be of interest to all those interested in
classical history more broadly and to Byzantinists seeking to
explore the history of the city before it became Constantinople.
Harvesting the Sea provides the first systematic treatment of the
exploitation of various marine resources, such as large-scale
fishing, fish salting, salt and purple-dye production, and oyster
and fish-farming, in the Roman world and its role within the
ancient economy. Bringing together literary, epigraphic, and legal
sources, with a wealth of archaeological data collected in recent
years, Marzano shows that these marine resources were an important
feature of the Roman economy and, in scope and market-oriented
production, paralleled phenomena taking place in the Roman
agricultural economy on land. The book also examines the importance
of technological innovations, the organization of labour, and the
use of the existing legal framework in defence of economic
interests against competitors for the same natural resource.
Livy's History of Rome covers the city's foundation to 9 BC in 142
Books of which only 1-10 and 21-45 survive. This is the fourth and
final volume of John Briscoe's commentary on the last fifteen
surviving Books of Livy. Books 41-45 cover the years 178-167 BC and
deal with the Third Macedonian War which lasted from 171-168 BC,
and resulted, as had been the senate's intention, in the
destruction of the Macedonian monarchy. Livy's text depends on a
single manuscript of late antiquity, which is not only considered
as highly corrupt but has also suffered substantial physical
losses.
The volume's introduction contains a discussion of the causes of
and events leading to the outbreak of war, as well as sections on
Livy's sources, the text, chronology, and Roman legions in service
during the period. Briscoe's final commentary also looks in detail
at the historical, textual, linguistic, and stylistic matters of
Livy's narrative and eschews the narratological approach of much
recent work on Livy.
For most of the postwar period, the destruction of European Jewry
was not a salient part of American Jewish life, and was generally
seen as irrelevant to non-Jewish Americans. Survivors and their
families tended to keep to themselves, forming their own
organizations, or they did their best to block out the past. Today,
in contrast, the Holocaust is the subject of documentaries and
Hollywood films, and is widely recognized as a universal moral
touchstone. Reluctant Witnesses mixes memoir, history, and social
analysis to tell the story of the rise of Holocaust consciousness
in the United States from the perspective of survivors and their
descendants. The public reckoning with the Holocaust, the book
argues, was due to more than the passage of time. It took the
coming of age of the "second generation" - who reached adulthood
during the rise of feminism, the ethnic revival, and therapeutic
culture - for survivors' families to reclaim their hidden
histories. Inspired by the changed status of the victim in American
society, the second generation coaxed their parents to share their
losses with them, transforming private pains into public stories.
Reluctant Witnesses documents how a group of people who had
previously been unrecognized and misunderstood managed to find its
voice. It tells this story in relation to the changing status of
trauma and victimhood in American culture more generally. At a time
when a sense of Holocaust fatigue seems to be setting in, and when
the remaining survivors are at the end of their lives, it offers a
reminder that the ability to speak openly about traumatic
experiences had to be struggled for. By confronting traumatic
memories and catastrophic histories, the book argues, we can make
our world mean something beyond ourselves.
Law was central to the ancient Roman's conception of themselves and
their empire. Yet what happened to Roman law and the position it
occupied ideologically during the turbulent years of the Iconoclast
era, c.680-850, is seldom explored and little understood. The
numerous legal texts of this period, long ignored or misused by
scholars, shed new light on this murky but crucial era, when the
Byzantine world emerged from the Roman Empire. Law, Power, and
Imperial Ideology in the Iconoclast Era uses Roman law and canon
law to chart the various responses to these changing times,
especially the rise of Islam, from Justinian II's Christocentric
monarchy to the Old Testament-inspired Isaurian dynasty. The
Isaurian emperors sought to impose their control and morally purge
the empire through the just application of law, sponsoring the
creation of a series of concise, utilitarian texts that punished
crime, upheld marriage, and protected property. This volume
explores how such legal reforms were part of a reformulation of
ideology and state structures that underpinned the transformation
from the late antique Roman Empire to medieval Byzantium.
Made famous in the 1976 documentary Harlan County USA, this pocket
of Appalachian coal country has been home to generations of
miners-and to some of the most bitter labor battles of the 20th
century. It has also produced a rich tradition of protest songs and
a wealth of fascinating culture and custom that has remained
largely undiscovered by outsiders, until now. They Say in Harlan
County is not a book about coal miners so much as a dialogue in
which more than 150 Harlan County women and men tell the story of
their region, from pioneer times through the dramatic strikes of
the 1930s and '70s, up to the present. Alessandro Portelli, one of
the giants of the oral history movement, draws on 25 years of
original interviews to take readers into the mines and inside the
lives of those who work, suffer, and often die in them-from black
lung, falling rock, suffocation, or simply from work that can be
literally backbreaking. The book is structured as a vivid montage
of all these voices-stoic, outraged, grief-stricken,
defiant-skillfully interwoven with documents from archives,
newspapers, literary works, and the author's own participating and
critical voice. Portelli uncovers the whole history and memory of
the United States in this one symbolic place, through settlement,
civil war, slavery, industrialization, immigration, labor conflict,
technological change, migration, strip mining, environmental and
social crises, and resistance. And as hot-button issues like
mountain-top removal and the use of "clean coal" continue to hit
the news, the history of Harlan County-especially as seen through
the eyes of those who lived it-is becoming increasingly important.
With rare emotional immediacy, gripping narratives, and
unforgettable characters, They Say in Harlan County tells the real
story of a culture, the resilience of its people, and the human
costs of coal mining.
Peter Yearwood reconsiders the League of Nations, not as an attempt
to realize an idea but as an element in the day-to-day conduct of
Britain's foreign policy and domestic politics during the period
1914-25.
He challenges the usual view that London reluctantly adopted the
idea in response to pressure from Woodrow Wilson and from domestic
public opinion, and that it was particularly wary of ideas of
collective security. Instead he examines how London actively
promoted the idea to manage Anglo-American relations in war and to
provide the context for an enduring hegemonic partnership.
The book breaks new ground in examining how London tried to use the
League in the crises of the early 1920s: Armenia, Persia, Vilna,
Upper Silesia, Albania, and Corfu. It shows how in the negotiations
leading to the Draft Treaty of Mutual Assistance, the Geneva
Protocol, and the Locarno accords, Robert Cecil, Ramsay MacDonald,
and Austen Chamberlain tried to solve the Franco-German security
question through the League. This involves a re-examination of how
these leaders tried to use the League as an issue in British
domestic politics and why it emerged as central to British foreign
policy.
Based on extensive, detailed archival research, this book provides
a new and authoritative account of a largely misunderstood topic.
After the battle of Antietam in 1862, Harriet Eaton traveled to
Virginia from her home in Portland, Maine, to care for soldiers in
the Army of the Potomac. Portland's Free Street Baptist Church,
with liberal ties to abolition, established the Maine Camp Hospital
Association and made the widowed Eaton its relief agent in the
field. One of many Christians who believed that patriotic activism
could redeem the nation, Eaton quickly learned that war was no
respecter of religious principles. Doing the work of nurse and
provisioner, Eaton tended wounded men and those with smallpox and
diphtheria during two tours of duty. She preferred the first tour,
which ended after the battle of Chancellorsville in 1863, to the
second, more sedentary, assignment at City Point, Virginia, in
1864. There the impositions of federal bureaucracy standardized
patient care at the expense of more direct communication with
soldiers. Eaton deplored the arrogance of U.S. Sanitary
Commissioners whom she believed saw state benevolent groups as
competitors for supplies. Eaton struggled with the disruptions of
transience, scarcely sleeping in the same place twice, but found
the politics of daily toil even more challenging. Conflict between
Eaton and co-worker Isabella Fogg erupted almost immediately over
issues of propriety; the souring working conditions leading to
Fogg's ouster from Maine state relief efforts by late 1863. Though
Eaton praised some of the surgeons with whom she worked, she
labeled others charlatans whose neglect had deadly implications for
the rank and file. If she saw villainy, she also saw opportunities
to convert soldiers and developed an intense spiritual connection
with a private, which appears to have led to a postwar liaison.
Published here for the first time, the uncensored nursing diary is
a rarity among medical accounts of the war, showing Eaton to be an
astute observer of human nature and not as straight-laced as we
might have thought. This hardcover edition includes an extensive
introduction from the editor, transcriptions of relevant letters
and newspaper articles, and a thoroughly researched biographical
dictionary of the people mentioned in the diary.
This book provides the first comprehensive and authoritative
account of the events leading up to the UK seeking a massive loan
from the IMF in 1976 which almost precipitated a financial crisis
on a par with those of the 1930's and early post War period. Sir
Douglas Wass, who was permanent Secretary to the Treasury at the
time, provides a unique first hand account of the events that took
place as the crisis unfolded and the decision-making process.
Bringing unrivalled experience and knowledge of Whitehall to the
narrative, he draws on recently released documents such as official
Treasury minutes, memoranda, official statements and reports, IMF
documents and blends them with his own assessment of this key
period of policy making to provide a fascinating, blow-by-blow
account of how the Treasury reacted when faced with a series of
inter-locking crises. Decline to Fall will be a must read for
anyone interested in the formulation of policy and the workings of
government.
American living standards improved considerably between 1900 and
2000. While most observers focus on gains in per-capita income as a
measure of economic well-being, economists have used other measures
of well-being: height, weight, and longevity. The increased amount
of leisure time per week and across people's lifetimes, however,
has been an unsung aspect of the improved standard of living in
America. In Century of the Leisured Masses, David George Surdam
explores the growing presence of leisure activities in Americans'
lives and how this development came out throughout the twentieth
century. Most Americans have gone from working fifty-five or more
hours per week to working fewer than forty, although many Americans
at the top rungs of the economic ladder continue to work long
hours. Not only do more Americans have more time to devote to other
activities, they are able to enjoy higher-quality leisure. New
forms of leisure have given Americans more choices, better quality,
and greater convenience. For instance, in addition to producing
music themselves, they can now listen to the most talented
musicians when and where they want. Television began as black and
white on small screens; within fifty years, Americans had a cast of
dozens of channels to choose from. They could also purchase
favorite shows and movies to watch at their convenience. Even
Americans with low incomes enjoyed television and other new forms
of leisure. This growth of leisure resulted from a combination of
growing productivity, better health, and technology. American
workers became more productive and chose to spend their improved
productivity and higher wages by consuming more, taking more time
off, and enjoying better working conditions. By century's end,
relatively few Americans were engaged in arduous, dangerous, and
stultifying occupations. The reign of tyranny on the shop floor, in
retail shops, and in offices was mitigated; many Americans could
even enjoy leisure activities during work hours. Failure to
consider the gains in leisure time and leisure consumption
understates the gains in American living standards. With Century of
the Leisured Masses, Surdam has comprehensively documented and
examined the developments in this important marker of well-being
throughout the past century.
Specters of Revolution chronicles the subaltern political history
of peasant guerrilla movements that emerged in the southwestern
Mexican state of Guerrero during the late 1960s. The National
Revolutionary Civic Association (ACNR) and the Party of the Poor
(PDLP), led by schoolteachers Genaro Vazquez and Lucio Cabanas,
respectively, organized popularly-backed revolutionary armed
struggles that sought the overthrow of the ruling Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI). Both guerrilla organizations
materialized from a decades-long history of massacres and everyday
forms of terror committed by local-regional political bosses and
the Mexican federal government against citizen social movements
that demanded the redemption of constitutional rights. The book
reveals that these revolutionary movements developed after years of
exhausting legal, constitutional pathways of redress (focused on
issues of economic justice and electoral rights) and surviving
several state-directed massacres throughout the 1960s. As such, the
peasant guerrillas represented only the final phase of a social
process with roots in the unfulfilled promises of the 1910 Mexican
Revolution and the dual capitalist modernization-political
authoritarian program adopted by the PRI after 1940. The history of
the ACNR and PDLP guerrillas, and the brutal counterinsurgency
waged against them by the PRI regime, challenges Mexico's place
within the historiography of post-1945 Latin America. At the local
and regional levels parts of Mexico like Guerrero experienced
instances of authoritarian rule, popular political radicalization,
and brutal counterinsurgency that fully inserts the nation into a
Cold War Latin American history of state terror and "dirty wars."
This study simultaneously exposes the violent underbelly that
underscored the PRI's ruling tenure after 1940 and explodes the
myth that Mexico constituted an island of relative peace and
stability surrounded by a sea of military dictatorships during the
Cold War.
Who were the Victorians? Were they self-confident imperialists
secure in the virtues of the home, and ruled by the values of
authority, duty, religion and respectability? Or were they
self-doubting and hypocritical prudes whose family life was
authoritarian and loveless? Ever since Lytton Strachey mocked
Florence Nightingale and General Gordon in Eminent Victorians, the
reputation of the Victorians, and of what they stood for, has been
the subject of vigorous debate.
John Gardiner provides a fascinating guide to the changing
reputation of the Victorians during the 20th century. Different
social, political, and aesthetic values, two world wars, youth
culture, nostalgia, new historical trends and the heritage industry
have all affected the way we see the age and its men and women. The
second half of the book shows how radically biographical accounts
have changed over the last 100 years, exemplified by four
archetypical Victorians: Charles Dickens, W.E. Gladstone, Oscar
Wilde, and Queen Victoria herself.
The Historia Novella is a key source for the succession dispute
between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda which brought England
to civil war in the twelfth century. William of Malmesbury was the
doyen of the historians of his day. His account of the main events
of the years 1126 to 1142, to some of which he was an eyewitness,
is sympathetic to the empress's cause, but not uncritical of her.
Edmund King offers a complete revision of K. R. Potter's edition of
1955, retaining only the translation, which has been amended in
places. Not only is this a new edition but it offers a new text,
arguing that what have earlier been seen as William of Malmesbury's
final revisions are not from his hand. Rather they seem to come
from somewhere in the circle of Robert of Gloucester, the empress's
half-brother, to whom the work is dedicated. In this way the work
raises important questions concerning the transmission of medieval
texts.
|
|